8.5%
Krugman's "Smoot-Hawley Moment"
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/25/2013 12:04 -0500This is what the world's "smartest" economist is calling for.
Meanwhile In Global Logistics...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/20/2013 14:29 -0500
FedEx started the day down around 4% (on the disaster that we noted earlier) and has not looked back. Now at the lows of the day, down 7% (and 8.5% from its highs yesterday) this is the biggest drop and biggest volume (with 30 minutes left in the day) in 18 months. So much for global trade volumes...
Goldman's Cyprus Post-Post-Mortem: "A Depositor “Bail-In” – And/Or – A Wealth Tax"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2013 07:04 -0500Can't get enough of Cyprus? Then here is yet another post-post-mortem from Goldman's Jernej Omahen, once more trying to put some very silvery lining on this particular mushroom cloud, and providing some useful facts in the process. "As part of its rescue package, Cyprus introduced a one-off tax on deposits. This “tax” can be viewed as both (1) a depositor bail-in, and/or (2) a wealth tax. Cyprus aims to capture €5.8 bn of tax revenue in this way, which compares to the total bailout package of €10 bn. In absolute terms, the amounts are low; regardless, the market focus on potential read-across will be high, in our view. The tax on depositors is setting a precedent, which is likely to have an impact beyond the immediate term, in our view. Resilience of, in particular, retail deposits was an important element of stability during crisis peaks (e.g., Spain). Post the Cyprus precedent, however, it is reasonable to expect that the deposit volatility in stressed sovereigns could rise, for two reasons: firstly, perceived risk of deposit bail-in will have increased; secondly (independent of failing bank issues), perceiving savings as a potential tax-base – for wealth taxes – is new."
Guest Post: What Will Become Of Chavez's Gold Hoard?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2013 21:04 -0500
In August 2011, while undergoing cancer treatments that ultimately failed him, Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez began withdrawing 160 tons of gold from U.S., European and Canadian banks. “It’s coming to the place it never should have left. ... The vaults of the central bank of Venezuela, not the bank of London or the bank of the United States. It’s our gold,” he said on national television as crowds cheered armored trucks carrying an initial bullion shipment to the central bank. The Caracas hoard would today be valued at around $9 billion, were it not for the fact that Venezuela has been selling it — about $550 million worth in the first eight months of 2012, according to the IMF. Did further sales follow over the past six months, with proceeds partly paying for the public largesse that helped fuel Chávez’s victorious up-from-the-sickbed presidential run? Thus, there is something less than $8.5 billion in untraceable gold bullion stashed in an extremely politicized city that’s simmering with grudges and dreams. Physical gold is modestly short of priceless to a criminal. What mala gente or dissident generals wouldn’t want some of Chávez’s rich legacy?
Is the UK Going Where Japan didn't Dare?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 03/12/2013 09:20 -0500The UK government appears to be contemplating changing the BOE's mandate so it can be freer tolerate greater near-term price pressures. The Tory-led government is commented to fiscal consolidation--austerity--the same kind of policies many want to see the US adopt, and needs greater monetary stimulus to avoid a deeper contraction in the UK economy.
German Civil Servants Get Pay Increase in Excess of Inflation
Submitted by Marc To Market on 03/11/2013 09:53 -0500German state employees got a wage increase that is above current and expected inflation. This has domestic and boarder implications. Although few are talking about it, I think it is an important development. It may help lighten the pressure on the peripheral countries from bearing the sole burden of the adjustment process.
Part II | Stress Test Follies & Zombie Love
Submitted by rcwhalen on 03/10/2013 09:27 -0500You could even make a case that QE is part of TBTF. Chew on that for a while Shirley.
Weekly Bull/Bear Recap: Mar. 4-8, 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2013 10:50 -0500
This objective report concisely summarizes important macro events over the past week. It is not geared to push an agenda. Impartiality is necessary to avoid costly psychological traps, which all investors are prone to, such as confirmation, conservatism, and endowment biases.
Rand Paul's #Filiblizzard Enters Its Sixth (Now Tenth) Hour
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2013 17:28 -0500
Starting at 1147ET, Rand Paul began his James-Joycean discussion on US-based Drone strikes, six hours later (and with some minor aid from Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX)), he is still going. Have you ever felt so strongly about something that you were willing to talk about it for over six hours? From Cruz's note that today is the 177th anniversary of the fall of (or stand at) the Alamo to Paul's rhetorical (we think) question to the President: "Are you going to just drop a hellfire missile on Jane Fonda?" We suspect the night is yet young as the snowquester continues.
Dow Jones Opens At All-Time Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2013 09:34 -0500
On October 11th 2007, the 'old' Dow Jones Industrial Average reached its previous all-time high of 14,198.10 (with the all-time closing high of 14,164.5 on October 9th) as plans for the MLEC were rumored to save the world from the intensification of stress in the interbank funding markets. A week later, the Dow had dropped 5.5%; a month later it had dropped 8.5%; three months later it had slumped 18%. But, this time the 'wealth effect' will be different-er.
Extended Claims Jump 8.5% As Initial Claims Continue Sideways Crawl
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/28/2013 08:52 -0500
Initial claims beat expectations but remain in a narrow 'flat' range for the last year. Non-seasonally-adjusted claims dropped notably to their lowest in 5 months. Since January we have seen multiple estimated states and a lot of choppy noise in the initial claims data. Against this choppiness in the main headline data is the swings in Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) benefits which rose 10% or 187k. One thing is for sure, the last two months have seen an unprecedented amount of noise in the claims data that we can only put down to seasonally-affected-disorder (or statistical idiocy with 5 sigma swings the new normal).
Guest Post: It's Always The Best Time To Buy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/25/2013 14:37 -0500- 10 Year Treasury
- 8.5%
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Blackrock
- BLS
- Bob Toll
- Census Bureau
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- Free Money
- Government Motors
- Guest Post
- Home Equity
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Inventory
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Market Manipulation
- NAHB
- New Home Sales
- Newspaper
- Private Equity
- ratings
- Ratings Agencies
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Robert Shiller
- Student Loans
- Subprime Mortgages
- Treasury Department
- Unemployment
I really need to stop being so pessimistic. I’m getting richer by the day. My home value is rising at a rate of 1% per month according to the National Association of Realtors. At that rate, my house will be worth $1 million in less than 10 years. Every mainstream media newspaper, magazine, and news channel is telling me the “strong” housing recovery is propelling the economy and creating millions of new jobs. Keynesian economists, Wall Street bankers, government apparatchiks and housing trade organizations are all in agreement that the wealth effect from rising home prices will be the jumpstart our economy needs to get back to the glory days of 2005. Who am I to argue with such honorable men with degrees from Ivy League schools and a track record of unquestioned accuracy as we can see in the chart below? These are the facts. But why trust facts when you can believe Baghdad Ben and the NAR? It’s always the best time to buy.
Spain's "Inverse Austerity" Leads To Multi-Year High Budget Deficit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/22/2013 08:01 -0500For a country that laments the imposition of draconian "austerity" measures, now allegedly in their third year, which have so far seen government revenues slide, while spending rises, Spain sure has a problem with figuring out how it is supposed to work. Yet while the world was shocked back in December 2011 when Spain quietly announced its budget deficit would jump from 6% to 8.5%, before finally settling on 8.9% of GDP, today's announcement that the 2012 Spanish deficit was a whopping 10.2% of 2012 GDP hardly caused any commotion. Apologists will quickly say that this budget gap was boosted by the 3.2% increase due to setting up the bad bank, and rolling bank bailouts, and of course they will be right: just as all those economists were right to say that when one excludes all the negatives, US Q4 GDP was in fact positive. Or, indeed, as Goldman said to ignore this week's negative initial claims and new housing starts data: after all they too were negative. In fact, when one excludes all the negative trading days in 2013, the stock market has not had a down day yet. As for Spain, too bad the country can't have its broke bank cake and eat the budget surplus that would result "if only" things were different.
Meet China's Housing Debt Slaves
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2013 16:56 -0500
Think Americans are the only people in the world toiling under a gargantuan debtload, which at last check was a massive $55.3 trillion, or about $175K per person? Think again. Meet Sherry Sheng, a 29-year-old Shanghai policewoman, who bought herself a 4,000 yuan ($642) black fur jacket, splurging for the last time before she starts paying off the mortgage on her first home.
Sherry is what is known as a Chinese "housing slave."
Norway Enters The Currency Wars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/17/2013 11:36 -0500
While the G-20 and the G-7 haggle among each other, all (with perhaps the exception of France) desperate to make it seem that Japan's recent currency manipulation is not really manipulation, and that the plunge in the Yen was an indirect, "unexpected" consequence of BOJ monetary policy (when in reality as Richard Koo explained it is merely a ploy to avoid the spotlight falling on each and every other G-7/20 member, all of which are engaged in the same type of currency wars which eventually will all morph into trade wars), Europe's energy powerhouse Norway quietly entered into the war. From Bloomberg: "Norges Bank is ready to cut interest rates further to counter krone gains that interfere with the inflation target, Governor Oeystein Olsen said. “If it gets too strong over time, leading to inflation that’s too low, we will act,” Olsen said yesterday in an interview at his office in Oslo.






