Russell 2000
These Stocks Are Most Likely To Get A Fake "Buyout Offer" Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2015 11:28 -0500Since yesterday's fake AVP tender offer was nothing but a targeted attempt to force a short squeeze in one of the market's most shorted stocks, the best way to be positioned for future such criminal activity is to go long precisely the most shorted stocks, the names which in any other universe would be the first to crash, burn and file bankruptcy, but in this parallel centrally-planned universe may just be the biggest winners.
Will A Spike In Rates Hurt Stocks? (Spoiler Alert: Yes)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/14/2015 14:40 -0500The current consternation among global equity markets is centered around the recent considerable rise in bond yields globally. Historical precedents, or the lessons they contain, which bear some resemblance to present market conditions suggest the recent spike in bond yields would appear to have historical evidence to back up those who harbor concerns about its potential negative impact on stocks – a negative impact that may be of a long-term nature.
Wall Street Is One Sick Puppy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2015 14:40 -0500In welfare state America its virtually certain that through one artifice or another taxes will go up and the national debt burden will rise to crushing heights in order to keep the baby boomers’ entitlements funded. While Keynesians and Wall Street stock peddlers are clueless about the implications of this - it actually doesn’t take too much common sense to get the drift. Namely, under a long-term path of fewer producers, higher taxes and more public debt, the prospects for rejuvenating the previous historically average rates of real output growth are somewhere between slim and none - to say nothing of the super-normal rates implied by the markets’ current bullish enthusiasm.
Stocks Sinko-No-Buyo As Crude Hits 6-Month Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2015 15:02 -0500Dennis Gartman's Latest Trade Recommendation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/04/2015 08:48 -0500"We are sellers this morning of the Russell and we are buyers of the S&P, for the chart of the former is ominously bearish while the chart of the latter is interestingly bullish."
Dear CFTC, The Market Is Still Broken
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2015 17:01 -0500While we are delighted that you take advantage of the daily posts on Zero Hedge detailing flagrant spoofing across various asset classes (which you use to promptly ban two gold manipulators yesterday), the reality is that with every passing day the market becomes more disjointed, more fragmented, more broken.
Markets & The FOMC – the Game Of Chicken Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 13:45 -0500The recent quietude in the markets has our attention. Quietude in markets nearly always leads to unexpected increases in volatility. We use the term volatility not necessarily only in the sense of “must go down”, but rather in the sense that the quiet period will soon end. It could just as well result in a blow-off move (in the case of stocks) as in a sharp decline – at least from a purely technical perspective. The currency markets seem a bit more unsettled and have been making big moves for quite some time, which curiously haven’t altered the trajectory of “risk assets” much.
One Heckuva Bull Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 09:29 -0500The current equities bull run seems unstoppable. No amount of geopolitical concerns, Greek default fears, rate hikes, US dollar strength, crude oil price volatility, Russian sanctions or whatever else you can think of can put a dent on it. Perhaps we should take a step back and try to understand what is driving this strength. OK, we know that central banks continue to spike the punchbowl, but what is the actual transmission mechanism that directs all this liquidity into equities – as opposed to commodities for instance, which continue to struggle?
Why Markets Are Manic - The Fed Is Addicted To The "Easy Button"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/28/2015 15:30 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Federal Reserve
- Free Money
- Great Depression
- Group Think
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- Irrational Exuberance
- Lehman
- Market Manipulation
- Medicare
- Meltdown
- Momo
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- New York Stock Exchange
- None
- Personal Income
- Recession
- Russell 2000
- Student Loans
- Unemployment
Honest price discovery is essential to capitalist prosperity since it is the miraculous mechanism by which capital is raised from savers and investors and efficiently allocated among producers, entrepreneurs and genuine market-rate borrowers. What the central banks have generated, instead, is a casino that is blindly impelled to churn the secondary capital markets and inflate the price of existing assets to higher and higher levels - until they ultimately roll-over under their own weight. The Easy Button addiction of our central bankers is thus not just another large public policy problem. It is the very economic and social scourge of our times.
Levered Funds Are The Most-Short Bonds Ever, Russell Shorts Lowest In A Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2015 08:11 -0500It appears the ammunition for another leg higher in bond yields and small cap stocks is running dry quickly. As BofAML notes, speculators added to Russell 2000 positions for the 5th of the 6 weeks, reducing small cap shorts to smallest in a year. Spec buying of crude continues unabated with the 4th week in a row lifts net long to highest since August. The bond complex is at extremes everywhere: large specs bought 2Y bonds for the 7th week in a row, lifting the 2Y bond net long to a 2-year high; but levered funds have never been more short the long-bond. Finally, VIX Spec shorts have soared to one-year highs. All-in-all positions are extreme to say the least.
Divergence Drives the Dollar
Submitted by Marc To Market on 04/12/2015 09:18 -0500- Abenomics
- Australia
- Auto Sales
- Bank of Japan
- Beige Book
- Central Banks
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Equity Markets
- EuroDollar
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Housing Starts
- Italy
- Japan
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- March FOMC
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- Netherlands
- Nikkei
- Russell 2000
- Shenzhen
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
A look ahead into next week's macro forces.
Gold Flat In Quarter In Dollars But 11% and 5% Higher In Euro and Pounds
Submitted by GoldCore on 04/01/2015 07:10 -0500* Silver surges 6.5% in dollars and 19% and 12% in euros and pounds *Oil and most commodities declined on economic concerns in the quarter (see table) *U.S. stocks eked out minor gains to new record highs and look toppy *Gold performance impressive given strength of dollar and equities, oil collapse and negative sentiment
- GoldCore's blog
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Some Folks At The Fed Are Lost - No Juice To The Macros, Part 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/25/2015 12:17 -0500- Bond
- Census Bureau
- fixed
- GAAP
- headlines
- Home Equity
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Prices
- Housing Starts
- Janet Yellen
- Jumbo Mortgages
- Main Street
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- New Home Sales
- PE Multiple
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Russell 2000
- Salient
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Wall Street Journal
- White House
- Yield Curve
Does it really take purportedly intelligent people six years to see that the macros are not responding? Better still, isn’t it time for the Fed to explain the exact channel by which its interest rate pegging and forward guidance is supposed to be transmitted to the main street economy? After all, if these channels are blocked or ineffective - then its flood of liquidity never leaves the canyons of Wall Street. In that event, the central bank actually functions as a financial doomsday machine, inflating the next financial bubble until it bursts. Then, apparently, its job is to rinse and repeat.
Why Yellen & The Feds Are Bubble Blind - They Apparently Believe Wall Street's EPS Scam
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/24/2015 13:40 -0500Janet Yellen noted that everything was awesome and that stocks were now slightly "on the high side" of their historical range. It appears no one showed her the Russell 2000 which has a valuation multiple of just about 90x LTM earnings (as reported by the 2000 companies which comprise the index, and which were certified as accurate by 4,000 CEOs and CFOs on penalty of jail time). The mystery of how the Fed remains so stubbornly bubble blind - just like it did during the dotcom and housing bubbles - is thus revealed. The self-evident reason is that the purported geniuses who comprise our monetary politburo drink the Wall Street Cool-Aid about forward ex-items EPS. The Fed is driving a two-ton bubble machine, but has no clue that it has become a financial death trap.






