President Obama
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: May 23
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2012 06:55 -0500Following the morning in Europe, a generally risk-off tone is observed, with stock futures sitting just above session lows and the German Schatz auction resulting in record low yields. Some of the risk-averse moves were noted following unconfirmed market talk that a troubled Dutch housing association may be pressed towards bankruptcy, however this seems to be linked towards an article concerning the Dutch central bank probing into the sale of derivatives to the housing group Vestia. Nonetheless, the long end of the Dutch curve remains well-bid and European 10-yr government bond yield spreads are seen generally wider across the board. Releases from the UK have come under particular focus; the BoE minutes showed an alongside-expectations vote of 8-1 to keep QE on hold. With some analysts estimating more of a lean towards further asset purchases, the initial reaction was strength in the GBP currency, but countering this effect was the parallel release of UK retail sales, with the monthly reading showing the sharpest decline since January 2010. Additionally, it was noted that several members of the board saw further QE as a finely balanced decision, placing GBP/USD back on a downward trajectory and briefly below 1.5700. Elsewhere in foreign exchange, current sentiment is reflected in EUR/USD, printing multi-month lows earlier in the session of 1.2615, with the USD index at 20-month highs which in turn has weighed on commodities.
Ganging Up On Germany
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/20/2012 15:32 -0500A three-pronged attack on reason. Obama's reelection is at stake....
David Rosenberg: "Despair Begets Hope"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2012 15:22 -0500- Bear Market
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- China
- David Rosenberg
- default
- Demographics
- Eurozone
- Gallup
- Germany
- Gilts
- Greece
- headlines
- Investor Sentiment
- Iran
- Italy
- Japan
- LTRO
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Monetization
- Natural Gas
- New York Times
- Portugal
- President Obama
- Recession
- Renaissance
- Rosenberg
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yield Curve
A rare moment of optimism from David Rosenberg: "I've said it once and I'll say it again. And believe me, this is no intent to wrap myself up in stars and stripes. But there is a strong possibility that I see a flicker of light come November. The U.S. has great demographics with over 80 million millennials that will power the next bull market in housing, likely three years from now. After an unprecedented two straight years of a decline in the stock of vehicles on the road, we do have pent-up demand for autos. I coined the term "manufacturing renaissance" back when I toiled for Mother Merrill and this is happening on the back of sharply improved cost competitiveness. Oil production and mining services are booming. Cheap natural gas is a boon to many industries. A boom in Chinese travel to the U.S. has triggered a secular growth phase in the tourism and leisure industry. The trend towards frugality has opened up doors for do-it-yourselfers, private labels and discounting stores.... Few folks saw it at the time. But it's worth remembering, especially now as we face this latest round of economic weakness and market turbulence. It is exactly in periods of distress that the best buying opportunities are borne...and believe it or not, when new disruptive technologies are formed to power the next sustainable bull market and economic expansion. Something tells me that we are just one recession and one last leg down in the market away from crossing over the other side of the mountain. And believe me, nobody is in a bigger hurry to get there, than yours truly. At the risk of perhaps getting too far ahead of myself, but you may end up calling me a perma-bull (at that stage, I must warn you, folks like Jim Paulsen will have thrown in the towel)."
Rumors, Denials, and Visions of Chaos
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/18/2012 21:19 -0500In the Eurozone
Frontrunning: May 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/18/2012 06:25 -0500- Inside J.P. Morgan's Blunder (WSJ) - Where we learn that Jamie Dimon did not inform his regulator, the Fed, where he is a board member of the massive JPM loss even as he was fully aware of the possible unlimited downside
- Euro Attempted Recovery Countered By Asian Sovereigns (MNI)
- Santander, BBVA Among Spanish Banks Downgraded by Moody’s (Bloomberg)
- Defiant Message From Greece (WSJ)
- G-8 Leaders to Discuss Oil Market as Iran Embargo Nears (Bloomberg)
- Spain hires Goldman Sachs to value Bankia (Reuters)
- China to exclude foreign firms in shale gas tender (Reuters)
- Fed Board Nominees Powell, Stein Win Senate Confirmation (Bloomberg)
- Defiant Message From Greece (WSJ)
- Fitch Cuts Greece as Leaders Spar Over Euro Membership (Bloomberg)
- Madrid Hails Moves by Regions to Cut Spending (WSJ)
Guest Post: President Obama, The View, And The False Notion Of Too Big To Fail
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2012 23:56 -0500
From the 2008 financial crisis to Bernie Madoff, federal regulators have consistency proven too incompetent or too in-the-pocket to actually catch big disasters before they happen. Their interests, like all government employees, are politically based. State bureaucracies seek more funding no matter performance because their success is impossible to determine without having to account for profit. There is never an objective way to determine if the public sector uses its resources effectively. The news of JP Morgan’s loss has reignited the discussion over whether the financial sector is regulated enough. The answer is that regulation and the moral hazard-ridden business environment it produces is the sole reason why a bank’s loss is a hot topic of discussion to begin with. Without the Fed, the FDIC, and the government’s nasty history of bailing out its top campaign contributors, JP Morgan would be just another bank beholden to market forces. Instead it, along with most of Wall Street, has become, to use former Kansas City Fed President Thomas Hoenig’s label, a virtual “public utility.” Take away the implied safety net and “too big to fail” disappears. It’s as simple that.
Guest Post: JPM Chase Chairman, Jamie Dimon, The Whale Man, And Glass-Steagall
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/14/2012 15:56 -0500It’s 1933 and the country has undergone several years of painful Depression following the 1920s speculation that crashed in the fall of 1929. Investigations into the bank related causes began under Republican President, Herbert Hoover and continued under Democratic President, FDR. Okay, that’s pretty common knowledge. But, here’s something that isn’t: of all the giant banks operating their trusts schemes and taking advantage of off-book deals, and international bets in the late 1920s, it was an incoming head of Chase (replacing Al Wiggins who shorted Chase stock in a network of fraud) that advocated for Glass-Steagall. Indeed, despite all pedigree to the opposite (his father was Senator Nelson Aldrich architect of the Federal Reserve and brother-in-law, John D. Rockefeller), Chase Chair, Winthrop Aldrich, took to the front pages of the New York Times in March, 1933 to pitch decisive separation of commercial and speculative activity arguments. Fellow bankers hated him. His motives weren’t totally altruistic to be sure, but somewhere in his calculation that Chase would survive a separation of activities and emerge stronger than rival, Morgan Bank, was an awareness that something more – permanent – had to be put in place if only to save the banking industry from future confidence breaches and loss. It turned out he was right. And wrong. (much more on that in my next book, research still ongoing.) Financial history has a sense of irony. JPM Chase was the post-Glass-Steagall repeal marriage, 66 years in the making, of Morgan Bank and Chase. Today, it is the largest bank in America, possessing greater control of the nation’s cash than any other bank. It also has the largest derivatives exposure ($70 trillion) including nearly $6 trillion worth of credit derivatives.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: May 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/14/2012 06:46 -0500The failure to form a coalition government in Greece this weekend has prompted risk averse trade across the asset classes this morning with publications across Europe continuing to speculate about the potential exit of Greece from the Euro-area. As a result of this the Spanish 10yr yield touched 6.2% and the respective spreads over benchmark bunds in Spain and Italy have traded as wide as 30bps so far today. The knock on effect has been a sell-off in the financials which has seen the IBEX and FTSE MIB under perform in the equity markets with a relative safe-haven bid into the USD weighing on crude futures and precious metals. Spanish t-bill auctions and a variety of lines tapped out of Italy did stem the tide after selling around the top end of their indicative ranges but focus will remain solely on Greece given a lack of tier 1 data out of the US. Moving forward the next meeting of party heads in Greece is scheduled to commence at 1730BST, however, the head of the Syriza party has already indicated he will not be attending with the leader of the democratic left suggesting he is doubtful that a coalition can be formed.
The IRA | It's All About the Fraud: Madoff, MF Global & Antonin Scalia
Submitted by rcwhalen on 05/13/2012 19:14 -0500- Antonin Scalia
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bankruptcy Code
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Counterparties
- Countrywide
- Creditors
- default
- Fail
- FINRA
- Great Depression
- Gretchen Morgenson
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- MF Global
- New York Times
- President Obama
- Real estate
- recovery
- Risk Management
- Securities Fraud
- TARP
- White House
Two Charts Exposing America's Record Shadow Welfare State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2012 11:46 -0500
There was a little mentioned tangent to last Friday's very disappointing NFP print of +115,000 (driven by a surge in temp jobs offsetting a collapse in full time positions): as David Rosenberg notes, the jobs number was about half of another far more important number - that of Americans applying for disability, which in April was +225,000. He continues: "this is the new stealth stimulus program - so far in 2011, nearly one million Americans have applied for disability and year-to-date, 333k have actually enrolled (covering 539k family members). In total, more than five million people have been added to disability coverage since President Obama took over three years ago." The punchline will make all those who adore (insolvent) welfare states shake with giddy delight: "So look - either safety standards at work have eroded dramatically or the "99%" have found a creative way to milk the system and turn the economy into a quasi welfare state".... Yup. What he said. Because remember: the BLS assumes that any amount up to the total 53 million people, is not in the labor force as they have other "wefare" based forms of government handouts and see no need at all to look for a job. Is there any wonder why US unemployment is realistically 20% if not much higher? As for the other chart, food stamps, we know that story all too well.
Guest Post: The 5 Most Influential Figures In U.S. Clean Energy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 22:33 -0500As Oilprice.com embarks on its Top 5 series, we thought it expedient to begin with our take on the key figures shaping and influencing U.S. renewable energy efforts, not least because the issue of energy security is being prioritized in campaigning ahead of U.S. presidential elections. In considering from the numerous choices for these top five slots, we take into account a number of variables, including investment in renewable energy, the ability to influence policy and shape public opinion, and advocacy efforts. This goes well beyond simply counting coin – it is about innovation, imagination, vision, risk and patience. Arguably, these people will play an important role in your life and leisure, for better or worse.
Osama's Grand Plan To Destroy America: President Biden
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 12:04 -0500
In celebration of the one-year anniversary of the Corzining of Osama, a stash of letters uncovered during the raid that killed the Al Qaeda mastermind uncover a truly terrifying 'grand plan'. As the NY Daily News reports, Bin Laden planned to target more airplanes at Petraeus and President Obama with the cunning plan that a successful assassination would propel an "utterly unprepared" Vice President Biden into the Oval Office - and send the US spiraling into chaos." In the aftermath of Solyndra and the realization that Biden's key economic advisor was Jon Corzine this actually sounds like a brilliant plan. The full list of 17 Bin Laden letters can be found here with English translations and the Combating Terrorism Center's report is embedded below. Luckily for all of us, it appears the weakened Al Qaeda had no means to pull off such high profile attacks and Osama even reflected on his frustration with the inability of spinoff terror groups to inflict real damage on the West. Oorah!
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 05/03/2012 08:09 -0500- Australia
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Bloomberg News
- China
- Crude
- Daniel Tarullo
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Global Economy
- Hong Kong
- India
- Institutional Investors
- Iran
- Israel
- Japan
- Markit
- Mary Schapiro
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Mervyn King
- Middle East
- Mohammad
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Nomura
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- President Obama
- Recession
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Term Sheet
- Unemployment
- Vladimir Putin
- Yuan
All you need to read.
Havoc and Opportunity in Natural Gas
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/02/2012 17:06 -0500The point of maximum pain.
Guest Post: Two Words - Screw That
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2012 12:30 -0500History shows that freedom is almost always the price that societies pay to maintain the status quo and keep their rulers in power. When the system finally collapses under its own weight, though, things can go from bad to worse as the people cry out for CHANGE. The French, for example, traded an absolute monarch in Louis XVI for an absolute dictator in Robespierre. Similarly, the Russians traded the empire of ‘Bloody’ Tsar Nicholas II for the Red Terror of Soviet Russia. As the Russian Marxist revolutionary Leon Trotsky said in 1937, “The old principle of ‘who does not work shall not eat’ has been replaced by a new one– who does not obey shall not eat.”
Two words: Screw that.





