Quantitative Easing
8 Reasons Why The Telegraph Thinks The Market Doomsday Clock Is One Minute To Midnight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/17/2015 11:13 -0500"Time is now rapidly running out," warns The Telegraph's John Ficenec as the British paper takes a deep dive into the dark realities behind the mainstream media headlines continued faith in central planning. Sounding very "Zero Hedge", Ficenec warns that from China to Brazil, the central banks have lost control and at the same time the global economy is grinding to a halt. It is only a matter of time before stock markets collapse under the weight of their lofty expectations and record valuations.
Approaching A Global Deflationary Crisis?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/15/2015 17:00 -0500- Capital Formation
- China
- Creditors
- default
- Eurozone
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Futures market
- Gambling
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Japan
- Meltdown
- Monetary Policy
- Prudential
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- ratings
- Ratings Agencies
- Reality
- Recession
- Risk Premium
- Saudi Arabia
- Too Big To Fail
- Toxic Trash
- Trade Deficit
Anyone with any sense for global economic trends ought to be worried. The signs are everywhere of a serious deflationary crisis.
Peter Schiff: The Shot Not Heard Around The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2015 20:15 -0500While making its devaluation announcement, Beijing said that it wanted its currency "to reflect fundamentals" and to no longer simply mirror the movement of the dollar. It acknowledged the fact that its peg to the dollar was problematic and that it wanted a better, more natural mechanism. This is the key to understanding the announcement: The Chinese are preparing for a time in which the financial world does not spin in orbit around the dollar. Such a reality must make us think about the future.
Frontrunning: August 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/10/2015 06:22 -0500- Grim China data keeps stimulus hopes alive (Reuters)
- Berkshire Hathaway to Buy Precision Castparts for About $37 Billion (BBG)
- Greece, lenders in final push to seal new bailout (Reuters)
- Quantitative Easing With Chinese Characteristics Takes Shape (BBG)
- Greece nears €86bn accord with creditors (FT)
- Oil Futures Signal Weak Prices Could Last Years (WSJ)
- Drop in long-term investment hinders eurozone recovery (FT)
- Two shot in Ferguson amid standoff between police, protesters (Reuters)
Chinese Stocks Soar On Terrible Economic Data; US Futures Levitate; Brent Drops To 6 Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/10/2015 05:54 -0500- Barclays
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Fail
- fixed
- Foreclosures
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- High Yield
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Conditions
- Market Manipulation
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
Following last week's bad news for the economy (terrible ADP private payrolls, confirmed by a miss in the NFP) which also resulted in bad news for the market which suffered its worst week in years, many were focused on how the market would react to the latest battery of terrible economic news out of China which as we observed over the weekend reported abysmal trade data, and the worst plunge in Chinese factory prices in 6 years. We now know: the Shanghai Composite soared by 5%, rising to 3,928 and approaching the key 4000 level because the ongoing economic collapse led Pavlov's dog to believe that much more easing is coming from the country which as we showed last night has literally thrown the kitchen sink at stabilizing the plunge in stocks.
Economic Reality Now Catching Up To Market Fantasy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/07/2015 21:25 -0500In a murky world of market fantasy, our first guideposts are the fundamentals themselves. Supply and demand can be misrepresented for a time through manipulated statistics, but the tangible effects of decline cannot be. Our secondary guideposts are the paths that internationalists and central banks bulldoze through the fiscal forest. To anyone with any sense, the endgame is clear: Total centralization is the goal, and economic fear is the tool they hope to use to get there. We have written on numerous solutions to this threat in past articles; but the first and most important action is for each of us to acknowledge, wholeheartedly, that the system we know is ending. It is over. What replaces that system will either be up to us or up to them. Only by admitting that there is an end to the fantasy, a painful end, will we then be able to help determine our future reality.
The Sweet, Sickly Stench Of QE 'Success'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/06/2015 17:00 -0500Six years ago, hardly anybody outside financial circles had any idea what Quantitative Easing was – hell, many within financial circles had no idea what QE entailed. The success of the narrative created around QE; that it is the mythical ‘free lunch’ that we all intuitively know can’t exist but secretly hope does, has played perfectly to the public and now, having endured for two electoral cycles, the next wave of politicians also believe it will have no consequences and are actually using it when planning the message they feel will endear them to the electorate. What plays better than free money?
Futures Flat, China Slides Again, Oil Tumbles Near 2015 Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/06/2015 05:55 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Greece
- headlines
- High Yield
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Netherlands
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Portugal
- Price Action
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yuan
It has been more of the same in the latest quiet overnight session where many await tomorrow's NFP data for much needed guidance, and where Chinese markets opened weaker, rose during the day, then went through a mini rollercoaster, then sold off in the afternoon. The Shanghai Composite and HS China Enterprises indices finished down .9% and .3%, respectively. Trading volume continued to be very subdued, running at half the thirty day average as some 20 million "investors" have pulled out of the market to be replaced with HFTs such as Virtu. But while stock action has been muted, the story of the night so far is oil and the energy complex broke out of a tight overnight range early in the European session to continue yesterday's downward trend, seeing WTI Sep'15 futures fall below the USD 45.00 handle after yesterday's DoE crude oil inventories saw US crude output rise by 0.552%. As of this moment oil was trading at $44.72, just pennies above the low print of 2015.
Paul Craig Roberts: A Prescription For Peace & Prosperity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 21:20 -0500- Afghanistan
- Alan Greenspan
- Bond
- Brazil
- BRICs
- China
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- First Amendment
- India
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- Main Street
- Medicare
- Middle East
- national security
- New York Fed
- New York Times
- None
- North Korea
- Nuclear Power
- Quantitative Easing
- Real Interest Rates
- Saudi Arabia
- Too Big To Fail
- Ukraine
- Vladimir Putin
- Wall Street Journal
"What can we do?"
China's Plunge Protection "National Team" Bought 900 Billion In Stocks, Goldman Calculates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 18:45 -0500Peter Schiff: What If "They" Are Wrong (Again)?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 19:05 -0500- Bear Market
- default
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Investor Sentiment
- Ireland
- Italy
- NASDAQ
- new economy
- Peter Schiff
- Portugal
- Quantitative Easing
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Savings Rate
- Sovereign Debt
- Trade Balance
- Unification
What if the assumptions about a U.S. economic recovery and Fed rate hikes were wrong? Could observers be mistaken now about the trajectory of the Dollar vs. the Euro as they were back in 2000? Confidence is the only thing that really undergirds modern fiat currencies. But confidence can be very ephemeral...disappearing as quickly as it arrives. The U.S. Dollar benefits from confidence that the Euro currency may just be unworkable, that the U.S. economy will continue to improve, and that the Fed will raise rates throughout the remainder of 2015 and into 2016. If these expectations are unfulfilled, there could be a Euro reversal.
If Price Insensitive Buyers Become Sellers, Will The Entire Market Collapse?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2015 16:15 -0500"If circumstances cause these price-insensitive buyers to turn around and become price-insensitive sellers, there are not a lot of candidates to take the other side. Be prepared for the possibility that some of the same assets that have again and again risen to prices that many investors said were impossible show more downside volatility than investors have bargained for."
Supply And Demand In The Gold And Silver Futures Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2015 22:15 -0500The bear market in bullion is an artificial creation. This artificial, indeed fraudulent, increase in the supply of paper bullion contracts drives down the price in the futures market despite high demand for bullion in the physical market and constrained supply.
Compromised Hedge Funder Joins BOE In Revolving Door Roundtrip
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2015 13:01 -0500A former BOE employee and Mervyn King speechwriter who went on to a lucrative private sector career as a bond strategist at Deutsche Bank, and then as a hedge fund economist, is now going back to the BOE as a voting member. And that's not all. This revolving door story has a punchline...
“I Own Krugerrands” Says Legendary Jim Grant
Submitted by GoldCore on 07/28/2015 06:06 -0500Grant: "I am very bullish indeed". ”Recent fall in prices “terrifically vexing but a wonderful opportunity”; the reasons for owning gold have not gone away.




