New Normal
The Global Monetary Reset Is Under Way
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2014 20:15 -0500The Global Monetary Reset is under way, but people have not noticed it yet. The key is the move to zero interest rates.
"Fed To The Rescue" - The Plunge Protection Team Makes The Front Page
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 10:36 -0500In October it was Jim Bullard's "QE4" hint that sent the stock market on an all-time record-breaking run of gains, which no lesser institution than the central banker's central bank - The BIS - lamented "the markets' buoyancy hinges on central banks' every word and deed." And then just two days ago, The Fed did it again: by the mere appearance of grandma Yellen (and the words "patient" and "considerable"), US stocks explode to their greatest back-to-back gains in almost six years. So it is perhaps ironic that no more mainstream media publication than USA Today has finally realised, there are no fundamentals anymore...
"Oil May Drop To $25 On Chinese Demand Plunge, Supply Glut, Ageing Boomers"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2014 10:45 -0500Most commentators remain in a state of denial about the enormity of the price fall underway. Some, failing to understand the powerful forces now unleashed, even believe prices may quickly recover. Our view is that oil prices are likely to continue falling to $50/bbl and probably lower in H1 2015, in the absence of OPEC cutbacks or other supply disruption. Critically, China’s slowdown under President Xi’s New Normal economic policy means its demand growth will be a fraction of that seen in the past. This will create a demand shock equivalent to the supply shock seen in 1973 during the Arab oil boycott. Today's ageing Boomers mean that demand is weakening at a time when the world faces an energy supply glut. This will effectively reverse the 1973 position and lead to the arrival of a deflationary mindset.... Prices have so far fallen $40/bbl from $105/bbl since we first argued in mid-August that a Great Unwinding was now underway. And there have been no production cutbacks around the world in response, or sudden jumps in demand. So prices may well need to fall the same amount again.
WTF Chart Of The Day: VIX "Noise" Edition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/16/2014 10:28 -0500Yesterday - amid multiple options-based exchange "breakages", the VIX feed across various platforms appeared massively noisy. We assumed it would be cleaned up and brushed under the carpet in the new normal. Today, it is just as bad...it appears the plunge in stocks has been a catalyst for amplification of VIX pricing noise... so far no desks (or CBOE) have a reason for this.
Goldman Pours More Crude On The Fire: "Oil Prices Can Go Lower For Longer"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/15/2014 11:48 -0500Slowing the rebalancing and creating further downside risk is a very strong consensus view that this pull back is temporary and that oil prices will quickly rebound as they did in 2009. According to a recent Bloomberg survey, the median WTI forecast for 2016 is $86/bbl (even we forecast it going back to $80/bbl). All of these forecasts are based upon now outdated cost data that is shifting as fast as the price. It is precisely this strong view for a rebound in prices and the behavior it creates, that not only suggests that oil prices can go lower for longer, but also that the new normal is far lower than we thought just one month ago. Instead of optimizing against a lower price environment, many oil producers are trying to position themselves for the rebound in prices
Oil Algos Gone Wild - WTI Futures Insta-Lift Over $58
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2014 21:37 -0500UPDATE: The rally is continuing amid several low-volume stop-runs... Desk chatter over the Libya port shutdown and force majeure is behind this but it seems unlikely enough to warrant any notable cupply cut.
Well it wouldn't be the new normal financial markets if we didn't see some tom-foolery. At 2123ET, WTI Crude futures lurched through unchanged smashing $1 higher to over $58 on heavy volume... only to fall back rapidly...
Crude Crash Set To Continue After Arab Emirates Hint $40 Oil Coming Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2014 19:24 -0500In space, no one can hear you scream... unless you happen to be Venezuela's (soon to be former) leader Nicolas Maduro, who has been doing a lot of screaming this morning following news that UAE's Energy Minister Suhail Al-Mazrouei said OPEC will stand by its decision not to cut crude output "even if oil prices fall as low as $40 a barrel" and will wait at least three months before considering an emergency meeting.
How Wal-Mart Fabricated And Lied About Its "Strong" Chinese Sales For Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2014 11:22 -0500For many, if not most, companies and especially retailers, the great wildcard that is the "massive" Chinese market with the potential of hundreds of millions of buyers in the country's nascent middle class, has been a slam dunk when it comes to boosting stock prices. After all, what can go wrong? America's largest retailer was one of those hoping to capitalize on just this shareholder euphoria for Chinese exposure, and just like everyone else, it milked its Chinese exposure for many years. And then, unexpected everything did go wrong: as Bloomberg explains, "After years of heralding China as one of its best markets, Wal-Mart in August said its performance there was among the worst in its major countries." How is that possible? Read on to find out how Wal-Mart fabricated, lied and misled investors for years using every single trick in the book and then some.
Deutsche, Barclays FX Algos Busted For FX Rigging
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2014 08:01 -0500First it was humans. Now it is vaccum tubes.
Frontrunning: December 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2014 07:43 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- Barclays
- Bloomberg News
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Confidence
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Dollar General
- Evercore
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Insurance Companies
- Iran
- Ireland
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Miller Tabak
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- New Normal
- New York Stock Exchange
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- Nomura
- OPEC
- Phibro
- Portugal
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Standard Chartered
- Ukraine
- Volkswagen
- Yield Curve
- Yuan
- New Normal headlines: Global stocks up on hopes of China policy easing (Reuters)
- China inflation eases to five-year low (BBC)
- U.S. Lawmakers Agree on $1.1 Trillion Spending Bill (WSJ)
- U.S. Braced for Blowback as CIA Report Lays Bare Abuses (BBG)
- CIA tortured, misled, U.S. report finds, drawing calls for action (Reuters)
- CIA Made False Claims Torture Prevented Heathrow Attacks (BBG)
- Oil Resumes Drop as Iran Sees $40 If There’s OPEC Discord (BBG)
- OPEC Says 2015 Demand for Its Crude Will Be Weakest in 12 Years (BBG)
- Greek yield curve inverted as politics raise default fears (Reuters)
"Burning Money To Keep Warm" - China's New Normal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2014 21:00 -0500Worried about money-printing in China... don't! As China.org reports, an electricity generation plant in China's troubled Henan province is burning banknotes in what appears to be an effort to raise efficiency and reduce toxic emissions. One ton of scrapped banknotes can generate about 660 kWh of electricity, which means around 4,000 tonnes of coal can be saved in the province every year by using this process. Perhaps that is the solution to higher natural gas prices in winter for the US NorthEast... just transfer some banknotes up from The Eccles Building and heat the nation...
Deutsche Bank Is Stumped: The Broad Market Is Ignoring The Bear Market In Energy, "Something Has To Give"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2014 17:33 -0500First the BIS came out with the following stunner when discussing markets: "The highly abnormal is becoming uncomfortably normal. Central banks and markets have been pushing benchmark sovereign yields to extraordinary lows - unimaginable just a few years back. There is something vaguely troubling when the unthinkable becomes routine." And now the routine of the unthinkable has forced Deutsche Bank to look at the unprecedented disconnect between the collapse in energy assets and the general market - which continues its hypnotized, low-volume levitation - and conclude that it makes absolutely no sense: "We find current dislocation between deep distress in Energy assets and marginal reaction in broad market indexes to be inconsistent with each other. Either energy has to rebound noticeably, or it could pull broader market indexes lower. Exceptions to this assessment are rare."
European Banks At Risk Of Bail-Ins In 2015 - Moody's and S&P Warn On Bail-Ins
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/09/2014 11:08 -0500Europe's banks are vulnerable in 2015 due to weak macroeconomic conditions, unfinished regulatory hurdles and the risk of bail-ins according to credit rating agencies ... Oh what a tangled web, we weave ...
It Wasn't Only China: Here Is What Else Is Crashing Overnight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2014 07:15 -0500- Abu Dhabi
- Aussie
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- CDS
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hyperinflation
- Italy
- Kuwait
- Mexico
- New Normal
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- OPEC
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- recovery
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- SocGen
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- Wholesale Inventories
It wasn't just China's long overdue crash last night. In addition to the Shanghai Composite suffering its biggest plunge since August 2009, there has been a sharp slide in the USDJPY which has broken its uptrend to +∞ (and hyperinflation), and around the time Chinese gamblers were panicking, the FX pair tumbled under 120, although since then the 120 tractor beam has been activated. Elsewhere, the Athens stock exchange is also crashing by over 10% this morning on the heels of news that the Greek government has accelerated the process to elect the next president and possibly, a rerun of the drama from the summer of 2012 when the Eurozone was hanging by a thread when Tsipras almost won the presidential vote and killed the world's most artificial and insolvent monetary union. And finally, the crude plunge appears to have finally caught up with ground zero, with ADX General Index in Abu Dhabi plunging 3.5%, also poised for the biggest drop since 2009. In fact the only thing that isn't crashing (at least not this moment), is Brent, which did drop to new 5 year lows earlier under $66, but has since staged a feeble rebound.




