Eurozone
Oct 6 - Fed's Rosengren: Door Still Open For 2015 Fed Rate Hike
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/05/2015 16:50 -0500- Barclays
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News That Matters
The Window Has Closed On The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2015 15:45 -0500The Fed understands that economic cycles do not last forever, and we are closer to the next recession than not. While raising rates would likely accelerate a potential recession and a significant market correction, from the Fed's perspective it might be the 'lesser of two evils. Being caught at the "zero bound" at the onset of a recession leaves few options for the Federal Reserve to stabilize an economic decline... For Janet Yellen, the "window" to lift interest rates appears to have closed.
Global Stocks, Futures Jump On Barrage Of Bad Economic News; Glencore Surges, Volkswagen Slumps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2015 05:54 -0500- Apple
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Following Friday's disastrous payrolls report, which confirmed all the pre-recessionary economic data and signaled that instead of approaching "lift-off" and decoupling from the rest of the world, the US economy is following the emerging markets into a slowdown in what may be the first global, synchronized recession since 2008, the market saw its biggest intraday surge since 2011 and the sharpest short covering squeeze in history, we are happy to announce that the "market" is now solidly back in "bad news is good news" mode.
Draghi Dud: Investor Confidence Collapses As PMIs Plunge Across EU
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2015 05:31 -0500When "whatever it takes" is not enough... Despite Draghi's promises and EU leaders' exuberance, European Investor Confidence tumbled to its lowest since January as the Q€ bounce has now well and truly died. While volatility has picked up over the last month and reassuring tones have been uttered by every central banker in the world, it is the real economy that appears to be weighing on confidence as Eurozone Composite PMI prints at 53.6 - its lowest since February.
Portugal's Ruling Coalition Prevails As Country Votes In What Amounts To Austerity Referendum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2015 14:15 -0500The results from Portugal's elections are beginning to trickle in and according to exit polls, Coelho's coalition has prevailed. According to Bloomberg, the ruling coalition of Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho has won 38%-43% of vote and 108-116 seats.
A Worrying Set Of Signals
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2015 14:00 -0500From time to time, the data (from economic activity, inflationary pressure, risk appetite and asset valuations) points unambiguously in a single direction and experience tells us that such confluences are worth watching. We are today at such a point, and the worry is that each indicator is flashing red.
Global Investors "Panic" Most Since 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2015 11:20 -0500If it feels like you’re reliving the market jitters of the Great Recession and eurozone crisis, it’s probably because you are. During this week, Marketwatch reports that global risk appetite dropped to "panic" levels for the first time since January 2012, according to Credit Suisse’s Global Risk Appetite Index.
Frontrunning: October 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2015 07:01 -0500- U.S., Allies Demand Russia Stop Attacks on Syria Opposition (BBG)
- Russian Airstrikes Defend Strategic Assad Regime Stronghold on Syria’s Coast (WSJ)
- Emerging Stocks Head for Weekly Advance Before U.S. Jobs Data (BBG)
- Wage Strife Clouds Car-Sales Boom (WSJ)
- Oregon town reels from classroom carnage (Reuters)
- Oregon shooter came from California, described as shy and skittish (Reuters)
Calm Before The Payrolls Storm
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2015 05:47 -0500- Barclays
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With China markets closed for holiday until the middle of next week, and little in terms of global macro data overnight (the only notable central banker comment overnight came from Mario Draghi who confidently proclaimed that "economic growth is returning" which on its own is bad for risk assets), it was all about the USDJPY which has seen the usual no-volume levitation overnight, dragging both the Nikkei higher with it, and US equity futures, which as of this moment were at session highs, up 7 points. The calm may be broken, though, as soon as two hours from now when the September "most important ever until the next" payrolls report is released.
Oct 1 - Fed's Dudley: Will Make Sure QE Withdrawal Won't Roil Markets
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 09/30/2015 18:55 -0500News That Matters
RANSQUAWK WEEK AHEAD VIDEO: 28th September 2015 - Friday sees the latest nonfarm payroll report from the US, with surveyed expectations for the reading at 200k while this week also sees the advance reading of Eurozone & German CPI for September
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 09/28/2015 09:02 -0500
· Friday sees the latest nonfarm payroll report from the US, with surveyed expectations for the reading at 200k
· This week sees the advance reading of Eurozone and German CPI for September, which may see added attention given recent suggestions the ECB may expand QE
US Futures Resume Tumble, Commodities Slide As Chinese "Hard-Landing" Fears Take Center Stage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 05:47 -0500- Barclays
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It was all about China once again, where following a report of a historic layoff in which China's second biggest coal producer Longmay Group fired an unprecedented 100,000 or 40% of its workforce, overnight we got the latest industrial profits figure which plunging -8.8% Y/Y was the biggest drop since at least 2011, and which the National Bureau of Statistics attributed to "exchange rate losses, weak stock markets, falling industrial goods prices as well as a bigger rise in costs than increases in revenue." In not so many words: a "hard-landing."
Catalan 'Secessionists' Set To Win Election Amid Record Turnout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/27/2015 13:12 -0500CATALAN SEPARATISTS CLOSE TO 50% OF VOTES: EXIT POLL
Reflexivity Wrecks Fed Credibility, Crushes 2016 Rate Hike Hopes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2015 20:25 -0500With Janet Yellen choking back the vomit as she shifted The Fed's stance to a "hawkish hold," markets remain just as confused (and disconnected) as they were after The FOMC's "dovish hold." The problem, as Deutsche explains, is The Fed's reliance on 'conventional' inflation dynamics (and its mean-reversion - higher in this case) as opposed to actual market expectations (which are collapsing), leaving them open to a major Type II policy error - the risk of rejecting something that is, in actuality, true. The Fed's credibility is teetering on the brink as inflation 'reflexivity' - that is, Fed expectations strengthen the dollar, depress risk in general and commodities in particular, with lower commodities driving headline inflation lower - raises the prospect that the Fed fails to raise rates at all in 2016.
China Cannot Let This Happen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2015 17:30 -0500After borrowing (and largely wasting) $15 trillion during the Great Recession, China now looks like a typical decadent developed-world country, complete with slow growth, anemic consumer spending and unstable financial markets. But it’s not France, Canada or the US, where recessions happen and voters peacefully replace one major party with the other. China, within living memory, has seen civil unrest beget open rebellion beget multi-decade civil war. Take a surplus of young men (the result of China’s one-child policy which put a premium on male children), combine it with a shortage of good jobs, and the obvious result is instability.




