Merrill
FBI Recovers Personal Emails Allegedly Deleted From Hillary Clinton's Personal Server
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2015 08:59 -0500The FBI has recovered the personal and work-related e-mails from the private computer server used by Hillary Clinton during her time as secretary of state, and which had allegedly been wiped clea. The FBI obtained Clinton’s server from the Colorado-based company managing it. The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s success at salvaging personal e-mails that Clinton said had been deleted raises the possibility that the Democratic presidential candidate’s correspondence eventually could become public. The disclosure of such e-mails would likely fan the controversy over Clinton’s use of a private e-mail system for official business.
Why Merrill Is Urging Investors To "Sell The Rallies"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/21/2015 12:08 -0500The technical pattern for S&P 500 and many other US and global equity market indices is sell rallies, according to BofAML's Stephen Suttmeier, who notes that the market is as overbought now as it was in July. Current price action suggests “dislocation” rather than “capitulation” and we continue to see the risk of retest / undercut of the August 2015/October 2014 lows of 1867-1820.
Analyst Who Said "Buy Lehman" 20 Days Before Its Collapse Is Now On The Financial Stability Oversight Council
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/15/2015 12:38 -0500Seven years ago today, Lehman Brothers failed. But it is what took place just over two weeks prior that is of interest for the scope of this article.
Suddenly The Bank Of Japan Has An Unexpected Problem On Its Hands
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 09:41 -0500By monetizing more than the entire Japanese budget deficit, the BOJ is running of out willing sellers. Without those, Japan's QE, just like that of the ECB, will grind to a halt. Better yet, this creates a vicious loop, because with every passing month, the inevitable D-Day when the BOJ has no more TSYs on the offer gets closer, which in turn will force those who bought stocks to sell in anticipation of the end of QE, and to seek the safety of bonds themsleves, in effect precipitating the next inevitable Japanese stock market crash.
"Rough Summer" For Small Caps Set To Continue
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/29/2015 12:15 -0500Small Cap stocks are in the middle of their worst summer doldrums since 2011 - and in fact for many individual stocks, worst summer since the collapse in 2008/9. While talking heads proclaim these smaller (supposedly more domestically-oriented) stocks a must-own, they have underperformed significantly as the credit cycle turns (thanks to their higher sensitivity to funding costs, among other things). Judging by this week's farce, the supposedly high-beta small caps are being BTFD'd aggressively either and perhaps that is because, since 1926, on average, September and October are the only months in which small-capitalization stocks have posted losses.
Biggest Short Squeeze Since 2008 Bank Bailout And Epic VIX Rigging Sends Stocks Green For The Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2015 15:06 -0500Margin Calls Mount On Loans Against Stock Portfolios Used To Buy Homes, Boats, "Pretty Much Everything"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 14:40 -0500
"In a securities-based loan, the customer pledges all or part of a portfolio of stocks, bonds, mutual funds and/or other securities as collateral. But unlike traditional margin loans, in which the client uses the credit to buy more securities, the borrowing is for other purchases such as real estate, a boat or education..." The result was "dangerously high margin balances,' - the products became “the vehicle of choice for investors looking to get cash for anything.” Mr. Sica and others say the products were aggressively marketed to investors by banks and brokerages.
U.S. Military Leaders Support Iran Deal
Submitted by George Washington on 08/19/2015 17:03 -0500And So Do ...
MS Boosts TSLA Price Target To $465, Days After Underwriting Stock Offering; Sees Tesla Bigger Than Ford And GM
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/17/2015 06:10 -0500Moments ago, Morgan Stanley did it again just as expected, only this time it at least followed protocol when it announced it is raising its price target on TSLA from $280 to a whopping $465, or just shy of $61 billion in implied market cap. Incidentally at this price TSLA would be the biggest US automaker, surpassing not only GM's $50bn in market capo, but also Ford's $60 billion.
Yuan Devaluation Sparks Biggest Crash In US Corporate Bonds Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/16/2015 11:04 -0500Just two days ago we warned of the dramatic disconnect between equity insurance and credit insurance markets - at levels last seen before Bear Stearns collapse. As the Yuan devaluation shuddered EURCNH carry traders and battered European assets, US equity markets stumbled onwards and upwards, impregnable in their fortitude with The Fed at their back no matter what. However, US corporate bond markets were a bloodbath...
When Internet Zillions Slipped My Grasp
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 08/15/2015 16:00 -0500It wasn't really clear to me how popular their site was, though, until the news hit on April 23, 1998 that Silicon Investor had been bought by go2net for $33,000,000 in stock. Now keep in mind this was just a discussion board we're talking about, little more sophisticated than the dial-up BBS's I had enjoyed back in 1981 on my TRS-80.
TSLA Confirms Cash Burn Fears, Sells $500 Million In Stock
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/13/2015 06:24 -0500Over the weekend, when looking carefully at Tesla's cash burn, pardon cash inferno we said that at "the current cash burn rate, TSLA can only fund just two more quarters of cash burn at which point, and most likely well before it, the company will have to aggressively raise new capital." It wasn't 1-2 quarters. It was barely 3 days. Moments ago TSLA announced that, just as we expected, it would dilute its shareholder by just under 2% by issuing $500 million in equity.
Hedge Fund Horrors: First Einhorn Has Worst Month Since 2008, Now Paulson Getting Redeemed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 15:21 -0500"The wealth management arm of Bank of America Merrill Lynch is liquidating its clients’ money from one of Paulson & Company’s funds and has put another fund under "heightened review,'" NY Times reports. As it turns out, this was not the year to be long Greece and Puerto Rico.
Frontrunning: August 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 06:32 -0500- Apple
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bond
- Bulgaria
- Carbon Emissions
- China
- Citadel
- Corruption
- Creditors
- Crude
- Daimler
- default
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- High Frequency Trading
- High Frequency Trading
- Hong Kong
- Ken Griffin
- LIBOR
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Natural Gas
- NBC
- Oaktree
- PIMCO
- Puerto Rico
- ratings
- RBS
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Tata
- Turkey
- UK Financial Investments
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
- Unhappy Voters Shake Up Presidential Race (WSJ)
- China stock exchanges step up crackdown on short-selling (Reuters)
- China Dethroned as World’s Most Liquid Stock Market After Curbs (BBG)
- Xiaomi retakes the smartphone lead in China as Apple slips (Engadget)
- Impact of EPA’s Emissions Rule on Industry to Vary (WSJ)
- Citadel’s Ken Griffin Leaves 2008 Tumble Far Behind (WSJ)
- Greece says expects bailout deal by Aug 18 (Reuters)
Trade Like A Market Wizard - An Interview With Mark Andrew Ritchie
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2015 13:45 -0500"...risk management is not another component... it is THE component of trading! Everyone goes broke because their trading size is wrong... Any fool can take a profit. It takes a lot of character, discipline and commitment to take losses and continue going – and that is the only way one can succeed. The lasting trader will always reduce trading size in order to continue trading and come back."





