China
Middle-East Opens Weak: Dubai Stocks Slump To 2-Year Lows As Financials Tumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2015 02:06 -0500Following Friday's further freefall in crude oil prices, The Middle East is opening down notably. Abu Dhabi, Saudi, and Kuwait are lower; Israel is weak and UAE and Qatar are tumbling, but Dubai is worst for now. Dubai is down for the 6th day in a row (dropping over 3% - the most in a month) extending the opening losses to 2-year lows. The 11% drop in the last 6 days is the largest since the post-China-devaluation global stock collapse. Leading the losses are financial and property firms.
Emerging Market Vulnerability - The Most Likely For Disruption From Fed Liftoff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 21:25 -0500
The build-up in credit or leverage in many Emerging Market economies has been an important focus for EM investors given historical episodes of credit crunches and subsequent growth slowdowns. While broadly speaking, EM stocks began to drastically underperform DM stocks at the start of QE3, Goldman summarizes in a heat map, the EM nations with greatest potential for the upcoming Fed liftoff to cause a major disruption.
China's Gold Army
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 19:50 -0500
Meet 'The Gold Armed Police' - China's special army unit dedicated to acquiring and protecting the nation's precious metals.
Austria Proudly Shows Off The 15 Tons Of Gold It Repatriated From London
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 18:13 -0500
President Obama Explains How He Just 'Saved' The World From Its Greatest Threat - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 17:20 -0500
"Mission Accomplished?" Amid failure after failure for President Obama's 'legacy' policies, Americans can rest assured that the "historic" signing of today's climate accord will be spun in its most positive, "see, I saved the world from its greatest threat" awesomeness, despite, as we detailed earlier, the utter farce of it all.
World Leaders Just Agreed To A "Historic" Climate Accord... Which Is Non-Binding And Has No Enforcement Language
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 14:58 -0500
Great news! The "greatest threat to future generations of the world" has apparently been solved. World leaders Saturday adopted an historic international climate accord in Paris, the first-ever agreement to commit almost every country to fight climate change. However, as we knew all along and just got confirmation, the 31-page pact does not have binding language or a mechanism to force countries to live up to the promises to cut greenhouse gases.
Market Panics As "China's Warren Buffett" Detained In "Richter Scale 9 Event"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 14:00 -0500China’s sweeping crackdown on sellers, “manipulators”, frontrunners, financial journalists and anyone else “suspected” of acting in such a way as to sow fear and uncertainty in the wake of the dramatic meltdown in Chinese equities that unfolded over the summer has ensnared money managers, high profile executives, and government officials alike. Earlier this week, it reached a crescendo with the disappearance of Guo Guangchang, known to some as “China’s Warren Buffett. We now have a bit more in the way of color regarding Guo’s detention and sure enough, he’s being “held in connection with an investigation.”
Morons At The Precipice
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 13:25 -0500Seven years of zero rates, massive monetary inflation and incessant market backstopping have desensitized and anesthetized. Rational thought ultimately succumbed to "perpetual money machine" quackery. And now all of this greatly increases vulnerability to destabilizing market dislocations, as senses are restored and nerves awakened. "A lot of this looks like late 2007 or early 2008," warns one manager, but today, market mispricing is systemic and global – virtually all securities classes at home and abroad.
Visualizing The World's "Hot" Money
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 21:30 -0500Every year, roughly $1 trillion flows illegally out of developing and emerging economies due to crime, corruption, and tax evasion. This amount is more than these countries receive in foreign direct investment and foreign aid combined. This week, a new report was released that highlights the latest data available on this “hot” money. How does this “hot” money leave these countries? Global Financial Integrity has calculated that 83% of illicit financial flows are due to what it calls “trade misinvoicing”.
Bitcoin Breaks Out Higher After China Announces Crackdown On UnionPay POS Devices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 20:30 -0500When we first detailed the link between a devaluing currency, increasing restrictions on outflows of China capital, and Bitcoin, the virtual currency soared (driven by Chinese flows, just as predicted). The last few days, as China has once again started devaluing its currency, authorities once again moved to tighten capital outflows - this time through caps on credit-card withdrawals (as warned here) - and sure enough, Bitcoin has been soaring recently. Specifically, a nationwide crackdown on illegal UnionPay point-of-sale devices, has sparked capital flight (on heavy volume) through the vurtual currrency.
Bank of America: "Sadly, It Took World War II..."
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 19:28 -0500"A flip to fiscal stimulus is the most likely catalyst for a Great Rotation out of “deflation plays” into “inflation plays”, undoubtedly the biggest investment decision of 2016. Sadly it took the New Deal and WW2 to end the dominance of “growth” over “value” in the 1930s."
3 Signs We've Reached 'The Top' In The Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 19:00 -0500Duh. It was so obvious looking back. This is not a consequence-free environment... it’s time to find safety.
Weekend Reading: Risk - That Is All
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 16:30 -0500While the world patiently waits for Janet Yellen to raise interest rates this month, the markets have been unable to decide as of yet whether such an event is good or bad thing.
This Is How America Has Changed Since The Last Fed Rate Hike
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 15:12 -0500Here is the biggest difference: back then total debt/GDP was 61%. Now, it is 104%, with the total US debt just now shy of $19 trillion.



