China
The 10 Principles Of Bubbles Show Why The Whole Planet's On Central Planner "Crack"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 11:26 -0500Bubbles don’t correct - they burst! Sure, U.S. stocks might have climbed out of the August correction. But too many small- and mid-cap stocks are in the red to say "the coast is clear." And these growing divergences in the market are showing that we are very, very close to bursting.
US Stocks Give Up "China Is Fixed" Gains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 11:14 -0500Small Caps have been red most of the day but the major US equity indices clung valiantly to hopeful "China is fixed... and what about Jobs" gains (despite the recessionary print in wholesale data). But that is all over now... The S&P 500 and Dow have now broken down and turned red for the day...
RBS: "This Is Simply The Worst Week We Had In Recent History... After Too Much Policy Kool-aid"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 08:20 -0500This week is simply the worst we had in recent history for markets, RBS exclaims, the worst ever start to the year for The Dow, the worst since 1999 for S&P and the second-worst for credit since 2008. Worst still is, they think there’s more weakness ahead and that many fundamental risks will continue to haunt markets. Why? Simple! Investors drank too much policy kool-aid last year.
"The Least Important Payrolls Report In A While": What Wall Street Expects
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 08:08 -0500Now that the Fed has commenced its rate hike cycle, the jobs report suddenly takes on far less significance because only a massively "outlier" print will have an impact on Fed thinking, thinking which so far appears undented despite a raging manufacturing recession across the US. This means that the December jobs could be the "most important ever" only in retrospect.
Frontrunning: January 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 07:49 -0500- U.S. jobs market seen fairly healthy despite slowing economy (Reuters)
- China State Funds Said to Buy More Shares After Market Rout (BBG)
- Global Stocks Gain Some Respite (WSJ)
- U.S. Jobs Data Take on Added Importance With Markets in Turmoil (BBG)
- GOP Health Plans Are Works in Progress (WSJ)
- For economy czar of crisis-hit Venezuela, inflation 'does not exist' (Reuters)
Markets Spooked After China Central Bank Announces More Rate Liberalization, Yuan Internationalization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 07:25 -0500U.S. STOCK INDEX FUTURES PAIR GAINS SLIGHTLY AFTER CHINA'S CENTRAL BANK SAYS IT WILL FURTHER LIBERALIZE INTEREST RATES - RTRS
Translated: even more devaluation + even less intervention = bad for risk.
US Futures Lose Overnight Gains; Dax Back Under 10,000 As Chinese Market Bailout Fizzles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 06:56 -0500- Aussie
- Bond
- China
- Circuit Breakers
- Consumer Credit
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Fail
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iran
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- KIM
- Mexico
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- North Korea
- Price Action
- Primary Market
- recovery
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Time Warner
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Wholesale Inventories
- Yuan
The half-life of the latest "market supporting" intervention by the Chinese government: just about 12 hours.
Internal War Is Now On The Horizon For America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 22:30 -0500As our situation in this country becomes more precarious, there are going to be far more flashpoints than anyone will be able to keep track of. It is inevitable that a fight between corrupt elements of the U.S. government and regular people will erupt.If internationalists were to get their way fully with the world and future historians write their analysis from a globalist perspective of the defunct American nation, they will probably say simply that our collapse was brought about by our own incompetence - that we were our own worst enemy. Yes, they would treat America as a cliché. They will of course leave out the destructive influences and engineered disasters of elitists, that would just complicate the narrative. My hope is that we do not prove these future historians correct, and that they won’t have an opportunity to exist.
2016: Oil Limits & The End Of The Debt Supercycle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 21:30 -0500The problem of reaching limits in a finite world manifests itself in an unexpected way: slowing wage growth for non-elite workers. Lower wages mean that these workers become less able to afford the output of the system. These problems first lead to commodity oversupply and very low commodity prices. Eventually these problems lead to falling asset prices and widespread debt defaults. These problems are the opposite of what many expect, namely oil shortages and high prices. This strange situation exists because the economy is a networked system. Feedback loops in a networked system don’t necessarily work in the way people expect.
Russell Napier Explains How The Decline Of The Yuan Destroys Belief In Central Banking
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 20:28 -0500If you had not noticed, 2016 has begun with gold and the USD rising simultaneously. This is different and important. This is very positive for gold and very bad for the world...
Here We Go Again: Chinese Stocks Plunge, Give Up Early Gains Despite Yuan Fix Unchanged
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 20:23 -0500Update: *SHANGHAI COMPOSITE INDEX FALLS 2.04%(AFTER BEING UP 3.2%)
With all eyes on Chinese FX and equity markets, following the worst start to a year for US (and Chinese) stocks in history, PBOC decided (after 7 straight days of devaluation and 7% devaluation since August) to halt the run and increase Yuan fix by a paltry 0.01% to 6.5636 (notably below yesterday's 6.5939 CNY close). Offshore Yuan is strengthening and US equity markets are jumping. Chinese equity markets (now theoretically unhampered by their circuit-breaker panic switch) are far less impressed.
It's Official: Bitcoin Was The Top Performing Currency Of 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 20:00 -0500For most investors, the major story of 2015 was the expectation and eventual fulfillment of a rate hike, signalling the start of tightening monetary policy in the United States. This policy is divergent to those of other major central banks, and this has translated into considerable strength and momentum for the U.S. dollar. Despite this strength, the best performing currency in 2015 was not the dollar. In fact, the top currency of 2015 is likely to be considered the furthest thing from the greenback.
What China Has To Look Forward To When It Opens In A Few Hours
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 19:38 -0500
It's all up to China tonight.
Perfect Storm!?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 17:20 -0500One of the (many) fascinating things about this latest global financial crisis is that there’s no single catalyst. Unlike 2008 when the carnage could be traced back to US subprime housing, or 2000 when tech stocks crashed and pulled down everything else, this time around a whole bunch of seemingly-unrelated things are unraveling all at once.
Bob Janjuah Warns The Bubble Implosion Can't Be "Fixed" This Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2016 16:25 -0500Having correctly foreseen in September that "China's devaluations are not over yet" it appears Nomura's infamous 'bear' Bob Janjuah has also nailed The Fed's subsequent actions (hiking rates into a fundamentally weakening economy in a desperate bid to "convince markets that strong growth and inflation are on their way back"). In light of this, his latest note today should be worrisome to many as he warns the S&P 500 will trade down around 20% to 25% from current levels in H1, down to the 1500s and for dip-buyers, it's over: "I now feel even more certain that debt-driven asset bubble implosions cannot merely be 'fixed' with even more debt and another round of central bank-driven asset bubbles."


