China
Frontrunning: January 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 07:22 -0500- Hedge Funds Try to Profit From Greece as Banks Face Losses (Bloomberg)
- Spain Doubles Target in Debt Auction, Yields Down (Reuters)
- Italy 1-Year Debt Costs More Than Halve at Auction (Reuters)
- Obama to Propose Tax Breaks to Get Jobs (WSJ)
- GOP Seeks to Pass Keystone Pipeline Without Obama (Reuters)
- Debt Downgrades to Rise ‘Substantially’ in 2012, Moody’s Says (Bloomberg)
- Petroplus wins last-minute reprieve (FT)
- Geithner gets China snub on Iranian oil as Japan plans cut (Bloomberg)
- Fed officials split over easing as they prepare interest rate forecasts (Bloomberg)
- Draft eurozone treaty pleases UK (FT)
- Premier Wen looks at the big picture (China Daily)
- US Foreclosure Filings Hit 4-Year Low in 2011 (Reuters)
Guest Post: India - Land of Energy Opportunity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 00:29 -0500Quick, what country is the economic engine that will power world growth? If you answered "China," you're far from alone. But there's another country that deserves as much attention and better yet, is much friendlier to investment: India, home to 1.2 billion people. To electrify all those houses, power the industries that keep all those people employed, and fuel the vehicles that more and more Indians own, India's energy needs are shooting skyward. First question to consider: what kind of energy does India need? Just about every kind, really. India encompasses significant reserves of coal, oil, and gas, but each year it has to import more and more to meet its rapidly rising demand. Domestic production increases have been hampered by land disputes, interminably slow permitting, and government-regulated pricing mechanisms that discourage development. That's got to change if India wants to keep up, and its government knows it. Domestic supplies always come with better reliability, better prices, and other benefits that we can shorten into two words: energy security. So India is reaching out to foreign oil majors, quietly setting up deals to exchange stakes in giant, underexplored oil and gas fields for the technical expertise it needs to best develop these resources. These partnerships are working into place slowly. However, they show Delhi is serious about the welcome mat it rolled out in 2000, when it passed a policy that allows foreign companies to own 100% of any oil and gas assets they may want to acquire for exploration and development. And what we really like is that explorers are welcome in a democratic and reasonably friendly country that harbors none of the risk of asset nationalization that clings to other underexplored locales, like Venezuela.
When The White House Touts Falling Wages
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/11/2012 21:34 -0500White House report claims credit for making America competitive with low-wage countries. But it wasn’t meant for the rank and file....
China Enters The Danger Zone, SocGen Presents The Four Critical Themes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 20:37 -0500
As both anecdotal, local and hard evidence of China's slowing (and potential hard landing) arrive day after day, it is clear that China's two main pillars of strength (drivers of growth), construction and exports, are weakening. As Societe Generale's Cross Asset Research group points out, China is entering the danger zone and warns that given China's local government debt burden and large ongoing deficits, a large-scale stimulus plan similar to 2008 is very unlikely, especially given a belief that Beijing has lost some control of monetary policy to the shadow banking system. In a comprehensive presentation, the French bank identifies four critical themes which provide significant stress (and opportunity): China's economic rebalancing efforts, a rapidly aging population and healthcare costs, wage inflation and concomitant automation, and pollution and energy efficiency. Their trade preferences bias to the benefits and costs of these themes being short infrastructure/mining names and long automation/energy efficiency names.
They detail their concerns about the Chinese economic outlook (weakening exports, housing bubble about to burst, local government's debt burden, and large shadow banking system), and show that China has no choice but to transition to a more consumption-driven economy leading to waning growth for infrastructure-related capital goods and greater demand for consumer-related manufacturing. Overall they see a hard-landing becoming more likely.
Guest Post: Iran: Oh, No; Not Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 17:06 -0500
In each of the years 2008, 2009, and 2010, significant worries emerged that Western nations might attack Iran. Here again in 2012, similar concerns are once again at the surface. Why revisit this topic again? Simply because if actions against Iran trigger a shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, through which 40% of the world's daily sea-borne oil passes, oil prices will spike, the world's teetering economy will slump, and the arrival of the next financial emergency will be hastened. Even if the strait remains open but Iran is blocked from being an oil exporter for a period of time, it bears mentioning that Iran is the third largest exporter of oil in the world after Saudi Arabia and Russia. Once again, I am deeply confused as to the timing of the perception of an Iranian threat, right now at this critical moment of economic weakness. The very last thing the world economies need is a vastly increased price for oil, which is precisely what a war with Iran will deliver. Let me back up. The US has already committed acts of war against Iran, though no formal declaration of war has yet been made. At least if Iran had violated US airspace with stealth drones and then signed into law the equivalent of the recent US bill that will freeze any and all financial institutions that deal with Iran out of US financial markets, we could be quite confident that these would be perceived as acts of war against the US by Iran. And rightly so.
David Rosenberg Explains What (If Anything) The Bulls Are Seeing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 15:56 -0500While we have long asserted that any attempt to be bullish this market (and economy) by necessity should at least involve the thought experiment of eliminating such pro forma crutches as trillions in excess liquidity from the Fed, not to mention direct and indirect intervention by the central planners in virtually all asset classes, which in turn drives frequent periods of brief decoupling between various geographies and asset classes (which always converge) and thus economic performance (because as Bernanke will tell you gladly, the economy is the market), an exercise which would expose a hollow facade, a broken market and an economy in shambles, in never hurts to ask just what, if anything, do the bulls "see" and how do they spin a convincing case that attempts to sucker in others into the great ponzi either voluntarily, or like in China, at gun point. Alas, our imagination is lacking for an exercise such as this, but luckily David Rosenberg has dedicated his entire letter to clients from this morning precisely to answer this question. So for anyone who is wondering just what it is that those who have supposedly "climbed the wall of worry" see, here is your answer.
China's Debt Maturity Problem Has Arrived
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 11:12 -0500
We have discussed the seemingly irrepressible demand to lend companies money (for the implicit FX trade) in Dim Sum bond format a number of times and in the last few weeks yields on these bonds have risen further as the reality of a notable contraction in mainland credit conditions (along with a rationalization of the lax restrictions within the bonds themselves) starts to hit investors. Overnight, Bloomberg reports that Shandong Helon, a Chinese fiber maker and the first to lose its investment-grade rating (fallen angel), missed a 397mm Yuan loan payment, only serving to further stoke fears of the knock-on effects of a slowing Chinese economy dragged lower by global growth fears (except for the US which is off in faerie land), as ratings downgrades surged last year. Incredibly, no Chinese company has defaulted on its domestic debt since the country's central bank started regulating the market in 1997, according to Moody's but as Bloomberg notes, there is some 2 trillion yuan of bank facilities set to mature in 2012, compared to 33 billion yuan of bonds - leaving a very crowded-out market of shorter-dated debt rolls soaking up what little credit is willingly available. With Dim-Sum bond yields (based on our index of sizable issues) up over 30% (80bps) from early September and European-based USD strength slowing any CNY-FX decay these holders hoped for, we agree with Gao Zhanjan (of Citic Securities), via Bloomberg, that "there will slowly be more substantive defaults in the future".
FoxConn Workers Threaten With Mass Suicide If Working Conditions Aren't Fixed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 10:05 -0500
FoxConn, which at last count had well over 1 million workers and rising, appears to have had enough of being the global electronic gadget sweatshop, and as the Telegraph reports, saw its workers threaten with mass suicides unless working conditions are not improved. "Around 150 Chinese workers at Foxconn, the world's largest electronics manufacturer, threatened to commit suicide by leaping from their factory roof in protest at their working conditions. The workers were eventually coaxed down after two days on top of their three-floor plant in Wuhan by Foxconn managers and local Chinese Communist party officials." Does this mean that in the latest Apple prospectus there will be a Risk Factor which says: "Our profit margins may be severely impaired if our contracted work force decides to proceed with mass self-induced genocide." We will find out, but if anyone needed a loud and clear warning that the record profitability of high margin electronics producers is about to go down, this is it.
China's Gold Imports From Hong Kong Surge to Highest Ever? - PBOC Buying?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 08:39 -0500The run into Chinese Lunar New Year has again seen higher than expected Chinese demand for gold and China's voracious appetite for gold is surprising even analysts who are positive about gold. As Chinese people's disposable incomes gain and concerns grow over inflation and equity and property markets, Chinese consumers and investors are turning to gold as a long term investment hedge. There is informed speculation that commercial Chinese banks may have taken advantage of the recent price dip to build stocks of coins and bars and accumulate bullion. China's demand for physical gold bullion has rocketed past India with the country now overtaking India in the third quarter as the largest gold jewellery market according to the World Gold Council. There is also informed speculation that some of the buying was from the People's Bank of China with one analyst telling Bloomberg that “there is always the possibility that some purchases were made by the central bank.”
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: January 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 08:10 -0500Heading into the North American open, European equity futures are trading lower, with comments from Fitch’s Riley, who suggested that the ECB must do more to prevent cataclysmic EURO collapse, causing the most recent bout of risk averse sentiment. As a result, major FX pairs are trading lower, with EUR/USD testing 1.2700, while GBP/USD fell through 1.5400 level. Looking elsewhere, apart from being buoyed by Fitch comments, German Bunds benefited from a well received German Bobl auction. Of note, European bond yield spreads are predominantly tighter for the time being, with analysts noting buying of Spanish and Italian paper by domestic and real money account names. Finally, there is little in terms of macro-economic data and instead the attention will be on the publication of various EU related economic outlooks and the US Treasury is set to sell USD 21bln in 10-y notes.
Frontrunning: January 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2012 07:30 -0500- Apple
- Bain
- Bank of New York
- China
- Citibank
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Creditors
- Fannie Mae
- FBI
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- India
- Iran
- Italy
- New York State
- New York Stock Exchange
- News Corp
- Nomination
- Nomura
- NYSE Euronext
- Private Equity
- Recession
- Reuters
- Swiss National Bank
- Trade Balance
- Transparency
- Treasury Department
- Europe’s $39T Pension Threat Grows as Economy Sputters (Bloomberg)
- Monti Warns of Italy Protests as He Meets Merkel (Bloomberg)
- Bernanke Doubling Down on Housing Bet Asks Government to Help: Mortgages (Bloomberg)
- Europe Banks Resist Draghi Bid to Avoid Crunch by Hoarding Cash (Bloomberg)
- Europe Fears Rising Greek Cost (WSJ)
- ECB’s Nowotny Sees Risk of Mild Recession in Euro Region (Bloomberg)
- Republican Senators Criticize Fed Recommendations on Housing (Bloomberg)
- Spanish Banks Try to Build Their Way Out of Home Glut (WSJ)
- Europe Stocks Fluctuate After German Auction (Bloomberg)
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 01/11/2012 05:36 -0500- Aussie
- Australia
- Australian Dollar
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bloomberg News
- Borrowing Costs
- China
- Citigroup
- Cleveland Fed
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- Ikea
- India
- Investment Grade
- Iran
- Italy
- Japan
- John Williams
- Market Sentiment
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- Rating Agency
- ratings
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- San Francisco Fed
- Standard Chartered
- Swiss National Bank
- Timothy Geithner
- Unemployment
- Vacant Homes
- Vikram Pandit
- Wall Street Journal
- Wen Jiabao
All you need to read.
Germany’s Export Debacle
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/10/2012 21:23 -0500The economic superstar, with unemployment at a 20-year low and exports at an all-time high, produces 34% of the Eurozone’s GDP—and it smacked into a wall.
How Inferior American Education Caused The Credit/Real Estate/Sovereign Debt Bubbles & Why It's Preventing True Recovery Pt 2
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/10/2012 10:33 -0500Ask many people lower on the socio-economic ladder what money is for, you frequently get in response “to buy things” -a mentality leading a circular lack of understanding -leading to a lack of money itself. Capital - or more simply, money - is a proxy for labor.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: January 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/10/2012 07:59 -0500Markets are moving positively across the board today following comments from Fitch, dampening speculation that France may be downgraded from its Triple A status. Fitch’s Parker commented that he does not expect to see France downgraded at all throughout 2012. However he added that there are continuing pressures for France from national banks and EFSF liabilities, Parker also reinforced German confidence stating that Germany’s Triple A rating is safe. Markets were also experiencing upwards pressure from strong French manufacturing data performing above expectations and successful Austrian auctions today, tightening the spread between France and Austria on 10-year bunds.






