REITs
Guest Post: From Shirakawa To Kuroda: The Regime Change Explained
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/21/2013 13:13 -0500
The main take away from events in Japan is that the BOJ shifted from a tactic of interventions (under former Governor Masaaki Shirakawa) to one of monetary policy (under current Governor Haruhiko Kuroda) . What strikes us is that the monetary policy is precisely to... well, destroy their money and in the process any chance of having a monetary policy. In our view, it was exactly because the Fed’s (undisclosed) intention was to engage in never ending Quantitative Easing, that Japan was forced to implement the policy undertaken by Kuroda. Coordination with the Fed was impossible. With Mr. Kuroda’s policy, we now have the BOJ with a balance sheet objective, the Fed with a labour market objective (or so they want us to believe), the European Central Bank with a financial system stability objective (or a Target 2 balance objective) and the People’s Bank of China (and the Bank of Canada) with soft-landing objective. It is clear that any global coordination in monetary policy is completely unfeasible. The only thing central banks are left to coordinate is the suppression of gold.
When Safe Havens Become Bubbles In Disguise
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 04/20/2013 07:52 -0500Many investors are now buying yield with little regard to the price that they're paying. It's a dangerous game that's not going to end well.
Frontrunning: April 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/19/2013 06:59 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bank Failures
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bob Diamond
- Boeing
- Capital One
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- E-Trade
- General Electric
- Global Economy
- GOOG
- Ireland
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- Merrill
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- New York Stock Exchange
- Newspaper
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- REITs
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Six Flags
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
- Police Searching for 19-Year-Old Boston Bombing Suspect (BBG)
- Mayhem Erupts in Boston After MIT Campus Officer Slain (BBG)
- Elvis Impersonator Accused of Ricin Letters Sowing Fear (BBG)
- Blackstone Pulls Out of Dell Bid on Rapidly Falling PC Sales (BBG)
- Before Texas plant exploded: What did regulators know? (Reuters)
- Aso Says Japan Policy Unopposed at G-20 Meeting as Yen Falls (BBG)
- Bipartisan pair target $2.5tn US savings (FT)
- Plan for new Cyprus vote casts uncertainty on bailout (Cyprus Mail)
- Ireland picks through debtors’ lifestyles (FT)
Protecting Yourself From Japanese Insanity
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 04/06/2013 15:33 -0500There's never been coordinated global money printing of the scale of today and it's likely to end badly. Here's how you can protect your investment portoflios from what's to come.
Protecting Yourself From Japanese Insanity
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 04/06/2013 11:00 -0500There's never been coordinated global money printing of the scale of today. It will end badly and investors need to prepare accordingly.
Japan Has Shown Us the Way To Our Own Monetary Disaster
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 04/04/2013 10:58 -0500We all know how this will end: with higher inflation/ costs of living and now very likely with a market crash. Every bubble the Fed has blown has resulted in disaster. This time will be no different.
BoJ Unveils 'Shock-And-Awe' Quantitative-Qualitative Easing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2013 00:08 -0500
As Citi's Todd Elmer notes, today's BoJ outcome looks far closer to 'shock and awe' than disappointment. It appears the BoJ's actions may speak as loud as their words for now - JPY is weakening and the Nikkei is rallying after Kuroda's last shot at a first impression appeared to beat expectations (covering for disappointing macro data - despite six months of jawboning and a 20% devaluation). Expectations, though tough to extract given the range of possible actions, appeared centered on extending maturities of bond purchases, increasing the size (median expectations of around JPY5.2tn per month or 50% higher than in Q1), bringing forward the open-ended nature of the program, and increasing scope to foreign bonds and REITs. In his effort to do "whatever it takes", the BoJ is upping asset purchases, extending the maturity of purchases and merging its asset purchase program; increasing the size to JPY7tn and buy securities out to 40 years. Though no mention of foreign bond-buying was made, and increase in ETFs and REITs is included. They have given themselves a two-year window to achieve the 2% inflation goal - paging Kyle Bass - and ironically, as the news broke Tokyo was hit by a significant earthquake.
Quantitative Easing, Cyprus and Housing
Submitted by rcwhalen on 03/26/2013 14:50 -0500Events in Cyprus stem from precisely the same source as the surge in US home prices, namely monetary expansion by the Fed.
The Day after Cyprus
Submitted by Marc To Market on 03/26/2013 06:04 -0500Calmer markets today, but European officials are finding it hard to put the cat back in the bag.
Why Are Asia's Markets Trailing The World?
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 03/16/2013 11:00 -0500Asia has badly lagged U.S. and European stock markets this year and over the past 12 months. We explain why it's happened and why it may continue.
Bank Of Japan May Buy Derivatives Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/11/2013 17:17 -0500Because having legal authority to buy corporate bonds, ETFs and REITs, in addition to everything else the Fed now buys, is apparently not enough to crush, mangle and suicide its currency, the BOJ is now considering adding yet another "asset" to its cocktail of eligible securities for purchase: those which Buffett once declared weapons of mass financial destruction - derivatives.
Will Japan's "Attempted" Reflation Succeed And Will It Spill Over Into Full-Fledged Currency War?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/07/2013 21:36 -0500Yesterday we presented a simplistic analysis of why for Japan "This Time Won't Be Different", a preliminary observation so far validated by the just announced Japanese December current account deficit which was not only nearly double the expected 144.2 billion yen, printing at some 264.1 billion yen, but was only the first back-to-back monthly current account deficit since 1985. But perhaps we are wrong and this time Abe will succeed where he, and so many others, have failed before. And, as is now widely understood, perhaps Japan will succeed in finally launching the necessary and sufficient currency war that would be part and parcel of Japans great reflation, as even various G-8 members have recently acknowledged. The question is will it, and when? One attempt at an answer comes from the fine folks at Bienville Capital who have compiled the definitive pros and cons presentation on what Japan must do, and how it will play out, at least if all goes according to plan.
Guest Post: The Next Secular Bull Market Is Still A Few Years Away
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/06/2013 20:35 -0500
There have been several articles as of late discussing that the next great secular bull market has arrived. However, the reality is that this cycle is currently unlike anything that we have potentially witnessed in the past. With massive central bank interventions, artificially suppressed interest rates, sub-par economic growth, high unemployment and elevated stock market prices it is likely that the current secular bear market may be longer than the historical average. No matter how you slice the data - the simple fact is that we are still years away from the end of the current secular bear market. The mistake that analysts, economists and the media continue to make is that the current ebbs and flows of the economy are part of a natural, and organic, economic cycle. If this was the case then there would be no need for continued injections of liquidity into the system in an ongoing attempt to artificially suppress interest rates, boost housing or inflate asset markets. From market-to-GDP ratios, cyclical P/Es, misconstrued earnings yields, and the analogs to previous Fed-blow bubbles, we appear near levels more consistent with cyclical bull market peaks rather than where secular bear markets have ended.
Deep Dive: Financial Repression Reconsidered
Submitted by Marc To Market on 01/17/2013 08:20 -0500- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Credit Crisis
- Creditors
- default
- Federal Reserve
- HIGHER UNEMPLOYMENT
- Japan
- Lehman
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- national security
- Nominal GDP
- None
- Paul Volcker
- PIMCO
- Quantitative Easing
- Real estate
- REITs
- Swiss National Bank
- Switzerland
- The Visible Hand
- Unemployment
In this piece, I re-examine what many economists call "financial repression" and I find it to be sorely lacking as a description of what is happening. I also look at a related concern about the loss of central bank independence. Color me skeptical.
A Hard Landing In China Part 2 - Rest Of The World Impact
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2013 22:17 -0500
Following on from our earlier discussion of how a Chinese hard landing would evolve, SocGen now examines how a Chinese hard landing would impact the global economy. They see the contagion in several ways: mechanically (since China is part of the global economy) and through trade, financial and market channels. Mechanically, a slump in Chinese GDP growth to just 3% would cut our global GDP growth forecast by 0.6pp. Add to that the channels of transmission to the global economy, and our expectation is that a Chinese hard landing would result in 1.5pp being slashed from global GDP growth in the first year.







