• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Morgan Stanley

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Former Fed Member, And Guy Who Came Up With Idea To Sell Treasury Puts, Joins Morgan Stanley As Chief US Economist





Morgan Stanley continues to demonstrate just how badly it lags Goldman. While the vampire squid is mostly known for sending its employees to run such places as the US Treasury, the New York Fed and the ECB (in 2 short months), Morgan Stanley has to be content with the inverse, i.e. hiring former Fed apparatchicks, in this case former long-time Fed advisor Vince Reinhart, who among other things is best known for collaborating with Ben Bernanke on discovering that Operation Twist does not work, and, of course, proposing the currently overt Treasury manipulation operation (for those times when QE is not sufficient) which involves selling puts on Treasury futures (link).

 
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Morgan Stanley Releases The Definitive Gold Stocks Report





Everything you always wanted to know about the future of gold stocks and much more is now answered in this 79 page monster of a report just released by Morgan Stanley, which finally joins the crowd and goes megabullish on gold stocks, by estimating that "currently c.$1500/oz of value is accounted for in reserves in the ground – so, at a $1800-1900/oz gold price, this leaves $400-500/oz for stakeholders, of which shareholders come last (after debt servicing and tax/royalties). While this is a blunt tool, we do believe it provides a good illustration how the sector has historically discounted the spot gold price, but currently does not seem to believe that the current $1800/oz gold price will hold. Thus, we believe an opportunity exists to invest in reserves in the ground rather than bullion (ETF)." So for those who do not wish to chase bullion at record prices (although with currency collapse increasingly imminent, that is probably not a lot), here is MS' conclusion: "Broadly, on stock performance we would make the case for:  i) primarily, operating delivery; hence, which stocks look to offer value in their reserves through volume growth and cost reduction. ii) secondly, in the extremes of gold price movement, operating gearing can, but generally does not, supersede operating delivery; theoretically, higher operating gearing generally implies lower quality assets associated with difficult cost/volume control, hence our caution in looking at operating gearing in isolation from operating delivery and track record. iii) thirdly, valuation (but need to adjust for regional risk factors, by-product discount to rating, track-record and risk of delivery). Apparent valuation anomalies can rapidly be erased by big movements in the gold price or failure to deliver to operational expectations. Stocks screening favourably  on a balanced gold price outcome (and rated OW by Morgan Stanley analysts) include ABG, ABX, BVN, PMTL. While several of the growth stocks (RRS, KGC, GG) screen less well, delivery on the operating expectations would likely be positive stock drivers." Of course, as much as we like gold and its derivatives, Morgan Stanley's outright push is nothing short of an attempt to get investors to move away from physical into a stock certificate deliverable (and hence, "confiscatable") which is ultimately in the hands of the DTC: something, which, with the world on the edge of complete insolvency, we would hardly advocate.

 
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Full Presentation From Morgan Stanley's Ongoing "Global Equities - Thematic Bets" Call





Morgan Stanley is currently holding a call in which the firm's strategists, led by Adam Parker and Greg Peters, will be presenting their latest investment case for global equities. Sure enough, coming from Morgan Stanley the call will have a decidedly bullish tone to it, but maybe, just maybe, the firm will finally realize that as the 30 year "Great Moderation" winds down and reverts to its mean, there are other, less favorable outcomes on the horizon. Then again, this being Morgan Stanley, we doubt it. Regardless, the 52 page accompanying presentation is attached, and those who wish to dial in should just drop a line to their favorite Morgan Stanley snake oil salesman.

 
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Forget The Twist, Here Comes Operation Torque: Presenting Morgan Stanley's Complete Moral Hazard Profit Guide





While we often pick on Morgan Stanley's Jim Caron (the same guy who year after year after year keeps predicting the yield on the 10 year will soar, and not just soar, but soar for all the wrong reasons, such as bull steepening and what not), has just diametrically changed his tune, by bringing us, drumroll please, Operation Torque. To wit: "Policy makers in both the US and Europe get back to work in September, and this month will be rife with deliberations on stimulus and market support policies. In our view, a duration extension to the Fed's SOMA portfolio is an optimal policy tool to engender easing. This can initially be done through extending the duration of reinvestments from MBS and agency holdings but may ultimately culminate in selling shorter-duration USTs in its SOMA portfolio in exchange for buying longer duration assets (‘Operation Torque’, as we at Morgan Stanley have dubbed it)." Why 2 Years? Because as per the August 9 FOMC statement, we know that there will no rate hike for the next 2 Years, and hence no duration risk. Which means that the Fed can sell an infinite amount of paper into a mid-2013 horizon without worrying about demand destruction. And by doing so it will, as we have been predicting since May, expand the duration of its portfolio, in the process pushing investors into risky assets for the third time in as many years. But there is a twist...

 
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Morgan Stanley: "We Have Been Arguing For A Stronger 2H US Economy.. And We Are Capitulating"





And so the last true blue, and much ridiculed economics team, that of Morgan Stanley's David Greenlaw's and his merry Buryini-ruler clad automatons, has waved the white flag. Specifically, in an email sent out yestrday by the firms' overabundant and soon redundant salespeople, both institutional and retail, we read: "WE HAVE BEEN ARGUING FOR A STRONGER 2H US ECONOMY..AND WE ARE CAPITULATING..." The all caps comes from them lest someone accuses us of being overly dramatic.

 
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Morgan Stanley's Credit Team Joins The Bearish Call, Looks To Reduce Risk In Counter-Trend Rallies





Over the weekend, we presented the suddenly very pessimistic outlook by Morgan Stanley's equity strategist team which stated in no uncertain terms that it "assigns a higher probability to our bear case than bull case, preventing us from becoming increasingly optimistic" adding that it "continues to assign a higher probability to the bear case than the bull case, and believe the recent price action increases the probability of the bear case." Yesterday, the firm's Credit Strategy team joined the call for a bearish outcome, when in a conference call it stated its case for why its "bearish strategic view is based on long-term structural and valuation issues." Two key metrics watched by MS: i) The unsustainable DM credit super-cycle may be approaching a difficult dénouement, and ii) based on long-term P/E valuation measures, US and UK equities are still expensive. MS warns that "a larger correction in risk assets is likely if a recession occurs, more so for equities" a topic discussed by the equity strategy team over the weekend which believes that the probability of a recession has surged (and continues to be confirmed by leading indicators such as yesterday's Empire State Fed survey). Morgan Stanley's concluding advice to clients: "look to reduce risk in Developed Markets  in Counter-Trend rallies." Luckily, any time volume trickles to a halt, the counter-trend rally should present itself providing ample opportunities for selling into it.

 
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Morgan Stanley Gets Downright Apocalyptic





Listening to David Greenlaw and/or Jim Caron as they strike out again, and again, and again, with delusions of economic grandure over US GDP and some historic 2s10s bull steepener which is never, ever coming, one would be left with the impression that Morgan Stanley has inherited the title of most permabullish sell side advisory from Deutsche Bank's economics department. Nothing could be further from the truth. Like any other bank, MS has perfectly hedged its rosy outlook by spoonfeeding its retail clients with the rosy view, while whispering the apocalypse case to its institutional clients (judging by last week's pummeling in MS stock, there is not that many of them left). Below we present the view of MS' equity strategy team under Adam Parker, who gives not only a distribution range for his year end S&P target (1004-1425), but a matrix specifying the probability outcome of either case. Bottom line, "while there is 18% upside to the year-end bull case and 16% downside to the year-end bear case, we assign a higher probability to our bear case than bull case, preventing us from becoming increasingly optimistic." When even Morgan Stanley tells you (or rather the whale clients who are now more than happy to sell into every low volume, retail driven rally) there is little to smile about, it is high time to look for the exits.

 
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Morgan Stanley's ClientServ Is "Transitorily" Unavailable... Again





Update: aaaaand it's up. DJIA must be down only 300 now...

Without looking at the ticker we will assume that market selling has accelerated since the BAC call ended and the DJIA is down 400... Were we right?

 
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Morgan Stanley's ClientServ Is "Transitorily" Unavailable; Withdrawal Requests May Or May Not Have Surged





Update: it is now back online. Redemptions and liquidations shall proceed in an orderly, dignified manner please.

 
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Morgan Stanley Discloses $8.5 Billion In Europe Exposure, 8 Trading Day Losses, Lists Impacts Of US Downgrade On Market And Its Business





Some very interesting data points were disclosed in Morgan Stanley's just released 10Q. First, we learn that in the last quarter, the company which had "blow out" earnings, at least compared to expectations and Goldman, actually was not much to write home about by typical Wall Street standards, with a whopping 8 days of trading losses in Q2. Considering that most Wall Street firms had quarters in a row with no daily trading losses, this is, sadly, quite disappointing. Next, and more important, is that MS has disclosed it has a rather substantial $5 billion in gross exposure to the PIIGS, as well as another $3.5 billion in funding exposure to Europe. Considering that most European banks had already offloaded their PIIGS exposure, at least we now know who they were offloading risk to. Lastly, from the risk factors we read that a US downgrade will likley not be beneficial to Morgan Stanley or the stock market, to wit: "[a downgrade] could disrupt payment systems, money markets, long-term or short-term fixed income markets, foreign exchange markets, commodities markets and equity markets and adversely affect the cost and availability of funding and certain impacts, such as increased spreads in money market and other short term rates, have been experienced already as the market anticipated the downgrade. In addition, it could adversely affect our credit ratings, as well as those of our clients and/or counterparties and could require us to post additional collateral on loans collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities."

 
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Morgan Stanley Does The (Operation) Twist, Extolls The Virtues Of QE3





It was over two months ago that Zero Hedge first described why we though QE3 would ultimately appear in the form a reincarnation of Operation Twist first utilized by the Fed in the 1960s to prevent the gold exodus from the US into Europe (read more here and here), also known as Operation Twist 2. In essence what the Fed would do would be a curve patterning exercise in which the Fed would lower long-term rates by changing the average maturity of Fed holdings, in the process removing substantial duration from the markets, once again pushing investors into far more risky assets such as stocks (but certainly not gold: the CME will see to that). Today, Morgan Stanley's Jim Caron (who has yet to be right about one thing in his prior 3 year forecasts so take this with a grain of salt) explains why Morgan Stanley is a big supporter (read lobbying heavily on behalf of) of Operation Twist 2. Quote Caron: "As outlined in the recent congressional testimony, the Fed could consider several ways to ease financial conditions further. One of the options mentioned by Fed Chairman Bernanke was to provide explicit language to keep the fed funds rate and the Fed’s balance sheet unchanged for an extended period. Another approach would be to keep the balance sheet unchanged but increase the average maturity of its holdings. If this path is chosen, we believe that a significant amount of duration could be removed from the markets – to the effect of $90-150bn 10y equivalents which could lower 10y yields by 20-35bps. Let us explain." Explain away Jim.

 
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Morgan Stanley's Q3 Outlook On Gold, Silver, Rare Earths And Every Other Metal Under The Sun





Morgan Stanley has released its comprehensive quarterly metals outlook update for Q3, which while traditionally furiously wrong in its price targets for the assorted metals under consideration, represents one of the best reference materials for the underlying fundamentals behind each hard asset including base and precious metals, steel and bulk commodities, mined energy, rare earths, even such arcania as zircon and titanium dioxide. We suggest readers avoid the conclusion by Morgan Stanley which ultimately will be based on the firm's prop trading bias, and instead focus on the key supply/demand mechanics in any given product. For the sake of reference, we break down MS' outlook on gold, silver due to the special place these hold in the modern geo-political and voodoo economic discussions.

 
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A Day After GM Channel Stuffing Story Goes Mainstream, Here Comes Morgan Stanley To The Rescue With Its "Top US Auto Pick"





It was only yesterday when we observed that the story of GM's relentless channel stuffing has now gone mainstream. Sure enough, a few hours later, here is Morgan Stanley with a stick save so pathetic it does not even deserve commentary.

 
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PIMCO: +$50 Million; Morgan Stanley: -$50 Million





It just has not been Morgan Stanley's year: first the bank's prop desk got decimated by the massive tightening in MBIA CDS (previously discussed here), and then, as noted last week, the firm's rates desk got creamed by a massively wrong bet on 30s - 5s TIPS breakevens (courtesy of another ex-master of the universe who realized the hard way that things are not quite as profitable when you move away from being God's right hand guy). We previously broke down the details of the trade, and the only open question was: qui bonoed? Courtesy of the WSJ we can now close the file on that one. The firm, which as so often happens to be the case, that took Morgan Stanley to the cleaners is the one true rates behemoth, PIMCO, which sooner or later, always gets it pay day. Bottom line: "Pimco made about $50 million from its trade over several months." Perhaps prop trading really should be banned to protect banks, if not from their stupidity, then certainly from their hubris.

 
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Former Goldman Trader Blows Up Morgan Stanley Rates Desk With Breakevens Bet Gone Horribly Wrong





About a year ago, Goldman Sachs experienced an unprecedented P&L wipe out after in Q2 it bet on a decline in volatility, only to be caught offguard by the first Greek bailout which in turn cost the firm's prop desk hundreds of millions in losses. Now, about a year later, it is again the same sellside hubris and pretty much the same players that make a repeat appearance, after Bloomberg just disclosed that a very wrong way bet on 5 and 30 year TIPS breakevens has cost the interest-rates trading group "at least tens of millions of dollars." And while Jim Caron's traditionally wrong rates call has up to now only cost his clients money, this time it is his own trading desk that may be left collecting the shrapnel. But topping off the irony is that it is once again an ex-Goldmanite who is responsible for the actual trade. Per Bloomberg, "The interest-rate group is run by Glenn Hadden, who Morgan Stanley hired from New York-based Goldman Sachs in January." News of the loss made their way through the trading community earlier and was manifested in the weakness of the "hedge fund" banks: the Goldmans, the JPMs and, of course, the Morgan Stanleys of the world. As a result, MS is now forced to unwind the trade at a major loss (at least for the current quarter, we have to ask John Paulson if the trade is profitable on a cost basis), which will likely have substantial repercussions for the short and long breakeven curve for days, if not weeks.

 
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