Credit Suisse
Credit Suisse Warns On China: "Some Companies Are Having To Borrow To Pay Staff Salaries"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2015 22:20 -0500"Corporate balance sheet deterioration may well be a theme in 2016, raising market concerns, in our view. A mirror image of that is the rise in bank non- performing loans. Our contacts among the banks seem increasingly concerned about the NPL issue in 2016."
Brazil Faces Disastrous Downgrade Debacle: Here's What You Need To Know
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2015 17:00 -0500
Pains For Trains From Automobiles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2015 13:00 -0500With global freight costs collapsing, as China trade dries up, status-quo-hugging talking heads have point to America's car sales and picture some islandic isolation that means investors in US equities are immune. Well that little dream just burst. Rail freight carloads tumbled 5.1% in October, dramatically accelerating the 1.6% drop in Q3 as a strong dollar crimps exports, retailers whittle down excess inventory and energy investment stalls. Until recebtly, the one bright spot in rail traffic was auto shipments... but even that just plunged and is now at the seasonally weakest since 2008.
Frontrunning: December 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2015 07:34 -0500- Argus Research
- B+
- Barclays
- Canadian Dollar
- Carlyle
- CBOE
- China
- Comcast
- Copper
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- European Central Bank
- France
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hershey
- Housing Market
- Japan
- Morgan Stanley
- Nomura
- Omnicom
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Redstone
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- SPY
- Starwood
- Starwood Hotels
- Trichet
- Uranium
- Yen
- Yuan
- Anti-Trump Effort Launches Super PAC (WSJ)
- Muslims decry Trump's proposal to keep them out of US (AP)
- Debate Heats Up Over No-Fly List, Gun Sales (WSJ)
- OPEC Takes Down Oil Majors as Lower-for-Even-Longer Kicks In (BBG)
- Chinese Companies Are Trapped in IPO Logjam (WSJ)
- Republican Ted Cruz vaults into first place in new Iowa poll (Reuters)
Beware The "Massive Stop Loss" - JPM's Head Quant Warns This Unexpected Downside Catalyst Looms Next Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2015 18:39 -0500"There are $1.1 trillion of S&P 500 options expiring on Friday morning. $670Bn of these are puts, of which $215Bn are struck relatively close below the market level, between 1900 and 2050. At the time of the Fed announcement, these put options will essentially look like a massive stop loss order under the market. This important event falls at a peculiar time—less than 48 hours before the largest option expiry in many years. "
Amid FX Reserve Liquidation, These Are The Countries JP Morgan Says Are Most Vulnerable
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2015 18:32 -0500While EM sovereigns as a group may be in better shape now in terms of “original sin” (i.e borrowing heavily in foreign currencies) than they were during say, the Asian Currency Crisis, the confluence of factors outlined above means no one is truly “safe” in the current environment as moving from liquidation back to accumulation will entail a sharp reversal in commodity prices and a pickup in the pace of global growth and trade.
Apple "Faces Risk Of Inventory Correction": Three Channel Checks Confirm Deteriorating iPhone Sales
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2015 11:35 -0500One month ago, Credit Suisse confirmed what we had reported in the previous several weeks, namely that according to channel checks, iPhone supply chain orders had weakened recently adding that "in our view, the continued weak supply chain news could weigh on Apple shares for the next few weeks/quarters." The market did not like the news and sold AAPL stock only to promptly BTFD as it always has in the past 7 years: after all any transitory weakness is merely an opportunity to buy, right? Only this time the weakness may not be transitory, because as of this morning we now have not one but three updated channel checks all pointing to a substantial slowdown in AAPL's flagship product and core revenue generator, the iPhone.
What Polarized Politics Teaches Us About Stock Market Uncertainty
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2015 17:30 -0500It’s important to respect the power of econometric models. It’s important to work with econometric models. But we don’t care who you are... whether you’re the leader of the world’s largest central bank or you’re the CIO of an enormous pension fund or you’re the world’s most successful financial advisor... it’s a terrible mistake to trust econometric models. But we all do, because we’ve been convinced by modeling’s henchman, The Central Tendency.
Ben Bernanke's Employer Citadel Alleges That "Leveling The Playing Field" Will Actually Hurt Stock Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2015 14:53 -0500The market is now officially so broken, that the biggest HFT-player no longer even makes any sense.
The "Real Stuff" Economy Is Falling Apart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2015 11:00 -0500Can an economy thrive if it doesn’t make or move physical things? Intuitively the answer is no, because most of the services either maintain the status quo (like healthcare and restaurants) or (like houses) consume rather than build capital. The US, in short, is engaged in an experiment to see how long an economy can function with services growing and manufacturing contracting. As with so many of today’s monetary and fiscal experiments, no one knows when definitive results will come in. But the data so far aren’t encouraging.
Correlation May Not Equal Causation, But This Divergence Looks Like Bad News
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2015 19:30 -0500For about three weeks, beginning on August 11, just about all anyone wanted to talk about were EM FX reserves, and for good reason. But because the market has a short memory, the global EM FX reserve liquidation story has been largely forgotten even as commodity prices remain in the doldrums and even as a laundry list of idiosyncratic factors are still weighing on the world’s most important emerging economies from Brasilia to Ankara to Beijing to Kuala Lumpur.
Citi Turns Bearish On Stocks On "Richer And Richer" Markets, Sees 65% Recession Probability; Janet Yellen Disagrees
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2015 14:19 -0500"Given the surge back towards the all-time highs in the S&P 500, we think that the best might be over for US equities and that indices might range trade more in 2016. We have downgraded US equities to neutral. This takes our overall equity weighting down to neutral, in many respects an extension of what we’ve been doing for most of this year as richer and richer asset markets, against a global background of economic risks, have made us more cautious."
"Equities Peak 12-18 Months After A Peak In Margins; We Are Now 15 Months After The Peak In Margins"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2015 19:30 -0500"Normally, equities peak 12-18 months after a peak in margins and we are now c.15 months after the peak in margins."
The Five Reasons Why Credit Suisse Just Turned The Most Bearish On Stocks Since 2008
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2015 09:35 -0500Overnight, Credit Suisse became the latest bank to join Goldman, JPM and increasingly more banks in predicting that 2016 will be a year in which investors will want to rotate out of equities. Specifically, the second largest Swiss bank said that it is "we reduce our equity weightings to our most cautious strategic stance since 2008 and take our mid-2016 S&P 500 target down to 2,150, the same as our end-2016 target." Here are the five reasons why CS just looked at the mounting wall of worry... and began to worry.
Frontrunning: December 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2015 07:26 -0500- Global Stocks Edge Higher on Expected ECB Stimulus (WSJ)
- Moment of truth as Puerto Rico faces crucial debt payment (Reuters)
- Obama urges Turkey to reduce tensions with Russia, stresses support (Reuters)
- Russian Media Takes Aim at Turkey (WSJ)
- Support Grows for U.S. Commando Raids to Fight Islamic State (BBG)
- Yuan Drops as SDR Approval Seen Prompting PBOC to Reduce Support (BBG)


