Repo Market
Nothing "Schizophrenic" About Today's Abysmal 5 Year Auction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 13:18 -0500We were fully expecting not only a tail, but a whopping tail in today's weak market. And that is precisely what we got when moments after we learned that the When Issued was trading at 1.774% before the 1pm announcement, the 5 Year printed at 1.78%, a tail of 1.1 bps, a mirror image of yesterday's squeeze into the auction!
Repo Experts Stumped: How Could Fed Hike Without Draining ANY Liquidity: "This Is A Market By Decree"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2015 12:04 -0500"The Fed didn't really drain any liquidity yesterday. They moved the IOER up to .50%, moved the RRP rate up to .25%, and the RRP volume came in at $105 billion, only $3 billion more than the day before. Where was the draining? But interest rates moved up anyway to reflect the tightening, without any fundamental change. Basically, the Fed decreed a rate tightening and the market moved rates higher.... I wonder how many economic interest rate models include "by decree" as a factor?"
In First Post-Hike Reverse Repo, Fed Removes $105Bn Liquidity From 49 Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2015 13:35 -0500In what appears to be an orderly process, The NY Fed's first Reverse Repo operation since The FOMC 'raised' rates released $105.185 billion of Treasury collateral to 49 banks at a rate 25bps, draining the same amount of system liquidity. This is being greeted as good news by many as no major disprutions appear to have occurred... aside from, of course, a 6bps plunge in long-end bond yields, 250 point drop in The Dow, and notable weakness in high-yield bonds. While some had feared up to $1 trillion would need to be withdrawn to achieve The Fed's goals, the size of this initial RRP suggests there is considerably less excess liquidty in the system than many would believe... indicating a notably more fragile system than we are being led to believe.
Ever Greater Distortions Hint At Rising Crash Probabilities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2015 08:41 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of New York
- Barclays
- Bear Market
- BIS
- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Counterparties
- default
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- High Yield
- Investment Grade
- Japan
- Market Breadth
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Price Action
- Reality
- Repo Market
- Volatility
Government interference by both central banks and regulators (the latter are desperately fighting the “last crisis”, bolting the barn door long after the horse has escaped, thereby putting into place the preconditions for the next crisis) has created an ever more fragile situation in both the global economy and the financial markets. As the below charts and data show, price distortions and dislocations have been moving from one market segment to the next and they keep growing, which indicates to us that there is considerable danger that a really big dislocation will eventually happen.
BIS Warns The Fed Rate Hike May Unleash The Biggest Dollar Margin Call In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2015 22:30 -0500"While funding continued to be available, such a large negative basis indicates potential market dislocations. And this may call into question how smoothly US dollar funding conditions will adjust in the event of an increase in US onshore interest rates. Similar pricing anomalies have also emerged in interest rate swap markets recently, raising related concerns."
Why The Euro Didn't Drop (Despite Payrolls 'All Clear' For Fed)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2015 12:42 -0500The positive US payrolls report has sent December rate hike odds up to around 80% and along with the 'all clear' from Hilsy, one would expect relative 'strong dollar' flows front-running the divergent policy directions about to be undertaken by The Fed. However, EURUSD continues to rise this morning... here's why... (until Draghi puts everyone straight)
Why The Fed Has To Raise Rates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2015 11:47 -0500Whether or not the Fed actually manages to raise rates in the real world is less important than maintaining USD hegemony. No empire has ever prospered or endured by weakening its currency.
"But It's Just A 0.25% Rate Hike, What's The Big Deal?" - Here Is The Stunning Answer
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2015 23:59 -0500"QE2 moved Repo rates, on average, 2.7 basis points for every $100B in QE. So, one very rough estimate moved GC 8 basis points and the other 2.7 basis points per hundred billion. In order to move GC 25 basis points higher, in a very rough estimate, the Fed needs to drain between $310B and $800B in liquidity."
Global Bond Markets: Where Did All the Liquidity Go?
Submitted by GoldCore on 11/24/2015 09:19 -0500The world is awash with debt. With central banks increasing their balance sheets through quantitative easing, simultaneously pushing down interest rates and taking huge chunks of the market out of circulation, investors have had to stray beyond developed market government bonds in search of yield.
What A Negative Swap Spread Really Means (Spoiler Alert: Nothing Good)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2015 14:00 -0500Swap spreads recently took a nosedive and are once again trading at negative levels, even for shorter maturities. This market perversion suggest that Wall Street is a safer counterpart than the very institution that underwrites the whole fractional reserve fraud in the first place. To price in a higher risk premium on the US government than on US banks is a contradiction in terms so there need to be another explanation behind this puzzling market phenomenon... There is, and you're not going to like it.
Overstock Holds 3 Months Of Food, $10 Million In Gold For Employees In Preparation For The Next Collapse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/25/2015 17:49 -0500"What do we do as a business so that we would be prepared when the next crash happens. One thing that we do that is fairly unique: we have about $10 million in gold, mostly the small button-sized coins, that we keep outside of the banking system. We expect that when there is a financial crisis there will be a banking holiday. I don't know if it will be 2 days, or 2 weeks, or 2 months. We also happen to have three months of food supply for every employee that we can live on."
Bernanke Says Economy Needs To Crash Periodically So We Can Be Sure We're Pushing It Hard Enough
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/23/2015 09:04 -0500"My mentor, Dale Jorgenson [of Harvard], used to say — and Larry Summers used to say this, too — that, ‘If you never miss a plane, you’re spending too much time in airports.’ If you absolutely rule out any possibility of any kind of financial crisis, then probably you’re reducing risk too much, in terms of the growth and innovation in the economy.”
Peak Debt, Peak Doubt, & Peak Double-Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/20/2015 07:23 -0500Investors are too complacent (the Minsky-Moment). Too many are still trying to profit from the Fed subsidy of past stimulus. Investors remain loaded in risk assets, incentivized by the need to beat peers and benchmarks and comforted into complacency by the Fed ‘put’. The true level of risk is being ignored. The pervasive mentality of seeking maximum risk has become a terrible risk/reward trade for two main reasons...
A Desperate Sweden Looks To "Fix" Broken QE With Massive Muni Monetizing Madness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/14/2015 11:00 -0500Way back in June we documented the “curious” case of Sweden’s broken QE and when we used the term “broken”, we didn’t just mean that inflation expectations weren’t moving higher. We meant that bond yields were rising as the adverse impact from the illiquidity "premium" surpassed the price appreciation benefit from frontrun central bank buying. Fast forward three months and Sweden looks set to “solve” the broken QE problem and by extension ensure it can stay in the currency war games by expanding the list of eligible assets to muni bonds.
Short Squeeze, Liquidity, Margin Debt & Deflation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2015 10:31 -0500- AIG
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bear Market
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Crude
- default
- Duct Tape
- Eurozone
- Glencore
- Global Economy
- Japan
- Lehman
- M2
- Milton Friedman
- Money Supply
- Money Velocity
- NASDAQ
- New York Stock Exchange
- Nominal GDP
- recovery
- Repo Market
- Reverse Repo
- Russell 2000
- Turkey
- Tyler Durden
Some things you CAN see coming, in life and certainly in finance. Quite a few things, actually. Once you understand we’re on a long term downward path, also both in life and in finance, and you’re not exclusively looking at short term gains, it all sort of falls into place. Of course, the entire global economy has been hanging together with strands of duct tape for decades now, but hey, it looks good as long as you don’t take a peek behind the facade, right?



