Goldman Sachs

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 17





  • German president resigns in blow to Merkel (Reuters)
  • China central bank in gold-buying push (FT)
  • Germany Seeks to Avoid Two-Step Vote on Greek Aid, Lawmakers Say (Bloomberg)
  • Eurozone central bankers and the taboo subject of losses (FT)
  • Bernanke: Low Rates Good for Banks in Long Run (WSJ)
  • Cameron and Sarkozy to test rapport at talks (FT)
  • Chinese Enterprises encouraged to invest in US Midwest (China Daily)
  • Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley have reduced their use of "mark-to-market" accounting (WSJ)
  • Regulators to raise trigger for rules on derivatives (FT)
 
Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Answers Why People Log On To Social Networking Sites





Today, instead of some arcane chart showing in some complex fashion the simple fact that only excess liquidity drives excess returns, we present something more in tune with the latest bubble du jour: social networking. As part of its social media survey Goldman Sachs asked respondents what is the main reason for people to "log on" to various social networking venues. The answer, by a wide margin, is the expected one: namely to spy, and to compare whether our lives are more boring, less glitzy and exciting, with fewer gadgets, gizmos, smaller houses or cars, and generally more in debt, than our "friends." Of course, the politically correct way of saying this is "to see what my friends are doing." In other words, there is nothing new about social media but a millennia-old regurgitated phenomenon- it is merely a new locus of exhibiting and observing social status, to see and be seen. One which can be enjoyed 24/7. At least, until something better comes along.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Sprott's John Embry:“The Current Financial System Will Be Totally Destroyed“





Sprott strategist John Embry has never been a fan of the existing financial system. Today, he makes that once again quite clear in this interview with Egon von Grayerz' Matterhorn Asset Management in which he says: "I think that the current financial system, as we know it, will be totally destroyed, probably sooner rather than later. The next system will require gold backing to have any legitimacy. This has happened many times in history." Needless to say, he proceeds to explain why a monetary system based on gold, one in which one, gasp, lives according to one's means, is better. Logically, he also explains why the status quo, whose insolvent welfare world has nearly a third of a quadrillion in the form of unfunded future liabilities, will never let this happen. Much more inside.

 
Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Greece is Not Lehman 2.0... As I'll Show, It's Much Much Worse





When Greece defaults, the fall-out will be much, much larger than people expect simply by virtue of the fact that everyone is lying about their exposure to Greece.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 15





  • Europe ushers in the recession: Euro-Area Economy Contracts for the First Time Since 2009 (Bloomberg)
  • Greek conservative takes bailout pledge to the wire (Reuters)
  • China Pledges to Invest in Europe Bailouts (Bloomberg) - as noted last night, the half life of this nonsense has come and gone
  • Japan's Central Bank Joins Peers in Opening the Taps (WSJ)
  • EU Moves on Greek Debt Swap (EU)
  • EU Divisions Threaten Aid For Greece (FT)
  • Athens Woman facing sacking threatening suicide (Athens News)
  • King Says Euro Area Poses Biggest Risk to UK’s Slow Recovery (Bloomberg)
  • Sarkozy to Seek Second Term, Banking on Debt Crisis to Boost Bid (Bloomberg)
 
Phoenix Capital Research's picture

The Triumvirate of Wall Street/ The Fed/ and the White House is Beginning to Crumble





 

These January jobs numbers make the Obama administration look good, at least relative to how it’s looked in the previous 12 months. However, they’re not reflecting as positively on two of Obama’s primary support groups: Wall Street and the US Federal Reserve.

 

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Is Okun's Law The Latest Casualty Of Central Planning...And BLS Seasonal Adjustments





Okun's rule-of-thumb relates the long-term empirical finding that a country's unemployment rate is closely related to a country's output (or GDP) - perfectly sensible and comprehensible. In fact to be a little more explicit, it is the change in unemployment that is more notable in its relationship to the potential GDP (the output gap). His original work noted that a 3% increase in output corresponds to a 1% decline in unemployment rates (and/or rise in labor force participation, rise in hours worked, and rise in labor productivity) but as Goldman Sachs notes this week, Okun's Law has broken. As they point out, even though US real GDP growth has averaged a meager 2.5% pace since the end of the recession, the unemployment rate has fallen almost two percentage points from its peak. There are three implications, in our view: the unemployment rate is hopelessly miscalculated (and is much higher); potential growth is much lower than economists have been expecting (not such good news for real growth); and the multiplier effect of money has dropped structurally (in other words the implied money flow from more workers is not circulating the way it empirically has to juice growth). It seems to us that none of these are good for growth as the reality of a higher unemployment rate (BLS adjustments aside) is negative, lower potential for growth impacts earnings expectations (as we are already seeing in company and analyst outlooks which has perplexed those market watchers pinning their hopes on the jobless rate), and the balance sheet recessionary impacts of the 'employed' minimizing debt rather than maximizing potential gain is a further drag. Either way, as Goldman notes the potential growth rate going forward (2012 and 2013) is likely to remain quite weak, in the neighborhood of 2% in line with the CBO's dismal views and this could be further exacerbated by the drop in labor force participation we have noted vociferously.

 
Reggie Middleton's picture

The Value Of Not Following The Name Brand Following Crowd, Re: Apple, Goldman & RIM





Explain to me again, how often is EVERYBODY ALWAYS RIGHT? Finding value in not following the name brand following crowd...

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: The First Dominoes: Greece, Reality, And Cascading Default





Greece is the epicenter of a drama that threatens to unwind with all the intrigue and subterfuge of ancient Greek myths and tragedies. As with the legend of Icarus, big, and now bigger, transnational banks provoked the gods with their wax-and-feather financial fabrications to create the appearance of soaring wealth. Now that they have flown too close to the sun and their wings have melted, these banks are being brought to earth by the obligations and consequences imposed by their fabrications. Rather than take responsibility, these banks seek to appease the gods by sacrificing taxpayers. In fact, if one looks closely, these banks aspire to be gods themselves. They clothe themselves in their indispensability and shield themselves from accountability with tales about how many innocent citizens will be hurt if they don’t get their next bailout. It is as if they say, “We are above the law… We are the law.” Mathematics, legal enforcement, restraint, humility all must fall under the sword of their hubris. In the end, just as with a Greek tragedy or a Yeats poem, this center cannot hold and things fall apart.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 13





  • Greek Parliament Backs Austerity as Rioters Burn Buildings (Bloomberg)
  • China CIC Wary of EU Government Bond Investments (Reuters)
  • Spain Unions Decry New Labor Rules (WSJ)
  • China Tells Banks to Roll Over Loans (FT)
  • We're Not Greece: Italian Prime Minister Monti (CNBC)
  • Bernanke’s Labor Pessimism at Odds With U.S. Growth (Bloomberg)
  • Obama Budget Seeks Funding for Trade Unit (Bloomberg)
  • Obama's Election-Year Budget to Target Rich (Reuters)
  • China May Need to Fine-Tune Policy This Quarter, Wen Says (Bloomberg)
  • China’s Xi Seeks Second Front for U.S. Ties in Return to Iowa (Bloomberg)
  • Why Greece and Portugal Ought to go Bankrupt (FT)
 
Tyler Durden's picture

The Cost Of The Combined Greek Bailout Just Rose To €320 Billion In Secured Debt, Or 136% Of Greek GDP





Some of our German readers may be laboring under the impression that following the €110 billion first Greek bailout agreed upon and executed in May 2010, the second Greek bailout would cost a "mere" €130 billion. Alas we have news for you - as of this morning, the formal cost of rescuing Greece for the adjusted adjusted adjusted second time has just risen to €145 billion, €175 billion, a whopping €210 billion, bringing the total explicit cost of all Greek bailout funds to date (and many more in store) to €320 billion. Which incidentally is a little more than Greek GDP (which however is declining rapidly) at 310 billion, only in dollars. So as of today, merely the ratio of the Greek DIP loan (Debtor In Possession, because Greece is after all broke) has reached a whopping ratio of 136% Debt to GDP. This excludes any standing debt which is for all intents and purposes worthless. This is secured debt, which means that if every dollar in assets generating one dollar in GDP were to be liquidated and Greece sold off entirely in part or whole to Goldman Sachs et al, there would still be a 36% shortfall to the Troika, EFSF, ECB and whoever else funds the DIP loan (i.e., European and US taxpayers)! Another way of putting this disturbing fact is that global bankers now have a priming lien on 136% of Greek GDP - the entire country and then some now officially belongs to the world banking syndicate. Consider that when evaluating Greek promises of reducing total debt to GDP to 120% in 2020, as it would mean wiping all existing "pre-petition debt" and paying off some of the DIP. Also keep in mind that Greece has roughly €240 billion in existing pre-petition debt, of which much will remain untouched as it is not held in Private hands (this is the debt which will see a major "haircut" - or not: all depends on the holdout lawsuits, the local vs non-local bonds and various other nuances discussed here). If you said this is beyond idiotic, you are right. It is not the impairment on the Greek "pre-petition' debt that the market should be worried about - that clearly is 100% wiped out. It is how much the Troika DIP will have to charge off when the Greek 363 asset sale finally comes. This is also what Angela Merkel will say tomorrow when Greece shows up on its doorstep with the latest "revised" agreement from its parliament to take Europe's money ahead of the March 20 D-Day. Because finally, after months (and to think we did the math for Die Frau back in July) Germany has done the math, and has reached the conclusion that letting Greece go is now the cheaper option.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: February 10





Heading into the North American open, EU equity indices are trading lower following reports that Eurozone Finance Ministers have dismissed as incomplete a budget presented to them by the Greek party leaders. In addition to that, EU lawmakers have warned Greece of more intensive involvement in the Greek economy to improve tax collection and accelerate the sale of state-owned assets. The Greek Finance Minister Venizelos said that Greece must make a “final, strategic” decision Greek membership in the Eurozone over the next six days as it decides on new austerity and reform measures or faces leaving the single currency. However, according to sources, German finance minister told MPs, Greek reform plans would bring debt to 136% of GDP by 2020, instead of targeted 120%. So it remains to be seen as to whether Greece will be able to meet the looming redemptions in March. Of note, analysts at Fitch said that the ongoing Greece talks stating that the country must secure an agreement to cut its debt burden in the next few days to prevent a “disorderly” default.

 
MacroAndCheese's picture

ECB Enters CLO Business





It takes a central banker from Goldman Sachs to conceive of the world's largest CLO, and enlist the Eurozone's central banks to do the credit analysis.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 9





  • New Greek demands threaten debt deal (FT)
  • Greek Finance Minister Heads to Brussels; Loan Talks Stall (WSJ)
  • Talks Stalled on Greek Bailout as Venizelos Heads to Brussels (Bloomberg)
  • US banks near historic deal on foreclosures (FT)
  • Obama: Europe needs "absolute commitment" on debt crisis (Reuters)
  • Fed's Lacker sees no need for more easing for now (Reuters)
  • Europe compromise urged at summit (China Daily)
  • China to Punish Illicit Bank Lending, Shanghai Securities Says (Bloomberg)
  • Monti Meets Obama Amid ’Spectacular Progress’ (Bloomberg)
  • Draghi’s First 100 Days Presage Greek Help (Bloomberg)
 
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