Commercial Real Estate
AIG Lite: Margin Call Claimed First Foreign Casualty Of Austrian "Black Swan"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/31/2015 12:20 -0500While we wait to see which “well capitalized” bank will be the next to crumble under the weight of mountainous writedowns occasioned by the sudden souring of “riskless” assets, we get to read the DuesselHyp post-mortem, which shows that the bank was effectively AIG’d by Eurex.
3 Things - Uncomfortable Facts, 25-54 Employment, Houston RE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/12/2015 17:45 -0500"...I believe that the Fed understands that we are closer to the next economic recession than not. For the Federal Reserve, the worst case scenario is being caught with rates at the 'zero bound' when that occurs. For this reason, while raising rates will likely spark a potential recession and market correction, from the Fed’s perspective this might be the 'lesser of two evils.'"
China’s Monumental Debt Trap - Why It Will Rock The Global Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/06/2015 19:10 -0500- Abenomics
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Real Estate
- Copper
- Corruption
- Deficit Spending
- Deutsche Bank
- European Central Bank
- Evans-Pritchard
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Housing Prices
- International Monetary Fund
- Japan
- McKinsey
- Monetary Policy
- Nominal GDP
- Quantitative Easing
- Real estate
- Reality
- Shadow Banking
- Tax Revenue
- Unemployment
- Yen
- Yuan
Needless to say, Greece is only the poster child. The McKinsey numbers above suggest that “peak debt” is becoming a universal condition, and that today’s Keynesian central bankers and policy apparatchiks are only pushing on a giant and dangerous global string. So now we get to ground zero of the global Ponzi. That is the monumental pile of construction and debt that is otherwise known on Wall Street as the miracle of “red capitalism”. In truth, however, China is not an economic miracle at all; its just a case of the above abandoned Athens stadium writ large.
Behold SubTropolis: The Underground City Located In An Excavated Kansas Mine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/04/2015 19:30 -0500More than 1,000 people spend their workdays in an industrial park housed in an excavated mine the size of 140 football fields. As Bloomberg reports, the underground industrial park known as SubTroplis opened for business in 1964 in an excavated mine below Kansas City, Mo. attracting tenants with the lure of lower energy costs and cheap rents...
I'm Not Buying It - Not The Wall Street Rip, Nor The Keynesian Rap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 20:52 -0500The current illusion of recovery is a result mainly of windfalls to the financial asset owning upper strata, the explosion of transfer payments funded with borrowed public money and another supply-side bubble - this time in the energy sector and its suppliers and infrastructure. But that’s not real growth or wealth. Indeed, the desultory truth about the latter is better revealed by the fact that the American economy is not even maintaining its 20th century level of breadwinner jobs. And the real state of affairs is further testified to by the lamentable trend in real median household incomes. That figure - not distorted by the bubble at the top of the income ladder - is still lower than it was two decades ago. So much for the Keynesian rap. Yet that’s about all that underpins the latest Wall Street rip.
Frontrunning: December 17
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2014 07:43 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- Baidu
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- China
- Citigroup
- Commercial Real Estate
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Fisher
- Florida
- Ford
- General Electric
- Israel
- KIM
- Lloyds
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- North Korea
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Private Equity
- RBS
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Sears
- Stress Test
- Verizon
- Vladimir Putin
- Yuan
- Citigroup is pleased: Obama signs $1.1 trillion government spending bill (Reuters)
- Oil holds below $60 as OPEC, Russia keep pumping (Reuters)
- 5 Things to watch at the December Fed Meeting (WSJ)
- Russia Tries Emergency Steps for 2nd Day to Stem Ruble Rout (BBG)
- Ruble crisis could shake Putin's grip on power (Reuters)
- Apple Curbs Russia Sales as McDonald’s Lifts Prices (BBG)
- Traders Betting Russia’s Next Move Will Be to Sell Gold (BBG)
- China Warms to a More Flexible Yuan (WSJ)
Guest Post: Central Banks Create Deflation, Not Inflation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2014 12:09 -0500If there's one absolute truism we hear again and again, it's that central banks are desperately trying to create inflation. Perversely, their easy-money policies actually generation the exact opposite: deflation. Financial and risk bubbles don't pop in a vacuum--all the phantom collateral constructed with mal-invested free money for financiers will also implode.
Did Blackstone Just Call The Top In Commercial Real Estate?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2014 19:00 -0500Blackstone's well-timed IPO in 2007 was almost the perfect top-tick indicator as 'the smart money' private-equity guys cashed out into the public markets at peak euphoria. Earlier this year we noted that, among others, Blackstone was drastically ratcheting down purchases (and in fact selling what it could) US residential real estate - and with it withdrew the only pillar holding up the housing market. And now, in the biggest deal in 7 years, Blackstone is dumping a $3.5 billion commercial real estate portfolio. Given the recent declines in CMBX pricing, perhaps, once again, Blackstone is calling the top in another bubble...
Guest Post: How Bloomberg’s Algo-Writers Serve The Cult Of Keynesian Central Banking
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2014 14:50 -0500If you ever needed proof that the financial press has been completely indoctrinated in the cult of Keynesian central banking consider the following...
FBI To Probe Accounting Fraud At Multi-Billion REIT
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2014 19:37 -0500While the Fed and the BOJ were by far the biggest news of the past week, explicitly admitting that the world simply can not exist without one central bank passing the monetization torch to someone else, a surprising, and scare for its shareholders, development took place when REIT American Realty Capital Properties, with a then-market cap of over $10 billion, announced, under the cover of the Fed ending QE3, that it had overstated its adjusted funds from operation, a cash flow key metric used by REITs, from the first- and second-quarters of 2014.As the WSJ reminds us, while the amount of money involved, some $23 million, was "relatively small", the irregularities resulted in the resignation of the company’s chief financial officer, Brian Block, and chief accounting officer, Lisa McAlister.The result: a crash in the stock that wiped out nearly 30% or nearly $4 billion in market cap.
Good Riddance To QE - It Was Just Plain Financial Fraud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2014 09:31 -0500QE has finally come to an end, but public comprehension of the immense fraud it embodied has not even started. In stopping QE after a massive spree of monetization, the Fed is actually taking a tiny step toward liberating the interest rate and re-establishing honest finance. But don’t bother to inform our monetary politburo. As soon as the current massive financial bubble begins to burst, it will doubtless invent some new excuse to resume central bank balance sheet expansion and therefore fraudulent finance. But this time may be different. Perhaps even the central banks have reached the limits of credibility - that is, their own equivalent of peak debt.
This Time 'Is' Different - For The First Time In 25-Years The Wall Street Gamblers Are Home Alone
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2014 16:00 -0500- AIG
- Alan Greenspan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barry Ritholtz
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- Central Banks
- Commercial Real Estate
- Countrywide
- Discount Window
- Fannie Mae
- Fortress Balance Sheet
- Freddie Mac
- GAAP
- Gambling
- Goldilocks
- Great Depression
- headlines
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Prices
- Jim Cramer
- Las Vegas
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Moral Hazard
- NASDAQ
- None
- PE Multiple
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- Shadow Banking
- Yield Curve
The last time the stock market reached a fevered peak and began to wobble unexpectedly was August 2007. Markets were most definitely not in the classic “price discovery” business. Instead, the stock market had discovered the “goldilocks economy." But what is profoundly different this time is that the Fed is out of dry powder. Its can’t slash the discount rate as Bernanke did in August 2007 or continuously reduce it federal funds target on a trip from 6% all the way down to zero. Nor can it resort to massive balance sheet expansion. That card has been played and a replay would only spook the market even more. So this time is different. The gamblers are scampering around the casino fixing to buy the dip as soon as white smoke wafts from the Eccles Building. But none is coming. For the first time in 25- years, the Wall Street gamblers are home alone.
Frontrunning: October 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/08/2014 06:32 -0500- American International Group
- Australia
- B+
- Bank of England
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Botox
- China
- Citigroup
- Commercial Real Estate
- Copper
- Corporate Finance
- CSCO
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Germany
- Glencore
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hong Kong
- India
- International Monetary Fund
- Keefe
- Kraft
- LIBOR
- Morgan Stanley
- Pershing Square
- Private Equity
- Puerto Rico
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Sears
- Serious Fraud Office
- Timothy Geithner
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Wells Fargo
- Turkey says Syria town about to fall as Islamic State advances (Reuters)
- Only now? Growth worries grip stocks, oil (Reuters)
- Hong Kong Protest Leaders ‘Furious’ at Agenda for Talks (BBG)
- Earthquake Damages Thousands of Homes in Southern China (BBG)
- Keystone Be Darned: Canada Finds Oil Route Around Obama (BBG)
- Where Is North Korea's 31-Year-Old Leader? (BusinessWeek)
- Australia to Revise Employment Data (WSJ)
- Americans Living Longer as Fewer Die From Heart Disease, Cancer (BBG)
- A 401(k) Conundrum: Can You Make Cash Pile Last for Life? (BBG)
- China Services Sector Slows in September (WSJ)
Credit Suisse Warns Of "Self-Fueling Negative Feedback" In Scotland; Here's Who Is Exposed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2014 20:36 -0500Credit Suisse warns of a self-fuelling feedback loop of rising risks and costs to the Scottish financial and sovereign sectors, and a steady migration of capital, activity, jobs and taxes if the Scots vote "Yes". However, if the vote is a close "no", they warn "the cat is out of the bag," and risk remains.
The Lesser Depression: How Bubble Finance Has Deformed The Jobs Cycle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2014 21:21 -0500The term “jobless recovery” is itself an oxymoron since the main function of any economic advance is to broaden participation. Thus a “jobless recovery” is nothing of the sort, indicating more so the re-arranging of numbers rather than full achievement – the hallmarks of redistribution.
As financialism spreads, so does disharmony, not just in function but in breaking correlations among economic accounts and statistics that were once seemingly so unconquerable.


