Risk Management
Systemic Fragility & The Fed's "Hobson's Choice"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/24/2015 16:30 -0500The previous Bubble was of the Fed’s making, and our central bank lost control. It became a Hobson’s Choice issue in the eyes of the Fed, and they fully accommodated the Bubble. These days, the Fed and global central bankers face a similar but much more precarious Bubble Dynamic: The Fed specifically targeted higher securities market prices as its prevailing post-mortgage finance Bubble (“helicopter money”) reflationary mechanism. This ensured that the Fed would again be unwilling to impose any monetary restraint before it would then become too risky to remove accommodation (Einstein’s definition of insanity?). In concert, global central bankers now aggressively accommodate financial Bubbles.
Teetering Trannies? Oil "Could Get Very Very Ugly, Very Very Quickly"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 08:00 -0500As WTI Crude tests new lows this morning (Dec contract $45.32) after API reported a huge build, we can't help but wonder "what happens next" in Dow Transports as the exuberant index has decoupled from oil for the 3rd time in a week... the only saving grace for the collapse in oil - Gartman warned "this could get very, very ugly and do so very, very quickly."
Hedging in the Gold Miners
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 10/21/2015 03:52 -0500For a gold miner with dollar-denominated debt, the right thing to do is to hedge the gold price. It's interesting that at the LBMA conference in Vienna, a panel discussed the epic collapse of hedging. Why?
IBM Reports Terrible Q3 Earnings: Worst Revenue Since 2002; Slashes Guidance
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 15:45 -0500Moments ago IBM reported what can be defined simply as abysmal results.
Goldman Mocks "Constitutionally Dovish" Fed, Sees December Rate Hike Odds At 60% To Offset "Credibility Problem"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2015 13:52 -0500Q: Why do you still expect the FOMC to hike rates in December?
A: Because the FOMC leadership has said that a rate hike by the end of the year is likely if the economy and markets evolve broadly as expected. Our near-term forecast is similar to theirs, so our baseline is also that they hike.
What's The Worst That Could Happen?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2015 07:18 -0500The 30 stocks of the Dow Jones Industrial Average currently trade for an average of 14.8x next year’s consensus earnings. But... Everyone knows Wall Street analysts are always too optimistic, so what if we just look at the lowest estimate for each company? The driver of market pessimism sits at the top of the income statement – the Street’s worst case revenue estimates call for a decline of 1.7% in 2016. Now, Q3 earnings season is unlikely to provide much comfort here; why should corporate managements go out on a guidance limb when their stocks are down on the year? All this points to further volatility in October, and with a bias to the downside.
Humans Are No Longer The Apex Predator In Capital Markets (But We Act As If We Are)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/01/2015 20:30 -0500How many of us are bored to tears with the Fed’s Hamlet act on raising rates, and yet have been staring at this debate for so long that we have convinced ourselves that we have a meaningful view on what will transpire, even though it’s a decision where we have zero investing edge and unknowable risk/reward odds. The hardest thing in the world for talented people is to avoid turning a low edge and odds opportunity into an unreasonably high conviction bet simply because we want it so badly and have analyzed the situation so smartly. In both poker and investing, we brutally overestimate the edge and odds associated with merely ordinary opportunities once we’ve been forced by circumstances to sit on our hands for a while. Investment discipline suffers under the weight of dullness and low conviction in at least four distinct ways here in the Golden Age of the Central Banker...
HFTs Have Devolved To Two-Bit Criminals Straight Out Of "Office Space"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/01/2015 18:01 -0500A quick summary of the latest HFT market-rigging scam: mysteriously, and "erroneously", a change in Latour Trading's code was made, which the firm lacked "direct and exclusive control" over, and which was non-compliant with Reg NMS requirements, yet which mysteriously ended up generating "gross trading profits and rebates by stock exchanges" amounting to $2.8 million. Where have we seen this? Oh yes...
Commodity Giant Trafigura Founder, Top Shareholder Claude Dauphin Has Died
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/30/2015 10:41 -0500In a tragic, if very odd coincidence, a day after we postulated that the real "commodity-trader" risk may not be Glencore after all, but its just as vast, if even more levered competitor, Trafigura, moments ago the privately-held company (with publicly traded bonds), announced that its founder and biggest shareholder, french billionaire Claude Dauphin has died at the age of 64.
Liquid Alts - The World's Most Popular Hedge Fund Strategy Explained
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 14:30 -0500Today's most popular hedge fund strategy among institutional investors globally is "Alternative Global Macro Funds". Also known as a “go anywhere” investment style, active managers employ opportunistic trading tactics across asset classes, financial instruments, and geographic regions. Like many liquid alts, global macro funds grew rapidly following the financial crisis as investors looked for strategies that could diversify their portfolios in the midst of volatility in the global marketplace and historically high sector correlations against the S&P 500, thereby improving their risk-return profiles. Ultimately, success in this classification resides in selecting the right active manager given the strategy’s wide dispersion of returns.
Of Greater Fools, Bigger Liars, & A Society In Decline
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/27/2015 21:15 -0500Whether it’s the economy, climate, the planet, warfare, your future obligations, your pensions, the future of your children, nobody in power tells you the truth. Human life is fast losing the value we would like to tell ourselves we assign to it. We don’t, do we? Our technological advances haven’t come with moral advances, quite the contrary, our morals turn out to be a thin layer of mere cheap veneer. What advances we’re making are the last death rattle of a society in decline, and a dying civilization.
Divergence Drivers and the Dollar
Submitted by Marc To Market on 09/27/2015 08:55 -0500The divergence theme is likely to strengthen in the week ahead.
Three Strategies To Make Your Life Easier As Times Get Harder
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2015 13:30 -0500No risk, no gain. But risk can deliver staggering, crushing losses if it isn't limited or hedged. Times are going to get harder going forward, for all the reasons that are already visible in today's headlines. So what can we do to make our own lives easier as times get tougher? Here are three suggested strategies...
The Table Is Set For The Next Financial Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2015 20:50 -0500- Auto Sales
- Capital Markets
- Creditors
- default
- Deficit Spending
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- Foreclosures
- Gambling
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Home Equity
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- John Hussman
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Market Manipulation
- Monetary Policy
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- Mortgage Loans
- New Home Sales
- Rating Agencies
- ratings
- Recession
- recovery
- Risk Management
- Subprime Mortgages
- Volvo
Some people will never learn... ever. What is happening today is nothing more than rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. The iceberg has been struck, we’re taking on water, and this sucker is going to sink. Game Over.
Futures Plunge On Renewed Growth, Central Bank Fears; Volkswagen Shares Crash As Default Risk Surges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2015 05:49 -0500- Apple
- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Default Probability
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- Flight to Safety
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Glencore
- Global Economy
- Housing Market
- Italy
- Newspaper
- None
- Porsche
- Price Action
- Primary Market
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Richmond Fed
- Risk Management
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Volatility
- Volkswagen
- Yuan
While Asian trading overnight started off on the right foot, chasing US momentum higher, things rapidly shifted once Europe opened as attention moved back to global growth fears, global central banks losing credibility, as well as miners and the ongoing Volkswagen fiasco.




