Risk Management
Frontrunning: April 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2014 06:32 -0500- Apple
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- Boeing
- BRICs
- China
- Citigroup
- CRA
- Credit Suisse
- Cronyism
- Daniel Loeb
- Empire State Manufacturing
- General Electric
- General Motors
- Germany
- Glencore
- GOOG
- Housing Market
- Japan
- Jeff Immelt
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Motorola
- NAHB
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Spansion
- Spirit Aerosystems
- Third Point
- Ukraine
- Ukraine forces move against separatists (FT)
- China GDP Gauge Seen Showing Deeper Slowdown (BBG)
- China Is Losing Its Taste for Gold (WSJ)
- Regulators Weigh Curbs on Trading Fees (WSJ)
- Obama, Putin Talk as Unrest Roils Eastern Ukraine (WSJ)
- Japan PM talks with BOJ chief, does not push for easing (Reuters)
- BRICS countries to set up their own IMF (RBTH)
- IMF Members Weigh Options to Sidestep U.S. Congress on Overhaul (WSJ)
- Zebra to Buy Motorola Solutions Unit for $3.45 Billion (BBG)
- Chinese Thunder God Herb Works as Well as Pain Therapy (BBG)
Blythe Masters Under Investigation By Federal Prosecutors
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2014 21:28 -0500
There is much new info in the just released Bloomberg profile on the infamous ex-JPMorganite Blythe Masters, among which the disclosure that she had made it clear that she had wanted to go along with the disposable JPM physical commodities unit (which as was reported recently, was sold to Swiss commodities giant Mercuria) and "and continue as the group's chief", a plan which did not work out as she had planned since she has no plans to "join the unit’s purchaser" (although joining Glencore is another matter entirely, and one which looks increasingly plausible) but what we find most striking is the following revelation: "Masters is under investigation by federal prosecutors in Manhattan, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. That probe was opened following a settlement with regulators that alleged JPMorgan manipulated power markets in the Midwest and California."
GMAC 2.0: ALLY Opens Below Its IPO Price
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2014 08:42 -0500
Another day, another 'failed' IPO. Ally Financial - aka GMAC - that bastion of subprime auto loans and risk management, IPO'd at $25 last night (at the very bottom of the $25 to $28 range) but investors seem to prefer to sell their allocations than pile into this 'bank'. Enabling the Treasury to exit more of its losing proposition (raisng $2.38 billion), ALLY opened well below its IPO price... at $24.25. As a gentle reminder, ALLY filed to go public in March 2011.
ABN Amro Ex-CEO Found Dead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2014 10:17 -0500
A mere two weeks since former JPMorgan banker, Kenneth Bellando jumped to his death, Bloomberg reports that the former CEO of Dutch Bank ABN Amro (and his wife and daughter) were found dead at their home after a possible "family tragedy." This expands the dismal list of senior financial services executive deaths to 12 in the last few months. The 57-year-old Jan Peter Schmittmann, was reportedly discovered by his other daughter when she arrived home that morning. Police declined to comment on the cirumstances of his (and his wife and daughter's) death. This is not the first C-level ABN Amro banker to be found dead. In 2009, former CFO Huibert Boumeester was discovered with (assumed self-inflicted) shotgun wounds.
Goodbye Blythe Masters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/02/2014 11:44 -0500- AIG
- Bank of New York
- Barclays
- Blythe Masters
- Bond
- Citadel
- Creditors
- Federal Reserve
- Futures market
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- HFT
- Jamie Dimon
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- MF Global
- Monetary Policy
- New York City
- New York Fed
- Open Market Operations
- Paul Volcker
- Precious Metals
- Prop Trading
- Risk Management
- Shadow Banking
- State Street
A week ago we wrote: 'While it has been public for a long time that i) JPM is eager to sell its physical commodities business and ii) the most likely buyer was little known Swiss-based Mercuria, there was nothing definitive released by JPM. Until moments ago, when Jamie Dimon formally announced that JPM is officially parting ways with the physical commodities business. But while contrary to previous expectations, following the sale JPM will still provide commercial gold vaulting operations around the world, it almost certainly means farewell to Blythe Masters." Sure enough:
JP MORGAN COMMODITY CHIEF BLYTHE MASTERS LEAVING, WSJ SAYS
Farewell Blythe: we hope your replacement will be just as skilled in keeping the price of physical gold affordable for those of us who keep BTFD every single day.
Risk Expert: GMOs Could Destroy the Planet
Submitted by George Washington on 03/26/2014 14:52 -0500“Black Swan” Author Nassim Nicholas Taleb DEMOLISHES the Claim that GMOs Are Low-Risk
Stress Test Dummies: It's All About Interest Rate Risk, Right?
Submitted by rcwhalen on 03/24/2014 04:20 -0500Is capital adequacy really the answer to the question?
"QE's Are... Cake" - The Full Walkthru How Bond Traders Manipulate Daily POMO
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/20/2014 12:48 -0500
Remember when we said in January 2011 that Dealers merely game the daily POMO reverse auction to generate abnormal - and now confirmed criminal - profits on the back of the central bank, i.e. taxpayer? Guess what - we were right. Again.
Goodbye Blythe Masters: JPM Sells Its Physical Commodities Business To Mercuria For $3.5 Billion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/19/2014 07:50 -0500
While it has been public for a long time that i) JPM is eager to sell its physical commodities business and ii) the most likely buyer was little known Swiss-based Mercuria, there was nothing definitive released by JPM. Until moments ago, when Jamie Dimon formally announced that JPM is officially parting ways with the physical commodities business. But while contrary to previous expectations, following the sale JPM will still provide commercial gold vaulting operations around the world, it almost certainly means farewell to Blythe Masters.
NY Attorney General Probing HFT "Fairness & Predatory Behavior": Did He Just Kill The Virtu IPO?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2014 08:57 -0500
It seems the blatant unveiling of the HFT market's Holy Grail trading - Virtu (1 loss in 1238 days) - has raised some attention as Bloomberg reports, NY AG Eric Schneiderman has opened a broad investigation into whether U.S. stock exchanges and alternative venues provide high-frequency traders with improper advantages. As one European lawmaker noted, "the area of high-frequency trading is lacking suitable regulation," and Schneiderman warned "this new breed of predatory behavior gives a small segment of the industry an enormous advantage over all other competitors." We wonder how this will affect Virtu's IPO given regulation is risk factor #1!
China Widens Dollar Trading Band From 1% To 2%, Yuan Volatility Set To Spike
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2014 09:09 -0500
In the aftermath in the recent surge in China's renminbi volatility which saw it plunge at the fastest pace in years, many, us included, suggested that the immediate next step in China's "fight with speculators" (not to mention the second biggest trade deficit in history), was for the PBOC to promptly widen the Yuan trading band, something it hasn't done since April 2012, with the stated objective of further liberalizing its monetary system and bringing the currency that much closer to being freely traded and market-set. Overnight it did just that, when it announced it would widen the Yuan's trading band against the dollar from 1% to 2%.
The Holy Grail Of Trading Has Been Found: HFT Firm Reveals 1 Losing Trading Day In 1238 Days Of Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2014 20:50 -0500
Think JPM's 0 trading day losses in 2013 was impressive? Prepare to have your mind blown. The chart below shows the chart of daily net trading income by High Frequency Trading titan Virtu, taken from its just filed IPO prospectus. The punchline: in 4 years of trading Virtu has had one, one, day in which it lost money. Let that sink in: one trading loss day and 1237 days of profits. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the Holy Grail of the New Normal broken, manipulated markets.
China On The Verge Of First Corporate Bond Default Once More
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 22:50 -0500
While everyone was focusing on the threat of tumbling debt dominoes in China's shadow banking sector, a new threat has re-emerged: regular, plain vanilla corporate bankruptcies, in the country with the $12 trillion corporate bond market (these are official numbers - the unofficial, and accurate, one is certainly far higher). And while anywhere else in the world this would be a non-event, in China, where corporate - as well as shadow banking - bankruptcies are taboo, a default would immediately reprice the entire bond market lower and have adverse follow through consequences to all other financial products. This explains is why in the past two months, China was forced to bail out not one but two Trusts with exposure to the coal industry as we reported previously in great detail. However, the Chinese Default Protection Team will have its hands full as soon as Friday, March 7, which is when the interest on a bond issued by Shanghai Chaori Solar Energy Science & Technology a Chinese maker of solar cells, falls due. That payment, as of this moment, will not be made, following an announcement made late on Tuesday that it will not be able to repay the CNY89.8 million interest on a CNY1 billion bond issued on March 7th 2012.
Frontrunning: February 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2014 08:12 -0500- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- Carlyle
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Department of Justice
- Deutsche Bank
- Florida
- France
- General Electric
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Insider Trading
- ISI Group
- Italy
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Middle East
- Monsanto
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- New Home Sales
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- Norway
- President Obama
- Prudential
- ratings
- RBS
- Recession
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Switzerland
- Tender Offer
- Timothy Geithner
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Zurich
- California couple finds $10 million in buried treasure while walking dog (Reuters) ... not bitcoin?
- Dimon Says Threats to JPMorgan Span Google to China Banks (BBG)
- Stocks So Many Love to Hate Buoyed by Fed’s Jobs Priority (BBG)
- White House Weighs Four Options for Revamping NSA Phone Surveillance (WSJ) ... to pick the fifth one
- Credit Suisse Executives Weren’t Aware of U.S. Tax Dodges (BBG)
- Militias Hunt Kiev Looters From Central Bank to Bling Palace (BBG)
- Crisis Gauge Rises to Record High as Swaps Avoided (BBG)
- Obama to Propose Highway-Repair Program (WSJ)
- Ukraine Pledges to Protect Deposits as Kiev Rally Called (BBG)
The Tyranny Of Models (Or Don't Fear The Reaper)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2014 18:47 -0500
The tyranny of models is rampant in almost every aspect of our investment lives, from every central bank in the world to every giant asset manager in the world to the largest hedge funds in the world. There are very good reasons why we live in a model-driven world, and there are very good reasons why model-driven institutions tend to dominate their non-modeling competitors. The use of models is wonderfully comforting to the human animal because it’s what we do in our own minds and our own groups and tribes all the time. We can’t help ourselves from applying simplifying models in our lives because we are evolved and trained to do just that. But models are most useful in normal times, where the inherent informational trade-off between modeling power and modeling comprehensiveness isn’t a big concern and where historical patterns don’t break. Unfortunately we are living in decidedly abnormal times, a time where simplifications can blind us to structural change and where models create a risk that cannot be resolved by more or better modeling! It’s not a matter of using a different model or improving the model that we have. It’s the risk that ALL economic models pose when a bedrock assumption about politics or society shifts.




