Apple
Jailhouse Diary Of A Libor Manipulation Scapegoat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 18:00 -0500"It was over. The guard led me into a room daubed in graffiti, with the faint smell of cigarettes and urine. He allowed me to use the toilet, but it had no door – the days of privacy and dignity were over. A plastic toilet with no seat. I couldn’t really comprehend it."
Late-Day Buying Panic Saves Stocks From Worst Start To January In 84 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 17:33 -0500The Movies Are Becoming Just Like The Markets: A Handful Of Blockbusters And Tons Of Losers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2016 20:41 -0500As go the markets, so go the movies. According to the WSJ, Hollywood just had its biggest-ever year at the box office in 2015, collecting $11.1 billion in ticket sales, up 7% from the previous year and surpassing the record of $10.92 billion set in 2013. All of the growth, however, occurred at the top of the heap, or in other words, 2015 was a record year "thanks to a handful of blockbusters that left a whole lot of duds in the dust." In other words, just like in the stock market, a record high portion of Hollywood "gains", or rather box office ticket sales, came from just five movies.
The Battle Between Manufacturing And Services
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2016 14:00 -0500As we start the new year, there is a debate raging within the market. No the debate isn’t whether there is weakness in the manufacturing economy, that is taken as a given, especially after Friday’s awful Chicago Purchasing Manager number of 42.9. Instead, the debate boils down to this: 'bears' believe the manufacturing economy and the service economy act in conjunction with each other – that one cannot turn, without the other; 'bulls' view each segment of the economy as relatively independent and they highlight the size of the service economy relative to the manufacturing. The answer lies in the missing cog - the 'wealth' economy.
ISIS: The 'Enemy' The US Created, Armed, & Funded
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2016 22:00 -0500To delve into Daesh’s convoluted money trail, one must first explore its equally convoluted origins. And in both areas, the role of the U.S. and its allies can not be ignored.
Stocks End 2015 In The Red, Worst Year With Oil Since 1984
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2015 21:05 -0500Frontrunning: December 31
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2015 07:42 -0500- Oil ends 2015 in downbeat mood; hangover to be long, painful (Reuters)
- Recession, retrenchment, revolution? Impact of low crude prices on oil powers (Guardian)
- Midwest Flooding Might Make the Oil Glut Worse (BBG)
- From Oil Glut to Shortage? Some Say It Could Happen (WSJ)
- Ten Years After Blowup, Amaranth Investors Waiting to Get Money Back (WSJ)
- China Fires a Warning Shot at Yuan Speculators With Bank Bans (BBG)
Red Or Green For The Year: Decision Time For US Markets On Last Trading Day Of 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2015 07:05 -0500It has come down to this: a year in which the US stock market (led by a handful of shares even as the vast majority of stocks has dropped) has gone nowhere, but took the longest and most volatile path to get there, is about to close either red or green for 2015 based on what happens in today's low-volume session following yesterday's unexpected last half hour of trading "air pocket" which brought the S&P back to unchanged for the year.
Guest Post: "American Capitalism" No Longer Serves Society
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/30/2015 22:25 -0500America is being destroyed by problems that are unaddressed. Unbridled greed, short-term in nature, will continue to drive America into the ground.
The Minimum Wage Hike Hangover Arrives: Dining Out To Cost 10% More Starting January 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/30/2015 22:00 -0500
Global Stocks, Futures Dragged Lower By Commodities As Oil Slumps Back Under $37
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/30/2015 07:02 -0500- 7 Year Treasury
- Apple
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Economic Calendar
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Germany
- Hong Kong
- India
- Italy
- KKR
- Kuwait
- Market Manipulation
- Market Sentiment
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Mexico
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Newspaper
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Puerto Rico
- Swiss Banks
- Switzerland
- Yuan
With just two days left in 2015, the main driver of overnight global stocks and US equity futures remains the most familiar one of all of 2015 - crude oil, which, after its latest torrid bounce yesterday has resumed the familiar "yoyo" mode, and again stumbled dropping below $37 on yesterday's surprising API 2.9 million crude inventory build, as well several more long-term "forecasts" by OPEC members, with Kuwait now budgeting for $30 oil, while Venezuela's Maduro said the oil price fell to $28/bbl and is "headed downward." As a result U.S. futures declined and European stocks fell, extending their worst December drop since 2002 in thin volume on the last full trading day of the year.
Google's Enterprise Value Quietly Surpasses Apple
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 15:10 -0500For the first time since early 2014, "no brainer" Apple's Enterprise Value has fallen below that of its tech giant super-hero nemesis Alphabet (the company formerly known as Google). Since early July, Apple has lost a stunning $112 billion of 'value' while Alphabet has added over $150 billion. In September we asked "have we reached peak Apple?" it appears, for now, the answer is in.
"2016 Will Be No Fun" - Doug Kass Unveils 15 Surprises For The Year Ahead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 11:36 -0500- American Express
- Andrew Ross Sorkin
- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bernie Sanders
- Bill Gates
- Boeing
- Bond
- Book Value
- Capital Expenditures
- Carl Icahn
- Chesapeake Energy
- China
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Crude
- dark pools
- Dark Pools
- David Faber
- Donald Trump
- Doug Kass
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Elizabeth Warren
- ETC
- European Union
- Federal Reserve
- Florida
- Ford
- Fox Business
- France
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Greece
- HFT
- Housing Market
- Janet Yellen
- Joe Kernen
- JPMorgan Chase
- Morgan Stanley
- MSNBC
- NASDAQ
- NBC
- New York City
- New York Stock Exchange
- New York Times
- Nominal GDP
- President Obama
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- REITs
- Sears
- Stagflation
- Unemployment
- Vladimir Putin
- Warren Buffett
- Wells Fargo
- Yield Curve
My overriding theme and the central drama for the coming year is that unexpected events can take on greater importance as the Federal Reserve ends its near-decade-long Zero Interest Rate Policy. Consensus premises and forecasts will likely fall flat, in a rather spectacular manner. The low-conviction and directionless market that we saw in 2015 could become a no-conviction and very-much-directed market (i.e. one that's directed lower) in 2016. There will be no peace on earth in 2016, and our markets could lose a cushion of protection as valuations contract. (Just as "malinvestment" represented a key theme this year, we expect a compression of price-to-earnings ratios to serve as a big market driver in 2016.) In other words, we don't think 2016 will be fun.
In The "Year When Nothing Worked", This Handful Of Traders Made Billions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 09:52 -0500
While most hedge funds will be glad to close the books on a year in which they once again dramatically underperformed a market which hugged the flatline courtesy of just a few stocks (even as most stocks posted substantial declines) and where "hedge fund hotels" such as Valeant suffered dramatic implosions, a handful of traders generated impressive returns for their investors and made billions by going against the herd.
In Latest Blow To Apple, Taiwan Makers Cut iPhone Shipments Up To 10%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 08:25 -0500While the straws have been building on the camel's back of Apple's "no brainer" status over the past few months, today's news from DigiTimes appears to be the most damning yet on the 'peak Apple' phenomenon. Apple share are fading off early market highs as demand for iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus appear to have slowed down recently, shipments of iPhone devices from production lines in the fourth quarter of 2015 are likely to be 5-10% lower than originally expected, according to Taiwan-based supply chain makers.




