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Puerto Rico Is About To Default: Your Complete Guide To An Island Debt Debacle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2015 20:30 -0500It's almost game over for Puerto Rico. The commonwealth is racing to restructure some $72 billion in debt and next week, Padilla will need to decide between a partial default on a $354 million bond payment and ensuring that the government can continue to provide basic services.
On Credit Default Swaps
Submitted by rcwhalen on 11/25/2015 08:58 -0500"This is legal?" Stephanie Ruhle on CDS after watching "The Big Short" (Bloomberg TV)
Why Even A Modest Disruption Will Shatter The Status Quo
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2015 07:14 -0500Any modest reduction in debt, tax revenues, consumption or new borrowing will bring the entire Status Quo crashing down. This is the bitter fruit of rampant financialization and the ascendancy of maximizing private gain by whatever means are available.
"We're Now Just One Big Shock Away From A Global Downturn"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/24/2015 15:15 -0500The financial news continues to confound and confuse investors. The Fed is telling one story. The world economy is telling another.
S&P Just Warned Asia's Largest Commodity Trader It May Be Junked
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/23/2015 13:58 -0500As usual, S&P was late, but just over three months after our explicit warning, the rating agency finally came out with the catalyst we have been expecting when moments ago it said that it had "placed its 'BBB-' long-term corporate credit rating on Hong Kong-based supply-chain management service provider Noble Group Ltd. and the 'BBB-' issue rating on the company's senior unsecured notes on CreditWatch with negative implications." In other words, Asia's Glencore is about to be junked.
"How Is This Possible" Deutsche Bank Asks, Looking At The Canary In The Junk Bond Mine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/23/2015 10:50 -0500"The hardest questions we are trying to reconcile here are how is that possible to see all these signs of weakness under the surface being balanced by very strong equity markets and upbeat employment picture. One of these sides has to be wrong..."
Argentina Throws Out The Peronists In "Historic" Presidential Election
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/23/2015 07:53 -0500"Today is a historic day. It’s the changing of an era. We can live in an Argentina without poverty, where we can all aspire to have our own homes with running water and a sewage system."
"The question is whether this is going to be something like the rebirth of Argentina or another failed dream that people get excited about, but then they can’t overcome the challenges.”
Equities vs 'Everything Else' - Deutsche Bank Warns "One Of These Sides Has To Be Wrong"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2015 13:40 -0500The hardest questions we are trying to reconcile here are how is that possible to see all these signs of weakness under the surface – including weak commodities, tightening credit, retrenching consumer spending – being balanced by very strong equity markets and upbeat employment picture. One of these sides has to be wrong in its assessment of the current macro environment, and seeing both of them extending well into the future appears unlikely to us.
Puerto Rico Faces "Public Unrest" As Cash Crunch May Leave Government Workers Unpaid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2015 15:10 -0500As Puerto Rico stares down a $355 million bond payment due in less than two weeks, analysts warn that without federal intervention, the commonwealth could face growing social unrest and a prolonged depression.
China's "Minksy Moment" - $1.2 Trillion In Ponzi Financing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 19:20 -0500“Some Chinese firms have entered the Ponzi stage because return on investment has come down very fast. As a result, leverage will be rising and zombie companies increasing.”
Physical Sales Surge, as Paper Prices Plummet
Submitted by Sprott Money on 11/19/2015 13:05 -0500People are scared, the market is uncertain and the world is for all intents and purposes in a constant state of turmoil and flux.
"This Isn't Going To End Well" - Junk Bonds Under Pressure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 11:52 -0500There are seemingly always “good reasons” why troubles in a sector of the credit markets are supposed to be ignored – or so people are telling us, every single time. Some still recall how the developing problems in the sub-prime sector of the mortgage credit market were greeted by officials and countless market observers in the beginning in 2007. Meanwhile, the foundation of the economy continues to look rotten (the newest round of Fed surveys has begun with another bomb and other manufacturing-related data continue to disappoint as well). This isn’t going to end well, if history is any guide.
Economists' Models Are Losing Their Grasp On The Real State Of The Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 14:20 -0500Economists have been consistently over-estimating the strength of the economy this year. The magnitude of their misses is not particularly worrisome but volatility measures and the recent record number of consecutive negative readings are suggesting that economists’ models are losing their grasp on the state of the economy.
Guest Post: Gold, Oil, & 'Grandmaster' Putin's Trap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/15/2015 21:15 -0500It is important to keep in mind that the dollar’s attacks on gold always end the same way – in a painful knockout for the dollar. There have been no exceptions to this rule throughout monetary history, nor will there be this time. Hence the well-known market rule: “Any maximum of the gold price is not the last one.” It would be naive to believe that this golden rule is unknown to that grandmaster of patience, Vladimir Putin, and to Xi Jinping. By systematically increasing their gold reserves, Russia and China are relentlessly moving forward to strip the US dollar of its status as a global reserve currency. America’s standard military solution won’t work in this situation.
Weekend Reading: Will They, Or Won't They?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2015 16:30 -0500Will they, won't they, should they or shouldn't they? Those are the questions being hotly contested by the mainstream media on a daily basis. Of course, the reality is the Federal Reserve faces the huge obstacle of weak global growth and deflationary pressures which could very well keep them on hold well into 2016. The potential loss of credibility in the Fed by the markets could be the bigger issue to be concerned with. For now, we wait.




