Germany
Gold 'Flash Crash' as $2.7 Billion Worth of Gold Futures Sold in Less Than 2 Minutes
Submitted by GoldCore on 07/20/2015 06:23 -0500In what looked like another successful bid to manipulate the gold market lower, there was massive selling of gold futures contracts - some 700,000 ounces worth of gold futures in mere seconds. The equivalent of one-fifth of a whole day’s trade in a normal session, was sold in a concentrated manner in less than two minutes - pushing prices lower again.
Futures Levitate After Greek Creditors Repay Themselves; Commodities Tumble To 13 Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 05:52 -0500- Apple
- Bank of England
- Bond
- Caijing
- China
- Conference Board
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Housing Starts
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- New Home Sales
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- Recession
- Shenzhen
- Ukraine
- University Of Michigan
- Verizon
- Volatility
Today's action is so far an exact replica of Friday's zero-volume ES overnight levitation higher (even if Europe's derivatives market, the EUREX exchange, did break at the open for good measure leading to a delayed market open just to make sure nobody sells) with the "catalyst" today being the official Greek repayment to both the ECB and the IMF which will use up €6.8 billion of the €7.2 billion bridge loan the EU just handed over Athens so it can immediately repay its creditors. In other words, Greek creditors including the ECB, just repaid themselves once again. One thing which is not "one-time" or "non-recurring" is the total collapse in commodities, which after last night's precious metals flash crash has sent the Bloomberg commodity complex to a 13 year low.
French President Calls For The Creation Of United States Of Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 18:35 -0500French President Francois Hollande said that the 19 countries using the euro need their own government complete with a budget and parliament to cooperate better and overcome the Greek crisis. “Circumstances are leading us to accelerate,” Hollande said in an opinion piece published by the Journal du Dimanche on Sunday. “What threatens us is not too much Europe, but a lack of it.”... Countries in favor of more integration should move ahead, forming an “avant-garde,” Hollande said.
Can You Hear the Fat Lady Singing? - Part I
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 07/19/2015 13:34 -0500Why Greece is simply a symptom of a much larger problem
Portugal’s Debts Are (Also) Unsustainable
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 12:32 -0500Everyone seems to be focusing on Greece these days – a country so indebted that it needs even more loans to repay just a fraction of its gigantic credits. Clearly this is unsustainable and something has to give. Even the IMF agrees. But what about the other Southern European countries? Actually, Portugal’s financial situation is looking particularly shaky, and any hiccups could have serious cross-border repercussions from Madrid all the way to Berlin.
Long Lines Expected As Greek Banks Risk "Cautious" Reopening
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 12:15 -0500"Greek banks expect long queues ... when they reopen on Monday for the first time in three weeks, although withdrawals will still be limited and capital controls will remain," Reuters reports, adding that "Greeks will be able to withdraw 420 euros a week at once instead of just 60 euros a day". Clearly, this is about managing perception. The only way that €420 per week is different than €60 per day is that it will front-load the bank queues on Mondays and thus create a false impression of calm throughout the remainder of the week.
Next Week in the Context of the Big Picture
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/19/2015 10:00 -0500- Abenomics
- Australia
- Bank of England
- BOE
- Capital Markets
- China
- Creditors
- default
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Italy
- Japan
- Krugman
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- New Zealand
- non-performing loans
- Norges Bank
- Portugal
- Sovereign Default
- Swiss National Bank
- Volatility
- Wall Street Journal
- Yen
- Yuan
The divergence theme is not longer being eclipsed by the Greek drama and the Chinese stock market slide. See how this week's developments fit into the bigger picture.
What Do The Countries That Wanted Greece To Leave The Eurozone Have In Common?
Submitted by Secular Investor on 07/19/2015 07:06 -0500There’s one side of the story which hasn’t been highlighted at all by the mainstream media...
Historic Iran Nuke Deal Resets Eurasia's "Great Game"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 21:00 -0500This is it. It is indeed historic. And diplomacy eventually wins. In terms of the New Great Game in Eurasia, and the ongoing tectonic shifts reorganizing Eurasia, this is huge: Iran — supported by Russia and China — has finally, successfully, called the long, winding 12-year-long Atlanticist bluff on its “nuclear weapons.” And this only happened because the Obama administration needed 1) a lone foreign policy success, and 2) a go at trying to influence at least laterally the onset of the new Eurasia-centered geopolitical order.
Varoufakis Slams Bailout #3 As "Greatest Macroeconomic Disaster In History" While Tsipras "Doesn't Eat Or Sleep"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 20:30 -0500In an rare convergence of Greek and German viewpoints, overnight former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis told the BBC that "economic reforms imposed on his country by creditors are "going to fail", ahead of talks on a huge bailout. At the same time, Germany's most noted Eurosceptic, Hans-Werner Sinn, in an interview with the newspaper "Passauer Neue Presse" also earlier today warned that any new aid would be "totally worthless" and "would never come back." Meanwhile, the Greek PM, who is facing an economic abyss "does not eat, does not sleep, but he has no choice -- he has a debt to the people who put their faith in him" his mother Aristi Tsipras, 73, told Parapolitika weekly.
Paul Craig Roberts: Greece's Lesson For Russia
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 19:30 -0500Greece’s lesson for Russia, and for China and Iran, is to avoid all financial relationships with the West. The West simply cannot be trusted. The “globalism” that is hyped in the West is inconsistent with Washington’s unilateralism. No country with assets inside the Western system can afford to have policy differences with Washington. It is testimony to the insouciance of our time that the stark inconsistency of globalism with American unilateralism has passed unnoticed.
Have Central Banks Brought Us Back to 2008… or 1929?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/18/2015 11:34 -0500The last time these criteria were met... stocks plunged over 90% over the next 24 months.
Dollar Bulls in Charge, but Stretched Technicals May Test Conviction
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/18/2015 09:40 -0500The dollar made new multi-year highs against the dollar-bloc and is bid against most major and em currncies. Why?
- Marc To Market's blog
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An "Austrian" Economist's Advice For Greece & The EU
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/17/2015 21:25 -0500Greece’s and the European Union’s economic and political crisis will not be resolved through a new debt deal between the government in Athens and the European authorities. It will be merely one more stop-gag “solution” to a problem whose nature is endemic to the current ideology and politics of State-Power and collectivism. Its real solution requires something deeper and more comprehensive: a revival of the classical liberal ideal of individualism and the economics of free market capitalism. This, unfortunately, is not likely to occur any time soon.








