Gundlach
Futures, Treasurys Flat After Chinese Stock Bubble "Incident"; Bunds Stage Feeble Rebound
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2015 05:59 -0500- Aussie
- Australia
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bond
- China
- Citadel
- Comcast
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Gundlach
- headlines
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- Natural Gas
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- Portugal
- Price Action
- Puerto Rico
- Reuters
- San Francisco Fed
- Sovereign Debt
- Switzerland
- Total Return Fund
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
If yesterday's laughable lack of volume (helped by the closure of Japan and the UK) coupled with hopes that the end of the buyback blackout period was enough to send stocks surging if only to end with a whimper below all time highs despite what is now looking like three consecutive quarters of Y/Y EPS declines according to Factset, today's ramp will be more difficult for the NY Fed and Citadel to engineer, not least of all due to the headwind of the overnight "incident" by China's stock bubble which saw the Shanghai Composite tumble by 4%, the most since January.
Ira Sohn Conference Picks And Pans Summary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/04/2015 18:25 -0500In what was perhaps the most uneventful Ira Sohn book-talking conference in years, some of the biggest hedge fund names came, and as expected, talked their book. There were few surprises, perhaps with the exception of David Einhorn who may have pulled an Ackman and revealed his disdain for Pioneer Natural Resources, which sent the name and the fracking sector lower if only briefly. Indicative of the broader state of the "market" Einhorn was also the only person who pitched a short.
Bund-Battering Continues - It's Different This Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/04/2015 07:31 -050010Y German bond yields hit 42.5bps today (almost a 10x move off their 4.9bps lows on April 17th - before Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach unleashed their bearish theses). While Draghi keeps buying, the move over the last week is 'almost' unprecedented in bond market history. We says 'almost' because we have seen this before - a sovereign issuer with an extremely low yielding bond suddenly see their bond market collapse... Japan 2003 (when Greenspan cut rates less than expected).
Another Sharp Bund Selloff Sends EUR Surging, Futures Sliding
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 03:45 -0500While many thought the selloff had peaked yesterday, and would henceforth be more orderly, they were proven wrong, when right out of the gates this morning, investors were very, so to say, bunderweight, on the German benchmark govvie and the yield promptly gapped up as high as 0.38% before retracing some of the sharp move higher.
To Commerzbank, German Bunds Are "Flash Crashing"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2015 10:36 -0500As first Bill Gross and then Jeff Gundlach suggest shorting German bonds, so it appears the message has sunk in that at 4.9bps 10 days ago, 10Y Bund yields were the short of a lifetime. Since then they have soared, with a dramatic doubling today from 14bps to over 29bps - the highest yield in 7 weeks. As Commerzbank warns, "a cascade of small events is creating a large splash in a structurally ever-thinner market," which has led to a plunge "similar to US Treasury flash crash of Oct. 15."
Gundlach Considers 100X Leveraged Bet Against German Bunds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2015 08:46 -0500The "new" Bond King joins his predecessor on the bond throne in calling German Bunds a compelling short opportunity. Just as we said last week, "when you short negative yielding bonds you have a positive carry," so why not leverage your bet 100X and get paid to wait on rising yields?
Futures Flat On FOMC, GDP Day; Bunds Battered After Euro Loans Post First Increase In Three Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2015 05:38 -0500- Barclays
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- fixed
- Greece
- Gundlach
- Iran
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- March FOMC
- Market Conditions
- NASDAQ
- Nasdaq 100
- Nikkei
- Obamacare
- Personal Consumption
- Precious Metals
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Richmond Fed
- Time Warner
- Uranium
- Volkswagen
Today we get a two-for-one algo kneejerk special, first with the Q1 GDP release due out at 8:30 am which will confirm that for the second year in a row the US economy barely grew (or maybe contracted depending on the Obamacare contribution) in the first quarter, followed by the last pre-June FOMC statement, in which we will find out whether Janet Yellen and her entourage of central planning academics will blame the recent weakness on the weather and West Coast port strikes and proceed with their plan of hiking rates in June (or September, though unclear which year), just so they can push the economy into a full blown recession and launch QE4.
October 15th Bond Market Crash Explained
Submitted by EconMatters on 04/25/2015 13:01 -0500October 15th, 2014 wasn`t a market crash!
Frontrunning: April 20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2015 06:25 -0500- Just How Leaky Is the Fed? More Than You May Realize (BBG)
- Republican Presidential Candidates Spar Over Party’s Future (WSJ)
- Euro Area Seeks Greece Roadmap to May Agreement (BBG)
- The $320 Billion Bogey Needed to Placate U.S. Stock Market Bulls (BBG)
- Seeking Obamacare alternative, Republicans eye tax credits (Reuters)
- Gundlach Says Market Hasn’t Seen Full Impact of Fed Moves (BBG)
- EU meets on migrant crisis as shipwreck corpses brought ashore (Reuters)
- Canada’s Own Oil Pipeline Problem (WSJ)
Human Bond Traders Barely Show Up To Work As Machines Take Control
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2015 14:30 -0500"A slow start to the week has become customary, as Monday appears to have become the new Friday," Barclays says, noting that the humans simply aren't trading in a credit market where opportunities are scarce. Meanwhile, the robots do not rest, and on the Monday they simultaneously decide that some random data point or unduly hawkish/dovish soundbite out of an FOMC voter is cause for all the algos to chase down the same rabbit hole sending ripples through a fixed income market devoid of any real liquidity, the humans will be in for a rude awakening when they get to work on Tuesday morning.
Gundlach Lieutenant Says Risk/Reward In US Corporate Credit Most Unattractive Proposition Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2015 12:45 -0500“In my 30-year career, it’s one of the most unattractive risk-return propositions that I’ve seen,” DoubleLine's Bonnie Baha says. Between abysmally low yields, heightened rate sensitivity heading into a rate hike cycle, and balance sheet re-leveraging on the part of US corporations, it’s a bad time to be betting on corporate credit.
Bonds Are Right! DoubleLine's Gundlach Warns Fed "Has Been Wrong For So Long... Offers No Value"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2015 13:55 -0500History is on the market’s side, says DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach, noting the Fed’s forecast for how much benchmark rates will rise is still too high, even after central bankers lowered their estimates last month. BlackRock’s Jeffrey Rosenberg says the bond market’s too complacent and is poised for a correction, claiming The Fed has "a tremendous ability" to send bond yields higher. But as Bloomberg reports, "if the burden of proof is on anybody, it’s on the Fed," and for now, as Gundlach exclaims, The Fed has "been wrong for so long," that their forecasts have been literally of no value, "the market’s pricing has been closer."
Stock Futures Keep Losses, Gold Near Highs After Worst Jobs Report Since 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2015 06:00 -0500As market participants slowly make their way back to trading desks around the post-Easter world, and especially the US where a truncated session on Friday morning ended in tears for anyone hoping for a 2015 US recovery following an abysmal March nonfarm payrolls print, they find that unlike on previous occasions, the equity futures liftathon is nowhere to be found this morning, with the S&P set to resume trading in the red for 2015. Away from Greece, whose future remains in limbo, the biggest development over the holiday weekend was a Goldman note in which the central-bank friendly firm said that "the right policy would be to put hikes on hold for now."
"It's Not Bearish, It's Simply Sane"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/30/2015 13:57 -0500In all the annals of investing, few seemingly innocuous phrases incorporate as much by way of grave implication as those four words, “a shift to banknotes”. 2008 was bad. With central bank policy now at the outer reaches of the possible and even of the theoretical, the outlook is certainly uncertain. Not wishing to participate in the terminal stages of a momentum-driven bubble is not bearish so much as simply sane.
5 Things To Ponder: Random Musings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/27/2015 15:30 -0500"...The negative divergence of the markets from economic strength and momentum are simply warning signs and do not currently suggest becoming grossly underweight equity exposure. However, warning signs exist for a reason, and much like Wyle E. Coyote chasing the Roadrunner, not paying attention to the signs has tended to have rather severe consequences."



