Japan
Yellen & Kuroda Live In A "Fantasy Fiat World Divorced From Actual Business Conduct"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 18:25 -0500Given what the Japanese have been subjected to in the past two and a half years of QQE, it is nearly criminal to suggest they need only more of it. None of it has worked as promised and stated, so what might have changed? Absolutely nothing except the arrangement of qualifiers and excuses that litter the same shared central bank speech delivered over and over of late. Kuroda says “robust”, Yellen proclaims “strong”, and both only confirm they live not of this world’s economy.
China's Red Capitalism Is The New Black Swan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 16:45 -0500From the bowels of Australia’s iron ore mines to the top of Dubai’s pointless 100 story office towers, the entire warp and woof of the global economy has been distorted and bloated by the central bank money printing spree of the last two decades, led by the red credit machines of Beijing. Everywhere economies have succumbed to over-building, over-consumption, over-financialization and endless dangerous, unstable speculation. Stated differently, China’s red capitalism is the new black swan. There is nothing rational, stable or sustainable about it.
Housing - There's No Way Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 13:40 -0500The Fed has created permanent housing crisis from which there is no escape.
Going Nowhere Fast - The Median US Stock Is Flat Year-To-Date
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 12:37 -0500Despite today's ridiculous melt-up in US equities - all driven by USDJPY-correlated algos - after the completion of over 9 months of this year, the median stock in the United States has officially gone nowhere.
Goldman Deconstructs Draghi's Conference, Expects "Plenty Of Downside" For EUR, Reiterates 0.95 Target
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 12:25 -0500Goldman: "we think a 10 bps (surprise) deposit cut is worth two big figures downside in EUR/$. At the very least, following today’s press conference, a December deposit cut is now possible, meaning that EUR/$ – which went into the meeting at around 1.13 – should reprice to 1.11.... there is a good chance that December will instead bring an actual augmentation of the QE program, such that downside in EUR/$ might be larger. The kind of scenarios our European economics team envisage imply downside of at least 5-6 big figures from here, i.e. should see us return to near the 1.05 low that EUR/$ made in March."
Gold Is Long Term Inflation Hedge - Leading Academic Expert
Submitted by GoldCore on 10/22/2015 08:08 -0500Gold can be useful as a hedge against inflation but it's been consistently so only in the long run.
Everything’s Deflating And Nobody Seems To Notice
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 07:16 -0500As long as politicians and media keep talking about disinflation and central bank inflation targets, and all they talk actually about is consumer prices, we will all fail to acknowledge what’s happening right before our very eyes. That is, the system is imploding. Deflating. Deleveraging. And before that is done, there can and will be no recovery. Indeed, this current trend has a very long way to go down. So far down that you will have a very hard time recognizing the world, and its economic system, on the other side of the process. But then again, you have a hard time recognizing the world for what it is on this side as well.
Futures Firm On Hope Draghi Will Give Green Light To BTFD
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 05:56 -0500- Australia
- Bank Lending Survey
- Bank of Japan
- Boeing
- China
- Chrysler
- Conference Board
- Crude
- Daimler
- Debt Ceiling
- Enron
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- General Motors
- Gilts
- Greenlight
- headlines
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- McDonalds
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- PDVSA
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Reflexivity
- Shenzhen
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- Yen
After yesterday's dramatic late day market rout catalyzed by the tumble in the biotech sector in general, and Valeant in particular, and foreseen in its entirety by Gartman who went bullish just hours before, this morning US equity futures and European stocks have recouped some losses on the recursive, and traditional, hope that Mario Draghi will say something to push risk higher when he speaks in 2 hours at the ECB's press conference in Malta. And yet, just like Yellen a month ago, Draghi faces the paradox of reflexivity that after years of being ignored, is the "new thing" in town: how does he intervene and demonstrate he is readier than ever to set up stimulus, without panicking investors over euro area’s health.
Saudi Arabia Will Be Broke In 5 Years, IMF Predicts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 20:39 -0500
China Calms Fears, Says "Stock Plunge Is Normal Correction" As Panic-Buying Resumes On Japanese Open
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 20:35 -0500After last night's bloodbathery in China, analysts and officials are out en masse to ensure a newly re-leveraged Chinese investors that the "stock plunge is a normal correction." Disappointingly, Chinese stocks are barely bouncing at the open, which is not what we can say for Japan, where the mysterious uneconomic panic-buyer-of-first-resort appeared once again and smashed the Nikkei 225 200 points higher at the open (after weakness in the US).
Goldman Is Getting Nervous: "There Are Significant Risks To Our Forecast For Gold Price Weakness"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 19:17 -0500The "very serious people" are starting to get nervous, because while most other "commodities" have seen their prices plummet in the biggest crash since Lehman, gold just went green for the year. Enter Goldman Sachs: "While our base case remains for higher US real rates and lower gold prices, there are significant risks that our forecast for gold price weakness is pushed out, should the Fed surprise us and remain on hold in December."
Truth Is Being Suppressed By The Tools Of Money
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 17:50 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Convexity
- Core CPI
- CPI
- default
- Demographics
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Global Economy
- Great Depression
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Moral Hazard
- New York City
- Quantitative Easing
- Real estate
- Reality
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Warren Buffett
- Washington D.C.
Global Capitalism is trapped in its own Prisoner’s Dilemma; fourty four years after the end of the Bretton Woods System global central banks have manipulated the cost of risk in a competition of devaluation leading to a dangerous build up in debt and leverage, lower risk premiums, income disparity, and greater probability of tail events on both sides of the return distribution. Truth is being suppressed by the tools of money. Market behavior has now fully adapted to the expectation of pre-emptive central bank action to crisis creating a dangerous self-reflexivity and moral hazard. Volatility markets are warped in this new reality routinely exhibiting schizophrenic behavior. The tremendous growth of the short volatility complex across all assets, combined with self-reflexive investment strategies, are creating a dangerous ‘shadow convexity’ that will fuel the next hyper-crash.
Citi Expects Imminent Easing From Central Banks Of China, Australia, Japan And Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 13:04 -0500"With disinflationary global conditions and sluggish pay growth, most advanced economies are likely to remain locked into low-flation, and we expect headline and core inflation rates will continue to run below target and below central bank forecasts next year. Against this backdrop, we expect further near-term easing from the PBOC, RBA, BOJ and ECB and forecast only very gradual and delayed tightening by the Fed (starting around March 2016) and BoE (starting around end- 2016)."
Voices From The Real World - The 8 Biggest Questions On Investors' Minds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 09:54 -0500"Real investors" are simultaneously nervous and hopeful, confident yet resigned. Yes, their basic belief in equities as an investment class is sound and supported by the last five years of good performance. At the same time, they understand the nuances of the bear case extremely well and are prepared for a long slog of lower returns.
Frontrunning: October 21
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 06:35 -0500- Global Stock Markets Edge Higher Though Global Growth Concerns Weigh (WSJ)
- Nikkei up 1.9% because Japan export growth slows sharply, raising fears of recession (Reuters)
- Saudis Risk Draining Financial Assets in 5 Years, IMF Says (BBG)
- Syria's Assad flies to Moscow to thank Russia's Putin for air strikes (Reuters)
- US Prosecutor Preet Bharara Probing Daily Fantasy-Sports Business (WSJ)
- Syrian army denies Russian ground forces fighting in Syria (Reuters)



