Larry Summers
The Creeping Fear Of The "Great Normalization" Of US Monetary Policy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2013 20:34 -0500
There is a recurring nightmare that is playing out once again in many of the most leveraged asset-classes in the world's so-called 'markets'. The theme is that of an improving US economy which is pointing a normalization of US monetary policy. Good news, right? It would seem not; as Chris Wood's Greed and Fear notes, that the practical reality is that the emerging world, including Asia, will remain vulnerable to further selling so long as markets are anticipating normalisation of American monetary policy and a related strengthening in the US dollar. However, there is a conundrum, if the world was so sure of the relative strength of the American economy, surely the yen should be selling off more against the dollar. For CLSA the real test is yet to come when the new fiscal year in America begins on 1 October and the revival of US economic growth that is so hoped-for, does not materialize... and given the correlation in the chart below, it is clear that there is only thing that matters - the US 10Y rate.
Futures Tumble On Pre-War Jitters, Emerging Market Rout, More Summers Rumors
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2013 05:48 -0500
Overnight the emerging market rout continued, with the India Sensex down another 3.18%, the Philippines tumbling 4%, Jakarta down 3.7% and Dubai crashing 7%. A driving factor continues to be the fear over an imminent air campaign launched at Syria, leading both WTI and Brent higher by 1%, and gold finally breaking out above the $1400 tractor beam, and printing at $1412 at last check, a hair away from a 20% bull market from the lows. In other news, the market is once again "surprised" to learn that Summers, who as we have been showing for over three weeks is the frontrunner for the Fed chair, is the frontrunner for the Fed chair according to CNBC. Of course, there is nothing preventing this from being the latest trial balloon (and nothing that suggest Summers will actually be hawkish as conventional wisdom seems to think: the guy basically works for the financial sector) but futures aren't waiting to find out, and US traders are walking in this morning to a red screen with ES down just over 10 point and sliding. Any minute now the great unrotation from stocks into bonds (10 Year was 2.77% at last check) is about to be unleashed. And if Obama actually goes to war (without talking to Congress of course), watch the bottom fall from the market.
Guest Post: Trying To Stay Sane In An Insane World - Part 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 16:31 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Best Buy
- China
- CPI
- default
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- Financial Derivatives
- France
- Gambling
- GE Capital
- Glass Steagall
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Guest Post
- HFT
- Jamie Dimon
- Japan
- Larry Summers
- Madison Avenue
- Main Street
- National Debt
- national security
- Poland
- Purchasing Power
- Reality
- Washington D.C.
In Part 1 of this article we documented the insane remedies prescribed by the mad banker scientists presiding over this preposterous fiat experiment since they blew up the lab in 2008. In Part 2 we tried to articulate why the country has allowed itself to be brought to the brink of catastrophe. There is no turning back time. The choices we’ve made and avoided making over the last one hundred years are going to come home to roost over the next fifteen years. We are in the midst of a great Crisis that will not be resolved until the mid-2020s. The appearance of stability is illusory, as the civic fabric of the country continues to tear asunder. Record high stock markets do not trickle down. The masters of propaganda seem baffled that their standard operating procedures are not generating the expected response from the serfs. They have failed to take into account the generational mood changes that occur; propaganda loses its effectiveness in proportion to the pain and distress being experienced by the citizenry.
First Signs of Hyperinflation Have Arrived: US National Debt Can Travel From the Earth to the Sun and Back a Stunning 83 Times!
Submitted by smartknowledgeu on 08/26/2013 09:44 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- American International Group
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of New York
- Barack Obama
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- China
- Citigroup
- credit union
- Cronyism
- Deutsche Bank
- Edward DeMarco
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hong Kong
- Hyperinflation
- Jamie Dimon
- John Stumpf
- KIM
- Larry Summers
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Medicare
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- National Debt
- Obama Administration
- Paul Volcker
- President Obama
- Prudential
- Quantitative Easing
- Richard Cordray
- Robert Rubin
- SmartKnowledgeU
- State Street
- Timothy Geithner
- Wells Fargo
- White House
If one were to lay $1 bills side by side, the current US National Debt would reach from the earth to the moon 32,358 TIMES AND BACK and to the sun 93 million miles away 83 times AND BACK.
Black or White?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 08/24/2013 06:58 -0500How long will it take for the Black side of the taper to come back home?
The Bubble Watcher-In-Chief Speaks: "No More Bubbles"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2013 20:07 -0500
“We have to turn the page on the bubble-and-bust mentality that created this mess,” President Obama stated authoritatively in his weekend radio address... but do not get too excited by the possibility of a real end to the Keynesian experiment and a return to 'free' markets for the President, in his oh-so-not-trying-to-start-a-class-warfare-battle way, blames bubbles not on Central banks (who have done "an outstanding job") but on the skewed distribution of income. As Bloomberg reports, Obama states “When wealth concentrates at the very top, it can inflate unstable bubbles that threaten the economy." The problem with his way of thinking is best described by the status quo defender Sarah Bloom Raskin who offered up this insight into what the manipulation of market interest rates gives us, "asset bubbles are a feature of our financial landscape." So there it is, a feature (not a bug) that the President wants to get rid of (and yet wants to maintain the illusion that unrealized profit (and debt) is wealth).
Larry Summers' Fed Chair Odds Surge Again, Cross 70%; Yellen In The Dust
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/16/2013 13:02 -0500
Guess what comes next in the numbered sequence: 30.0%, 60.0%, 66.666%? If you said 71.4%, or 2/5, which just happens to be Larry Summers' latest Fed Chairmanship odds according to Paddy Power, you are correct. Janet Yellen, who was once a 1/3 favorite has now plunged to just 7/4 or about 30% odds. And while Bill Gross' tweet certainly moved the market, perhaps a far greater concern to longs everywhere (of both bonds and stocks) is the realization that with every passing day Larry Summers gets closer to becoming the next Fed chairman.
Janet Yellen On The Financial Crisis: "I Didn’t See Any Of That Coming Until It Happened"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2013 11:49 -0500
“For my own part I did not see and did not appreciate what the risks were with securitization, the credit ratings agencies, the shadow banking system, the S.I.V.’s — I didn’t see any of that coming until it happened.” - Janet Yellen, 2010
Europe Returns To "Growth" After Record 6-Quarter Long "Double Dip" Recession; Depression Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2013 06:18 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- BOE
- Bond
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dennis Lockhart
- Double Dip
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Glencore
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- Larry Summers
- Market Sentiment
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- President Obama
- Price Action
- Recession
- recovery
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
The amusing news overnight was that following slightly better than expected Q2 GDP data out of Germany (0.7% vs 0.6% expected and up from 0.0%) and France (0.5% vs 0.2% expected and up from -0.2%), driven by consumer spending and industrial output, although investment dropped again, which meant that the Eurozone which posted a 0.3% growth in the quarter has "emerged" from its double dip recession. The most amusing thing is that on an annualized basis both Germany and France grew faster than the US in Q2. And they didn't even need to add iTunes song sales and underfunded liabilities to their GDP calculation - truly a miracle! Or perhaps to grow faster the US just needs higher taxes after all? Of course, with the all important loan creation to the private sector still at a record low, and with the ECB not injecting unsterilized credit, the European depression continues and this is merely an exercise in optics and an attempt to boost consumer confidence.
Why Larry Summers' Ego Matters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2013 15:49 -0500
'Larry Summers for Fed Chair' proponents are working hard to reverse his generally poor reputation and seem to have gained some ground. They’ve tempted even Fed skeptics with reports that Summers doesn’t believe much in quantitative easing. But his supporters are also making claims that don’t stand up to the facts. Call us old-fashioned, but we think we should be wary of power-hungry egotists whose personal philosophy is to obscure the truth.
Five Years Later, Fed Finds QE Has "At Best, Moderate Effects On Economic Growth"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2013 13:37 -0500
In a somewhat stunning revelation from the masters-of-money-printing, the SF Fed (whose former head is none other than alleged Fed chairwoman frontrunner Janet Yellen) has found that "asset purchase programs like QE appear to have, at best, moderate effects on economic growth and inflation." One has to wonder why this sudden change of heart? Perhaps to pave the way for the less-than-enamored-with-QE Larry Summers' arrival... as we noted previously his views that “QE is less efficacious for the real economy than most people suppose." Or maybe this is a way for Ms. Yellen, to ingratiate herself with the president by indirecly toning down expectations she would go "feral hog" on the CTRL-P button? In any case, markets appear a little concerned at this rising Fed canon of removing the liquidity spigot despiet the all-time-highs in stocks.
Larry Summers And Tapering The 'Tattoo' Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2013 10:37 -0500
Outside the fetid terrarium where US economists live, like skinks kept as pets by bankers, other forces are in motion. For instance, there’s the non-theoretical, non-financial economy, which is now apparently based on the trade in tattoos, and the journey by automobile from the nearly foreclosed home to the tattoo studio, and to the hamburgers, pizzas, and fried chicken thighs consumed on each end of the journey. It seems, based on the latest odds, that Larry Summers will be entering the scene the way Vincent Price used to enter a Hammer Studio horror film - reliably delivering some deadly unpleasantness. We don’t think a more perfect figure might be found for piloting the garbage barge of American finance over a Niagara Falls of consequence.
Obama's Full Take On Messrs. Summers And Yellen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/11/2013 09:12 -0500
While Janet Yellen's chances of becoming the next head of the Fed are plunging, those of Larry Summers are soaring, and it may be all due to a simple Freudian slip by the president. For those who missed, below is the full transcript of Obama's Friday's Q&A on the topic of who will succeed Ben Bernanke. Perhaps the most notable component: the president's pre-slipped reference to Janet Yellen's gender. Because if "he" occupies so little of Obama's attention, then what really are "his" chances of becoming the most important woman in the history of the world? To wit: "I have a range of outstanding candidates. You've mentioned two of them — Mr. Summers and Mr. Yellen — Ms. Yellen. And they're both terrific people."
Larry Summers' Chairman Odds Soar To 66.6%, Double Yellen's
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/09/2013 13:44 -0500
Do you see what happens Larry when you float a strategic trial balloon or two? Your odds literally surge, at least according to Irish bookmaker Paddy Power, which in the absence of InTrade has become the only market polling venue where pundits put money where their mouth is (as opposed to countless clueless Op-Eds written by every self-proclaimed Fed expert in existence). Where two weeks ago, on July 24, Larry "the hawk" Summers was a long 20% odds challenger to Janet Yellen, who was a solid 75% favorite to become the next Fed chair, since then Yellen's odds have crumbled to just 33% currently, while Summers has exploded higher and after peaking at 60% two days ago has climbed even higher, and is a 66.6% (appropriately enough) favorite currently. Time for the perma-Doves to panic yet?
Obama Answers Your Housing Bubble Questions - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/07/2013 11:57 -0500
Following yesterday's soundbite-generating speech, President Obama will continue his 'victory lap' over housing. In a social-media event (#AskObamaHousing), Obama will join the CEO of Zillow to answer all your housing questions. From "which market do I buy/invest in to make the most money in the next 3 months flipping dat house?" to "how will my new rent-backed-securities hold their value if you cap rates?", and from "Isn't Eminent Domain just another wealth transfer plan from a large diversified group of investors to a small of group of people?" to "have you got naked pictures of Larry Summers to ensure that he instantly un-Tapers upon appointment and smashes rates back down?", we cant wait to hear the public's questions... especially as homeownership plunges to 18 year lows and rent costs surge, the 'recovery' is stalling as hedgies flee, and affordability retreats dramatically. With Zillow's dismal earnings it seems they need Obama as much as he needs housing hope...




