Portugal
How Do You Solve A Problem Like Syriza?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2015 14:51 -0500- Bad Bank
- Central Banks
- Creditors
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- ETC
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Fail
- France
- Gambling
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- headlines
- Institutional Investors
- Ireland
- Krugman
- Nobel Laureate
- None
- Paul Krugman
- Portugal
- Reality
- SocGen
- Treasury Department
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
Rather than be a problem, Syriza may well be a solution, if it plays its cards right, but that still leaves politicians and investors denominating Tsipras et al as a problem, if not a menace. The world’s major banks got rich off the back of the Greek population at large, and when their wagers got so absurd they collapsed, the banks saw to it that their losses were transferred to European -and American – taxpayers. And those taxpayers are now told to vent their anger at 'those cheating, lazy Greeks'. The Troika, the EU, the IMF, and the banks whose sock puppets they have chosen to be, are a predatory force that has come a long way towards wiping Greece off the map. And that’s what Syriza has set out to remediate. And for that, they deserve, and probably will need, our unmitigated support.
Market Wrap: Treasury-Equity Reallocation Trade Pushes Futures Lower, 10 Year Rises To 1.72%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2015 07:08 -0500- Bond
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Economic Calendar
- Eurozone
- fixed
- Greece
- headlines
- HFT
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Michigan
- Money Supply
- Monte Paschi
- Nikkei
- Personal Consumption
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- Recession
- Reuters
- Swiss Franc
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
While the US daytime trading session has lately become a desperate attempt to expand multiples on the declining earnings of the S&P500, thanks to recurring BOJ intervention in the USDJPY, to keep the S&P above the 100 SMA at all costs including generous central banker verbal intervention then it is during the US overnight session when global deflationary reality reasserts itself with a vengeance, and sure enough at last check, the 10 Year has rallied with 10Y yield hitting 1.71% before this morning’s 4Q GDP release, as well as following the latest deflation number of -0.6% out of Europe (worse than the -0.5% expected) which was the biggest price decline on the continent since 2009. "Treasuries remained well bid overnight due to month-end index adjustments. Some talk of a reallocation from equities to bonds trade going through in both Asia and continuing in Europe," ED&F Man head of rates and credit trading Tom di Galoma wrote in a note to explain the latest Great Unrotation, if only until the Virtu HFT algos get the full blessing of the Fed to ramp the USDJPY, and thus the stock market.
NEWSFLASH: The Netherlands Wasn’t The First Time The IMF Dropped The Ball On The National Gold Holdings
Submitted by Sprout Money on 01/29/2015 14:33 -0500We discovered two more mistakes...
Markets Drift Without Direction As Zombified BTFDers Unable To Frontrun Hawkish Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/29/2015 07:00 -0500- Bond
- Brazil
- CDS
- Consumer Confidence
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Greece
- India
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Reuters
- Romania
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Uzbekistan
The bottom line is that unfortunately for the BTFDers, with the Fed no longer giving explicit buy signals with the "considerable time" language struck, and with an implicit economic upgrade suggesting a rate hike is still on the table, it is becoming increasingly more difficult to frontrun the Fed's "wealth creation" intentions.
Market Wrap: All Eyes On Yellen Who Better Not Disappoint
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/28/2015 07:22 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- BOE
- Boeing
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- Case-Shiller
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Equity Markets
- France
- GETCO
- Gilts
- Greece
- Housekeeping
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- New Home Sales
- New Normal
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Reuters
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yuan
While all the algos are programmed and set to scan today's FOMC statement for whether both "patient" and "considerable time" are still there (as it did last time when it supposedly sent a pseudo-hawkish message while telling Virtu and Getco to buy, buy, buy), the market is torn between the trends observed in recent days: on one hand finally succumbing to the adverse impact of USD strength, which overnight also saw the Singapore Dollar admit defeat in the ongoing currency wars, is crushing both revenues and EPS, as well as outlooks, for the bulk of US companies, even as millennials - long since given up on buying a house - allocate their meager savings to the annual incarnation of Apple's flagship product as seen in yesterday's record, blowout numbers by AAPL which is up 8% in the premarket and sending Nasdaq futures soaring compared to the stagnant DJIA or S&P. And then there is Europe where the mood is decidedly sour this morning, with Greece imploding on fears Tsipras really means business and concerns the Greek "virus" may spread to other peripheral nations whose bonds have also seen a lack of a bond bid this morning.
It’s Not The Greeks Who Failed, It’s The EU
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/27/2015 15:57 -0500It’s important that we all, European or not, grasp how lacking in morality the entire system prevalent in the west, including the EU, has become. This shows in East Ukraine, where sheer propaganda has shaped opinions for at least a full year now. It’s not about what is real, it’s about what ‘leaders’ would like you to think and believe. And this same immorality has conquered Greece too; there may be no guns, but there are plenty victims. The EU is a disgrace, a predatory beast unleashed upon all corners of Europe that resist central control and, well, debt slavery really, if you live on the wrong side of the tracks. SYRIZA may be the last chance Europe has to right its wrongs, before fighting in the streets becomes an everyday reality.
Currency Wars - Russia Buys 20.7 Tonnes Of Gold In December; Netherlands Refutes IMF Gold Data
Submitted by GoldCore on 01/27/2015 10:46 -0500Given that Russia perceives itself to be under financial and economic attack from the West, there is the possibility that they are accumulating more gold than they are declaring officially to the IMF.
De Nederlandsche Bank, the Dutch central bank has denied reports in Reuters, Bloomberg and picked up by GoldCore, that the bank had increased its gold holdings for the first time in sixteen years. IMF data had shown that the Dutch had increased their holdings to 622.08 tonnes.
From Keynesian Shangri-La To Outright War
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/26/2015 12:38 -0500The problem with all Keynesian styled philosophy is, it works well, and seems utterly brilliant on paper and in the classrooms of academia - when trouble arises its "To the text books!" for answers and BAM! – crisis solved. However in the real world it doesn't work that way. Just like war, when the battle starts, all earlier plans get thrown in the dust heap. And make no mistake, this was all started via armchair generals who believed monetary policy could be managed from within the Ivory Towers of academia and the consequences of these policies are multiplying by the day. As Mike Tyson once said so eloquently: (I’m paraphrasing) "Everybody's got a plan – till someone punches them in the face." The SNB has just landed the first blow. Now what?
With Syriza Leading By 7 Points, Greek Incumbents Fear-Monger Looming "Toilet-Paper-Run"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/24/2015 16:45 -0500Left-wing anti-EU party Syriza has extended its lead over incumbent Nea Dimokratia (ND) to 7 percentage points in the polls ahead of tomorrow's crucial Greek election. As Keep Talking Greece reports, To Potami and Golden Dawn (the neo-Nazi party that is facing charges for being a "criminal organization") are running 3rd with 6-7% of the vote (Syriza 33.5%, ND 26.5%) and with 20% admitting they had changed their opinion about which party to vote for in the pre-election period, it appears ND incumbents have taken up the "Scotland" strategy - fearmongery. Speaking on Greek TV, just 48 hours before the elections, ND-candidate Sofia Voultepsi implied that if Syriza wins the elections and forms a government on Monday Greeks will run out of toilet paper... and with JPMorgan noting that deposit outflows hit EUR8bn last week (double the previous 2 weeks combined), the "bank run" could easily morph into Venezuelan "toilet paper runs."
Euro Crash Continues Sending Stocks Higher, Yields To Record Lows; Crude Stabilizes On New King's Comments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/23/2015 07:03 -0500Today's market action is largely a continuation of the QE relief rally, where - at least for the time being - the market bought the rumor for over 2 years and is desperate to show it can aslo buy the news. As a result, the European multiple-expansion based stock ramp has resumed with the Eurostoxx advancing for a 7th day to extend their highest level since Dec. 2007. As we showed yesterday, none of the equity action in Europe is based on fundamentals, but is the result of multiple expansion, with the PE on European equities now approaching 20x, a surge of nearly 70% in the past 2 years. But the real story is not in equities but in bonds where the perfectly expected frontrunning of some €800 billion in European debt issuance over the next year, taking more than 100% of European net supply, has hit new record level.
Bloomberg's Handy Guide To Why Falling Prices Are Horrible For You
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/22/2015 14:09 -0500With almost perfect comedic timing, Bloomberg unleashed the mainstream media's Draghi-confirming raison d'etre for QE... explaining why - shock horror - deflation is bad for you. No matter that the QE efforts of The Fed (and BoJ) entirely (totally and utterly) failed to spark any increase in inflation expectations, we must try try try again. However, despite the exuberant disgruntlement with deflation that Bloomberg offers, Portuguese economy minister Guindos had something 'odd' to say this morning: "European deflation is positive." We are sure he will issue some clarifying statement soon enough walking back such a dangerous and anti-authority comment.
Market Wrap: Global Markets Rebound On ECB QE Hopes After IMF Cuts Global Growth Forecast Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/20/2015 06:53 -0500Hours after the IMF cut its global economic growth forecast yet again (which for the permabullish IMF is now a quarterly tradition as we will shortly show), now expecting 3.5% and 3.7% growth in 2015 and 2016, both 0.3% lower than the previous estimate (but... but... low oil is unambiguously good for the economy) and both of which will be revised lower in coming quarters, and hours after China announced that its entirely made up 2014 GDP number (which was available not 3 weeks after the end of the quarter and year) dropped below the mandatory target of 7.5% to the lowest in 24 years, it only makes sense that stock markets around the globe are solidly green if not on expectations of another year of slowing global economies, which stopped mattering some time in 2009, but on ever rising expectations that the ECB's QE will be the one that will save everyone. Well, maybe not everyone: really only the 1% which as we reported yesterday will soon own more wealth than everyone else combined and who are about to get even richer than to Draghi.
"De-Dollarization" Deepens: Russia Buys Most Gold In Six Months, Continues Selling US Treasuries
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2015 21:40 -0500The rumors of Russia selling its gold reserves, it is now clear, were greatly exaggerated as not only did Putin not sell, Russian gold reserves rose by their largest amount in six months in December to just over $46 billion (near the highest since April 2013). There is another trend that also continues for the Russians - that of reducing their exposure to US Treasury debt.
Franc-ly Speaking: What If It Were All A Set Up?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2015 19:30 -0500Everyone loves a good conspiracy theory debate. Regardless of whether you argue for it, or against, there are times when suddenly the ramifications for plausible truth are realized that overshadow the conspiracy. This is where the plot of truth can get far more sinister than the imagined conspiracy ever could.
"The Consequences Of The SNB Decision Will Not Be Limited To Switzerland"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/17/2015 15:00 -0500Since the European sovereign-debt crisis erupted in 2009, everyone has wondered what would happen if a country left the eurozone. The risks created by the SNB’s decision – as transmitted through the financial system – have a fat tail - and the consequences will not be limited to Switzerland. After years of wondering whether the exit of a small, fiscally weak country like Greece could undermine the euro, policymakers will have to deal with an even bigger shock stemming from the exit of a small, fiscally strong country that is not even a member of the European Union.




