Wells Fargo
Guest Post: Protect The Banks At All Costs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2012 11:19 -0500
Welcome to the new America — where banks must be protected at all costs. Whether it’s a bailout or a trumped up charge to silence a protestor, if the banks want it, they get it. The district attorney in the case has dropped the charge of attempted robbery. However, a terroristic threat charge remains. Meanwhile, the economic evidence is mounting that countries that want to recover need to tell the banks to take a hike.
Happy Anniversary Countrywide! Or is it Back to the Future?
Submitted by rcwhalen on 08/23/2012 09:18 -0500I am reminded that this is the 5-year anniversary of the emergency Fed Discount Rate cut in response to the collapse of Countrywide Financial (CFC) earlier that week.
Soros Gold Action Speaks Louder Than 'Bubble' Words
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/15/2012 07:10 -0500George Soros more than doubled his shares in the SPDR gold trust ETF. He increased his position in SPDR Gold to $137.3 million in the second quarter from $52 million previously. SEC filing for the second quarter showed Soros Fund Management more than doubled its investment in the SPDR Gold Trust from 319,550 shares to 884,400 shares at the end of June. In September 2010 (see chart), Soros called gold "the ultimate bubble" and largely dumped his stake in the ETF before gold recorded annual gains in 2010 and 2011 and rose to a nominal high of $1,920.30 per ounce in September. There was speculation at the time that he may have sold the SPDR trust in order to own far safer allocated gold bars. Another billionaire investor respected for his financial acumen is John Paulson and Paulson & Co increased its holdings by 26% by purchasing an additional 4.53 million shares of the SPDR Gold Trust to bring entire holding to 21.8 million shares. It was the first time Paulson & Co had increased its position in the SPDR Gold Trust since the first quarter of 2009, when the investment firm initially acquired 31.5 million shares. It means that Paulson's $21 billion hedge fund now has more than 44% of the company's assets allocated to gold.
Frontrunning: August 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/15/2012 06:28 -0500- Investors Shift Money Out of China (WSJ)
- Rajoy Risks Riling ECB in Bid to Avoid Union Ire (Bloomberg)
- Romney-Ryan See Fed QE as Inflation Risk Amid Subdued Prices (Bloomberg)
- Spanish savers offered haircut then money back (FT)
- Must wipe all traces of illegality and settle for $25,000: Standard Chartered Faces Fed Probes After N.Y. Deal (BBG)
- Greece debt report backs cuts plan (FT)
- Greece seeks two-year austerity extension (FT)
- Brevan Howard Looks To U.S. To Raise Money For Currency Fund (Bloomberg)
- Can he please stop buying gold? Paulson, Soros Add Gold as Price Declines Most Since 2008 (Bloomberg)
- BOE Drops Reference to Rate Cut as It Considers Policy Options (Bloomberg)
- EU Banking Plans Asks ECB to Share Power, Documents Show (Bloomberg)
Dan Loeb Purges Portfolio, Cuts Over Two Thirds Of Equity Holdings, Adds 25 New Positions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2012 15:59 -0500In Q2 Dan Loeb went to town to his holdings as of March 31. Of his roughly 38 different positions, Loeb cut 24 names to zero among which Cisco, Marvell Technology, Sara Lee, Google, Wells Fargo (with the Octogenarian of Omaha likely buying every share), El Paso, Abercrobmie, Goldman and many others. Of course, he kept his stake in Yahoo and added to Apple, while cutting his Delphi stake from 13.34 million shares to 11.5 million. He used the proceeds from these sales to add to new positions (latest 13F here) in new names such aws AIG, Aetna, Chesapeake, Cigna, Coca Cola, Enphase, Humana, News Corp, and Unitedhealth Group. Also, Loeb went quite optically against Bill Ackman and bought a $6.5 million share equivalent put in JCPenney. He is significantly in the money in this. Altogether, his disclosed equity stake was at $3.3 billion as of June 30, down from $4.1 billion at March 31. Dry powder? Or more likely getting more into bonds (which he doesn't have to disclose on any filing).
09 Aug 2012 – “ Beautiful Days " (Venus, 2003)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/09/2012 10:56 -0500ECB to EU governments: “Guys, we won’t fly solo…”
Bond Market to ECB “Show me the money!”
Equity market “Someone said Money? Buy!”
Guest Post: TBTF Banks Laughing All The Way Home Thanks To HARP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/06/2012 22:45 -0500
HARP, The Home Affordable Refinance Program, is a streamline refinance program developed to help borrowers who have continued to make their mortgage payments, but have be unable to refinance due to a decline in their home value. While it is encouraging that more and more underwater homeowners are gaining the benefits of today’s low interest rates, tremendous profits are being made at their expense. Lack of competition is the primary catalyst, but the underlying economics of the large “too big to fail” banks will do nothing but stoke additional anger in the general public. Expect this trend to continue until the dynamics of the program is changed once again, possibly in HARP 3.0. Until then, the cash cow will continue for the TBTF banks.
Why Mega Banks Are The Modern Cocaine Cowboys
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2012 19:17 -0500
In today's episode of blast from the past, Bloomberg's Jonathan Weil takes us on a time journey, which presents the Too Big To Fail bank problem from a different perspective: that of the Cocaine Cowboy roaming the streets of Miami in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Just like today's big banks they were untouchable; just like today's banks they were collaborating and existing in perfect symbiosis with the Federal Reserve; just like today the Cocaine Cowboys existed in an untouchable vacuum courtesy of endless bribes to the local law enforcement and judicial officials, and just like today, the TBTF institution du jour isn't "merely an economic problem. It is a great moral failing of our society that poisons our democracy." Back then, Ronald Reagan stepped in just when Miami (whose real estate market had soared in 1979-1981 courtesy of rampant crime and money laundering: hint hint NAR anti money-laundering exemptions) was about to be overrun, forming a task force that in the nick of time restored law and order. Today we are not that lucky, as there is not a single politican willing to risk it all just to eradicate the modern version of a classic scourge: only this time they don't hand out 8 balls; they give away 0% introductory APR cards and 3 Year NINJA Adjustable Rate Mortgages. Both however get you hooked for life: either on drugs or on debt. Will someone step up this time and form a task force to eliminate the second coming of the Cocaine Cowboy? Sadly, we don't think so. At least not until the next great crash happens.
JP Morgan, Bruno Iksil and the FDIC TAG Program
Submitted by rcwhalen on 08/01/2012 05:16 -0500TAG ought to be allowed to expire at the end of 2012, but people like Barney Frank and Tim Johnson will be working to preserve this corporate subsidy for their clients among the large banks regardless of the deleterious effect on the US economy.
Is Time For Facebook Investors To Literally Face the Book (Value)?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 07/27/2012 07:53 -0500Facebook investors are about to get unliked...
Presenting The Real Impact Of US Stress Test Transparency
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/23/2012 12:30 -0500
Far be it from us to reflect Schadenfreude here but at the time of the squeezefest leading up to and after the announcement of the lipstick-on-a-pig US Stress Tests in mid-March, when CDS were remaining wide and hardly budged, we questioned the reality of the assumptions and the lack of contagion comprehension. Most critically, in the 4 months since that wondrous day when all was proved great in the world of US banking, the major financials are down a stupendous 25% on average with Wells Fargo taking over the mantle of least used bed-pan in the E-Coli ward - at an unimpressive unchanged since 3/13.
Pennsylvania Real Estate Trust - CRE Short of the Year Foreclosure Scenario
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 07/16/2012 11:59 -0500PEI is at risk of "JingleMailing" properties. Even if foreclosure doesn't occur, here's more evidence of imminent distress as Value Line says buy, I say #crash & management takes down more than shareholders in compensation!
Citigroup Earnings, NIM and the FDIC TAG Program
Submitted by rcwhalen on 07/15/2012 15:31 -0500So when you see Citi’s Q2 2012 earnings, remember that about ¼ of the number will come from non-interest bearing deposits covered by FDIC's TAG program.
Frontrunning: July 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/05/2012 06:29 -0500- Finland (which with Holland account for 50% of the Eurozone's AAA rated countries), just says "Ei" to stripping ESM subordination (Bloomberg)
- Libor Rate Scandal Set to Spread (WSJ)
- #ByeBarclays flashmob descends on bank (FinExtra)
- What is financial reform in China? (Pettis)
- Cities Consider Seizing Mortgages (WSJ)
- China Beige Book Shows Pickup Unseen in Official Data (BBG)
- China’s New Rules May Curb Credit Growth, CBRC Official Says (BBG)
- India Said to Pay in Euros for Iranian Oil Due to Rupee Hurdles (BBG)
- Wealthy Hit Hardest as France Raises Taxes (FT)
- Euro Bank Supervisor Faces Hurdles (WSJ)
The Big Losers in the Libor Rate Manipulation
Submitted by George Washington on 07/03/2012 12:36 -0500- Bank of New York
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Citibank
- Citigroup
- Counterparties
- Credit Crisis
- European Union
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Gambling
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Insurance Companies
- Joseph Stiglitz
- JPMorgan Chase
- LIBOR
- Meltdown
- Morgan Stanley
- New York State
- Purchasing Power
- ratings
- Recession
- TARP
- Testimony
- University of California
- Wells Fargo
Local Governments Which Entered Into Interest Rate Swaps Got Scalped






