New Zealand
Frontrunning: September 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2012 06:43 -0500- Apple
- Barack Obama
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Credit Suisse
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- Ford
- General Electric
- General Motors
- Germany
- GOOG
- Greece
- India
- Insider Trading
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Japan
- Jeff Immelt
- Keefe
- Kuwait
- Lazard
- Lennar
- LIBOR
- Medicare
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Nomura
- Obama Administration
- Portugal
- Raj Rajaratnam
- ratings
- Raymond James
- RBS
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SAC
- Sheila Bair
- Standard Chartered
- State Street
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- China carrier a show of force as Japan tension festers (Reuters)
- Draghi Rally Lets Skeptics Dump Spain for Bunds (Bloomberg)
- China’s Central Bank Injects Record Funds to Ease Cash Crunch (Bloomberg)
- Obama warns Iran on nuclear bid, containment 'no option' (Reuters)
- When Would Bernanke’s Successor Raise Rates? (WSJ) that's easy - never
- Italy's Monti Downplays Sovereignty Risk (WSJ)
- Portugal swaps pay cuts for tax rises (FT)
- Madrid faces regional funding backlash (FT)
- Berlin Seeks to Push Back New Euro-Crisis Aid Requests (WSJ)
- Race Focuses on Foreign Policy (WSJ)
- China Speeds Up Approvals of Foreigners’ Stock Investment (Bloomberg)
Frontrunning: September 24
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2012 06:29 -0500- World on track for record food prices 'within a year' due to US drought (Telegraph)
- Foxconn halts production at plant after mass brawl (BBC)
- Germany Losing Patience With Spain as EU Warns on Crisis Effort (Bloomberg)
- Fed Recovery Doubts Spur Investor Bid for Treasuries (Bloomberg)
- Japan protests as Chinese ships enter disputed waters (Reuters)
- In Shark-Infested Waters, Resolve of Two Giants Is Tested (NYT)
- China jails Wang Lijun for 15 years (FT)
- China closes in on Bo Xilai after jailing ex-police chief (Reuters)
- European Leaders Struggle to Overcome Crisis Stalemate (Bloomberg)
- Politicians 1: Austerity 0 - Portugal Gives Ground on Worker Contributions (WSJ)
- Obama Controls Most of His Money as Republicans Have More (Bloomberg)
- Coeure Says Not Clear That Further ECB Interest-Rate Cut Needed (Bloomberg)
- France Seeks Labour Overhaul (WSJ)
Scientific Paper: “The Fukushima Radioactive Plume Contaminated the Entire Northern Hemisphere During a Relatively Short Period
Submitted by George Washington on 09/18/2012 10:40 -0500Nuclear News Roundup
Overnight Sentiment: Leave It All To The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2012 05:52 -0500News may come, and news may go, but the fiscal policy implementation vehicle known as the market, and now controlled by the Political Reserve don't care. For those who do, here is what has happened in the past few hours and what is on deck for the remainder of the week.
Guest Post: Hedging Against Capital Controls: Opening An Account Overseas
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2012 10:30 -0500Two signs that fear and instability have reached critical mass are capital flight and capital controls. Capital flight is people and enterprises moving their capital (cash and liquid assets) to an overseas "safe haven" to avoid devaluation of the currency or confiscation of their capital/assets. (Devaluation can be seen as one method of confiscation; high taxes are another.) Capital controls are the Central State's way of stemming the flood of cash leaving the country. Why do they want to stop money leaving? If we think of each Central State as a neofeudal fiefdom, we understand the motivation: citizens are in effect serfs who serve the State and its financial nobility. If the serfs move their capital out of the fiefdom, it is no longer available as collateral for the banks and a source of revenue for the State. Once capital has drained away, borrowing and lending shrink, cutting off the revenue source of the banks (financial nobility). Since financial activity also declines as cash is withdrawn from the system, the State's "skim"--transaction fees, sales taxes, VAT taxes, income taxes, wealth taxes, etc.--also declines. Both the State and its financial nobility are at increasing risk of decline and eventual implosion as capital flees the fiefdom. The Central State imposes capital controls as a means of Elite self-preservation.
AUD.USD: Is Optimism about to Shift?
Submitted by Burkhardt on 09/07/2012 17:17 -0500Where does the AUD.USD go from here?
JPM and Goldman See $1,800/oz Gold By Year End – Iran, Middle East and Inflation Risks Cited
Submitted by GoldCore on 09/07/2012 05:08 -0500XAU/EUR Exchange Rate Daily - (Bloomberg)
Gold at €1,355/oz, just 2.5% from the record high of €1,390/oz, is a sign of a continuing lack of trust in the euro and in Draghi’s stewardship at the ECB.
Russia’s Gazprom Tightens Its Stranglehold On Europe, France Falls: The Natural Gas War Gets Dirty
Submitted by testosteronepit on 08/31/2012 20:15 -0500The usual suspect, the all-powerful French nuclear industry?
Are People Being Thrown In Psychiatric Wards For Their Political Views?
Submitted by George Washington on 08/21/2012 17:51 -0500Governments Indefinitely Detaining Citizens In Psychiatric Wards Without Due Process of Law
Rate Cut Talk Saps Strength of the AUD
Submitted by Burkhardt on 08/17/2012 16:50 -0500Even the strong falter. As the dynamics within this global economy become more severe, the strengthening local economies find it more difficult to remain on course. The situation in Australia is that the country’s currency appears to be overvalued which impedes their ability to compete in the global market place.
Key Events In The Coming Week: Stalling Global Q2 GDP Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2012 17:38 -0500The week ahead brings a batch of Q2 GDP prints, which will provide guidance on the strength of activity in that quarter, as well as a bunch of business survey data which will offer insights into the strength of momentum at the start of Q3. Starting with the GDP data, the main attraction is likely to be the print from the US. Goldman expects a below trend print of 1.1%qoq, vs the consensus at 1.5%qoq. The Q2 print from the UK is expected to be negative. While only a few Q2 prints have been published so far, only China has recorded a recovery on Q1. The consensus expects soft prints for the business surveys out this week. The Euroland flash PMIs are expected to be unchanged, leaving them at levels consistent with a continued contraction in activity. The German IFO is expected to fall slightly, as is the Swiss KoF. There are no consensus expectations for the China flash PMI, however if it does not pick up from current levels around 48, questions over the extent/effectiveness of stimulus in China will remain.
The Great Demise: EUR at Two-Year Low
Submitted by Burkhardt on 07/20/2012 14:55 -0500Strength is fading. Parity is visible. Reform is the only option. European markets are tumbling and the euro has slipped to record lows against several major currencies. The market is in reaction mode responding Spain and Greece in the headlines.
Key Events In The Coming Week And... Bonds, PIIGS Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/16/2012 05:39 -0500Via Goldman, here are the key economic events to look forward to in the coming relatively quiet week. And out of DB, we get a list of the key PIIGS bond auctions and bailout events in the immediate and near-term future.
Central Bankers Are Not Omnipotent
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2012 20:40 -0500
A generation of market participants has grown up knowing only the era of central bankers and the 'Great Moderation' of (most of) the last two decades elevated their status significantly. While central bankers are generally very well aware of the limits of their own power, financial markets seem inclined to overstress the direct scope of monetary policy in the real world.
If markets fall, investors need only to run to central bankers, and Ben Bernanke and his ilk will put on a sticking plaster and offer a liquidity lollipop to the investment community for being such brave little soldiers in the face of adversity
Monetary policy impacts the real economy because it is transmitted to the real economy through the money transmission mechanism. This has become particularly important in the current environment, where, as UBS' Paul Donovan notes, some aspects of that transmission mechanism have become damaged in some economies. Simplifying the monetary transmission mechanism into four very broad categories: the cost of capital; the willingness to lend; the willingness to save; and the foreign exchange rate; UBS finds strains in each that negate some or all of a central bank's stimulus efforts. In the current climate, it may well be that the state of the monetary transmission mechanism is even more important than monetary policy decisions themselves. Some monetary policy makers may be at the limits of their influence.
Guest Post: Some Thoughts On Overseas Investing In U.S. Real Estate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/27/2012 19:03 -0500
What few media pundits seem to grasp is that when our trade deficits transfer hundreds of billions of dollars to other nations, those dollars have to end up in dollar-denominated assets like bonds, stocks or real estate. Many people have missed the difference between dollars used to settle accounts and dollars held as a result of trade deficits. Many of those emotionally wedded to the belief that the U.S. dollar is doomed gleefully grabbed onto the news that China and Japan will swap currencies directly (yen and yuan) rather than intermediate the trade with U.S. dollars. This was mistakenly seen as a nail in the coffin of the USD. If I am in Japan and I have yuan due to trade with China, and I want to exchange those yuan for yen, I only need USD for about 10 seconds to intermediate the exchange. Cutting out the USD simply cut the exchange costs and lowered the daily trading volume of the USD. This reduction in the transactions needed to exchange yuan for yen did nothing to change the dollars held by China or Japan as a result of their trade surpluses with the U.S. This also didn't lower the amount of assets or credit (debt) denominated in USD. In other words, the effect on the value of the dollar is trivial. No matter how many exchanges the USD sitting in overseas accounts are pushed through, they still end up in dollar-denominated assets somewhere.







