Gross Domestic Product
"Houston, You Have A Problem" - Texas Is Headed For A Recession Due To Oil Crash, JPM Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2014 22:55 -0500Fast forward to today when we are about to learn that Newton's third law of Keynesian economics states that every boom, has an equal and opposite bust. Which brings us to Texas, the one state that more than any other, has benefited over the past 5 years from the Shale miracle. And now with crude sinking by the day, it is time to unwind all those gains, and give back all those jobs. Did we mention: highly compensated, very well-paying jobs, not the restaurant, clerical, waiter, retail, part-time minimum-wage jobs the "recovery" has been flooded with. Here is JPM's Michael Feroli explaining why Houston suddenly has a very big problem.
The "Unequivocally 'Not' Good" Reality Of Lower Oil Prices & Jobs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2014 11:37 -0500The drop in oil prices is certain to cause some incremental unemployment in the U.S. energy industry; the question is simply how much and what that means for the American economy as a whole.
For Anyone That Still Believes Collapsing Oil Prices Are Good For The Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2014 19:25 -0500Are much lower oil prices good news for the U.S. economy? Only if you like collapsing capital expenditures, rising unemployment and a potential financial implosion on Wall Street.
European Banks At Risk Of Bail-Ins In 2015 - Moody's and S&P Warn On Bail-Ins
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/09/2014 11:08 -0500Europe's banks are vulnerable in 2015 due to weak macroeconomic conditions, unfinished regulatory hurdles and the risk of bail-ins according to credit rating agencies ... Oh what a tangled web, we weave ...
Jobs, Shale, Debt And Minsky
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2014 19:45 -0500We don’t see a whole lot of comprehension out there, so let’s try and link the obvious: employment to shale to plummeting oil prices to the debt the shale industry was built on (and which is vanishing). We know, people look at the US jobs report yesterday, and at the stock markets (Europe up some 2% across the board), and think salvation has landed on their doorstep, but the true story really is very different. We’ve been saying for weeks that lower oil prices would not be a boon but a scourge for the US economy, for several different reasons, and this is a big one. The losses to investors, the restructurings and bankruptcies, and perhaps even the bailouts, are a very much interconnected and crosslinked other. There’s no resilience – left – in a system like this, it bets all on red, and that makes it terribly brittle.
Voices Grow Louder To End The US Dollar's Reserve Status
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2014 19:05 -0500When no lesser establishmentarian than Obama's former chief economist Jared Bernstein called for an end to the US Dollar's reserve status, it raised a few eyebrows, but as the WSJ recently noted, the voices discussing how the burden of being the world's reserve currency harms America, more than just Vladimir Putin is paying attention. While some argue that “no other global currency is ready to replace the U.S. dollar.” That is true of other paper and credit currencies, but the world’s monetary authorities still hold nearly 900 million ounces of gold, which is enough to restore, at the appropriate parity, the classical gold standard: the least imperfect monetary system of history.
Here Is Oil's Next Leg Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2014 17:02 -0500Perhaps those sub-$50 Bakken prices tell us pretty much where global prices are ahead. And then we’ll take it from there. With 1.8 million barrels “that nobody needs” added to the shale industries growth intentions, where can prices go but down, unless someone starts a big war somewhere? Yesterday’s news that US new oil and gas well permits were off 40% last month may signal where the future of shale is really located. But oil is a field that knows a lot of inertia, long term contracts, future contracts, so changes come with a time lag. It’s also a field increasingly inhabited by desperate producers and government leaders, who wake up screaming in the middle of the night from dreaming about their heads impaled on stakes along desert roads.
Jobs: Shale States vs Non-Shale States
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2014 13:50 -0500Investments in oil and gas exploration and production generate substantial economic gains, as well as other benefits such as increased energy independence. The Perryman Group estimates that the industry as a whole generates an economic stimulus of almost $1.2 trillion in gross product each year, as well as more than 9.3 million permanent jobs across the nation. Simply put, this means 9.3 million, or 93% of the 10 million jobs created since the recession/depression trough, are energy related.
Stocks Rebound, Oil Resumes Slide, Ruble Tumbles As Yen Flirts With 119
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2014 07:05 -0500- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Fed Speak
- Fisher
- Fitch
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- New Normal
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Stress Test
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yen
A few days of near-record crude volatility (which the CME is scrambling to reduce following 2 crude margin hikes in the past week) is giving way to the New Normal default thinking: that central banks will soon take care of everything. And sure enough, just an hour earlier, US equity futures had jumped 8 points on virtually zero volume, wiping out all of yesterday's losses, driven higher by that new "old favorite", the USDJPY, which has once again resumed its climb higher, briefly rising above 119.00 once again and sending the Nikkei and the Topix to fresh 7 year highs, perfectly oblivious to both yesterday's Moody's downgrade and now open warnings from both Eisuke Sakakibara and Goldman Sachs that further declines in the Yen will accelerate the collapse of the Japanese economy. And, since there is also zero liquidity in the market, that entire gain was also just as promptly wiped out with futures now practically unchanged from yesterday's close.
5 Things To Ponder: Tryptophan Induced Coma
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2014 18:50 -0500As we prepare for the annual food fest, and post-Thanksgiving tryptophan-induced food coma; we thought this weekend's reading list should be a bit of a smorgasbord of interesting topics to stimulate your brain cells between naps and football.
3 Of The 10 Largest Economies In The World Have Already Fallen Into Recession – Is The U.S. Next?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 21:30 -0500Are you waiting for the next major wave of the global economic collapse to strike? Well, you might want to start paying attention again. Three of the ten largest economies on the planet have already fallen into recession, and there are very serious warning signs coming from several other global economic powerhouses.
You Asked For It, And Here It Is: The First GDP Downgrade Due To The Polar Vortex 2.0
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 09:42 -0500BMO Capital Markets economist Sal Guatieri notes that the BMO Economics team has lowered its U.S. fourth quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth estimate to 2.5% from 2.8% due to weaker housing starts and a view that November’s activity could get chilled by polar vortex 2. While October was relatively warm, November has been anything but. However, he does not expect the sort of massive hit that GDP suffered in the first quarter of 2014 due to cold weather.
Japan Goes Full Helicopter-Ben: Prints "Free Gift-Cards" To Spark Consumption
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2014 20:55 -0500Since Ben Bernanke reminded the world of the existence of government printing-presses, echoed Milton Friedman's "helicopter drop" solution to fighting deflation, and decried Japan for not being as insane as it could be... it has only been a matter of time before some global central bank decided that the dropping of cash onto the populace was the key to economic recovery. Having blown their wad on QQE (and been left with a triple-dip recession), it appears Japan has reached that limit. As Japan's News47 reports, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has instructed his cabinet to develop economic measures such as handing out 'gift certificates' to the poor to "support personal consumption directly."
The World Is Run By Fools, And We Let Them
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2014 09:54 -0500Dumb and Dumber To, the sequel after 20 years, was released recently. However, when it comes to real humor, the Dumber slapstick was easily upstaged over the past few days by the G20 summit in Brisbane. The lunatics are guiding us off the cliff. We know most people feel there’s nothing they can do to change the course their countries and governments have taken, but we also think that perhaps all these people need to realize they don’t have much of a choice anymore. If getting up from your couch for your own sake isn’t enough of a incentive, how about doing it for your kids and grandkids? The dumber-ass approach is the same one they use for their economic, what shall we call it, ‘policies’(?), it’s the exact same thing. It’s the surface that counts, not what’s underneath it. It’s the storyline, not the veracity of it.
And This Is How Central-Planning Broke Housing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2014 20:15 -0500First, they broke the capital markets. Then, the money-printing central-planners broke the housing market too. Here, in under 200 words, is a real-life case study of just how they did that.



