Insurance Companies
Unintended Consequences Of Bailouts: Greece Gets Slammed
Submitted by testosteronepit on 11/11/2012 20:20 -0500Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann: the favorite solution to the Greek crisis is legally impossible
The "Believe In Germany Bailing The EU" Trade: Go Long Magic Wand Raw Materials & Harry Potter Paraphernalia
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 11/07/2012 09:56 -0500How's this for a Harry Potter-like Incantation? Margin up magic, go short math! Believe Germany will escape unscathed, prepare to take a bath!
FIRE Burns From Hurricane Sandy - Fear The Insurance Companies, Twice Over - Just Ask the ECB, Greece, Spain & Portugal
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 11/02/2012 10:39 -0500Do you want to see FIRE burn as a result of hurricane level water. Visit NYC from the perspective of the insurance industry. The same industry poised to make sooo much money from EU sovereign debt.
Guest Post: The Tremendous Economic Benefits Of Superstorm Sandy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/31/2012 22:19 -0500
The public relations propaganda campaign to convince the ignorant masses that Sandy’s impact on our economy will be minor and ultimately positive, as rebuilding boosts GDP, has begun. I’ve been hearing it on the corporate radio, seeing it on corporate TV and reading it in the corporate newspapers. There are stories in the press that this storm won’t hurt the earnings of insurers. The only way this can be true is if the insurance companies figure out a way to not pay claims. They wouldn’t do that. Would they? It seems all the stories use unnamed economists as the background experts for their contention that this storm will not cause any big problems for the country. These are the same economists who never see a recession coming, never see a housing collapse, and are indoctrinated in Keynesian claptrap theory.
Frontrunning: October 24
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/24/2012 06:41 -0500- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- BOE
- Bond
- CBL
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- Fisher
- France
- Germany
- Hong Kong
- Institutional Investors
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- Keefe
- KKR
- Madison Dearborn
- Markit
- Merrill
- Mervyn King
- Monetization
- New York City
- New York Stock Exchange
- Nomura
- NYSE Euronext
- People's Bank Of China
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
- China May Forgo Easing as Economy Rebounds, Survey Shows (Bloomberg)... or as food and house inflation has never gone away
- China Edges Out U.S. as Top Foreign-Investment Draw Amid World Decline (WSJ)
- Fed to keep buying bonds despite firmer U.S. growth (Reuters)
- Bernanke Seen Attacking Jobless Rate With QE Until His Term Ends (Bloomberg)
- Mortgage applications plunge 12%, down for third week in a row (Dow Jones)
- Exchanges Retreat on Trading Tools - Fund Managers, Regulators Say Certain Orders Are Risky, Aid High-Speed Firms (WSJ)
- Europe Bank Chief to Defend Bond-Buying Plan (WSJ)
- Japan, China Envoys Met Last Week for Talks on Island Feud (Bloomberg)
- Goldman’s Pill Says ‘Guerrilla’ ECB to Impose Losses on Skeptics (BBG)
- Chance rise of an Obama defeat (FT)
- King Says BOE Is Ready to Add to QE If U.K. Recovery Fades (Bloomberg)
- Rajoy Sees Case for Slowing Spain’s Austerity as Economy Shrinks (BusinessWeek)
- Hong Kong Intervenes to Defend Peg as Upper Limit Tested (Bloomberg)
Shipping News - and a bit more
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 10/18/2012 19:59 -0500Think of a steady stream of rusty old ships headed for the scrap-yards of India. Each one means China gets stronger.
Once "Jollying The Markets" With "Faith, Hope And Charity" Fails, What Comes Next: A Primer On Europe's Next Steps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2012 09:06 -0500Back in January, Zero Hedge proposed a pair trade, which to date has returned well over 100% on a blended basis, namely the shorting of local law peripheral European bonds, while going long English law (or strong covenant) bonds (a relationship best arbed in Greece, when various foreign-law issues were tendered for at par to avoid a bankruptcy, even as the local law bond population saw a massive cram down a few months later as part of the second Greek "bailout"). In big part, this proposal stemmed from the work of Cleary Gottlieb's Lee Buccheit, who has been the quiet brain behind the real time restructuring of Europe's insolvent states. In fact, one can say that what is happening in Europe was predicted to a large extent in his "How to Restructure Greek Debt" and "Greek Debt; The Endgame Scenarios." Which is why we read his latest white paper: "The Eurozone Debt Crisis - The Options Now", because it presents, in clear, practical terms, just what the flowchart for Europe looks like, unimpeded by the ceaseless chatter and noise of clueless politicians and career bureaucrats who have never heard the term pro forma or fresh start. In brief, Buccheit, unlike all European politicians, is hardly optimistic.
We Are On The Road To Serfdom
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/11/2012 22:40 -0500
We are now five years into the Great Fiat Money Endgame and our freedom is increasingly under attack from the state, liberty’s eternal enemy. It is true that by any realistic measure most states today are heading for bankruptcy. But it would be wrong to assume that ‘austerity’ policies must now lead to a diminishing of government influence and a shrinking of state power. The opposite is true: the state asserts itself more forcefully in the economy, and the political class feels licensed by the crisis to abandon whatever restraint it may have adhered to in the past. Ever more prices in financial markets are manipulated by the central banks, either directly or indirectly; and through legislation, regulation, and taxation the state takes more control of the employment of scarce means. An anti-wealth rhetoric is seeping back into political discourse everywhere and is setting the stage for more confiscation of wealth and income in the future. This will end badly.
Guest Post: The Many Guises Of Financial Repression
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2012 19:31 -0500- Australia
- Bank of New York
- Bill Gross
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Corruption
- credit union
- default
- European Union
- Fail
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Guest Post
- Institutional Investors
- Insurance Companies
- Ludwig von Mises
- Monetary Policy
- Netherlands
- Nobel Laureate
- Purchasing Power
- Real Interest Rates
- Risk Premium
- Sovereign Debt
- State Street
- Switzerland
- Tobin Tax
- Transaction Tax
- United Kingdom
Economists, market analysts, journalists and investors alike are all talking about it quite openly, generally in a calm and reserved tone that suggests that - to borrow a phrase from Bill Gross – it represents the 'new normal'. Something that simply needs to be acknowledged and analyzed in the same way we e.g. analyze the supply/demand balance of the copper market. It is the new buzzword du jour: 'Financial Repression'. The term certainly sounds ominous, but it is always mentioned in an off-hand manner that seems to say: 'yes, it is bad, but what can you do? We've got to live with it.' But what does it actually mean? The simplest, most encompassing explanation is this: it describes various insidious and underhanded methods by which the State intends to rob its citizens of their wealth and income over the coming years (and perhaps even decades) above and beyond the already onerous burden of taxation and regulatory costs that is crushing them at present. One cannot possibly "print one's way to prosperity". The exact opposite is in fact true: the policy diminishes the economy's ability to generate true wealth. If anything, “we” are printing ourselves into the poorhouse.
Frontrunning: October 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2012 06:46 -0500- American Express
- Apple
- Australia
- Bain
- Bank of New York
- Barclays
- BOE
- China
- Citigroup
- Colony Capital
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- CSCO
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- India
- Insurance Companies
- International Monetary Fund
- Iraq
- Ireland
- ISI Group
- Keefe
- Lazard
- MatlinPatterson
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Nomura
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Recession
- Reuters
- SPY
- Standard Chartered
- State Street
- Tax Revenue
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Rajoy’s Deepening Budget Black Hole Outpaces Spain’s Cuts (Bloomberg)
- ECB May Need to Cut Rates Given Deflation Risk, IMF Says (Bloomberg)
- Global Recession Risk Rises (WSJ)
- Romney Leads Obama in Pew Likely Voter Poll After Debate (Bloomberg)
- IMF Sees Global Risk in China-Japan Spat (WSJ)
- Republicans shift tone on taxing the rich (FT)
- Romney casts Obama's foreign policy as weak, dangerous (Reuters)
- Europe Salutes Greek Budget-Cutting Will, Raising Aid Prospects (Bloomberg)
- U.S. Downgrade Seen as Upgrade as U.S. Debt Dissolved (Bloomberg)
- IMF Says Most Advanced Nations Making Progress Reducing Deficits (Bloomberg)
- Eurozone launches €500bn rescue fund (FT)
Guest Post: Welcome To The Era of 'Ugly' Inflation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2012 17:01 -0500
Ray Dalio recently described the characteristics of a “beautiful deleveraging” in which equal doses of austerity, write-downs, and inflation gradually lighten the load of impaired debt. Two things can turn beautiful inflation into ugly inflation: Wages don’t inflate along with prices and the currency depreciates as money is printed excessively. This might not matter for a nation that is a net exporter of goods and services. But for nations that import essentials such as oil and grain, this is a catastrophe, as wages are flat while the cost of imported energy and food skyrocket. Households have less money to spend, and servicing debt becomes increasingly burdensome. Welcome to the United States of Ugly Inflation. Real household income (i.e., adjusted for official inflation) has declined 8% since 2007; the cost of oil, medical care and higher education has climbed; and government revenues have stagnated even as demand for government services has increased. As a result, the entire beautiful deleveraging scenario is at risk.
The Financial Crisis Of 2015 - A Non-Fictional Fiction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/27/2012 20:22 -0500
The financial crisis of 2008 shook politicians, bankers, regulators, commentators and ordinary citizens out of the complacency created by the 25-year "great moderation". Yet, for all the rhetoric around a new financial order, and all the improvements made, many of the old risks remain (and some are far larger). The following 'story' suggests a scenario based on an 'avoidable history' and while future crises are not avoidable, being a victim of the next one is.
"John Banks was woken by his phone at 3am on Sunday 26th April 2015. John worked for Garland Brothers, a formerly British bank that had relocated its headquarters to Singapore in late 2011 as a result of..."
The Inexplicable American Consumer Is Putting The Screws To Health-Care Expenses
Submitted by testosteronepit on 09/18/2012 19:28 -0500The profit motive
There She Blows!!!...................Evil Plan 83.0 (by BDI from Slope of Hope)
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 09/16/2012 13:59 -0500Well, my fellow Slope-a Dopes, your favorite intrepid seafaring Frenchman got blown out of the water by Benjamin Moby-Dick Bernanke once again. I have to hand it to captain grey beard, for a guy with a curiously quivering lower lip, who seems so utterly unsure of himself every time he opens his moronic mouth, he sure does have some pair of ballistic brass balls. Not only did he delivered on his QE3 promise, but he actually turbo charged it into a terrifying trifecta! Boatswain BDI was left for dead, desperately drowning in a sea of red DOOMs (Deep Options Out of the Money). So now that Moby Dick has breached and surged the equity waves to new highs, where do we sail from here?







