Bear Market
Are We There Yet?
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 05/29/2013 13:35 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- Australia
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bear Market
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Brazil
- Charlie Munger
- China
- Citigroup
- Commercial Real Estate
- Corruption
- Eurozone
- France
- Global Economy
- headlines
- Japan
- Jeremy Grantham
- Kool-Aid
- Las Vegas
- Market Timing
- Norway
- Real estate
- Recession
- Value Investing
- Volatility
- Warren Buffett
- Yen
One of the problems with QE is that the Fed is forcing people to buy riskier investments than they otherwise would have. The immorality of their actions aside, they create a significant psychological mismatch between assets and their holders. Stocks are in weak hands, insuring one great stampede for the chairs when the music stops.
Death By Carry
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2013 07:34 -0500
These are not easy times for the global bond market. We’re looking at US Treasuries market (more below), and reckon this morning’s 10-yr spike to 2.23 is only the start. We could see more aggressive price declines as the curve steepens further. It’s only partly based on the better economic outlook and fears of the QE Taper. Japan banks will be among the biggest sellers due to the volatility and “death by carry”. Forget the stories Japan banks were buyers at the wides.. that’s wishful thinking from Treasury holders long and wrong on the US bond market. Unfortunately, each passing day sees the BoJ's credibility chipped away.
Presenting The Full Impact Of Stock Buybacks On S&P 500 "Earnings"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2013 13:23 -0500
There has been much speculation in the recent past over what the bottom-line impact of surging stock buyback activity has been on the overall S&P earnings: after all, by removing shares from circulation, the denominator in "per share" calculation gets smaller and smaller with every incremental buyback. Courtesy of JPM we finally have a definitive answer to this long-running question. Of the change in S&P TTM operating earnings between Q3 2011 and the just completed Q1 2013, a stunning 60% or $2.20, of all "gains" of $3.70 have been the result of buybacks. The remainder: a tiny $1.50 is due to actual organic growth. This means that nearly 60% of the bridge between the LTM operating earnings of $94.60 as of Q3 2011 to $98.30 at Q1 2013 has come from corporate management teams engaging in shareholder friendly activity.
America's Bubble Economy Is Going To Become An Economic Black Hole
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/24/2013 16:03 -0500
What is going to happen when the greatest economic bubble in the history of the world pops? The mainstream media never talks about that. They are much too busy covering the latest dogfights in Washington and what Justin Bieber has been up to. And most Americans seem to think that if the Dow keeps setting new all-time highs that everything must be okay. Sadly, that is not the case at all. Right now, the U.S. economy is exhibiting all of the classic symptoms of a bubble economy. What we are witnessing right now is the calm before the storm. Let us hope that it lasts for as long as possible so that we can have more time to prepare. Unfortunately, this bubble of false hope will not last forever. At some point it will end, and then the pain will begin.
Guest Post: Generation X: An Inconvenient Era
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 10:09 -0500
A data-based look at the financial context of the past 30 years from the perspective of Gen X.
The Housing Unrecovery Is Here: Lumber Enters Bear Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/21/2013 16:08 -0500
Despite the incessant belief that this must be too-much-new-supply-driven (as opposed to a lack of demand for new home construction), Lumber futures (after hitting limit down once again today) have now officially entered bear-market territory. Front-month lumber prices are down 23% from their highs in mid-March and given the 2-month lead that correlates so well to the market, it seems things are a little ahead of themselves in 'housing recovery' land.
Silver Recoups Sharp Loss And Rises 2% On Record Volume
Submitted by GoldCore on 05/21/2013 10:08 -0500Silver’s recovery yesterday from being 10% lower at one stage to recouping these losses and then rising over 2% was very positive technically. The key reversal is leading some to postulate that we may have seen the bottom or are close to a bottom.
This Crisis Will Be Over 30 Times Bigger Than Greece
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 05/20/2013 09:05 -0500
If Japan’s bond market implodes, then global Central Bank efforts to hold the system together will have proven a failure.
It’s Official: Gold Is Now The Most Hated Asset Class
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/18/2013 20:37 -0500
Not a day passes without the financial media denouncing gold as an investment option and hailing the bureaucrats heading the world's monopolist monetary central planning agencies as superheroes. It began prior to gold's recent breakdown, with widely cited bearish reports on gold published by Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs, among others. Never mind that most of their arguments were easily unmasked as spurious. It should be no wonder though: gold's rise was the most conspicuous evidence of faith in central banking being slowly but surely undermined. The banking cartel relies on the fiat money system remaining intact; the legal privilege of fractional reserve banking provides it with what is an essentially fraudulent profit center unparalleled by any other in the world (fraudulent in terms of traditional legal principles, but not in terms of the current law of course). As a subtle reminder, in October (before the Nikkei began its 80% rally), a full 76% of the 'big money' fund managers surveyed declared themselves bearish on Japan. Currently, 69% of the managers surveyed in the most recent Barron's poll are bearish on gold.
Bill Gross: "We See Bubbles Everywhere"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/16/2013 13:25 -0500
It is only logical that when one of the smarter people in finance warns that he "sees bubbles everywhere" that he should be roundly ignored by those who have no choice but to dance. Because Bernanke and company are still playing the music with the volume on Max, and if not for POMO there is always FOMO. However, if there is any doubt why this "rally is the most hated ever", here are some insights from the Bond King from an interview with Bloomberg TV earlier today: "We see bubbles everywhere, and that is not to be dramatic and not to suggest they will pop immediately. I just suggested in the bond market with a bubble in treasuries and bubble in narrow credit spreads and high-yield prices, that perhaps there is a significant distortion there. Having said that, it suggests that as long as the FED and Bank of Japan and other Central Banks keep writing checks and do not withdraw, then the bubble can be supported as in blowing bubbles. They are blowing bubbles. When that stops there will be repercussions. It doesn't mean something like 2008 but the potential end of the bull markets everywhere. Not just in the bond market but in the stock market as well and a developing one in the house market as well."
What Happens When the Bond Bull Market Ends?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 05/16/2013 13:18 -0500
Bill Gross, who manages the world’s largest bond fund, has indicated that the 30+ year old super cycle bull market in bonds has ended. This is very bad news for the markets.
Gold Demand Remains Strong As Buying Records Continue To Tumble
Submitted by GoldCore on 05/16/2013 09:30 -0500There are no surprises in the latest World Gold Council Gold Demand Trends report other than the fact that statistics show global demand for gold in Q1 2013 was on the increase before the COMEX raid on April 15th. This is a clear indication that the fundamentals supporting a strong price for gold in the long term remain and also helps to explain why there was such a shortage of gold bars and coins in the weeks after April 15th.
Frontrunning: May 16
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/16/2013 06:45 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bain
- Bank of England
- Bank of New York
- Barclays
- Bear Market
- Beazer
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bitcoin
- Boeing
- Borrowing Costs
- China
- Chrysler
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Corporate Finance
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- CSC
- CSCO
- Delphi
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- DVA
- Evercore
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Ford
- General Motors
- Glencore
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Greenlight
- Housing Market
- India
- International Energy Agency
- Iran
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- KKR
- Kraft
- Lazard
- LIBOR
- Mervyn King
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- Obama Administration
- People's Bank Of China
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- World Gold Council
- Yuan
- As scandals mount, White House springs into damage control (Reuters)
- Glencore Xstrata chairman ousted in surprise coup (Reuters), former BP CEO Tony Hayward appointed as interim chairman (WSJ)
- JPMorgan Chase asks Bloomberg for data records (Telegraph)
- Platts Retains Energy Trader Confidence Amid Price-Fix Probe (BBG)
- Syrian Internet service comes back online (PCWorld)
- Japan Q1 growth hits 3.5% on Abe impact although fall in business investment clouds optimism for recovery (FT)
- Soros Joins Gold-Stake Cuts Before Bear Market Drop (BBG)
- Factory Ceiling Collapses in Cambodia (WSJ)
- Sony’s $100 Billion Lost Decade Supports Loeb Breakup (BBG)
- Snags await favourite for Federal Reserve job (FT)
- James Bond’s Pinewood Turned Down on $300 Million Plan (BBG)
Rick Rule: Uranium’s Wounds Are the Making of a Bull Market
Submitted by Sprott Group on 05/15/2013 09:56 -0500Natural resource speculators know that past uranium bull markets offered some ’explosive’ (pun intended) upside. I have been fortunate enough to experience two uranium bull markets: the 1970s bull market, which saw a tenfold increase in the uranium price and a hundredfold increase in some uranium equities, and the bull market of the last decade, which saw a repeat of the earlier performance.[1] If past is prologue, the stage may be set for a third uranium bull run.
The Complete Ira Sohn Conference Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2013 08:28 -0500
While Paul Singer, Kyle Bass, and Stan Druckenmiller got the headlines, there were in total 14 worthwhile speakers at yesterday's Ira Sohn conference. Though many of the themes were unsurprising, it is nonetheless useful to compare your own views to those of these professional money managers, many of whom are now bludgeoned daily by the 'idiot-maker' rally... of course, that is, until they are proved 100% correct.






