RBS
Weekend Reading: Breaking Markets - Season II
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2016 16:35 -0500“Fed Chair Janet Yellen will be forced to either acknowledge labor market tightening as reason to continue with the four-hike schedule for 2016 or risk her credibility, belittle job market stability and sound a warning about the risks of lower oil prices and cheap gasoline (sacrilege to regular Americans) by slowing the hiking pace after a single 0.25 percent increase last month. If she gets it wrong, things could get ugly fast."
Frontrunning: January 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2016 07:45 -0500- Crude sinks 4 percent as market braces for more Iranian oil (Reuters)
- Plunge in crude oil prices send stock futures sliding (Reuters)
- Oil Slides, Deepening Gloom in Stocks as Bond Buyers Celebrate (BBG)
- China Stocks Enter Bear Market, Erasing Gains From State Rescue (BBG)
- Friendly no more: Trump, Cruz erupt in bitter fight at Republican debate (Reuters)
- Dollar in Best Run Since July on Haven Bid Even as Fed Odds Fall (BBG)
Norway's Black Gold Fields Are A Sea Of Red - A Real-Time Map Of Crude Carnage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2016 12:16 -0500Norway is in trouble. As we have detailed previously (here, here, here, and here), the world's largest sovereign wealth fund has begun liquidating assets (after its largest quarterly loss) as the nation faces recessionary fears (key data deterioration as oil stays lower for longer) with expectations building (despite denials by the central bank) that ZIRP (or even NIRP) is coming. Why? Simple - as the following real-time map shows - every one of Norway's oil fields are currently underwater!
More Strategists Throw In The Towel: "Things Will Only Get Worse"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2016 09:28 -0500Having been abandoned by equity analysts, perhaps investors could find some solace in the Treasury analyst community. Alas no: as Bloomberg notes this morning, citing independent Treasury strategist Marty Mitchell, "our concern is that things will only get worse (effects of commodity super-cycle, bankruptcies, debt defaults, hedge fund redemption/failures, global economic slowdown, equity weakness, global debt deleveraging, etc, etc) before they get better."
Frontrunning: January 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2016 07:32 -0500- Oil slips toward $30, traders bet on more falls (Reuters)
- Oil Plunge Sparks Bankruptcy Concerns (WSJ)
- RBS cries 'sell everything' as deflationary crisis nears (Telegraph)
- World stocks drop but Europe shrugs off oil slide, China money market surge (Reuters)
- Canadian Stocks Fall in Longest Slump Since 2002 as Oil Slides (BBG)
- "Murderous" Yuan Rate Jolts Hong Kong as Top Currency Hub (BBG)
When 3 Trillion Just Isn't Enough: Analysts Fret Over "Worrying" China Reserve Burn
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 15:01 -0500"The burn rate has been worrying. It’s not about how long it gets to zero, its about how long it gets to about 2, which is what they need."
How Low Will The Yuan Go? Deutsche Bank Answers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 13:09 -0500"Until the market acquires greater confidence on the intended scale of currency depreciation as well as the equilibrium level of capital outflows (and effectiveness of capital controls) concerns around China’s currency policy are unlikely to subside any time soon."
RBS: "This Is Simply The Worst Week We Had In Recent History... After Too Much Policy Kool-aid"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 08:20 -0500This week is simply the worst we had in recent history for markets, RBS exclaims, the worst ever start to the year for The Dow, the worst since 1999 for S&P and the second-worst for credit since 2008. Worst still is, they think there’s more weakness ahead and that many fundamental risks will continue to haunt markets. Why? Simple! Investors drank too much policy kool-aid last year.
Saudi Aramco Confirms "World's Most Valuable Company" May Go Public
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2016 07:54 -0500"Saudi Aramco confirms that it has been studying various options to allow broad public participation in its equity through the listing in the capital markets of an appropriate percentage of the Company’s shares and/or the listing of a bundle its downstream subsidiaries."
Frontrunning: December 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2015 08:02 -0500- Oil prices drop towards 11-year lows on worsening glut (Reuters)
- Third Avenue Seen by Top Investors as Fueling More Carnage (BBG)
- Lucidus Has Liquidated $900 Million Credit Funds, Plans to Shut (BBG)
- Investor nerves tested with yuan, oil, Fed in play (Reuters)
- Junk Bonds Stagger as Funds Flee (WSJ)
- Seattle lawmakers set to vote on allowing Uber, other drivers to unionize (Reuters)
Futures Resume Slide After Oil Tumbles Below $35, Natgas At 13 Year Low; EM, Junk Bond Turmoil Accelerates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2015 06:51 -0500- Across the Curve
- Australia
- Barclays
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Foreclosures
- Global Economy
- High Yield
- Iran
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Lehman
- Monetary Policy
- Nat Gas
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Precious Metals
- RANSquawk
- RBS
- Recession
- recovery
- Renminbi
- Yuan
- Zurich
With just 72 hours to go until Yellen decides to soak up to $800 billion in liquidity, suddenly we have China and the Emerging Market fracturing, commodities plunging, and junk bonds everywhere desperate to avoid being the next to liquidate.
Weekend Reading: Market Forecasting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2015 16:30 -0500The mainstream media is increasingly suggesting that we have once again entered into a 'Goldilocks Economy.' The problem is that in the rush to come up with a 'bullish thesis' as to why stocks should continue to elevate in the future, they have forgotten the last time the U.S. entered into such a state of 'economic bliss.' You might remember this: "The Fed's official forecast, an average of forecasts by Fed governors and the Fed's district banks, essentially portrays a 'Goldilocks' economy that is neither too hot, with inflation, nor too cold, with rising unemployment." - WSJ Feb 15, 2007. Of course, it was just 10-months later that the U.S. entered into a recession followed by the worst financial crisis since the 'Great Depression.'
As The Credit Cycle 'Turns', Global Defaults Surge To 6-Year Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2015 14:01 -0500After asking rhetorically "if something just blew up in junk," as CCC-yields explode to crisis-peak levels - suggesting something "spectaculor" is occurring as one trader noted, The FT reports that, according to Standard & Poor’s, companies have defaulted on $78bn worth of debt so far this year with 2015 set to finish with the highest number of worldwide defaults since 2009.


