Monday, December 26, 2016

Ok - get ready, big selloff coming and its going to start this week.  Put on your hard hats....

The BEAR is back!

Just want this documented....AGAIN

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

QE3 - Starts the Risk Off Trade

While we have yet to see the actual report, almost certainly emanating from Jon Hilsenrath, it appears that the QE3 rumormill has started, initially with speculation that the Fed's activity will be merely "sterilized" or more Twist-type purchases, unclear however if in TSYs or also in MBS. Via the WSJ:
Fed Officials consider "sterilized" option for Future bond buying
Operation Twist Reprise, QE Other Options For Fed Bond
Still Unclear Whether Fed Will Launch Another Bond-Buy
As a reminder, yesterday we said that according to the EURUSD, the implied market expectation is for a $750 billion QE. However, that is for sterilizied balance sheet expansion. If the Fed goes ahead and does not grow its balance sheet, it may well be EURUSD, and thus risk, negative, as no new money will be available for actual speculation. Which perhaps is precise ly what the Fed is planning, as every incremental dollar now goes into Crude first, and everything else later. In other words: this is a very big risk off indicator as no new money will be availble to pump up stocks!

Monday, March 5, 2012

Insolvency stupid...

Insolvency will keep dragging the Euro-Area economy down until sovereign and bank balance sheets are repaired, but as Lombard Street Research points out: eliminating the Ponzi debt without fracturing the entire credit system is impossible. The Lehman default occurred 13 months after the US TED spread crossed 100 basis points. The European equivalent crossed 100 basis points in September 2011, so its banking crisis would occur this autumn if a year or so is a normal incubation period. A Greek or any other significant default will precipitate a European banking crisis in the foreseeable future. Markets are already speculating on Portuguese negotiations for haircuts and Ireland can’t be far behind and the contagion to US (and global) banking systems is inevitable given counterparty risks, debt loads (and refi needs), and capital requirements (no matter how well hidden by MtM math). The contagion will likely show up as a risk premium in the credit markets initially as we suggest the recent underperformance of both US and European bank credit relative to stocks is a canary to keep an eye on.

Monday, December 19, 2011

DEFLATION is upon us...

Europe’s banking system is imploding, Gold has broken its long-term uptrend, and US Treasuries are signaling a Crisis even worse than 2008, stocks are bouncing off of support as though there’s no real danger.
This can be attributed to three factors:
1) Light volume (fewer and fewer folks are investing in stocks which allows Wall Street to move the market more easily).
2) End of the year performance gaming by hedge funds and institutions (most of which have had horrible years)
3) Misguided hope and delusions… just like the ones we had in 2008 when stocks didn’t “get it” until the whole system was ready to collapse
In simple terms, the best analysis of today’s markets is that we are getting MAJOR red flags across the board that another round of DE-flation is here.
Against this backdrop, stocks are as clueless as they were in 2008. And given that most traders will be taking off early this week, those remaining will be able to move the market any way they please as volume will be even lower than the abysmal levels we’ve seen for most of 2011.
So my advice is to avoid trading this week if you can help it. There is simply too much uncertainty in the market: stocks could rally based on end of the year shenanigans… or they could just as easily collapse due to Europe or any number of other issues in the system today.
However, the larger picture indicates that deflation is back and it’s back with a vengeance. It would be wise to prepare in advance for this as stocks are ALWAYS the last to “get it.” And by the looks of the recent action in Gold and Treasuries, “It” is going to be something VERY unpleasant.

QE 3?????

Sorry Folks, QE 3 Ain’t Coming…
… Unless we get a major bank going under or a 2008-type event.
I’ve been reading that several pundits believe QE 3 is just around the corner. I’m sorry to say that this view is both misguided and has proven to be extremely dangerous to investors’ portfolios over the six months.
Indeed, we’ve heard this argument virtually non-stop since last June. Every time the Fed had another FOMC coming up, the argument was made that QE 3 would be announced. Every single time the Fed disappointed and the markets cratered (only to then be ramped higher by the PPT).
The madness would then start all over again a few weeks later. Whether it was some Dovish Fed President hinting the Fed was ready to act… or some economic data point missing expectations… EVERY TIME the pundits spun this to argue that QE 3 was just around the corner.
However, for those who actually read what Bernanke was saying, it was clear as day that QE 3 was NOT coming… at least not without some kind of Crisis hitting first: such as a major bank collapsing or another 2008 episode.

QE 3???

We’ve reached the end game for Central Bank intervention.
When confronted with excessive debt, you can either “take the hit” or you can try to inflate the debt away.
In 2008, the Central Banks, lead by the US Federal Reserve, decided not to “take the hit.” They’ve since spent trillions of Dollars propping up the financial system. By doing this, they’ve essentially attempted to fight a debt problem by issuing more debt.
The end result is similar to what happens when you try to cure a heroine addict by giving him more heroine: each new “hit” has less and less effect.
Case in point, consider the Central Banks’ coordinated intervention to lower the cost of borrowing Dollars three weeks ago. Remember, this was a coordinated effort, not the Federal Reserve or European Central Bank acting alone.
And yet, here we are, less than one month later, and European banks have wiped out MOST if not ALL of the gains the intervention produced.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Kyle Bass is a Genius....

The slow grinding crash is intact and in progress. Because demand has collapsed and deflation is knocking on the door again...but...the Fed and C Bankers in their wisdom think the cure is monetary expansion. After 3 years of "the cure" we've proven that although stock prices, bond prices and food and energy prices do rise, household net worth, real median incomes, res and commercial real estate all drop...and drop..and drop. There is no growth in real terms. Jobs and whole industries keep going offshore, we keep handing money over to other countries by feeding our twin deficits (trade and fiscal) and capital (financial and now even human) follows. Net result? Biflation. The domestic economy is going to hell, slowly being bled dry and geopolitical risks are increasing as buying power and the middle class keeps getting crushed. The cost of living, working and doing business will continue to outstrip the potential for profit.
So no you won't get a "crash". THat would be real capitalism in action. The process of creative destruction would ensure that the failed, inefficient business models would fail and new ones would spring up in their place with new vigor. Ahh but that would mean the status quo, and the people in power would lose big: through defaults and bankrupticies. Debts would cancel. And they sure as hell don't want that. They'd rather ride the slow grinding crash all the way down while they get fat off the failed zombie banks, the Fed's largess and the collection of debts incurred at the peak of the cycle.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Smartest man in the world...

Could this be it?

The late day collapse in financials (thanks to Fitch's comments that seemed to wake up a sleeping equity market to the reality that credit has been screaming for weeks) helped drag equities (and HY debt) significantly lower. Most notably, amid a much higher than average volume day today, the dislocations of the last few days - that we have highlighted - have converged very rapidly this afternoon. ES significantly underperformed a broad basket of risk assets (CONTEXT) into the close as copper and oil gave back some of the day's gains. TSYs closed at low yields for the day - and 2s10s30s dropped significantly - as we warned it would have to sustain any sell-off as EURUSD tracked back towards its lowest levels of the day dragging DXY up to almost unchanged on the day (+1.7% on the week). On a longer-term basis, HY markets are priced for an S&P around 1190 currently but as HY also collapses wider, we will rapidly see the 'expected' S&P level drop further. Credit Anticipates and Equity Confirms is often cited by old-school credit market professionals - it seems once again that it is true. What is more evident, and discussed by Peter Tchir of TF MArket Advisors, is the morphing of the sovereign crisis into a banking system crisis as TPTB are unable to achieve anything of note.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Run On the Banks?

Paul Krugman’s latest post is extremely bearish and he warns that “things are falling apart in Europe; the center is not holding” Krugman warns that this could lead to a “gigantic bank run” and “emergency bank closing”. Not only does Krugman warn of a massive bank run and emergency bank holidays but he warns of the euro breaking up and Italy returning to the Italian lira and even warns of similar problems confronting France. “The question I’m trying to answer right now is how the final act will be played. At this point I’d guess soaring rates on Italian debt leading to a gigantic bank run, both because of solvency fears about Italian banks given a default and because of fear that Italy will end up leaving the euro. This then leads to emergency bank closing, and once that happens, a decision to drop the euro and install the new lira.” “Next stop, France.” Uber Keynesian Krugman, has been one of the most vocal gold bears in recent years and his opinion on gold has been biased and uninformed. It will be interesting to see if his attitude towards gold has changed given the appalling vista he is now warning of. An important question we have posed for some time – is what price gold in drachma, lira, pesetas, escudos and punts? What should the ordinary people in European countries do to protect themselves from currency debasement and devaluations? Unfortunately, we may find out the answer to these questions in the coming months.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Crash finally coming????

Market observers have long noted that increasing volatility presages market crashes. If you glance at a chart of September-October 1929, just before the crash that started the Great Depression, you will note the same sort of manic swings of euphoria and fear that have characterized the U.S. stock market over the past few months. Not only are the swings increasing in amplitude, the time between each move up or down is decreasing. Think of a series of wind storms that grow increasingly more violent even as the time between storms diminishes.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

H and S Pattern - We go lower....


On Sept. 22 the SPY broke out of H&S pattern on decisive volume. From Sept. 23-27 there was a dead cat bounce on lower volume. Since then we have been pushing back down, ending last week on lows.

To calculate the measured move of the H&S pattern, take the distance from the top of the head to the neckline (blue line) which is approx. 10 points and extend from the breakout point - approx. $116 and subtract to arrive at my target of $106. The August low is a psychologically significant level and its retest could produce a rip your face off, bear market rally (day trade).

Underlying Cause will lead to ultimate panic!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Move fwd already.

Blow up the debt, you blow up the banks. Blow up the banks, you blow up the $700tr derivatives market. Blow up the $700tr derivatives market and the world we’ve known since Bretton Woods changes forever. It’s the same thing that had Hank Paulson corralling senior members of Congress into a wood-paneled room telling them that if he doesn’t get TARP the world will end. He was wrong then and the fear-mongers in Europe are wrong now. Let the banks blow up, let the equity holders get wiped out and the debt holders take haircuts. Guess what? The sun will continue to rise. Sensible, solvent players will move in to pick up the pieces and the real business of healing a horribly broken economy can finally begin but not one second before we force real capitalism down the throats of the current crop of pseudo-capitalists running the world. We’ve had a nice run as the world’s super power. Almost 66 years at the top of the world isn’t too shabby. And no matter what happens during the next few years that would see the US knocked off its perch as sole super power, we will still be an economically important, vital member of the global community. The sooner we acknowledge that the current economic system, that we in the US sit firmly on top of, is broken and needs massive, perhaps even painful fixing, the sooner we can get back to being a great country. In the meantime, the Bernank will tell you how he plans on extending the bad system at 2:15pm. Enjoy.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Euro Doesn't Work. It will be gone in 2 years.

Any time a major bank releases a report saying a given course of action is too costly, too prohibitive, too blonde, or simply too impossible, it is nearly guaranteed that that is precisely the course of action about to be undertaken. Which is why all non-euro skeptics are advised to shield their eyes and look away from the just released report by UBS (of surging 3 Month USD Libor rate fame) titled "Euro Break Up - The Consequences." UBS conveniently sets up the straw man as follows: "Under the current structure and with the current membership, the Euro does not work. Either the current structure will have to change, or the current membership will have to change." So far so good. Yet where it gets scary is when UBS quantifies the actual opportunity cost to one or more countries leaving the Euro. Notably Germany. "Were a stronger country such as Germany to leave the Euro, the consequences would include corporate default, recapitalisation of the banking system and collapse of international trade. If Germany were to leave, we believe the cost to be around EUR6,000 to EUR8,000 for every German adult and child in the first year, and a range of EUR3,500 to EUR4,500 per person per year thereafter. That is the equivalent of 20% to 25% of GDP in the first year. " It also would mean the end of UBS, but we digress. Where it gets even more scary is when UBS, like many other banks to come, succumbs to the Mutual Assured Destruction trope made so popular by ole' Hank Paulson : "The economic cost is, in many ways, the least of the concerns investors should have about a break-up. Fragmentation of the Euro would incur political costs. Europe’s “soft power” influence internationally would cease (as the concept of “Europe” as an integrated polity becomes meaningless). It is also worth observing that almost no modern fiat currency monetary unions have broken up without some form of authoritarian or military government, or civil war." So you see: save the euro for the children, so we can avoid all out war (and UBS can continue to exist). The scariest thing, however, by far, is that for this report to have been issued, it means that Germany is now actively considering dumping the euro.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

25 Signs That the Financial World is in SERIOUS Trouble...

The following are 25 signs that the financial world is about to hit the big red panic button....



#1 According to a new study just released by Merrill Lynch, the U.S. economy has an 80% chance of going into another recession.



#2 Will Bank of America be the next Lehman Brothers? Shares of Bank of America have fallen more than 40% over the past couple of months. Even though Warren Buffet recently stepped in with 5 billion dollars, the reality is that the problems for Bank of America are far from over. In fact, one analyst is projecting that Bank of America is going to need to raise 40 or 50 billion dollars in new capital.



#3 European bank stocks have gotten absolutely hammered in recent weeks.



#4 So far, major international banks have announced layoffs of more than 60,000 workers, and more layoff announcements are expected this fall. A recent article in the New York Times detailed some of the carnage....

A new wave of layoffs is emblematic of this shift as nearly every major bank undertakes a cost-cutting initiative, some with names like Project Compass. UBS has announced 3,500 layoffs, 5 percent of its staff, and Citigroup is quietly cutting dozens of traders. Bank of America could cut as many as 10,000 jobs, or 3.5 percent of its work force. ABN Amro, Barclays, Bank of New York Mellon, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Lloyds, State Street and Wells Fargo have in recent months all announced plans to cut jobs — tens of thousands all told.



#5 Credit markets are really drying up. Do you remember what happened in 2008 when that happened? Many are now warning that we are getting very close to a repeat of that.



#6 The Conference Board has announced that the U.S. Consumer Confidence Index fell from 59.2 in July to 44.5 in August. That is the lowest reading that we have seen since the last recession ended.



#7 The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index has fallen by almost 20 points over the last three months. This index is now the lowest it has been in 30 years.



#8 The Philadelphia Fed's latest survey of regional manufacturing activity was absolutely nightmarish....



The survey’s broadest measure of manufacturing conditions, the diffusion index of current activity, decreased from a slightly positive reading of 3.2 in July to -30.7 in August. The index is now at its lowest level since March 2009



#9 According to Bloomberg, since World War II almost every time that the year over year change in real GDP has fallen below 2% the U.S. economy has fallen into a recession....



Since 1948, every time the four-quarter change has fallen below 2 percent, the economy has entered a recession. It’s hard to argue against an indicator with such a long history of accuracy.



#10 Economic sentiment is falling in Europe as well. The following is from a recent Reuters article....

A monthly European Commission survey showed economic sentiment in the 17 countries using the euro, a good indication of future economic activity, fell to 98.3 in August from a revised 103 in July with optimism declining in all sectors.



#11 The yield on 2 year Greek bonds is now an astronomical 42.47%.



#12 As I wrote about recently, the European Central Bank has stepped into the marketplace and is buying up huge amounts of sovereign debt from troubled nations such as Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy. As a result, the ECB is also massively overleveraged at this point.



#13 Most of the major banks in Europe are also leveraged to the hilt and have tremendous exposure to European sovereign debt.



#14 Political wrangling in Europe is threatening to unravel the Greek bailout package. In a recent article, Satyajit Das described what has been going on behind the scenes in the EU....



The sticking point is a demand for collateral for the second bailout package. Finland demanded and got Euro 500 million in cash as security against their Euro 1,400 million share of the second bailout package. Hearing of the ill-advised side deal between Greece and Finland, Austria, the Netherlands and Slovakia also are now demanding collateral, arguing that their banks were less exposed to Greece than their counterparts in Germany and France entitling them to special treatment. At least, one German parliamentarian has also asked the logical question, why Germany is not receiving similar collateral.



#15 German Chancellor Angela Merkel is trying to hold the Greek bailout deal together, but a wave of anti-bailout "hysteria" is sweeping Germany, and now according to Ambrose Evans-Pritchard it looks like Merkel may not have enough votes to approve the latest bailout package....



German media reported that the latest tally of votes in the Bundestag shows that 23 members from Mrs Merkel's own coalition plan to vote against the package, including twelve of the 44 members of Bavaria's Social Christians (CSU). This may force the Chancellor to rely on opposition votes, risking a government collapse.



#16 Polish finance minister Jacek Rostowski is warning that the status quo in Europe will lead to "collapse". According to Rostowski, if the EU does not choose the path of much deeper economic integration the eurozone simply is not going to survive much longer....



"The choice is: much deeper macroeconomic integration in the eurozone or its collapse. There is no third way."



#17 German voters are against the introduction of "Eurobonds" by about a 5 to 1 margin, so deeper economic integration in Europe does not look real promising at this point.



#18 If something goes wrong with the Greek bailout, Greece is financially doomed. Just consider the following excerpt from a recent article by Puru Saxena....



In Greece, government debt now represents almost 160% of GDP and the average yield on Greek debt is around 15%. Thus, if Greece’s debt is rolled over without restructuring, its interest costs alone will amount to approximately 24% of GDP. In other words, if debt pardoning does not occur, nearly a quarter of Greece’s economic output will be gobbled up by interest repayments!



#19 The global banking system has a total of 2 trillion dollars of exposure to Greek, Irish, Portuguese, Spanish and Italian debt. Considering how much the global banking system is leveraged, this amount of exposure could end up wiping out a lot of major financial institutions.



#20 The head of the IMF, Christine Largarde, recently warned that European banks are in need of "urgent recapitalization".



#21 Once the European crisis unravels, things could move very rapidly downhill. In a recent article, John Mauldin put it this way....



It is only a matter of time until Europe has a true crisis, which will happen faster – BANG! – than any of us can now imagine. Think Lehman on steroids. The U.S. gave Europe our subprime woes. Europe gets to repay the favor with an even more severe banking crisis that, given that the U.S. is at best at stall speed, will tip us into a long and serious recession. Stay tuned.



#22 The U.S. housing market is still a complete and total mess. According to a recently released report, U.S. home prices fell 5.9% in the second quarter compared to a year earlier. That was the biggest decline that we have seen since 2009. But even with lower prices very few people are buying. According to the National Association of Realtors, sales of previously owned homes dropped 3.5 percent during July. That was the third decline in the last four months. Sales of previously owned homes are even lagging behind last year's pathetic pace.



#23 According to John Lohman, the decline in U.S. economic data over the past three months has been absolutely unprecedented.



#24 Morgan Stanley now says that the U.S. and Europe are "hovering dangerously close to a recession" and that there is a good chance we could enter one at some point in the next 6 to 12 months.



#25 Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota says that he is so alarmed about the state of the economy that he may drop his opposition to more monetary easing. Could more quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve soon be on the way?

And the conclusion which is, as usual, spot on:

Things have not looked this bad for global financial markets since 2008. Unless someone rides in on a white horse with trillions of dollars (or euros) of easy credit, it looks like we are headed for a massive credit crunch.



What we witnessed back in 2008 was absolutely horrifying. Very few people want to see a repeat of that. But as things in the U.S. and Europe continue to unravel, it appears increasingly likely that the next wave of the financial crisis could hit us sooner rather than later.



None of the fundamental problems that caused the crisis of 2008 have been fixed. The world financial system is still one gigantic mountain of debt, leverage and risk.



Authorities around the globe will certainly do all they can to keep things stable, but in the end it is inevitable that the house of cards is going to come crashing down.



Let us hope for the best, but let us also prepare for the worst.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Get Ready......it will be ugly.

I am confident in predicting we are about to have another Global Financial Crisis—I’m calling it The Sequel: Same movie, same players, same story. Only this time around—like all good sequels—the financial crisis we are about to experience is going to be bigger, longer, and uncut by bailouts. By the way, that is the key difference between 2008 and 2011: We’re not going to have a Hollywood Ending this time around. The governments of Europe and the United States, as well as their respective central banks, do not have any weapons to fight off this 2011 financial crisis, as they did in 2008, for the simple reason that they used them all up—they’re out of bullets, both monetarily and politically. So when The Sequel hits the big screen, there won’t be a Big Daddy Government deus ex machina to come save the day in the third act twist. When The Sequel hits, we’re on our own.

Let’s discuss the structural similarities between the original and The Sequel:

In both 2008 and now 2011, you had unpayable debts at the center of a fragile financial system. In 2008, it was mortgage backed securities and collateralized debt obligations—the so-called “toxic assets”. I think we all know that story pretty well.

In 2011, we have European sovereign debt. And just like the toxic assets of 2008, the Euro-bonds might have been rated AAA, but they certainly aren’t blue-chip—they are more like brown-chip: That deep brown color peculiar to fast-sinking dog-turds.

In both 2008 and 2011, these unpayable debts—emitted over many years, accumulating silently and asymptomatically like plaque in the arteries—gave a false sense of prosperity in the years leading up to the respective crises.

In the lead up to 2008, the MBS’s and CDO’s gave the American homeowner a sense that their house was their personal private ATM sitting on their quarter-acre suburban lot. They also were a profit spigot for the financial sector, which bouyed the U.S. GDP growth, leading to a false sense of national prosperity, even as there were signs that the non-financial sector of the economy was diving.

In the lead up to 2011, on the other hand, the sovereign debt of the eurozone countries gave the European citizens a sense that they could afford to buy all the imported goods they could ever want, as well as the sense that their government could afford to pay for all the social welfare programs they were all promised—without having to pay for any of this by way of higher taxes. Hell, that was the entire Labour governments’ platform between 1997 and 2010: Blair and Brown gave the UK a welfare state and low taxes—all paid for with sovereign debt.

In both 2008 and 2011, you have banks exposed to these bad debts both directly and indirectly—and this exposure in 2011 threatens to topple the entire financial structure, just as it almost did in 2008.

In 2008, the financial institutions with direct exposure to the toxic assets—that is, the institutions that actually owned these crap bonds that would never be paid in full—were mostly American banks. Their capitalization depended on how pristine these toxic assets were. As it became increasingly clear that the toxic assets were exactly that—toxic—the banks holding this crap found themselves not only without the capitalization to pass regulatory muster, but in fact found themselves functionally insolvent—hence the suspension of FASB 157, coupled with the injection of $150 billion worth of capital by way of TARP.

In 2011, the financial institutions with direct exposure to toxic assets—in this case, the European sovereign bonds, especially from the PIIGS—are once again banks, this time around mostly European banks: UniCredit, Société Générale, Dexia.

Like 2008, these assets might be rated triple-A, but they’re dog-turds—and they threaten these banks with insolvency, if any of them default. A bankruptcy of any of the aforementioned European banks would have massive consequences for the rest of the global financial construct—it would not be a Europe-only problem, just as the bankruptcy of Lehman was most definitely not an America-only catastrophe.

And that’s just the direct exposure to the 2011 version of toxic assets.

The real danger in 2011 is the indirect exposure—that is, the liabilities that are triggered in the case of a debt default: Just like 2008.

In 2008, it was AIG and other assorted credit default swap sellers that got hit bad, when the toxic assets began to default—we all remember how the very ground we trod rocked as AIG stumbled and everybody had a collective nuclear-meltdown freak-out.

In 2011—you guessed it—it’s worse: We have Bank of America for sure has massive exposure to derivatives on European sovereign and debt, as well as . . . God Knows who else.

Why do I say “God Knows who else”? Because just like in 2008, the derivatives market is so opaque—not to say hermetic—that we are not going to know who’s going to go bust until it actually happens. In 2008, Hank Paulson and the Treasury Department didn’t find out about the AIG hole until the weekend before the company would go bust. Today, in 2011—even with the experience of how potentially deadly ignorance of the derivatives markets can be—there are no mechanisms in place to swiftly and accurately tally who has derivatives exposure to any particular bond or asset.

In other words, Tiny Timmy and Bailout Benny never implemented the one lesson learned from 2008: Make the markets transparent, so that you can see where the crisis is coming from before it falls on top of your head.

Thus they—and we collectively—are flying blind insofar as derivatives written on the European sovereign debt. We only know about BofA’s massive CDS exposure indirectly, through Timothy Geithner’s demand in December 2010 that Ireland not default, because of the massive losses an Irish sovereign default on BofA.

Bernanke and Geithner had the chance to regulate this vital piece of the financial markets—but they didn’t! Instead, they acquiesced to this ridiculous pseudo-“ideology” that we should not regulate the financial markets.

(Parenthetically, and speaking as a hard-core, anti-choice, anti-vegan, pro-gun, pro-red meat Conservative: I am sick and tired of the ignorant assholes who say, “All government regulation is bad! Let the free markets reign!” We have the government regulate various industries and products because it is necessary for our individual and collective safety—or would you rather the government never regulated, say, the water supply, car safety standards, housing standards? Would you prefer it if the FDIC ceased to exist, and your local S&L could go to Vegas and play the roulette wheel with your life savings? Certainly not. Not only do we need government regulation for safety standards, we need regulations to prevent unscrupulous exploiters from gaming the system—think Enron, which should have put paid to any ridiculous notion that “the market knows best”, but obviously hasn’t (or else I wouldn’t be ranting here): The Enronites of the “energy trading desks” exploited the free markets and the lack of government regulation in the so-called “energy markets”, and deliberately created rolling blackouts in California so as to gouge the people of that state for the electricity they already owned and which they should have been getting, but which the Enron bastards were manipulating in order to squeeze them for money. Insofar as the financial markets are concerned, anyone spouting that particular bullshit spiel about the markets knowing best is either a shill for the banks, or a complete and utter imbecile. And a bank shill at least has the excuse of needing to pay the mortgage in exchange for spouting this nonsensical bullshit—the imbecile does not.)

Now, I used to write for the movies—I can tell you the secret to writing a good sequel: Use the exact same elements, the exact same story structure—hell, even use the exact same lines!—but make sure the sequel is bigger: Bigger sets, bigger explosions, bigger stars, bigger everything—a bigger bang for the buck.

2011’s The Sequel is certainly going to deliver that bigger bang—because it’s a lot bigger than 2008: The total sovereign debt of the PIIGS is about €3.1 trillion. That’s 20% of the eurozone’s GDP—just the PIIGS, just those five, forget about France, Belgium and the UK, which if added up easily doubles that €3.1 trillion figure.

Compare that to 2008, when the total toxic assets the Federal Reserve wound up having to buy amounted to about $1.5 trillion—about 11.5% of the U.S.’s 2008 GDP.

In other words, the current situation is over twice what 2008 was—and might wind up being four times the 2008 price tag. And that’s just the nominal value of the toxic debt at the core of the current situation. We have no idea what the total value of the indirect exposure via derivatives is going to add up to.

So! We’ve seen that we’re structurally at the same place we were in 2008: Unpayable debts held by a fragile financial sector, with massive indirect exposure by way of derivatives that no one has bothered to tally up and regulate.

We have furthermore seen that—like all good sequels—2011 is going to have a bigger bang: We currently have more debts on deck than in 2008, at least twice as much, as a matter of fact.

Question: Why does teasing out these similarities matter?

Answer: Because it will allow us to see what will happen over the months of September and October, when the crisis breaks.

What we’ve seen over the last couple of weeks is not the crisis—or not the crisis, at any rate. We’ve seen Italian and Spanish debt drop, their yields spiking—we’ve seen gold run up to $1,820—we’ve seen the biggest drops in the US equities markets since 2008—

—but these gyrations are not The Sequel. Rather, these last couple of weeks of market gyrations have been the forewarnings—the pre-tremors. Anyone who’s lived in earthquake country knows about them: The little tremors and hiccoughs that precede The Big One.

The Sequel will actually get going once we have our Lehman-like event.

In 2008, the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers triggered the crash—but it was not the cause of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008: The structural weaknesses were already baked into the situation—the Lehman bankruptcy was just the shove the global financial system needed to fall off the proverbial cliff.

Today, we are waiting for the Lehman-like event. My personal guess is Dexia will be the first to go under, the Lehman-like event that will trigger The Sequel—but that’s just a guess. More likely than not, the Lehman-like event of 2011 will catch us all by surprise—but just like the Lehman bankruptcy, it won’t matter intrinsically: It’ll only matter insofar as it triggers the cascade of panic-default-bankruptcies, etc.

Be that as it may, at my paid site, The Strategic Planning Group, we’ve been discussing what to do, when The Sequel hits. I won’t bother recapitulating what I’ve written there—frankly, it’s too long, and besides, the details are why the SPG Members pay their dues.

The one issue I will discuss here is the notion of a safe haven:

In 2008, when all the stock markets were going south, and all the name-brand banks were teetering, where did everyone park their money? What was the safe haven?

Treasury bonds. In fact, the flight to safety was so massive that Treasuries reached negative yields, when you factored for inflation.

Treasuries are the traditional American safe haven. But what with the recent spate of, er, questionable events (Debt celing conniption fit, anyone?), Treasuries aren’t looking as safe as they used to, nevermind the (cosmetic) S&P downgrade of their Treasuries rating.

But this isn’t an American crisis—this is a European crisis that will have catastrophic consequences in America—but the epicenter will be Europe.

What’s the safe haven in Europe? Gold.

In fact, in Europe, sovereign bonds have never been considered a “safe haven”, for the simple reason that sovereign debt in Europe has countless times suffered haircuts, defaults, outright national bankruptcies.

Since this will be a European sovereign debt crisis that will spread around the globe—but the epicenter of which will of course be in Europe—bankers and asset managers will pull their cash—euros—out of whatever they think is risky, and park it in some safe haven.

These European money men obviously cannot sell their assets and buy US Treasury bonds with those euros that they get. And they certainly won’t plug those euros into European sovereign debt, which is exactly the source of the panic. They won’t even park those euros in German bunds, for fear of contagion.

Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that, if and when there is a Lehman-like event in Europe that triggers The Sequel, the flight to safety will be to gold, which Europeans traditionally see as a financial refuge as surely as Americans consider Treasuries their financial refuge.

Hence in my estimation, gold will rocket on. I would not be surprised if gold crosses $2,000 an ounce when the Lehman-like event happens, and goes on quickly to $2,500 before the end of the year. On my scale of augury, this is head-and-shoulders above a Strong Hunch, just shy of a Fearless Prediction: $2,500 by the New Year’s. After that?

Thursday, August 11, 2011

30 Year Auction

The just completed auction of $16 billion in 30 Year bonds, was, as Rick Santelli said, "a failure". And while this may be a little dramatic, this was without doubt one of the ugliest 30 Year auctions ever seen. The 30 year priced at 3.75%, a huge 11 bps tail to the When Issued which was trading at 3.64%, the Bid To Cover plunging from 2.80 to 2.05, the lowest since February 2009, and, most shockingly, the Indirect Bidders Imploded to a paltry 12.2%! Those wondering if Chinese posturing would led to anything more than just jawboning have their answer. The Indirect tendered bids were just $3 billion or about 20% of the total auction size, which resulted in a $2 billion take down. It was so bad that the Directs were for the first time in 30 Year history greater than the Indirects. And yes, while the yield was close to record low it won't stay there especially if as is now expected, August 26 will see the BEA report a second GDP revision of ~0.6% at 8:30 am, which will be promptly followed by Bernanke's 2011 Jackson Hole address. And so the yoyo continues: what today's auction has proven is that going forward the Fed will be forced to crash the market every day that there is a Treasury auction, while ramping stocks on days when Treasury does not need to fund its borrowing binge.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

What Happens If the US Is Downgraded? - CNBC

What Happens If the US Is Downgraded? - CNBC

This is hard to believe.....




The wealth gap between whites and minorities has become a grand canyon.

The median net worth of white households is 18 times that of Hispanic households and 20 times that of black households - the widest disparity between whites and minorities in a quarter-century, according a study released Tuesday.

The median wealth of a white U.S. household in 2009 - for which numbers recently became available - was $113,149, compared with $6,325 for Hispanics and $5,677 for blacks, according to the analysis by the Pew Research Center.

The gap is the widest its been since the census began tracking such data in 1984. The ratio then was roughly 12 to 1.

In 1995, the gap grew smaller, with a ratio of 7 to 1. That was during a period when the nation's economic expansion propelled many low-income groups into the middle class.

During that period of economic prosperity, the median white household had a net worth of $134,992 for white families. The number was $18,359 for Hispanic families and $12,124 for black families.

Then the Great Recession - which cratered home values and destroyed millions of jobs - widened the gap again.



Many white families garner their wealth from stocks and corporate savings. Minority families, on the other hand, are more invested in their homes, and purchased residences during the housing boom of the early to mid-2000s, especially in California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona.

"What's pushing the wealth of whites is the rebound in the stock market and corporate savings, while younger Hispanics and African-Americans who bought homes in the last decade - because that was the American dream - are seeing big declines," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who studies income inequality.

Other findings:

*Asians lost their top ranking to whites. Median household income for Asians dropped from $168,103 in 2005 to $78,066 in 2009.

*Across all race and ethnic groups, the wealth gap between the rich and poor grew.

*About 35% of black households, 31% of Hispanic households and 15% of white households had zero or negative worth in 2009. In 2005, that number was 29% for blacks, 23% for Hispanics and 11% for whites.

Here we go........downgrade of the world.












Monday, July 25, 2011

CNBC's Fast Money: Doug Kass: Buy Dips Until Debt Deal, Then Sell - CNBC

If you’re among those traders who are selling stocks due to the squabbling in Washington, strategic investor Doug Kass thinks you’ve got it all wrong.

As the August 2nd debt ceiling deadline approaches, as long as there’s no deal on the table the trade is long, according to Kass who's the president of Seabreeze Partners and a CNBC Contributor. For the next few days, he expects “the market will rally into the uncertainty.”

And it's not just Kass who's saying it. From the floor of the NYSE trader Steve Grasso agrees. “I think any debt ceiling dip should be purchased,” he says.

However once lawmakers reach a deal – the trade changes. That’s the time to reposition, either defensively - or into cash - or short.

Find that trade hard to swallow? Here’s the thesis:

Kass and Grasso feel reasonably confident that lawmakers understand the seriousness of a debt default and regardless of the rhetoric, they won’t let allow it to happen.

And to take that a step further, they believe that's the prevailing feeling on the Street -- that the squabbling is more a political game of chicken than a real threat to the nation’s triple A credit rating.

“Ultimately the news will be that a new debt ceiling has been put in place,” says Kass.

In addition, Kass doesn’t see a lot of other selling pressure right now – in fact he thinks a lot of the selling has already happened. “There’s an element of summer exhaustion," he says.

Kass goes on to say, large hedge funds have already been de-risking into the summer. That should relieve selling pressure in the market, at least in the near-term.

Hence, for the next few days, Kass and Grasso expect to see the market climb this wall of worry.

Sell the Debt Deal Headline
However, once lawmakers arrive at some kind of deal, now that’s the time to reposition.

Kass says “that’s when I’d get flat out short.”

That’s because once a deal is cut, Kass thinks the market will come to realize what he calls ‘the soup we’re in – or the ramifications of austerity both here and abroad.”

In other words, it’s not only the Federal government facing fiscal imbalances – it’s also a growing issue at the state and local levels. And the resulting austerity could present serious headwinds to growth.

"I think more analysts will ratchet down growth expectations for Q4 2011 and into 2012,” Kass adds.

Here's another way of saying it - the debt ceiling has generated a distraction.

”Everyone is focused on the debt ceiling and they’re losing sight of slowing growth,” Kass says. But we’re getting the trouble signs every day in the form of “problems developing in China – weakness in consumer confidence – weakness in PMI etc.”

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Is a Liquidity Trap Coming?

The term liquidity trap is used in Keynesian economics to refer to a situation where monetary policy is unable to stimulate an economy, either through lowering interest rates or increasing the money supply.

In its original conception, a liquidity trap resulted when demand for money becomes infinitely elastic (i.e. where the demand curve for money is horizontal) so that further injections of money into the economy will not serve to further lower interest rates. Under the narrow version of Keynesian theory in which this arises, it is specified that monetary policy affects the economy only through its effect on interest rates. Thus, if an economy enters a liquidity trap, further increases in the money stock will fail to further lower interest rates and, therefore, fail to stimulate.

In the wake of the "Keynesian revolution" in the 1930s and 1940s, various neoclassical economists sought to minimize the concept of a liquidity trap by specifying conditions in which expansive monetary policy would affect the economy even if interest rates failed to decline. Don Patinkin and Lloyd Metzler specified the existence of a "Pigou effect," named for English economist Arthur Cecil Pigou, in which the stock of real money balances is an element of the aggregate demand function for goods, so that the money stock would directly affect the "IS" curve in an ISLM analysis, and monetary policy would thus be able to stimulate the economy even under the existence of a liquidity trap. While much of the economics profession had serious problems with the existence or significance of this Pigou Effect, by the 1960s academic economists gave little credence to the concept of a liquidity trap.

The neoclassical economists' assertion was that, even in a liquidity trap, expansive monetary policy could still stimulate the economy via the direct effects of increased money stocks on aggregate demand. This was essentially the hope of both the Bank of Japan in the 1990s, when it embarked upon quantitative easing and of the central banks of the United States and Europe in 2008–2009, with their foray into quantitative easing. These policy initiatives attempted to stimulate the economy through methods other than the reduction of short-term interest rates.

However, the concept returned to prominence in the 1990s when the Japanese economy fell into a period of prolonged stagnation despite the presence of near-zero interest rates.[1] While the liquidity trap as formulated by Keynes refers to the existence of an horizontal demand curve for money at some positive level of interest rates, the liquidity trap invoked in the 1990s referred merely to the presence of zero interest rates (ZIRP), the assertion being that since interest rates could not fall below zero, monetary policy would prove to be impotent in those conditions, just as it was asserted to be in a proper exposition of a liquidity trap.

While this later conception differed from that asserted by Keynes, both views have in common first the assertion that monetary policy affects the economy only via interest rates, and second the conclusion that monetary policy cannot stimulate an economy in a liquidity trap.

Much the same furor has emerged in the United States and Europe in 2008–2010, as short-term policy rates for the various central banks have moved close to zero.[2]

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Next Week ISM report could be ugly - GS

The next U.S. ISM manufacturing and services reports, to be released by the Institute for Supply Management this Monday, could be pretty ugly, says Goldman.

How do they know? They've built their own 'GSAI' indicator that shares much of the same data that goes into the ISM release, and thus provides a potential early warning:

Goldman's Jan Hatzius:

The Goldman Sachs Analyst Index fell 6.1 points to 55.4 in July, indicating less widespread economic growth than in June. This decline is consistent with recent weakness in other recent economic indicators. The GSAI now stands at its lowest level since November 2009.

...

Most of the movement in the GSAI this month is attributed to significant declines in the sales and new orders indices, which fell 12.3 and 9.7 points respectively. The new orders index is now at its lowest level since July of last year. In this context, July’s slight increase in the inventories index may not be a good sign as it suggests production may have moved ahead of demand at a time when orders may be flagging. The gap between the new orders and inventories indices, which provides a rough leading guide to future strength in industrial output in ISM-style surveys, is the narrowest it has been since May of 2009.



The only reminder here is that their indicator remains in growth territory, indicating continued economci expansion, but just of a far slower nature.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/goldmans-leading-indicator-plummets-to-a-seven-month-low-predicts-an-ism-collapse-2010-7?utm_source=Triggermail&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=CS_COTD_073010#top#ixzz0vIzW1SOS

Thursday, July 29, 2010

EURO - DOLLAR and US CREDIT RATING

The euro (U.S.:EURUSD) rose to $1.3094, near its highest in about three months, from around $1.2985 in North American trading late Wednesday.

The euro touched $1.3106 on an intraday basis, eclipsing the high of $1.3094 on May 10, the first business day after the European Union and the International Monetary Fund announced a nearly $1 trillion loan program designed to keep the debt crisis from spreading beyond Greece to other vulnerable countries.

The dollar index (BOARD:DXY) , which tracks the U.S. unit against a basket of major currencies, stood at 81.559, down from 82.139 late Wednesday.

The dollar fell against the yen (U.S.:USDYEN) to ¥86.92, down from ¥87.35 Wednesday. The greenback extended losses as U.S. stock indexes turned negative.

The euro (U.S.:EURYEN) gave up earlier gains to buy ¥113.83, versus ¥113.44.

Since the credit crisis began, the dollar has tended to react more to movements in equities as an indication of investor demand for the relative safe-haven status of the dollar and other low-yielding currencies, including the yen.

The dollar stayed down in afternoon action as traders position themselves for Friday's report on U.S. economic growth. The gross domestic product is expected to have grown at a 2.5% in the second quarter, according to a survey of economists by MarketWatch. That's down from predictions closer to 4% earlier and would be a slower pace than the 2.7% rate in the first quarter. See preview of GDP.

'We're consolidating before tomorrow's GDP," said John Doyle, a currency strategist at Tempus Consulting. "If it turns out stronger, it may have a positive effect on equities, which would weaken the dollar."

Two Federal Reserve officials said the U.S. is may grow at a "suboptimal" pave and is close to experience Japanese-style deflation. Read Fed comments on deflation.

The gains in the euro started in the European session, as earnings releases boosted European stocks, contributing to an increase in overall risk appetite to the detriment of the dollar, said Manuel Oliveri, currency strategist at UBS.

The dollar wasn't helped by a report that Moody's Investors Service top sovereign analyst for the U.S. reiterated that the nation's triple-A credit rating could eventually come under scrutiny unless the government presents a credible fiscal consolidation plan, Oliveri said.

All week, the euro has failed to recapture levels "last seen on May 10 as the world woke up to news of the $1 trillion EU bailout," strategists at RBC Capital Markets said. "The suggestion that the U.S.'s AAA rating could come under question was enough to trigger a spike higher in euro-dollar."

Separately, the European Commission's economic-sentiment indicator rose for July, supporting the rally in the shared currency. Read about euro-zone sentiment.

Equity Market Being Propped Up As Market Remains Last Line Of Defense Against Deflation

By MatrixAnalytix
Created 07/29/2010 - 14:43
3:20PM EST

Recent 1 to 1 Treasury to Equity correlation continues to break down as we noted monday...note Treasuries holding near high of the day as equities rally back into green...something is amiss in the financial markets right now with one of these markets being artificially skewed...again most likely culprit is equities as this market is much more easily manipulated due to lower liquidity profile relative to the treasury market....believe equities are being artificially propped up as a defense against widespread acceptance of deflationary pressures for if headlines start to cross that equities are cratering due to deflation, consumer spending will certainly come to a screeching halt (due to perception of lower asset prices in the future) which will certainly give deflation the green light to take hold of this economy...ultimately believe equity market pricing is the last line of defense against the reality of deflation which is why we are seeing such a strong defense against lower prices....in the end however, deflation is such a strong force that any attempt at short-term manipulation of asset prices will fail.

http://www.matrixanalytix.com/live-market-analytix.html

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Bank Ratings: BofA, Citi, Wells Fargo Outlook Negative: Moody's - CNBC

Bank Ratings: BofA, Citi, Wells Fargo Outlook Negative: Moody's - CNBC
Moody's on Tuesday changed its outlook on Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo to negative, from stable, citing lessened government support for the institutions under new U.S. regulations.


A negative outlook indicates the banks are more likely to be downgraded over the next 12 to 18 months. The credit ratings agency also said it may cut its ratings on ten regional banks on reduced government support.

Moody's has boosted its debt and bank deposit ratings on large financial institutions by between 3 and 5 notches since early 2009 on the assumption that they would receive government support in a time of trouble because of the risks they pose to other financial firms and the economy as a whole.

The new financial reform bill, however, is intended "clearly to eliminate government—i.e. taxpayer-support to creditors," Moody's said. Some support, however, is likely to remain for large institutions as regulators work to implement new laws, it added.

"Over the next 12 to 24 months ... we expect that our support assumptions for systemically important banks will likely revert to pre-crisis, or even lower, levels—though we do not anticipate that we would completely eliminate support from these firms' senior debt and deposit ratings," Moody's said.

Moody's rates Bank of America's senior debt A2, the sixth highest investment grade, Citigroup A3, the seventh highest investment grade and Wells Fargo A1, the fifth highest investment grade.

Moody's also said it may downgrade subsidiaries of BB&T, Capital One, Fifth Third, KeyCorp, PNC, Popular, Regions Financial, SunTrust Banks, U.S. Bancorp and Zions Bancorp.

Wag the Dog « BondSquawk

Wag the Dog « BondSquawk

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Large Swings

Anytime there are large swings like this in the market, it is usually a bearish sign and precedes a larger decline. Just something I have observed. So don't look at the futures....remember, stay the course.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Here we go again | zero hedge

Here we go again zero hedge: "Risk assets plunged today, with Nikkei futures seeing a 250 point drop Thursday overnight, as the Yen was bid heavily across all pairs, with funds flocked to safe haven and carry trades reversing course. Several commodity FX yen crosses are on the precipice of head and shoulders breakdowns, after selling off heavily back to their necklines. Today's biggest mover in FX was CAD/JPY in fact, which is very deflationary. Commodities in general are losing their fundamental bid. Intermarket corrs are at 1987 crash highs, eliminating the diversification premium investors offer for commodities. And global growth slowdowns, austerity, and deflationary threats in Eurozone, USA, & Japan are bearish for commodities, the nations that export them, and risk in general.
Speaking of commodities, the Aussie Dollar suffered big selling as well, both against JPY & USD. The skyrocketed nominal housing prices and very hawkish rate policy since crash lows could turn out to be more bearish than bullish if exports to China slow, as Chinese economic data and the one-time nature of its stimulus package suggest. With the Baltic Dry Index posting record consecutive losses, global trade probably will not be a “way out” of bearish developments in the forthcoming months.
On a technical basis, the AUD/USD seems to have double-topped at its June highs and was unable to break up to or back above its 200DMA (which price has had very high confluence to), leading to its current bear flag formation. As my technical analysis and FX Concept's Jonathan Clark's views suggest in the charts below, it appears to be a great short. The AUD/JPY does as well, as it found selling at its 55DMA and appears primed for a move down to 72.50 and 70.00 support levels, the latter of which corresponds to April 2009 levels."

Monday, July 12, 2010

Declining volume - bearish sign


Although Alcoa had decent earnings and everyone is predicting a big run prior to earnings which start tomorrow...I see a market approaching some technical levels where resistance is present and a recent run up on low volume which is bearish...let's see if we break to the upside or begin to retrace as I believe....

Begining to approach resistance

Look at the chart from AlphaTrends.net - it clearly shows the 3 next resistance areas. I expect one of these resistance points to hold up and the downward pressure to pick up.