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Unlike the broad consensus of prognosticators who feel the road for the US is a decade or more,
Bass
sees a three-to-five year window for a credible solution to the debt
saturation or else kicking the can will cease to have any impact.
The reason for the proximity is the acceleration of what happens in
Europe and Japan with that respective chronology his central view -
which he sees as critical in understanding for every money manager.
In this extended interview at AmeriCatalyst, he points to the optimistic self-deception biases that leave people unable to comprehend the scenarios as they either lead to a really bad outcome or a nominally bad outcome.
Using the Lehman moment as an example,
Bass explains how we have been conditioned to believe there is always a backstop or savior...now
those backstops at a corporate and sovereign level (central banks and
the IMF for example) are being called into question in their roles
(being seen for what they are - as just promises) and it is
the
chasm between what we want to believe and what does happen that is
enormous and leaves the extreme volatility, risk-on/risk-off market the
way it is. Reiterating how critical the psychology of today's situation, Bass goes on to
debunk the optimism of globalization (at least for the Western world),
destroy the myth of a 50% greek writedown solution,
Japanese xenophobia and
savings losses, structural versus cyclical implications for
US equity deterioration, why you should
never trust what government says, the
US decifit and housing issues, increasing
global debt saturation and how this
tearing at the social fabric of the world will lead to - war.
Barely has the USD/Renminbi (or RMB) contract started to trade on the
CME and already the exchange decided to hike the margin by 18.5%. And
not only: in a broad action across the board, the CME hiked margins in
some key FX contracts, including Aussie Dollar, Yen, Canadian Dollar,
Forint, Zloty, and the Koruna. In addition, CME hiked two Interest Rate
products including EM and I3. So if anyone was wondering why the AUDXXX
dropped after hours, now you know.
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The other global strategic thinker with a decent white beard,
Bob Janjuah of Nomura,
sees weaker growth, weaker earnings and a great deal more volatility
in the short- and medium-term for the US. Not a fan of the decoupling
miracle, Janjuah explains (following our
last discussion of his thoughts) in this
Bloomberg TV interview that
US data is showing only a temporary improvement with the forthcoming fiscal drag into next year likely to slow the economy to a practical standstill. Noting that
'The worst is ahead of us' he sees the implications of the
hard-default he expects for Greece in early 2012 (that is not priced into the market) as very concerning with a cluster of defaults more than possible. Uncomfortably
viewing the banking sector as a curse (and not a cure) for our problems, he sees the
Japanese Zombie bank experience playing out which guarantees sustainable growth is not around the corner and suggests we would be far
better off medium-term if
bank defaults occurred and the painful medicine is taken now. The
banking sector risks the threat of taking down governments
and while emerging market financials may seem flush with capital, it
is the Western banking systems that dominate. He concludes the
interview with some
positives focused on up-in-quality and up-in-capital structure allocations,
which fits with our view of the world, and notes he has no financial
sector debt or equity exposure in any of his portfolios.
Following yesterday's announcement that the state of Massachusetts
would sue 5 mortgage lenders among
which the bailed out subprime failure formerly known as GMAC and now
known by the much more idiot-friendly name "Ally", the latter has
decided to take matters into its own crazy hands and escalate matters by
confronting the entire state of Massachusetts in a move that will
generate even greater anger among the broader population, aimed squarely
and rightfully at the banks all over again. In an email sent out
today, GMAC Bank said it would "no longer accept new locks for
properties located in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts." The reason
given: "
This change is necessary due to the complexity of
transacting business in an increasingly difficult legal environment in
Massachusetts." By complexity GMAC of course means being
confronted with Attorneys General who refuse to be pushed over or jump
when the banking cartel says so. In essence, GMAC (with other lenders
likely to follow suit) has decided to boycott states that dare to break
away from the settlement talks and to pursue unilateral action. Alas,
since pretty soon every state will be suing the banks now that the Nash
Equilibrium of the settlement negotiations has collapsed and it is
every state for itself, GMAC better figure out a way to make money
doing something besides lending as very soon the "legal environment" in
every state is about to get "increasingly difficult."
The financial system is highly interconnected. Unlike 2008, it won’t be so
easy to engineer bailouts with public funds if the dominoes based on
fictionalized balance sheets start falling again. Commentary: It's not
2008. Financial firms have no savior COT money flows suggest that connected
interest are trying to refute the old saying blood cannot be squeezed from
a stone. They're pushing paper...
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Fox Business is reporting that the former head of MF Global has been
subpoenaed to testify in front of a Congressional House Panel
Here is their lead in to the article:
Jon Corzine, the former head of bankrupt commodities brokerage firm MF
Global, has been subpoenaed to testify about his role in the collapse
before a congressional committee.
Corzine hasn’t been heard from publicly since MF Global imploded in
October, the result of bad bets on European sovereign debt, a risky gamble
reportedly pushed by Corzine himself.
Read more:
http://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/2011/12/02/cor...
more »
There has been more and more speculation that the Fed is getting
ready to launch a new QE program, this one targeting residential
mortgages. With the data coming in better than expected, stocks back
up, and Plosser and Bullard both chiming in that improving data would
make them hesitate or question the need for more QE, there is some fear
that it is off the table. We don't think it is off the table, and if
anything see growing signs that they are trying to create the political
will to get it done.
On a day with a somewhat unusually high
number of housing-related negative nabobs on Bloomberg TV, Peter Tchir,
of TF Market Advisors, thinks Bernanke is trying to lay the groundwork
of why it is so important to buy mortgages.
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A
787 point gain on the Dow this week, second only ever in absolute
points gained to w/e 10/31/08, ended on a disappointing note as equities
gave back significant early gains around the NFP print to end the day
practically unch (128pts off the highs). Equities underperformed credit
on the day with another strangely impressive (given NAV and HY spread
differentials) outperformance by HYG. On a medium-term basis, equities
began to revert back to where broad risk assets are more supportive but
on a short-term intraday basis, risk assets (most notably EURJPY,
AUDJPY, and TSY levels and curves) were in a more aggressive derisking
mode. ES definitely maintained strength for longer than many expected
today before giving it all back into the close, but financials
(especially the majors) were surprisingly positive today even after
such a good week - quite a squeeze.
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So
much for the short covering squeeze in the EUR. After eeking out some
modest purchases in the EUR in the weeks leading up to November 8, with
the interim peak in net sentiment hitting a transitory high of -54,257,
the three weeks since then have seen yet another major spike in
bearish EUR sentiment, and as of minutes ago the
CFTC's COT report indicated
that net non-commercial spec shorts surged to more than -100,000 for
the first time since June 2010, or specifically -104,302. Granted this
is as of November 29, so
before the Fed's FX swap intervention.
Yet considering that the EURUSD is rapidly filling the gap to
Wednesday, we would not be surprised if all the Fed managed to do was to
force a handful of specs to cover their short positions. Nonetheless,
this does confirm that the EURUSD continues to act like a tightly wound
coil, and any
credible resolution to the European
crisis will result in the biggest short covering squeeze in the EUR in
years, sending both the currency and its S&P 500 derivative soaring.
Now the question remains: does a credible resolution exist? The irony
is that the only real solution is the ECB printing. Yet for the first
time ever in monetary history that announcement of the the ECB's
dilution of the European currency will actually send the currency
surging, due to the technical unwind of the shorts overwhelming the
fundamental weakness of the currency. Granted, it will be a transitory
response, but who really can predict the long-run these days anyway?
And now for the Friday humor which instead of capital markets... we
get enough fun there every time we look at the S&P or read any
headline out of Europe... focuses on cultural perspectives.
Specifically, those originating in Saudi Arabia. As QMI reports "
allowing
women to drive in Saudi Arabia would cause rampant sex, porn and
homosexuality, according to some of the country's scholars."
It gets better: "Academics at the country's highest religious council
submitted a report to the legislative assembly warning of the dangers
of letting women behind the wheel, reports the Daily Telegraph.
If
the only country in the world that still bans women from driving were
to change its rules, there would be "a surge in prostitution,
pornography, homosexuality and divorce." Within 10 years of the ban being lifted, the report claimed, there would be "
no more virgins" in
the country, according to the paper." One then wonders if Britney
learned to drive when she was 17. That said, we urge feminists with a
penchant for sports cars to stay out of Saudi Arabia, no matter how much
they love extracting the viscous substance out of the oil-rich venues:
"Currently,
women caught driving in the kingdom may be lashed as punishment."
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This
mornings release of the Employment Situation report from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics was in truth bitter sweet. On the positive side
there were 120,000 jobs created in the previous month and the
unemployment rate fell from 9.0% to 8.6%. Furthermore, September and
October jobs were also revised higher. That is the sweet part.
Unfortunately, while the headlines give us the sweetness the underlying
data provides the bitter. As we discussed earlier this week with the
ADP Employment report,
which showed a 206,000 job increase, this is the seasonally strong
time of year for employment increases due to the retail shopping
season. Therefore, it is no surprise that we saw a fairly healthy jump
in employment but unfortunately these jobs tend to be very temporary
in nature. Secondly, 120,000 new jobs is well below the necessary job
creation level to return the country to full, healthy, emplyment. I
say
"healthy employment" because technically if enough people fall off the rolls into the category of
"discouraged worker", where they are no longer counted, we could have a much lower unemployment rate - it just won't be a good thing.
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There is a Bloomberg story out there stating that the debt negotiations are “complex”.
So
long as the TROIKA keeps making the payments, the banks have no reason
to reach a settlement, particularly on their shorter dated paper. In fact, given the movements in the Greek CDS-Cash basis, we wonder how much debt is even held by banks?
The daily dialogue that some sort of bailout and some sort of solution
and some central bank action seems to be churning along, but the Greek
haircut will ultimately have to be dealt with and we don’t see how it
is accomplished without a failure to pay and involves all bond
holders. Some holders may receive preferential offers (ECB and Greek
Institutions) but
avoiding a honest to goodness failure to pay seems impossible, and avoiding the writedowns altogether also seems impossible.
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Now
that the Anti-Tilson trade has been closed, it is time to resurrect
the Anti-Barton "Notorious" B.I.G.G.S. ETF. The man who personifies
everything that is broken with momo and levered beta chasers, in
addition to his late September
bottom tick memorialized here, is best known for telling Bloomberg he
went very bearish 10 days ago,
just in time to get his face ripped off on a central bank facilitated
short squeeze scorcher, has now once again top ticked the market
telling Tom Keene "that while he doesn’t want to be fully invested in
equities, “it’s hard to get really bearish.” The broken gramophone
continues: "“Except for Europe, the rest of the world economy is doing
pretty well,” the hedge-fund manager said today during an interview on
Bloomberg Radio’s “Surveillance” with Tom Keene and Ken Prewitt.
“There’s too much bearishness, and equities -- particularly U.S.
equities and emerging-market equities -- are very cheap relative to
fixed income, Treasury bonds, high yield, other financial assets.”" Odd,
because the aged former Morgan Stanley-ite was among the very people
who were "bearish" ten days ago. But it's ok: one forgets things.
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European
stocks gapped impressively higher from a weaker-than-credit close
yesterday and credit rallied to catch up with equities until just
around the US NFP print. Downgrade rumors and the Republicans
legislation threats took the shine off dramatically as EURUSD dropped
almost 200pips from its intraday highs and
equity and credit markets cracked lower in a hurry into the close (though ending higher on the day).
European sovereign bonds were performing very well but also
leaked notably wider into the last hour or so (perhaps France and Belgium driven by the Dexia news?). Ending the day under 1.34,
EURUSD has retraced more than half the 'bailout' gap higher.
EUR-USD basis swaps and FRA-OIS spreads also started to decompress (worsen)
again as we noted earlier the ECB's dramatic rise in deposits and
emergency loans suggests all is not well and perhaps this was the
greatest central-bank-driven opportunity to reduce exposure ever?
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