Treasuries Crash Back To Equity's Unreality
Presented with little comment except to say that is a very rapid and quite large dump in 10Y Treasuries to 'correct' up (in yield) to equity's apparent ignorance of dismal data...
Is The Chinese Stock Market About To Crash?
"The eternal optimists would have us all believe that China will awaken from its slumbers amid a blaze of new, debt-fuelled spending initiatives and so buy up all the goods we find so hard to sell at home (without offering a substantial concession in price)" is how Sean Corrigan begins his assault on the non-reality that is China's 'save-the-world' protagonists. It is worth noting, however, that those who actually invest in the place seem to be too busy selling their equities to pay much attention to the Panglossians and Polyannas. With a 10% slump in the past 12 sessions in the main indices (retracing a major fib interval of the 2012 rally), there seems little enthusiasm there for clinging on in the hope that the PBOC will bail anyone out - and the wedge is closing on something big in the chart. Plain vanilla economics might well be correct in telling the bulls that they may rely on a Zhou Xiaochuan Put to spare them too much future pain, but the law of the political jungle, red in flag, tooth, and claw, may well dictate otherwise. As we write, it seems beyond dispute to say that the Chinese hierarchy is battling it out behind closed doors to determine the long term future of the regime and, by implication, the direction of the entire nation. In such momentous times, we would perhaps be foolish to think that the routine application of short?term countercyclical policy will bear overmuch weight in their counsels. Simply out, there is too much political infighting for any large-scale action to be taken as "Having moved against the state-capitalist left of old man Jiang and his Chongqing bruisers, surely the last thing Hu & Co. would want in their final months in office would be to unleash another oligarch?enriching orgy of speculation of the kind such a mass stimulus would be almost bound to foment."This Time Is No Different - Reflections On 1929 Optimism
When it comes to markets, the following clip, as well as memories of recent market collapses, highlights that it is usually brightest just before it's pitch black.Stanley Haar Reviews the Latest Developments on MF Global - Edith O'Brien's Gioconda Smile
It seems like yesterday that to much pomp and circumstance, Groupon
came public. We can only hope that anyone who bought into the public
offering sold long ago, becuase the company has just decided to TVIX the
muppets:
- GROUPON CUTS FORECAST - BBG
- GROUPON REFUND RESERVE ACCRUAL INCREASED - BBG
But most importantly:
- GROUPON SAYS MATERIAL WEAKNESS IN INTERNAL CONTROLS - BBG
We are fairly confident that the stock will continue imploding after
hours until such time as confidence in the stock market returns.
Stocks Odd Man Out As Every Other Asset Class Has Now Faded LTRO2
Silver remains the best performer YTD and the Long Bond the worst performer but what is most notable is the quiet serenity of the equity rally continued through March as Commodities, Precious Metals, Treasuries, and Corporate Bonds all lost notable ground post LTRO2. Is equity keeping the dream alive as the liquidity spigot has slowed to a drop (for now)? AAPL had it largest 2-day drop for almost 4 months into quarter-end - ending under $600 - and the broad S&P 500 pulled away once again from credit yesterday and today as IG, HY, and HYG close practically unchanged from last Friday's low but the ES up 15-20pts. Of the S&P sectors, Energy was the only one to fall appreciably post LTRO2 with Utilities the only sector in the red YTD -2.6% as Financials +21.5% and Tech +18.5% dominate.MarketWatch Goes Full Propaganda Retard
Guest Post: The Consumption Dysfunction
The
sharp drop in the personal savings rate in the month of February,
which just hit to lowest level since January of 2008, is indicative of
the problem. While personal savings rates could be bled down further
to sustain the current level of subpar economic growth - the world
today is vastly different than prior to the last two recessions where
access to credit and leverage we very easy to obtain. It is entirely
possible, that in the very short term, we could see personal
consumption expenditures continue to make some gains even in the face
of the obvious headwinds. However, it is important to keep these month
to month variations in context with longer term historical trends.
Personal consumption is ultimately a function of the income available
from which that spending is derived. As such, the current decline in
the growth rate of incomes, without the tailwind of easy credit, poses a
much greater threat to the current level of anemic economic growth
than we have seen in past cycles.
Another Failed Grand Plan In Europe
The last hour has spewed forth more disingenuous clap-trap from
European finance ministers. From 'sufficiency of the firewall' to the
'absurdity of Spain needing a bailout', it beggars belief that these
humans can look at themselves in the mirror every morning (as they feel
the 'need' to lie' - or are simply ignorant of the reality). At some
point in the near future there will be about €40 billion of money
sitting in the ESM and a bunch of promises from countries failing to live up to existing debt obligations, and that is the big firewall? The correlation between who is providing the guarantees and who will need them cannot be ignored. This new €500 billion number doesn’t exist, it’s not just meaningless,
it’s non-existent if Italy or Spain needs money. People can take away
whatever they want, but unlike LTRO which had real injections of
liquidity, this is just like the July plans from last year and the
November “grand” plans. It sounds great, especially when too many people
are willing to blindly follow what the politicians want them to, but it
doesn’t work in practice.
European Bailout Stigma Shifts From Banks To Sovereigns As Bundesbank Refuses PIG Collateral
Back in early February, the ECB's Margio Draghi told a naive world when discussing the implication of taking LTRO bailout aid, that “There is no stigma whatsoever on these facilities." We accused him of lying. Additionally, we also suggested to put one's money where Draghi's lies are, and to go long non-LTRO banks, while shorting LTRO recipients. In two short months the spread on that trade has doubled (see below), which intuitively is not surprising: after all, as a former Goldmanite (and according to some - current), Draghi is merely treating Europe's taxpayers like the muppets they are. As such, fading anything he says should come as naturally as Stolpering each and every FX trade. Yet what that little incident shows is that despite all their attempts otherwise, the central planners can not contain every single natural consequences of their artificial and destructive actions. Today, we see learn that the same Stigma we warned about, and that Draghi said does not exist, is starting to spread away from just the bailed out banks (becuase we now know that the LTRO was merely a QE-like bailout of several insolvent Italian and Spanish banks), and to sovereigns. From Bloomberg: "Germany’s Bundesbank is the first of the 17 euro-area central banks to refuse to accept as collateral bank bonds guaranteed by member states receiving aid from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported." And where Buba goes, everyone else is soon to follow. And what happens then? Since it is inevitable that Spain and Italy will be next on the bailout wagon, what happens when over $2 trillion in bonds suddenly become ineligible for cash collateral from the only solvent central bank in the world (aside for that modest, little TARGET2 issue of course). Will it force the ECB to be ever more lenient with collateral, and how long until the plebs finally realize that the ECB has been doing nothing but outright printing in the past 5 months? What happens to inflationary expectations then?
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