US Services PMI Beats After Last Week’s Manufacturing PMI Record Miss, Employment Plunges

With US manufacturing PMI having missed by the most on record last week, it was only “fair” that the Services PMI from recent IPO Markit would beat expectations and hold at record highs. At 61.0 this is equal to the best print in history… but there is somethng wrong here. The surge in employment in June has been eviscerated as the index plunged back from record exuberance at 56.1 to 52.8 with some respondents noting “a degree of caution about the business outlook.” This is not good news for long-awaited wage inflation that promises to lift all boats…

 

 

 

And employment tumbled…

 

 We leave it to a normally exuberant Markit to conclude…

“While a cyclical upswing appears underway across the service sector, the latest survey provides some indication that a smoother ride is not yet fully entrenched. Service providers saw new business gains slip to a three-month low, while payroll growth moderated since June amid a drop in confidence towards the year-ahead business outlook.”




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China's Solution To “Property Companies Facing Huge Debt Burdens”: Much More Debt

As reported earlier, China’s stock market blasted higher overnight to the best level in seven months driven by the country’s financial sector and especially its property developers. WSJ summarized the sudden buying frenzy: “as a slowdown hits China’s real-estate market, investors are turning bullish and buying up stocks of large property developers on bets they will not only ride out the storm but also grow bigger. The MSCI China Real Estate Index has surged 16.5% since the start of July, on track for its best month in nearly three years, as local governments have started to ease housing purchase restrictions to boost sales.”

Shares in some of the larger companies though have performed well with China Vanke Co., the country’s biggest developer, up 22.7% this year and another large builder, Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd. climbing 17.2%. This despite a warning by the same China Vanke two short months ago that the “Golden Era” For Chinese Housing Is Over.

However, aside from easing purchasing curbs which refute any stated government intentions to rein in the China’s epic housing bubble following several months in which property prices and transactions tumbled, the real reason, as reported by Bloomberg: China’s government is once again authorizing developer debt sales for the first time in five years in a bid to avoid bankruptcies as the property market cools.

Recall:

The pressure on Chinese real estate companies was underscored by the collapse in March of Zhejiang Xingrun Real Estate Co. Developers including China Vanke Co., the nation’s biggest, and Greentown China Holdings Ltd., the largest in the eastern province of Zhejiang, have cut property prices since then to boost sales. The slump comes as economic growth is set to cool to 7.4 percent this year, the slowest in more than two decades, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

So it was only logical that with China’s attempt to normalize its epic credit bubble going horribly wrong, everything would be put on halt or rather, in reverse:

Jiangsu Future Land Co. a builder of homes in eastern China, sold 2 billion yuan ($323 million) of five-year AA rated bonds last week to yield 8.9 percent. That’s less than the average 9.73 percent on trust products that many developers relied on for financing after authorities stopped approving onshore note issuance in 2009.

 

The China Securities Regulatory Commission reversed course in April when it granted four real estate companies the right to sell the securities, after the collapse of a builder south of Shanghai the previous month underscored financing strains. The government allowed the first mortgage-backed debt sale since 2007 last week, in the latest step to ease restrictions on the industry as new home prices drop in a record number of cities.

 

“The issuances are obviously an easing signal,” said Xu Hanfei, a bond analyst in Shanghai at Guotai Junan Securities Co., the nation’s third-biggest brokerage. “The CSRC will probably approve more note sales as long as developers have fund-raising demand. It would be helpful because bond costs are lower than trusts.”

 

The move to allow Chinese builders to tap the onshore note market, instead of raising funds from so-called shadow-banking products such as trusts or through international bonds, parallels the first regulatory approvals for new-stock sales in about four years. The CSRC said in March that Tianjin Tianbao Infrastructure Co. and Join.In Holding Co. were allowed to sell yuan-denominated A shares in private placements.

 

Jiangsu Future Land said it will spend the proceeds from its bond sale to repay bank loans and replenish working capital, according to the prospectus. Tianjin Realty Development said it will use the money it raised to invest in a lower-cost housing project and repay borrowings.

But mostly it was to “extend and pretend” that the company is viable even as revenues tumble, and the only source of funding is, drumroll, debt.

In other words, China has figured out – yet again – what the Fed discovered back in 2009, namely why try to fix a problem created by ridiculous debt loads when one can just kick the can, and add even more debt?

As for the punchline:

“Property companies are facing huge debt burdens,” said Sun Binbin, a bond analyst at China Merchants Securities Co. in Shanghai. “If the regulator hadn’t eased, there probably would have been more defaults.”

Or, translated: if the companies weren’t allowed to “fix” their huge debt burdens with even more debt, it would have been a catastrophe.

Finally, here is why China is once again stuck injecting record amount of debt into its market:

“The revival of property bonds is the right move in the long run,” given real estate’s close ties to many industries including cement, steel and even banking, said Chen in Shanghai. “Property is the single most important sector to the Chinese economy.”

Indeed it is, with 75% of Chinese household wealth coming form the real estate sector (unlike in the US where this is flipped and it is all in the stock market and other financial assets). Which means that any hope that China would have done the right thing and burst the bubble in a controlled fashion are now gone forever. The only question is how much longer can the breakneck speed of bubble expansion in both housing and credit continue (something the Politburo was terrified of last summer) before everything collapses only this time the government will no longer be able to support the house of cards.




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China’s Solution To “Property Companies Facing Huge Debt Burdens”: Much More Debt

As reported earlier, China’s stock market blasted higher overnight to the best level in seven months driven by the country’s financial sector and especially its property developers. WSJ summarized the sudden buying frenzy: “as a slowdown hits China’s real-estate market, investors are turning bullish and buying up stocks of large property developers on bets they will not only ride out the storm but also grow bigger. The MSCI China Real Estate Index has surged 16.5% since the start of July, on track for its best month in nearly three years, as local governments have started to ease housing purchase restrictions to boost sales.”

Shares in some of the larger companies though have performed well with China Vanke Co., the country’s biggest developer, up 22.7% this year and another large builder, Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd. climbing 17.2%. This despite a warning by the same China Vanke two short months ago that the “Golden Era” For Chinese Housing Is Over.

However, aside from easing purchasing curbs which refute any stated government intentions to rein in the China’s epic housing bubble following several months in which property prices and transactions tumbled, the real reason, as reported by Bloomberg: China’s government is once again authorizing developer debt sales for the first time in five years in a bid to avoid bankruptcies as the property market cools.

Recall:

The pressure on Chinese real estate companies was underscored by the collapse in March of Zhejiang Xingrun Real Estate Co. Developers including China Vanke Co., the nation’s biggest, and Greentown China Holdings Ltd., the largest in the eastern province of Zhejiang, have cut property prices since then to boost sales. The slump comes as economic growth is set to cool to 7.4 percent this year, the slowest in more than two decades, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

So it was only logical that with China’s attempt to normalize its epic credit bubble going horribly wrong, everything would be put on halt or rather, in reverse:

Jiangsu Future Land Co. a builder of homes in eastern China, sold 2 billion yuan ($323 million) of five-year AA rated bonds last week to yield 8.9 percent. That’s less than the average 9.73 percent on trust products that many developers relied on for financing after authorities stopped approving onshore note issuance in 2009.

 

The China Securities Regulatory Commission reversed course in April when it granted four real estate companies the right to sell the securities, after the collapse of a builder south of Shanghai the previous month underscored financing strains. The government allowed the first mortgage-backed debt sale since 2007 last week, in the latest step to ease restrictions on the industry as new home prices drop in a record number of cities.

 

“The issuances are obviously an easing signal,” said Xu Hanfei, a bond analyst in Shanghai at Guotai Junan Securities Co., the nation’s third-biggest brokerage. “The CSRC will probably approve more note sales as long as developers have fund-raising demand. It would be helpful because bond costs are lower than trusts.”

 

The move to allow Chinese builders to tap the onshore note market, instead of raising funds from so-called shadow-banking products such as trusts or through international bonds, parallels the first regulatory approvals for new-stock sales in about four years. The CSRC said in March that Tianjin Tianbao Infrastructure Co. and Join.In Holding Co. were allowed to sell yuan-denominated A shares in private placements.

 

Jiangsu Future Land said it will spend the proceeds from its bond sale to repay bank loans and replenish working capital, according to the prospectus. Tianjin Realty Development said it will use the money it raised to invest in a lower-cost housing project and repay borrowings.

But mostly it was to “extend and pretend” that the company is viable even as revenues tumble, and the only source of funding is, drumroll, debt.

In other words, China has figured out – yet again – what the Fed discovered back in 2009, namely why try to fix a problem created by ridiculous debt loads when one can just kick the can, and add even more debt?

As for the punchline:

“Property companies are facing huge debt burdens,” said Sun Binbin, a bond analyst at China Merchants Securities Co. in Shanghai. “If the regulator hadn’t eased, there probably would have been more defaults.”

Or, translated: if the companies weren’t allowed to “fix” their huge debt burdens with even more debt, it would have been a catastrophe.

Finally, here is why China is once again stuck injecting record amount of debt into its market:

“The revival of property bonds is the right move in the long run,” given real estate’s close ties to many industries including cement, steel and even banking, said Chen in Shanghai. “Property is the single most important sector to the Chinese economy.”

Indeed it is, with 75% of Chinese household wealth coming form the real estate sector (unlike in the US where this is flipped and it is all in the stock market and other financial assets). Which means that any hope that China would have done the right thing and burst the bubble in a controlled fashion are now gone forever. The only question is how much longer can the breakneck speed of bubble expansion in both housing and credit continue (something the Politburo was terrified of last summer) before everything collapses only this time the government will no longer be able to support the house of cards.




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Argentina Bonds/Currency Tumble As Delegation Snubs Mediation

With 2 days until the 30-day grace period for ‘negotiating’ the already defaulted upon bonds is over and Argentina is once again dumped from the public markets, the demands for a “continuous mediation” by Judge Griesa appears to have fallen on dear ears. Bloomberg reports that the Argentina delegation will not meet with the mediator today.. and Argentina bonds are tumbling (and CDS soaring). Markets are implying around 45-50% chance of a default being triggered, which, as Jefferies noted last week, seems low. Argentina’s black-market peso (blue dollar rate) weakened to 12.75 (just shy of its weakest ever at 13.00) implying a 50% devaluation over the peso.

 

Cabinet Chief Jorge Capitanich said a delegation won’t meet with a court-appointed mediator until tomorrow even as a July 30 deadline approaches to try and stave off a default.

 

CDS have surged back to pre-mediation/grace-period levels…

 

And bond price “hope” is starting to turn to anxiety…

 

and the currency is tumbling (at 12.75 today)

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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"Reprehensible" Lloyds Bank Agrees To $105 Million Wristslap For Manipulating Libor

That will teach them! Having received full credit for for co-operation and suspending some individuals, Lloyds Bank has been fined by the CFTC the staggeringly wrist-slap-like sum of $105 million for the “manipulation, attempted manipulation, and false reporting of Libor.” Total fines will amount to around $370 million across all UK and US regulators and all Llloyds divisions. As WSJ reports, the British bank becomes the seventh financial institution to strike a deal with U.S. and U.K. authorities who are conducting a long running probe into allegations of widespread attempts to manipulate Libor. With no less than the head of the Bank of England calling the bank’s actions (mainpulating JPY Libor for at least 2 years) “reprehensible,” and the CFTC adds individuals bevahior was a “gross breach of trust.” Well we are sure after this they will never manipulate another market ever again…

 

CFTC Explains…

Banks agree to a $105 million settlement and agree to changes in systems and controls

 

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today issued an Order against Lloyds Banking Group plc and Lloyds Bank plc, formerly known as Lloyds TSB Bank plc (Lloyds TSB), bringing and settling charges for acts of false reporting and attempted manipulation of the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) for Sterling, U.S. Dollar, and Yen committed by employees of Lloyds TSB and HBOS plc (HBOS), which was acquired by Lloyds Banking Group in January 2009. The Order finds that, in a few instances, Lloyds TSB was successful in its manipulation of Sterling LIBOR and Yen LIBOR. The CFTC also brought and settled charges that Lloyds TSB, at times, aided and abetted the attempts of derivatives traders at Rabobank to manipulate Yen LIBOR.

 

The Order requires Lloyds Banking Group and Lloyds Bank to pay a $105 million civil monetary penalty, cease and desist from their violations of the Commodity Exchange Act, and to adhere to specific undertakings to ensure the integrity of LIBOR submissions in the future.

 

“By today’s action, Lloyds is being held accountable for serious misconduct,” said Aitan Goelman, CFTC Director of Enforcement. “The CFTC remains committed to taking all actions necessary to ensure the integrity of the markets we oversee.”

As WSJ reports,

The British bank becomes the seventh financial institution to strike a deal with U.S. and U.K. authorities who are conducting a long running probe into allegations of widespread attempts to manipulate the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and other widely used interest-rate benchmarks.

Lloyds said in a statement: “The group condemns the actions of the individuals responsible for the conduct in question, which it regards as totally unacceptable and unrepresentative of the cultural changes that the group has implemented.”

The bank’s executives have long argued that their involvement in rate rigging was relatively minor compared other British lenders.

Lloyds’s misconduct took place before the existing Lloyds management team took over in 2011. Nevertheless, the fine is a setback to the bank’s attempt to rehabilitate its reputation after taxpayer bailouts in 2008 and 2009.

*  *  *

So it appears Lloyds tried the “just the tip” excuse and it worked with a wristslap of a fine and so far no jailtime for anyone involved.




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“Reprehensible” Lloyds Bank Agrees To $105 Million Wristslap For Manipulating Libor

That will teach them! Having received full credit for for co-operation and suspending some individuals, Lloyds Bank has been fined by the CFTC the staggeringly wrist-slap-like sum of $105 million for the “manipulation, attempted manipulation, and false reporting of Libor.” Total fines will amount to around $370 million across all UK and US regulators and all Llloyds divisions. As WSJ reports, the British bank becomes the seventh financial institution to strike a deal with U.S. and U.K. authorities who are conducting a long running probe into allegations of widespread attempts to manipulate Libor. With no less than the head of the Bank of England calling the bank’s actions (mainpulating JPY Libor for at least 2 years) “reprehensible,” and the CFTC adds individuals bevahior was a “gross breach of trust.” Well we are sure after this they will never manipulate another market ever again…

 

CFTC Explains…

Banks agree to a $105 million settlement and agree to changes in systems and controls

 

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today issued an Order against Lloyds Banking Group plc and Lloyds Bank plc, formerly known as Lloyds TSB Bank plc (Lloyds TSB), bringing and settling charges for acts of false reporting and attempted manipulation of the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) for Sterling, U.S. Dollar, and Yen committed by employees of Lloyds TSB and HBOS plc (HBOS), which was acquired by Lloyds Banking Group in January 2009. The Order finds that, in a few instances, Lloyds TSB was successful in its manipulation of Sterling LIBOR and Yen LIBOR. The CFTC also brought and settled charges that Lloyds TSB, at times, aided and abetted the attempts of derivatives traders at Rabobank to manipulate Yen LIBOR.

 

The Order requires Lloyds Banking Group and Lloyds Bank to pay a $105 million civil monetary penalty, cease and desist from their violations of the Commodity Exchange Act, and to adhere to specific undertakings to ensure the integrity of LIBOR submissions in the future.

 

“By today’s action, Lloyds is being held accountable for serious misconduct,” said Aitan Goelman, CFTC Director of Enforcement. “The CFTC remains committed to taking all actions necessary to ensure the integrity of the markets we oversee.”

As WSJ reports,

The British bank becomes the seventh financial institution to strike a deal with U.S. and U.K. authorities who are conducting a long running probe into allegations of widespread attempts to manipulate the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and other widely used interest-rate benchmarks.

Lloyds said in a statement: “The group condemns the actions of the individuals responsible for the conduct in question, which it regards as totally unacceptable and unrepresentative of the cultural changes that the group has implemented.”

The bank’s executives have long argued that their involvement in rate rigging was relatively minor compared other British lenders.

Lloyds’s misconduct took place before the existing Lloyds management team took over in 2011. Nevertheless, the fine is a setback to the bank’s attempt to rehabilitate its reputation after taxpayer bailouts in 2008 and 2009.

*  *  *

So it appears Lloyds tried the “just the tip” excuse and it worked with a wristslap of a fine and so far no jailtime for anyone involved.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1oAuc1T Tyler Durden

Near-Record Trulia Shorts Crushed After Zillow Acquires Incomeless Company For $3.5 Billion

What a difference a weekend makes… After offering $2 billion for Trulia last week (and seeing its share soar), Zillow has decided that $3.5 billion worth of its bubblicious paper money-stock is the right price for its real estate marketing and income-less competitor Zillow. Of course, on the back of near-record short interest the stock has exploded higher once again this morning and is now up over 60% from before last week’s offer. We suspect the word ‘synergy’ will be used heavily (and not the word ‘layoff’) but in the interests of helping our fellow man, we present the combined firm’s income statement

They are paying this…

  • ZILLOW BUYS TRULIA FOR $3.5B IN STOCK
  • TRULIA DEAL REPRESENTS PREMIUM ABOUT 25% T0 JULY 25 CLOSE

For this:

 

… and because of this (near record short interest)

 

This happened…

 

Sorry First Western Capital Management, but it is your fault you didn’t realize the market was permanently broken some time in 2009…

Remember what we have said since 2012: the only strategy that actually works with unprecedented consistency in this broken, centrally-planned market is to go long the most shorted names. Today: another case in point.

Meanwhile, while shorts are the biggest losers, here are the biggest winners. Congratulations Stevie Cohen’s Point72 who added to his position, as well as Tiger Global and momo expert JAT whose 4.6% and 2.2% stakes in TRLA, respectively, are both new positions as of the latest quarter.




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Mitch Daniels Battles the Campus Bureaucracy at Purdue

HydraThose who have closely studied
soaring tuition rates at public universities know that
administrators’ ballooning salaries are the real culprit, not the
cost of instruction. While faculty employment levels have
generally remained flat
in recent years, universities have
continued to hire more and more administrators. Purdue University,
for example, has grown the campus bureaucracy by 75 percent in the
last 13 years.

That fact comes from a recent
Wall Street Journal
profile of former Indiana Republican
Gov. Mitch Daniels, who is now the president of Purdue. Since
taking the job last year, Daniels has been fighting the good fight
against bureaucratic bloat. His results are probably as good or
better than any other tuition-conscious university president,
though the structural barriers are massive:

Mr. Daniels cut millions from state higher education as
governor, but millions more pay for the administrative salaries
that have ballooned at Purdue, along with most universities around
the country. At Purdue, there are now 75% more administrators and
staff on the payroll than there were 13 years ago.

J. Paul Robinson, a former president of the faculty senate, said
Mr. Daniels’s worth as a leader will be tied to his ability to
prune that administrative bloat. “Let me put it this way,” Mr.
Robinson said: “A blind man on a galloping horse at midnight with
sunglasses on can see the problem. The question is, What can he do
about it?”

Mr. Daniels says he is consolidating administrative jobs where
prudent and leaving jobs unfilled where the duplication of effort
makes that possible. He has jettisoned 10 university cars,
consolidated hundreds of thousands of feet of off-campus rental
storage and introduced a higher-deductible health-care plan.

He has also frozen tuition rates:

And by freezing tuition, he is forcing his own school to
modernize its 19th-century business model with a combination of
systemic cuts, organizational realignments and cash incentives.

“This place was not built to be efficient,” Mr. Daniels said
when asked about the structural changes he was making at Purdue.
But “you’re not going to find many places where you just take a
cleaver and hack off a big piece of fat. Just like a cow, it’s
marbled through the whole enterprise.”

The bottom line is this: Universities can’t have it both ways.
They can’t provide an affordable education to middle class and
low-income families while also hiring a bajillion more residential
advisors, vice presidents of sustainability, diversity
coordinators, and other paper pushers who never set foot near a
classroom.

Many Democratic politicians who claim to sympathize with the
suffering students, such as President Obama and Sen. Elizabeth
Warren, believe the best way keep college affordable is to loan
students a bunch of money on the taxpayer’s dime and then forgive
their debts —so long as they find their way into government
service. But that
doesn’t actually keep costs down
; it merely tricks students
into thinking they can manage.

The best method for preventing tuition increases is actually
much simpler: University presidents and regents need to stop
raising tuition to cover non-educational nonsense. Kudos to Daniels
for understanding that, daunting though the challenge may be.

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Veterans Health Care Compromise Reached, Rockets Launched From Russia, 'The Sarah Palin Channel' Lives: A.M. Links

  • House and Senate lawmakers have agreed on a
    compromise plan to fix the problem-plagued veterans
    health care program
    , which they will unveil at a press
    conference Monday. 
  • The Pentagon says satellite images show
    rockets were fired from Russia into eastern Ukraine

    between July 21-26. Meanwhile, the UN is considering whether the
    downing of Malaysia Airlines jet MH17—thought to be done by
    pro-Russian rebels—may constitute a
    war crime
    . Time to start cleaning out the old bomb shelter
    yet?
  • If real problems are too scary right now, you could always join
    hyper-partisans on both sides of American politics in feeding the
    absurd
    impreachment feedback loop
    .”
  • And speaking of impeachment… Sarah Palin
    has launched
     her own subscription-based online network,
    The Sarah Palin Channel. For $9.95 per month you can talk with
    Palin “about the issues that the mainstream media won’t talk
    about.” LOL. 
  • Not to be outdone by neighboring states, Tennessee advocates
    are
    pushing a constitutional amendment
     that would create a
    spate of new abortion restrictions. 
  • Married couples with equal education levels are less
    likely to get divorced
    than those in which women are less
    educated than their husbands.
  • Does President Obama have
    the authority to stop tax inversion

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via IFTTT

Veterans Health Care Compromise Reached, Rockets Launched From Russia, ‘The Sarah Palin Channel’ Lives: A.M. Links

  • House and Senate lawmakers have agreed on a
    compromise plan to fix the problem-plagued veterans
    health care program
    , which they will unveil at a press
    conference Monday. 
  • The Pentagon says satellite images show
    rockets were fired from Russia into eastern Ukraine

    between July 21-26. Meanwhile, the UN is considering whether the
    downing of Malaysia Airlines jet MH17—thought to be done by
    pro-Russian rebels—may constitute a
    war crime
    . Time to start cleaning out the old bomb shelter
    yet?
  • If real problems are too scary right now, you could always join
    hyper-partisans on both sides of American politics in feeding the
    absurd
    impreachment feedback loop
    .”
  • And speaking of impeachment… Sarah Palin
    has launched
     her own subscription-based online network,
    The Sarah Palin Channel. For $9.95 per month you can talk with
    Palin “about the issues that the mainstream media won’t talk
    about.” LOL. 
  • Not to be outdone by neighboring states, Tennessee advocates
    are
    pushing a constitutional amendment
     that would create a
    spate of new abortion restrictions. 
  • Married couples with equal education levels are less
    likely to get divorced
    than those in which women are less
    educated than their husbands.
  • Does President Obama have
    the authority to stop tax inversion

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