You Can’t Stop Online Drug Sales: The Supposed Operator of the New Silk Road Speaks

Mike Power, author of the
book

Drugs 2.0
,
nabs an encrypted online interview
at the site Medium with a person purporting to be
operating the new version of the Silk Road darkweb sales site,
still using the original pseudonym for that role, “Dread Pirate
Roberts.” (The federal government claims that a man named Ross
Ulbricht
who they have arrested
was the original Dread Pirate
Roberts.)

Choice excerpt, and wise no matter who the source is:

The recurring theme [at] Silk Road is that we provide
honest, unadulterated products to people who want them, and whether
we [were] here or not, most people would have access to them anyway
from shady street dealers who lie through their teeth.

Let us assume you have a son who is in his teenage years and you
knew they were going to do drugs, what as a parent, would you do?
Would you let them go to their friends’ friends’ dealer … or would
you help them buy from Silk Road from vendors who are reviewed
regularly, and where we will be offering product-testing services,
and [where we have] a resident doctor to ensure nobody harms
themselves?

Ultimately you cannot stop people doing drugs, but you can make
it safer for them, and get people off the streets and away from
violence — which is what we stand for.

He won’t discuss security measures for the site, which as Power
notes has not yet established a record of completed sales with
stated customer satisfaction. And for feds who want to try to slap
down the site again, he has this to say:

You will hunt me — but first ask yourselves is it worth it?
Taking me down will not affect Silk Road — back-ups have already
been distributed and this entire infrastructure can be redeployed
elsewhere in under 15 minutes, and you will gain nothing from our
database.

Reason
on Silk Road.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/you-cant-stop-online-drug-sales-the-supp
via IFTTT

You Can't Stop Online Drug Sales: The Supposed Operator of the New Silk Road Speaks

Mike Power, author of the
book

Drugs 2.0
,
nabs an encrypted online interview
at the site Medium with a person purporting to be
operating the new version of the Silk Road darkweb sales site,
still using the original pseudonym for that role, “Dread Pirate
Roberts.” (The federal government claims that a man named Ross
Ulbricht
who they have arrested
was the original Dread Pirate
Roberts.)

Choice excerpt, and wise no matter who the source is:

The recurring theme [at] Silk Road is that we provide
honest, unadulterated products to people who want them, and whether
we [were] here or not, most people would have access to them anyway
from shady street dealers who lie through their teeth.

Let us assume you have a son who is in his teenage years and you
knew they were going to do drugs, what as a parent, would you do?
Would you let them go to their friends’ friends’ dealer … or would
you help them buy from Silk Road from vendors who are reviewed
regularly, and where we will be offering product-testing services,
and [where we have] a resident doctor to ensure nobody harms
themselves?

Ultimately you cannot stop people doing drugs, but you can make
it safer for them, and get people off the streets and away from
violence — which is what we stand for.

He won’t discuss security measures for the site, which as Power
notes has not yet established a record of completed sales with
stated customer satisfaction. And for feds who want to try to slap
down the site again, he has this to say:

You will hunt me — but first ask yourselves is it worth it?
Taking me down will not affect Silk Road — back-ups have already
been distributed and this entire infrastructure can be redeployed
elsewhere in under 15 minutes, and you will gain nothing from our
database.

Reason
on Silk Road.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/you-cant-stop-online-drug-sales-the-supp
via IFTTT

Just Before David Tepper Was Preaching A 20x P/E On CNBC, He Was Selling These Stocks

On October 15, two weeks after the end of the third quarter, David Tepper appeared on CNBC for his semi-annual stock pumpfest, most memorable for his suggestion that a 20x P/E multiple on the S&P was perfectly acceptable. Which would suggest Tepper was very bullish on risk. Which would suggest buying more stocks, not selling. Yet selling is precisely what he did between June 30 and September 30 according to his just released 13F. Specifically, after having a total long equity AUM of $6.9 billion at the end of the second quarter, the Appaloosian lowered the dollar value of his AUM by nearly 10%, to $6.3 billion as of September 30. So what did he liqudate? Here are his biggest liquidations:

  • Comcast ($61 million, 1.5MM shares)
  • Microsoft ($48 million, 1.4MM shares)
  • Weatherford ($31 million, 2.3MM shraes)
  • NetApp ($24 million, 640K shares)

Just as notable is what he sold partially, of which his $665 million cut (4.3 million shares) in the SPY ETF is certainly quite dramatic. Other notable sales.

  • Bank of America: sold $51 million, or 4.1MM shares
  • Broadcom: sold $55 million, 1.2MM shares
  • Hertz: sold $40 million, 1.5MM shares
  • Sandisk: sold $39 million, 635K shares
  • Carnival: sold $32 million, 876K shares
  • Google: sold $18 million, 20k shares

And so on. What did he buy to offset all these sales? His new stakes are as follows:

  • Freeport McMoRan: $58 million, 1.75mm shares
  • Ingredeon: $20 million, 297k shares
  • Community Health: $8.7 million, 210k shares
  • Tenet healthcare: $8.7 million, 210k shares

and…

  • a flyer for $6.5 million or 737k shares in JCPenney, in which he is nursing a substantial loss so far.

Tepper’s complete latest holdings are shown below, sorted by notional as of Sept 30. New positions in green.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/vy4X8o1xtEE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

“No Warning Can Save People Determined To Grow Suddenly Rich”

Submitted by Tim Price of The Price of Everything blog,

“No warning can save people determined to grow suddenly rich.” – Lord Overstone.

We have seen a confluence of events that suggests we may be reaching the terminal point of the financial markets merry-go-round – that point just before the ride stops suddenly and unexpectedly and the passengers are thrown from their seats. Having waited with increasing concern to see what might transpire from the gridlocked US political system, the market was rewarded with a few more months’ grace before the next agonising debate about raising the US debt ceiling. There was widespread relief, if not outright jubilation. Stock markets rose, in some cases to all-time highs. But let there be no misunderstanding on this point: the US administration is hopelessly bankrupt. (As are those of the UK, most of western Europe, and Japan.)

The market preferred to sit tight on the ride, for the time being. Three professors were awarded what was widely misreported as ‘the Nobel prize in economics’ for mutually contradictory research. What they actually received was the ‘Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel’, which is not quite the same thing. But then economics is not a science, and Eugene Fama’s ‘efficient market hypothesis’ is not just empirically wrong, but dangerously so. History, it would seem, is clearing the decks. Perhaps the most intriguing development of the week was the news that Neil Woodford would soon be retiring from his role managing £33 billion of other people’s money at Invesco Perpetual to start up his own business. It was widely reported that Mr. Woodford nursed growing frustration at the short-termism of the financial services industry. We will return to this theme.

One of the sadder stories in the history of investment management is that of Mr. Tony Dye. The following extract is taken from his obituary in The Independent:

Tony Dye was one of Britain’s best known fund managers, becoming a household name in the late 1990s due to his controversial opinions about the outlook for global stock markets. At a time when markets were soaring, Dye insisted they were overvalued and on the verge of a crash – a view which put him at odds with most other investors at the time and earned him the nickname “Dr Doom”.

 

As early as 1995, as the FTSE 100 was approaching 4,000 points, Dye began to make the case that markets were too expensive. At the time, he was the chief investment officer for Phillips & Drew, one of Britain’s biggest asset management firms, and by 1996 he had begun to move large sums of clients’ money out of equities and into cash.

 

In the years that followed, however, stock markets continued to soar, driven by the technology boom. But Dye stuck to his guns, avoiding the high-growth, high-risk internet stocks, maintaining large positions in cash, and consequently ensuring that Phillips & Drew’s funds significantly underperformed their rivals. By 1999, the firm was ranked 66th out of 67 for performance amongst Britain’s institutional fund managers, and was haemorrhaging clients – and in February the following year, just weeks after the FTSE had broken through 7,000 points for the first time, Dye was sacked.

 

Days later, his prophesy finally came true. Markets collapsed, and settled into a three year slump, which saw more than 50 per cent wiped off the value of global stock markets.

Neil Woodford’s apparent concerns are well placed. There is a grotesque mismatch between the set-up of institutional asset managers and what is in the best interests of their end clients, the individual members of the public who pay their fees. The investment fund marketplace is grotesquely oversupplied. There is far too much, to use the dismal phrase, product. The problem is exacerbated by perhaps inevitable weaknesses in psychology – both on the part of the manager, and on the part of the investor. Stress points abound throughout the chain. The investment fund world is hopelessly balkanised, and brimming over with a degree of product specialisation utterly unwarranted by investors’ real needs. The fund management industry is a perpetual production line of novelty, or rather an endless rehash of the same old ideas. The point of absurdity was reached and surpassed when there were more mutual funds listed on the New York Stock Exchange than there were common stocks with which to populate them. The industry is a monstrous hydra, busily consuming its own, and its investors’, capital. New funds are launched daily. Failing older funds are quietly tidied away, merged, or destroyed. They are ‘uninvented’.

Alison Smith and Stephen Foley covered the news of Neil Woodford’s resignation for the Financial Times. They cited the FT’s own John Kay, who carried out a review of UK equity markets last year, and who said,

The short-term horizon is basically introduced by the intermediary sector.. Pension trustees [for example] are told they should keep reviewing managers, while retail investors get constant invitations to trade from independent financial advisers [for example] and the platforms set up to enable them to do so.

As they suggest, Neil Woodford’s past success means that raising money for his new business is unlikely to be much of a struggle. “But imagine the hurdles in the way of a manager who would like to purse long-term strategies but is just starting out.” In the words of Professor Kay,

How easy would Warren Buffett find it to set up now?

We have not been immune to the demands of clients frustrated at the performance of diversified portfolios lagging the broader equity markets (although this explicit benchmarking against stocks was never a mandate to which we subscribed). We struggle, in some cases, to make sufficiently clear our concerns about broader market valuation, or just as importantly the gravity of the global financial situation (including a potential QE-driven currency crisis), which makes a wholehearted commitment to the stock market in late 2013 seem to us a risky strategy. So where, if anywhere, does the fault lie? Sometimes it is not just asset managers who should be accused of being short-termist, or of missing the big picture.

Our thesis has been consistent for five years now. We believe we are at the tail end of a 40-years’ and counting experiment in money and the constant expansion of credit. This experiment is not ending well. Because government money, unbacked and unchecked as it now is by anything of tangible value, can be created at will, it has been. What is extraordinary is that despite trillions of dollars / pounds / yen of stimulus, there are few visible signs of what we would call inflation, in anything other than the prices of financial assets themselves.

We are living through a historic period of global currency debasement. The neo-Keynesian money-printers who dominate the world’s central banks have ‘won’ the debate, but are now scratching their heads, looking in vain for the economic recovery that they were expecting all those trillions to have bought. They will continue to look in vain, because money creation and true wealth creation are polar opposites. As portfolio manager Tony Deden has asked,

If cheaper currency is the source of wealth, where has Bangladesh gone wrong? If cheaper money means economic prosperity, why not just print as much as we can and give it out to everyone? We have become fools. The customers know nothing and the advisers know even less. And then we have the idiot economists – the neo-classical Keynesian variety with solutions to problems they did not even anticipate; solutions that have, in fact, been long discredited. And so we lurch from crisis to crisis, eating our meagre capital in the hopes of becoming rich in money. It is a pity.

Those words were written four years ago. The printing presses have been run to exhaustion ever since. So far they have bought us an inflationary rally in the prices of financial assets, and not much else. It has been a lousy time for anyone focused on the disciplined and genuinely diversified pursuit of capital preservation in real terms (more recently, for anyone seeking to escape the inflationary insanity via the honest money that is gold). We have not, to any significant extent, participated in the ‘phony rally’. But then we are playing a longer game than most of our peers. Round and round and round she goes; where she stops, nobody knows. Fund manager Sebastian Lyon recently quoted another celebrated fund manager, Jean-Marie Eveillard:

I would rather lose half of my shareholders than half of my shareholders’ money.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/obCgZTZOllU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

"No Warning Can Save People Determined To Grow Suddenly Rich"

Submitted by Tim Price of The Price of Everything blog,

“No warning can save people determined to grow suddenly rich.” – Lord Overstone.

We have seen a confluence of events that suggests we may be reaching the terminal point of the financial markets merry-go-round – that point just before the ride stops suddenly and unexpectedly and the passengers are thrown from their seats. Having waited with increasing concern to see what might transpire from the gridlocked US political system, the market was rewarded with a few more months’ grace before the next agonising debate about raising the US debt ceiling. There was widespread relief, if not outright jubilation. Stock markets rose, in some cases to all-time highs. But let there be no misunderstanding on this point: the US administration is hopelessly bankrupt. (As are those of the UK, most of western Europe, and Japan.)

The market preferred to sit tight on the ride, for the time being. Three professors were awarded what was widely misreported as ‘the Nobel prize in economics’ for mutually contradictory research. What they actually received was the ‘Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel’, which is not quite the same thing. But then economics is not a science, and Eugene Fama’s ‘efficient market hypothesis’ is not just empirically wrong, but dangerously so. History, it would seem, is clearing the decks. Perhaps the most intriguing development of the week was the news that Neil Woodford would soon be retiring from his role managing £33 billion of other people’s money at Invesco Perpetual to start up his own business. It was widely reported that Mr. Woodford nursed growing frustration at the short-termism of the financial services industry. We will return to this theme.

One of the sadder stories in the history of investment management is that of Mr. Tony Dye. The following extract is taken from his obituary in The Independent:

Tony Dye was one of Britain’s best known fund managers, becoming a household name in the late 1990s due to his controversial opinions about the outlook for global stock markets. At a time when markets were soaring, Dye insisted they were overvalued and on the verge of a crash – a view which put him at odds with most other investors at the time and earned him the nickname “Dr Doom”.

 

As early as 1995, as the FTSE 100 was approaching 4,000 points, Dye began to make the case that markets were too expensive. At the time, he was the chief investment officer for Phillips & Drew, one of Britain’s biggest asset management firms, and by 1996 he had begun to move large sums of clients’ money out of equities and into cash.

 

In the years that followed, however, stock markets continued to soar, driven by the technology boom. But Dye stuck to his guns, avoiding the high-growth, high-risk internet stocks, maintaining large positions in cash, and consequently ensuring that Phillips & Drew’s funds significantly underperformed their rivals. By 1999, the firm was ranked 66th out of 67 for performance amongst Britain’s institutional fund managers, and was haemorrhaging clients – and in February the following year, just weeks after the FTSE had broken through 7,000 points for the first time, Dye was sacked.

 

Days later, his prophesy finally came true. Markets collapsed, and settled into a three year slump, which saw more than 50 per cent wiped off the value of global stock markets.

Neil Woodford’s apparent concerns are well placed. There is a grotesque mismatch between the set-up of institutional asset managers and what is in the best interests of their end clients, the individual members of the public who pay their fees. The investment fund marketplace is grotesquely oversupplied. There is far too much, to use the dismal phrase, product. The problem is exacerbated by perhaps inevitable weaknesses in psychology – both on the part of the manager, and on the part of the investor. Stress points abound throughout the chain. The investment fund world is hopelessly balkanised, and brimming over with a degree of product specialisation utterly unwarranted by investors’ real needs. The fund management industry is a perpetual production line of novelty, or rather an endless rehash of the same old ideas. The point of absurdity was reached and surpassed when there were more mutual funds listed on the New York Stock Exchange than there were common stocks with which to populate them. The industry is a monstrous hydra, busily consuming its own, and its investors’, capital. New funds are launched daily. Failing older funds are quietly tidied away, merged, or destroyed. They are ‘uninvented’.

Alison Smith and Stephen Foley covered the news of Neil Woodford’s resignation for the Financial Times. They cited the FT’s own John Kay, who carried out a review of UK equity markets last year, and who said,

The short-term horizon is basically introduced by the intermediary sector.. Pension trustees [for example] are told they should keep reviewing managers, while retail investors get constant invitations to trade from independent financial advisers [for example] and the platforms set up to enable them to do so.

As they suggest, Neil Woodford’s past success means that raising money for his new business is unlikely to be much of a struggle. “But imagine the hurdles in the way of a manager who would like to purse long-term strategies but is just starting out.” In the words of Professor Kay,

How easy would Warren Buffett find it to set up now?

We have not been immune to the demands of clients frustrated at the performance of diversified portfolios lagging the broader equity markets (although this explicit benchmarking against stocks was never a mandate to which we subscribed). We struggle, in some cases, to make sufficiently clear our concerns about broader market valuation, or just as importantly the gravity of the global financial situation (including a potential QE-driven currency crisis), which makes a wholehearted commitment to the stock market in late 2013 seem to us a risky strategy. So where, if anywhere, does the fault lie? Sometimes it is not just asset managers who should be accused of being short-termist, or of missing the big picture.

Our thesis has been consistent for five years now. We believe we are at the tail end of a 40-years’ and counting experiment in money and the constant expansion of credit. This experiment is not ending well. Because government money, unbacked and unchecked as it now is by anything of tangible value, can be created at will, it has been. What is extraordinary is that despite trillions of dollars / pounds / yen of stimulus, there are few visible signs of what we would call inflation, in anything other than the prices of financial assets themselves.

We are living through a historic period of global currency debasement. The neo-Keynesian money-printers who dominate the world’s central banks have ‘won’ the debate, but are now scratching their heads, looking in vain for the economic recovery
that they were expecting all those trillions to have bought. They will continue to look in vain, because money creation and true wealth creation are polar opposites. As portfolio manager Tony Deden has asked,

If cheaper currency is the source of wealth, where has Bangladesh gone wrong? If cheaper money means economic prosperity, why not just print as much as we can and give it out to everyone? We have become fools. The customers know nothing and the advisers know even less. And then we have the idiot economists – the neo-classical Keynesian variety with solutions to problems they did not even anticipate; solutions that have, in fact, been long discredited. And so we lurch from crisis to crisis, eating our meagre capital in the hopes of becoming rich in money. It is a pity.

Those words were written four years ago. The printing presses have been run to exhaustion ever since. So far they have bought us an inflationary rally in the prices of financial assets, and not much else. It has been a lousy time for anyone focused on the disciplined and genuinely diversified pursuit of capital preservation in real terms (more recently, for anyone seeking to escape the inflationary insanity via the honest money that is gold). We have not, to any significant extent, participated in the ‘phony rally’. But then we are playing a longer game than most of our peers. Round and round and round she goes; where she stops, nobody knows. Fund manager Sebastian Lyon recently quoted another celebrated fund manager, Jean-Marie Eveillard:

I would rather lose half of my shareholders than half of my shareholders’ money.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/obCgZTZOllU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

5 Big Questions About President Obama’s Health Law Tweak

Earlier today, President Obama
announced a plan to tweak Obamacare by allowing state insurance
commissioners to let health insurers continue to offer plans that
do not pass muster under Obamacare’s health insurance regulations.
The announcement came following mounting public outrage about the
millions of individual market health plans being terminated as a
result of the health law’s regulations—in direct contradiction to
the president’s repeated promise that people who liked their health
plans could keep them. Congressional Democrats had been circling
around plans to address plan cancellations all week; the
announcement was in large part a response to growing pressure from
within the president’s own party to respond.

But the president’s plan doesn’t resolve the mess. Indeed, it
may have just compounded the law’s existing political and policy
troubles. Big questions remain about how it will work, and how
other parties will respond.

1. Will congressional Democrats be satisfied?
The president’s tweak was designed to help congressional Democrats
under fire for supporting a law that caused people to lose their
health plans despite many absolute promises to the contrary. But
while some Democrats appear to be
happy with the change
, which allows them to blame insurers for
cancelling plans, it’s not clear that this will placate all of
them. Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.), who sponsored a bill to require
insurers to continue existing plans,
said
in a press conference this afternoon that the president’s
proposal was a “step in the right direction,” but also suggested
that a further legislative fix might be needed.

2. How will the insurance industry react? This
is potentially a big deal. Right now, the insurance industry is
working closely with the administration, and despite frustrations
with the rocky rollout of the exchanges, has largely avoided direct
confrontation with the administration. Not so here. The head of
America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), issued a statement warning
that the president’s plan could upend the insurance market.
“Changing the rules after health plans have already met the
requirements of the law,”
said AHIP CEO Karen Iganagni
, “could destabilize the market and
result in higher premiums for consumers.” That, in turn, could have
political consequences, as next year’s insurance rates will be
revealed in the months leading up to the 2014 election.

3. How will the new policy be implemented? A
letter sent to state insurance commissioners says that the Obama
administration will allow health insurers to “choose to continue
coverage that would otherwise be terminated or cancelled” next year
under a “transitional” policy. But that still depends on the say-so
of state insurance regulators, who are merely “encouraged to adopt
the same transitional policy” regarding specific types of
terminated coverage. Yet insurance regulators aren’t sure how to do
that. “It is unclear how, as a practical matter, the changes
proposed today… can be put into effect,” said the head of an
insurance commissioner’s group, according
to a Wall Street Journal health reporter. So there’s a
significant operational question about how—and whether—this would
work.

4. Will state insurance commissioners actually pursue
the Obama administration’s encouraged change?
Maybe not.

At least one
has already said no thanks: Washington state
Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler, one of
the most liberal insurance regulators in the nation
, has
already indicated that his state won’t participate, citing “serious
concerns” about implementation and insurance market stability.
Washington state, notably, has had direct experience with insurance
market meltdowns in the past: In the 1990s, it passed a slew of
health insurance market reforms that eventually
resulted
in the large majority of individual market insurance
carriers exiting the market.

5. Is it legal? Right now the administration is
citing “transitional” authority to implement the change. But it’s
all pretty vague. The idea, as with the delay of the employer
mandate, is that transitional authority gives the administration
the power to do what is necessary in order to put the law in place.
But the power to take the steps necessary to implement a law
doesn’t apply here. What the administration is doing is using its
authority to not implement a part of the law.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/5-big-questions-about-president-obamas-h
via IFTTT

Obama Attempting to Reverse Insurance Cancellations, Student Debt Passes $1 Trillion, Another City Considers Bankruptcy: P.M. Links

  • Today's P.M. links brought to you by Benjamin FranklinPresident Barack Obama’s
    solution to the disaster of the rollout of his signature Affordable
    Care Act is to allow insurers to
    uncancel customers’ policies
    for a year. Insurance industry
    representatives worry this will make the problem
    even worse
    .
  • As of the third fiscal quarter, total student debt has
    surpassed $1 trillion
    . Good luck getting them to pay for your
    health care!
  • Desert Hot Springs in California may be the next city to

    declare bankruptcy
    , though they’re trying hard to resist
    it.

  • School security spending
    is predicted to double to $5 billion
    by 2017 in response to the Sandy Hook Elementary shootings.
  • Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is
    threatening legal action
    against aides who told police about
    his drug use and drunken-driving. Snitches get stiches, guys!
  • Murderous Boston ganster
    Whitey Bulger
    has officially been sentenced to two life terms
    (plus five years).

Get Reason.com and Reason 24/7
content 
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Follow us on Facebook
and Twitter,
and don’t forget to
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up
 for Reason’s daily updates for more
content.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/obama-attempting-to-reverse-insurance-ca
via IFTTT

J.D. Tuccille on Health Care Reform Without Obamacare

SyringeIf we’d all spent the last few generations eating
swill slapped in front of us at state-run cafeterias, who would
feel comfortable describing a world of gourmet restaurants,
fast-food drive-ins, greasy spoons, and ethnic food carts evolving
all by itself if we just swept away the federal Department
of Heartburn? Yet describe the alternatives, we must, when goggling
at the current if-you-like-it-there-it-goes fiasco that doesn’t
even rate a description as the army-issue shit on a shingle of
health care systems. We can’t reliably describe what a free society
would come up with for treating people’s aches and pains given time
to evolve and react to human needs, writes J.D. Tuccille, but
Obamacare can be improved upon. A lot.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/jd-tuccille-on-health-reform-without-oba
via IFTTT

The QEeen Sends Stocks Soaring To Moar New Highs; Bonds & Bullion Bid

Despite a 10% collapse in CSCO (which apparently is not a bellwhether anymore at all) – notching a mere 18 points off the Dow, Yellen's confirmation of everything we thought we knew (and bad macro data) was enough to send the S&P and Dow to new all-time highs. Treasuries rallied 2bps (5-8bps on the week) and gold lifted back to unchanged on the week. VIX limped lower. On the day, the USD closed higher (thanks to JPY weakness supporting stocks) but was lower from early highs. Credit markets rallied very modestly but remain hugely divergent in this supposed QEeen-fueled surge. And on it goes…

 

Stocks are unstoppable… credit not so much…

 

The Dow, Nasdaq totally ignored CSCO – so old school – and roared again…

 

Some context off the debt-ceiling lows…

 

and across the sectors…

 

Gold lurched begrudgingly today – back to unchanged on the week…

 

as Treasuries rallied (10Y back to 2.69%)

 

Before everyone gets too excited – we have seen this rampacious levitation 4 times this year now and each time it reached this pace – we turned lower…

 

You think this is funny… does it amuse you?

 

Charts: Bloomberg

 

Bonus Chart: It all makes sense somewhere…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/cw33tsj9-Mw/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The QEeen Sends Stocks Soaring To Moar New Highs; Bonds & Bullion Bid

Despite a 10% collapse in CSCO (which apparently is not a bellwhether anymore at all) – notching a mere 18 points off the Dow, Yellen's confirmation of everything we thought we knew (and bad macro data) was enough to send the S&P and Dow to new all-time highs. Treasuries rallied 2bps (5-8bps on the week) and gold lifted back to unchanged on the week. VIX limped lower. On the day, the USD closed higher (thanks to JPY weakness supporting stocks) but was lower from early highs. Credit markets rallied very modestly but remain hugely divergent in this supposed QEeen-fueled surge. And on it goes…

 

Stocks are unstoppable… credit not so much…

 

The Dow, Nasdaq totally ignored CSCO – so old school – and roared again…

 

Some context off the debt-ceiling lows…

 

and across the sectors…

 

Gold lurched begrudgingly today – back to unchanged on the week…

 

as Treasuries rallied (10Y back to 2.69%)

 

Before everyone gets too excited – we have seen this rampacious levitation 4 times this year now and each time it reached this pace – we turned lower…

 

You think this is funny… does it amuse you?

 

Charts: Bloomberg

 

Bonus Chart: It all makes sense somewhere…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/cw33tsj9-Mw/story01.htm Tyler Durden