Gold Wins The First Quarter While Dow Drops Most Since 2012

Value stocks handily outperformed Growth stocks by the end of Q1 but the window-dressing pump of the last 2 days rescued all but the blue-chip Dow from ending the quarter in the red. This is the worst quarterly performance for stocks since 2012.  Despite disconnects all over the place today, stocks managed to hold onto gains today. Thanks to some dovosh comments by Yellen (that apparently "some time" is interpreted as more than 6 months), bonds and stocks ripped today leaving long-bonds best quarter since Q2 2012. Gold is the best performing asset of the quarter and HY bonds worst as the USD ended unchanged.

 

Gold ends Q1 as the best-performing asset-class

 

The Dow closed the quarter red – its first since Q4 2012 while the last 2 days rescued the rest of the major indices

 

And Utlities are the best performing sector in Q1 with Discretionary and Builders worst…

 

Nasdaq Biotech Index gained 3% – its best day in 2 weeks – to scramble back above the 100DMA and closing the quarter up just over 4% (its lowest gain in 5 quarters) but March was its worst month in 4 years.

 

Perhaps rather surprisingly 5Y Yields are unchanged (-1bps) on the quarter while 10Y is -30bps, and 30T -40bps – thi sis the best quarter for bonds sicne Q2 2012

 

On the day, Yellen's comments sparked Bond and stock buying as the merest hint of moar dovishness is enough to do this…

 

AUDJPY was in charge…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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Check Out These 8 New “Record Highs”

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

There’s nothing like a nice cup of reality first thing on Monday morning.

If you’ve been a reader for any length of time, you know one of the things I periodically do is scan headlines for phrases like “record high” or “all time high”.

The results can often given an interesting big picture perspective of what’s happening in the world.

1) President Obama’s disapproval rating hits a record HIGH of 59 per cent

No surprise here, especially given the latest crash of the Obamacare website this weekend, just before the signup deadline.

2) “Frozen” enters the record books as highest-grossing animated film of all time

This weekend, Toy Story 3 was eclipsed by Frozen as the top grossing animated movie of all time.

2010′s Toy Story 3 had $1.063 billion in total revenue. Frozen just hit $1.072 billion.

Curiously, the average movie ticket price in the Land of the Free was $7.89 in 2010 according to NATO (no, not that NATO. This is the ‘National Association of Theater Owners.)

Today it’s $8.38. This obviously has had an impact. And it doesn’t even account for the rapid inflation in movie ticket prices outside of the United States, which is even more critical given that nearly 2/3 of movie revenue comes from outside the US.

3) Property Tax Revenue Reaches a Record High

Great news– in the Land of the Free, state and local governments are taking more of your money than ever before. This is, of course, in addition to tax increases at the federal level.

4) Corporate Profits Hit A New Record High Last Year

Wages are stagnating. Median household income levels are well below where they were in 1996 when adjusted for inflation. But corporate profits are at a record high.

If you’ve ever wondered where all that money goes that is printed by the central bank, now you have at least a partial answer.

5) S&P 500 falters after nearing record high

The US stock market ended February at a record high and has continually flirted with new record territory throughout the month of March. Now you have another part of the answer to the question above– ‘where does all that printed money go?’

6) French Unemployment At Record High

As it turns out, raising taxes, overregulation of everything, and chasing away your most productive citizens is NOT the path to prosperity. What a shocker.

7) Pricier beef ‘here to stay’ as food costs seen higher: USDA

Beef prices are at/near their all-time high. Not that there’s any inflation. Blame the weather.

8) RMB enjoys record-high activity on global markets in February

The use of the renminbi in worldwide financial transactions as tracked by the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT) has increased to a record amount. And it’s growing.

The renminbi has already overtaken the Hong Kong dollar, Singapore dollar, and Swiss Franc in terms of its percentage of worldwide financial activity.

And while it’s still embryonic, compared to the dollar, the rise of the renminbi as a potential reserve currency is a trend that cannot be ignored.


    



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Fed Releases Taper’d POMO Schedule – Allows 3 Days For Shorting In April

As expected, the Federal Reserve has released its Permanent Open Market Operations (POMO) non-monetizing-of-the-debt schedule for April with $30 billion of Treasury purchases (and $25 billion MBS). This is a 33% reduction from the ‘normal’ $45 billion Treasury purchase of last year. The POMO schedule very generously allows traders 3 days of non-money-printing potential shorting opportunities (Friday 4th, Thursday 17th, and Wednesday 30th)… however, this Friday is non-farm payrolls day and we will not be allowed a red day after that…

 

 

Source: The Fed


    



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$242 Billion: That Is How Much Record “Window Dressing” Banks Got Today Thanks To The Fed

The last time banks scrambled to pad their books into the quarter end, and come begging at the front door of the NY Fed’s Liberty 33 office, was on the last day of Q4 and 2013, when nearly $200 billion in Treasurys were handed out by the Fed to over 100 counterparties in what was the largest reverse repo operation conducted by Ben Bernanke, and his brand new Fixed-Rate Reverse Repo operation, in history.

That was the record until today, when just over an hour ago the Fed disclosed that as part of its most recent reverse repo operation, it had handed out to 93 dealer banks and other financial intermediaries, both foreign and domestic, some $242 billion in Treasurys in what is now the biggest reverse repo operation in history, a privilege for which the collateral-starved banks paid the Fed the king’s ransom of 0.05% in annual interest, i.e., nothing.

So while hedge funds, speculators and assorted vacuum tubes are rushing all day to bid up all the overvalued stocks they can find in order to make their quarter end P&Ls appear more attractive to LPs even as the early ramp and late selloff is again set to resume tomorrow, the megabanks too were rushing to the “window dressed” safety of Treasurys in order to make their balance sheets appear more attractive to regulators and supervisors, in a world in which high quality collateral is much more valuable than the Fed’s fungible reserves, and which helps indicate much higher capitalization ratios than otherwise would be observed at the collateral-starved banks.

But what today’s off the charts reverse repo really shows us, aside from the fact that all the reverse repo operation really is, is a way for the Fed to make bank balance sheets appear far better than in reality (for all those still confused), is that the collateral shortage we have been warning about for the past several years, and which is getting only more acute the longer the Fed soaks up all 10 year equivalents from the Treasury market (of which it now holds 35% and rapidly rising), is getting worse for banks.

And in related news, one should consider that tomorrow – with their books well padded for the March 31 daily security “holdings” – the banks will almost certainly unwind over $100 billion if not more of today’s reverse repo, an amount that is now equal to nearly two full months of QE. Where that money will go, only the (NY) Fed and a few bank CEOs know.

Then again none of this should come as a surprise – we said precisely this during our last such window dressing observation, to wit:

In short: collateral window dressing on; collateral window dressing off, all with the blessing of the banks’ overarching regulator, the Federal Reserve. What is most disturbing is that both the world’s largest financial firms, and by implication the Fed, just admitted there is a massive collateral shortage currently if banks are forced to pad their books to the tune of nearly $200 billion in “high quality collateral” just to pass year-end auditor muster.

Today’s record quarterly window dressing merely confirmed precisely this.

So while the Fed can provide on both an orderly and on an emergency basis up to the total amount of Treasurys it holds on its entire balance sheet amounting to $2.3 trillion (as of today), what will happen if banks find themselves needing to urgently satisfy $2.4 trillion, or $2.5 trillion, or $5 trillion, or more in Treasury deliverable demands, as collateral chains suddenly collapse on themselves as they did the day after Lehman’s bankruptcy and rehypothecated Treasurys, not to mention re-re-re-rehypothecated Treasurys have to be delivered once those infamous “off the books” repo and reverse-repo operations suddenly find they aren’t quite netting each other off, as we have also been warning for years.

We hope not to have to find out, at least not for some time, because the outcome would make the Lehman aftermath seem like a walk in the park.


    



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Mark Faber: The Old World Order Is Over

Via Callum Denness of Money Morning blog,

In the gilded ballroom of Hyatt’s Savoy ballroom, World War D‘s opening speaker Dr Mark Faber delivered a blunt message: the old world order is over.

The US reached a peak in prosperity and influence in the world in the 1950s or 1960s,’ said Faber. But since the 70s the superpower has been locked into a cycle of bubbles, busts and growing debt.

Debt, and the way it has manipulated the global economy, was the main theme of Faber’s address.

There are some people who claim to be economists who will tell you debts do not matter,’ Faber told the packed ballroom.

But the real story is different….

Faber explained the flaw at the heart of expansionary monetary policy (such as QE). ‘When you drop dollar bills into the economy…it won’t lift all prices and assets equally at the same time,’ he said. In the 60s and 70s, extra money flowing through the economy inflated wages; in the early 2000s, money printing inflated commodities. But, Faber points out, this price and asset growth is never equal.

In other words, money printing creates more bubbles. Some assets go up, they overshoot, collapse and cause significant damage which necessitates, in the view of the US Federal Reserve, more money printing. It is a vicious cycle we’ve seen since the 70s: each time there was an economic problem, the Fed printed money and created more distortions.

Bernanke’s tenure saw this trend continue, and when it came to assessing the former Fed chairman, Faber didn’t mince his words.

 ’He’s been a disaster,‘ Faber said drily. Faber pointed out that not only did Bernanke not notice the subprime disaster, he actually helped create it. ‘Under his tenure at the Federal Reserve and under his intellectual influence when working for Mr Greenspan they created the gigantic housing bubble,‘ he said.

At the heart of this expansion in debt, and cycle of bubbles and busts is the reliance of the US economy on consumption. For the last century, policy makers have encouraged consumption on all levels of society including government, and discouraged savings.

But according to Faber, consumption doesn’t create a strong economy. ‘Wealth doesn’t come from consumerism, it comes from capital spending,‘ he said.

And the problem for the US economy is that while debt has continued to rise, capital investment hasn’t. In fact, it’s been falling sharply for a long time.

If we have growing debts, there’s a difference in quality of those debts, he said.  Japan, South Korea and Taiwan used their debts to invest in factories, plants…investments that generated wealth. According to Faber however, the US has just acquired debt to fuel consumption. ‘Where’s the future income?‘ he asked.

Faber used this as an opportunity to strike a note of caution for Australia, warning the room that one day Australia’s indebted housing sector won’t be able to borrow much more. It will then enter a period of contraction or very slow growth.

That was his warning to Australia: then came the opportunity.

We live in a new word. We live in a world where the balance of power has shifted to emerging countries,’ said Faber.

He was of course, talking about China. While China’s growth story is well known, Faber gave the audience an important geopolitical sub story.

China’s massive growth triggered massive commodity export booms in emerging economies. China’s real success was exporting the products it produced back to emerging economies. This has created a significant shift in the global economy: exports from China to emerging countries are higher than exports to the US or Europe.

‘This is the new world, where the old world is largely bypassed,’ said Faber.  While most of the media debates whether the US will grow, Faber argues it will have no impact on the world, as China has a much greater influence now than the US.

Faber is no bull on China however, and warned he would be very careful about investing there. Faber sees conditions at the present time as much worse than many people realise. There are also geopolitical concerns that are often left unexamined.

Take oil. Oil consumption in China – most of which comes from the Middle East – will rise.The Middle East in my opinion will go up in flames at some point, that will be an unpleasant event, predicted Faber in his typically apocalyptic but still understated way.

For Australia, he sees opportunities in the huge numbers of Chinese tourists travelling abroad, but he believes Australia has made a huge mistake by tolerating US bases on its continent. China will not sit by and let themselves be bossed around by the US,‘ he said.

His final message reiterated the failure of the US Federal Reserve. Corporate profits had been boosted by artificially low interest rates; wealth inequality is on the rise; and to compound it all, he says the Fed won’t raise interest rates anytime soon.

Punctuated by flashes of humour and dire warnings, it was a sober message that the attentive audience lapped up.


    



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Who You Gonna Trust?

Given the pump-and-dump revelations of last night (that we have been vocierfously explaining to an unwilling to hear public for five years), the question today is – who you gonna trust? The bond market or the stock market…

 

Did Yellen really just go full dove-tard? If so why is the USD rallying and gold fading?

 

Of course what is really driving the Stock market is carry-fueled HFT momentum…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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Meanwhile At The Obamacare Website…

Despite months to plan and an early morning failure today already, the Obamacare wesbite Healthcare.gov is down once again…

  • *AP SAYS HEALTHCARE.GOV WEBSITE NOT ACCEPTING NEW APPLICANTS,
  • *TECHNICAL PROBLEMS PREVENTING HEALTHCARE.GOV APPLICATIONS: AP

Of course the frequency of visitors is having some effect and the adminstration has once again extended the deadline for enrolment as long as participants are in line today. Perhaps, Obama should ask the HFTs how they cope with the volume?

 

As Bloomberg reports, Healthcare.gov, the federal website for Obamacare, faltered for the second time today as a record number of people tried to buy health insurance on the last day of enrollment for 2014.

Starting about midday New York time, users weren’t able to create new applications because of the number of people trying to use the website. Visitors to the health insurance exchange are being directed to a queuing system that asks them to provide an e-mail address so they can be contacted when traffic slows.

 

"There are a record number of people trying to access healthcare.gov right now — more than 100,000 people concurrently in the system as of noon,” Aaron Albright, a spokesman for the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in an e-mail. “The application and enrollment tools are unavailable to new users at the moment. The tech team is working to resolve the issue as quickly as possible. Users already in system remain able to complete enrollment.”

 

The agency pulled the website out of service earlier today after a software bug was discovered during the 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. regularly scheduled maintenance of the site.

We also remind those excited about a few hundred thousand enrollees on the last day that these are merely adding the healthcare to their 'Carts' and not actually paying for it yet… remember the average e-commerce shopping cart abandonment rate is 67%.


    

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1fH50Pp Tyler Durden

Top Obama Advisor Travels to Hollywood to Encourage “Obamacare” Mentions in Movie Scripts and TV Shows

Just when you thought the Truman Show that is the U.S. these days couldn’t get any more ridiculous, a headline like this comes along to shock you back into dazed incredulity.

Hollywood shenanigans aren’t a focus of this website, but I have covered them previously. The most recent example was almost exactly a year ago with my post: How Hollywood Became “Propagandist in Chief” by John Pilger.

Now from the Weekly Standard:

A top of advisor to President Barack Obama is in Los Angeles to try to get Obamacare written into scripts of TV shows and movies. Valerie Jarrett explained in an appearance on Top That! on PopSugar.com:

“That’s the cool thing,” a host said to the presidential advisor. “You’ve been reaching out to people that are, you know, outside of the norm of what the president might work with. Who else are you working with? Like celebrities, personalities, things like that?”

“You name it,” said Jarrett. “That’s part of why I’m in L.A. I’m meeting with writers of various TV shows and movies to try to get it into the scripts.” When Jarrett says “it into the scripts,” she’s referring to getting references to Obamacare, the president’s signature legislation, into the scripts of TV shows and movies.

This is what America has devolved into. Now watch the clip itself.

Full article here.

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

 

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Top Obama Advisor Travels to Hollywood to Encourage “Obamacare” Mentions in Movie Scripts and TV Shows originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on March 31, 2014.

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Former Chinese President Asks Current One To Curb Crackdown On Criminals And Corruption

When one reads stories such as the following report from the FT, in which we learn that former Chinese president Jiang Zemin “has urged the current leadership to rein in an anti-corruption campaign that is proving the harshest in decades and is seen as threatening the interests and networks of some Communist party elders“, or said otherwise – his cronies, aside from being utterly speechless at the rapid unravelling of the bizarro world, all one can say is – expect such developments in the US in a few years time, when then former president Obama asks Clinton, Christie or whoever the then-reigning dictator of the totalitarian states of America is, to take it easy on the Corzines of the world.

From the FT:

Mr Jiang, who stepped down as president of China in 2003 but retained control of the military for a further two years, has sent a clear signal in the past month to Xi Jinping, the president, according to three people familiar with the matter. Mr Jiang sent a message saying “the footprint of this anti-corruption campaign cannot get too big” in a warning to Mr Xi not to take on too many of the powerful families or patronage networks at the top of the party hierarchy.

 

Former President Hu Jintao, who was replaced by Mr Xi a year ago, has also expressed reservations about the anti-corruption drive and warned his successor not to expand it too far, according to one person involved in executing the campaign.

 

President Xi has made tackling corruption and official largesse the centrepiece of his presidency, vowing to tackle powerful “tigers” (high-ranking officials) as well as “flies” at lower levels in the bureaucracy.

 

 

Apart from concerns about attacks on their patronage networks, Mr Hu and Mr Jiang are worried that a campaign that lasted too long and was too harsh could erode support among the Communist party’s rank and file and threaten the stability of its rule.

 

Using corruption allegations to purge a high-ranking official is a time-honoured tradition for new presidents in China.

Obivously China’s oligarchs, or at least those among them who were true to Zemin if not so much to Jinping, are starting to sweat bullets if they have resorted to such an unprecedented appeal in public media which naturally will reflect as weakness on the current president if he relents, which probably means the crackdown will only accelerate in the coming months.

This is important because as we have reported previously, as a result of Xi’s “anti-corruption” campaign, Chinese domestic demand has fallen precipitously in recent months, and has gone so far as to reverberate across the global economy where the Chinese have become the de facto marginal consumer of luxury goods and services.d

[T]he length and severity of the current campaign has had more of an impact on behaviour than in the past, according to business people and officials, who say that conspicuous consumption is off the agenda these days.

 

Most global luxury companies have reported declining Chinese sales of their products, which have been favoured as gifts and bribes for officials for years.

 

In the past few weeks, producers of high-end spirits like Diageo, Pernod Ricard and Rémy Cointreau have reported double-digit first-half collapses in sales in China and have explicitly blamed Beijing’s austerity drive for their woes.

In other words, please tolerate China’s criminals otherwise who else will buy overpriced Chanel bags, while wearing just as overpriced Louboutin shoes and chugging Cristal.

And since in the US it’s increasingly “only fair” to redistribute wealth, the Chinese definition of “fairness” increasingly involves the stretching of the term justice, which is applicable to most… just not the uber wealthy criminals that built up their stolen wealth during some previous administration.


    



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Dear Unnamed “Significant Financial Institution”: The DOJ Has Some Very Bad News For You

Looks like someone didn’t pay their annual “cost of conducting criminal business” bribe:

Fox Business’ Charlie Gasparino leaks a hint that it may be, surprise, an HFT firm (not really, considering Goldman is now actively bashing HFT itself and promoting its own-supported IEX exchange, a move that has left many stunned)”

So who is it?  And please free Jon Corzine already!


    



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