Gold & Silver Play Catch Up To Stocks’ Un-Taper Exuberance

Silver prices are up over 1.5% this morning and gold +0.6% as the PMs play catch-up to Friday’s post-NFP ‘goldilocks’ performance in stocks. Whether this is also fallout from Baidu’s Bitcoin decision is unclear but gold did spike in early Asia trading.

 

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/5RABzKlBevg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Rising Rates Spoil the Party

I originally wrote this in September 2013. It is just as relevant now in December.

 

The big news in America is that the rate on the 10-year Treasury bond has risen dramatically from around 1.6% to over 2.9% [now on December 5, 2.84%]. This is 130 basis points from a starting point of 160, or an increase of more than 80%!

Interest Rate on 10-Year Treasury Bond

So naturally, the financial media are discussing the “essential” issues. They have commentators philosophizing about whether the tapering of Quantitative Easing is “priced in” (an invalid question, as I argue in my in the Theory of Interest and Prices). They credulously entertain the view that it signals “economic recovery”. If the economy were really recovering for four years, there would be no need for such hype.

On CNBC this week, Larry Kudlow’s guest was a sell-side analyst. He worried that either the absolute level of the rate, or the speed with which it has risen, will interrupt the bull market in stocks. Why is he concerned? Higher rates may discourage companies from borrowing to buy back their shares and issue dividends. I have previously written about this madness.

It is a strange politically correct world that makes it a taboo to say the simple truth. Unfortunately, freedom of speech in America is slipping—at least on controversial topics that matter. It may still be legal, but there is a very real chilling effect. In a crony system, one’s career is at risk to say the unpopular. So the gentlemen in the club safely confine their discussion to the M1 and M2 measures of the money supply, and the number of angels that can dance on the head of one pin.

Let’s take a step back from the noise. In the real world, every change in the interest rate destroys capital. To avoid this, firms hedge using derivatives. The good gentlemen in the club do sometimes acknowledge the derivatives problem, but never the cause, never why derivatives grow and grow and grow until they are now estimated to be approaching one quadrillion dollars. Those who sell these hedges must, themselves, hedge. They can push risk around and around in a circle of the big multinational banks. They cannot eliminate it.

Historically, the Federal Reserve has exhibited what I’ll call “bipolar interest rate disorder”. They vacillate between bingeing and purging. First they try to encourage the economy to “grow” by offering a buffet of too much credit, dirt-cheap. Then with pangs of regret if not guilt, they try to “fight inflation” by raising the price of credit. This leads to a bogus debate among economists: which evil should the Fed be pursuing at any given moment. Wall Street, of course, has a strong bias towards more credit, dirtier and cheaper. So do politicians seeking reelection.

Today, these two false alternatives are called “stimulus” and “austerity”. Fans of the latter sometimes fantasize about a mythological place, like Atlantis or El Dorado, called the “Exit”. Unfortunately, the Fed cannot sell their bonds. If they reversed from big buyer to even a small seller, it would reignite the very conflagration they fought in 2008. Leveraged market players would be unable to sell new bonds to pay their old bonds when due, and would therefore be forced into default. Talk of a Fed “exit” is a smokescreen.

Let’s take a further step back. The collapse of the Soviet Union proved that central planning doesn’t work. It can’t even deliver simple goods like food. The Fed is the central planner of something much bigger and vastly more complex. Money and credit are the foundation of our economy, and everything else depends on them.

The issue is not what the Fed should do next!

We should be discussing how to transition from irredeemable currencies to a free market based on gold without collapsing the financial system. I wrote a paper proposing how to do this. There may be others with good ideas. Let’s begin the discussion. Unfortunately, few want to risk their careers. I am not sure what would be worse: the cowardice of remaining silent in the face of a Big Lie, or the fact that saying the truth would indeed jeopardize one’s career in finance or economics.

We should be talking about the evolution of the Fed. Let’s not get distracted by conspiracy theories, stories about ancient banking families and creatures from islands with unfortunate names. And no, the Fed is not a “private cartel”.

The Fed began in 1913; it was the liquidity provider of last resort. If a bank needed gold, it could take Real Bills to the Fed, who would buy them at a discount. The government should have no role in the financial system at all, but Fed v1.0 was not the destroyer of markets as Fed v8.2 is today.

Subsequently, they began to buy government bonds. Incrementally, over many decades, the Fed evolved into the central planner it is today. Some of these steps were by presidential decrees, some were Acts of Congress, and of course the Fed took new powers for itself at opportune moments.

Today, there are many distribution channels, but the Fed is the only provider of credit of any resort. Should they cease issuing new credit, every bond market in the world would seize up followed immediately by the default of every bank, insurer, annuity, and pension. Despite the Fed’s record pumping of credit effluent, some bond markets are beginning to collapse anyway, along with the national currencies backed by those bonds.

We face a bitter dilemma. Without credit, large-scale production is not possible. The economy would devolve into medieval villages, with subsistence production done on family farms and workshops. On the other hand, continuing a system based on ever more counterfeiting will destroy more and more capital until the economy collapses.

Markets are being slammed back and forth between “austerity” and “stimulus”, between credit contraction and credit expansion. The number of units of the Fed’s credit paper required to buy an ounce of gold has long been rising. In other words, those units of credit were falling in value. But in the past few years, one has needed fewer of them to trade for gold. One day, traders are borrowing freely to speculate in the markets, driving prices up. The next, they are squeezed in a vice, desperate to roll over their liabilities, or if they cannot, to sell assets, especially assets that do not have a yield.

In conclusion, here is what I think the Fed should do. The Fed should go on buying bonds and doing what it has to do to keep the system going. No one wants the system to collapse. We should all be clear that the Fed is doing nothing more than buying time.

We need to use that time to transition to the gold standard, to begin the process of gold and silver to circulate, to develop a market for lending and borrowing gold. We need to repeal the capital gains, VAT, GST, and any other taxes that make it impractical to use gold. We need to repeal laws that force creditors to accept paper as payment in full. We need to develop the institutions such as gold banking and Real Bills.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/52YEtARhxi0/story01.htm Gold Standard Institute

HFT Algos Force Institutional Investors Off-Exchange

Having discussed market microstructure and the parasitic impacts of high-frequency-trading for the last 5 years, it comes as no surprise that the block-trade-sniffing algos have had very significant impacts on the way institutional investors trade now. As WSJ reports, in fact the big boys are conducting more “upstairs trades,” in which deals are executed among big institutions, bypassing the broader market, because the proliferation of algorithmic trading and other structural issues, including the fragmentation of the market, are hurting their ability to get the best prices and execute large trades quickly. While the concerns aren’t all new, big investors say the cat-and-mouse games are growing more elaborate – and counterproductive – by the day.

 

Via WSJ,

Some of the world’s biggest investors are changing the way they trade in U.S. markets in response to what they say are rising risks for institutions of their size.

 

The strategies include conducting more “upstairs trades,” in which deals are executed among big institutions, bypassing the broader market, as well as other sophisticated order-routing techniques designed to avoid pitfalls that have become increasingly apparent to investment managers.

 

Investors say such measures are increasingly necessary because the proliferation of algorithmic trading and other structural issues, including the fragmentation of the market, are hurting their ability to get the best prices and execute large trades quickly.

 

A trade has the possibility of wending its way through 13 exchanges and more than 40 “dark pools,” off-exchange trading venues that don’t publicly display stock trades. A trade could also be executed inside a large broker-dealer that matches buyers and sellers from its own holdings.

 

 

The intricacy of the equity markets creates unnecessary steps for large investors and distracts portfolio managers from increasing returns, said Mr. Brooks of T. Rowe Price.

 

“It’s like trying to fill up your gas tank, but you have to go to 15 gas stations,” Mr. Brooks said. “By the time you get to the 15th one, they’ve increased the price because they’ve heard you were coming. Wouldn’t someone rather go to two or three stations and fill up the tank in blocks?”

Still believe HFT provides liquidity and makes the market ‘more’ efficient?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Hby72OkKZhU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

What have the Japanese been Buying ?

With the balance of payments data released early today, Japan also reported a country breakdown of its portfolio investment flows.  Japanese investors stepped up their capital outflows in October to JPY1.324 trillion  or about $13.3 bln from JPY952 bln in September. 

Recall that, confounding expectations, Japanese investors were net sellers of foreign assets from January through June.  They repatriated roughly $150 bln.  In four months for which there is now data, Japanese investors have bought almost $55 bln of foreign stocks and bonds. 

Japanese investors bought JPY1.452 trillion of foreign bonds in October after JPY1.385 trillion in September.  Although the amount was broadly similar, the composition was radically different. 

In September, Japanese investors were large new buyers of US bonds and net sellers of rest of the world’s bonds.  In October, Japanese investors bought JPY148 bln US bonds compared with JPY1.732 trillion.  Japanese investors doubled the amount of French bonds they bought (JPY239 bln)  in October, over September (JPY117 bln).    Japanese investors also bought JPY65.3 bln of Italian bonds, the most since June 2011.  Overall, they bought JPY463.8 bln euro-denominated bonds. 

Japanese investors also scooped up bonds from the dollar-bloc.  They bought JPY130 bln of Australian government bonds and JPY189.2 bln over all, the most since June 2012 and is only the second month of net purchases since Nov 2012.   Japanese investors purchased almost five times more Canadian bonds in Oct (JPY108 bln) than in September (a little less than JPY23 bln).  

Another noteworthy development was that Japanese investors sold JPY36.1 bln of Singapore bonds.  This may not seem like a larger amount, but it is the largest sell-off since 1998.  We don’t see a fundamental change in the macro outlook for Singapore and suspect it may be a function of the low rates.  Yields out to five years are less than 1%.  The Singapore dollar has lost about 2.2%, though it did gain about 1.3% against the US dollar in October after a 1.5% rise in September.

Turning to equities, Japanese investors sold almost JPY198 bln in October.   Except for a minor JPY4.6 bln purchase in August, Japanese investors have been consistent sellers of foreign shares since July 2012.    Over this time they have sold about JPY7.256 trillion (~$73 bln) of foreign shares. 

US shares accounted for the bulk of the selling.  Over the 16-month period, Japanese investors sold JPY4.170 trillion US shares.  In October, US share sales were JPY138 bln (of the JPY198 overall net sales).  In September Japanese investors sold almost JPY254 bln, of which the US accounted for a little more than JPY177 bln.  

Japanese sales of European shares slowed, and there does appear to be a gradual shift toward booking purchases of euro area shares in Luxembourg.  According to MOF data, Japanese investors bought JPY44 bln of Luxembourg shares after JPY21 bln of purchases in September.  Over the 16-month period of selling, Japanese investors bought about JPy468 bln of “Luxembourg” shares, which as we say, likely reflects an account function and is better understood as a proxy for euro-denominated shares.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/QPKNzWI0jKY/story01.htm Marc To Market

Special Order Types and Exchange Blathering

The acknowledgment of the importance of Special Order Types highlights the asymmetry created from guaranteed economics by exchanges to HFTs that benefited from an uninformed public unaware that the game of checkers they thought they were playing was now, indeed, a game of chess with different pieces available and different rules….not publicly disclosed or not disclosed without any “reasonable effort” to “fairly inform” the industry of the new rules and pieces available to “play the game”.  Colin is saying DE didn’t need to disclose Hide-Not-Slide (HNS) because it was default behavior for the exchange.  Louis Marascio and O’Brein both highlighted a 2009 release with message coding instructions for using HNS, again, no document of Order Type Approval….Internet way-back machines will show exchange websites didn’t highlight these order types, they only covered what they wanted the “public” to know about.

When these guys come out (pro-HFTs attacking those highlighting the problems associated with HFT), now, 6 years after the guaranteed economics were created out of Reg NMS which was designed to improve micro-structure, they conflict each other regarding Order Types, like you saw with Colin and Louis tweets about HNS disclosure, it should painfully obvious that the only guys who know what they are talking about are the ones admitting they don’t have all the answers. An exchange CEO & creator makes “good faith efforts” to explain how his exchange works while another guy claims regulatory connections and electronic coding prowess at the exchange level highlights a release two years post Reg NMS and the re-branding of Knight’s Attain exchange as Knight, Citadel, and Goldman launch exchange Direct Edge in 2007 with the default behavior of HNS not approved by the SEC/NASD/FINRA and clearly structured to take advantage of Reg-NMS and the systematic restructuring of our National exchange economics. No longer were vanilla order types beneficial.  Note O’Brein likes to highlight Edge’s “Edge”, here’s an excert from Haim Bodek’s “The Problem of HFT”:

Market fragmentation in combination with the maker-taker market model, and in conjunction with a dramatic period of exchange “innovation,” had resulted in a new form of artificial edge. The net result was that unfair and discriminatory asymmetries in exchange order handling had been introduced into the marketplace. Special order types were the key to unlocking the advantages.

HFTs don’t use them (vanilla order types) either, the alpha is in their special order types and guaranteed economics that take advantage of the less informed orders that exchanges were telling customers to use on their websites (IE Limit, Market, Stop-Loss, etc).

Remember, it’s 6 years past Reg NMS and only now, post Wall Street Code, have we seen a coordinated effort to promote positive PR for HFT as proponents waste energy defending themselves against a growing sediment that questions the veracity of a trading strategy that Direct Edge exchange head can only try to explain in the limited knowledge hinted at when describing the Special Order Type Guide as a “Good Faith Effort”. It’s bullshit, admit it and stop rationalizing this in a similar destructive manner as the mice of the Utopia experiment from the mid 1900s.  I hope this better highlights the debate around HFT and disables the proponents ability to discredit me by merely highlighting hyperbole of my commentary 6 years into Reg NMS and a month after our release of Wall Street Code. At least I admit I don’t know exactly how every intricate part of the structure operates and that is the problem, no one can explain it because the HFT field IS manipulated, slanted, AND structured for a privileged few who never describe it publicly and surely wouldn’t desire for everyone to be trading with Special Order Types, the exchanges need dumb-flow. Note what Jamie Selway of ITG and of the BATS Board of Directors said about HFT in Trader Mag (also, side note, here’s why I’m bringing Jamie in now, aside from the quote you are about to read):

The post-only order is not particularly innovative, said Jamie Selway, head of liquidity management at agency broker Investment Technology Group. Plus, the focus on rebates “is not a good thing always. If you’re
a broker and you’re concerned more about the fee you pay than best execution, that’s sort of a conflict of interest.”

We continue to debate this on Twitter with no one choosing to set up a public debate with the most vocal adversary to the HFT practice.  Wonder why?

All this conflict of commentary shows the complexity and fucked up structure of our market post REG NMS, even SEC wasn’t ready as just a year ago they bought MIDAS from an HFT firm (can’t make this shit up guys) started by a guy who admitted HFT stole his lunch (first quote from HuffPost).  The pro HFT guys have no choice but to pay attention to us because we have been documenting, commenting, and highlighting the bullshit for years….consistently, while they have merely waited to hear what we say so they can adjust their behavior accordingly. 

Pay attention going forward, the discussion you will see from the Pro-HFT community will be starkly different than the behavior we’ve seen from them up to this date, they are feeling the pressure and are on a PR push to skew the facts of what they have done.  You have been warned yet again.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/gl4VJghbyBo/story01.htm CalibratedConfidence

Here Is The "Wealth Effect": Wealthiest 400 Americans Accounted For 16% Of All Capital Gains

Hidden deep inside the IRS’ most recent annual report focusing on just the Top 400 Individual Tax returns, titled “The 400 Individual Income Tax Returns Reporting the Largest Adjusted Gross Incomes Each Year, 1992-2009” we find the definitive confirmation of just where the Fed’s Wealth Effect has gone. As seen in the highlighted cell on the table below, just the top 400 individual tax returns account for a whopping 16% of the net Capital Gains tax paid in the US in all of 2009 (the most recent year recorded).

Putting this number in context, since 1992 the average percentage of the total capital gains attributable to the top 400 earners was “only” 8.69%. In 2009, or the year QE officially began, it was doulbe this or 16%.

One can’t wait for the 2010 update… or the 2011, 2012, 2013 and so on – all those “other” years in which the Fed’s “wealth effect” continued to benefit the capital gains of the Top 400…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Iibvur8Qgl4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Here Is The “Wealth Effect”: Wealthiest 400 Americans Accounted For 16% Of All Capital Gains

Hidden deep inside the IRS’ most recent annual report focusing on just the Top 400 Individual Tax returns, titled “The 400 Individual Income Tax Returns Reporting the Largest Adjusted Gross Incomes Each Year, 1992-2009” we find the definitive confirmation of just where the Fed’s Wealth Effect has gone. As seen in the highlighted cell on the table below, just the top 400 individual tax returns account for a whopping 16% of the net Capital Gains tax paid in the US in all of 2009 (the most recent year recorded).

Putting this number in context, since 1992 the average percentage of the total capital gains attributable to the top 400 earners was “only” 8.69%. In 2009, or the year QE officially began, it was doulbe this or 16%.

One can’t wait for the 2010 update… or the 2011, 2012, 2013 and so on – all those “other” years in which the Fed’s “wealth effect” continued to benefit the capital gains of the Top 400…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Iibvur8Qgl4/story01.htm Tyler Durden

In Hilarious Twist Herbalife Strikes Back At Bill Ackman, Tells His Investors To Pull Their Money

It would be tragic if it wasn’t so hilarious. Nearly a year after we first suggested that Herbalife is the long of 2013, as a result of the epic short squeeze potential resulting from the Ackman announcement of his mega short,(promptly followed by the traditional Whitney Tilson piggyback) which it has been, rising from $25 to an all time high of $77.39 days ago, Herbalife has had enough of the so-called retail expert’s (coughJCPcough) repeated allegations of fraud, and after taking a well-deserved victory lap costing Ackman hundreds of millions, has decided to hit him where it truly hurts – his clients. Bloomberg reports that Herbalife is approaching investors in Ackman’s hedge fund, suggesting they pull their money from the $12 billion firm.

Herbalife’s argument: Ackman’s bet, which has lost as much as $500 million, is risky and irresponsible, said the people, asking not to be named because the campaign is private.” This is sheer brilliance on behalf of HLF, and one can’t wait to see just how successful the Moelis-run campaign concludes, because if there is one thing massively overinflated Wall Street egos (in this case belonging to epically overvalued “investment managers” – just ask Icahn) can’t stand, it is a drain of AUM. It would also mark a historic first time that a company marked for a shorting death strikes back at the hedge fund itself.

More from Bloomberg:

Moelis & Co., an investment bank working for Herbalife, arranged a meeting with Cliffwater LLC, which advises clients on hedge-fund investments, and Herbalife executives, according to two people with knowledge of the gathering. Moelis also reached out to New Jersey’s $76.7 billion pension fund, which has $207 million invested with Ackman, said the people. Executives of the New Jersey fund haven’t met with the Herbalife camp.

 

“Herbalife and Ackman have been fighting in one theater, and now the warfare has moved into an additional theater,” said John Coffee, professor of securities law at Columbia University in New York. “All’s fair in love and activism,” he said, adding that the tactic of putting pressure on activist investors through their clients is a new one.

 

Ackman, using chart-filled presentations with more than 300 pages, has waged a public campaign accusing Herbalife of generating most of its revenue from recruiting new distributors, rather than through sales to consumers. He’s urging U.S. regulators, elected officials and community activists to help shut it down. Even after the shares surged, the hedge-fund manager said in a November interview on Bloomberg Television that he “will take this to the end of the earth.”

He sure will. And speaking of Ackman’s presentation, this is what Whitney Tilson said about it last year, when he piggybacked on the losing trade:

Merry Christmas to all!

 

Pershing Square’s analysis of Herbalife is the most remarkable piece of investment analysis I have ever seen. Simply astonishing. And kudos to Pershing Square for making all of it public – not just the 300+ page slide presentation, but all the supporting materials. For the many young people on this email list who are looking for a job in this industry, study this carefully – if you can do analysis even a tiny fraction this comprehensive, there will always be a job for you…

Yup – with Whitney Tilson… where you may have to pay an “inverse Christmas Bonus” to keep your job.

The stated, politically-correct reason for the intervention is clear:

Herbalife and Moelis are trying to persuade Pershing Square investors and advisers such as Cliffwater that Ackman is acting irresponsibly and made the wager a personal issue, said this person. They argue that, by putting almost 10 percent of client assets into a short position against Herbalife, he was taking too much risk, the person said.

Still, none of this will compare to the sheer, epic humor that will result if and when Carl Icahn joins in, say, by telling every Pershing Square investor he would match every dollar pulled out with 50 cents of his own money. After all, for the 70+ year old billionaire it’s all a game at this point…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/w_Gp8C7SV4g/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Key Events And Issues In The Coming Week

The US data flow is relatively light which is typical of a post-payrolls week but it’s worth noting wholesale inventories on Tuesday and retail sales on Thursday. Importantly US House and senate negotiators are supposed to come to an agreement on a budget before the December 13th deadline. A lot of optimism has been expressed thus far from members of congress, and there are reports that a budget deal will be unveiled this week.

This week there are eight central bank meetings – Switzerland, New Zealand, Russia, South Korea, Indonesia, Philippines, Chile and Peru – although consensus does not expect any changes to monetary policy stances to be announced, with all eyes on the almighty Fed and its FOMC announcement next week, where 37% of economists expect the Fed will begin tapering up from 20% a month ago. After the US data, markets will likely focus more on Fed speakers again, to gauge the likelihood of an early tapering in December or January. Three Fed speakers are scheduled to speak today including Lacker, Bullard and Fisher. The week is going to be relatively light in terms of economic releases. At the beginning there will be a usual set of China data. The week also brings inflation data from the Euro Area countries.

Monday, Dec 9

  • US Fed Speakers: Bullard (FOMC voter), Fisher (FOMC non-voter), Lacker (FOMC non-voter)
  • Israel MPC minutes
  • Germany IP (Oct): consensus +3.1%yoy, previous +1.0%yoy
  • Hungary Trade Balance (Oct, prelim.): consensus EUR+725.0mn, previous EUR+830.3mn
  • Taiwan Trade Balance (Nov): consensus USD+3.5bn, previous USD+3.5bn
  • Chile Trade Balance (Nov): consensus USD+200mn, previous USD+241mn
  • Also interesting: Canada Housing Starts (Nov), Mexico INPC Headline Inflation (Nov)

Tuesday, Dec 10

  • China IP (Nov): Consensus +10.1%yoy, previous +10.3%yoy
  • China Retail Sales (Nov): Consensus +13.2%yoy, previous +13.3%yoy
  • China Fixed Asset Investment (Nov): Consensus +20.1%yoy, previous +20.1%yoy
  • Japan Consumer Confidence (Nov): consensus 44.0, previous 41.2
  • UK IP (Oct): GS +3.2%yoy, Previous +2.2%yoy
  • UK Trade Balance (Oct): Previous GBP-3.3bn
  • India Trade Balance (Nov): Previous USD-10.6bn yoy
  • Czech Republic Trade Balance (Oct): consensus CZK+37.5bn, previous CZK+35.1bn
  • Turkey GDP (Q3): Cconsensus +4.2%yoy, previous +4.4%yoy
  • Also interesting: Ukraine GDP (Q3), Italy IP (Oct), Sweden IP (Oct)

Wednesday, Dec 11

  • New Zealand MPC: Consensus has cash rate unchanged at 2.50%.
  • South Korea MPC: Consensus has policy rate unchanged at 2.50%yoy
  • Japan Machinery Orders (Oct): +0.6%mom
  • US Federal Budget Balance (Nov): consensus USD-148.3bn, previous USD-91.6bn
  • Germany Harmonised CPI (Nov, final): consensus +1.6%yoy, previous +1.6%yoy (flash)
  • Turkey CA Balance (Oct): consensus USD-3.0bn, previous USD-3.3bn
  • Also interesting: South Africa CPI (Nov), Malaysia IP (Oct)

Thursday, Dec 12

  • Switzerland MPC: Consensus has 3-month Libor target rate unchanged at 0.00%.
  • Philippines MPC: Consensus has policy rate unchanged at 3.50%yoy
  • Chile MPC: Consensus have overnight rate target unchanged at 4.50%
  • Peru MPC: Consensus have policy rate unchanged at 4.00%.
  • US Initial Jobless Claims (7 Dec): consensus 320K, previous 298K
  • US Retail Prices (Nov): Consensus +0.6%, previous +0.4%
  • US Business Inventories (Oct): consensus +0.3%, previous +0.6%
  • Euro Area IP (Oct): consensus +1.1%yoy, previous +1.1%yoy
  • France Harmonised CPI (Nov): consensus +0.8%yoy, previous +0.7%yoy
  • Italy Harmonised CPI (Nov, final): consensus +0.6%yoy, previous +0.6%yoy
  • India CPI (Nov): Previous +10.1%yoy
  • Russia Trade Balance (Oct): consensus USD+14.2bn, previous USD+15.7bn
  • Israel Trade Balance (Nov): USD-1234mn
  • Also interesting: Canada New Housing Price Index (Oct)

Friday, Dec 13

  • Russia MPC: GS and consensus have 1-week auction rate unchanged at 5.50%
  • US PPI (Nov): Consensus flat, previous -0.2%
  • Spain Harmonised CPI (Nov, final): consensus +0.3%yoy, +0.3%yoy (flash)
  • UK Construction (Oct): consensus +1.3%yoy, previous +5.8%yoy
  • Poland CA Balance (Oct): consensus EUR-424mn, previous EUR-1024mn
  • Also interesting: Romania CA Balance (Oct), Poland CPI (Nov)

The above visually via SocGen:

TOP ISSUES FOR THE WEEK AHEAD via SocGen

US RETAIL SALES EX-AUTOS TO DISSAPOINT

A headline gain of 0.2% mom on November retail sales is expected to mask a disappointing -0.4%. More encouraging, we expect November small business (NFIB) at 92.2 up from 91.6. These reports are unlikely to significantly shift taper expectations and we now look to the first full week of January for the next major releases. Next week should some interesting Fedspeak with both James Bullard and Richard Fischer on the agenda.

UK HOUSING TO LIFT CONSTRUCTION

October construction output is set to see a rapid increase at 1.5% mom driven by housing. Also on the agenda this week is industrial production. The manufacturing sector is part of the UK recovery story, but a very volatile indicator. We look for a temporary decline in October at -0.4% mom. Mark Carney’s speech in New York this week will be given close scrutiny as expectations build that the BoE will be amongst the first major central banks to hike rates; our call is late 2015. Good news for Sterling!

CHINA DATA TO SHOW STEADY Q4 BUT POINT TO LESS UPBEAT 2014

Chinese November export data were fairly positive. Tuesday’s wave of activity data is set to show slower yoy activity growth across the board in November, mostly due to a base effect. Growth momentum seems to have largely held up entering Q4 and we look for 7.7%, after 7.8% in Q3. However, with November’s money and credit data expected to confirm on-going deleveraging, the outlook for 2014 is less upbeat. We still expect a much below-consensus 6.9%. Such a slowdown, however, may also be within policymakers’ expectation. The central government is likely to lower its growth target for next year from 7.5% to 7% at the Economic Work Conference sometime this month.

FURTHER SLOWDOWN FOR BRAZIL TOO

Economic activity is set to see a further decline in October at -0.3% mom and we look for retail sales to clock in at a lacklustre 0.2% mom. Uncompetitive exports and slowing wage and credit growth will see further weakness over the coming quarters.

Source: Deutsche, Goldman, SocGen


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/J2Q71KkV1Gc/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Frontrunning: December 9

  • Glass-Steagall Fans Plan New Assault If Volcker Rule Deemed Weak (BBG) … “if”? The banks control the legislators and regulators…
  • Cellphone data spying: It’s not just the NSA (USA Today)
  • Major tech companies push for limits on government surveillance (Reuters)
  • Shanghai Warns Kids to Stay Indoors for Seventh Day on Smog (BBG)
  • Protesters fell Lenin statue, tell Ukraine’s president ‘you’re next’ (Reuters)
  • Everyone must be flying private these days: EADS to cut 5000-6000 jobs, close Paris HQ in restructuring (FT)
  • Big Players Trade ‘Upstairs’ (WSJ)
  • There’s no way to tell how many people who think they’ve signed up for health insurance through the U.S. exchange actually have (BBG)
  • Slower China inflation reduces worries of tighter policy (Reuters)
  • BIS Sounds Alarm Over Record Sales of Payment-in-Kind Junk Bonds (BBG)
  • Singapore hit by rare outbreak of rioting, 27 arrested (Reuters)
  • Japan’s GDP Growth Slows, Current Account in Red (WSJ)
  • Bargains Beckon Funds to European Equities (BBG)
  • Banks Listen In to Trader Talk (WSJ)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* After a nearly yearlong effort to sell its gun business, Cerberus Capital Management LP is close to bringing on a minority investor and lender to the weapons maker to let some of its investors sell out, a person familiar with the matter said.

* General Motors Co is preparing a concerted attack on its most troubled international operations that would entail big output cuts at factories in South Korea and likely an end to production in Australia, said people familiar with the auto maker’s plans.

* Given Imaging Ltd, a maker of ingestible pills that take photos inside patients’ bodies, agreed to be acquired by Covidien PLC for $860 million.

* When employees of the new American Airlines Group Inc ring the Nasdaq Stock Market’s opening bell Monday from the carrier’s Texas headquarters, many of them will be cheering because they already know what their pay and benefits will be-unlike in most airline mergers. The new American has secured temporary labor agreements that spell out how the merged airline will quickly integrate key groups of workers from the former American Airlines and US Airways.

* Some of the world’s biggest advertising companies are predicting faster growth in ad spending in 2014 than occurred this year, although concerns about the U.S. and European economies weigh on some of their projections.

* Amazon.com Inc received a lot of news coverage for its sci-fi drone-delivery idea last week. But an immediate robotics effort under way in the Seattle retailer’s warehouses could save the company more than $900 million a year, according to an analyst.

* As enrollment picks up on the HealthCare.gov website, many people with modest incomes are encountering a troubling element of the federal health law: deductibles so steep they may not be able to afford the portion of medical expenses that insurance doesn’t cover.

* When Hertz Global Holdings Inc acquired car-rental rival Dollar Thrifty last year, the Federal Trade Commission sought to combat rising prices by forcing Hertz to sell off its Advantage Rent a Car brand, making it a new, independent competitor. But the arrangement has taken a sharp detour.

* A high-speed rail project linking the three Baltic states embodies the economic hopes the European Union has placed on the fast-train technology. It also exemplifies one of high-speed’s biggest hurdles: national borders.

* Russia is undertaking a series of long-delayed and politically sensitive economic overhauls aimed at boosting efficiency as the country struggles with the longest period of economic stagnation yet in Vladimir Putin’s 13-year reign, according to a top official.

* European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co, fresh from streamlining its Airbus unit and its own complex corporate structure, is moving down its to-do list and trimming its defense operations to fit shrunken growth prospects. Top EADS executives Monday will meet with labor representatives to unveil their restructuring plans, according to people familiar with the discussions.

 

FT

HSBC Holdings is considering the potential sale of a stake in its British retail and commercial banking business, according to three people familiar with the project.

Former Barclays Chief Executive Bob Diamond has secured the preliminary support of several big institutional investors for the $250 million London listing of a shell company, targeting the African financial sector.

U.S. private equity company Cerberus Capital Management is offering shareholders a way to sell their interest in Freedom Group, the maker of the gun used in the Newtown school shootings last year, after failing to deliver on its promise to dispose of the company.

IAG’s British Airways is taking legal action to try to prevent the trustees of one of its pension schemes from increasing payments to some of its retired workers.

Renault-Nissan is working towards striking an agreement with its German partner Daimler that will deepen the alliance between the carmakers during the first quarter of next year.

 

NYT

* Federal Reserve officials are in no hurry to retreat from their bond-buying campaign to stimulate the economy and are likely to postpone any cuts to the program until next year, according to public statements by Fed officials and interviews with some of them.

* Kevyn D. Orr, the man who must now revive Detroit, commutes each week from Maryland to a cavernous old office building here that seems to dare him to succeed: the former headquarters of a company, itself recently in bankruptcy, that once sold more than half of America’s cars – General Motors .

* Eight prominent technology companies, bruised by revelations of government spying on their customers’ data and scrambling to repair the damage to their reputations, are mounting a public campaign to urge President Obama and Congress to set new limits on government surveillance.

* Cellphone carriers last year answered at least 1.1 million requests from law enforcement agencies seeking information on caller locations, text messages and other data for use in investigations, according to repor
ts from the carriers.

* Last week, Bob Evans Farms announced that it had declined to make strategic changes recommended by one of its biggest investors. Now that investor, the hedge fund Sandell Asset Management, plans to turn up the heat on the restaurant operator.

* Comcast has hired JPMorgan Chase to advise it on a possible bid for Time Warner Cable, according to people briefed on the matter.

* China’s exports rose more than expected last month, government figures released Sunday showed, as resurgent demand from consumers in the United States and the European Union helped put the Asian manufacturing juggernaut on track for its biggest annual trade surplus since 2008.

* Greece’s Parliament early on Sunday approved a budget for 2014 which predicts a timid return to growth after six years of recession despite the reluctance of many government lawmakers to impose further cutbacks on a country reeling from economic hardship.

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* Ontario’s Liberal government is leaning away from hiking the harmonized sales tax as a method of paying for transit expansion, reasoning that such a move would be too unpopular.

* Bahrain, Algeria and Iraq, countries with dubious human rights records or a history of violent internal conflict, have recently become new buyers of Canadian-made guns and ammunition, an analysis of federal government data shows.

* At least two more key Conservative MPs received gold-embossed business cards, contrary to long-standing government rules against fancy stationery. Tony Clement was given his gold cards shortly after being promoted to Treasury Board president in the May 2011 cabinet shuffle, following the election of a Conservative majority.

Reports in the business section:

* On its 4,000-km path across the country, TransCanada Corp’s Energy East’s pipeline would traverse the traditional territory of 180 different aboriginal communities, each of whom must be consulted and have their concerns accommodated as part of the company’s effort at winning project approval.

* Incoming Barrick Gold Corp Chairman John Thornton has friends in high places in China – including the country’s premier, central bank chief and anti-corruption czar, to name a few. Now Thornton’s job is to turn those connections into new business opportunities for the gold miner as it seeks to turn the corner on a string of costly setbacks.

* Winter has not been good to Transat AT Inc in recent years. Canada’s largest tour operator has lost money in the past four winter seasons. Among the reasons for the poor performance have been stiff competition from chief rival Sunwing Travel Group Inc, management’s overestimation of capacity requirements and failure to fully match appropriate fleet deployment to seasonal needs.

NATIONAL POST

* The quantum revolution Mike Lazaridis expects is grand enough. Inventing the mythical quantum computer, which the BlackBerry billionaire has set as the primary goal of his massive investment in the southern Ontario technology hub known as Quantum Valley, could create a trillion-dollar market that Canada stands to dominate. He says the question is when, not if. The scientists say years, not decades.

FINANCIAL POST

* Once again Canada’s big five banks have delivered a record performance, with total profit in the last fiscal year of $29.4-billion, up a healthy 5 percent from last year despite the weak economy, slower consumer lending and other headwinds.

* Despite predictions that the recent Black Friday sales push would be the most robust to date in this country, one post-mortem analysis found only 27 percent of Canadians partook of the deals on Nov. 29.

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

– The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) plans to introduce bank insolvency regulations, said Yan Qingmin, the vice chairman of the CBRC at a forum recently. The country’s overall level of non-credit business operations needs to be improved, Yan added.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

– China’s largest car leasing companies are starting to launch asset securitization products. Xinjiang Guanghui Leasing Services Limited issued “the yuan issue” of its specific asset management plan on Dec 5.

– On Dec. 6, China Life Insurance Co Ltd held the opening ceremony for the listing of its e-commerce subsidiary, the industry’s first e-commerce company.

PEOPLE’S DAILY

– China’s development is at an important period of strategic opportunity, but the nature of these opportunities is changing, said a commentary in the paper that acts as the party’s mouthpiece. The country is closer to a great rejuvenation than ever, but must focus on the challenges it faces, it said.

CHINA FINANCE INFORMATION WEBSITE

– The Tianjin government is spending 60 billion yuan ($9.87 billion) on a land-reclamation project for the purpose of building a site for China’s second free trade zone, according to insiders.

– Zambia has shut a mine owned by China Nonferrous Metals (8306.HK) at Chambishi Copper Mines due to “contempt of environmental law”

 

Britain

The Telegraph

BT SPORT AND BSKYB IN POLE POSITION FOR RIGHTS TO ELECTRIC RACING SERIES

Formula E, the world’s first electric single-seater motor racing series, is in talks with BT Sport and BSkyB about a British television rights deal.

INEOS PLANS TO SHARE OUT GRANGEMOUTH SITE

Ineos, the owner of Grangemouth, is planning to attract other companies to the Scottish industrial site in a bid to expand its customer base and share soaring energy and other utility costs.

AXE CARBON TAX TO KEEP LIGHTS ON AND CUT ENERGY BILLS, SAYS SCOTTISHPOWER CHIEF

Britain’s unilateral carbon tax should be scrapped before it causes blackouts, pushes up household bills and makes Britain uncompetitive, ScottishPower argues.

The Guardian

DONG ENERGY UPBEAT ABOUT OFFSHORE WIND POWER THANKS TO HIGHER SUBSIDY

Dong Energy, the company that claims to be the biggest developer of windfarms in the world, believes it is “game on” in the North Sea with nothing to hold back new investment.

The Times

WTO DEAL’S 1 BLN STG BOOST FOR BRITAIN

British business will receive 1 billion pounds ($1.64 billion) per year from the “historic” deal struck yesterday to end a 20-year impasse on global trade. Prime Minister David Cameron hailed the agreement as a “lifeline” for the world’s poorest people, as well as a boon for Britain’s exporters.

ED DAVEY’S WORDS FALL ON STONEY GROUND AT HINKLEY POINT

Ed Davey’s claim that British companies will win most of the work to build EDF’s 16 billion pound Hinkley Point nuclear reactor was on shaky ground last night after it emerged that his remarks contradicted a government report.

DE VERE SELL-OFF TO PUSH LOSSES TO 900 MLN STG FOR LLOYDS

Lloyds Banking Group is preparing to kick-start the sell-off of De Vere Group in a move that could push total write-offs on the taxpayer-supported bank’s backing of the hotel and leisure operator to almost 900 million pounds.

INSULATION SCHEME WILL HAVE LESS OBLIGATION

Energy companies and their successful lobbying efforts have come under fire from consumer groups after it emerged that even fewer households will have their homes insulated under an abbreviated government-backed scheme.

JOBS SAVED AT ASBESTOS FIRM

More than 1,000 jobs at Silverdell, an asbestos clean-up specialist, are to be secured by a rescue deal. Rcapital, a turnaround fund, stepped in as the troubled company’s bank prepared to pull the plug.

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Alon USA Energy (ALJ) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
American Eagle (AEO) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at B. Riley
BRE Properties (BRE) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at BMO Capital
CRH Plc. (CRH) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Citigroup
Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
Delek US (DK) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
KCG Holdings (KCG) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Evercore
Kraft Foods (KRFT) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Manitowoc (MTW) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Longbow
Mohawk (MHK) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Phillips 66 (PSX) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
PolyOne (POL) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo
Portland General Electric (POR) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Barclays
Protective Life (PL) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Evercore
Valero Energy (VLO) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank

Downgrades

Camden Property (CPT) downgraded to Underperform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Continental Resources (CLR) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Danone (DANOY) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Exane BNP Paribas
Dean Foods (DF) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Given Imaging (GIVN) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Cantor
Home Properties (HME) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital
Noble Energy (NBL) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Ply Gem (PGEM) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
Stock Building Supply (STCK) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup

Initiations

American Airlines (AAL) initiated with a Buy at CRT Capital
American Airlines (AAL) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Atlantic Coast Financial (ACFC) initiated with an Outperform at FBR Capital
Brixmor (BRX) initiated with a Buy at SunTrust
Brixmor (BRX) initiated with a Neutral at Citigroup
Brixmor (BRX) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Brixmor (BRX) initiated with an Outperform at Wells Fargo
Brixmor (BRX) initiated with an Overweight at JPMorgan
Chegg (CHGG) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Chegg (CHGG) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
Dynagas LNG (DLNG) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Dynagas LNG (DLNG) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Dynagas LNG (DLNG) initiated with an Outperform at Credit Suisse
Dynagas LNG (DLNG) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Eros International (EROS) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Fibrocell Science (FCSC) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Tandem Diabetes (TNDM) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
Universal Electronics (UEIC) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
XPO Logistics (XPO) initiated with an Outperform at Credit Suisse

HOT STOCKS 

Alibaba to invest $364M in Haier to boost China logistics (YHOO)
WhiteWave Foods (WWAV) agreed to acquire Earthbound Farm for $600M
Equal Energy (EQU) agreed to be acquired by PetroFlow Energy for $5.43 per share
Quanta Services (PWR) sold equity ownership in Howard Energy for $221M
Phillips 66 (PSX) sees 2014 capital expenditures 40% higher than 2013 capital target
Spherix (SPEX) subsidiary filed lawsuit against AT&T (T) for alleged patent infringement
Verizon (VZ) to buy CDN provider EdgeCast Networks for over $350M, TechCrunch reports

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

  • Some of the world’s biggest investors (TROW) are changing the way they trade in U.S. markets in response to what they say are rising risks for institutions of their size, including conducting more “upstairs trades,” in which deals are executed among big institutions, bypassing the broader market, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • Major advertising companies (WPPGY, PUBGY, IPG) predict faster growth in ad spending in 2014 than this year, although concerns about the U.S. and European economies weigh on some of their projections, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Saturday night denied a last-ditch effort by a group of consumers and travel agents to stop the merger of American Airlines (AAMRQ) and US Airways (LCC), Reuters reports
  • European aerospace company EADS (EADSY) plans to cut between 5,000 and 6,000 jobs and sell its Parisian headquarters as part of a restructuring program it will detail later today, according to Le Figaro newspaper, Reuters reports
  • Dealer revenue from negotiating interest-rate swap transactions is poised to drop about 45% as new rules boost trading costs, pressures that may prompt banks to participate less in the $633T over-the-counter derivatives market, Tabb Group LLC estimates, Bloomberg reports
  • American mutual funds are scouring Europe for bargains, snapping up Dutch oil drillers, French drugmakers and Swiss food producers on speculation the region’s rally is just beginning as the U.S. bull market ages. While investors speculate the Fed will cut stimulus in March, they are betting the European Central Bank will keep economic measures for longer, Bloomberg reports

BARRON’S

Barron’s listed its 10 favorite stocks for 2014: Barrick Gold (ABX), Canadian Natural (CNQ), Citigroup (C), Deere (DE), General Motors (GM), Intel (INTC), MetLife (MET), Nestle (NSRGY), Simon Property (SPG), US Airways (LCC). The new US Airways, American Airlines symbol will be AAL
Allergan (AGN) shares could rise 15%-20%
Coach (COH) shares could rise 25% in two years
Astoria (AF), Brookline (BRKL), Northfield (NFBK) could be takeover targets
Quarterly results may bring 3-D printing stock correction (DDD, XONE, VJET, SYSS)
Ulta Salon (ULTA) still unattractive after selloff

SYNDICATE

Ocera Therapeutics (OCRX) files to sell 4.73M shares for holders
SeaWorld (SEAS) to repurchase 1.5M shares from Blackstone Group LP


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/jRsfXT8Azac/story01.htm Tyler Durden