With a title like "The ‘Heads I win, Tails you lose’ bank bonus culture", what’s there not to like about Cuomo’s latest. Also, sheds some light on why perpetuating a grossly inflated Ponzi market is where it’s at come December.
In summary, number of employees making over $1 million:
Nothing like scaring the indirects shitless after their lack of interest in yesterday’s 5 Year auction almost lead to a failure. The Fed’s yo yo game with the capital markets continues.
Says: – Yield 3.369% vs. Exp. 3.394% – Bid/Cover 2.63 vs. Avg. 2.45 (Prev. 2.82) – Indirect bids 62.5% vs. Avg. 44.39% (Prev. 67.03%) – Alloted at high 91.73% (BBG)
The two year in the meantime is whistling all the way to the lack of the Chinese bank (or Timmy’s back pocket).
So let’s get this straight – the Treasury thinks we are so gullible to believe that “investors” are more interested in the long end of the curve now? Sigh.
I’m starting to think I should just sit around and trade energy and commodity ETFs instead of all these other stocks. I really like how they are behaving from a technical perspective.
As you may recall from yesterday, I had entered the day with a bunch of big shorts in USO, GLD, GDX, and OIH. I covered them all yesterday. I even went long OIH shortly before the close, expecting a bounce. (It did, and I’ve sold it off already).
Just look at USO below. You can see how cleanly it is bouncing off its lines. I think it’s getting pretty messy at this point, but I’m inclined to say that, after this morning’s bounce, it might be ready for another bearish trade.
Finally, a rip-roaring bull case supporting the idea that the market will rocket higher from here.
As we noted last week, the current consensus is that the economy will soon start growing but that the recovery in 2010 will be feeble. (To brush up on this consensus, see the presentation below.)
This consensus is likely to be wrong--the consensus is usually wrong--but uber-bulls and uber-bears have been so shamed of late that most are afraid to come out and really bang the drum one way or the other (Gary Shilling excepted).
But now comes Tim Bond, head of asset allocation at Barclays, who puts his mouth where his money is. Tim’s full article in the FT is here. Here are the key points:
Economies recover much faster than most people think. "The average forecast for third-quarter US gross domestic product growth is a weak 0.8 per cent, which would be by far the slowest first quarter of any recovery on record. Since 1945, the average annualised real US growth rate in the first two quarters of recovery is 7 per cent. History provides abundant evidence that the deeper the recession, the stronger the bounce. Even the recovery from the Great Depression conformed to this rule, real US GDP grew 10.8 per cent in 1934 and 8.9 per cent in 1935."
Asia is already seeing a v-shaped recovery. "[O]utput, employment and demand [are] all following V-shaped trajectories, and regional industrial production rapidly bouncing back above the previous peak. Yet this recovery is dismissed by western analysts, who appear unable or unwilling to believe the region is capable of endogenous growth."
10% unemployment will not derail the recovery. "The 9.5 per cent US unemployment rate is also viewed as an obstacle…This objection ignores the many contrary examples of high unemployment rates and subsequent recoveries, not least in the US. Thus in 1982, US unemployment hit 10.8 per cent, yet GDP soared at an average annual pace of 7.7 per cent over the next six quarters."
One reason unemployment is so high is that employers over-reacted, firing too many people. "[T]he large post-Lehman rise in US unemployment was a mistake on the part of panicky
As of 10 minutes ago, Larry Kudlow would like you to believe that Q2 earnings are so much better than Q1. That is a flat out lie. The chart below, straight out of Bloomberg which we demand all readers with a BBERG terminal replicate using SPX Index EA <go>, demonstrates that Q2 earnings are now in fact worse than Q1. While in Q1 the YoY EPS drop was -31.49%, as of right now the drop is -32.41%. And the drop in revenues is much worse.
Larry Kudlow, please put this chart up on your show and advise people you are misrepresenting the truth.
And while Earnings are bad, here is the revenue comparison: the quarterly drop is in fact accelerating!
And here is the projected earnings growth rate over the next two quarters, needed to justify the rosy perspective on the economy: the bottom line: over 110% in projected EPS growth in 6 months. A jobless, revenueless doubling in earnings!
And this is what Larry Kudlow, Wall Street and Corporate America would like you to believe is achievable in order to justify an S&P at 1,000 and billions in Wall Street bonus payments. The Kool Aid is served in the ranch toward the back.
A very informative letter by Joe Ratterman, Chairman and CEO of BATS, in which he advocates a rational examination of the usefullness of Flash orders.
"To be absolutely clear – BATS would support a ban on flashed orders based on the rational concerns listed in our July 7th newsletter. If a ban would relieve pressure and give our industry the pause necessary to review and reconsider flashed order functionality, then let’s collectively go that route. Nasdaq, DirectEdge, CBSX … are you open to a coordinated approach to withdrawing flashed orders? We are."
The bluff by the Nasdaq (and the NYSE) has been called. The real question then becomes what remaining advance look conduits remain to some of the biggest market participants. Zero Hedge would suggest that dark pools methods of operations should be immediately examined in the follow through of any imposed or adopted ban on flashed orders.
With the VIX – S&P intraday correlations now broken on a daily basis, investors are expressing bearishness by going long equity option implied correlation (the factor linking individual member vols to index vols). With the VIX openly gamed, is the ICJ now the relevant indicator for the cost for “portfolio insurance”?
I could not help noticing that China’s imports from Japan fell 16.2pc in December. Imports from Taiwan fell 6.2pc. The strong yen strikes again: Honda decides to build a high-performance hybrid Acura in Ohio – instead of its home nation of Japan. The firm’s continued shift in p...
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In an effort to reach the angry mob, CNBC's Rick Santelli goes all Sesame Street on the numbers behind the US Debt Ceiling Rise. Focusing for two minutes on what this practically means for every man, woman, child, and politician, the shouting Chicagoan points out that when the US breaches this new limit then the world's entire population will be on the hook for $2,346 each (and $52,409 per US person).
The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) growth indicator of the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) posted -6.5 in its latest reading, data through January 20. The latest public data point is a reduced contraction from last week's -7.6 (a slight downward revision from -7.5). This is the highest level (i.e., least negative) since early September. However, the underlying WLI declined fractionally from an adjusted 123.3 to 122.8 (see the third chart below).
Early last December Lakshman Achuthan, the Co-founder of ECRI, spoke with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television's Surveillance Midday. You can watch the video on the ECRI website here, with bold heading Recession Update. The eight-minute video is well worth watching in its...
Some combination of better made cars, and less Americans able to pay new car prices has conspired to push up the average age of U.S. vehicles to a new record high. Reflecting this sea change, one of the best investment g...
Shares of battered tech company Research in Motion (NASDAQ: RIMM) are seeing much strength during Friday's trading session.
Fairfax Financial Holdings released a 13G filing with the SEC this morning, in which they disclosed a 5.12% stake in Research in Motion.
Currently, shares of Research in motion are up over 4% at $16.85. Over the last year, Research in Motion is down over 72%.
Research In Motion Limited is a designer, manufacturer and marketer of wireless solutions for the worldwide mobile communications market. RIM provides platforms and solutions for access to information, including e-mail, voice, instant messaging, short message service.
Top 5 RisersStockRatingAnalysisASBCBUYMany analysts are expecting higher than previously expected long term growth from Associated Bancorp, and its near-term earnings outlook is also improving.CZZSTRONGBUYThe recent earnings history for Cosan Ltd shows significant improvement while projected valuation continues to rise.STLDBUYProjected value continues to rise for Steel Dynamics while long term increases in earnings growth are also becoming more widely expected.PSESTRONGBUYAn increasingly attractive expected long term growth rate and a significantly higher projected valuation from just a fe...
Major markets and major index ETFs corrected slightly today after the stock market’s euphoric party yesterday
Major markets suffered a slight hangover today, as the S&P 500 dropped .57%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped .18%, the NASDAQ dropped .46% and the Russell 2000 Index dropped .34%, after yesterday’s crazy Fed and Tech Sector induced Wall Street Party. The NASDAQ, in particular, partied very hard, so hard in fact that the NASDAQ reached its 11 year record high.
The major market index ETFs were hungover too as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF lowered .51%, the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial ...
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This post is for all our live virtual trade ideas and daily comments. Please click on "comments" below to follow our live discussion. All of our current trades are listed in the spreadsheet below, with entry price (1/2 in and All in), and exit prices (1/3 out, 2/3 out, and All out).
We also indicate our stop, which is most of the time the "5 day moving average". All trades, unless indicated, are front-month ATM options.
Please feel free to participate in the discussion and ask any questions you might have about this virtual portfolio, by clicking on the "comments" link right below.
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Here is the virtual portfolio weekend update. Basically a recap of the positions and some notes about the trades. As usual, I'll post the previous week's P&L for comparison. Not the greatest of week in general!
AA Money
Only transaction last week as we bought back the AA Feb 9 puts on Tuesday for close to a 70% profit. The idea is to sell another set of put as soon as we get a chance.
Previous week P&L - $400.00
We lost some ground this week, but we'll keep on selling premium!
FAS Money
We also lost some ground in this virtual portfolio, but we have sold plenty of premium for the coming week. A little correction would go a long way to help! On Wednesday we sold the FAS Feb 72 puts (already good for 50%), on Thursday we added the Jan4 78 calls and on Friday we had to roll the Jan 78 puts to the Jan 80 puts. We were hoping for these ones to expire worthless on Friday, but a late stick killed that hope.
Previous week P&L - $4372.00...
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Here's the latest Stock World Weekly. We discuss the Fed's next move, and it's new policy for more QE-cating. Brief review of Sabrient's trade ideas for 2012 (already doing well) and a few new buy-writes from Phil and Pharmboy. Enjoy! (Feedback appreciated - give some life to the comment section below.)
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Finding new and exciting Biotech companies that target novel mechanisms is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. Sure there are many companies working on cutting edge science, but investing in those companies to reap the rewards of their work is a very dangerous game. More often than not, companies fail because the mechanism does not pan out, the compound(s) do not have pharmacokinetics (get into the body or last very long in the body), or an adverse event happens that knocks years off a development timeline. In addition, the stock can be manipulated by market makers so investors don't know which way is up. I approach investing in biotechs as a long term prospect. I continue to like our current portfolio of biotech companies (join in chat for many of those plays), and we continually add/subtract shares and sell/buy options on ...
Philip R. Davis is a founder Phil's Stock World, a stock and options trading site that teaches the art of options trading to newcomers and devises advanced strategies for expert traders...
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