Archive for
January, 2010
by Zero Hedge - January 31st, 2010 1:04 am
Courtesy of Tyler Durden
It appears that in the 11th hour, Europe is still unable to decide just what the proper approach to rescuing Greece is. The Sunday Times has just released information that a plan to be published by Brussels on Tuesday, titled “Urgent measures to be taken by May 15, 2010″ will demand dramatic Greek austerity measures, such as cutting “average nominal wages, including in central government, local governments, state agencies and other public institutions” and proposes new luxury goods and self-employed taxes. Yet the kicker is that “Richer eurozone countries such as Germany and France would be expected to bail out Greece in the worst-case scenario, to prevent a disastrous crash in the value of the single currency” – not very surprisingly, this is precisely the Plan B that Almunia yesterday swore up and down that the EU was not, repeat not, considering. Moral Hazard has indeed gone global. Yet even with this bureaucratic memorandum on the table, it seems certain that the EU will not actually act before Greek deterioration escalates out of control. Here are the near term catalysts that will likely make the cost of inactivity very high. Think full Dick Fuld stature when screaming upright.
But before presenting a timeline of near-term events, here is a simplified flow-chart of how bond, and CDS, investors should handicap Greece’s near-term future, courtesy of Barclays.

As the chart highlights, the critical junction occurs once the market digests the forthcoming fiscal adjustment: should the market deem that insufficient, the immediate options are two: an EU bailout and an IMF bailout. We remind readers that the IMF has already pointed out that it would be willing to provide critical assistance to the Mediterranean country. In either case, Barclays expects that the “bailout” manifest itself via a bridge financing which would “buy time for another round of fiscal adjustment attempts.” Logically, if the bridge ends up going nowhere, then the country will have to evaluate how to deal with a potential default scenario.
Of course, this flow chart will not occur in limbo and will be determined by a variety of internal and external stimuli. BarCap presents the following critical catalysts in the near-term future which will likely push either the EU or the IMF’s hand sooner rather than later.
- 10 February: National strike. The strike’s intensity and politicians’ reactions may
…

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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 8:19 pm
Courtesy of Mish
The already strained relationship between US and China is took a turn for the worse when US announced $6.4 billion in arms sales to Taiwan.
The United States is planning to sell $6.4 billion in arms to Taiwan, a move that will infuriate China and test whether President Barack Obama’s efforts to improve trust with Beijing will carry the countries through a tense time.
The United States, which told China of the sale only hours before the announcement, acknowledged that Beijing may retaliate by cutting off military talks with Washington, which happened after the Bush administration announced a multibillion-dollar arms sale to Taiwan in 2008.
The U.S. is "obstinately making the wrong decision," China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement Saturday after Vice Foreign Minister He Yafei warned Ambassador Jon Huntsman the sale would "cause consequences that both sides are unwilling to see." The vice minister urged that the sale be immediately canceled, it said.
Despite its size, the U.S. weapons package dodges a touchy issue: F-16 fighter jets that Taiwan covets are not included. Senior U.S. officials said they are aware of Taiwan’s desire for F-16s and are assessing Taiwan’s needs.
The arms package includes 114 PAC-3 missiles and other equipment, costing more than $2.8 billion; 60 UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters, costing $3.1 billion; information distribution systems and other equipment, at $340 million; two Osprey Class Mine Hunting Ships, at a cost of about $105 million; and other items.
U.S. officials say the Obama administration’s China policy is meant to improve trust between the countries, so that disagreements over Taiwan or Tibet do not reverse efforts to cooperate on nuclear standoffs in Iran and North Korea, and attempts to deal with economic and climate change issues.
China aims more than 1,000 ballistic missiles at Taiwan; the U.S. government is bound by law to ensure the island is able to respond to Chinese threats.
Obama’s national security adviser, Jim Jones, said Friday that both Washington and Beijing do things "periodically that may not make everybody completely happy."
China Suspends Military Exchanges With The US
China’s response was easy to predict: China summons US defence attache over Taiwan deal.
China says it will suspend its military
…

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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 6:46 pm
Courtesy of John Lounsbury
The 10-year bear market in stocks has accelerated in the past two years. What about the bull market from 2003-07, you ask? It didn’t exist if you use gold (GLD) as your medium of exchange. This can be seen in the following graph from ChartOfTheDay.com:

We are currently about 79% below the market top of late 1999 to early 2000. At the market low in March, we were down about 82%. At that point, we were close to the 89% decline of 1929-32, when the market was actually traded in gold due to the gold standard for the U.S. dollar.
The following graph shows the relationships between the Dow-listed value and gold for an 89% decline from the market top – the Dow as of Jan. 29, 2010 and as of the recent market low in March 2009.

In an Instablog today, I suggested that making comparisons of today to the start of the Great Depression had more curiosity value than utility. I received some criticism for that remark.
In this analysis, the curiosity value has more utility than most comparisons (at least for me) because it shows how close we have already come to repeating the market decline of 1929-32. The parameters can be read from the chart for an exact reproduction. For example, Dow at 10,000 and gold at $2,200 or Dow at 7,000 and gold at $1,500 produce a loss of 89%.
Disclosure: Currently own GLL (short gold).
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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 6:23 pm
Courtesy of George F. Smith writing at Mises Daily

Having failed to learn what causes depressions and how to treat them when they arrive, our nation’s leaders are steering us straight into a monetary catastrophe. Predictably, the major media voices are clinging to the assurances of Keynesians, who see new wads of debt and paper money and conclude that the good times are ready to roll again; don’t pay any heed to the millions still looking for work.
The free-lunch Keynesians even tell us how we got into the crisis and what saved us. Paul Krugman speaks for many when he blames market deregulation for the meltdown and hails the Fed’s printing press as our savior.
What does this mean? It means we can laugh at rumors that the Fed’s cheap credit brought on the crisis. We can laugh even harder at the claim that Fed monetary pumping will ensure an even greater disaster down the road. And we can save our biggest laughs for that lucky guesser, Peter Schiff, whose knowledgeable detractors laughed at him in 2006 when he predicted the current meltdown.
For many, it was the government’s tinkering with Glass-Steagall that gave investors a free hand to commit evil — by allowing greedy mouths to gorge themselves to the brink of self-destruction. Because those mouths were so big, our leaders had no choice but to fleece taxpayers and dollar-holders to save them. Once again, we were told, freedom in economics became a recipe for disaster.
Sorry, state lovers, but rigging regulations to create a stupendous moral hazard does not reflect the "influence of free-market ideology," as Krugman claims. Regulations are interventions, and interventions are that seemingly benign collection of stepping-stones from capitalism to socialism. The current economic debacle is overwhelmingly a crisis of government meddling, not free markets.
A Regulated Economy without State Coercion?
A free economy is one that is — how to say this? — free. It is free of cronyism, favoritism, handout-ism, protectionism, or anything else that amounts to using the state as a means of living at the expense of others. If paupers or billionaires need help, they’re required to get it without picking the pockets of others.
In a free economy the only role for
…

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by Zero Hedge - January 30th, 2010 6:17 pm
Courtesy of Tyler Durden
Following on yesterday’s RealPoint January update on CMBX delinquencies, here is Lehman’s most recent report on January whole loan and CMBX remittances. While CMBX 3 seems to have stopped the bleeding at least temporarily, the other vintages are happy to step in its place. Deterioration is also accelerating in non-CMBS whole loans.
CMBX.1 Update
The overall non-performing rate of CMBX.1 increased by 49bp, to 6.90%, slightly slower than the trailing 3-month average pace of 61bp. Of note:
- GCCFC 05-GG5: The $74.5mn Benaroya – Met Park West loan (1.78%, SS-Cur) backed by an office property in Seattle, Washington, was transferred to special servicer because the borrower may not be able to refinance the loan on the maturity date in November 2010. The most recent DSCR was reported in September 2009 and came in at 1.4x; a likely scenario is an extension of 24 months leading to a 20% loss.
CMBX.2 Update
An increase of 49bp in the non-performing rate of CMBX.2 brings the number to 6.82%. The pace is in line with the trailing 3-month average of 46bp. All significant loans that went delinquent were previously transferred to the respective special servicer and highlighted in prior months’ remittance reports.
CMBX.3 Update
The worst-performing series last month saw an “improvement” of 15bp in the nonperforming rate to 6.65%. However, three large loans for a total of $555mn were brought current either through modification or by some other means. If we exclude these loans, the non-performing rate worsened by 37bp, to 7.17%. Of note are the following loans that were
newly delinquent or transferred to special servicer:
- GCCFC 07-GG9: A full-service 390-room hotel located in Bethesda, Maryland, is the collateral for the $140.0mn Hyatt Regency – Bethesda loan (2.14% of deal, SS-Cur), which was transferred to special servicer. According to servicer comments, the property is experiencing cash flow problems and is in danger of imminent default. The loan is likely to be extended to maturity with a loss of 30% if defaulted. DSCR had been above 1.0x all through 2008 and 2009 with quarterly reported (except 1Q08) financials.
- BSCMS 06-PW14: The $65.0mn Philips at Sunrise Shopping Center loan (2.69% of deal, FCL) entered foreclosure after nine months of SS-Cur status (first mentioned in the April 2009 report). The loan is backed by a retail mall in
…

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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 5:33 pm
Courtesy of Tim at The Psy-Fi Blog
Clinging to the Wreckage of Old Ideas
The problem of confirmation bias – the tendency of people to seek evidence confirming an already held opinion and to avoid looking for that which might upset their carefully constructed mental models has attracted a lot of attention from researchers. It occurs across all domains of human endeavour and triggers all sorts of implausible behaviour, yet investors and institutions remain in its thrall.
We find examples in law courts and doctor’s surgeries, in scientist’s laboratories and the lairs of legislators. So we shouldn’t be surprised to find it coursing through the veins of economists and investors, colouring their every thought and structuring their every idea. Of course a rational market participant, faced with a theory built on a crumbling cornerstone will abandon their ideas and look for some new ones. As you’d expect, therefore, we do no such thing, clinging irrationally to the wreckage of our dreams as they collapse around us.
Disconfirming Science
Science is perhaps the area in which we might expect confirmation bias to be least effective. After all, the processes of science are built around the institutionalisation of disconfirmation. New ideas have to run the gamut of envious colleagues who generally hate nothing more than a smart ass and take great pleasure in proving them wrong. Despite this scientists have generally proven remarkably reluctant to give up discredited theories. Indeed science has often proceeded for decades on the basis of ideas that could easily have been disconfirmed had anyone been sufficiently motivated to do so.
So, for instance, the idea that the universe is stable and unchanging was held way into the twentieth century despite the fact that Newton’s laws of gravitation implied something different. To be precise, they suggested that unless the universe was actually expanding gravity should be causing all the bits of matter in the cosmos to hurtle together towards a central point in a manner calculated to render discussions of globalisation, polar bear populations and national debt levels redundant. Yet when Einstein’s theories also predicted an expanding universe he simply made up a special constant, which he later had to ruefully remove, to stop this unwanted behaviour so ingrained was the…

Tags: Behavioural biases, behavioural finance, Confirmation Bias, Investor’s Curse, social group, Wreckage of Old Ideas
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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 5:33 pm
Courtesy of Henry Blodget at The Business Insider/Clusterstock
These two charts tell you pretty much all you need to know about the state of the US economy. They also, unfortunately, provide some clues as to how this movie will end.
First, from John Mauldin, the state of the U.S. government’s finances. The red line is spending. The blue line is tax revenue.

Can you imagine if that was your household?
Second, from Ned Davis, the state of our country’s debts, as measured by debt as a percentage of GDP. The little peak to the left was the debt mountain we accumulated during the Great Depression, which took a decade to work off. The, um, bigger peak to the right, is the one we’ve accumulated now.

So how will this movie end?
Well, in the near-term, we can try to borrow more to fill the hole between the red line and the blue line in the chart on the top. That will postpone the ending and give us a chance to kickstart the economy again.
Of course, every dollar we borrow will also drop down to the chart at the bottom, making the mountain even taller (unless private-market debt shrinks by an offsetting amount--this chart includes both government and private debt).
If we’re lucky, in the intermediate term, the economy will start growing more rapidly (blue line turns up) and the government will be able to ease off on spending (red line turns down), making it so we can borrow less every year. If that happy trend continues, we’ll eventually only have to deal with the nasty looking chart at the bottom: The debt mountain.
As to that… The accumulation of the debt mountain is what has fueled the impressive GDP growth we’ve enjoyed for the past 30 years. It’s fun borrowing more money, because when you borrow more money, you can spend more money, which is fun!
Of course, in the end, when you’ve borrowed as much as you can, you have to start paying some of the money back (or, at the very least, borrow less each year than you used to). And to pay the money back, you have to start spending less.
…

Tags: debt, Economy, Financial Crisis, Mortgages, Recession, stocks
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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 4:15 pm
Courtesy of Joe Weisenthal and Kamelia Angelova at Clusterstock/Business Insider
Confused about the ongoing AIG controversy?
Don’t be any longer.
Professor Linus Wilson has put together this helpful chart showing exactly how the bailout went down, complete with which banks got how much.
Two things stand out: The Treasury’s overpayment for preferred stock was a crucial part of the bailout, and though Goldman Sachs is usually held up as the bad guy here, SocGen received $2.5 billion more.
Hope the Europeans appreciate your (the taxpayer) ponying up.

Tags: AIG, AIG Bailout, Bailout, Chart of the day, Wall Street
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by ilene - January 30th, 2010 3:38 pm
Courtesy of The Daily Bail
Video: Dylan Ratigan with Senator Bernie Sanders — January 28, 2010
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Senate Roll Call: How members voted on Bernanke >>
—
"Ben Bernanke just received 4 more years as your Federal Reserve chief. The Senate confirming him by a vote of 70-30. After providing cheap money for years, inflating the housing bubble and then delivering an infinte suppy of money after the collapse that recapitalized Wall Street while depriving America of trillions of dollars in investment, your U.S. Senate believes HE’S THE BEST MAN to run the Federal Reserve for the next 4 years…the biggest and most powerful and most secretive bank in the world, the Federal Reserve."
"Let’s be very clear, Dylan. Wall Street has enormous power here on Capitol Hill. Bernanke is their guy and Wall Street usually gets what they want. What makes me particularly sad is that the White House ALSO pulled out all the stops for Bernanke’s reappointment."
"The American people can NOT understand how the Fed can lend out TRILLIONS to large, financial institutions and we don not know the names of the organizations that received the money. The fight for Fed transparency is going to continue."
—--
Video: Sanders asks Bernanke "Which banks got the $2.2 trillion?" — 3/23/09
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Video: Bernanke on TALF, TLGP and other Fed give-aways.
Tags: Bernanke, Dylan Ratigan, New Term As Fed Chairman, Senator Bernie Sanders
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January 27th, 2012 1:40 pm
Reminder: David is available to chat with Members, comments are found below each post.
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January 27th, 2012 12:55 pm
Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.
Submitted by Tyler Durden.
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).
...
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January 27th, 2012 12:35 pm
Courtesy of Doug Short.
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...
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January 27th, 2012 11:15 am
Submitted by Mark Hanna
Courtesy of MarketMontage. View original post here.
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...
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January 27th, 2012 10:05 am
Courtesy of Benzinga.
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.
...
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January 27th, 2012 12:00 am
Top 5 RisersStockRatingAnalysis
ASBCBUYMany 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...
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January 26th, 2012 6:16 pm
Courtesy of John Nyaradi.
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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January 26th, 2012 1:38 pm
Today’s tickers: DB, ATHN & LSI
...
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January 23rd, 2012 8:56 am
Reminder: OpTrader is available to chat with Members, comments are found below each post.
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.
To learn more about the swing trading virtual portfolio (strategy, performance, FAQ, etc.), please click here
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January 22nd, 2012 10:09 pm
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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January 22nd, 2012 2:52 am
NEW: Elliott and Ilene are available to chat with Members regarding topics presented in SWW, comments are found below each post.
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.)
Click this link for this weekend's newsletter, and sign in or sign up.
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January 18th, 2012 1:09 am
Reminder: Pharmboy is available to chat with Members, comments are found below each post.
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 ...
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