Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Bonds

The primary reason why bonds have rallied in the past three months is because the futures market has radically cut its expectation for any Fed tightening in the next six to nine months” - David Rosenberg, in The PragCap

$EURUSD

Rumours of big demonstrations in Athens, Greece.

Equities

SMN ETF (Ultrashort Basic Materials) reversed for the day.

US Data

U.S. home prices hit their lowest levels since mid-2002 - WSJ

Bonds

US bonds are looking good, contrary to Pimco's Bill Gross.

$EURUSD

Closed my $EURUSD short position at 1.4376

Equities

The market will probably reverse.

$EURUSD

17:20 31May11 RTRS-GERMAN FDP PARLIAMENT MEMBER SCHAEFFLER TELLS PAPER GREECE SHOULD LEAVE EURO ZONE

Equities

The US data are very weak, pretty soon shorting will be the way to go.

$EURUSD

More QE expected. I do not think so.

Nokia

Nokia shares down 12% after reporting weaker sales.

$EURUSD

Wire: BLOOMBERG News (BN) Date: May 31 2011  14:46:12
Germany Wants Private-Sector Involvement for Greece, Zeit Says


By Rainer Buergin
     May 31 (Bloomberg) -- Northern European Union countries led
by Germany still want private creditors to Greece to contribute
to bailouts of the over-indebted country, the German weekly
newspaper Die Zeit said without saying where it got the
information.
     The countries are especially pushing for a lengthening of
maturities of outstanding Greek government bonds, the newspaper
said in an e-mailed advance copy of an article in its print
edition.
     EU governments and the European Central Bank are seeking a
compromise on a new aid package for Greece, the newspaper said.

 

$EURUSD

Shorted $EURUSD at 1.4411

$EURUSD

Germany is considering dropping its push for an early rescheduling of Greek bonds in order to facilitate a new package of aid loans for Greece, according to people familiar with the matter.

Friday, May 27, 2011

$EURUDS

21:05 27May11 RTRS-SWEDISH FINMIN BORG SAYS REJECTS GREEK DEBT RESTRUCTURING WITHOUT ADDITIONAL GOVT SPENDING CUTS -GERMANY'S DIE WELT
21:06 27May11 RTRS-SWEDISH FINMIN BORG SAYS GREECE SHOULD FOLLOW EXAMPLE OF BALTIC STATES LIKE ESTONIA -GERMANY'S DIE WELT
21:07 27May11 RTRS-SWEDISH FINMIN BORG TELLS GERMAN NEWSPAPER ESTONIA'S BUDGET CUTS WERE EQUIVALENT TO 15 PERCENT OF GDP
21:09 27May11 RTRS-SWEDISH FINMIN BORG TELLS NEWSPAPER GREECE MUST SWALLOW MEDICINE WE PROSCRIBED AND RAISE TAXES, CUT SPENDING
21:10 27May11 RTRS-SWEDISH FINMIN BORG - WILL ONLY DISCUSS RE-PROFILING OF DEBT ONCE GREECE HAS ACHIEVED A "VERY SUBSTANTIAL SURPLUS"
21:12 27May11 RTRS-SWEDEN'S BORG - GREECE CANNOT PRIVATISE STATE ASSETS OF 300 BLN EUR IN A SHORT TIME, NEEDS INSTITUTION LIKE GERMANY'S TREUHAND

$EURUSD

FW: (BN) *GREECE'S SAMARAS SAYS EU BAILOUT MUST BE RENEGOTIATED

Memorial Day

$EURUSD

Watch the Euro going down.

$EURUSD

Preliminary information from Greece: No consensus

Adidas Corporate Bond

Adidas Corporate Bond ISIN:XS0439260398, 14.7.2014 yielding about 3%. Adidas has no debt except this bond.

$EURUSD

FW: http://www/​.zerohedge​.com/artic​le/belgium​s-dexia-ab​out-be-fir​st-greek-c​asualty

 

$EURUSD

Greek Plan Modeled on Vienna Program May Buy Time: Euro Credit
2011-05-26 23:01:00.5 GMT

By Boris Groendahl
    May 27 (Bloomberg) -- Euro-area policy makers trying to
avert a financial calamity may turn to a blueprint that arrested
contagion in eastern Europe after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
collapsed.
    A plan, modeled on the Vienna Initiative of 2009, would
involve leaning on creditors to roll over expiring bonds, buying
time for Greece until its austerity program shows results or
until a law takes effect in 2013 permitting sovereign-debt
writedowns. The extra yield investors demand to hold Greek 10-
year bonds over German bunds has climbed more than 3.85
percentage points to 13.38 percentage points since Dec. 31.
    “It’s burden sharing without restructuring,” said Mark
Wall, Deutsche Bank AG’s London-based chief euro-area economist.
“You’re not changing the terms of outstanding bonds, you’re not
lengthening their maturities, you’re not imposing haircuts on
them. The bonds will mature but new bonds will be issued. What
you’re asking the creditors to do is to participate in those new
issues,” he said.
    Such a proposal may bridge differences among European
leaders over allowing a Greek debt restructuring, a step that
Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker floated this month,
sparking instant opposition from central bankers. Restructuring
would lead to a “horror show,” according to Bank of France
Governor Christian Noyer.
    European Union Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn
has said it’s worth looking at “a Vienna-type initiative of
maintaining exposure of banks” to Greece’s 341 billion euros
($482 billion) of outstanding debt. About 91 billion euros comes
due through the end of 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
About 62 billion euros of that aren’t covered by revenue or aid,
Deutsche Bank estimates.
                        Debt Rollovers
    EU finance ministers said last week Portugal would try to
“encourage private investors to maintain their overall
exposures” in its 149 billion euros of debt by rolling over
maturing securities into new bonds. This is different than
exchanging existing bonds for new ones, something that rating
companies consider a form of default.
    Persuading investors to keep lending may give politicians
something to show taxpayers angered by handouts to both ailing
banks and nations. In Finland, voters have rewarded parties
critical of bailouts and demanded that the private sector play a
role in rescuing Portugal.
    “Political conditions in Europe now make some form of
private-sector involvement crucial to convince public opinion to
help Greece further,” said Deutsche Bank’s Wall.
                   Raiffeisen to UniCredit
    The Vienna Initiative involved the western banks who owned
the biggest lenders in eastern Europe. The plan was a key plank
in the International Monetary Fund-sponsored rescues of Hungary,
Romania, Latvia and Serbia. Banks, including UniCredit SpA,
Raiffeisen Bank International AG and Societe Generale SA,
pledged to keep their units in those countries afloat by rolling
over funding and providing fresh capital when needed.
    The program solved a problem known as the “prisoners’
dilemma,” in which parties don’t cooperate though it’s in their
best interest to do so. It achieved that by asking banks to
promise one another that they were on board and by tying public
funding to the collective commitment.
    “We made it clear to the banks that if one of them is
leaving, the others will follow and the situation would get
worse for everybody,” said Austrian central bank Governor Ewald
Nowotny, who helped devise the plan for eastern Europe because
of Austrian banks’ large presence in the region. “If all of
them would stay, the situation would remain stable.”
                         Euro Version
    The plan, along with $108 billion of emergency loans,
worked in eastern Europe. While a euro version of the Vienna
Initiative would buy time for the region’s policy makers, it
wouldn’t cut Greek debt, which the EU forecasts will peak at 166
percent of gross domestic product next year.
    Less than half of the European Central Bank’s 23-member
governing council supports a Vienna-style approach, said a
person with knowledge of the matter, who declined to be
identified because the discussions are private.
    Eastern Europe’s problem wasn’t excessive debt. Instead, it
was dependence on western capital and the possibility that it
might dry up when credit markets froze following the failure of
New York-based Lehman Brothers in September 2008.
    “I don’t think it will solve a lot in this situation,”
said Alessandro Giansanti, a strategist at ING Bank NV in
Amsterdam. “The crisis is peculiar to Greece, while in eastern
Europe, you could have argued that a big part of the crisis was
external.”
    Juncker, who leads the group of euro-area finance ministers,
said yesterday that the International Monetary Fund may not
release its portion of a 12 billion-euro aid payment to Greece
next month.
                       Juncker Statement
    “There are specific IMF rules and one of those rules says
the IMF can only take action when the refinancing guarantee is
given over 12 months,” Juncker said at a conference in
Luxembourg.
    ECB Executive Board member Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo said
yesterday a Vienna Initiative-style agreement for Greece may be
“positive.”
    While the Vienna Initiative brought 15 western European
banks to the table, creditors in Greece or Portugal are more
numerous and diverse, with about a third of Greece’s debt held
by “foreign non-banks,” a category that includes mutual,
pension or sovereign wealth funds as well as insurers outside of
Greece, according to estimates from analysts at Citigroup Inc.
                         Greek Banks
    A Vienna-like deal would realistically focus on those
within reach of European authorities. “We would in particular
expect the Greek banks and ECB to participate in this voluntary
exercise and some European banks and/or insurance companies who
may feel the force of international authorities’ moral suasion
more than others,” Deutsche Bank’s Wall said.
    Greek banks and other Greek investors such as the pension
system own about 29 percent, or 99 billion euros, of Greek debt.
European banks, including France’s BNP Paribas SA, French-
Belgian Dexia SA, Germany’s Commerzbank AG and the so-called bad
bank of Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, probably own about 50
billion euros between them, New York-based Citigroup said.
    The single-biggest Greek bondholder is now the ECB, which
Citigroup estimates holds about 50 billion euros worth of debt.
    “Given all the options on the table, this is probably the
one that the ECB could live with,” said Juergen Michels, chief
euro-area economist at Citigroup in London.
    Europe would have to convince ratings firms that the deal
is indeed wholly voluntary and not a veiled default.
    “Vienna-style initiatives purport to be genuinely
voluntary,” said Alastair Wilson, Moody’s Investors Service’s
chief credit officer for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
“Moody’s would seek to assess, both before and after the event,
whether that was in fact so. If we concluded that there was an
element of compulsion, we would very likely class this as
default.”

$EURUSD

The meeting in Greece starts now. Very important

EurUSD

Indignados in Athens, Greece in central square for the last three days.

EurUSD

Very important meeting in Greece starting at 11.30 am central european time. All the Greek political parties will participate in order to try to reach consensus. Better stay to the sidelines .

Thursday, May 26, 2011

EuroUSD

An opportunity to short again?

EuroUSD

I closed the EuroUSD short.

EuroUSD

18:04 26May11 RTRS-U.S. EXPRESSED CONCERN OVER FLUCTUATION IN DOLLAR-EURO EXCHANGE RATE DURING G8 LUNCH -EU DIPLOMATIC SOURCE

EuroUSD

17:35 26May11 RTRS-JAPANESE OFFICIAL-MANY G8 LEADERS SAY GREECE NEEDS TO WORK FURTHER ON ITS FISCAL REFORM

eurousd

US Bonds

US Bonds are looking good,particularly the long maturities.

IMF about Greece

16:30 26May11 RTRS-IMF CHIEF ECONOMIST: GREECE ADJUSTMENT PROGRAM HAS NOT COMPLETELY DERAILED
16:30 26May11 RTRS-IMF'S BLANCHARD: GREEK ECONOMY WILL NEED AN ADJUSTMENT PERIOD OF 10 YEARS
16:30 26May11 RTRS-IMF'S BLANCHARD: GREEK DEBT RESTRUCTURING NOT A "MAGIC BULLET," HAS CONTAGION RISKS
16:30 26May11 RTRS-IMF'S BLANCHARD: GREEK DEBT RESTRUCTURING NOT INEVITABLE
16:30 26May11 RTRS-IMF'S BLANCHARD: GREEK DEBT RESTRUCTURING WOULDN'T AFFECT WORLD RECOVERY IN SUBSTANTIAL WAY
From Reuters

US Data

initial claims surge

Greece

*EU SAYS DAMANAKI'S DRACHMA COMMENT WAS A FIGURE OF SPEECH
2011-05-26 10:43:17.917 GMT

eurousd

Trying to find a level to short euro sooner rather than later.

Equities-Commodities

Don't trust the bounce. The higher commodities prices, particularly oil, are a big taxation to consumer.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Mark Haines

Cow (livestock etf)

Looks interesting at these levels for an oversold bounce.

commodities

Commodities look topy here.

Bunds

If you have euros, best place to hide is German Bunds. The problem in Europe is deflation, not inflation.
I like particularly the 10 year German Bund for trading.

Euro vs usd

I really like the USD here vs the Euro. Target 1.36?

Tuesday, May 24, 2011