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Nov 11, 2010

FW: Frontrunning: November 11

  • asiablues
    11/11/2010 - 06:33
    China is decades ahead of the global curve when it comes to understanding the strategic importance of rare earths. But with demand set to double to 225,000 tons by 2015, not accounting for the burgeoning green energy industry, nobody's immune to the coming supply shortfall, including China.
  • williambanzai7
    11/10/2010 - 23:25
    The central banking PhD rash that just keeps coming back...Ladies and Gentleman....Maestro!!!!!!!

Frontrunning: November 11

Tyler Durden's picture




  • Irish borrowing costs hit high, EU says has tools to act (Reuters)
  • Obama Presses Hu on Yuan as Trade Imbalances Divide G-20 (Bloomberg)
  • Irish bank chief eyes foreign buyers  (FT), which means after Greece and Portugal, the PBoC will soon add Ireland to its European holdings, and further reduce the Fed's European sphere of influence
  • Geithner Moves to Soothe G20 Currency Tensions (Reuters)
  • G-20 Nears Pact but Tensions Still Fester (WSJ)
  • Asia's Central Banks Face a Policy Dilemma (BusinessWeek)
  • Makeovers on Hold as Consumer Caution Validates Bernanke (Bloomberg)
  • "Jersey Shore" lifts Viacom profit (Reuters)
  • Why the Fed's QEII Will Not Work (RCM)
  • The Global War over Currencies (FT)
  • Western Union, MoneyGram May Lose as Fed Sets Remittance Rules (Bloomberg)
  • U.K. Regulator Adopts Mobile-Phone Taping Rules Over Protests From Banks (Bloomberg)
  • Deficit Panel Leaders Propose Curbs On Social Security, Major Cuts In Spending, Tax Breaks (WaPo)
  • SEC Asked to End S&P's `Chilling' Fees for Security ID Numbers (Bloomberg)
  • Li: China to deepen trade ties with UK (China Daily)

 

ddd

  • Sweden CPI Level for October 305.57 – in line with expectations.Consensus 305.57. Previous 304.6.
  • Sweden CPI - Headline Rate for October 0.3% m/m 1.5% y/y – in line with expectations.Consensus 0.3% m/m 1.5% y/y. Previous 0.8% m/m 1.4% y/y.
  • Sweden SW CPI - CPIF for October 0.3% m/m 1.8% y/y – in line with expectations.Consensus 0.3% m/m 1.8% y/y. Previous 0.8% m/m 1.8% y/y.
  • Sweden AMV Unemployment Rate for October 4.5% – in line with expectations.Consensus 4.5%. Previous 4.7%.
  • Australia Consumer Inflation Expectation 3.1%. Previous 3.8%.
  • Australia Employment Change 29.7K – higher than expected. Consensus 20.0K. Previous 49.6K.
  • Australia Unemployment Rate 5.4% - higher than expected. Consensus 5.0%. Previous 5.1%.
  • Australia Full Time Employment Change -14.1K. Previous 59.4K.
  • Australia Part Time Employment Change 43.8K. Previous -9.8K.
  • Australia Participation Rate 65.9% - higher than expected. Consensus 65.6%. Previous 65.6%.
  • Japan Domestic CGPI 0.2% m/m 0.9% y/y – higher than expected. Consensus -0.2% m/m 0.5% y/y. Previous 0.0% m/m -0.1% y/y.
  • Japan Buying Foreign Bonds¥404.8B. Previous ¥566.3B.
  • Japan Buying Foreign Stocks ¥19.8B. Previous ¥28.8B.
  • Foreign Buying Japan Bonds -¥306.6B. Previous ¥374.1B.
  • Foreign Buying Japan Stocks ¥191.8B. Previous -¥51.0B.
  • Japan Tokyo Avg.Office Vacancies 8.9%. Previous 9.0%.
4
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by Oh regional Indian
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:24
#719040

It's 11-11 folks.

Get ready for some fireworks today. 

Up and down and around and around.

The Oh Gee 20 will need a special reason to pass some previously agreed upon "solution"!

ORI

http://aadivaahan.wordpress.com

by Boop
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:25
#719043

You have, of course, seen this: Jane Austen's Fight Club.

by Tortfeasor
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:25
#719044

I will never play poker against Timmah...anyone who can tell bald-faced lies like that is dangerous.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/40122177

by Peace is the x-axis
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:36
#719052

"In sum, Tim Geithner is a gigantic fool, the IMF the gun that can't shoot straight, Alan Greenspan a bungler..."

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/03/06/why-the-aussies-could-have-predict...

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/obamas-economic-saviour-savaged-as-keating-lets-rip-20090306-8rk7.html

by High Plains Drifter
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:53
#719074

Yes, such wholesome programming as "Jersey Shore" lifts profits. They don't care however.  The destruction of the culture is their main goal. Included in the fine print that is not told to anyone who watches this show and laughs at the sick behavior of the young people involved is that this sort of behavior has consequences that can be life altering and life threatening.

http://www.thefrisky.com/post/246-jersey-shore-house-is-std-central/

 

For the woman , it can cause cervical cancer, a extremely dangerous form of cancer. For the man, he becomes a std carrier for the rest of his life and he has to deal with this, when and if he decides to quit this sick behavior and find a nice girl to get married to for you see he can give it to his wife as well. Risky behavior has consequences but I guess it is ok to show garbage like this and appeal to the baseness of the human condition, all in the name of the profits and money.

by Careless Whisper
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:13
#719118

@ tort

timmay would be the sucker at the poker table. here'e the guy u want to avoid:

http://media.mlive.com/deadmoney/photo/9032305-large.jpg

 

by schoolsout
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:28
#719045

The good people at Viacom are probably "fist pumping" all over themselves...

Congrats, America.

by FunkyMonkeyBoy
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:31
#719048

Give us an update on the Baltic Dry please Tyler, looks to have been dropping faster than building 7 recently.

by tmosley
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:47
#719067

Which is to say not fast at all, apparently: http://investmenttools.com/futures/bdi_baltic_dry_index.htm

I see a tiny, totally normal drop.  Where are you seeing a precipitous decline?

by spanish inquisition
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:39
#719057

I have a followup observation on the L.A. missile. http://cryptogon.com/?p=18669 is a good link for bringing the stories together. It appears to be a joint US-Japan operation and my observation is based on a Navy spokesman possibly telling the truth.

Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations, told reporters and editors at The Washington Post that it “wasn’t a Navy missile.” He declined to go into more detail. He did, however, appear to be smiling when he said it. (Ital and bold added)

Could it have been a Japanese missile shot from a Japanese sub? Is this the beginning of Japan not having nuclear weapons the same way that Israel does not have nuclear weapons? 

I could be way off, just saying based on what I have read to now this may be a plausible scenario.

by ibjamming
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:50
#719072

But why there?  Why in the open?  They knew there would be questions...and possibly answers.  Did they WANT China to figure it out?  Maybe give them something to think about...not that nukes aren't already there with all the bases we have in Japan.  I don't get the "why" in their doing it there/then.

by spanish inquisition
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:29
#719153

Good points. Before and after, it was not handled like a normal Navy missile launch in terms of notification and press. If it wasn't for a news copter you would not of heard anything, it could be they thought they were in a good spot to fire one off without notifying anyone. The waffling after says they didn't have anything in place for that contingency, so they wanted it to be kept secret or there was a breakdown in communication. Wouldn't it have been easy to go, "Crap, we messed up, didn't follow our procedures while firing a potential nuclear weapon" ........ Mmmmmm of course they wouldn't say that if it really happened. HAHA

by MachoMan
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:38
#719179

It's called, hey china, you remember japan right?  Yeah, pwnt.  You keep in check or we unleash the fury and you haven't even seen our/their good stuff yet.

PS, quit buying PMs, it's making it hard on us to keep the price down.

by goldmiddelfinger
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:40
#719060

Jeremy Grantham w Shrill Moll Maria Bartiromo. 28 minutes

 

http://www.businessinsider.com/jeremy-grantham-interview-bubble-2010-11

by Careless Whisper
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:04
#719095

"the ice is thin"

i want that on my t-shirt

thanks for the link

by plocequ1
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:47
#719063

Im tired of hearing QE2 wont work. Its working now, On the stock market. Thats what its there for. All this crap that QE2 is supposed to help the economy and UE is bullshit. There is no economy. QE2 is here to make stock prices go higher. For the rest of us who are non club members, We get to pay the bill. Economy, Thats so 90's . Remember, " Its a big club, And we aint in it".... George Carlin

by High Plains Drifter
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:55
#719080

But, but , but, Ben said that helping the stock market averages go up will help main street. Ha ha ha

by plocequ1
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:22
#719134

..

by plocequ1
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:21
#719139

..

by scratch_and_sniff
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 08:57
#719085

R.I.P. George, funny bastard.

by Die Weiße Rose
on Thu, 11/11/2010 - 09:22
#719121

Obama Presses Hu on Yuan as Trade Imbalances Divide G-20 (Bloomberg)

Who is China's finance minister ?

When did Obama press him on the Yuan for 20 G's ?

Well, that's what I been asking, Who ?

What ? Why do you say When ?

What do ya mean How !

Look, all I wanted to know is:

Who is China's Finance minister ?

That's what I've been asking You !

Who ?

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Feed: zero hedge
Posted on: Thursday, November 11, 2010 02:18 PM
Author: Tyler Durden
Subject: Frontrunning: November 11

 

Description: Image removed by sender.
Description: Image removed by sender.

  • Irish borrowing costs hit high, EU says has tools to act (Reuters)
  • Obama Presses Hu on Yuan as Trade Imbalances Divide G-20 (Bloomberg)
  • Irish bank chief eyes foreign buyers  (FT), which means after Greece and Portugal, the PBoC will soon add Ireland to its European holdings, and further reduce the Fed's European sphere of influence
  • Geithner Moves to Soothe G20 Currency Tensions (Reuters)
  • G-20 Nears Pact but Tensions Still Fester (WSJ)
  • Asia's Central Banks Face a Policy Dilemma (BusinessWeek)
  • Makeovers on Hold as Consumer Caution Validates Bernanke (Bloomberg)
  • "Jersey Shore" lifts Viacom profit (Reuters)
  • Why the Fed's QEII Will Not Work (RCM)
  • The Global War over Currencies (FT)
  • Western Union, MoneyGram May Lose as Fed Sets Remittance Rules (Bloomberg)
  • U.K. Regulator Adopts Mobile-Phone Taping Rules Over Protests From Banks (Bloomberg)
  • Deficit Panel Leaders Propose Curbs On Social Security, Major Cuts In Spending, Tax Breaks (WaPo)
  • SEC Asked to End S&P's `Chilling' Fees for Security ID Numbers (Bloomberg)
  • Li: China to deepen trade ties with UK (China Daily)

 

ddd

  • Sweden CPI Level for October 305.57 – in line with expectations.Consensus 305.57. Previous 304.6.
  • Sweden CPI - Headline Rate for October 0.3% m/m 1.5% y/y – in line with expectations.Consensus 0.3% m/m 1.5% y/y. Previous 0.8% m/m 1.4% y/y.
  • Sweden SW CPI - CPIF for October 0.3% m/m 1.8% y/y – in line with expectations.Consensus 0.3% m/m 1.8% y/y. Previous 0.8% m/m 1.8% y/y.
  • Sweden AMV Unemployment Rate for October 4.5% – in line with expectations.Consensus 4.5%. Previous 4.7%.
  • Australia Consumer Inflation Expectation 3.1%. Previous 3.8%.
  • Australia Employment Change 29.7K – higher than expected. Consensus 20.0K. Previous 49.6K.
  • Australia Unemployment Rate 5.4% - higher than expected. Consensus 5.0%. Previous 5.1%.
  • Australia Full Time Employment Change -14.1K. Previous 59.4K.
  • Australia Part Time Employment Change 43.8K. Previous -9.8K.
  • Australia Participation Rate 65.9% - higher than expected. Consensus 65.6%. Previous 65.6%.
  • Japan Domestic CGPI 0.2% m/m 0.9% y/y – higher than expected. Consensus -0.2% m/m 0.5% y/y. Previous 0.0% m/m -0.1% y/y.
  • Japan Buying Foreign Bonds¥404.8B. Previous ¥566.3B.
  • Japan Buying Foreign Stocks ¥19.8B. Previous ¥28.8B.
  • Foreign Buying Japan Bonds -¥306.6B. Previous ¥374.1B.
  • Foreign Buying Japan Stocks ¥191.8B. Previous -¥51.0B.
  • Japan Tokyo Avg.Office Vacancies 8.9%. Previous 9.0%.

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