Why Are Bonds and Stocks Acting Strangely?

The past week saw a dynamic in financial markets that, not long ago, would have been deemed quite unusual: Prices of all kinds of assets, from safe government bonds to risky stocks, rose together. German bunds and U.S. Treasuries gained, pushing yields lower, as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index approached its all-time high.

The movements continued to confound the once-traditional pattern, in which bond prices rise and stock prices fall when investors expect the economy to perform poorly, and vice versa. There are various explanations, some more consequential than others.

One interpretation is that investors expect hyperactive central bankers to remain their best friends, buoying markets with continued unconventional policies. Last week’s disappointing economic data out of the U.S. and Europe would support this view, putting pressure on the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank to be more accommodative than they otherwise would.

By demonstrating a consistent willingness and ability to contain market volatility and bolster the prices of financial assets, essentially divorcing equity performance from that of the underlying economy, central bankers have managed to bring more money off the sidelines and into the market. Lower borrowing costs have also boosted companies’ actual profitability, allowing them to return more money to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks, as has the notion that we are in a lower historical interest-rate paradigm.

That’s the optimistic view. It is also valid and, given how well it has played out, deeply entrenched in markets. But it may be only part of a less comforting explanation relating to the view that, at current valuations, bond investors may be reacting to something that the stock market has yet to recognize.

Bond investors tend to be more risk averse than equity investors, and thus reposition earlier in response to a higher probability of a market selloff. This is in part because they are more focused on the macroeconomic picture, and in part because bonds have a different risk-reward profile: They ultimately pay only their face value, whereas stocks can keep going up.

This interpretation is bolstered by the fact that the stock market is also subject to demand influences that could prove temporary. The boom in merger and acquisitions, for example, has pumped a lot of cash into the market, helping to push prices higher than what the performance of the economy would justify.

If this complementary interpretation is correct, it’s just a matter of time before the correlation between risky and riskless assets starts returning to its historical pattern. The hard part is specifying the timing, especially as it relates to a crucial psychological question: When will investors lose faith in central banks’ ability to keep bolstering the economy through higher financial asset prices?

To contact the writer of this article: Mohamed A. El-Erian at

M.El-Erian@bloomberg.net.

Source ::  http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-08-18/why-are-bonds-and-stocks-acting-strangely

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A Bitcoin ‘Flash Crash’ As Volume Spike Briefly Takes Price to $309

Once more is Bitcoin falling ….

Bitcoin Latest Price: $458.77, down 6.9% (via CoinDesk)

Crossing Our Desk:

– Bitcoin prices on Monday plunged – on a single exchange – in what’s being called a “flash crash” of the digital currency, after what appears to be a cascading series of trades that occurred in rapid fashion took the price of bitcoin all the way down to $309.

Even within the volatile world of bitcoin trading, what happened Monday was unusual. Prices were under pressure early. They started off the morning around $500, and began trending downward. A little bit before 8 a.m. New York time, though, there was a massive plunge on the BTC-e platform, and only there. Data provided to us by the analytics website TradeBlock showed that there were actually three trades that went off at $309, for a little more than one bitcoin in total, as well as at least 20 trades before and after those three that went off at $310. Well more than a thousand were recorded between $400 and $309.

In three minutes around those three $309 trades – from 7:42-7:44 a.m., there were 1,554 individual trades worth a total of 1,273 BTC, according to the data, in a pattern that looks very much like automated trading. That may not sound like very high volume, but there are entire days when the trading volume is only around 5,000 BTC. Volume on Monday was already above 26,000.

All of that took place on the BTC-e exchange; the low on Bitstamp was $445. The low on CoinDesk’s index was $435. It’s currently at $458.77. On BTC-e, the most recent trade went off at $443.99.

BTC-e is an opaque exchange – It’s not clear whether it’s located in Bulgaria or Cyprus, and the people running it keep themselves out of the public eye. The site notes its located in a “European time zone (GMT +2), which includes both locales. Our colleagues at MarketWatch described it as a “black hole” in a February profile, even as it became one of the biggest of the bitcoin exchanges.

The exchange does, however, offer some of the more complicated, and risky, kind of trading options that the big capital-markets exchanges offer, like margin trading and shorting. It’s entirely possible, as happened last week, that the initial trading was triggered by a margin call, forcing somebody to dump their holdings. That could’ve sparked a cascade of buy and sell orders. It’s hard to imagine otherwise why somebody would sell at that price.

Also, it’s not the first “flash crash” on BTC-e: a similar swan dive occurred in February, sending the price from $600 to $100 in a matter or minutes.

Trades in bitcoin don’t get unwound. That’s one of the key features, once a trade is confirmed in the blockchain, it’s set in stone. Absent some kind of overriding glitch, the trades are the trades.

In other words, somebody took a bath today, and on the other end, somebody, ahem, cleaned up.  (Paul Vigna)

Contacts: 

paul.vigna@wsj.com,

@paulvigna

michael.casey@wsj.com,@mikejcasey

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Forex: 10 Events to Watch Next Week 19Aug-22Aug

Forex: 10 Events to Watch Next Week

In order of release

1. UK Consumer Price Index (Aug 19)
2. New Zealand Dairy Auction (Aug 19)
3. RBA Semi-Annual Testimony (Aug 19)
4. Bank of England Minutes (Aug 20)
5. FOMC Minutes (Aug 20)
6. HSBC China Manufacturing PMI Aug Flash (Aug 20)
7. Eurozone PMIs (Aug 21)
8. Jackson Hole Summit (Aug 21)
9. Canadian Retail Sales (Aug 21)
10. US Philadelphia Fed Index (Aug 22)

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BIG MARKET NEWS WEEK 18 AUG – 24 AUG 2014

Australia Tuesday, August 19, 2014 03:30  
 

AUD RBA Meeting’s Minutes
United Kingdom Tuesday, August 19, 2014 10:30  
GBP Consumer Price Index (YoY) (Jul)
United States Tuesday, August 19, 2014 14:30  
 
USD Building Permits (MoM) (Jul)
United States Tuesday, August 19, 2014 14:30  
USD Consumer Price Index (YoY) (Jul)
United States  

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

14:30  
USD Consumer Price Index Core s.a (Jul)
United States  

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

 

14:30  
USD Consumer Price Index Ex Food & Energy (YoY) (Jul)
Australia Wednesday, August 20, 2014

 

01:30  
AUD RBA’s Governor Glenn Stevens Speech
United Kingdom Wednesday, August 20, 2014

 

10:30  
GBP Bank of England Minutes
United Kingdom Wednesday, August 20, 2014    10:30  
GBP BOE MPC Vote Cut
United Kingdom Wednesday, August 20, 2014    10:30  
GBP BOE MPC Vote Hike
United Kingdom Wednesday, August 20, 2014

 

   10:30  
GBP BOE MPC Vote Unchanged
Canada  

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

 

14:30  
CAD Wholesale Sales (MoM) (Jun)
United States  

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

 

20:00  
USD FOMC Minutes
United States Thursday, August 21, 2014

 

24h    

USD Jackson Hole Symposium
China  

Thursday, August 21, 2014

 

03:45  
CNY     HSBC Manufacturing PMI (Aug)Preliminar
France Thursday, August 21, 2014

 

09:00    

EUR Markit Manufacturing PMI (Aug)Preliminar
Germany Thursday, August 21, 2014

 

09:30    

EUR Markit Manufacturing PMI (Aug)Preliminar
United Kingdom Thursday, August 21, 2014 10:30    

GBP Retail Sales (YoY) (Jul)
United Kingdom  

Thursday, August 21, 2014

10:30    

GBP Retail Sales (MoM) (Jul)
United Kingdom  

Thursday, August 21, 2014

10:30    

GBP Retail Sales ex-Fuel (YoY) (Jul)
United States Thursday, August 21, 2014 14:30    

USD Continuing Jobless Claims (Aug 8)
United States Thursday, August 21, 2014 16:00  
USD Existing Home Sales Change (MoM) (Jul)
United States Thursday, August 21, 2014 16:00    

USD Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey (Jul)
United States Friday, August 22, 2014 24h    

USD Jackson Hole Symposium
Canada Friday, August 22, 2014 14:30    

CAD Consumer Price Index (YoY) (Jul)
Canada Friday, August 22, 2014 14:30  
CAD   Bank of Canada Consumer Price Index Core (YoY)  (Jul)
Canada Friday, August 22, 2014 14:30  
 

CAD

Consumer Price Index (MoM) (Jul)

 

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Buy bubbles, bet big and backache – Soros’s secrets

George Soros is 84 today. His career is remarkable both for its longevity and its returns – his Quantum fund has generated $39.6 billion in profits over the last four decades, making Soros the most successful hedge fund manager in history.

How has Soros managed to stay at the top for so long? What are the secrets to his success? Can investors learn from his methods? Or is Soros a one-off, a gifted speculator with an inimitable knack for timing?

Short selling

Never dependent on rising markets, Soros has long been a skilled exponent of short selling, where traders profit by betting on market declines. Although most equity markets went nowhere in the 1970s, Soros’s market-neutral trades helped fuel returns of more than 4,000 per cent during that difficult decade.

His most famous bet was in September 1992, when Soros’s shorting of sterling forced the Bank of England to devalue the currency and leave the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM).

That trade earned Soros an estimated £1 billion and ensured he will forever be remembered as the man who “broke” the Bank of England.

Alarmed by the deteriorating global economy, he netted returns of 32 per cent after coming out of retirement in 2007 and even profited amid the chaos of 2008, a disastrous year for most investors.

Last year, Soros’s main fund earned an estimated $1 billion by shorting the Japanese yen.

read more here : http://www.irishtimes.com/business/personal-finance/buy-bubbles-bet-big-and-backache-soros-s-secrets-1.1893639

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Who bought, funded or exited the most Bay Area startups?

Orginal post here  : http://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/news/2014/08/15/who-bought-or-funded-the-most-bay-rea-startups.html?page=all

The venture investor that has backed the most startups in the Silicon Valley and San Francisco area in the past five years is 500 Startups.

But the one with the most exits of companies it has backed is Sequoia Capital, and the company that has bought the most local startups isn’t Yahoo or Facebook — both of whom have been on an acqui-hiring tear recently. It’s Google.

That is according to a report from investment database research firm CB Insights, whose rundown we posted yesterday on the 20 local startups that have raised the most cash without exiting yet.

The ranking of top investors didn’t include Y Combinator and other accelerators that don’t have a separate venture investing wing.

The top two on the list — 500 Startups and SV Angel — get in at the earliest stage of the companies they back. But most of the top investors there blend early and later stage funding. SV Angel, in fact, is a frequent co-investor in 500 Startups and backer of many Y Combinator companies, as well.

The top 10 (in the number of unique companies they have backed since 2009) are:

1. 500 Startups — 222.

2. SV Angel — 197.

3. Andreessen Horowitz — 157.

4. New Enterprise Associates — 123.

5. Google Ventures — 118.

6. Sequoia Capital — 111.

7. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers — 102.

8. Greylock Partners — 102.

9. Intel Capital — 92.

10. Accel Partners — 90.

When it comes to middle and later rounds, Intel Capital, New Enterprise Associates and Sequoia Capital were the most active.

In terms of the investors with the most exits, CB Insights ranks Sequoia on top with 54 of its local portfolio companies bought or doing an IPO in the past five years. Big names on that list include WhatsApp, Palo Alto Networks and Instagram.

Here is the top 10 ranking of investors with the most exits:

1. Sequoia Capital — 54.

2. Intel Capital — 49.

3. Accel Partners — 47.

4. Felicis Ventures — 42.

5. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers — 37.

6. New Enterprise Associates — 37.

7. SV Angel — 36.

8. Lightspeed Venture Partners — 35.

9. Foundation Capital — 35.

10. Benchmark Capital — 35.

As noted earlier, Yahoo and Facebook have done the most acquisitions in the past year or so. But CB Insights reports that Google has been the big buyer over the past five years with Waze and AdMob being two of the most prominent deals.

Here is that top 10 ranking, with the number of deals done by each.

1. Google — 37.

2. Facebook — 30.

3. Yahoo — 28.

4. Twitter — 18.

5. Oracle — 15.

6. Apple — 15.

7. Cisco Systems — 14.

8. IBM — 13.

9. VMware — 11.

10. Salesforce — 11.

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The Man Who Really Built Bitcoin

Who cares about Satoshi Nakamoto? Someone else has made Bitcoin what it is and has the most power over its destiny.

In March, a bewildered retired man faced journalists yelling questions about virtual currency outside his suburban home in Temple City, California. Dorian Nakamoto, 64, had been identified by Newsweek as the person who masterminded Bitcoin—a story that, like previous attempts to unmask its pseudonymous inventor, Satoshi Nakamoto, was soon discredited. Meanwhile, the person arguably most responsible for enabling the currency to swell in value to $7.7 billion, and with the most influence on its future, was hiding in plain sight on the other side of the country, in Amherst, Massachusetts.

That person is Gavin Andresen, a mild-mannered 48-year-old picked by the real Satoshi Nakamoto, whoever he or she is, as his successor in late 2010. Andresen became “core maintainer”—chief developer—of the open source code that defines the rules of Bitcoin and provides the software needed to make use of it. The combination of Nakamoto’s blessing and Andresen’s years of diligent, full-time work on the Bitcoin code has given him significant clout in Bitcoin circles and stature beyond. The CIA and Washington regulators have looked to him to explain the currency. And it was Andresen who conceived of thenonprofit Bitcoin Foundation—established in 2013—which is the closest thing to a central authority in the world of Bitcoin.

Some Bitcoin enthusiasts offer bombastic predictions that Americans will shake off the shackles of the Federal Reserve and poor nations will rise to prosperity with the low-cost transactions made possible by the stateless virtual currency. Other Bitcoin boosters have the air of salesmen chasing a mark, reeling off reasons you should buy into the currency that make you feel you’re not getting the whole story. In contrast, Andresen seems to be in search of quiet personal satisfaction, cheerfully calling himself a “geek interested in nuts and bolts things.” He can make a pretty good pitch for Bitcoin, but he quickly slides into technical nuances that would be a turnoff for most. “We say this is going to be the year of the multisignature wallet,” he says when summing up what 2014 holds for Bitcoin.

Still, Andresen has had and maintains more influence than anyone else on the code that determines how Bitcoin operates—and ultimately whether it can survive. Although there is no central bank for the currency, its design needs significant changes if it is to become widely used. How Andresen wields his power over Bitcoin will shape not only its fate but also the prospects for other virtual currencies.

Lucky Bet

http://www.technologyreview.com/news/527051/the-man-who-really-built-bitcoin/

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The Bond Market Explained for Mohamed El-Erian

On Thursday Mohamed A. El-Erian was on CNBC`s Halftime Report and he said something that a lot of people have been saying regarding the bond market, and it needs to be cleared up, because the amount of poor understanding regarding the bond market by people who make their living, i.e., are in the financial market business is astounding. It is even more mind blowing given that Mohamed A. El-Erian actually worked at a Bond Firm in PIMCO, and helped manage Harvard` s endowment in the past.

http://www.econmatters.com/2014/08/the-bond-market-explained-for-mohamed.html

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Secular stagnation :: Is there something seriously wrong with the economy?

Is there something seriously wrong with the economy?

It’s a scary prospect, and a concern that’s gotten louder and louder over the past year. In economic circles, it goes by the alliterative name of “secular stagnation.” And it’s a phrase that Fed watchers are likely to hear more and more in the months ahead.

Recent comments by the vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, Stanley Fischer, indicate questions within the central bank about whether the slow growth that has followed the recent recession could reflect, or at least could potentially morph into, longer-term issues within the economy. And while Fischer avoided the phrase “secular stagnation” in his Monday speech, Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota is planning to host a November symposium that directly addresses the issue of secular stagnation by name, CNBC has learned.

“I think there’s a lot of concern about how long this will last, and I think that’s certainly high on the agenda right now. At least people are entertaining that possibility now that it could drag on for longer,” said Brown University associate professor of economics Gauti Eggertsson, who authored (along with fellow Brown economist Neil Mehrotra) the landmark paper “A Model of Secular Stagnation,” which provides an in-depth explanation of how a long period of low growth could come about.

The theory of secular stagnation was first developed by Alvin Hansen, who wondered in the midst of the Great Depression whether diminishing investment opportunities in a maturing economy would stunt economic growth and permanently prevent full employment—at least in the absence of robust government intervention, which soon came in the form of the second world war.

These theories have found a new life in the aftermath of the so-called Great Recession, as the U.S. is experiencing (albeit to a much less dramatic degree) slow growth over a relatively long time period.

In November 2013, noted economist Larry Summers (who was considered, alongside current Chair Janet Yellen, a leading candidate to head the Fed) began to invoke the same phrase in arguing that the interest rate that the economy requires has fallen below zero.

The problem is that it is very difficult for nominal interest rates to fall below zero due to a constraint known as the zero lower bound. The upshot? Even with the Fed keeping short-term rates just above zero, market interest rates cannot possibly create adequate demand for loans, and thus the economy stagnates.

Without embracing the secular stagnation thesis, in Sweden on Monday, second highest-ranking Fed official Fischer gestured toward those concerns.

Noting slow growth in “labor supply, capital investment and productivity,” Fischer warned that “This may well reflect factors related to or predating the recession that are also holding down growth” and noted: “How much of this weakness on the supply side will turn out to be structural—perhaps contributing to a secular slowdown—and how much is temporary but longer than usual lasting remains a crucial and open question.”

“There was a level of concern on that point that I don’t think we generally hear,” said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx, referring to Fischer’s speech.

The stagnation debate will also be addressed by a new eBook entitled “Secular Decline,” which is due to be published on Aug. 18, and hosts contributions from Paul Krugman and Nomura’s Richard Koo, in addition to Summers, Eggertsson and Mehotra, and others.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101914044

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August 13th 2014: Preview: Sterling faces huge event risk

Sterling fundamentals will take centre-stage on Wednesday with high volatility inevitable. The Bank of England inflation report will have a mixed tone and plenty of caveats, especially as Governor Carney will want to keep as much flexibility as possible. While not ruling out a 2014 rate increase, he will again insist that policy is data dependent. Sterling bulls and bears should both be able to find some comfort in the report with the threat of several shifts in direction. The overall tone is likely to be slightly less convincing surrounding the economy and sentiment will already be damaged if there is a negative reading for headline average earnings amid the threat of further underlying profit taking. The best approach looks to be fading any initial headline Sterling spike higher against the dollar. Alternatively, run a limited short Sterling position ahead of the unemployment release with wide stops.

 

Over the first half of 2014, Sterling pushed strongly higher as short-term funds moved aggressively into the currency with stronger growth fuelling expectations of Bank of England tightening. The mood has turned more cautious over the past few weeks with doubts over the sustainability of growth and greater doubts over the interest-rate path. After prepping markets in June for a possible 2014 interest rate increase, Governor Carney failed to follow-through on his hawkish rhetoric.

 

The fundamental reports due on Wednesday will be extremely important for sentiment and Sterling. Markets are not fully pricing in a 0.25% rate increase until March 2015 so there is certainly scope for sharp short-term Sterling gains if there are strong hints over a 2014 rate increase.

 

First up for release will be the latest labour-market data. Markets have almost become immune to strong clamant-count data with declines of over 20,00 every month since July 2013. The unemployment rate is likely to have ticked lower to 6.4% from 6.5%, in theory pushing the economy closer to full employment which could push the Bank of England nearer to tightening. The earnings data will be watched extremely closely and is likely to be the most important element given that the Bank of England is very uncertain how much spare capacity is still available in the economy. A slow rate of earnings growth would suggest that there is still considerable spare capacity even with falling unemployment. Significantly, the consensus forecast is for earnings to fall 0.1% in the year to June which would be an important negative Sterling factor. Concerns over very weak productivity would be a key long-term bearish Sterling influence.

 

One hour after the labour-market data the latest Bank of England inflation report will be released. This provides the bank’s economic forecasts and is the backdrop for yield expectations. The report will be extremely important as the central bank will want to provide the theoretical underpinning and justification for any monetary tightening. With the next report due for release in November, failure to signal a rate hike this month would substantially undermine the possibility of an increase this year.

 

 

 

 

These are several key factors to watch in the inflation report:

 

  1.  The bank will estimate how much spare capacity is still available in the economy. Previously, the estimate was 1-1.5% of GDP. Any increase in this estimate to say 1.5-2.0% would effectively rule out and interest rate increase for 2014, while a reduction in this estimate would make an increase this year much more likely.

 

  1.  The inflation forecasts will obviously be important as they are the bank’s central focus. A projected rate below 2% in two-years time would lessen the risk of an early tightening.

 

  1.  Comments on Sterling will need to be watched closely. The bank expects Sterling strength over the first half of 2014 to dampen inflation. Markets will need to watch carefully whether there are warnings over potential damage to the economy from an over-valued currency and any attempt to talk it down. Any warnings over balance of payments vulnerability will also be important.

 

  1.  International growth forecasts will be important with the bank likely to be more wary over the Euro-zone outlook and wider global trends which will also make it cautious over any early tightening.

 

  1.  Governor Carney’s press conference will need to be watched very closely as the media probes for more decisive rhetoric on interest rates and there is the scope for high volatility during the press conference as well as on the inflation report headlines.

 

Follow breaking news and analysis on Twitter –  Follow @Investicafx

 

http://www.investica.co.uk/marketreport13-08-14.htm

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