Monday 14 December 2009

Dubai: was it Smiley?


Cheers! Abu Dhabi has ridden to the rescue at the last minute (visualize elegant Arabian thoroughbreds galloping on the air-conditioned beaches of Dubai).
Enough billions have been made available to redeem at full value the Nakheel bond expiring as we speak.
Was it, after all, a clever Smiley-like operation, as we suspected it might be?
We will never know, as we will never know how much of those bonds changed hands at the distressed levels, nor who bought them.
All eyes now on Greece. No, it will not default. Nor leave the EUR. But all kind of poop might hit the ventilators before another cavalry charge resolve the day.

Clearly the Greece situation would warrant dedicated expectorations. But there again, so would High Frequency Trading, which is becoming the next bugbear. No time though.

Sunday 13 December 2009

Bash the bankers? OK, but don't forget splitting them!

Judging from the excited cackling pervading every media, from the blogs to the tabloids, it certainly appears that Mr. Darling, the UK Chancellor, has set some kind of aggressive feline loose among the pigeons.

Pointless as it might be, here are the haruspex summary of the situation, and humble views, having read the opinions of more illustrious commentators, discussed with learned friends.

Tuesday 8 December 2009

UK Plc and its subsidiary RBS


ERRATA: it turns out that DJ got the below wrong. the revision was not to -1.5%, but to 1.5%.
Infuriating. So a minor slowdown, within noise, which is actually quite encouraging for the good old UK manufacturing sector. Still, the market was spooked. But maybe it was something else. RBS ended down nearly 8%.
Now need to check the German number... was that wrong too?

Sunday 6 December 2009

Fear and trembling

Terror and tremor. Yes, I am aware I am calling the name of Søren in vain.
But I am amazed at how the US stock market managed NOT to rally strongly on what were, at least by my humble measure, some bloody surprisingly good payrolls numbers, especially  given that previous 2 months were revised as well. 
In fact, they look good enough to make me seriously want to reconsider the view, now longly held, that the economy is rolling over (e.g. second derivative negative), leading to problems early next year.
It is just one number, among several others which point in the opposite direction, but an important one, so it has to be taken seriously.
I can't say that I have turned bullish (yet): but I do want to re assess and re evaluate... when the facts change... 


In the meantime, all thanks go to my historian friend who plugged my memory hole, and corrected my ignorance of philosophy. Ciao!

Thursday 3 December 2009

let's face it: it's quiet


It's good time to catch with all those books on the "to read" pile.
It's quiet. It's dead. In the markets at least. You hear it from the trading floors, from the brokerages, from the financial journos... everybody wants to shut up shop and call it a year.

So we use this time to tidy up, enter a few more trades (see views and positions), to think, to read, to do more worthy work.

It's quiet... it's dead. Till something happens, at least.

Tuesday 1 December 2009

Enough with Dubai


The global concerns in the markets for the Dubai are now abating. A statement (in full here) has been released which clarifies that Dubai World
is trying to restructure just 26 GUSD of debt, and that "constructive" talks are starting.
This is probably the end of the story, as far as markets are concerned.

Probably, quite rightly too. The chances of unexpected bad news coming out before XMas (the Dad's army scenario) are now very slim. Was it Smiley's? We'll never know.

Apart from the localized hit in the Gulf, equity markets are back where they were, more or less. Bonds though are still near the highs, but they were on an uptrend anyway.
Recent pieces of economic news have been tinged of a rosy hue, cancelling the mood effect of the darker ones from previous weeks.
The views then revert to what they were. Use the time to prepare for next year.

Why the picture? Well, why not?