Friday, May 22, 2009

Observing the weathervane



This quote summarizes this week’s sentiment rather succinctly: "There will likely be a growing steady recognition that in trying to prevent a Depression, the transfer of risk has been shifted from the private sector to the public purses and this may create a longer, more drawn out problem."
  • Geithner admits overnight that the US credit rating is in jeopardy in light of our heavy issuance
  • PIMCO's Bill Gross said the U.S. will eventually lose its AAA rating
  • Moody's did say Thursday it is comfortable with the triple-A sovereign rating on the United States, but it is not guaranteed forever
  • Goldman Sachs said the hike in oil prices this week was due to real oil market fundamentals and not just hedging against a weak dollar and equity market rallies. "The oil market was shocked by disruptions in Nigeria, refinery problems in the U.S. and a strong gasoline market," Goldman said in a research note. (Not sure why they think they have any credibility. Last year when oil was at $140/bbl they were calling for $200/bbl by year end. Their prop desk was probably getting short on the call, but I digress...--Ed)
  • US Treasury was getting hit hard at the end of the day yesterday as the market was getting ready for big new supply coming next week - $101B of fresh Treasuries to be auctioned
  • WAPO reported that the Obama administration is preparing to send GM into bankruptcy as early as the end of next week under a plan that would give the auto maker tens of billions of dollars more in public financing
  • Mastercard will lose more than half of a $59B portfolio of debit-card users after JPMorgan Chase & Co. decided to shift more business to Visa
  • The FDIC seized BKUNA, the 34th bank failure of the year, with $12.8B in assets, $8.6B in deposits and 85 branches
  • AIG announced that Chairman and CEO Edward Liddy will step down and also proposed a 1-for-20 reverse stock split
I think that at some point in the not too distant future the Obama Administration, with the help of Congress, will attempt to take over the Fed. I bet the majority of Americans will see nothing wrong with that, at least the ones who have no idea (and don't care to have one) what the Federal Reserve system is and why it was created in the first place.

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