Monthly Archives: March 2012

ISDA declares Greek credit event, CDS payments triggered

09-Mar (Reuters) — Greece triggered the payment on default insurance contracts by using legislation that forces losses on all private creditors, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association said on Friday.

[source]

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The Daily Market Report

Gold Recoups This Week’s Losses


09-Mar (USAGOLD) — Gold has traded in a choppy manner, falling in early New York trading after a modestly better than expected nonfarm payrolls report lifted the dollar and stocks. The purported success of the Greek PMI deal may have also diminished the safe-haven appeal of the yellow metal somewhat.

However, these intraday losses were short-lived as news that Fitch downgraded Greece to “selective default” and reports of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza sparked a rebound that saw gold set new highs for the day and threaten the high for the week at 1716.48. A close above the 100-day moving average (1695.66), and more so a higher close on the week (above 1710.50), would offer encouragement to longs for the week ahead. Such action into the close would also likely discourage shorts.

Despite reports of 95% participation in the Greek bond swaps, the euro tumbled back to its low for the week, just below 1.3100 versus the dollar. The Greek cabinet approved activation of the collective action clauses and Fitch downgraded Greece to selective default status. Meanwhile, in the grey market for the new bonds, it appears that the actual haircut for the private bondholders will be closer to 78%. Yields have surged from the get-go with new 2% bonds maturing in Feb 2023 being bid at 19.7% on repayment worries. Basically, the new bonds aren’t even out yet and already there’s ample skepticism about Greece’s ability to pay on them.

Such skepticism is well founded with news that the Greek economy contracted more than expected at the end of last year. The Hellenic Statistical Authority reported today that Q4 GDP fell by 7.5%, rather than the 7% that was initially estimated.

Here in America we’ve started seeing some downward revisions to GDP for this year that are primarily being driven by a surging trade deficit. The January trade deficit jumped to a three year high of $52.6 bln on rising costs for imported energy and food products. At the same time, European demand for our exports fell as their economy teeters on the brink of a new recession. The weaker economic prospects for the US may have prompted the Fed to spur renewed speculation this week about additional quantitative measures.

If the Fed does indeed launch a QE3 down the road, the gold market is likely to react in the same way it did to QE1, QE2 and Operation Twist, by pushing relentlessly higher. When you consider the absolute explosion in the balance sheets of the Fed’s peers — the ECB, BoE, BoJ, among others — it’s reasonable to view gold as being on sale at these prices.

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U.S. Still Down 6 Million Jobs

09-Mar (SmartMoney) — The stock market has recovered its losses since hitting bottom three years ago today. But despite gains in employment during that same stretch, America is still down six million jobs, data shows.

The economy added 227,000 jobs in February, more than the 204,000 economists expected, the Labor Department reported this morning. The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 8.3% from last month. But while the economy has added more than 200,000 jobs for three straight months, the damage to employment done by the Great Recession is still far from repaired.

Between December 2007, when the recession officially started, and February 2010, when the Labor Department’s reports show employment hit bottom, the economy lost more than eight million jobs.

[source]

PG View: While limited progress is certainly better than no progress — or worse yet, higher joblessness — there’s still a huge gap to fill.

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Operation Twist: New York Fed sells $8.630 billion in Treasury coupons.

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Grant: A New Fed Bond-Buying Plan Would Be Market Manipulation

A great interview with Jim Grant of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, where he discusses how past, present and future quantitative measures are nothing short of market manipulation.

Grant also advocates for a “sound currency by which i mean a currency that is based on a standard and not at the whim and the discretion of a bunch of mandarins sitting around Washington D.C.”

Yes, Jim believes gold needs to be part of that conversation…

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Greek Debt Swap at 95% After Bondholders Forced to Join

09-Mar (Bloomberg) — Greece pushed through the biggest sovereign restructuring in history after cajoling private investors to forgive more than 100 billion euros ($132 billion) of debt, opening the way for a second bailout.

Euro-region finance ministers agreed on a conference call that the swap meant Greece had met the terms to proceed with a 130 billion-euro rescue package designed to prevent a collapse of the Greek economy. Ministers freed up 35.5 billion euros in public sweeteners and interest now, with a decision on the balance to be made at a March 12 meeting in Brussels.

“It would be a big mistake to think we are out of the woods,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters in Berlin after the call today. “We have a chance of making it. And we have to seize that opportunity.”

…Investors with 95.7 percent of Greece’s privately held bonds will participate in the swap after so-called collective action clauses are triggered, the Finance Ministry said.

[source]

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