Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Modified Trading Restrictions

Bernanke speaking today will surely be another 'read between the lines' delivery with markets hoping he will not drop negative vibes on a trading environment suspicious of the current economic outlook. There are plenty of 'dead cat bounces' between housing and earnings which could give way to negative price action given any impetus from the Fed.

The 'Volcker Rule' is being somewhat watered down despite the White House's comments to the contrary. With the Illinois contingent in Washington sympathetic to enormous Cmegroup influence, it is unlikely a forceful restriction of banking proprietary trading will ever happen. Trading is trading and the Cmegroup will want to see as much grey area as possible in the final regulations.

Other elements of trading oversight will be the SEC's recommendation for a modified uptick rule which will be applied once a stock has dropped 10% or more. This is a temporary rule but will probably survive the beta since it has wide public support.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Lobbying Data

Opensecrets.org

Lobbying Database

In addition to campaign contributions to elected officials and candidates, companies, labor unions, and other organizations spend billions of dollars each year to lobby Congress and federal agencies. Some special interests retain lobbying firms, many of them located along Washington's legendary K Street; others have lobbyists working in-house. We've got totals spent on lobbying, beginning in 1998, for everyone from AAI Corp. to Zurich Financial.

You can use the options below to search through our database in several ways: search by name for a company, lobbying firm or individual lobbyist; search for the total spending by a particular industry; view the interests that lobbied a particular government agency; or search for lobbying on a general issue or specific piece of legislation.

Total Lobbying Spending
1998$1,434,258,445$1.43 Billion
1999$1,432,747,529$1.43 Billion
2000$1,547,395,809$1.55 Billion
2001$1,633,527,367$1.63 Billion
2002$1,807,811,769$1.81 Billion
2003$2,036,366,469$2.04 Billion
2004$2,167,219,539$2.17 Billion
2005$2,423,534,636$2.42 Billion
2006$2,614,933,192$2.61 Billion
2007$2,856,828,289$2.86 Billion
2008$3,298,573,637$3.30 Billion
2009$3,473,043,293$3.47 Billion
Number of Lobbyists*
1998$10,40310,403
1999$12,95012,950
2000$12,44912,449
2001$11,75511,755
2002$12,07512,075
2003$12,83812,838
2004$13,09613,096
2005$14,03014,030
2006$14,45114,451
2007$14,82614,826
2008$14,44614,446
2009$13,74113,741

NOTE: Figures are on this page are calculations by the Center for Responsive Politics based on data from the Senate Office of Public Records. Data for the most recent year was downloaded on February 01, 2010.

*The number of unique, registered lobbyists who have actively lobbied.

Feel free to distribute or cite this material, but please credit the Center for Responsive Politics. For permission to reprint for commercial uses, such as textbooks, contact the Center.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Inflate or Deflate

Fed raised the discount rate a quarter point and has begun what will be a pattern of rate increases to extend over the next several years. The dollar will benefit with this change in policy direction although the initial impact of the current move is primarily a psychological one. The curve between the 2 and 10 year, at a record yesterday, was not necessarily the issue for the Fed since it was responding to the structural elimination of some liquidity guarantees for banks which have already been closed down. The steepening yield curve move reflects a natural reaction to an almost organic insisting, that over time, inflation will be a problem. There is almost no other way the curve to go, it is reasoned, but as we know that does it make it a sure thing.

So many of the old trade tendencies may be tested as we deal with systemic complications created by the most recent collapse. Easy money during boom times historically leads to inflation. Easy money in an economic collapse limits but does not eliminate deflation. What is left is a trading industry trying to catch the next move, and since the last big war was against inflation, traders just cannot put there arms around a deflationary strategy. Not after all that stimulus. But if the velocity of money in the system is limited to providing liquidity to financial institutions and not to finance economic expansion through broad public use, jobs and asset growth will be limited. Inflation trades will implode.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Data Please

Barclays showed what asset sales and transaction revenue, (they call it proprietary trading), can do to in an environment where expectations are so low, down is up. They are quick to fire up the strategies which will go directly to the bottom line, and of coarse, selling things will always work. The trading side however is one where the game clock is running. Being able to continue to capture the latency factor on order and price data where opportunities exist in part by bank/brokerages own customers willingness to be hosed by the firm's proprietary trading desk.

"A technology arms race is under way in the equities and derivatives trading markets as traders – especially high-frequency traders – seek to get trades done as fast as possible. Colocation has emerged as a popular way to do this, with exchanges offering colocation and specialist data centre operators ......" Full Article

We must be near a top of sorts in this arms race since it is all one reads about. But this race is not new however and the chase to the data drough ramped up big time as far back as 2003. What is different now is reliance on it as a front running tool for brokerage/banks to generate transaction fees. As to whether it increases volatility is not quite clear. Last year the markets rallied continually in an orderly fashion with all the high frequency trading necessary to execute underlying demand and price change.

What is more important to volatility is the anticipation of higher prices and the eagerness to participate in the pursuit of what is perceived as real profitable opportunities. For 2010, you need, if possible, a clearer picture of the overall direction, which is somewhat cloudy considering the current price action of financial stocks. If it is the real deal, they will lead.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Gold Southbound

The current rationale to buy gold continues to be fueled in large part by an investment cycle where notions of value become intertwined with a macro view of trends. Gold unfortunately shares the bubble characteristics made possible by the enabling of an investment super highway funnelling dollars from the greater population into dubious upside expectations. While there is no doubt certain world events could raise the price of gold, most of them have not been thought of and the most feared would probably be a selling opportunity.

Gold's attractiveness as an alternative safe haven for economic preservation has some major problems. If it is merely a substitute for dollars, then a substantial rise in the value of the dollar, which I believe is underway, will be craps for the shiny stuff. But if it is more than a substitute for US currency and rather is a fundamental demand/scarcity play, good luck. Those notions have been played and there is not a commodity market on earth which, from its all time highs, has not suffered a retracement of at least 50%. The declines retrace a winding road and run over all those convinced of its investment power. Gold has started down that road.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Bernanke/CMEGroup/Debt

Bernanke clearly wants to get going on raising the discount rate to bring about the' beginning of the end' for intervention. Stimulus will remain but the controlling aspects of a hike will be the first time in a while the Fed can say it is leading and not reacting. Rates will rise ever so slowly even in the face of a sluggish economy.

CMEGroup worked out a deal with News Corp for the Dow Jones Index as a move to gain control of an important piece of trading content. Other than reducing license costs, controlling the underlying product is a strategic move to drive and protect the index and its derivatives from any and all competitors. All exchanges fear substitute possibilities, never knowing what may replace any of the current high volume derivatives in the future.

Sovereign debt will be a news game for the year with little chance of any real default but certainly enough bumbling among governments to make trading interesting.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Numbers

The unemployment rate fell to 9.7% but the announcement left confusion since January is the month to do the reset for many of the data components. Regardless, once the number came out the Bears had much of their day's anticipated thunder removed despite an intraday decline of about 150 in the DJIA.

Sovereign debt issue during the week was part of the debt is bad mantra with many concerned ultimately about the U.S. and Britain. The result will be zero rates to avoid defaults, modest economic gains for a long time, and eventual commodity melt downs as the big bets on inflation and China fizzle.

Financial reform has become a joke as there seems to be a Washington thing for big money. What a shock. Since the country seems about evenly divided on party loyalty, there is no one to sway. The Tea Party folks are simply the same end of the universe aliens who have been walking in the desert since Goldwater. They are convinced their meetings will make a difference. Better chance of a large volcano erupting in central Illinois.

Markets will continue volatile trade between false hope and over stated disasters, so the numbers will fly around, but here are a few numbers that do not matter;

1. The DJIA 10,000
2 Any 200 day moving average
3. Any appraised value of any home in the last 5 years.
4. Any economic data produced by the Chinese government.
5. The number of times anyone says 'it is not about the money.'