ECON DEATHBURGER Bank ISSUE 2023.3 The hidden/Secret Pow Wow Edition.

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea

jward

passin' thru
Sowwie. I still spect a nuthin burger, but I have stopped by the desk/computer a half dozen times today, so... :: shrug :: I might be more concerned than my conscious mind realizes. . .
 

alpha

Veteran Member
LIVE UPDATES
Updated Sun, Mar 26 20237:49 PM EDT
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Asia markets headed for a mixed open as banking sector stress linger

Jihye Lee
Lim Hui Jie
This is CNBC’s live blog covering Asia-Pacific markets.
A Cruise Ship next to Hong Kong Skyline on March 21, 2023 in Hong Kong, China. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

A Cruise Ship next to Hong Kong Skyline on March 21, 2023 in Hong Kong, China. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Asia-Pacific markets are set to trade mixed on Monday as investors continue to assess the impact of the banking troubles in the U.S and Europe.
On Friday, Deutsche Bank saw a selloff of its U.S.-listed shares, after the German lender’s credit default swaps jumped, without an apparent catalyst.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200
rose 0.31%, while Japanese markets point to a negative open based off Nikkei 225
futures.

The Nikkei futures contract in Chicago was at 27,270, while its counterpart in Osaka was at 27,130 against the Nikkei 225′s

last close at 27,385.25.
Hong Kong markets are also poised to fall, with Hang Seng futures trading at 19,864 compared to 19,915.68.
TICKERCOMPANYNAMEPRICECHANGE%CHANGE
.N225Nikkei 225 Index*NIKKEI27385.2500
.HSIHang Seng Index*HSI19915.6800
.AXJOS&P/ASX 200*ASX 2006983.328.10.4
.SSECShanghai*SHANGHAI3265.6500
.KS11KOSPI Index*KOSPI2414.9600
.FTFCNBCACNBC 100 ASIA IDX*CNBC 1008118.65-5.78-0.07

In the U.S., all three major indices closed higher to record a winning week, with Dow Jones Industrial Average gaining 1.2% week-to-date, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.4% and 1.7%, respectively.
— CNBC’s Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min and Alex Harring contributed to this report.
 

alpha

Veteran Member

Morning Bid: Weighing up the global banking crisis

By Jamie McGeever
Silhouettes of passerby are seen as they stand in front of an electric monitor displaying Japan's Nikkei share average and world stock indexes in Tokyo

Silhouettes of passerby are seen as they stand in front of an electric monitor displaying Japan's Nikkei share average and world stock indexes outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, October 21, 2022 REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo
March 27 (Reuters) - A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever.
Asia's economic data and policy calendar this week is light, which is perhaps just as well because investors' focus is firmly fixed elsewhere - the global banking crisis and what it means for growth, markets, and policy.
Some may balk at recent events being termed a 'crisis', but consider: two of America's top 25 banks have collapsed; a global giant, Credit Suisse, has been swallowed up; worries over another, Deutsche Bank, are mounting; the Fed has taken emergency steps and provided backstops worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
Fears over deteriorating credit conditions are rising, despite the swift and bold action from U.S. and Swiss authorities. Fed and European Central Bank officials raised the warning flags on Sunday, echoing soundings from across the private sector last week.

This is the precarious backdrop to the final week of the quarter. The turmoil and volatility across interest rates and fixed-income markets since Silicon Valley Bank was shuttered by California regulators on March 10 has been severe.


Asia will not be immune. If safe-haven buying and rising demand for dollar liquidity and collateral pushes up the dollar, economies in the region will be under pressure.

Weakening domestic exchange rates push up price pressures, forcing central banks into a corner - tighten policy when growth is slowing, or allow inflation to rise? A stronger dollar also, all else equal, tightens financial conditions.

Currency market volatility has been surprisingly subdued since the banking crisis flared up. Maybe that is about to change.

Large caps banks have ubnderperformed regionals over the past year

Large caps banks have ubnderperformed regionals over the past year
Bank stocks have tumbled but stocks in general, and particularly the interest rate-sensitive tech sector, have held up better. More speculative corners of the investment universe, like Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, have significantly outperformed.

The Nasdaq is up two weeks in a row, and still up 3% for the month, while Bitcoin is up 35% since SVB collapsed.


chart

chart
How much longer can they defy gravity? If bond yields and implied rates are plunging because a looming credit crunch makes recession far more likely, risk appetite is likely to change accordingly.

Perhaps the Fed and other central banks can achieve the holy grail of a soft landing, and take the seemingly contradictory policy steps of promoting financial stability and tackling inflation without any further ructions in the financial system.

Perhaps.

Trade figures from Hong Kong and Thailand are the main Asian data points on Monday. Later in the week Vietnamese GDP, a Thai interest rate decision, Japanese retail sales and unemployment are on the docket, while the preliminary PMIs for March across the continent - including China - start filtering in.

Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Monday:

- Germany Ifo index (March)

- ECB's Schnabel speaks

- BoE Governor Andrew Bailey peaks
 

Masterchief117

I'm all about the doom
Steven Van Metre on You Tube said yesterday that he believes that meeting was convened to make sure all of these government agencies were on the same page as to what "tools" they had and could use in the event of a continued banking collapse.

You can look him up on YT. He's been giving some good info about all of this.
 

Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Interesting, gold started out down $9. NUGT, a 2X geared gold miner index, futures were up more than 1%, just like on Friday, when gold was down $19.
 

John Green

Veteran Member
Steven Van Metre on You Tube said yesterday that he believes that meeting was convened to make sure all of these government agencies were on the same page as to what "tools" they had and could use in the event of a continued banking collapse.

You can look him up on YT. He's been giving some good info about all of this.
Yes, that’s what he said and it makes sense.
 

tanstaafl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
You have to wonder if banks and businesses are juggling their spreadsheets as the fiscal quarter draws to a close this coming week. I imagine more than a few of them are feeling the pressure and are a little desperate to dress up those quarterly financial statements.
 

West

Senior
When the federal fiat dollar goes to minus zero, people will be deep-frying placenta in trade for a day's wages.

Honestly I'll eat almost anything deep-fried. Take okra for example. It's probably the same texture and taste as placenta. Just different colors. Fry them together and call it a serf and turf.

:D
 

SmithJ

Veteran Member

First Citizens said to be near deal for Silicon Valley Bank: report​

By
Reuters
First Citizens BancShares
First Citizens BancShares is close to making a deal. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
First Citizens BancShares Inc was in advanced talks to acquire Silicon Valley Bank, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Sunday.

First Citizens could reach a deal as soon as Sunday to acquire Silicon Valley Bank from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC), according to Bloomberg News, which first reported the development.

First Citizens has around $109 billion in assets and total deposits of $89.4 billion.

The FDIC, which now controls the Silicon Valley Bank assets, and First Citizens did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

The FDIC had tried to sell SVB Private alongside Silicon Valley Bank over the last two weekends but it failed to reach a deal to sell them both together. It has since asked for separate offers for SVB Private and Silicon Valley Bank by March 24.

Valley National Bancorp (VLY.O) was also a bidder for Silicon Valley Bank, according to a separate Bloomberg report on Saturday.
 

The Hammer

Has No Life - Lives on TB
One thing we should be concerned with is that the 2 threads directly above this one as I write this are about sniffing body odor and eating placenta ...there is something very wrong here LOL
Yeah, that's gotta be some kind of market indicator...
 

RememberGoliad

Veteran Member
We do not bad mouth the Okra.

I do not anything-mouth the okra, if boiled. I now have gotten to where I like fried pretty good, and love it in gumbo, but Dad ruint it for me for a lot of years when he told me I was gonna eat that boiled okra before I got up from the table. I was about 8. I asked how many times I had to eat it to be allowed to leave, he replied 'as many as it takes'. I then said 'now I know what Gus feels like.' (Gus was our shepherd who routinely barfed up his supper, then ate it again. Grossed Mom out.) Dad hurked a bit and released me from his decree.
 

BenIan

Veteran Member
I do not anything-mouth the okra, if boiled. I now have gotten to where I like fried pretty good, and love it in gumbo, but Dad ruint it for me for a lot of years when he told me I was gonna eat that boiled okra before I got up from the table. I was about 8. I asked how many times I had to eat it to be allowed to leave, he replied 'as many as it takes'. I then said 'now I know what Gus feels like.' (Gus was our shepherd who routinely barfed up his supper, then ate it again. Grossed Mom out.) Dad hurked a bit and released me from his decree.
Raw okra is best okra.
 

Squid

Veteran Member
Or come Monday pretty much stumbling forward and neither a rocket to the moon nor the end of global finance.

The market imho is running at and above a couple if major supports. Traders imho are looking for a reason to rally but also a little paranoid that another banking shoe could drop.

Many people in finance keep fighting ‘the last war’ failing to understand its something different. The risk is and always has been the derivative market and the counter party risk. Many of these trillions of dollars in risk are position hedges that are more insurance than a real position trade. During normal market conditions many options and derivative of options expire worthless and unused. The problem is in extreme moves some players (go watch The Big Short) are heavily on both the right and very wrong side of trades that ‘would never happen’

When lots of very low probability trades hit then not only does this hit some big players but when they can’t cover their position this starts putting strain on the player on the side of that position.

I think many are looking for Lehman moment thinking its the same thing. That was bad loans all collapsing at once ( or impacting institutions ). This is not situation of the banks giving many bad loans to people with no real income packaged and sold off. Currently this started with a moronic wokester leftist we are the smartest people in the world run bank that cared more about ESG and LGBTQ+ than standard banking risk balancing. Of course they would fail, leftist fail at every grand utopic business they attempt. They bought too many low rate Federal bonds and then the rates changed and NOBODY thought to adjust their bond portfolio. Freakin morons but they were the highest paid bank employee’s who received a 50% bonus on the rich Californian bail-out to stay on. Leave it to your government to reward the morons that not only ran the bank in the ground but gave themselves bonuses AND bank loans right before the bank became insolvent. Since they who ‘robbed’ the bank and tax payers blind’ were mostly big democrat contributors don’t hold your breath looking for any perp walks. Kind of exactly like a recent exchange that also searched for the lowest company limit on the old price chart.

Now since the pieces are not yet all in place for the CBDC I think things could very easily quiet down and even see a short term rally before reality and the combination of an earnings recession and a real people recession that could hit 3rd and 4th quarter bring a Holiday of suck to one and all.

A week of walking the razor, how fun for us.
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
I do not anything-mouth the okra, if boiled. I now have gotten to where I like fried pretty good, and love it in gumbo, but Dad ruint it for me for a lot of years when he told me I was gonna eat that boiled okra before I got up from the table
Steamed okra is great, but it's fragile. Overcooking is easy and then it's just slime.
 

Milk-maid

Girls with Guns Member

Squid

Veteran Member

Goldman Trader: "Nothing Has Gone As Planned: More Things Will Break And A Credit Crunch Is Coming"​

BY TYLER DURDEN
SUNDAY, MAR 26, 2023 - 05:30 PM

THIS ARTICLE IS SO GOOD, IT'S FOR MEMBERS ONLY.​

(anyone have a membership, that can post this??)
Don’t need the article.

The credit crunch is not coming its already here. Banks were already tightening financing standards for ‘at risk’ area’s like commercial real estate. Now rising credit defaults in high risk (low credit score) auto loans AND the banks needing to recapitalize in a surprise rising rate environment means this credit squeeze will likely spread to the entire lending market.

The you and me impact is banks could cut credit lines on HELOCs and lower credit card limits, cut funding to all but the safest small and medium business. If you do need a loan you will pay more in fees and see higher rates (even if the prime listed rates soften). Oh you saw our fantastic car loan, err sorry Your credit score doesn’t make the cut. But hey we can just get you a higher rate but ‘finance’ your car for 8-9 years.

Kind of ironic we hear about tens and hundreds in billions to foreign countries and bank programs but None of those billions ever seem to make it to you and me.

You will own nothing, and…
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
Banks were already tightening financing standards for ‘at risk’ area’s like commercial real estate. Now rising credit defaults in high risk (low credit score) auto loans AND the banks needing to recapitalize in a surprise rising rate environment means this credit squeeze will likely spread to the entire lending market.
I'm not too worried about tightening, it's to be expected in this environment. I think the article is addressing gridlock which could come any day.
 
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