Deutsche Bank is back in the spotlight with everyone screaming for their demise. Personally I don't see it (Germany will save them no...
Deutsche Bank is back in the spotlight with everyone screaming for their demise. Personally I don't see it (Germany will save them no problem at all), and DB's credits have been in question for years. However, I would not take bets on the securities, at this point.
Safe sailing DB. Your research holds a special place in my economic heart. - Chad
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Giving the markets jitters, struggling German banking giant Deutsche Bank AG DB hit a new 52-week low of $11.23 on Monday, closing down 7% to $11.85 on the NYSE, marking the lowest level in decades. The price movement reflected investors’ concern that the bank may raise capital to settle the potential $14-billion accord with the U.S. Department of Justice (“DoJ”) related to mortgage practices. Notably, as of Jun 30, the bank had €5.5 billion ($6.2 billion) in its litigation reserves - Zack's
Update: BofA/Merrill upgraded Deutsche Bank's credit to Neutral, not the equity
The Securities Law Blog: SEC Charges Anheuser-Busch With Violating FCPA and... : The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that...
The Securities Law Blog: SEC Charges Anheuser-Busch With Violating FCPA and...: The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that Anheuser-Busch InBev has agreed to pay $6 million to settle charges that it viol...
A follow up to "Toulouse, Toujours" - "Concorde Files" - a new book by Chad is coming out in Nov. See Pre-Purchase L...
A follow up to "Toulouse, Toujours" - "Concorde Files" - a new book by Chad is coming out in Nov.
Basically if the data had agreed... When the data does not agree you get the below... Despite Fed optimism for near-term improvement, the U....
Basically if the data had agreed...
When the data does not agree you get the below...
Despite Fed optimism for near-term improvement, the U.S. economy is expected to continue to alternate between “moderate” and “slow” activity levels, failing to meet even the Fed’s new, lower forecast of 2% growth in 2016, with lackluster price pressures well below the Committee’s longer-term objective of 2%. Furthermore, with the debate over U.K. membership in the EU heating up, a near-term resolution on either side is unlikely, resulting in an overhang of “global risks.” While the Fed has seemingly redirected their focus to September, swift improvement in the domestic economy is unlikely, making it difficult for the Fed to justify a second-round rate increase in a little more than two months. Lingering “uncertainties” both domestic and international could further delay a second hike until the end of the year or beyond. - Stifel
Housing starts fell in May and multi-family construction housing dropped. Single family homes went up. Housing consisted of a near .06% o...
Housing starts fell in May and multi-family construction housing dropped. Single family homes went up. Housing consisted of a near .06% of Q1 GDP - which is a big deal to some.
The summer is here (sort of ) and that means the hope of ravenous home sales.
Fitch: In the Midst of a Multiyear US Housing Recovery
"Challenges remain, including restrictive credit qualification standards and narrowing affordability. Various housing and related statistics bottomed in early to mid-2009. Since then, for a time, the on-and-off, then on-again nature of the federal housing credit spurred, or at least pulled forward, primarily entry-level buyer housing demand. With the US economy moving from recession to expansion in third-quarter 2009, plus very attractive housing affordability and government incentives, housing was jump-started. However, faltering consumer confidence, among other issues, had largely restrained the recovery. New home sales and single-family starts retested the bottom during the summer of 2010 and in February 2011. During second-half 2013, the sharp rise in home prices and interest rates and the government impasse over the budget and debt ceiling led many prospective homebuyers to take a careful stance in the shorter term. Consumer caution and poor weather from early in the year restrained the gain in housing metrics in 2014. The growth in starts, especially single-family, was more robust in 2015" - Fitch Ratings Press Release
You can ask my wife, I always wondered what went on with hotels and unused rooms. For years we lived in a major business di...
You can ask my wife, I always wondered what went on with hotels and unused rooms. For years we lived in a major business district bespotted with hotels. Of course when hotels.com came around that was a good enough answer for me, but then came AirBnB, and now AirBnB is worth more than most hotel chains despite being a private company, and holding no real estate. That is a major disruption. However, there is more ahead. Hotels are at times cumbersome real estate holdings, and that costs money. They are also service based, and that takes employees. Those perceived margins get thinner by the moment. See the link below for a more in depth look into the hotel industry shakeup.
The mechanics behind an EU member state exit https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/sites/files/oxlaw/final_report_bjorge_brexit_i_0.pdf
The Federal Reserve provided $6 million of liquidity to foreign central banks in the latest week via its swap lines for foreign central bank...
The Federal Reserve provided $6 million of liquidity to foreign central banks in the latest week via its swap lines for foreign central banks, the New York Fed said on Thursday. The European Central Bank swapped $5 million with a term of 7 days and a rate of 0.87 percent. The Bank of Japan swapped $1 million with a term of 7 days and a rate of 0.85 percent. The Federal Reserve has established swap arrangements with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank, and the Bank of Japan in an effort to respond to the reemergence of strains in short-term funding markets in Europe. - RTRS
Korea's Implied Volatility Index June 08 - June 14, 2016 - {AKA, What A Weekend} Link to published image
Korea's Implied Volatility Index June 08 - June 14, 2016 -
{AKA, What A Weekend}
Link to published image
- Both have somewhat tyrannical referendums on a regular basis - Both are financial hubs, filled with economists who are worried abo...
- Both have somewhat tyrannical referendums on a regular basis
- Both are financial hubs, filled with economists who are worried about Brexit (UK) and the Swiss, who are worried about upsetting 100* agreements with the EU securing the (unsecure) special status of Switzerland
- Both worry about tax on trade from losing access to the single market
Imagine of Schengen Area
* I seriously think it is over 100 agreements, treaties and special clauses
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