The light volume ramps higher continue on.
FOMC minutes tomorrow and the Jobs Report at the end of the week.
According to this the Fed is buying 61% of US debt. That leaves quite a bit of hot money looking for beta in the equity and junk markets.
"In the Incarnation the whole human race recovers the dignity of the image of God. Thereafter, any attack, even on the least of men, is an attack on Christ, who took on the form of man, and in his own Person restored the image of God in all. Through our relationship with the Incarnation, we recover our true humanity, and at the same time are delivered from that perverse individualism which is the consequence of sin, and recover our solidarity with all mankind."
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
"As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods,
They kill us for their sport."
William Shakespeare, King Lear
"While clients of MF Global say that it was unprecedented for the firm to abandon a longstanding business practice to wire money to customers who were closing accounts, the documents are not definite proof of wrongdoing. In recent weeks, federal authorities have come to suspect that MF Global’s actions amount to sloppy record-keeping, rather than criminal fraud."
Futures
Evidence of fraud at MF Global
By Daniel P. Collins
April 2, 2012
The Commodity Customer Coalition delivered a memo to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder as well as U.S. attorneys from New York and Chicago and members of Congress stating that there is clear evidence of intent to commit fraud by MF Global.
In the early days of the MF Global bankruptcy one of the red flags that something was incredibly wrong at the firm were reports from multiple customers that MF Global had told them that they would no longer wire transfer money to them and instead cut them checks.
This was disturbing to customers used to moving money by wire at a moment’s notice. Worse yet is that many of these checks—perhaps thanks to the delay—ended up bouncing. After last week’s hearing when it became clear that money was transferred out of customer segregated accounts the fact that MF Global purposely slowed down payment to customers is evidence of intent to commit fraud according to the CCC memo. “When you have abrupt changes in standard business practices that is a “badge of fraud,”” says CCC co-founder John Roe.
The memo includes account statements from Steven N. Kaplan a client of Roe’s firm BTR Trading. Kaplan had requested a wire transfer of customer funds but instead received a check, which was co-signed by Edith O’Brien and Christy Vavra, that later bounced.
The memo states, “The decision to stop sending wires to customers from the segregated accounts demonstrates that MF Global was concerned with preserving liquidity. This may have been done to bolster the prospects of selling the firm to Interactive Brokers or because they were concerned that the draining of this account would reveal that customer funds had already been commingled to stave off MF Global’ s bankruptcy.”
The CCC is concerned press reports citing unnamed sources claiming that no actual crimes have been committed in the MF Global bankruptcy would hurt customers’ chances of being made whole. The memo states, “we believe that sufficient evidence exists of intent to commit an actual fraud to support probable cause to arrest one or more employees of MF Global for several state and federal financial crimes.”
Read the rest here.
Charles Biderman: The Problem with Rigged Markets
Friday, March 30, 2012
"Even Wile E. Coyote had to come back down to earth sooner or later", says Charles Biderman, founder of TrimTabs Investment Research. In his opinion, the prices of stocks and bonds - enabled by excessive financialization of our economy and central bank money printing - have been defying gravity for a dangerously long time.
If we continue to do all we can to preserve the status quo -- to maintain "phony" asset price levels as Charles calls them -- at best we will restrict overall growth and handicap the economy.
The problem isn't so much the unfairness and malinvestment evident in a rigged market. As Charles shrewdly asks: what happens when the market becomes un-rigged?
We've never experienced the unwinding of an entirely manipulated financial system, so we can't predict for sure. But at this point, a painful collapse of our markets and loss of the US dollar as the world's reserve currency seem entirely plausible...
Read the rest here.