Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 6:50 a.m. No.77037   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7038 >>7056 >>7077 >>7114 >>7119

SAM900 USAF C-32A departed Kuwait City Int'l Airport nw after a ground stop of about 6 hours.

Blinken says Iran negotiating process cannot go on indefinitely

 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Thursday the negotiating process with Iran to revive a 2015 nuclear deal could not go on indefinitely, and that the ball is in Tehran's court. Indirect talks between Tehran and Washington to revive the nuclear pact, from which then-President Donald Trump withdrew the United States in 2018, adjourned on June 20, two days after the hardline cleric Ebrahim Raisi was elected president of the Islamic Republic. Raisi takes office on Aug. 5.

 

Parties involved in the negotiations, which also include China, Russia, France, Britain, Germany and the European Union, have yet to say when they might resume. "We are committed to diplomacy, but this process cannot go on indefinitely," said Blinken, addressing a news conference in Kuwait. "At some point the gains achieved by the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) cannot be fully recovered by a return to the JCPOA if Iran continues the activities that it's undertaken with regard to its nuclear program," he said. "We have clearly demonstrated our good faith and desire to return to mutual compliance with the nuclear agreement...The ball remains in Iran’s court and we will see if they're prepared to make the decisions necessary to come back into compliance." Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last say on Iran's state matters, declared on Wednesday that Tehran would not accept Washington's "stubborn" demands in nuclear talks and again flatly rejected adding any other issues to the deal. Gulf Arab states have asked to be included in the negotiations, and for any deal to address what they call Iran's ballistic missile programme and destabilising behaviour in the region.

 

Blinken also said he had discussed during his visit to Kuwait, where he met with the ruling emir, the subject of relocating Afghan interpreters. Many Afghans who worked with NATO forces fear reprisals from Islamist Taliban insurgents as U.S. troops depart.

 

The United States uses several military bases in Kuwait, with which it has strong relations after leading a coalition that ended Iraq's 1990-91 occupation of the Gulf state.

https://news.yahoo.com/blinken-says-iran-negotiating-process-114817222.html

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 6:58 a.m. No.77040   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7056 >>7077 >>7114 >>7119

Report Blames Credit Suisse's "Lackadaisical" Risk Management For Failing To Act On Archegos "Red Flags"

 

More than four months after the Archegos blowup rattled markets and dealt a serious black eye to Swiss megabank Credit Suisse, the law firm hired by the bank to investigate what went wrong has finally released a report on its findings.

 

Readers may remember that the half-dozen or so megabanks servicing Archegos apparently didn't realize until it was already too late that their prime brokerage divisions would likely be left on the hook for the fund's positions, as the entirety of the $20 billion in capital it had posted as collateral wouldn't even begin to cover the wicked margin call. Eventually, a plan to slowly unload the firm's positions quickly collapsed when Morgan Stanley and Goldman broke ranks, leaving Credit Suisse - the most exposed, and the slowest to sell - on the hook with more than $5 billion in losses.

 

Making matters worse (for Credit Suisse, at least), the Archegos blowup coincided almost perfectly with the collapse of Greensill, a trade-finance firm that packaged assets used to stock $10 billion in Credit Suisse "trade finance" funds, forcing the bank to gate the funds. Clients were so furious that CS has reportedly considered covering their losses as several major clients - including sovereign wealth funds - threatened to cut off all business ties with the Swiss megabank. Credit Suisse shares pulled back on Thursday after the firm confirmed the extent of the Archegos losses (though unsurprisingly its earnings report and presentation went to great lengths to obscure it). The bank's Q2 earnings report, also released Thursday morning, confirmed that it was indeed one of the worst quarters in the bank's 160-plus year history. The firm reported a nearly 80% drop in profits YoY, as it reckoned with the fallout from the twin scandals. CEO Thomas Gottstein, who held on to his job as a handful of senior executives were unceremoniously fired, pointed to the report, compiled by white-shoe law firm Paul Weiss, as evidence that CS was taking pains to learn from its mistakes.

 

While the report exposed incompetence in the firm's risk-management measures, it didn't find any evidence of criminal wrongdoing.

 

“We take these two events very seriously and we are determined to learn all the right lessons,” said Thomas Gottstein, Credit Suisse’s chief executive. “We have significantly reduced our risk-weighted assets and leverage exposure and improved the risk profile of our prime services business in the investment bank, as well as strengthened the overall risk capabilities across the bank.” The report mostly focused on the firm's failure to effectively manage risks in the prime brokerage unit, which is considered a relatively "safe" business line - until there's a blowup like this (the world saw a similar dynamic at play during JPM's "London Whale" trading fiasco). To remedy its mistakes, the firm said that after reviewing the roles played by 23 people, it had fired nine staffers, including the two heads of its prime services business, and imposed $70MM of monetary penalties on staff, including clawing back previously-paid bonuses. The cuts and clawbacks helped the bank reduce its operating expenses by a whopping 1%, it revealed.

 

As far as apportioning blame, the report didn't name any executives by name, though it did single out the head of equities trading and the risk managers responsible for monitoring the Archegos trades as the bank employees who were responsible for preventing the disaster. The report says they "failed to heed these signs, despite evidence that some individuals did raise concerns appropriately." More broadly, the entire prime brokerage business "had a lackadaisical attitude towards risk and risk discipline."

 

The 165-page report also showed that CS employees "shrugged off" Archegos founder Bill Hwang's checkered past, which included allegations of insider trading. The bank promised that this would be "a turning point" for its risk management. Because CS was worried about losing Archegos as a client, it ignored red flags. When risk managers requested that the fund post an additional $1 billion of collateral, relationship managers over at the prime brokerage desk said that "would be like asking them to move their business". "The Archegos matter directly calls into question the competence of the business and risk personnel who had all the information necessary to appreciate the magnitude and urgency of the Archegos risks, but failed at multiple junctures to take decisive and urgent action to address them," the report said. Some of the details confirmed in the report had already been reported by the press. For example, the report confirmed that Credit Suisse earned just $17MM in fees last year from its work with Archegos.

moar

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/report-blames-credit-suisses-lackadaisical-risk-management-failing-act-archegos-red-flags

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 7:05 a.m. No.77044   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7045 >>7047

>>77043

Joe can't keep his shit together at this point..

His day just started according to the schedule.

Must be nice stopping at 4pm EST every day.

I fuggen get up before him.

kek

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 7:16 a.m. No.77048   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7050

>>77047

don't think they gonna do that (25th) as that is too public and messy.

Think he just goes away (187'd) at some point

That easier for them to deal with.

Plus they get the sympathy of "all those voters"

kek

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 7:40 a.m. No.77053   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7056 >>7070 >>7077 >>7101 >>7114 >>7119

Some SAM departures from JBA

 

SAM939 USAF C-32A departed south (dis AC, as SAM915 decided to head to JBA yesterday after passing Atlanta from a Rockford, IL departure-mebby heading to where it was supposed to go yesterday before changing directions a bit abruptly-see here >>76880 pb

This AC also had a ground stop at Little Rock, AR and an overnight at Memphis Int'l on Tuesday.

 

SAM872 USAF G5 heading west at present

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 7:41 a.m. No.77054   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7055

>>77052

agree.

This would be ideal and take care of many issues.

Making it fixable via this broken system is not gonna do it.

We'll get another example of dat with the recall here.

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 7:49 a.m. No.77057   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7059

>>77055

>CB's

That is the original issue that brought me here...getting rid of that.

The pizzagate and trafficking stuff too.

Many thought it was gonna "go" in 2008- I certainly did then-but it was not completely connected enough to do that.

It is nao.

FRB just started foreign repo's so we got some time for that to keep them all propped

They gonna do currency swaps hard before it's all done and dusted.

Gets really ugly when they start those en masse

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 8:04 a.m. No.77062   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7077 >>7114 >>7119

Yields Rocked By Surprise Apple Bond Issuance

 

Last Friday, JPM's Nick Panigirtzoglou asked a question: just how illiquid is the Treasury market - still viewed by many as deepest, most liquid market on the planet - and whether the recent rollercoaster in bond yields was first and foremost a function of growing Treasury lack of liquidity (spoiler alert: a lot).

 

Fast forward to today when we got the latest stark example of this illiquidity, when in the unofficial launch to buyback season, shortly after the disappointing GDP report which sent yields sliding, Apple announced a four-part, back-end loaded debt issuance offering of paper due 2028, 2031, 2051, and 2061 which clearly took the bond market by surprise today, with the result a sharp re-steepening of the Treasury curve and 10Y yield spiking by 2bps to session highs.

 

Bloomberg confirms that this move was largely rate-locks (i.e., buyers hedging rate exposure) with payers at the back-end of the curve in the U.S. swaps market in London linked to the slog of corporate issuance.

 

How big is the offering? Therein lies the rub: according to Bloomberg's Alyce Anders, market chatter is that the Apple deal could be in the $6 billion to $8 billion range. In other words, as little as $8 billion in offsetting TSY hedging (i.e., shorting) can move the most liquid benchmark paper by 2bps. This is a striking collapse in liquidity in a market that clearly can barely absorb any volume without moving the entire market!

 

Some statistics: the last time Apple issued a benchmark deal was Feb. 1, 2021 with a $14 billion six-part offering, the technology behemoth’s largest bond offering since it brought $17 billion in 2013. The February order book peaked at $33.7 billion, 2.4 times the deal size. In any case, with a TSY market this illiquid, and only set to get worse as traders hit the beach, beware any sudden reversals should the market be hit with any unexpected developments which see a sharp move in yields. And speaking of buybacks which the proceeds from Apple's bond offering will most likely be used for, earlier this week BofA noted that while corporate client buybacks have picked up over the last three weeks amid the start of earnings season, buybacks this year still haven’t returned to ‘normal’ (preCOVID run-rate):

*Despite a strong start in 1Q21 (4Q20 earnings season) as many corporates reinitiated buybacks, the pace slowed last quarter in 2Q (1Q results season), with buybacks ~50% below 2Q19 levels and nearly 70% below those levels when normalized by S&P 500 market cap (cover chart). Companies doing the largest buyback programs have recently been outperforming, perhaps amid greater scarcity vs. the pre-COVID years when buybacks largely underperformed.

*Three sectors have dominated buyback activity this year: Tech, Financials and Consumer Discretionary. But Discretionary is the only one of the 11 sectors where buybacks have eclipsed 2Q19 levels.

And now that Apple has given the all clear, expect the next push higher in stocks to come not from retail investors but from companies themselves.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/yields-rocked-surprise-apple-bond-issuance

 

from July 21, 2021

Company stock buybacks are on track to hit a record $1 trillion amid ongoing economic recovery

https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/corporate-stock-buybacks-on-track-record-1-trillion-share-repurchases-2021-7

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 8:17 a.m. No.77064   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7068

>>77059

I should say I knew it was gonna get done when the FRB stuff was dropped..cause why tell everyone about it?

That's when I pushed the chips all in baby

Knew most 'o dat years ago via reading many books and felt totally powerless.

It was in 2007 when they 'saved' Bear Stearns that I promised to do whatever it took if the op. ever came to get these fuckers.

Lost a bunch of money that I had not banked so that muh fault but I knew what they were doing with that and by that time the money became irrelevant.

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 9:38 a.m. No.77070   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7099 >>7114 >>7119

>>77053

SAM939 USAF C-32A on approach at Homestead ARB from JBA depart and just did a go around

This is where it was headed to yesterday when it changed directions south of Atlanta.

Got a "call" to return to JBA imo

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 9:50 a.m. No.77074   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7076 >>7077 >>7114 >>7119

Robinhood stock jeered in its public debut

 

Stock opened flat with the IPO price, then dropped below it.

 

Robinhood Markets Inc., which has disrupted Wall Street with its no-fee trading app, was jeered in its public debut on Thursday, as the stock quickly fell below its reference price.

 

The highly anticipated initial public offering priced overnight at $38 a share, at the bottom of the expected pricing range of between $38 and $42 a share. Robinhood raised a net $1.89 billion in the IPO, after underwriting discounts and commissions. The initial indication of where the stock might open was at $42.00, 10.5% above the IPO price, but expectations declined steadily as time went on.

 

The stock’s first trade was at $38.00 at 12:24 p.m. Eastern for 11.4 million shares, or flat with the IPO price.

 

It received a quick initial boost, rising to an intraday high of $40.25, before investors backed off. The stock was recently trading at $34.56, or 9.0% below the IPO price.

 

With a total of about 835.7 million shares outstanding after the IPO, the company was currently being valued at just below $29 billion, compared with expectations of up to $35 billion when IPO terms were first set.

 

The disappointing debut comes on a day in which the Renaissance IPO exchange-traded fund IPO, 0.11% edged up 0.2% in afternoon trading, while the S&P 500 index SPX, 0.56% gained 0.6% toward a record high.

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/robinhood-set-to-receive-a-lukewarm-reception-on-wall-street-11627572105

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/HOOD

Anonymous ID: 7b6468 July 29, 2021, 11 a.m. No.77106   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7114 >>7119

>>76926 pb

BOXER41 USAF C-40C inbound to JBA from Geneva Int'l Airport

Deputy Sec. of State returning from Japan, SoKo, Mongolia, China, and Geneva meetings.

 

Cap #2 sauce

Senior Counselor, Albright Stonebridge Group

Yes that Madeline Albright

https://www.wellesley.edu/albright/albright/about/faculty/wendy-r-sherman

 

Dude or not?