Volatility Radio
David Bowie: Fame

David Bowie: Fame
I recently noted being on the sidelines in relation to the precious metals: gold and silver. I added exposure to the metals today. I am using a stop below yesterday’s low in the GLD and gold futures.

Gold
In evening news, Deborah Ball of The Wall Street Journal reports on the crackdown of tax evasion in Switzerland, especially in relation to Europe.
While most attention has been focused on the US probe of Swiss tax havens, more attention should be paid to Europe’s relationship with Switzerland, according to the story.
“Americans have made up no more than 5% of Switzerland’s $1.8 trillion offshore-banking business.”
“Now, in the wake of the American crackdown, and Switzerland’s cooperation, an exodus of European money is under way. According to consulting group McKinsey & Co., Western European money makes up 51% of legacy assets in Switzerland, but only about a third of new money.”
“According to KPMG, as much as 80% of the Europeans’ money in Switzerland is undeclared. In all, KPMG reckons that tax evasion could represent up to 25% of Switzerland’s total private-banking market.”
“It’s a big mistake to say this is an American issue,” says Philip Marcovici, a Zurich partner at law firm Baker & McKenzie. “The Europeans are right around the corner.”
“To be sure, the demise of the tax-dodging business is akin to a melting ice cube, and the speed at which it dissolves will depend on how aggressive European governments — whose rhetoric in clamping down on tax deadbeats has exceeded real action — will be. No other government has been as aggressive as the U.S. has in putting up demands that the Swiss hand over names of suspected tax dodgers.”
Great GDP analysis:
Steve Liesman:
David Rosenberg:
It was written on the walls that success is a process
No matter how hard I fall I know it is some progress
Notches of the ladder I climb, holdin a bottle of wine
So many paths to take, I’m followin mine
-Common
Yesterday, I wrote about Goldman Sachs lowering their expectations for Q3 GDP to 2.7%. This morning, the Advance GDP number was announced at 3.5%–higher than expectations and far higher than Goldman’s lowered target of 2.7%. This is the first of three GDP announcements. We’ll see preliminary GDP on November 22 and final GDP on December 22. I find it tough to think that an advance number of 3.5% can be lowered all the way down to 2.7%. Then again, don’t count Goldman out. Goldman is Goldman.
No matter where the final Q3 GDP number comes in, the announcement today is significant in that the economy grew in the 3rd quarter for the first time in just over a year. It was widely expected that there would be growth, and now the actual growth numbers will be analyzed and argued about on television.
There will be a myriad of economic releases in the next few weeks that will provide insight into what Q4 GDP will come in at. If Q4 GDP expectations need to be revised downward, there will be large gains by being short the right sectors.

Gross Domestic Product
Risk On, Risk Off
The higher than expected GDP announcement this morning spiked S&P futures and induced a selloff in the US Dollar. I have been referring to the “risk aversion trade.” The risk aversion trade is a risk off trade–when traders and investors run for cover. In the current market, I’d describe the risk off trade as being short the S&P, long the US dollar and long treasuries. Today’s market was the opposite of the risk aversion (risk off) trade. Traders scrambled to the risk on trade–long the S&P, oil, short treasuries, short US Dollar. When the risk on trade is on, the Volatility Index (VIX) trades lower. When the risk off trade is on, the VIX trades higher. From the intraday charts below, you can see that what the S&P lost yesterday, it gained back today. Conversely, what the Volatility Index (VIX) gained yesterday, it gave back today. Yesterday was risk off, today was risk on. You follow?

Volatility Index - 15 Minute

S&P 500 Index - 15 Minute
Phone Calls
Can a phone call change your view of the market? This one quite possibly could. I have long opined in these pages that there is more risk to this market than what it is priced for. Of late, I have written of a sudden spike in the dollar that no one is prepared for. After a phone call with a broker in Japan last night, I think it is best to be short select names in the weakest sectors rather than be short broader indices or sectors. Here is why. My broker in Japan alerted me to something very important: Japanese default swap spreads are at their widest in 6 months. Other sovereign default swaps have seen a significant widening as well. This is a sign of potential dollar weakness to come. If the dollar weakens, it will be tougher for the S&P index to sell off dramatically. It is for this reason that I am once again long some silver options (calls). If this widening of swap spreads is a sign–a tell in poker parlance–of dollar weakness to come, the best way to take advantage is to be long precious metals.
The Wall Street Beat
And there you have it, straight from the gut of Vinnie Vega of the Wall Street Beat, a subsidiary of Volatility News.
And the beat goes on.