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Frontrunning: April 20

  • After big New York wins, Trump and Clinton cast themselves as inevitable (Reuters)
  • Eastern States Take Turn in Presidential Primary Spotlight (WSJ)
  • China's Stocks Tumble Most in Seven Weeks to Break Trading Calm (BBG)
  • Oil falls on end to Kuwaiti strike, supply outlook (Reuters)
  • Oil price's decline weighs on global stock markets (Reuters)
  • Blankfein's Decade Ending With a Thud on a Humbled Wall Street (BBG)
  • Toyota to Resume Production at Most Japan Plants Next Week (WSJ)

Crude Slides After Kuwait Strikes Ends; China Markets Tumble

Crude Slides After Kuwait Strikes Ends; China Markets Tumble

The biggest catalyst for overnight markets, first reported on this site, was the announcement by Kuwait that its oil workers had ended their strike which disrupted oil production in the 4th largest OPEC producer for 3 days cutting it by as much as 1.7 mmb/d, and had served to offset the negative news from the Doha debacle. Kuwait Petroleum also added that it would boost output to 3m b/d within 3 days, which in turn has pressured the price of oil overnight, and the May WTI contract was back to just over $40 at last check, sliding 2%.

London's Rich See The Writing On The Wall: Stop Buying, Start Renting

London's Rich See The Writing On The Wall: Stop Buying, Start Renting

When the going gets tough, the rich get going first... and the rest should pay attention. While the smorgasbord of well-heeled wealthy elites will continue to proclaim that all is well in the world at any and every opportunity - for fear of the revolt of the masses - two disturbing headlines from one of the world's centers of money should have the 99% nervous.

Demand for London homes under construction slumped by 33%, according to Bloomberg, with "very few higher-end expensive sold in the central areas this year."

"Swimming Naked" - Chinese Corporate Bond Market Worst Since 2003

"Swimming Naked" - Chinese Corporate Bond Market Worst Since 2003

A week ago we highlight the "last bubble standing" was finally bursting, and as China's corporate bond bubble deflates rapidly, it appears investors are catching on to the contagion possibilities this may involve as one analyst warns "the cost has built up in the form of corporate credit risks and bank risks for the whole economy." As Bloomberg reports, local issuers have canceled 61.9 billion yuan ($9.6 billion) of bond sales in April alone, and Standard & Poor’s is cutting its assessment of Chinese firms at a pace unseen since 2003.

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