Showing posts with label PPT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PPT. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Stocks Keep Rising, But Major Speed Bumps Are Dead Ahead

Bored yet?

Since bottoming out the day before Christmas (December 24), the major US indices have gained in eight of the last ten sessions, including today's smallish gains.

While going eight for ten to the upside certainly sounds impressive, there is a small problem. The NASDAQ. S&P 500, Dow Industrials, and NYSE Composite are all trading below their 50-and-200-day moving averages. What's more troubling is that those averages are inverted, with the 50 below the 200, as all of the charts show the so-called "death cross" occurring variously between late November and mid-December.

This is troubling to chartists because the rallies have produced some ill-placed optimism in the minds of some investors, mostly affecting those passive types with 401k, retirement, IRA and other "hands off" accounts.

So, while everybody is cheering the fantastic performance of stocks in the new year, there are major speed bumps dead ahead. Turning around inverted moving averages is the kind of heavy lifting for which the PPT was created and how the Fed came up with various forms of money creation, such as QE, QE2, Operation Twist, and other variants of magical fiat money.

Earnings season is about to kick into high gear next week, and expectations are not all that rosy, though, if one tracks home builders, like Lennar (LEN), which missed expectations but still managed a gain today of nearly eight percent. Of course, the stock is just off its 52-week low, so there's an outside chance that everybody, all at once decided it was too cheap to pass up.

So, the question is whether the PPT or the Fed or the Bank of Japan or the ECB, or all of them are of like mind and will buy with open arms every stock that looks like a sure loser over the next four to five weeks.

There's an old adage in the investing world, that posits, "don't fight the Fed." This time it appears to be for real and the Fed, from the speeches and off-the-cuff quotes by some of the regional presidents, is in a fighting mood.

Dow Jones Industrial Average January Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
1/2/19 23,346.24 +18.78 +18.78
1/3/19 22,686.22 -660.02 -641.24
1/4/19 23,433.16 +746.94 +105.70
1/7/19 23,531.35 +98.19 +203.89
1/8/19 23,787.45 +256.10 +459.99
1/9/19 23,879.12 +91.67 +551.66

At the Close, Wednesday, January 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,879.12, +91.67 (+0.39%)
NASDAQ: 6,957.08, +60.08 (+0.87%)
S&P 500: 2,584.96, +10.55 (+0.41%)
NYSE Composite: 11,778.42, +62.19 (+0.53%)

Monday, January 7, 2019

Volatility Tamped Down By PPT A Probable Cause For Monday's Dullness

Chip stocks (NVDA, ADM) led the big gain on the NASDAQ, but the session overall was lackluster, with a dip at the open and a weak close.

Investors are still unconvinced the volatility of the past few months has abated. Today felt more like a temporary reprieve rather than a new paradigm. There's also the very good possibility that the Plunge Protection Team (PPT) is still active, especially considering the quick turnaround this morning. It was classic insider action, like hitting sellers over the head with a sledgehammer.

The PPT has absolutely no subtlety about it which makes their intrusions somewhat obvious, as has always been the case, even back in the days when people thought they were a myth or some kind of financial urban legend. As it turned out, the PPT was always a real thing, and a threat to fair, unmolested, open markets. Now that they've been out in the open for at least a decade, not much is left to the imagination. US markets - and, likely, almost every other market in the world - have been highly manipulated by central banks and governments working in cahoots and that's unlikely to end soon.

With friends like these in markets and the preponderance of investments in stocks, investing today is riskier than it has ever been. Who wants to play in a casino knowing that the dealer has the ability to cheat at any time? As unsuitable as it is for large money players to intervene at times of crisis, it's even worse when they do so at the drop of a hat, or, as the case may be, a few thousand points on the Dow.

It's not pleasant to witness wild swings in entire indices on a regular basis, which is why so many individual investors are so jaded. They know their money is at extreme risk all the time. There has to be a better way, and there used to be, prior to the financialization era we currently are enduring, before everything from mom's mortgage to pizza stocks are part and parcel of every fund's basic needs.

The trouble with markets today are the real probability that in the case of an extended bear market, the entire global financial system would simply implode. It keeps more than just a few heads at the IMF, BIS, and the Fed from sleeping well at night.

Dow Jones Industrial Average January Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
1/2/19 23,346.24 +18.78 +18.78
1/3/19 22,686.22 -660.02 -641.24
1/4/19 23,433.16 +746.94 +105.70
1/7/19 23,531.35 +98.19 +203.89

At the Close, Monday, January 7, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,531.35, +98.19 (+0.42%)
NASDAQ: 6,823.47, +84.61 (+1.26%)
S&P 500: 2,549.69, +17.75 (+0.70%)
NYSE Composite: 11,605.96, +72.62 (+0.63)

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Weekend Wrap: Friday's Big Gains Offset Thursday's Huge Loss, Dow Up Just 105 In 2019

Wall Street's week straddled 2018 and 2019, as Monday's session was the last of the prior year, and Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday starting off the new year.

Thus, the following final closing prices for the major indices, which will be instructive as we plow through the weeks, months, and quarters ahead:

Dow Industrials 12/31/18: 23,327.46
Dow Transports 12/31/18: 9,170.40
NASDAQ 12/31/18: 6,635.28
S&P 500 12/31/18: 2,506.85
NYSE Composite 12/31/18: 11,374.39

Two big trading days happened back-to-back, in opposite directions. Thursday's (1/3) downdraft was largely attributable to Apple's announcement that revenue for its fiscal first quarter (4th quarter) results would come in well below analyst estimates. December PMI from the ISM was also a contributing factor, insinuating a slowdown in the general economy, much of it tied to US-China trade tensions.

A blowout December jobs report was responsible Friday's about-face. Words from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell added fuel to the ascending fire. Powell stated quite plainly that the Fed was going to be flexible about raising rates and drawing down its balance sheet, which is pulling $50 billion a month out of the bond market.

After all was said and done, the week was just so-so, though the bias was obviously trending positive. There's some inkling of manipulation and coordination of and by the PPT, especially since the Fed was so compliant with its dovish commentary. Nobody really wants a bear market, and the data from Friday's release of the December non-farm payroll report (312K actual vs. 122K projected) suggests that the economy is humming right along and President Trump's promise to create more US jobs is being kept.

The Fed's jawboning was well-timed, coming a day after a confidence-shaking 660-point drop on the Dow, but the remarks by Chairman Powell won't be the last time the Fed has moved the goal posts in search of expediency.

Dow Jones Industrial Average January Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
1/2/19 23,346.24 +18.78 +18.78
1/3/19 22,686.22 -660.02 -641.24
1/4/19 23,433.16 +746.94 +105.70

At the Close, Friday, January 4, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,433.16, +746.94 (+3.29%)
NASDAQ: 6,738.86, +275.35 (+4.26%)
S&P 500: 2,531.94, +84.05 (+3.43%)
NYSE Composite: 11,533.34, +342.90 (+3.06%)

For the Week:
Dow: +370.76 (+1.61%)
NASDAQ: +154.34 (+2.34%)
S&P 500: +46.20 (+1.86%)
NYSE Composite: +242.39 (+2.15%)

Thursday, December 27, 2018

The Market Giveth, The Market Taketh Away, And Giveth Again

Stocks went on a wild ride Thursday, a phenomenon confounding to novice investors but completely understood by market observers who have been in the game for a few decades or more.

There's little doubt that the Dow's plunge of 600 points and last-hour rally were the work of the Plunge Protection Team, or PPT, or as they are formally known, the President's Working Group on Financial Markets.

Here are a few links for reference:

Mnuchin Calls Plunge Protection Team; Stocks Soar One Day Later

President's Working Group on Financial Markets

Happy Holidays!

You've been played.

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39
12/6/18 24,947.67 -79.40 -590.79
12/7/18 24,388.95 -558.72 -1149.51
12/10/18 24,423.26 +34.31 -1115.20
12/11/18 24,370.24 -53.02 -1168.22
12/12/18 24,527.27 +157.03 -1011.19
12/13/18 24,597.38 +70.11 -941.08
12/14/18 24,100.51 -496.87 -1437.95
12/17/18 23,592.98 -507.53 -1945.58
12/18/18 23,675.64 +82.66 -1862.92
12/19/18 23,323.66 -351.98 -2214.90
12/20/18 22,859.60 -464.06 -2678.96
12/21/18 22,445.37 -414.23 -3093.19
12/24/18 21,792.20 -653.17 -3746.36
12/26/18 22,878.45 +1086.25 -2660.11
12/27/18 23,138.82 +260.37 -2399.74

At the Close, Thursday, December 27, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,138.82, +260.37 (+1.14%)
NASDAQ: 6,579.49, +25.14 (+0.38%)
S&P 500: 2,488.83, +21.13 (+0.86%)
NYSE Composite: 11,285.31, +81.22 (+0.72%)

Sunday, December 9, 2018

WEEKEND WRAP: The Week The Wheels Fell Off

Was this the week that everything fell completely apart?

The answer is a matter of perspective and speculation, but it sure looked pretty bad. Stocks, with no significant deviation between the Dow, NASDAQ, NYSE Composite, and S&P 500 companies took a major hit, or, rather, a series of heavy blows. Stocks were bludgeoned with regularity, flogged within an inch of their lives, only to be flayed again the following day without respect to any particular sector or class.

Monday was the only positive day of the week, with all the major indices closing nicely in the green. Tuesday was a nightmare, with the Dow dropping nearly 800 points and the other indices dragged down the same abyss. By virtue of the death of former president George H.W. Bush, current president, Donald J. Trump issued an executive order, closing all federal offices for a day of mourning, thus shutting down not just mail service and other government functions, but the financial markets as well.

After the surprise day off, traders got right back to selling again, whacking away with the same ferocity as on Tuesday, but, by mid-afternoon, a suspicious rally emerged, sending the S&P and NASDAQ into positive territory by the close, leaving the Dow with a minor loss of 79 points after it had been down more than 700 during the session. As many expected, the lift late Thursday was either short-term short covering or some button-pushing by the PPT (President's Working Group on Financial Markets... remember them?), setting up Friday for a major collapse of another 558 points on the Dow with the other indices following the lead lower.

What actually was behind the carnage was difficult to discern, as a convergence of events helped shape the worrying. Wrapping up the G20 meeting in Buenos Aires on Sunday, President Trump and China's president, Xi Jinping, announced a 90-day calling off period on new tariffs that were supposed to go into effect and increasing the percentages on others already in force on January 1. Those changes were postponed until March 31, with the intent of the two leaders to work out a framework for trade policy going forward. Markets were obviously pleased on Monday, but by Tuesday felt that a mere 90 days would not be enough to develop long-term policy for either nation.

Politics also is playing a role in the background, as Special Counsel Mueller's bogus "Russia collusion" investigation drags onward with the expectation that a final report will is forthcoming in the very near term. The corrosive political climate in Washington is not only a worry for those involved or tangentially aligned, but it's also having a somewhat chilling effect on investments. Nobody likes uncertainty, but especially so, Wall Street, and when it involves the highest levels of the federal government, the fear gauge goes bonkers and skepticism reigns.

On top of that, there's still a general perception that stocks are not just fully valued, but some are significantly overvalued. More than a few analysts have maintained that the effects of the Trump tax cuts are wearing thin, the federal government is running enormous deficits and a profits squeeze will be apparent by the end of the first or second quarter of 2019.

A minor inversion of the treasury yield curve occurred - almost without notice - on Monday, when the yield on the three-year bill rose above that of the 5-year note. On Tuesday, the 2-year joined in, and both the 2-and-3-year yields ended the week above that of the five. The 2-year closed out Friday at 2.72%, the 3-year the same, and the five-year at 2.70%. The 10-year note was last seen with a yield of 2.85%, and the 30-year down to 3.14%. Bond vigilantes were out in force, and the flight from stocks sent both short and longer-dated bonds soaring. While not quite the textbook inversion of the 2s-10s that have preceded every recession since 1955, the indications are not at all rosy.

Finally, on Friday, November's non-farm payroll data came in woefully short, with expectations of 198,000 jobs met with the reality of just 155,000 new jobs for the month.

The short explanation is that the bull market is getting awfully long in the tooth, the economy is set to slow down a bit in 2019, and the big money on Wall Street is heading for the hills, i.e., bonds and cash or cash equivalents. Dow Theory is about to signal a bear market. The Dow has already sent the signal with its close at 24,285.95 on November 23. Confirmation will come if the Dow Transports close below 9,896.11. It closed Friday at 9,951.16.

With the Fed's FOMC meeting scheduled for December 18-19, and the widely-accepted view is that the Fed will raise the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, there's more than one good reason to be getting out of stocks and those in the know - or at least those who think they know - have been scurrying like rats off a sinking ship.

With the S&P now in correction and the NASDAQ, NYSE composite and Dow Transports already having been there, only the Dow remains above the magic mark of -10 percent. All the major indices show losses for the year and the Dow is just a few hundred points from correction.

Elsewhere on the planet, the number of countries in which their stock markets are already down more than 10 percent continued to grow, with Germany's DAX just a shade above bear market status. That's a huge issue, since Germany is Europe's strongest economy. Given the angst over Brexit, the unwinding of the ECBs massive balance sheet, and Japan's upcoming announcement about the end of QE measures, the focus could easily be on Europe, as it will almost certainly be headed for a recession in 2019. Since Japan's been in something of a recessionary decline for the past 25 years, any slowing of growth on the island nation will barely elicit more than a yawn.

If Europe is about to fall over, the US will almost certainly follow. So much for Making America Great Again (MAGA). The disassembly of the globalist power structure, the rise of populism (marches and violent riots in France) and a global economy on its knees after 10 years of fake stimulus may all be leading to a recession that will have long-lasting and severe consequences.

So, yes, this was the week the wheels fell off.

Here's how the Traveling Wilbury's see it, with the cheery "End of the Line."



Happy Holidays!

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39
12/6/18 24,947.67 -79.40 -590.79
12/7/18 24,388.95 -558.72 -1149.51

At the Close, Friday, December 7, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,388.95, -558.72 (-2.24%)
NASDAQ: 6,969.25, -219.01 (-3.05%)
S&P 500: 2,633.08, -62.87 (-2.33%)
NYSE Composite: 11,941.93, -202.48 (-1.67%)

For the Week:
Dow: -1149.51 (-4.50%)
NASDAQ: -361.28 (-4.93%)
S&P 500: -127.09 (-4.60%)
NYSE Composite: -515.62 (-4.14%)

Thursday, December 6, 2018

PPT To The Rescue, But For What Purpose?

Prepare for lower lows and lower highs.

It's long been maintained that central banks and/or governments should intervene in capital markets to keep people from panicking. That can also be read as "whenever stocks go down too much, too fast, we're here to protect our friends' investments."

For context, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 700 points today. It rallied to close with a minor loss. One problem. All other major stock indices around the world closed down between two and three-and-a-half percent. America is great, but not so great that it can avoid a global slowdown. Nefarious forces behind the scenes - much like the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz - averted a major selloff. Globalism is ending, and with it, many multi-national stocks are going to be badly damaged.

That's what today's miracle late-day rally was all about, because if stocks lose value, the system falls apart. It's really that simple. For context, figure this: corporate buybacks have been at record levels the past three years. Corporations have been buying their own stock at a frenetic pace, at the highest prices. If stocks fall, these companies will be sitting on mountains of their own stock which they bought at ridiculously-high prices. When they are forced to sell to raise capital, they will be losing money on investments in their own companies.

It's not just stupid, it's corrupt to the core, and that, friends, is why stocks can't go down.

But they will.

For a little more context, consider that according to Dow Theory, the primary trend has changed again from bull to bear. More on this in a later post.

Caveat Emptor.

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39
12/6/18 24,947.67 -79.40 -590.79

At the Close, Thursday, December 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,947.67, -79.40 (-0.32%)
NASDAQ: 7,188.26, +29.83 (+0.42%)
S&P 500: 2,695.95, -4.11 (-0.15%)
NYSE Composite: 12,144.41, -77.57 (-0.63%)

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Stocks Rage into the Close; PPT Mentioned on CNBC

Good stuff on Zero Hedge, when Asher Edelman brought up the PPT (Plunge Protection Team) on CNBC's "Fast Money."

People really don't mention the Plunge Protection Team much anymore, ever since the Fed and their central bank cohorts began their financial asset buying spree in 2009. The Fed money-printing machine puts the PPT (otherwise known as the President's Working Group on Financial Markets) to shame.

The Federal Reserve added liquidity to markets by directly intervening through outright asset purchases of mortgage-backed securities and treasury bills and notes. Known as Qualitative Easing (QE), those in the know simply call it "money printing" or "creating money out of thin air." Both are correct, and, despite all the best intents of Keynesian economics, those actions are supposed to create inflation, which has occurred in stocks, housing and elsewhere, but not in the many and varied consumer staples and discretionary items.

Most consumer prices (and incomes) have somewhat stagnated since the Great Financial Crisis of 2008-09, and, with the Fed threatening another rate increase in June, they probably won't be moving soon. The dislocations in the housing market and the massive transfer of wealth from the poor and middle classes to the very rich, however, have been direct results of Fed action.

So, it's somewhat funny that the commentator would single out the PPT, though he's probably spot on in his general assessment. The bigger issue would be the almost total control of the equity markets by key players, notably, central banks and large commercial firms, i.e., Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, et. al.

Whatever method was in play today, it certainly worked wonders as stocks levitated after 2:00 pm ET into the close.

At The Close, 5/24/17:
Dow: 21,012.42, +74.51 (0.36%)
NASDAQ: 6,163.02, +24.31 (0.40%)
S&P 500: 2,404.39, +5.97 (0.25%)
NYSE Composite: 11,621.23, +16.61 (0.14%)

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Dow At Record Highs 11 Staight Sessions; Eye On PPT, Central Bank Intervention

As has been the case for multiple sessions over many years, a rally in the final hour of trading pushed the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a new all-time high, with the NASDAQ and S&P averages also closing up, but short of record highs. They NYSE Composite was fractionally lower.

In the red the entire session, the Dow gained 70 points from 3:00 to 4:00 pm ET, with other major averages also gaining. This kind of activity has been a market feature since at least 2001, when the existence of the Plunge Protection Team (PPT) turned from urban myth to global reality. The PPT, created by Presidential Order #12631, signed on March 18, 1988 by President Ronald Reagan is also known as The Working Group on Financial Markets, is, in reality, a body of financial authorities consisting of:
  • The Secretary of the Treasury, or his or her designee (as Chairperson of the Working Group);
  • The Chairperson of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or his or her designee;
  • The Chairperson of the Securities and Exchange Commission, or his or her designee; and
  • The Chairperson of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Writers such as John Crudele of the New York Post have been critical of the Working Group's market-bending actions and foreign journalists from the Daily Telegraph and The Observer have suggested that the group has often exceeded its mandate.

Thus, tin-foil-hat type conspiracies have continued to suggest that the Federal Reserve and other central banks have been manipulating markets higher for years, and, while such coordinated action has yet to be unearthed by the mainstream media, sites such as ZeroHedge.com and other fringe outlets report that while the PPT may or may not be always active in markets, there's no doubt that central banks, notable, the European Central Bank (ECB), Swiss National Bank (SNB) and Bank of Japan (BOJ) are heavily invested in US and other global equities, making a mockery of the global regime of fiat money.

There are those who say intervention by government-sponsored agencies is not altogether nefarious, and some who believe such market-rigging is a good and reliable replacement for Adam Smith's "invisible hand" of the markets, it cannot be understated adequately that such activity will eventually undermine the integrity of financial markets and instruments.

Being based almost entirely upon faith and trust, financial markets have become the backbone of the global economy. If that faith and trust is broken - an unlikely occurrence, as the central banks, governments, and major brokerages work hand-in-hand largely toward the same end (higher stock prices) - the fragile system would crumble. An antecedent (and, much larger market) to the inner workings of financial markets is the bond market, which has also been pistol-whipped regularly by central bank policy and directive. On Friday, the US Treasury 10-Year Note fell to its lowest level in nearly three months, closing out the week at 2.3170, a direct result of higher stock prices, also known in the investing world as TINA (There Is No Alternative... to stocks).

With central banks and government agencies regularly interjecting themselves and their policies into financial markets, the natural question becomes: how stable and trustworthy are these markets and who gains from such manipulation?

Answering the question bluntly, the markets are only as stable as the institutions behind them, which is today a matter of considerable conjecture and discordant viewpoints. Purists posit that the mountains of debt produced by individuals, businesses, and governments is simply unsustainable and that a rout and crash, while unpredictable, is inevitable. The obvious conclusion to the other half of the question "qui bono" (who gains) is those in power and in control of such vast swaths of money, the governments, oligarchs, commercial and central banks. Beyond that, those in power consider themselves to be benefactors of the millions who gain from higher stock prices, inflation and boosts to massively underfunded pension funds.

With this degree of chutzpah in and on the minds of the central bankers and government leaders of the world, there is little doubt that they believe their actions to be highly beneficial to the orderly running of global finances while also not taking into account the falsity and pervasive inequities that are given rise by those same actions. Those with power over financial markets hold an incredible degree of responsibility, a responsibility that seemingly has gone beyond the pale, over the moon and into its own orbit.

Essentially, those who have questioned or taken positions contrary to the policies of the Fed and their brethren central banks, especially since the GFC of 2008, have been serially decimated in the markets. With stock indices raging without underlying fundamental bases, the planet may have reached a point of no return, wherein all matters financial are no longer in the control of individuals, but, rather, controlled by an opaque group of self-appointed masters.

One can only hope that they are well-grounded and essentially good-natured, because the alternatives would be brazen in concept and bizarre in execution.

At The Close, 2.24.17:
Dow: 20,821.76, +11.44 (0.05%)
NASDAQ: 5,845.31, +9.80 (0.17%)
S&P 500: 2,367.34, +3.53 (0.15%)
NYSE Composite: 11,541.29, -14.87 (-0.02%)

For the Week:
Dow: +197.71 (0.96%)
NASDAQ: +6.73 (0.12%)
S&P 500: +16.18 (0.69%)
NYSE Composite: +30.38 (0.26)



Monday, January 11, 2016

Perception Trumps Reality and Why You Should Not Trade Stocks

A large part of investing consists of paying attention to details. It's not enough to know what a certain company or industry is experiencing over a short-term basis, but to examine the details and to put those details into historic perspective.

It is in this light that today's presentation will advise anyone and everyone to distrust the mainstream media reports of the economy in general, and often, even the specific.

Back in the early portion of this century, word began circulating about a mysterious group called the Plunge Protection Team (PPT for short), which had the extraordinary power of pulling the entire equity market out of a crash, thus restoring confidence to traders and investors.

For a long time, people who believed that the PPT existed at all and was causing the wild fluctuations seen in the summer of 2001 and 2002, were dismissed as conspiracy nuts and tin-foil hat wearers. However, the PPT had been exposed beforehand, and it was indeed real. Its true name was the Working Group on Financial Markets, and it was created via an executive order 12631, signed on March 18, 1988 by US President Ronald Reagan, largely in response to the market turmoil that resulted in a 22% drop on October 19, 1987.

The PPT is real, though current manipulators may not exactly match the same original cast of characters, there is still a shadowy group of government people making sure the equity markets don't crash, or, at the very least, they enter the market to manifest a desired outcome.

Just in case you still don't believe in the power of the PPT, or that the market can be massively manipulated on a short-term (leading to long-term) basis, consider that today from 3:17 to 3:38 pm ET, a span of a mere 21 minutes, the Dow Jones Industrials jumped from 16,261.93 to 16.444.04. That's 182.11 points, a number that would be exceptional (a better than 1% gain) for an entire session.

Thus, the Dow - and along with it, the S&P and NASDAQ - went from near the day's lows to modestly positive, nearing the close of the session. These heady days, as perception exceeds reality by a longshot, that result will be precisely ONLY what the mainstream media reports. Not that markets were in turmoil and extending losses from last week, or, that market conviction suddenly changed dramatically, but ONLY that stocks were up on the day. All is well. Nothing to see here. Move along.

That there are government entities meddling in what used to be fair, honest and open markets should be enough to discourage just about any thinking person to not only abhor the practice of manipulation, but to remove themselves and their money from the fraud that is Wall Street, because, if government operators can make the market go up, they have an equal power to make it go down, or up-then-down or whatever they wish it to be.

In essence, stock markets are not fair and open and free anymore, and haven't been for quite some time. Most stocks these days are wildly overvalued, and for good reason. The retirements of millions of Americans are tied to stocks. Not only that, but the entire economy of the planet is tethered, one way or another, to the US equity markets. There are sovereign wealth funds, trust funds, hedge funds, mutual funds and all other manner of funds, ETFs and investment vehicles that are inexorably tied to the success or failure of stocks.

Suppose there is a massive bear market in stocks, like we witnessed in 2000, and again in 2008. People panic. They sell. But that's old news. People don't move markets any more. Computers do, and those are controlled by the barons of Wall Street, the banks and brokerage firms.

Thus, the PPT does not have to exist at all anymore. There only needs to be a mechanism for all the main traders to move at once in the same direction, and that mechanism is probably already in place, has been used in the past, is being used presently and will be used in the future, either to make stocks cheaper (down) or more expensive (up). Either way, the trading firms will have the upper hand, advance notice and the blessing of the federal government.

US markets are not what they appear to be. For instance, they are much more thinly traded than ever, by fewer participants, many of whom are nefarious, criminal and immoral. Individual investors would likely be better off stuffing cash into a mattress, buying gold or silver, or trading comic books, baseball cards, Beanie Babies or other collectibles. Realistically, the collectible market is very robust and smart individuals can actually make a good living on places like eBay or Craigslist. The art market is also very good, especially for rarities.

Leave the stock market to professionals. If you like to gamble, try the lottery, the horses, or fantasy sports betting, because the Dow Jones Industrials, the S&P, the NASDAQ and the NYSE have become nothing more than sophisticated casinos, operating without gaming licenses, and the house always wins.

Always.

Today's closing quotes:
S&P 500: 1,923.67, +1.64 (0.09%)
Dow: 16,398.57, +52.12 (0.32%)
NASDAQ: 4,637.99, -5.64 (0.12%)


Crude Oil 31.31 -5.58% Gold 1,095.60 -0.21% EUR/USD 1.0855 -0.60% 10-Yr Bond 2.1580 +1.31% Corn 351.25 -1.61% Copper 1.97 -2.52% Silver 13.85 -0.49% Natural Gas 2.39 -3.16% Russell 2000 1,041.90 -0.41% VIX 24.30 -10.03% BATS 1000 20,518.11 -0.16% GBP/USD 1.4540 +0.22% USD/JPY 117.7050 +0.79%

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Speculators Step Up to End Dull Trade with a Bang

Think zero interest rate policy and money for virtually free doesn't have its upside?

Ask fund and managed account managers what they think of this trading environment and they'll likely respond in unanimity that it's never been better. After eight straight days of lackluster, low-volume trading, the wheeler-dealers went to work in concerted fashion, driving all risk assets higher on Thursday.

When the biggest banks and their trading arms can borrow money at 25 basis points or less overnight, what happens is trading like today, shutting off the noise about a sputtering, topped out market with a quick, one-day ramp up on strong volume for a nice turn of profit for the week.

The particular catalyst could be anything, from Angela Merkel's comments today about floating more bailout money to save the Euro, to benign initial claims figures (op a mere 2,000 from the prior week, to 366,000), to July housing starts dropping to 746,000 annualized from 754,000 or the Philadephia Fed's manufacturing index gaining to -7.1 in August from July's horrific -12.1. Well, forget those last two as they don't quite fit the hopium narrative.

Indeed, if conditions on Wall Street get any better, the feds may just cancel the November election and proclaim President Obama the winner by default. After all, the campaign money flows from Wall Street and other major investors, multi-millionaires and billionaires to the candidates or their PACs, and Wall Street has been having a rousing good time the past three-and-a-half years. Why end the party now?

At some point, analysts are going to poke around the numbers a bit and find that stocks are extremely overvalued, priced for perfection, at levels unsustainable for the long run unless corporations severely fudge their books to show better-than-expected results (oh, that's never been done before, not in America).

It doesn't matter what analysts or the best chartists in the business conclude, however. Stocks will continue to go up as long as markets continue to be manipulated by the central planners scattered around the globe in investment houses, central banks and government ivory towers.

What's that? You don't believe the US markets are not manipulated? Maybe you need a little convincing from experts in the field.

Take J.S. Kim, for example, who posits that potential gold and silver investors are continually fed disinformation about a market manipulated by contrived futures and trading patterns in a false, paper market

Perhaps one could take advice from Chris Martenson's commentary, headlined "What to Do When Every Market Is Manipulated?"

For a more general understanding, one could comb through the 29,800,000 results for the search term "market manipulation," and see what kind of gems are unearthed.

The control, rigging or manipulation of markets in the United States has been going on in a large manner ever since Ronald Reagan created, by executive order, the President's Working Group on Financial Markets (otherwise known as the PPT, or Plunge Protection Team) after the massive market crash in the wake of "Black Monday," when the Dow Jones Industrials plummeted 508 points Oct. 19, 1987 and was called into action again when Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) nearly brought down the house of cards in 1998.

After 9/11/2001, the PPT, as it became known, has been on keen alert to any signs of a meltdown in markets, but not even the heft and might of the underhanded, underground operatives of the government could deflect the market forces pushing against them in the fall of 2008.

Since then, the manipulation in equity markets has become almost overt, with the Fed guiding the way by the light of quantitative easing (QE) and ZIRP.

While here at Money Daily we deride the pimping and pumping of markets by insider forces, there comes a time when one must admit that investing in risk assets such as stocks and commodities over the past three years has never been easier. All one needs to do is hold a basket of stocks or index contracts long enough and they're sure to rise. It's become a permanent feature of US markets that they cannot fall for long and there is no end in sight to the manipulation.

It's just that easy for the rich to get richer and the rest of us to remain in a stupefied trance-like state of amazement and contentment.

Dow 13,250.11, +85.33 (0.65%)
NASDAQ 3,062.39, +31.46 (1.04%)
S&P 500 1,415.51, +9.98 (0.71%)
NYSE Composite 8,089.82, +60.81 (0.76%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,901,789,500
NYSE Volume 2,898,041,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3862-1572
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 230-30
WTI crude oil: 95.60, +1.27
Gold: 1,619.20, +12.60
Silver: 28.21, +0.40

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Who Goosed the Stock Market? The PPT Did, That's Who

The more one endeavors to make sense of the movements of the major equity indices, the more one becomes convinced that there is major manipulation going on behind the scenes and today was just another prime example to throw into the conspiracy hopper.

While the Dow gained 78 points today, all of the gains were produced in roughly a one hour period, from 10:30 am to 11:30 am ET, on extremely light volume. The Dow moved from barely unchanged (12,760) to a gain of nearly eighty points (12,340), which just so happened to be roughly where it closed.

Did Greece's private debt holders agree to a deal at that hour? No.

Did ADP report a gain of 216,000 net private job gains for February. Sorry, that happened at 8:15 am, and the response was pretty muted.

So... let's see. Low volume (if today wasn't the lowest volume of the year, it was certainly close), stocks sliding back near unchanged right after a major selloff the previous session... like the calvary riding to the rescue in a cliche old time Western movie, the PPT - otherwise known as the Plunge Protection Team and officially known as the President's Working Group on Financial Markets has been hard at work ever since 1988, keeping US stock indices safe from free-falling collapses and lately, from even slight declines that might make the markets appear to be as weak as they really are and boosting stock prices when the trading activity all but dries up.

While Joe and Jane Sixpack reads just the headlines and understands nothing except, "honey, our retirement pension fund is up again!" out in the real world its endless money printing and insider stock manipulations that keep the American Dream alive and well.

It's become so blatant and obvious that it is rarely commented upon by even the most suspicious bloggers and underground financial writers. The mainstream press never mentions that the PPT has offices right in New York's financial district - the easier to send orders flying into the fray - or that said offices are owned by the NY Fed.

So, forget everything you just read and move along. You are not supposed to think, analyze or ask any questions. There's nothing to see here, or at least nothing you're supposed to see. In ten seconds your computer will automatically destroy this posting, and your brain will be wiped clean of the heretical commentary presented.

9...8...7...6...

Dow 12,837.33, +78.18 (0.61%)
NASDAQ 2,935.69, +25.37 (0.87%)
S&P 500 1,352.63, +9.27 (0.69%)
NYSE Composite 7,979.83, +59.69 (0.75%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,560,044,000
NYSE Volume 3,515,704,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4287-1316
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 93-43
WTI crude oil: 106.16, +1.46
Gold: 1,683.90, +11.80
Silver: 33.58, +0.80

Monday, September 12, 2011

BUMMER: The Plunge Protection Team Is Back in Action!

The Markets

Let's face it. US equity and commodity markets are completely, irretrievably, unconscionably manipulated beyond any basic sense of fairness.

On the morning of the first trading day of the week, US equity scalpers were met with futures that forecast a dismal Monday. Every index in every foreign country was lower on the day. In Asia, the Hang Seng led the way with a loss of greater than 4%. European bourses, shattered for the better part of the past three months, were all lower, the French CAC-40 taking over from the German DAX in leading the way to oblivion with a 4% decline.

But here in America, we have advantages. We have Ben Bernanke, the brilliant, often uninspiring and always shaking Chairman of the Federal Reserve. We have Timothy Geithner, the diminutive (matching his brain power) Treasury Secretary who keeps a watchful eye over the nation's exploding debt.

And we have printing presses (actually, they've been replaced by computers) spitting out US dollars faster than a 9th Avenue hobo picks up pennies thrown his way.

More than anything else, however, we have the fabled Plunge Protection Team (PPT), aka the President's Working Group on Financial Markets created by President Reagan in the aftermath of the LTCM blowup in 1987.

According to Executive Order 12631, the "Working Group" was established explicitly in response to events in the financial markets surrounding October 19, 1987 ("Black Monday") to give recommendations for legislative and private sector solutions for "enhancing the integrity, efficiency, orderliness, and competitiveness of [United States] financial markets and maintaining investor confidence.

In other words, when the markets are crashing, the Working Group, or PPT, springs, like trained attack Dobermans, into action to rescue witless investors from parting with their increasingly worthless cash.

Today, the PPT got busy early on. Stocks were hammered at the open, in response to the rest of the world in a near panic over Greece potentially defaulting and European credit market spreads blowing out all over the place. Stocks were down huge in the opening minutes of trading, as an extension of Friday's selloff and the continuing global debt implosion. The fact that Greece will eventually default on a large portion of their debt and ungraciously remove itself from the Euro standard (back to the Drachma) is unimportant to the functioning of the PPT. They buy futures. They buy stocks. They buy whatever is falling fastest, which on Monday, was just about anything that had a ticker symbol.

The PPT doesn't always prompt rallies. Their normal function is to keep US indices from falling too far, too fast, like today, like about six times in the past three weeks, like about a thousand times since the dotcom crash of 2000. And today was no different. They kept he markets in a sane neighborhood, down somewhere between a half and one per cent, until, that is, all the lights turned green.

Around 2:30, the Financial Times, another overstuffed relic from the days of ink and newsprint, ran a story that China was interested in buying Italian bonds, many of which will go up for bid this week as the Italian government seeks to finance its long-standing tradition of turning investor dough into pasta salad, along with assorted mafia side dishes and Berlusconi desserts.

Since noodles are noodles, whether they're doused in marinara or lobster sauce, the nitwits on CNBC were led to believe that this was a great idea, and the markets turned from merely moribund to miraculously magnificent in the final hour-and-a-half of trading. The US wins again. All of the US indices ended the day in positive territory.

Now, some may cheer that the US government has investor's backs, but the stark reality is that the PPT is all that's left between regular day-to-day life and a most serious, full-blown market crash of stupefying proportions. The global economy is on its knees due to too much debt, too many goods and too many currencies trying vainly to devalue themselves. The entire affair is deflationary in the most absolute sense as goods and services become more and more worthless, while the relative value of the currencies which buy such goods plummets into an phalanx of money-crunching debt.

Ah, for the good old days of really free, open markets, like back in the sixties and seventies, when a stock could be worthwhile returning a reasonable four to five per cent dividend along with annualized growth of 15-20%. A quarter point here, a half point there. We were all invested and looking forward to a safe, sensible and sane retirement.

Nostalgia. It's what one gets when one sees the fruits of labor lavished on the already rich.

And by the way, the day should not pass without acknowledging that Jaime Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, thinks the Basel 3 rules requiring the largest banks, such as his, to hold 9.5% of tier one capital, are "un-American." Right. FU, Jaime. Is JPM the next bank to start selling off assets? Probably should, but probably won't. Hey, the world is an imperfect place, suitable for misfit rich kids like Jaime.

Dow 11,061.12, +68.99 (0.63%)
NASDAQ 2,495.09, +27.10 (1.10%)
S&P 500 1,162.27, +8.04 (0.70%)
NYSE Composite 7,047.12, +2.11 (0.03%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,994,098,375
NYSE Volume 5,034,112,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3178-3364
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - new lows: 19-514
WTI crude oil futures: 88.19, +0.95
Gold: 1815.80, -42.80
Silver: 40.29, -1.09


Astute readers will understand what it means when all the major indices are up, but the A-D line is negative and especially when the new highs - new lows are tilted so heavily in favor of the lows. For those who still need guidance, it's a con, a complete, total, 100% sham. That oil futures are up while gold and silver suffer heavy losses really cinches it.

Idea: Fresh out, though working hard on "Making a budget and sticking to it," and "Saving 10% of your income." More tomorrow.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Citi Reverse Split Causes Volume Dump; PPT Still Engaged

Covering the daily machinations of a stock market that is now nearly a vast wasteland of swap trades, churning and "gotcha" moves seldom offers much of anything substantive of which to report, but today's reverse split of Citigroup (C) may turn out to be a watershed moment for our contrived and trivial stock markets.

With Citi now a $44 stock instead of a $4.40 stock - and it being the nearly indisputable daily volume leader for many months - America's 3rd largest bank has cost the NYSE about 450,000 trades on a daily basis, today, tomorrow, forever. This dramatic upside-down-sizing caused today's NYSE volume to dip to its second-lowest level of the year.

It is more than dismal on Wall Street; it is so scary that the PPT was brought in today just before noon for a quick fixer-up, sending all the indices close to their highs of the day in a 20-minute ramp job that is certain to destroy what little remains of confidence in the veracity of US markets.

From about 11:50 am to 12:10 pm, the Dow gathered itself up for an 80 point gain, the NASDAQ gained about 27 points and the S&P added nine. The indices had been hugging the flat line until the PPT (yes, we're absolutely certain they're still working) showed up. Afterwards, stocks drifted along the new highs and closed near those newly-elevated levels.

Yet another fantastic display of why nobody trusts these markets and nobody should be trading here: the stocks are all traded between the biggest brokerages and selected hedge funds, and the whole game is rigged for their benefit. Someday, we can only hope, the whole miasma gets thrown a loop by the HFT computers and never recovers. Maybe then, the greed, corruption and utter uselessness of US stock markets can be exposed.

Dow 12,684.68, +45.94 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 2,843.25, +15.69 (0.55%)
S&P 500 1,346.29, +6.09 (0.45%)
NYSE Composite 8,478.19, +52.29 (0.62%)


For the record, advancing issues beat decliners, 4534-2055. NASDAQ new highs: 81; new lows: 39. On the NYSE, there were 120 new highs and 17 new lows. Combined volume for the NYSE and NASDAQ was at or below the lowest level of the year. While the trading volume on the NYSE was expected, the absurdly low number of trades on the NASDAQ is telling market timers that now is the time to get out of Dodge.

NASDAQ Volume 1,654,697,000.00
NYSE Volume 3,366,898,000


Commodities must be the new playground, because they had a banner day. Forget the massive drop in crude oil from last week. Today's ramp job of $5.37 on NYMEX WTI crude futures brought the price back to $102.55 at the close. One wonders whether it's actual volatility driving the wild price swings or just plain revenge by the traders who were nearly wiped out in last week's plummeting decline. In any case, the price of oil has absolutely nothing to do with fundamental. It's almost as though price discovery has become a function of speculation. There is no real price for a barrel of oil, only that which appears or appeases for the day. These markets are broken beyond repair. Time to dust off and oil up that old bike. You'll need the energy boost in order to stay ahead of the coming rolling panics in cities across America.

Gold buyers were back in earnest, raising the price $18.20, to $1513.60. Silver recovered as well, gaining $2.28, to $37.90.

If anybody can make sense of any of this, please call 1-800-CONFUSED and leave a long, descriptive message.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Major Market Madness as EU Faces an Abyss

Greece has exploded into near-anarchy. Most of Southern Europe is about to enter similar circumstances, as Italy, Spain and Portugal face the same kind of debt crisis that is sweeping the globe. Ireland and Iceland have already felt the wrath of economic unwinding and the panic doesn't stop at small-country borders.

The unprecedentedly-swift breakdown which occurred today on US stock markets is a symptom of a wider contagion, a currency, central bank, sovereign confidence crisis.

Around 2:00 pm, with stocks already suffering significant losses and live video of protesters being attacked by riot police in Athens airing worldwide, markets turned even more dire, doubling their losses in a matter of minutes. By 2:15, the wheels were off as the Dow fell from 250 points down to a 990-point loss in the blink of an eye. For about 10 minutes, markets were in freefall. Traders reported a near-complete capitulation, with buyers completely absent from the market in almost all stocks.

Once again, however, the slide was staunched by some heavy-handed trading in futures and the more-than-likely subterfuge of the major investment banks and their allies in crime, the government-approved President's Working Group on Financial Markets (Plunge Protection Team. i.e., the PPT). As quickly as the markets fell, the rebounded. The Dow recovered to a loss of roughly 400 points and seemed to stabilize at that point. After a wild 15 minutes of trading that left everybody stunned and questioning exactly what happened, the markets churned onward toward the close, ending with massive losses, nonetheless.

Dow 10,520.32, -347.80 (3.20%)
NASDAQ 2,319.64, -82.65 (3.44%)
S&P 500 1,128.15, -37.72 (3.24%)
NYSE Composite 7,011.92, -246.10 (3.39%


The substantial declines on the day were more than bourn out by the internal indicators. Declining issues completely overwhelmed advancers, 6015-742, or, by a margin of about 9:1. It was one of the biggest one-day routs in recent years, and there have been a good number of those. The key measure was the number of new highs to new lows, which completely flipped over from a year-long trend. There were 612 new lows to 196 new highs, a complete reversal, which, if history is any kind of guide, is a loud siren that the bears are firmly back in control.

Another screaming indicator was the day's volume, literally off the charts. This is the kind of volume seen only at the extremes, likely one of the 5 or 10 highest-volume days in the history of US stock markets. Since the direction was decidedly to the downside, more selling should be expected in days to come.

NYSE Volume 11,772,131,000.00
NASDAQ Volume 4,292,823,500.00


Concerning the heavy selling that sent stocks into a short-lived abyss, the commentators on CNBC cited such simplistic theories as a computer glitch, false prints and other preposterous theories, all along avoid the obvious truth: the economic crisis did not end in March of 2009, when stocks began a year-long rally. Financial markets are still fragile, one might say, tenuous, and only clandestine moves by insiders kept stocks from recording a record sell-off.

At some point, CNBC or another expert may release a story explaining the sudden downturn on the back of a rogue trade or computer malfunction. Any such story should be viewed with an additional dose of skepticism if only because of the various levels the major indices broke through during the panic. All of them shattered their 50-day moving averages during the session and closed well below them. Markets have been trending lower for the better part of the past two weeks and this kind of momentum-turning-to-panic trading cannot be discounted as a one-off event.

The likelihood of further market declines in the very near term and extending into the longer term is very high. The debt-deflation bomb has not yet run its course. Not until massive amounts of money and companies are liquidated will the disease be purged from the global economy. Expect widespread panic in European markets as countries fall like dominoes with a side-effect around the world. US markets will not be spared, as the US is only the best among peers at this juncture. Major economies will survive, though France, Germany, Great Britain and the USA will be severely crippled by year's end.

Our beloved "recovery" has been a complete fabrication, fueled by the media and the mechanics of commerce in Washington and on Wall Street. Individual investors have largely shunned equities in favor of bonds and tangible assets such as gold, which was an outside winner on the day. Greece and the rest of the Southern European countries are financially on death's door, facing complete default. Soon, one will capitulate and flee the European Union and denounce the Euro. When that occurs, the ten-year experiment at cross-border governance will be essentially over. The EU will disintegrate and the Euro will be completely unwound. The main hope is that troops do not begin excursions into neighboring nations, as has been the centuries-old history of Europe.

Even today, as it has been throughout the life of the EU, the stronger Norther economies have considerable enmity toward their Southern neighbors. The chance of the entire continent devolving into skirmishes over currencies would neither be unexpected nor unprecedented. Wars are usually how nations resolve major financial squeezes and Europe is certainly in one now.

Besides the dire conditions in Europe, the Gulf oil spill remains unchecked and tomorrow's non-farm employment report - to be released to the public at 8:30 am ET - doesn't offer much optimism. Most of the supposed 185,000 jobs created in April will be attributed mostly to government hiring of temporary census workers and the whisper campaign is that not as many were needed due, ironically, of the efficiency of the operation. Should the non-farm number fall significantly below expectations - a real possibility - an immediate continuation of the plunge will probably occur.

The best hope is for the proverbial, "dead cat bounce," which might ease tensions temporarily, until, at best, the next round of crisis selling. So severely strained and wrought with fraud, inter-leveraging and toxicity, financial markets have entered a semi-permanent state of crisis. When this chapter of global finance is finally unwound, the world won't end, but the pain will have spread deeper and wider than anyone could have expected.

For the baby boomer generation, the nightmare may have only begun. Those without high debt may find themselves in better positions than many of their over-leveraged peers.

Some of the numbers emerging from this historic day in finance (and underscoring the idea that this was not a one-off event):

Crude oil futures continued their steady decline, losing another $2.86, to close at $77.11, the lowest print in months. Safe-haven gold improved by $22.30, climbing above the $1200 mark to finally settle at $1,196.90. Silver couldn't keep pace, losing 2 cents, to $17.49.

All of the major indices have suffered huge blows over the past two weeks, and all closed below their 50-day moving averages.

The Dow Jones Industrials are less than 100 points higher for the year. For the year, the NASDAQ is up only 50 points, the S&P ahead by just 13 points, the NYSE Composite - the broadest index - is down 173 points, all of that loss, and more, occurring today.

All of the 30 Dow components closed lower, many of them with 3.5 to 4.5% losses. Citigroup touched a low of 3.90, closing at 4.01, as all financial stocks were pounded lower.

Treasuries and the US dollar were sharply higher. The dollar index hit fresh highs while the Euro broke down to 14-month lows against the greenback. The benchmark 10-year treasury closed at a 3.40% yield, 55 basis points lower than just a month ago.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Thain at CIT; Stocks in a Funk

Obviously, John Thain is a hired henchman of the crime syndicate responsible for the financial meltdown of 2008, and all the associated scandals, including TARP, that were ancillary and antecedent to that event.

Why do I make such an overt claim, and just who is John Thain?

Well, John Thain has been around the Wall Street crime syndicate long enough to have attained a position of some authority within that circle. According to this article, Thain was the last chairman and chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch before its merger with Bank of America. Thain managed to get $29 per share ($50 billion) for Merrill, a 70% premium over its market price. Ken Lewis, then CEO of Bank of America, is currently under investigation by the NY State Attorney General, Andrew Cuomo.

Prior to being at Merrill, Thain was president of the NYSE, from 2004 through 2007, meaning he oversaw much of the wheeling and dealing on the exchange and also turned a blind eye to the criminal practices of Bernard Madoff. Prior to that, Thain was at Goldman Sachs, as head of the mortgage desk from 1985 to 1990, and president and co-COO from 1999 to 2004.

Given his history, it's surprising that Thain isn't Secretary of the Treasury or head of one of the regional Federal Reserves, but that's probably because John Thain is basically a bag man. He hides money for his friends. So, what better place for him to resurface after his sudden departure from Merrill Lynch (after he helped inflate its value and 11 top brokers fled to London) in January 2009, than at the beleaguered commercial lender, CIT.

Today, Thain was named CEO of CIT, apparently because CIT's bankruptcy has not worked out to full advantage for the syndicate. Thain will make sure that taxpayers are screwed some more, as one would suppose that stealing $2.3 billion, via TARP would be considered small peanuts in his circles.

With Thain at CIT, one should expect all manner of nastiness, including, but not limited to, falsified accounting, seizure of assets, pleas to the federal government for more bailout money and other not-so-niceties. If John Thain is running a company, one can only expect what he's always provided: fraud, falsity, obfuscation of facts, missing money, missing documents and generally, another round of financial panic.

You have been duly warned. With his track record or greed (he's one of the highest paid on Wall St.) and reputation (a lot of people will speak highly of him in public, because crossing him or the people he's associated with could be harmful to one's health - financial and otherwise) Thain should not be trusted. In any case, having him at CIT virtually assures that financial stocks will be hammered and the economy will suffer through a reprise of the fall of 2008.

With that as background, stocks, led by, you guessed it, large banks, generally fell, putting to rest any notion that Friday's 180-point "turnaround" was anything other than intervention by the PPT (Thain's buddies). It's been 18 months since the breakdown of finance, and since nothing's been done to fix the system - though the bankers and various federal government officials will tell you that MUCH has been done - the usual crowd is back for another round of feeding at investor and taxpayer expense.

Their greed knows no bounds. Not content with breaking the global financial system, they're committed to plunging much of the world - particularly the rich United States of America - into a financial holocaust. Naturally, none of the widespread carnage will affect any of them; they will be above the fray, sitting like vultures with cash in hand to buy up distressed assets at bargain-basement prices. Their true goal is to incite anarchy and revolt, and they're doing a nice job of it thus far. Don't think for a moment that Sarah Palin addressing the Tea Party Convention this weekend was an accident. If the American public is too squeamish to foment revolution, they've got Palin, the absolute perfect Manchurian Candidate, to push us over the edge.

Already, the Tea Parties, originally an amalgamation of loosely-aligned local groups opposed to bank bailouts and financial fraud, have devolved into right-wing bravado-fests, complete with guns, anti-government (and anti-democrat) signs and the tacit support of the the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and FOX News.

It's a two-pronged attack on liberty and rights, using politics and money to separate middle-class people from theirs. The ultimate goal is a state of neo-anarchy and martial law in America, and they're well on their way.

Dow 9,908.39, -103.84 (1.04%)
NASDAQ 2,126.05, -15.07 (0.70%)
S&P 500 1,066.18, -0.01 (0.00%)
NYSE Composite 6,713.87, -68.88 (1.02%)


Advancing issues were trampled upon by decliners, 4120-2442. New highs actually eked out a slight edge over new lows, 86-73, but volume was light, since all the big money already exited on Friday.

NYSE Volume 4,913,621,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,059,284,875


Commodities staged a little bit of a comeback. Oil, gold and silver all finished their trading sessions slightly higher.

The repugnant conditions which prevail in America today have long ceased being casual conspiracy banter or any kind of laughing matter. Lawlessness prevails. Rules, if there are any, are made up on the fly, to suit those who seek to break them. More than just your money is at risk. Beware.

Friday, February 5, 2010

PPT Fingerprints All Over Late-Day Rally

If you're unfamiliar with the term "PPT," you haven't been reading about economic conditions very deeply. The Plunge protection Team (PPT) stems from a presidential order (Reagan) that gives the Treasury Secretary, Fed Chairman and others extraordinary powers to combat financial firestorms, one of which is direct intervention into capital and equity markets, and, presumably, any other market.

Stocks began the day trying to overcome the lingering effects of Thursday's drubbing, and, after January Non-farms payroll data turned out to be more confusing than anything else, began to sell off, until, by 2:00 pm, the Dow had sunk another 167 points, pounding resistance. The S&P, already shattered, was being likewise battered.

That, however, proved to be the bottom for the day, and the week. Stocks quickly re-gathered and regained momentum without any catalyst, a tell-tale sign of intervention, something the PPT has been doing with regularity since 2000. From 3:00 to 3:15 pm, the Dow gained 100 points, putting the index near unchanged. The rest of the session was spent by the underpinning PPT and their henchmen making sure the Dow finished above 10,000 (it did) and all fears would be soothed over the weekend.

Their work is a fool's gambit, always has been and always will be. The problem is that they can play it because nobody is auditing them or their activities. The banks and the superstructure above it are irresponsible because they've been allowed to be and they will continue to be irresponsible until they destroy the economic system (almost did) or are destroyed themselves. But don't start holding your breath. The powers that be are incredible entrenched. Prepare for the worst four years of your economic life.

Dow 10,012.23, +10.05 (0.10%)
NASDAQ 2,141.12, +15.69 (0.74%)
S&P 500 1,066.19, +3.08 (0.29%)
NYSE Composite 6,782.75, -5.11 (0.08%)


As more evidence of the manipulative element in today's trading, consider that decliners beat advancers handily, 3476-3039. 149 new lows beat 96 new highs. Both of those indicators are contrary to the headline numbers. Volume was magnificent, owing both the the depth of selling and to the amount of financial heft necessary to keep the market from collapsing. But make no mistake about it. The decline will continue. The markets put in new lows which must be tested before any meaningful advance can occur. Chances are, today's lows will be surpassed to the downside within short order. Todays' reprieve was only necessary to avert a panic and to give insiders more opportunity to profit from the next leg down.

NYSE Volume 7,762,321,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,836,146,250


Oil closed at $71.19, down $2.98, at its lowest price since mid-December. Gold finished down $9.50, at $1,053.50 and silver finished down 47 cents, at $14.88. The commodities were only benefitted after their New York closes, not quite as fortunate as the equity markets.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Stocks Hammered Again, But It Should Have Been Worse

After falling below key support on Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrials, and US equities in general, were pounded down as fears of bank nationalization and unease over the future of the economy and even the welfare of the nation itself scared investors out of many positions.

While the technical damage on the Dow was serious, it should have been even worse, if not for subversive afternoon intervention by the usual corrupt cast of characters - the PPT, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, et. al. - which brought the Dow all the way back from a 215 point loss at 1:15 pm to a small gain at 10 minutes until 3:00.

At the heart of the matter was the fates of Bank of America and Citigroup, which suffered another day of crippling losses. At the low point of the day, Bank of America (BAC) was down 1.40, to 2.53, while Citigroup (C) fell 90 cents, to 1.51. On a basis unadjusted for splits, both were at all-time lows. Bank of America closed the day down a mere 14 cents, at 3.79, though Citigroup was not so fortunate, finishing 22% lower, down 56 cents at 1.95.

BofA CEO Ken Lewis was also subpoenaed by NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo over the bonuses paid to Merrill Lynch executives in 2008. BofA took over Merrill under government supervision during the meltdown last fall.

It was only a hastily-prepared White House statement pledging a commitment to keeping banks in private hands that kept the markets from an all-out rout.

There's little doubt that the some kind of solution must be found for the ailing banking session, and soon. The public, however, has seen enough of bailouts and handouts, so the newly-installed Obama administration and Democratically-led congress must tread lightly.

Truth of the matter is that two of the nation's largest banks (and probably more) will have to be managed by the government, or somebody sober, for some time, in order to restore even a hint of credibility in the markets. There is also a distinct possibility that the government may not have sufficient power to prevent a complete collapse of an over-leveraged banking sector. In some ways, it is nothing more than the market hurrying the bankers' self-inflicted collapse.

Yesterday's rant by Rick Santelli at the Chicago Board of Trade (Feb. 19, 2009) on CNBC created no small sensation across the blogosphere. One of his more poignant remarks was his this gem:
You know, they’re pretty much of the notion that you can’t buy your way into prosperity, and if the multiplier that all of these Washington economists are selling us is over… that we never have to worry about the economy again. The government should spend a trillion dollars an hour because we’ll get 1.5 trillion back.




Santelli was even called on the carpet by NBC's Brian Williams and Matt Lauer (NBC owns CNBC) on this morning's Today Show and put across the screen from his network nemesis, Steve Leisman, a puppy lapdog for the industrial-military-communications junta which rules the government and the nation. Santelli certainly has never backed down from a fight, and his performance on the Today Show was remarkably well-reasoned and honest with obvious middle-class populist overtones.

And now the censorship begins. While attempting to retrieve the code, I was initially met with a mention that the above-referenced video was no longer available on Youtube.com, a not-very-subtle attempt by the media elite to silence the truth and keep the public under wraps.. Don't be surprised if Santelli isn't quietly relieved of his duties soon or, more likely, continually marginalized. Nevertheless, as mentioned yesterday, the genie is well out of the bottle and the public outrage at just about anything and everything concerning government and big business will not be contained much longer.

Dow 7,365.67, -100.28 (1.34%)
NASDAQ 1,441.23, -1.59 (0.11%)
S&P 500 770.05, -8.89 (1.14%)
NYSE Compos 4,804.51, -76.65 (1.57%)


Internals were as expected, favoring declining issues over advancing ones, 4906-1775. New lows dominated new highs, expanding to new levels with 1119 new lows and a mere 25 new highs. The massive number of stocks hitting 52-week lows (1 in 6) have only been seen on days of extreme market turmoil, and today surely fit that bill. Volume was the highest in weeks, owing to options expirations, market intervention, usual trading and high levels of outright open executions on the sell side.

NYSE Volume 2,117,367,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,560,465,000


Commodities remained on their own track. Oil for March delivery closed down 54 cents, at $38.94 on the final day of that contract. Gold topped the $1000 mark, gaining $25.70, to $1,002.20. In concert, silver gained 56 cents, to $14.49. All food-related commodity futures were markedly lower.

The CPI figures released this morning demonstrated an increase of 0.4%, the first gain since July, 2008, though it is more than likely only an aberration in the continuing deflationary spiral.

Stocks should have finished much lower than they did today, which only means that they will fall further at some future date. Considering the level of angst in the market, in the public, and the ineptitude of government and corporate business to constrain the wealth destruction leads one to believe that the market is well into the third and most crucial phase of the bear market, total, utter, final capitulation.

All of the major indices finished the week with substantial losses. The Dow registered its lowest close since October 27, 1997.

For the week, the Dow was down a whopping 485 points, and closing in on a 50% decline from the October 2007 all-time high. The NASDAQ lost 93 points; the S&P surrendered 57; the NYSE Composite was down 402 points.

It's not a pretty picture and not likely to improve soon.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Obama's PPT Working Group On the Job

The perks of the presidency are large.

One of them is that you have at your disposal, thanks to the "godfather of conservatism," Ronald Reagan, who, in his limited wisdom, created, by Executive Order 12631 -- Working Group on Financial Markets(otherwise known as the PPT, or Plunge Protection Team) to ostensibly put the nation's various stock exchanges under the control of top government operatives whenever necessary.

The presidency being largely a function of public relations, it seems that President Obama has finally gotten his guys together and instructed them to keep the market on an upward keel. All of the fingerprints are there: the subtle prodding, the 50-point spikes after 2:00 and 3:00 pm, the positive close. It's just so nice to be able to salve the wounds of fractured investors with a couple of nice gains.

Of course, it's merely a mirage, and a temporary one at that. Once again, I must invoke my status as Resident Genius, noting that the Dow (and by inference, the other major indices) cannot escape the clutches of pure market dynamics at the resistance line of 8149, the point at which the market must invariable submit. Today's pumping was likely some short-covering and market tinkering to keep the Dow above 8000, a key psychological level, but nothing more than that. In the long run, it's just another number on the way back down to the mid-7000s.

Being that my job is keeping track of these arcane, diabolical market assumptions, it's clear that the investment community (with the assistance of the Working Group) still has much work to do, now that the Dow has closed below our magic number 8 times since its invocation on December 1, 2008, and, with today's finish, for the fourth time in a row.

So, when your friends say smart things like, "How'd ya like the Dow today, huh?" You can even-more-smartly respond with the retort, "8149, kid, watch it," secure in the knowledge that any rally that doesn't reach that level is doomed, caught like a fly in a spider's web.

Besides, the bears have a secret weapon which will be unleashed on Friday morning. It's called the Non-farms payroll report, tracking the number of jobs lost in January (lots of them, like more than 500,000).

When the BLS releases that figure at 8:30 am, all the little knee-jerk relief rallies of this week will look like just so much noise because that's all they are. Lows must be retested and haven't been. Just getting within 400 points is not enough.

Dow 8,078.36, +141.53 (1.78%)
NASDAQ 1,516.30, +21.87 (1.46%)
S&P 500 838.50, +13.06 (1.58%)
NYSE Composite 5,268.00, +101.53 (1.97%


As for news flow, it was good early - Pending home sales improved 6.3% in December as eager buyers snatched up foreclosed homes, Merck (MRK) reported a strong 4th quarter - but soured late as automotive firms reported year-over-year sales declines for January: GM -51%, Ford -40%, Toyota -34%. It's not pretty in the auto dealer world. And it's not improving, either.

Citigroup says they're going to start loaning money again, which is really not news, or shouldn't be, since that's what banks are supposed to do, but they announced that they'll employ some $36 billion of the money the government GAVE them, for loans and securitizations of mortgages. Maybe they'll get it right this time, though any positive result from bank lending is still very much in doubt and a matter of severe speculation.

The trouble with unleashing loans across the landscape is that the lender still has no idea what the immediate future holds. No doubt, the honchos at Citi were prodded into making a public loan announcement by the Fed or Treasury or both, as the public has been outraged over the non-use of some $350 billion in TARP funds. Whether this round of lending will help Citigroup is a dodgy issue. Home prices are still falling and the economy is anything but stable. It's likely that this $36 billion to be lent is just a cover for the eventual break-up and bankruptcy of the once high-and-mighty Citi.

Market internals confirmed the move higher. Advancers beat back decliners, 3840-2624. New lows remained ahead of new highs, though the number of new lows decreased along with the gap, 250-24. Volume was nothing exciting, as low volume is becoming a semi-permanent feature of this sublimated market.

NYSE Volume 1,353,295,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,091,114,000


Commodities were mixed, if not mixed up. Oil for March delivery gained 70 cents, to $40.78. Natural gas slipped 4 cents to $4.51. It seems as though the home heating fuel folks missed their opportunity completely this winter. January was extremely cold, but prices barely budged. The Midwest and Northeast parts of the US are about to experience the other side of the coin, with warmer weather predicted for much of February.

Gold fell $14.70, to $892.50. Silver dipped 12 cents to $12.30. The precious metals are still the sweet spot in this market, especially silver, which is being suppressed in a variety of ways and is well below the traditional gold-silver ratio. Just as gold was the fair-haired boy of the previous five years, it may be silver's time to shine.

Midday, Tom Daschle withdrew his nomination for Secretary of Health and Human Services in a tax-related snafu.

Honestly, is that good news or bad? Probably a little of both. Maybe it's time to overhaul the tax code. Just a thought...




Friday, July 11, 2008

The Fannie and Freddie Show

Anyone who still believes that US equity markets are either safe, fair or honest, needs to take a look at today's charts. All of the major indices were down massively at 2:30 pm. The Dow was down 250, the NASDAQ, down 55, the S&P down 32. Just before 3:00 pm all of them turned positive.

Somehow, that kind of move does not make any sense. There are nefarious forces at work, and they are likely those of the government, in the form of the Plunge Protection Team (PPT), or the President's Working Group on Financial Markets.

Only they have the power to make markets move massive in one direction over very short periods of time. And by the way, they're the same group of people who are likely behind the current mess we're in, having stolen most of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's assets years ago.

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Speaking of those two near-insolvent GSEs (Government Sponsored Entities), stocks were lower largely because most of the people who know a little about this stuff think they're going to go under, meaning that $5 Trillion worth of real estate loans will no longer be guaranteed by our wise and beneficent federal government. (It's probably for the best. They can't pay their bills as it is, so why not just default on everything?)

What will happen is a sharp rise in interest rates and a further deterioration of already seized up credit markets. The US economy is on the verge of complete catastrophic collapse, and those at the top of the heap - politicians, CEOs and mainstream news media - don't want us to panic. That's why the stock indices were only don their piddling amounts today, and not double or triple that.

But those losses are coming.

Sooner or later all manipulation schemes fail, and this one has run its course. Look for 10,000 on the Dow within 60 days and 8,500 or lower by year's end. There isn't enough good news around to save us. Even capturing Osama bin Laden (a good bet by November if the markets are down and the Republicans are down in the polls) will only boost stocks a little bit. Maybe 1000 points on the Dow, and even that won't last long.

Dow 11,100.54 -128.48; NASDAQ 2,239.08 -18.77; S&P 500 1,239.49 -13.90; NYSE Composite 8,347.24 -88.70

This is all about debt. Our banks are deeply in debt, to the point at which they have been selling off assets to raise capital. So are brokerages, investment banks, the Federal Reserve and the US government, and nobody has figured out a way out of debt.

Try reducing military spending by $500 billion a year, ending the war in Iraq and getting out of Afghanistan for starters. Too tough? Too bad, then. You lose all your assets.

Declining issues overwhelmed advancers again, 3793-2514. New lows beat new highs, 1210-77. Nearly 1 in 5 stocks on the NASDAQ and NYSE hit new lows today. No two ways about it, that's just plain ugly.

Oil finished up $3.33 at $145.66. Gold was up $18.60, to $960.60. Silver added 50 cents to $18.82. All of those prices are close to record - and unsustainable - highs.

Soon enough, everything is going to crash in price. Houses already have, and commercial real estate is beginning to crack. Stocks are down more than 20% from their year-ago highs. Commodities will be the last to go, but when they do, the losses on Wall Street will be enormous.

Remember Gordon Gecko, from the film Wall Street? He said, greed is good.. Well, allow me to paraphrase, as our so-called leaders try to avoid you and I panicking over our economic conditions. Panic is good.

Have a nice weekend. Enjoy it as best you can, because next week earnings reports begin flowing to market in earnest and they're going to be bad, very, very bad.

NYSE Volume 1,734,346,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,386,000,000

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

The Most Corrupted Markets in History

There are always shenanigans and manipulations involved in any kind of market, be it a food store, commodities exchange or those with which we are most familiar, equities.

The equity markets in the United States have to be some of the most corrupted places on the planet, far worse than those in so-called less-developed nations, mostly because both the regulation and the corruption is done by the very same entity - the government.

Not that the crude oil futures markets aren't any less subject to manipulation and distortion by a consortium of big-money players, but the trading today on the major US indices gives a small window into which we can see the depths and depravity of government-inspired and controlled manipulation.

Tuesday's markets opened with a spate of bad news.

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First a pre-earnings announcement by UPS that the high cost of gas had soured their second quarter expectations, then the Conference Board reported Consumer Confidence hitting another low, down to a June reading of 50.4, from 58.1, in May. It was the fifth-lowest reading ever.

Shortly after the announcement, stocks on the Dow Jones Industrials fell off by more than 100 points.

But, at 10:40, stocks began a miraculous recovery, and, by 11:20, the Dow had reached positive territory, with the other indices tagging along.

This was, without a doubt, the handiwork of the Plunge Protection Team (PPT), a/k/a, the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, by far the most powerful market intermediaries ever invented, blessed with the unbridled power of the presidency, the US Treasury, the Federal Reserve and heads of various other official and regulatory commissions, with its stated sole purpose to provide stability to financial markets.

The function of the PWGOFM is primarily to shore up flagging stock markets, to prevent panic, or, as is usually the case, to solidify the administration's case that the economy is sound - thus, the nickname, Plunge Protection Team.

What made today's activity so obvious was that the PPT swing into action as soon as the Dow reached 11,750, exactly the low point from March's swoon. It was evident that the powers-that-be (in this case the most corrupt politicians on earth) could not stomach a decline below that level, for that would have indeed confirmed the bear market with all its attendant consequences. Bouncing off it, as it did so obediently, makes the case for a re-test of the lows and a confirmation that we are "out of the woods," when, in fact, investors are totally lost in them.

Stocks have been heading lower for weeks and the sudden turn-about at precisely the closing low which every chartist worth his/her salt is watching, smacks of outright fraud at the highest levels of government.

As it is, even the powerful Plunge Protection Team, backed with monies from the Federal Reserve, cannot prevent the eventual bottoming out of US financial markets. They can only delay the process somewhat, in hopes that their fraud candidate - the flip-flopping John McCain - can make some phony case that all is well in America.

What a total and complete scam!

Dow 11,807.43 -34.93; NASDAQ 2,368.28 -17.46; S&P 500 1,314.29 -3.71; NYSE Composite 8,803.34 -38.55

Despite the best efforts of the PPT, stocks still took it on the chin again, though not quite as badly as they should have. That will come another day, as sure as the sun rises in the East.

Along the same lines, a series of unconfirmed reports from anonymous sources sent shares of Yahoo back up, after hitting multi-month lows. The so-called "rumors" that the company is back in talks with Microsoft, turned a 3/4-point loss into a more than 1/2-point gain. It was nothing more than continued manipulation by people with big money to lose or gain, notably "wildcat investor" Carl Icahn, who is heavily invested in Yahoo and faces a potential no-win situation without Microsoft.

On the day, declining issues held sway over advancers, 4412-1863, and new lows once again finished ahead of new highs, 768-90, a trend dating back to October 31, 2007. Since then, there have been more new highs than new lows on only a handful (less than 8) of days.

Crude oil for August delivery finished 26 cents higher, at $137.00. Gold was up $4.40, to $891.60 and silver declined 16 cents to $16.74. Once more, signs that the commodities boom is over are being telegraphed by the sluggish trade in precious metals.

Additionally, congress moved today to regulate oil futures trading more stringently than ever before, a move that many say could lead to prices of less than $89 per barrel and gas at $2.00 to $2.50 per gallon. Wishful thinking, indeed, but also well-timed, politically.

Tomorrow, the Fed issues a policy statement at 2:15. investors will collectively hold their breath in anticipation of the Fed leaving the federal funds rate unchanged at 2%.

How horribly stupid, and how easily fooled, investors are!

NYSE Volume 1,328,610,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,191,484,000