Showing posts with label margin calls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label margin calls. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Armageddon Arrives in Commodities; Stocks Next

As has been the ongoing motif of this blog for many months, the grand Bernanke experiment is now experiencing some of the nasty side effects. Today's action in commodities, particularly silver and crude oil, came as a stark reminder that leveraged positions can go very, very badly in very, very short spans of time.

It was just last Friday that silver stood at the precipice of $50/ounce, approaching the all-time high. As of this writing it is now trading on the spot market at $34.76, a drop of 30% over just four days. WTI crude oil futures were at $116 on Monday, and today it closed on the NYMEX at $99.80. All those sheiks and oil robber-barons drooling over $4/gall gas across the USA can now wipe their chins with their sell tickets.

Stocks were also not immune from the liquidity trap. The Dow was down as many as 200 points around midday, but recovered a bit into the close. Still, leveraged bets (margin) on selected stocks have finally begun to display inherent risk and the carnage has only begun.

What set off today's massive selling spree were a number of unrelated events which combined to turn the trading day into an economic tornado, tearing through asset classes like a Midwestern twister. First, a series of margin tightenings on silver speculation that has been ongoing from Sunday night began the unwinding process. Silver had been hammered for three straight days without buyers on the downside. Then, with the 8:30 am release of some truly horrible weekly unemployment claims, the spring was coiled tighter.

Initial claims for the most recent week (last week in April) came in at 474,000, the highest since August of 2010, off expectations for a number around 400,000. So much for Hope and Change, Bernanke's Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) and QE2. The smart money has made its way out of Dodge and the rest of the pilgrims are scrambling to leave town with whatever they can salvage.

While commodities were being ravaged one after another, stocks were salvaged from the brunt of the storm, though they eventually faced capitulation and will likely be under pressure from the opening bell on Friday, after the April non-farm payroll report goes public at 8:30 am EDT. Following the unemployment number, expectations have been ratcheted lower. The expected number of new jobs created during the month was supposed to be around 200,000, though that's been trimmed to 185,000 and even lower by some analysts. Anything under 185,000 will produce a bloodbath. Even anything over that will likely induce more selling, on a faster pace than today's, because this is a liquidity trap, and economic numbers - good, bad or indifferent - may not matter at all.

The winners on the day were the US dollar, which majestically made its move all the way from a low of 72.81 (about the point at which Mssrs. Bernanke and Geithner were having accidents in their pantaloons) to a close at 74.08, a move of roughly 1.5%, which, in the world of currencies, is enormous. This created a vicious, self-reinforcing virtuous loop, with the dollar's rise causing commodity margin calls, and a risk-off scramble in stocks.

The other winner was bonds, which explains much. Bonds are the lifeblood of the Ponzi scheme between the Treasury, Primary Dealers and the Federal Reserve which gave us the illusion of prosperity against the backdrop of an eroding dollar. Bumping right up to the debt ceiling, the Fed intervened in a very big way today - behind the scenes, of course - to dampen risk appetite and make fixed income investments the choice for the foreseeable future. They had to, being backed into an untenable position.

It was truly a momentous day, one which we've been preparing you for with our reminders all week that the narrative was changing with the (fictitious) slaying of Osama bin Laden. And now, change has come to us all.

Dow 12,584.17, -139.41 (1.10%)
NASDAQ 2,814.72, -13.51 (0.48%)
S&P 500 1,335.10, -12.22 (0.91%)
NYSE Composite 8,397.40, -109.21 (1.28%)


Advancing issued were submerged by decliners overall, 4183-2412. The NASDAQ recorded 48 new highs and 52 new lows, the second straight day of high-low reversal. On the NYSE, there were 100 new highs and 36 new lows, mostly due to the elevated levels reached recently. It's hard to imagine the daily lows not overtaking the highs within the next week. Volume was magnificently higher as sellers sold with both hands.

NASDAQ Volume 2,241,177,750
NYSE Volume 5,510,796,500


Crude oil took an earth-shattering drop of over 8%, losing $9.44, to finish at $99.80. The selling is certainly far from over as the tempering of emotions in the Middle East after the slaying of OBL will surely push prices back to some level of sanity and take out the majority of the risk premium and speculative fever.

Gold, which had been holding up relatively well with respect to other precious metals, finally took a beating, losing $43.40 (nearly 3%), to its current trading level of $1473.10. Silver took the worst of it again, falling another $4.73, to $34.66, but there is a silver lining for the faithful in precious metals. Most of the true believers - who only hold physical metal and use the futures and ETFs only as a hedge - have a cost basis below $20/ounce.

Technically, they've lost nothing, and could still sell right here for a hefty profit. But they won't, and are actually looking at this momentous correction as a buying opportunity, hoping to snatch up more metal at what they perceive as bargain-basement prices. The general strategy is to buy once everything has more or less settled out. Nobody is really worried about catching the absolute volume, and a few days of upwards trending will not entice the hardiest of the breed. They will wait until a bottom is confirmed. Like love, they'll know it when they see it. The same strategy holds more or less true for gold bugs worldwide.

The holders of gold and silver will eventually rule the world as we approach - at breakneck speed - the eventual destruction of the global fiat money regime and the likely collapse of more than a few governments. What has happened in Greece, Iceland, Ireland and Portugal will eventually visit the shores of Japan, the USA, Great Britain, France and even China.

We are still reeling from the catastrophe of the housing bubble and collapse and the general liquidity and solvency crisis of 2008. The measures taken by the Federal Reserve and other central banks has been to throw more money at the credit monster they created, but it has resulted in extreme imbalances everywhere. The thinking at the top of government is focused already on the elections of 2012. The betting is that the US government and the financial community will have a time making it there unscathed.

If this looks anything like 2008 to those wizened enough to learn from history, those people would be on the right track, except, this time, it's likely to be worse and without any magic bullets, because the Fed is all out of them.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

American Sheeple Love to Be Fleeced and Played

The lies, half-truths and material obfuscation by the government has reached new heights with the latest flip-flop on the "Osama bin Laden is dead" story.

Now the president won't release a picture of a dead bin Laden because it might inflame the Jihadists of the world. Rubbish! Pure, unadulterated nonsense from the man who is supposed to be the leader of the greatest nation on the planet, but is now exposed as nothing more than a simple liar.

Lies, lies and more lies are all the American people can expect from the most corrupt government the world has ever seen. The details of this entire, "we got him" affair have changed so often as to strain credulity until it doubles over in laughter or vomiting, or both.

First, the story originally released by AP on Sunday night, May 1, was that bin Laden was killed a week prior and that the White House had been waiting for DNA tests to confirm that the victim was indeed the world's bogeyman. Anyone watching the news scroll on FoxNews or CNN saw it, undeniably. That story vanished as soon as the president stepped up to the podium that Sunday night.

Then there were reports of a firefight, now, no firefight. Osama was armed, then he wasn't; he used his wife as a human shield, then he didn't and it wasn't even his wife, then it was his wife and she was shot because she rushed one of the Seals. There were two helicopters, no, three, no, there were four. Then Osama bin Laden is taken out of the compound to Afghanistan and rushed to an aircraft carrier for a proper burial at sea. Sure, that's completely understandable, especially if you believe Osama bin Laden was a seaman or a pirate.

Of course, there's the implausibility factor of a huge compound with 18-foot high walls, topped by barbed wire in a town populated by retired Pakistani military people, which never raised any suspicion for five or six years. That's certainly believable.

The entire episode is one huge farce and sadly, the iPad buying American sheeple public-at-large will gooble up every last sound bite of it, all the while chanting, USA, USA, USA! because the American sheeple actually love being conned, swindled, cheated, fleeced and sheared by their government. After all, this is the culmination of the 9/11 attacks, the major farce that has to this day never been adequately explained.

But, so what? Osama the Terrible is dead, right, and whether he's been dead for five, six or seven years is really immaterial because the powers that be are changing the narrative. They had to, because the most recent narrative of borrow and spend and gas at $4.00 a gallon and rising food prices and war on three fronts wasn't really going all that well, was it?

So, now, we have crashing commodity prices, falling stocks and oil down seven bucks in three days. Get ready for the new AUSTERITY coming to America. The sheeple will be fleeced from an entirely different direction and instead of calling it a recession or a depression, it will be known as a period of "slow growth" or "stagnation." Anything but calling a spade a spade, a recession a recession, a depression a depression.

The American sheeple will receive less in government service and be taxed more for it all in a "shared sacrifice" decade of austerity that is evolving even as we sit back and watch the latest American Idol or Star Dancing. America has been permanently dumbed-down and defeated, and the government loves it because an ignorant public is a well-behaved public. Give them their bread and circuses, today known as food stamps and football, and they'll just blindly follow along.

That's just the way it is, sheeple, one and all. You love being played.

Dow 12,723.58, -83.93 (0.66%)
NASDAQ 2,828.23, -13.39 (0.47%)
S&P 500 1,347.32, -9.30 (0.69%)
NYSE Composite 8,506.61, -78.07 (0.91%)


For a change, everything (except bonds) went down. Declining issues overwhelmed advancers - for the third day in a row - by a score of 4700-1904. On the NASDAQ, the flip required to shake the markets from rally mode to selling spree occurred today with 52 new highs, but 53 new lows. On the NYSE, stubbornness prevailed with 89 new highs and 28 new lows, but it's getting closer. Volume, unsurprisingly, was up again today, on a down day, an ominous warning that more selling is on the way.

NASDAQ Volume 2,250,185,000
NYSE Volume 5,078,037,500


Commodities continued to be whipped into submission. WTI crude oil futures fell another $1.81, to $109.24, the lowest price in two weeks. Gold tumbled another $20.60, to $1516.50 and silver took another massive beating, down $2.27, to $39.39. And, this just in after the close, margin requirements on silver are being raised again by the CME. Apparently sending the price of silver down $11 in three days isn't enough to square all of HSBC's and JP Morgan's short positions.

The often-discredited ADP Payroll report for April was released prior to the open today, showing private payrolls increasing by 179,000, short of consensus. But the real news was that the ISM Services index fell from 57.3 in March to 52.8 in April, a pretty big loss and well below consensus estimates of 57.5.

Tomorrow comes another week of initial unemployment and continuing claims, which precedes the BLS non-farm payroll report on Friday.

Prepare for disaster because we've been living one for the past three years.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

It's Not as Good as They're Saying; Lows-Highs Flip

To anyone who follows capital markets and the world of high finance closely, the material deficiencies in the US and global "growth" stories are glaring and have been for many months. While the financial press - CNBC, the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg - and the spokespeople for the various central governments around the world continue to feed the public the "recovery" fable, the facts, now beginning to see the light of day, contend that the global economy is still, two-and-a-half years after the grand cascading crash of 2008, in precarious straits.

Five separate stories sealed the fate for global markets today, beginning with China's announcement late Wednesday night (in America) that their trade balance was negative for the month of February.

About the same time, RealtyTrac delivered news that foreclosures had come to nearly a halt in the United States, with their numbers for February dropping 14 percent from the previous month and a 27 percent decrease from February 2010. Normally, that would be good news, but in the current environment of illegal and unethical actions by large, foreclosing banks, it meant that the mess that began in October, 2010 with the robo-signing scandal, was keeping banks from courthouses and clogging up the real estate market in a worsening manner.

Prior to the market opening, two more news items spooked the investment community. First, Moody's downgraded Spain's debt (about time for that!) to Aa2 and then, at 8:30 am on the East coast, the double whammy of new unemployment claims (397,000) and the US trade deficit, which expanded to -$46.3 billion in January.

Then, in mid-afternoon, as if the market had not received enough bad news, a story out of Saudi Arabia said that protesters had been fired upon by government troops.

That final bit of news sent the major indices - which had recovered somewhat off the day's lows - down once more, and stocks finished the session breaking into new depths.

The Dow and S&P broke through various levels of support, with the Dow finishing under the 12,000 mark for the first time in two months and the S&P crashing through it's 55-DMA. The NASDAQ and NYSE Composite each suffered similar pain.

It's becoming plain and clear to everybody living in the real world - not the fantasy land of fund managers, politicians and central bankers - that things are not going so well. Housing is an absolute catastrophe, global trade is grinding down due to higher imput costs and soaring energy prices, Europe is a full-blown basket case on the brink of dissolving, and US stocks are so wickedly overvalued that the path of least resistance is to sell them all, hurriedly, on the first sign of negative news, and there certainly was plenty of that to go around today.

Dow 11,984.61, -228.48 (1.87%)
NASDAQ 2,701.02, -50.70 (1.84%)
S&P 500 1,295.11, -24.91 (1.89%)
NYSE Composite 8,200.07, -179.37 (2.14%)


Declining issues led advancers, 5501-1072, a ratio of better than 5:1. New highs on the NASDAQ were just 33, overtaken by 68 new lows. On the NYSE, just 27 new highs and 31 new lows. This is a critical juncture for the markets, because if the number of new lows remain higher than new highs on a daily basis for long, say, six to eight trading days, it would confirm a hard change of direction, which has been in the cards since the double-engulfing session last Tuesday.

Volume was elevated as is the usual case when sellers outnumber buyers.

NASDAQ Volume 2,374,073,000
NYSE Volume 5,320,324,500


Commodities also took it on the chin, though in not such a dramatic fashion as stocks. Crude oil futures on the NYMEX fell $1.68, to $102.70, due to massive oversupply in the US of unrefined crude. Gold slipped $17.10, but remained below the psychologically-important $1400 level, ending the day at $1,412.50. Silver also was sold off, losing $98 cents, to finish at $35.07, though it should be noted that on days of hard reversals, a lot of precious metals are liquidated by speculators to cover margin calls.

A final note should not be ignored. Bill Gross' PIMCO, the world's largest fixed income family of funds, has slashed its holdings of Treasuries to ZERO. This news, first reported by the avant garde financial blog, zerohedge.com, holds unknown, but potentially damaging conditions. Gross and PIMCO have more or less registered a vote of "no confidence" on the policies of the US government and the Federal Reserve Corporation.

With stocks hammered down repeatedly over the past two weeks, the highs of February 18 look like specs on the horizon and the truth about the real conditions in the global and US markets is finally coming out. The cataclysm begun by the Wall Street banks in 2003-2006 and accelerated by then-Treasury Secretary's $700 billion holdup of the US mint in October, 2008, has many more acts still to be played out.

The rush for the exits began a week ago and the passageway out is beginning to get quite crowded.