Thursday, February 20, 2025

Stocks Hitting Resistance at All-Time Highs; Walmart Issues dull Guidance; FOMC Minutes Show Fed Holding on Rates

Compared to recent days, Wednesday was a little on the dull side. Elon Musk and DOGE didn't fire whole departments, President Trump didn't end any wars, and the stock market relied upon minutes from the January FOMC meeting for investment decisions.

Federal Reserve officials discussed the effects of potential changes in trade from proposed Trump tariffs and weighed the administration's efforts to slow illegal immigration and deport potentially millions of working age adults on the economy. They also reportedly discussed the inherent difficulty in discerning whether changes would be persistent or temporary regarding inflation, employment, and the general economy, minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee's January 28-29 meeting showed.

Essentially, the FOMC members couldn't make heads or tails of Trump or his directives other than to guess about their effectiveness, so they took a wait and see approach, deciding to keep the federal funds rate at current levels, indicating a preference for holding off on rate cuts in the near term.

From the minutes, Wall Street's coven of watchful witches bubbled up a brew that was somehow positive, sending stocks from their doldrums to another gloriously positive finish and a record close on the S&P 500. The main beneficiary was, as usual, NASDAQ, which ended positive for the fifth straight session. The S&P has closed higher eight of the past 11 sessions. Only the NYSE Composite remained lower for the day.

After the close Wednesday, a few more earnings reports trickled in, notable Cheesecake Factory (CAKE), which posted solid Q4 and full year 2024 figures. for the quarter, revenue: came in at a record $921 million against analyst expectations for $913.2 million and adjusted EPS (non-GAAP) was $1.04 versus estimates of $0.91. While the restaurant chain's quarter was solid, shares are down between one and two percent in pre-market trading, likely on a pure valuation play. The stock just hit its highest level since June, 2021, even though its dividend yield is nearly two percent and p/e ratio not excessive, in the high teens.

Also reporting after the Wednesday close was Carvana (CVNA). Even though the company beat estimates top and bottom line, the stock is being slaughtered pre-open, down seven percent. Shares recently reached their highest level in three years, but the company's margins are so tight, valuation appears to be the main issue.

On revenues of $3.55 billion for the quarter ended December 2024 the company earned $369 million, or 56 cents per share.

Reporting Thursday morning, Wayfair (W) showed a quarterly loss of $128 million or $1.02 per share on revenue of $3.1 billion, which was just slightly higher than year-ago revenue. Apparently, that's good enough, as shares are flying eight percent higher pre-market.

The kicker was Walmart (WMT), the nation's largest retailer. The company reported another solid quarter, beating estimates, but their guidance was dour, sending shares sharply lower prior to the open. Walmart is trending down six to eight percent a half hour before the bell.

Weekly jobless claims continued to trend near multi-decade lows. 219,000 initial claims were filed in the most recent week. Paradoxically, continuing claims were near 2.0 million, close to four-year highs.

With the open dead ahead, stock futures are slumping. Dow: -155; NASDAQ: -55; S&P: -18.

Gold hit a high of $2,972 earlier in the morning, but has come down off that number. Silver is trending around $33.50. WTI crude got a boost on Wednesday and that trend continues into Thursday, with a barrel going for around $72.50.

The market is teetering close to all-time highs. The Shiller PE ratio hit 38.75 as of Wednesday's close, surpassing the post=pandemic high in October, 2021 (38.58).

At the Close, Wednesday, February 19, 2025:
Dow: 44,627.59, +71.25 (+0.16%)
NASDAQ: 20,056.2, +14.99 (+0.07%)
S&P 500: 6,144.15, +14.57 (+0.24%)
NYSE Composite: 20,228.20, -12.19 (-0.06%)

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

The United States Is a Big Slush Fund; Treasury Missing $4.7 Trillion; Did Goldfinger Steal All of Fort Knox's Gold?

The world has been turned upside down. Just a month since Donald J. Trump was inaugurated as the 47th President of the United States, he's unleashed Elon Musk and his troops at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) upon various agencies and departments of the federal government, uncovering massive levels of fraud, waste, abuse, and corruption.

Democrats - and quite a few Republicans - in congress are in a panic, not because Trump and Musk have unearthed incredible amounts of money missing, wasted, spent, or plundered, but because they fear further unraveling of their hidden truths. Just who was taking bribes, hush money, kickbacks. It's no wonder the Senate pushed the confirmation of Kash Patel as Director of the FBI back a week. Certain lawmakers likely need more time to shred documents, wipe computer hard drives, close bank accounts before the investigations begin.

Meanwhile, Wall Street is content to carry on as though everything is normal, when the condition is actually closer to one of extreme FUBAR. Tuesday's close was yet another example of the devious nature exhibited in lower Manhattan. All of the major indices were in the red just 11 minutes before the final bell. Miraculously, as has been standard practice for months, even years, all of the exchanges turned green at the close.

Wall Street insiders depend on casual investors to only see the closing prices, not peer at daily charts. Those who did saw the Dow down by more than 220 points earlier in the session. "Painting the tape" as it were, has become such a common event that it's expected, and without explanation. Stocks go up. Everybody knows that.

In the travails of the DOGE team over the weekend and into Tuesday, it was discovered that there were thousands of individual social security numbers in age groups from 100 to as high as 300 years with the Death field entered a "false", meaning, according to the SSA's database, these people were still alive, and, ostensibly, entitled to receive benefits. Were they? And since thousands of people don't live to be 100, 120, 140 or more, who actually received the payments? That is going to require more forensic investigation.

Beyond that, Musk tweeted that $4.7 trillion of Treasury payments had no TAS code, and would be "untraceable." That raised a few eyebrows.

If $4.7 trillion was missing or lost or otherwise unaccounted for, divided equally, how much would that be per U.S. citizen?

As of February 1, 2025, the estimated population of the U.S. is 341,271,663. Dividing the total amount of money ($4.7 Trillion) unaccounted for at the U.S. Treasury by the U.S. population produces the following calculation:

$4,700,000,000,000 divided by 341,271,663 U.S. citizens = $13,769.75 (approximately).

Therefore, each U.S. citizen is on the hook for approximately $13,769.75. Surely, some people could use that extra cash.

The responsible party is the Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, the highest-ranking career official in the United States Department of the Treasury. David Lebryk served as Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury between 2014 and 2025. Of course, he served under Janet Yellen, a former Chair of the Federal Reserve. MoneyDaily pointed out that she should never have confirmed, given her ties to the Fed, a foreign, private bank.

Further down the rabbit hole, the requirement for using TAS for every disbursement is not found in a single, standalone statute. Instead, it's a fundamental requirement woven into the fabric of federal financial management through a combination of:

Statutory authority (31 U.S.C. §§ 3512, 3513) establishing the need for robust accounting systems and giving the Treasury the authority to set the rules.

Treasury regulations and guidance (TFM, FAST Book) providing the specific instructions and procedures for using TAS.

OMB guidance (Circulars A-123, A-136) reinforcing the importance of internal controls and accurate financial reporting.

GAO guidance (Title 7) providing further clarification on fiscal procedures.

The system is designed to ensure that every dollar spent by the federal government can be tracked back to its source appropriation, promoting transparency and accountability. The use of TAS is not optional; it's a mandatory part of federal financial management.

Well, somebody needs to do some 'splainin'.

Then there's the not-so-insignificant issue of the gold in Fort Knox. Elon Musk, with the backing of Senator Ron Paul, intends to inspect the vaults, the same ones Auric Goldfinger (Gerd Forbe) planned to abscond with in the 1964 classic OO7 film, "Goldfinger". Who knows, maybe James Bond really didn't catch the villain, Goldfinger's operation "Grand Slam" was a success, and the gold is gone.

Earnings from various companies were reported Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday prior to the bell.

Auction and retail platform Etsy reported before the open Wednesday. Spending on the platform was down 6.8% overall and the number of active buyers fell 2.6%. Though the company managed to beat earnings expectations, the miss on the revenue side has investors fleeing for the exits. Shares of ETSY are down more than five percent in pre-market trading.

Gold ripped higher on Tuesday after being slammed Friday. It's currently trending around $2,955. Silver is bouncing around the mid-$33s. Crude oil has caught a bid, stock futures are lower.

Sooner or later, there's going to be a reckoning, and, judging by the speed at which Trump is proceeding, it looks like sooner. Oh, and U.S. and Russian negotiators pretty much shut down project Ukraine, despite protestations from war-mongers in Europe and the little dictator, Zelensky.

At the Close, Tuesday, February 18, 2025:
Dow: 44,556.34, +10.26 (+0.02%)
NASDAQ: 20,041.26, +14.49 (+0.07%)
S&P 500: 6,129.58, +14.95 (+0.24%)
NYSE Composite: 20,240.39, +109.91 (+0.55%)

Editor's Note: X has temporarily suspended this account from posting for one week. Sorry.



Sunday, February 16, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: DC Panic; Wall Street Apathy; Gold-Backed Currencies Within 1-3 Years; Slowing Ecnomy; Higher Unemployment

Panic is trending in Washington D.C.

Anybody tired of #WINNING yet?

There are unconfirmed rumors of a massive spike in the number of houses up fr sale in and around the Washington D.C. metro area.

Checking with Zillow in a broad search of the area (Beltway and slightly beyond), there were:

  • 6700 homes listed for 6 months
  • 5753 homes listed for 90 days
  • 2922 homes listed for 30 days
  • 1709 homes listed for 14 days
  • 932 homes listed for 7 days
    • Doesn't seem to exactly point to an exodus. It will probably be insightful to watch rents and home sale prices over the next six months, however, as Trump and Musk take an axe to the federal workforce. With all the layoffs, firings, and upcoming prosecutions, it's a good bet that there's going to be more than enough housing for the few that remain. Prices should absolutely crumble unless BlackRock goes in and buys them all (which is a possibility).

      After four weeks of the Trump presidency, politicians are scrambling to delete incriminating evidence from hard drives, cell phones, bank records, you name it. An estimate of how many of the current 535 members of congress (100 senators, 435 members of the House) have taken bribes, kickbacks, or dirty money of some kind would have to be in the 90 percentile range. Estimating how many will resign and/or be caught, be tried, be convicted is probably in the high teens to low 20s. It's fairly obvious U.S. elected officials and higher-ups in government employ have been fleecing the taxpayers for years, even decades. Finally, there may be some exposure to just how deep the corruption has dug into the roots of politics in D.C.

      It's pretty deep and Americans want the crooks exposed. More to come, as they say.

      Meanwhile, Wall Street, responsible for at least some of the corruption via insider tips, favors, and probably payments to politicians, continues to stroll along as if nothing has changed. That's despite the revelations last week that inflation was not under control with the CPI and PPI both at higher levels than previous months and retail sales in January crashing (-0.9%).

      Stocks

      Stocks had a good week, with all the major indices posting gains, led by the NASDAQ (+2.58%), which, along with the S&P, ended a two-week-long slide. The Dow Jones Transportation Average was the best of the bunch with a gain of 2.84% for the week.

      The week past saw mixed results from companies reporting, but most were boosted higher despite results that were largely reflective of a slowing economy.

      The coming week will be shortened, with markets shuttered Monday (Presidents' Day). The earnings calendar gets a little lighter.

      Monday: (markets closed) Transocean (RIG), Huntsman (HUN)

      Tuesday: (before open) Baidu (BIDU), Medtronic (MDT), Entergy (ETR); (after close) Celanese (CE), Devon Energy (DVN), Toll Brothers (TOL)

      Wednesday: (before open) Wix (WIX), Fiverr (FVRR), Analog Devices (ADI), Etsy (ETSY), Garmin (GRMN); (after close) Bausch Health (BHC), Cheesecake Factory (CAKE), Equinox Gold (EQX), Carvana (CVNA)

      Thursday: (before open) Walmart (WMT), Wayfair (W), Birkenstock (BIRK), Shake Shack (SHAK); (after close) Texas Roadhouse (TXRH), Newmont Mining (NEM), Mercado Libre (MELI), Rivian (RIVN)

      Friday: (before open) US Cellular (USM), Atmus (ATMU), Uniti (UNIT).

      Data drops are slim, the most important - and becoming less so every day - will be the Fed minutes from the January FOMC meeting. Nothing spectacular or market moving in that Wednesday afternoon (usually 2:00 pm ET) release.


      Treasury Yield Curve Rates

      Date 1 Mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
      01/10/2025 4.42 4.35 4.36 4.33 4.27 4.25
      01/17/2025 4.43 4.35 4.34 4.32 4.28 4.21
      01/24/2025 4.45 4.36 4.35 4.32 4.25 4.17
      01/31/2025 4.37 4.37 4.31 4.33 4.28 4.17
      02/07/2025 4.37 4.38 4.35 4.37 4.30 4.25
      02/14/2025 4.37 4.38 4.34 4.35 4.32 4.23

      Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
      01/10/2025 4.40 4.46 4.59 4.70 4.77 5.04 4.96
      01/17/2025 4.27 4.33 4.42 4.52 4.61 4.91 4.84
      01/24/2025 4.27 4.33 4.43 4.53 4.63 4.91 4.85
      01/31/2025 4.22 4.27 4.36 4.47 4.58 4.88 4.83
      02/07/2025 4.29 4.31 4.34 4.42 4.49 4.75 4.69
      02/14/2025 4.26 4.26 4.33 4.41 4.47 4.75 4.69

      Nothing says flat like the difference between the lowest rate (4.23%, 1-year note) and the highest (4.69%, 30-year bond) of 0.46%. The 20-year (4.75%) is an anomaly and left aside of calculations.

      The Federal Reserve is being defanged by the Trump administration, gradually, but the effort will pick up momentum as soon as other issues are deemed under control. Those others include downsizing the government, a huge lift in foreign affairs (Middle East, Ukraine chief among them), and the domestic economy. Taking a wrecking ball to the Federal Reserve is the best part of the journey and purposely reserved for the end.

      While the Fed will attempt to assert its authority from time to time via sporadic speeches and the usual rhetoric from their 10 annual FOMC soirees, it was clear from the last FOMC meeting at the end of January that conditions have changed. The Fed stood down, keeping the federal funds target rate at 4.25-4.50% and Chairman Powell was as mealy-mouthed and non-committal as he could be, barring an outright gag order, at his press conference.

      Monetary policy is being taken out of the Fed's hands and will ultimately become a function of the Treasury. Currently, the treasury, secondary bond markets, and forex are providing all the monetary indicators needed without input from the Federal Reserve. The people doing their diligence at the Mariner Eccles building might as well start clearing their desks, packing their bags and sharpening up their resumes. Their days are numbered.

      The American people clearly demand an honest government and Trump is delivering on that promise. They will ultimately demand honest money, but that is an issue for another day, though, considering the speed at which Trump is operating, that day could come sooner than many wish to consider. The U.S. dollar, along with Russia's rouble, China's yuan, and India's rupee will have gold backing, either in full or in fraction, either for international trade or domestic transactions, at some time within the next one to three years. It only makes sense to have honest money the global standard and the countries with the largest gold holdings will dominate how currencies adjust to the emerging new standards.

      Central banks, being private, will protest vigorously, but their lamentations will fall on deaf ears. The global community has had its fill of the World Bank, IMF, and fiat currencies backed by nothing but faith in central banks, not governments. Once governments begin to wrest control of their currencies back from the debt pushers, there will be no stopping their momentum. The process has begun and the leaders of the "Big Four" will coordinate their agendas.

      Central banks will become irrelevant and soon dissolve. Government treasuries issuing the currency of their respective nations will become the norm. This is the biggest story of the century, unfolding before our very eyes though most people are blind to it.

      Spreads:

      2s-10s
      9/15/2023: -69
      9/22/2023: -66
      9/29/2023: -44
      10/06/2023: -30
      10/13/2023: -41
      10/20/2023: -14
      10/27/2023: -15
      11/03/2023: -26
      11/10/2023: -43
      11/17/2023: -44
      11/24/2023: -45
      12/01/2023: -34
      12/08/2023: -48
      12/15/2023: -53
      12/22/2023: -41
      12/29/2023: -35
      1/5/2024: -35
      1/12/2024: -18
      1/19/2024: -24
      1/26/2024: -19
      2/2/2024: -33
      2/9: -31
      2/16: -34
      2/23: -41
      3/1: -35
      3/8: -39
      3/15: -41
      3/22: -37
      3/28: -39
      4/5: -34
      4/12: -38
      4/19: -35
      4/26: -29
      5/3: -31
      5/10: -37
      5/17: -39
      5/24: -47
      5/31: -38
      6/7: -44
      6/14: -47
      6/21: -45
      6/28: -35
      7/5: -32
      7/12: -27
      7/19: -24
      7/26: -16
      8/2: -08
      8/9: -11
      8/16: -17
      8/23: -09
      8/30: 00
      9/6: +06
      9/13: +09
      9/20: +18
      9/27: +20
      10/4: +5
      10/11: +13
      10/18: +13
      10/25: +14
      11/1: +16
      11/8: +5
      11/15: +12
      11/22: +4
      11/29: +5
      12/6: +5
      12/13: +15
      12/20: +22
      12/27: +31
      1/3: +32
      1/10: +37
      1/17: +34
      1/24: +36
      1/31: +36
      2/7: +20
      2/14: +21

      Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
      9/15/2023: -109
      9/22/2023: -99
      9/29/2023: -82
      10/06/2023: -64
      10/13/2023: -82
      10/20/2023: -47
      10/27/2023: -54
      11/03/2023: -76
      11/10/2023: -80
      11/17/2023: -93
      11/24/2023: -95
      12/01/2023: -105
      12/08/2023: -123
      12/15/2023: -154
      12/22/2023: -149
      12/29/2023: -157
      1/5/2024: -133
      1/12/2024: -135
      1/19/2024: -118
      1/26/2024: -116
      2/2/2024: -127
      2/9: -117
      2/16: -103
      2/23: -112
      3/1: -121
      3/8: -125
      3/15: -109
      3/22: -112
      3/28: -115
      4/5: -93
      4/12: -87
      4/19: -77
      4/26: -70
      5/3: -85
      5/10: -87
      5/17: -94
      5/24: -99
      5/31: -83
      6/7: -92
      6/14: -113
      6/21: -103
      6/28: -96
      7/5: -101
      7/12: -108
      7/19: -103
      7/26: -104
      8/2: -143
      8/9: -131
      8/16: -138
      8/23: -141
      8/30: -121
      9/6: -125
      9/13: -117
      9/20: -80
      9/27: -80
      10/4: -75
      10/11: -58
      10/18: -54
      10/25: -38
      11/1: -18
      11/8: -23
      11/15: -10
      11/22: -12
      11/29: -40
      12/6: -23
      12/13: +18
      12/20: +29
      12/27: +38
      1/3: +38
      1/10: +54
      1/17: +41
      1/24: +40
      1/31: +36
      2/7: +32
      2/14: +32


      Oil/Gas

      WTI crude oil prices continue to fall, from $77.37 at the New York close on January 17, to $74.60 on January 24, to $73.81 on January 31, to $71.06 on February 7, and finally to $70.56 at the New York close this Friday. Four consecutive weeks of falling prices by a cumulative 8.80% should have convinced enough people that the price of oil is not going back up any time soon, regardless of cold winter heating days or summer driving season.

      Gasbuddy.com is reporting the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular gas at the pump up another four cents from last week, at $3.15 a gallon Sunday morning.

      California remains top of the heap, up sharply from last week, at $4.78, from $4.56 last week and $4.43 a gallon two weeks ago.

      Pennsylvania was up marginally at $3.37, the Keystone State remaining the price leader in the Northeast. New York is a distant second or third, at $3.15. Connecticut ($3.07) was sstable along with Massachusetts ($3.00). Maryland dropped back to third in the Northeast ($3.10).

      Illinois was up three cents, to $3.25. Ohio ($3.02) and Indiana ($2.99) were static.

      Mississippi ($2.65) held at the lowest, just slightly better than Oklahoma ($2.66) this week. Following are Texas ($2.68) and Louisiana ($2.68). Tennessee ($2.77), Alabama ($2.78), and South Carolina ($2.79) are next, followed by Kentucky ($2.82), Kansas and Arkansas (both, $2.83), and Missouri ($2.87). Georgia bounced higher, ($3.00). Florida fell 14 cents, to $3.01.

      Sub-$3.00 gas can now be found in fewer states than in prior weeks. At least 21 U.S. states have prices under $3.00, down from more than 24 last week and 28 a few weeks ago.

      Arizona ($3.42) is up another 16 cents from last week. Oregon showed prices higher by a dime, at $3.73. Nevada was up 14 cents, at $3.83. Washington was up 12 cents to $4.12, joining California in the small club of mainland states at $4.00 or higher. Utah ($3.03) was stable, but Idaho ($3.20) was higher by three cents.


      Bitcoin

      This week: $97,022.45
      Last week: $96,477.31
      2 weeks ago: $98,218.74
      6 months ago: $59,131.83
      One year ago: $51,685.54
      Five years ago: $9,667.06

      Bitcoin has not been over $100,00 since February 4. Hodlers are becoming impatient, former "diamond hands" turning to granite, eventually to sand as they see profits slip through their fingers. The price rise from $50,000 $60,000 to above $100,000 took place in September, October, and November of last year and has stalled out, with the all-time high now a look back to December 17.

      There exists a growing degree of dissatisfaction with the Trump administration in moving bitcoin and crypto in general to a higher plain and some speculation that the President was pandering for votes in his pro-crypto messaging during the election cycle.

      Rational people who largely agree that bitcoin is nothing more than vaporware and a slush fund for criminals and Wall Street firms like BlackRock (same thing) have watched the fluctuations in price and sentiment and are seeing chart patterns eerily similar to those in 2021, which plateaued at higher levels before falling sharply, decimating both price and sentiment.

      In the end, crypto speculators will get what's coming to them in a cascade of rapid declines, just like previous iterations.


      Precious Metals

      Gold:Silver Ratio: 88.63; last week: 89.66

      Per COMEX continuous contracts:

      Gold price 1/19: $2,740.00
      Gold price 1/26: $2,777.40
      Gold price 2/2: $2,809.30
      Gold price 2/9: $2,886.10
      Gold price 2/16: $2,893.70

      Silver price 1/19: $31.05
      Silver price 1/26: $31.04
      Silver price 2/2: $32.24
      Silver price 2/9: $32.19
      Silver price 2/16: $32.65

      Gold peaked somewhere around $2,966 on the COMEX late Monday, was ripped lower, bounced back Thursday into Friday, then was mercilessly punched down all day Friday into the weekend. Silver took a similar roundtrip, though the high was on Friday, the price of $34.23 the best since late October.

      It's the same tired story. Every time PMs apear ready to break out - and this is especially true for silver - the COMEX wheel grinds it down to more pedestrian levels. Sooner or later this price manipulation that has become so tortured and obvious will end. Until that time, there's little to do other than wait or buy more.

      Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (numismatics excluded, free shipping):

      Item/Price Low High Average Median
      1 oz silver coin: 38.49 44.95 39.96 39.00
      1 oz silver bar: 35.22 46.22 41.14 41.48
      1 oz gold coin: 2,930.59 3,071.97 3,019.45 3,024.07
      1 oz gold bar: 2,996.31 3,050.50 3,020.39 3,019.36

      The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) ended three weeks of declines with a rise to $40.40, a gain of 97 cents from the February 9 price of $39.43 per troy ounce.


      WEEKEND WRAP

      Things in Washington D.C. and across America are just beginning to get interesting. It's going to take a while for Wall Street to begin reflecting the rapid-fire changes to the economic landscape. Judging by the most important metrics, stocks should be nearing a top, and with earnings season for the first quarter winding down, more focus will be on events in D.C. that are reshaping the government.

      The massive movement of employees off the federal workforce roles will result in an unemployment spike. There's little doubt about that, but unemployment is always a lagging indicator. Impact to the nation's "wealth effect" will take considerably longer to materialize and it's possible that Trump's policies of mass firings, resignations, and furloughs, combined with potentially millions of deportations, and threats of tariffs rather than real ones, will likely stave off further inflationary tendencies.

      Companies may not experience much pricing power with consumers and credit stretched to extremes. An end to "Project Ukraine" and peace with Russia may be emboldened by lifting of sanctions, especially with regard to energy. With oil prices are already under pressure, removal of sanctions on Russian oil could produce a significant glut worldwide, and, set against an environment of slack to declining demand, is outright dis-inflationary, possibly deflationary.

      It's difficult to believe stocks can continue to rise in such an environment. Once housing prices begin to readjust back toward mean pricing, stocks and other financial assets should follow.

      For now, it's a guessing game.

      Happy Presidents' Day.

      At the Close, Friday, February 14, 2025:
      Dow: 44,546.08, -165.35 (-0.37%)
      NASDAQ: 20,026.77, +81.13 (+0.41%)
      S&P 500: 6,114.63, -0.44 (-0.01%)
      NYSE Composite: 20,130.48, -50.81 (-0.25%)

      For the Week:
      Dow: +242.68 (+0.55%)
      NASDAQ: +503.37 (+2.58%)
      S&P 500: +88.64 (+1.47%)
      NYSE Composite: +91.00 (+0.45%)
      Dow Transports: +459.34 (+2.84%)

      Editor's Note: X has temporarily suspended this account from posting for one week. Sorry.

Friday, February 14, 2025

Good Money vs. Bad Money, Trump and the Constitution; Silver Breaking Out; Draft Kings Losing Money a Winning Be

In the likeliest scenario, the Fed won't raise or lower interest rates significantly (remember: to quell inflation in the 1970s and early 1980s, Fed Chairman Paul Volker raised the effective federal funds rate all the way to 19%) over the next few years. There will be shrieking and hollering aplenty, but the federal funds target rate will range between 3.50 and 5.25%.

Having little to no effect on inflation, the Federal Reserve will be seen as incompetent and President Trump will move to abolish it. That would require action by congress, which could become a reality after the midterms of 2026. In the meantime, Trump may issue some executive order or orders and direct the Treasury to issue U.S. currency redeemable in gold and/or silver.

The price of gold in such an instance could be as high as $20,000 per ounce, some economists target it even higher. No matter what, it's going to be higher than it is currently. There seems to be no argument about that.

Timing and price levels are the two main points of argument at this late stage. There's also the possibility that Trump does nothing about the Fed or the dollar vis-a-vis the constitution, which pegs a U.S. dollar as equal to 371.25 grains of silver, meaning that a U.S. dollar is defined as containing 0.7734375 troy ounces of silver.

Well, if silver is around its current level of $32 an ounce, a constitutional dollar would be worth $24.75 in Federal Reserve Notes, making it, by far, the preferred currency. Some people, such as Alasdair Macleod and James Turk, both of goldmoney.com, suggest that the two currencies could circulate simultaneously, until, one or the other is eliminated.

Gresham's Law states that "bad money drives out good" and is often misunderstood. The principal takeaway is that people will spend the bad money and hoard the good money. Thus, it's entirely possible that the U.S. dollar, represented by the Fed's Federal Reserve Notes, will continue to be the currency of choice, while savers put away the constitutional money until such a time that it becomes officially the U.S. currency. Those constitutional dollars, redeemable in part or in whole for gold and/or silver, may be used as a vehicle for settling international trade balances.

That there could be two competing currencies is entirely plausible. As is currently the case, there already exists a school of thought that considers gold and silver currency, and further, the only true form of "money." So, gold, silver, and Federal Reserve Notes are already circulating through the U.S. economy, along with bitcoin and thousands of other alt-coins in the cryptoverse. It wouldn't be surprising to witness further decimation in the value of the Fed's currency by competition, which is ultimately a good thing.

Getting to market conditions this Friday morning, stock futures are tumbling in the pre-market, though not to any egregious level. Dow futures are down $122, and S&P futures off about $10 at 8:00 am ET.

It wouldn't be a shock if stocks sold off to end the week. It's been a persistent pattern. The Dow, NASDAQ, and S&P each sold off the past three Fridays, January 24, 31, and February 7. Maybe it's just herd behavior or a function of stock option expiration. Gone are the days of options expiry on the thrid Friday of each month. The current market structure accommodates not only options expiring on every Friday, but also every day, as in 0DTE (Zero Days to Expiration) options. In more ways than anyone dares to admit, derivatives (options, futures, swaps, repos, etc.) drive the actual market.

Gold came close to making another all-time high this morning on the COMEX. The continuous contract topped out at $2,963.20, precisely three dollar short of the high made Monday night. Silver made a big move in the quiet hours, hitting $34.16 earlier this morning. That's a three-month high, but anybody with skin in the game thinks $35 is a mortal lock, probably within weeks, and $40 will follow as day follow night. It would be stunning if silver doesn't exceed $40 an ounce this year. That would be about a 36% gain off the December 31, 2024 price of $29.24, pretty much par for the course these days.

It's noted with some irony that Draft Kings (DKNG) reported fourth quarter and full year results after the bell Thursday, missing its earnings target of -0.15 cents by losing 0.28, or, almost $138 million. The irony is that DraftKings purports to make money off gamblers, but hasn't made a single dime. In fact, the company has accumulated losses of $6,441,228,000. That's SIX BILLION, or, in other words, there needs to be a lot more losers using their platform. "Nice business model ya got there. Shame if anything would happen to it." Shares are up five percent in the pre-market. Go figure.

With the opening bell to close out the week in less than an hour, unless the bottom falls out today, the majors are looking at a winner for the week. Through Thursday's close, the Dow is up 408 points, the NASDAQ ahead by 422, and the S&P is up - after making a record close Thursday - 89 points.

At the Close, Thursday, February 13, 2025:
Dow: 44,711.43, +342.87 (+0.77%)
NASDAQ: 19,945.64, +295.69 (+1.50%)
S&P 500: 6,115.07, +63.10 (+1.04%)
NYSE Composite: 20,181.29, +118.98 (+0.59%)



Thursday, February 13, 2025

PPI Comes in Red Hot at +3.5% Annualized; Wall Street Says "Buy All the Things"' Because Inflation in Clown World

Yesterday, the BLS released January CPI, which showed an increase of 0.5% and a year-over-year increase of three percent. Simply put, if CPI continues to rise at 0.5% monthly, the annual increase will not be three percent at the end of 2025, but six percent, yet the Federal Reserve insists that it finished its work on taming inflation well over a year ago and actually cut interest rates by a full percent from September through December of last year.

If it wasn't so horrible, the Fed's political miscalculation to try to keep one Donald J. Trump out of the white House by lowering the federal funds target rate by half a percent in September (just in time for the election of Kamala the Hutt), it would be laughable. Given that prices are rising instead of falling, nobody's laughing and nobody is listening to a word the Fed has to say, for a multitude of good reasons: they're wrong, they work in the interest of their shareholders (major commercial banks) instead of the American public, they have destroyed the value of the U.S. currency by 98% since inception in 1913, and, they're about to be extinguished by the man they tried so hard to defeat. Trump is hell-bent on restoring constitutional money to the United States. There is no need for the Federal Reserve (a private bank) if the Treasury issues US$.

What occurred yesterday on the major exchanges was familiar. Wall Street rejected the assumption that consumer prices actually matter, and, after futures collapsed on the CPI reading, when the cash market opened an hour later at what turned out to be the lows of the day on the Dow, NASDAQ, and S&P 500, the reaction was adverse, buying the dip, as if nothing mattered other than higher stock prices. The NASDAQ, particularly the most egregious performer of stock market magic, was down more than 220 points at the open yet finished the session with a gain of six points. Woo-hoo!

The Dow and S&P ended with losses, but they were both well above the opening lows.

So, were all those selling in the futures market just plain wrong, stupid, ignorant of the reality that stocks must go up all the time, or, are markets just wired to reflect the never-ending con game to buy anything the Wall Street horde is pushing? AI? Dotcom? Crypto? Bio-tech?

Maybe its something different. Maybe stocks will continue to rise because of inflation. In Weimar Germany and in Zimbabwe, during their bouts of hyperinflation, stocks soared. However, the reality of the situation exposed the lie: 200, 300, 500% gains in the stock market didn't stand a candle to inflation running at 600, 800, or more than 1000 percent. The price of their investments may have looked fine on paper, but their value was being decimated, and high stock prices today may be just a symptom of the underlying inflation disease.

Today, the BLS is treating the financial community to their estimate of Producer Price Inflation (PPI), which has been a mixed bag the past six months, but has inched higher the past two.

Here is the BLS headline statement:

The Producer Price Index for final demand increased 0.4 percent in January, seasonally adjusted, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Final demand prices rose 0.5 percent in December 2024 and 0.2 percent in November. (See table A.) On an unadjusted basis, the index for final demand moved up 3.5 percent for the 12 months ended January 2025.

Leading the broad-based January advance in the index for final demand, prices for final demand services rose 0.3 percent. The index for final demand goods moved up 0.6 percent.

The index for final demand less foods, energy, and trade services rose 0.3 percent in January after moving up 0.4 percent in December. For the 12 months ended in January, prices for final demand less foods, energy, and trade services advanced 3.4 percent.

So, the unadjusted 3.5% annual inflation at the producer wellhead and 3.4% annual core producer inflation is good, no? NO. It's not good. Producer prices largely get passed onto consumers, so expect the CPI to continue going higher while the genii at the Fed do nothing.

Drilling down a bit to the BLS charts, PPI change in final demand from 12 months ago (unadjusted) looks like this:

August: +2.1%; September: +2.1%; October: +2.7%; November: +2.9%; December: +3.5%; January: +3.5%.

Now, all you math majors: is +3.5% inflation better than +2.1% inflation? Anybody notice a pattern developing?

These figures are all higher than what was expected, yet, upon the release, stock futures jumped higher, because, well, if the currency buys less, then stocks must be priced higher.

Makes perfect sense, in Clown World. (OK, OK, wait. Stock futures were down hard yesterday and stocks rallied, so today, futures are up, so stocks will fall? Mmmm, maybe not, since logic is not allowed in Clown World.)

At the Close, Thursday, February 13, 2025:
Dow: 44,368.56, -225.09 (-0.50%)
NASDAQ: 19,649.95, +6.10 (+0.03%)
S&P 500: 6,051.97, -16.53 (-0.27%)
NYSE Composite: 20,062.31, -105.89 (-0.53%)