Thursday, March 20, 2025

Fed Keeps Rates on Hold; Markets Overjoyed, But the Move Was Vacant; Gold Still Rising, When Silver Breaks Out, Everything Changes

Generally speaking, articles published on Yahoo! Finance tend to lean a little to the left and are almost always anti-Trump.

For its frankness, this story, published Thursday morning caught the eye and didn't disappoint on the Trump-bashing front. The article was penned by Trevor Jennewine, of The Motley Fool, not one of Yahoo! Finance's usual hacks, which may help explain why it made the front page at all.

The article, titled, "A Stock Market Alarm Is Sounding for the Third Time in 20 Years. History Says This Will Happen Next," delineates the bear markets of 2008-09 and 2020, citing negative GDP in both instances. To wit:

2008-2009: GDP declined 2.5% in Q4 2008 and remained negative through Q3 2009 as the housing market collapsed and borrowers defaulted on subprime mortgages. Those events led to the Great Recession.

2020: GDP declined 7.5% in Q2 2020 and remained negative through Q4 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic forced business closures and social distancing that disrupted supply chains around the world. Those events led to brief recession.

Noting that the first quarter of 2025 is currently projected to post a negative result somewhere between 1.5 and 2.6 by the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow nowcast, the article goes on to posit... "the S&P 500 fell 56% from its high during the Great Recession, and the benchmark index fell 33% during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic."

If GDP does come in at a negative number, Yahoo! will most likely blame Trump and begin blaring about how tariffs and firings of useless federal employees are leading to a recession that will be devastating for the middle class and erode confidence in his presidency.

OK, sure. Yahoo! Finance isn't known for being shy about misplacing blame or beating the Donald's reputation into the ground, but, their honest assessment of the situation in Thursday's article may indicate that the selling in the stock market is far from over, despite wins for the bulls in three of the past four sessions.

While the recent gains may have cheered up some investors, the gains actually haven't amounted to much. While the S&P was rescued from "correction territory", it is still down eight percent from its February high and the NASDAQ is still hunkered down some 12% from December 16 and the Dow Transportation Average even further in the red.

The Big Three - Dow, NASDAQ, S&P - remain below their 200-day moving average while the NYSE Composite has regained the space between the 50 and 200-day moving averages. Other than the Composite (+2.54), they're all down year-to-date, led by the NASDAQ's 8.08% drop.

Earlier Thursday morning, something either spooked the stock futures or there's some serious horse-trading going on behind the scenes. All three majors were positive, then, suddenly, dropped like rocks into a quarry, sinking into the negative waters. It was probably a reaction to ECB President Christine Lagarde, saying US tariffs could negatively affect growth prospects in the Eurozone, a laughable statement at best, since most of Europe is already in a recession or is soon to be.

In any case, with initial unemployment claims coming in quietly at 223,000, there remains plenty to suggest that Wednesday's vacuous gains based on literally no reassurances from the Fed or Chairman Powell are soon to be vaporized by the reality of slowing economies worldwide. Keeping an eye on gold rising ($3,050) and WTI crude oil swooning ($67.17 at 9:00 am ET), there are more indicators pointing to lower for longer on the stocks front. Silver shorts on the COMEX are at record levels. If silver ever breaks out above $35, it could signal a fairly rapid move to $50 and the end of the COMEX, the entire financial system and the world as we know it. Well, maybe not everything blows up, but, silver IS money, after all, and central banks don't own any, except Russia and maybe China.

When silver moves, look out below for falling currencies, economies, and entire Western nations. France, England and South Korea being prime candidates for overthow.

At the Close, Wednesday, March 19, 2025:
Dow: 41,964.63, +383.32 (+0.92%)
NASDAQ: 17,750.79, +246.67 (+1.41%)
S&P 500: 5,675.29, +60.63 (+1.08%)
NYSE Composite: 19,581.32, +159.74 (+0.82%)

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