Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

It's September 11

It's September 11.

Since this is a very solemn day in American life, there will be no economic or political analysis here. Just take a few moments and reflect upon what being an American means to you. Reflect upon what is important to you. Be honest with yourself. You may want to read what's below.

Recently, I was driving from upstate NY to Eastern Tennessee (moving... thank you, Andrew Cuomo). Watching all the cars and trucks moving up and down the highways, I thought, "all this law enforcement, laws, rules, regulations, restrictions, are bullshit. Look at all these people, traveling wherever they want, carrying whatever they please; there is no way the government can stop people from doing what they want, being free. There are just too many people. They can't control them all."

People need to stop being sheep, being herded, being told what to do. Unfortunately, the public school system has brought us to the brink, but, that was being said 50 years ago, when I was in high school. There are 330 million of us, a handful of them. Throw off the yoke of fear and the control net they throw over us via the media.

It takes a long time for individuals to awaken to the truth, but it can happen in an instant. The moment you shake off all the lies that have been told to you since you were a little kid is the moment you become free. Free to do as you please, without harming anybody else. If you want to farm, do it. If you want to weld, do it. Anything you want can be accomplished if you only have the will to start.

In the classic, "Think and Grow Rich," by Napoleon Hill, there is a great line which never fails:

Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve.

Anyone who truly wants freedom can have it. Nobody needs to raise arms, fire a single bullet. All the power rests in the minds of the people, individually, and collectively.

At the Close, Tuesday, September 10, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,909.43, +73.92 (+0.28%)
NASDAQ: 8,084.16, -3.28 (-0.04%)
S&P 500: 2,979.39, +0.96 (+0.03%)
NYSE Composite: 12,993.96, +33.24 (+0.26%)

Monday, May 2, 2011

Death of Osama bin Laden Springs Bernanke Trap

Whether or not one accepts the story of the demise of Osama bin Laden as gospel or Golem, there is no doubting that the mainstream news media is treating it as the truth, and celebrating it with requisite aplomb.

It served as the leading commentary to an otherwise dull Monday, especially in the financial markets. At one time, the capture or death of the man who was widely recognized as the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks was thought to able to create a market rally of dizzying proportions, but today's response was muted, if not downright dismissive of the manhunt that took nearly ten years, untold thousands of lives and over a trillion dollars.

The euphoria felt at the White House on Sunday night was not reflected in the trading on Wall Street, though the death of the world's most infamous terrorist did manage to provide a suitable cover story for crashing silver, and, to some degree, calming the Midas effect in the gold pits.

Other than those obvious manipulations, the death of OBL did less to inspire confidence than it did to induce relief that the most evil person in the world had finally met his maker. The rest of the moves in the market could widely be attributed to nothing as earth-shattering as the ordinary movement of the US Dollar against other fiat currencies, particularly well=reflected by the dollar index (DXY).

Initially higher on the news, the DXY lost ground throughout the day, finally bottoming out at 72.72 in early afternoon before rallying back to 73.04 at the 4:00 pm NY close. The decline and subsequent rise in the dollar index was the primary mover of stocks throughout the session, in an inverse relationship that has been in effect since the first round of QE in 2009.

In essence - apply tin-foil hat here in appropriate degree - the timing of OBL's death came at the perfect time for the world's money men. The dollar had been in a vicious slide over the past three months, which fueled the commodity and stocks boom, but was also threatening to undermine the reserve status of the US dollar. The decision to "pull the trigger" - whether real or imagined - quieted dollar devaluation fears, for now, but also took down stocks, creating a Bernanke Trap, in which monetization of US debt and the associated demise of the dollar gives rise to inflation and commodity speculation but the inverse could foment a stock market correction or crash and more severe economic fallout.

Thus, with the death of Osama bin Laden, we have a new enemy, the evil genius chairman of the Federal Reserve, the man behind the curtain pulling the levers, Ben Bernanke, and he is hopelessly trapped into a scenario in which neither outcome is preferable or palatable. One might assume that the esteemed chairman will side momentarily with the monetarists who believe dollar hegemony is preferable to runaway inflation and rioting at gas stations, though making assumptions in the age of political markets is a dangerous game.

For today, the dollar and Bernanke have survived, barely, but tomorrow may be another story altogether. In the very least, we can be assured that the killing of Osama bin Laden represents a shared view at the very pinnacle of power that the the overarching narrative needed to be changed, and abruptly.

Mission Accomplished.

Dow 12,807.36, -3.18 (0.02%)
NASDAQ 2,861.84, -11.70 (0.41%)
S&P 500 1,361.22, -2.39 (0.18%)
NYSE Composite 8,641.56, -29.85 (0.34%)


Market internals belied the slight declines. Stocks which lost ground far outnumbered those gaining, 4135-2454. On the NASDAQ there were 177 new highs and 28 new lows. The NYSE had 337 stocks make new highs and just 13 reach new lows. Obviously, the new highs were made early in the session, before the dollar began to rise and kill the carry trade (now known as risk on). Volume could best be described as either laughable, embarrassing or just plain disinterested.

NASDAQ Volume 1,768,677,875
NYSE Volume 3,669,946,000


WTI crude futures actually fell 41 cents, to $113.52, though that hardly can be construed as relief for motorists already feeling the pinch from $4.00 gasoline. According to AAA, the average price for a gallon of unleaded regular gas is now $3.95, so, $5.00 by summer becomes a distinct possibility in at least 10 states. Already 14 states are experiencing average prices above $4.00, with Hawaii the highest, at $4.57. The lowest average price is in Wyoming, at $3.60, hardly a bargain.

Precious metals were hammered down by the movers and shakers at JP Morgan and the Fed, with gold getting hit with a $19.80 decline, down to $1545.90 as of this writing. Silver took the brunt of the action, with five margin hikes in the past two weeks putting the kibosh on larger speculation in the paper markets. Silver fell $4.39, to $43.55, a point which may actually trigger more paper selling and eventually result in ramped up physical buying.

There's little doubt that the masters of fiat money at the Federal Reserve will do anything to keep gold and silver from appreciating, though they've been an abject failure up to this point. The Fed simply cannot stomach competing currencies and gold and silver amply qualify. If it means the end of screenings at airports and reduction of global tensions, maybe it's a worthwhile tradeoff, but the other side of the Fed's coin is already painted red. Any squelching of precious metals by pumping up the US dollar is likely to have similar deleterious effects on the risk trade in stocks.

At the end of the trading day, Tim Giethner made his appearance and the purpose of all the frenetic activities of the past 18 hours suddenly became crystal clear. The Treasury outlined plans to extend the deadline for raising the debt ceiling to the first week of August, thus delaying or deferring a crisis in the congress.

America teetering on a debt default with the currency debased for the whole world to see must have appeared as the opportune moment to divert attention by killing public enemy #1.

Mission accomplished, indeed, but beware the ultimate costs.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Oil, Gold Lead Way Lower

Forget the stock market for a moment and take a look at commodities. Focusing on the major precious metals, gold and silver, and America's favorite, crude oil, we can almost see the demand curve turning negative by the minute.

Commodity prices worldwide are collapsing with the precious metals leading the charge lower. There are no support levels or pivot points in the recent decline of both gold and silver. From their highs, gold is down 26%, silver, 47%, oil, 32%

Today's closing figures in New York were yet another indication of the commodity rout. Oil finished at $100.87, down $1.71. Gold slipped to $745.50, off $17.00. Silver melted down to $10.56, lower by 34 cents per ounce. Declining value in physical assets such as gold and silver is not an encouraging sign for any investor seeking growth opportunity.

Stocks on the day made all or most of their gains all in the final half hour. Markets were markedly low in the first half hour of trading. The Dow was down 170 points by 9:45 am. The rest of the session was spent short-covering and no doubt pumping by the inner circle of government interlocutors and their agents provacateurs in the market.

Dow 11,433.71 +164.79; NASDAQ 2,258.22 +29.52; S&P 500 1,249.05 +17.01; NYSE Composite 8,011.25 +3.99

As evidence of the manipulative nature of the day's trading, there were more decliners than advancers, 3459-2840. The gap between new lows and highs expanded magnificently, to 731 new lows to a pittance of new highs, 57. One should not be fooled by today's gains. This is a very weak market under incredible stress. There were underhanded interests at work on the 7th anniversary of the World Trade Center catastrophe to ensure that stocks traded higher.

Volume was light, with about 600 million fewer shares traded today than yesterday.

NYSE Volume 1,375,594,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,298,872,000

Monday, August 6, 2007

Shades of 2001

Today's rally reminded me of another time - not so long ago - in which the markets experienced volatile swings to the upside and down. It was the Summer of 2001 and the markets were being roiled by fraud scandals (Enron, WorldCom, et. al.) and weak economic numbers.

The story begins with the Dow trading to an intra-day high on June 29 of 10,729.18 and hitting an intra-day low of 9.431.07 on September 10.
Dow losses July, August, Sept., 2001
July 6 -227, July 12 +237, July 23 -152, July 24 -177, July 25 +164

Aug. 8 -165, Aug. 17 -152, Aug. 21 -146, Aug. 24 +194, Aug. 28 -160, Aug. 30 -171
Sept. 6 -193 Sept. 7 -235
On September 10, the market had one of the most volatile sessions ever, a range of more than 400 points, eventually losing 0.34. No, that is not a misprint. On September 10, the Dow Jones Industrials lost thirty-four cents.

We all remember what happened the following day. On September 11, two airliners crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City, resulting in the worst single man-made catastrophe on mainland America in our history. The financial markets were closed down for a week, and when they reopened on Monday, Sept. 17, the Dow lost another 685 points, as panicked investors scrambled to get out of positions.

Three trading sessions later, on September 20, the Dow lost another 383 points, followed by another 140 point loss the following day. The total loss for that week was a staggering 1,370 points.

Eventually, the market would bottom, though it took more than a year, with the Dow hitting a closing low of 7,286.27 on October 9, 2002. The NASDAQ fared much worse.

I mention this not because I think there is going to be another 9/11 (though history does tend to repeat itself). We may already have witnessed our planned disaster for the year - the Minnesota bridge collapse - without the nasty side effect of a tumbling stock market. I may be going overboard on a conspiracy tangent, but I wish to point out the similarities between the market of 2007 and that of 2001.

We are definitely in a bear market, and that's made all the more obvious by the conspicuous presence of rather large, late-day rallies, like Monday's. But all along, the market continues on a downward path. There is certainly more downside to come.

Dow 13,468.78 +286.87; NASDAQ 2,547.33 +36.08; S&P 500 1,467.67 +34.61; NYSE Composite 9,553.77 +183.17

Today's rally was also one of the narrowest on record. Declining issues actually outdid advancers, 3194 - 3185 and new lows swamped new highs, 1176-102. There are 6546 stocks on the NYSE and NASDAQ combined. That many lows mean that nearly 18% of all stocks hit 52-week lows. A 286-point gain on the Dow can surely hide a lot of evils.

Of the 30 Dow stocks, only one - Alcoa - showed a loss.
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Once again, somebody is playing favorites. This has to be one of the phoniest rallies ever. Get ready for another scoop from FOX News. When 18% of the market is hitting new 52-week lows, the rest of the market is usually not euphoric. There's manipulation of a massive degree being foisted upon unsuspecting investors - mostly individual traders and mutual fund holders. You see big gains on one hand, though on the other, your stocks, or your funds, are down.

One more comparison to 2001 is in order. Tomorrow the Federal Open market Committee of the Federal Reserve meets to consider any rate changes. There is a growing number of cries for a 25 basis point decrease from 5.25 to 5 percent. The August 21 FOMC meeting release reads as follows:
Release Date: August 21, 2001

The Federal Open Market Committee at its meeting today decided to lower its target for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to 3-1/2 percent. In a related action, the Board of Governors approved a 25 basis point reduction in the discount rate to 3 percent. Today's action by the FOMC brings the decline in the target federal funds rate since the beginning of the year to 300 basis points.

Now, just as then, the Fed may be thinking that it's time to loosen credit again. Sadly, that's what got us into this mess to begin with. Further loosening will only exacerbate an already bad situation. Better to tighten rate policy and inflict some small degree of suffering than risk an overwhelming, years long, inflationary stagnation.

Meanwhile, oil was dumped in a large way, with futures falling $3.42 to $72.06. The handwriting is on the wall. The hand-wringing has yet to begin.

And just how does ExxonMobil gain 1.46 (1.76%) on that news? Somebody enlighten me to the new math and the new market dynamics because I'd say I'm confused, but I'm not. The kinds of things that occurred today are just not supposed to happen... unless, of course, somebody's tinkering with the machinery of the free market.

Gold and silver posted marginal losses. Stock up.