Showing posts with label Ben Bernanke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Bernanke. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Sandy Weill, Hypocrite Bankster; Apple Sends S&P, NASDAQ Lower, Housing Bottom, NOT!

Like mountains that are climbed, we watch CNBC because it's there, not because they offer something other than the capitalist-claptrap-company-line of "buy stocks and keep buying stocks." They don't, usually, unless Rick Santelli is ranting or somebody like Sandy Weill says something so hypocritical that it cannot go unchallenged.

Weill, the former CEO of Citigroup, was the man most responsible for the repeal of the Glass-Steagall act during the Clinton administration years, which set in motion the deregulation of banks, ungodly high leverage, the sub-prime circus and eventually the global catastrophe of international finance through which we are all currently suffering, was polluting this morning's air with calls to break up the big banks.

Weill was on this morning's "Squawk Box," the normally tiresome pre-market news show, opining that the big banks need to be broken up. This is quite the turnabout from the man who, back in the 1990s, engineered the business model of the banking/financial supermarket, where customers could purchase not only CDs and checking accounts, but stocks, bonds, and all manner of derivative products, and where the bank would securitize obligations, repackaging and reselling to willing investors.

One should note that Weill profited greatly from the deregulation of the banking industry and that he is still very rich, though now, more than 15 years hence, his PR team has probably advised him that calling for the breakup of the too-big-to-fail (TBTF) banks would be a marvelous boost for his personal profile. No doubt, Weill has a profit motive behind his pronouncement, or is keying in a on lucrative, influential government position, which is all America needs right now, is another hypocritical bankster who puts self-interest far above public service running the Treasury Department, or maybe the Office of Thrift Supervision.

There really is no end or outer limit to the hubris of the banker class, but Weill's sudden change of heart, no doubt politically expedient, is the worst form of hypocritical doublespeak imaginable. Even Orwell would be amazed, abused, or, amused.



After Tuesday's post-market-close earnings miss by Apple (AAPL), the markets did as obedient markets will, as the S&P and NASDAQ, of which Apple is a huge component of both, sold off viciously right out of the gate.

The NASDAQ was down a quick 22 points, the S&P shedding seven points in the early going, but, with Ben Bernanke and the Fed providing cover, ostensibly standing ready with their bazooka loaded with QE stimulus, stocks gained ground and eventually turned positive (the Dow was in the green all day), before fading into the close. The Dow gave up more than half its gains, even though Apple is not a Dow component.

The current idea - floated around yesterday afternoon by the Fed's chief propagandist, Wall Street Journal writer John Hilsenrath - was that the Fed may act as soon as their very next FOMC meeting, which occurs next week, July 31 - August 1. About all the Fed can do, besides buying up more worthless MBS or some vague extension of Operation Twist, or more simple jawboning, all ideas which have been tried and proven failures.

But, the market being as rigged as it is, (according to Paul Criag Roberts, all markets are now rigged), the Federal Reserve must come off not looking like the powerless goon it really is, but rather as an engaged participant ready to swing into action to save the American people.

Tripe. The Fed has been without bullets or a gun for the better part of the past two years, and now, like the boy who cried "wolf," nobody is bothering to listen. QE1 and QE2 didn't fix anything and likely made matters worse, so QE3 isn't going to matter one iota.



For those who think the housing market has hit bottom, again! today's data must have been a chilling reminder of not only where we've been, but where the millions of underwater homes are headed: deeper into the blue, after new home sales for June plunged to an annualized rate of 350,000, well below the expected 373,000. The drop was made worse by the upward revision of the May data, from 369,000 to 382,000, but it was still a mighty miss by any standards.

The real estate market being diverse, there are some areas of strength, but, overall, the heartland of America is still suffering from the worst housing bust since the Great Depression, and it's not over with yet.

So, some big numbers and events are coming soon. Friday will witness the initial estimate of second quarter GDP, expected to be anywhere from 1.5% to 2.2% to the good, then there's the FOMC meeting Tuesday and Wednesday of next week, followed by next Friday's July non-farm payroll data.

Among all the usual market noise, new lows exceeded new highs for a third straight session, but, as we know, it won't last, because the Fed is coming to the rescue.

This is really beginning to get interesting.

Dow 12,676.05, +58.73 (0.47%)
NASDAQ 2,854.24, -8.75 (0.31%)
S&P 500 1,337.89, -0.42 (0.03%)
NYSE Composite 7,604.56, +13.94 (0.18%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,725,712,125
NYSE Volume 3,391,726,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3085-2522
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 119-165
WTI crude oil: 88.97, +0.47
Gold: 1,608.10, +31.90
Silver: 27.47, +0.66

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Bernanke Frightens, Then Appeases Bankers; Markets Rip

Talk about the tail wagging the dog.

Today, in semi-annual testimony before congress, Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Federal Reserve, did not give any hints to his banker/bankster friends that the Fed was planning any more easy money, i.e. quantitative easing (QE) events in the near future.

No hints of free money? Blasphemy! said the markets, as the indices fell from early strong gains to steep losses in a matter of minutes.

The Dow, which was up 40 points before Bernanke's written remarks were made available, fell to a loss of 82 points, with the other indices showing similar patterns.

But, during the question and answer period, the chairman began to make it clear that the Fed was indeed considering QE, albeit not quite as soon as the banking masters were expecting it, like in September, the timing nearly perfectly political for the election. Stocks reversed their losses, went positive and posted strong gains for the session.

Other than the words coming out of Bernanke's mouth, nothing else mattered today.

In the immortal words of the Mobambo Guru, "This investing stuff is easy. Wheeeeee!"

Dow 12,805.54, +78.33 (0.62%)
NASDAQ 2,910.04, +13.10 (0.45%)
S&P 500 1,363.67, +10.03 (0.74%)
NYSE Composite 7,792.15, +49.14 (0.63%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,722,949,375
NYSE Volume 3,239,712,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3436-2129
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 325-113
WTI crude oil: 89.22, +0.79
Gold: 1,589.50, -2.10
Silver: 27.32, -0.01

Monday, July 16, 2012

Markets Lower for Seventh Straight Monday in Sideways Trading

Get ready for a real roller coaster ride this week.

With Monday's declines marking the seventh straight Monday in which the market has sustained losses - an event which hasn't occurred since 2002 - the stage is set for more fun and games brought to you by the criminal syndicate that runs Wall Street, and, to some extent, your lives.

Citigroup (C) delivered a second quarter earnings beat prior to the open which failed to move futures off their declining dime, sending stocks straight downhill at the open, a not-unforeseen event, given Friday's massive melt-up.

And therein lies the crux of the market-is-rigged argument. If stocks are headed lower on Mondays, there isn't much analysis to do if you're running a big fund, or even a little one. Same might be true for Tuesday and Wednesday; you'll nibble a little maybe, but make your big move on Thursday, because Friday, as we all know all too well, is payday, and, thanks to concoctions like weekly options expiry and the usual third Friday of the month expiry (which happens to be this Friday), you can make money without break a sweat.

That seems to be the current game plan, since, after all, the world is heading to hell in a handbasket, so, savvy players will make the most of uncertainty, to say nothing of inside information and shared strategies.

Topping the news wires today were retail sales - down for the third straight month - and the IMF lowering its wildly optimistic global growth estimate for 2013 from 4.1% to 3.9%, though neither of those indicators seemed to touch off much sentiment other than bolstering the already overtly pessimistic.

Ben Bernanke appears before congress Tuesday and Wednesday, which might be newsworthy if he actually had any power over the markets (he doesn't), though many a hopeful banker will be listening in for any hints that the Fed may try more easing, a strategy which has worked well for speculators but come up snake eyes for the US and global economies.

A few weeks back, it was suggested here that stocks could be headed for a nighty downturn or a sideways/lower trade at best. So far, the sideways has been playing out, though the lower part of the formula seems to be headed off just about every Friday.

This week could be more of the same, with the aforementioned options expiration ending the week on a note the bankers love most, the sound of ringing cash registers.

Of course, this being the middle of summer, volume was nothing to speak of, though that's become somewhat the norm since the only players left are flesh-eating zombie bankers, flush with the Fed's newly-minted cash and nothing better to do with it than gamble it all away.

Dow 12,727.21, -49.88 (0.39%)
NASDAQ 2,896.94, -11.53 (0.40%)
S&P 500 1,353.64, -3.14 (0.23%)
NYSE Composite 7,743.06, -15.62 (0.20%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,438,632,500
NYSE Volume 2,883,821,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2271-3292
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 277-71
WTI crude oil: 88.43, +1.33
Gold: 1,591.60, -0.40
Silver: 27.32, -0.05

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Market Response to Fed Moves More Worrisome Than Reassuring

It's funny how everything seems to work out just as planned, but markets respond in their own unusual ways.

Such was the case today, as the FOMC announced no substantive changes to their ZIRP program and extended "operation twist," designed to spur the economy by having the Fed buy up the long end of the yield curve.

Memo to Bernanke: It ain't working.

All the tricks and ploys the central bankers have up their collective sleeves have now been tried and proven to have failed. Massive injections of liquidity may have temporarily bolstered the balance sheets of some of the world's largest insolvent banks - both here in the US and in Europe - but the one proven method of clearing out bad debt that hasn't been tried - default, repudiation, bankruptcy and restructuring - is the only way the world economy is ever going to get a solid kick-start.

The Fed and its counterparts in Europe, Japan and China seem to believe they can somehow suspend rules of economics and mathematical certainty. They are wrong, and continue to be proven so every day the global economy continues to carouse through its now nearly four-year-old funk.

The action on the stock market today can best be described in horse racing terms: it was what handicappers like to call a "Z." It's when a horse starts slow, rallies in the middle of the race and then fades down the stretch to the wire. Sometimes, it's a sign that the horse may do well in a subsequent race; usually, it means little, other than the horse was ridden badly or suffers from a lack of stamina.

That analogy could easily be applied to the stock market. It has been "ridden badly" by all the desperate attempts to justify prices and it sure looks like it has been running on empty for some time now.

Today's response to the policy decision to keep rates at or near zero and the Fed's tepid reliance on the "twist" program that only produces marginal support for the economy if any at all, is another shining example of the futility of central baking, government overspending and general malaise. Now, even the cheaters, swindlers and fraudsters on Wall Street aren't happy.

Serves them all right, since most of them should have been serving long prison terms by now. Well, maybe there's hope. After all, the price of gas at the pump keeps going down nearly every day. If nothing else, at least it will be cheaper to take the car out when it's time to head for the hills.

Dow 12,824.09, -13.24 (0.10%)
NASDAQ 2,930.45, +0.69 (0.02%)
S&P 500 1,355.70, -2.28 (0.17%)
NYSE Composite 7,747.91, -18.35 (0.24%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,477,882,125
NYSE Volume 3,637,796,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2639-2903
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 156-27
WTI crude oil: 81.80, -2.23
Gold: 1,615.80, -7.40
Silver: 28.39, +0.02

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Tumultuous Thursday: Bernanke Comments Spark Selloff

(Editor's note: running quite late again today, which seems to be happening with more frequency here at Downtown Magazine HQ. It could be a sign that at least this little corner of the economy is experiencing a pickup in activity. Today's comments will be somewhat abbreviated, but a full recap of the week's economic events will follow on Friday at markets' close.)

Things were sailing along rather smoothly in the morning session, with all of the major indices up sharply and European bourses closing modestly higher at 11:30 am EDT.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's non-committal stance on additional stimulus measures, which he delivered to a joint congressional committee, and a downgrade of Spain's credit rating by Fitch collided with China cutting key lending rates by 1/4 percent, sending US markets into a tailspin.

It was hoped by many on Wall Street that the Fed Chairman would offer a glimpse of fresh stimuli, though his testimony merely served to cloud the picture and was not what equity traders had hoped to hear. The Dow Jones Industrials, which peaked just prior to 10:00 am with a 140-point gain, dithered most of the rest of the session, and, along with the other indices, was traded off in the final hour, losing roughly two-thirds of the advance.

The NASDAQ, which had posted a gain of nearly 30 points in the early going, gave all of that back and then some, ending in the red for the day, along with the S&P, which wasted a 14-point gain and ended fractionally lower.

In reality, China's lowering of interest rates, while stimulative on the surface, actually should have - and could have - been interpreted as a negative, since the country is the world's leading exporter and a slowdown there, prompting interest rate easing, is nothing but a manifestation of the problems in Europe, which include slowing demand for what China produces.

Bernanke's wait-and-see attitude was not well-received, obviously, though the potential for the US sinking back into a recession without additional stimulus was murmured and whispered around trading desks during the day. For perhaps the first time in years, the Fed may be sending a signal that the free lunch for financial firms hasn't produced many positive results and it's time to try something other than plain vanilla monetization of Treasury debt and back-door policy easing. It would be a watershed event, should the Fed not engage the markets with more easy money, which has been the case since early 2009.

In other economic news, initial unemployment claims eased back by 12,000, to 377K in the current week, from an upwardly-revised 389K last week. Also, according to CNBC, Art Cashin reported that sources told him yesterday's huge upside advance was largely aided by the largest amount of short-covering in 2 1/2 years. Viola! Rally! Though, really, it was all just fun and games for Wall Street heavy hitters and insiders.

The rich get richer. The rest of us are supposed to just grin and bear it. Doesn't sound like much of a plan.

Gold and silver were smashed lower, for no apparent good reason, other than coordinated action by central banks who are worried that people may actually see precious metals as a safe and sound alternative to floating, devaluing, fiat paper.

Dow 12,460.96, +46.17 (0.37%)
NASDAQ 2,831.02, -13.70 (0.48%)
S&P 500 1,314.99, -0.14 (0.01%)
NYSE Composite 7,519.82, +2.36 (0.03%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,652,958,125
NYSE Volume 3,939,869,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2427-3168
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 122-52
WTI crude oil: 84.82, -0.20
Gold: 1,588.00, -46.20
Silver: 28.53, -0.96

Monday, June 4, 2012

Markets Take a Breather, But Issues Remain Unresolved

US markets took a bit of a breather on Monday as news flow from Europe was more a trickle rather than a deluge and the only data that moved US indices was factory orders for April, which came in below forecast at -0.6% on expectations of a move lower of -0.3%. March was revised lower - from -1.9% to -2.1% - which made the current numbers look better by comparison.

After opening briefly to the upside, stocks quickly turned red, even before the first half hour of trading, a signal that the more experienced traders were still trimming their risk exposure, but stocks stabilized, traded in a narrow range, bottomed between noon and 2:00 pm before rallying fairly strongly into the close.

If today was something resembling a dead cat bounce, the kitty remained room temperature, and the bounce was more of a flopping over on one side, that being the upside on the NASDAQ. Essentially, following the worst decline of the year this past Friday, traders might actually be encouraged with a session in which the Dow fell by less than 20 points and the NASDAQ actually ended slightly higher with the S&P unchanged. In the current environment, that kind of performance is about the best one could hope to see.

The somnabulent tone of trading did not prevent another negative read on the advance-decline line nor a persistent gap between new highs and new lows, both of which continue to indicate worsening conditions.

It was a lackluster session on average volume in a wait-and-see scenario. Elections in Greece are the main focus of global markets, with the nation going to the polls on June 17 to try and elect a new government after the previous round could not produce a ruling coalition.

Hope is that the Greek people will do the right thing, which, to the technocratic base of european politics, would be to form a government that favors remaining in the Eurozone and swallowing the bitter pill of austerity, though even the most ardent supporters of the unified currency will concede that the continent faces further problems and keeping the union intact is only a first step.

While Greek voters may indeed vote for a continuation of the current ruinous policies, there is a heightened awareness that the tide of populism in Athens could produce a more radical government that eventually rejects the euro and favors a return to the drachma as the nation's official currency. Such an outcome would likely produce massive dislocations of capital not only in Europe, but worldwide.

Another topic of discussion on the street is one of whether or not the Federal Reserve will signal or engage in another round of QE, which would provide temporary relief to markets, though, as has been seen with the previous two rounds, it would probably amount to nothing more than a sugar coating over economic conditions that are unstable at best and deflationary and point to recession at worst.

The FOMC is set to meet again on June 19 and 20 with a press conference with FED chairman Ben Bernanke and a summary of Economic Projections following the policy decision, Prior to that, Bernanke is set to testify before the Congressional Joint Economic Committee on Thursday of this week and the calendar is full of other Fed speakers who might give a clue to the next move by the nation's central bankers.

Speculation is rising that the Fed will be forced into a position favoring more easing, since without it, stocks and the general economy don't appear to have enough momentum to continue growing on their own. The same logic applies to Europe, where the message is to bail out, loan and print as much as is needed to keep the titanic economy from listing and sinking.

The main problem is that the issues that contributed to the crisis - now nearly four years old - have still not been resolved, the main point being the necessary deflation of the global credit bubble, which has not occurred. Instead policy has pointed to even more credit creation, prompting the need for more and more of the same policies that will not provide a long term solution. The entire vicious cycle is spelled out in some detail by Charles Hughes Smith on his Of Two Minds blog, an essential read for those not quite equipped to handle the myriad details of credit, collateral and derivatives.

Basically, Smith opines that the problems of the crisis have remained unfixed and continuation of current policies only are buying time before an ultimate collapse. Along similar lines, investor George Soros recently quipped that Europe has only three months in which to get its act together, a time frame that coincides almost neatly with the upcoming US elections in November. Should Europe stumble, fall, crash and burn within the near term, the tide will almost certainly turn against president Obama and toward Republican candidate Mitt (Adolph) Romney.

That seems to be the preferred strategy of the clandestine rulers of US politics, as any further slippage into the abyss of global depression could then be blamed on Mr. Romney's predecessor, just has Obama, even three-and-a-half years into his term of office, continues to lay blame on former president Bush.

The truth is that each president has had his own set of blunders and misfortune, and not all of the economic distress can be placed upon their shoulders. Congressional dithering and inaction and the global banking cartel are responsible for at least two thirds of the malaise, if not all of it.

The coming two weeks will be ones of nail-biting and indecision, with a fairly light schedule of news and data flow, all of which seems to in the range from bad to horrifying of late. The Greeks, Bernanke, and to some extent, the parliamentary elections in France on June 10 and 17 should be the major catalysts for market in the near term.

Much of what's already occurred and what will happen is still murky, and, since markets hate uncertainty, the chances for a rally in the near term are quite slim. A continued correction and possible bear market conditions (down 20% or more from recent highs) have become distinct possibilities.

Dow 12,101.46, -17.11 (0.14%)
NASDAQ 2,760.01, +12.53 (0.46%)
S&P 500 1,278.18, +0.14 (0.01%)
NYSE Composite 7,286.74, -5.49 (0.08%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,661,424,125
NYSE Volume 3,922,442,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2564-3054
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 36-293
WTI crude oil: 83.98, +0.75
Gold: 1,613.90, -8.20
Silver: 28.01, -0.51

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Reality Bites: Stock Charts Hit with Deflation Ugly Stick

One look at any of today's major index charts - or European charts, for that matter - tells the real story of the world economy and the overall effects of globalization, fiat money and constant Keynesian-modeled tinkering.

Down at the open and no chance of a rally at any point was the order of the day. Markets were completely flattened following Tuesday's slap-happy, bogus insider ramp job. With any luck, the same traders and rich, brassy speculators who made a few ducats on the way up yesterday are upside-down today.

While US markets were royally screwed, European bourses were overwhelmingly slammed to earth, with the major indices whacked more than 1.75%, led downward by the CAC 40, smashed a whopping 2.24% as the EUR/USD sank below 1.24 on its inexorable path to parity and then, extinction.

All indications from not just today's trade, but the overall tenor of markets since the end of April, are that Europe's crisis is not going to be solved easily, if at all. There's no hiding from the big stick of deflation, no crying in a deflationary spiral, except by the weak and unprepared, who deserve nothing but woe, destitution and poverty. May they take all of the major banking interests with them.

The carnage was unavoidable. The US 10-year note fell to an historic low yield of 1.62%, which, along with the German Bund, is headed for negative returns.

Whether or not this is coordinated end-game by the world's central bankers and our own small-minded Ben Bernanke, the siren's cry of lower prices has been heard loud and clear. By the end of fall or sooner, the entire charade should be over, for all intents and purposes. Adam Smith's invisible hand has given globalists the undeniable back-slap one receives for overindulgence, malinvestment and outright economic stupidity.

The pseudo-rally from the depths of 2008-09 is officially defunct and all that's left is picking up the pieces when everything crashes to the floor before falling into the abyss. It's almost as if the ancient tradition of the jubilee - in which all debts are forgiven - has been secretly woven into the fabric of modern economics. The crush of unpaid obligations will affect rich and poor alike. Only those with investments in useful machinery, arable land, real estate and precious metals will be spared, though their lot will no doubt be a difficult one.

Ordinary working class folk should be cheering the downfall of the tyrannical central banking regime, though anyone relying on pensions for retirement cushion should have already begun reordering their priorities. The last three-and-a-half years have been nothing more than a chance to prepare for the ultimate collapse of the global banking and sovereign state cabal and their over-leveraged, inflationist, dangerous, deadly ideas.

Resistance is futile against the wicked spiral of deflation, as it carries the weight of the world down with it, as derivatives are unwound and the banking and finance system breaks down. The worry is that governments will impose iron-fisted regimes and police states to quell the disquiet populace once the rioting begins, and it will, sure as day follows night.

As stocks tumbled, precious metals strengthened today, a significant development not seen in recent months and a trend almost certain to continue. Oil's drop continues and a plunge below $90/barrel today was an event long overdue. The world is absolutely glutted with the stuff as demand continues to plunge. Everything will be - or should be - cheaper as 2012 unfolds further.

The chaos should only worsen in this shortened week as the culmination is Friday's sure to be horrific non-farm payroll report. Tomorrow will afford an early sneak preview as ADT releases their private payroll data for May and hour and a quarter prior to the ringing of the bell at the Wall Street loser's casino. Additionally, Thursday will be heavy with data, with Challenger job cuts, initial unemployment claims and the second GDP estimate all due prior to US market opening. It should almost surely worsen from there forward with Chicago PNI and crude inventories guiding early-day trading.

It would require nothing short of divine intervention or an alien landing for the remainder of the week to be nothing short of a bloodbath.

Free houses for everyone! At least for those who need shelter and have a creative mind and two good hands with which to rebuild, that is.

Dow 12,419.86, -160.83 (1.28%)
NASDAQ 2,837.36, -33.63 (1.17%)
S&P 500 1,313.32, -19.10 (1.43%)
NYSE Composite 7,476.36, -138.68 (1.82%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,629,529,250
NYSE Volume 3,441,592,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1011-4774
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 42-134
WTI crude oil: 87.82, -2.94
Gold: 1,563.40, +14.70
Silver: 27.98, +0.19

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Volume Up, Stocks Down As Malaise in May Exhibits the Results of Bad Karma

With higher and higher volumes showing up on individual stocks as well as the major averages virtually every passing day, the idea that there's something basically wrong with the markets and the global economy is beginning to build into a self-defeating, repeating, cyclical tailspin.

The major indices did another midday about-face, in classic bear market fashion, even though economic data in the US was relatively positive.

Housing starts were up - at an annualized rate of 717K on expectations of 675K, though building permits were lower than anticipated. That stocks, especially those of home builders, would rally on such news was not unexpected, though just because somebody puts a shovel in the ground does not necessarily imply that these newly-constructed homes will eventually be bought, much less completed.

However, two more broad measures of the economy were also positive. Industrial production grew at a rate of 1.1% in April, while capacity utilization for the month printed at 79.2%, a very strong and encouraging number.

Investors simply cannot shake the co-mingled issues of Europe, especially Greece, the falling Euro and rising dollar, all of which contributes to what could be a tough state of affairs for many of the US markets' global entities, which ship and sell around the world. Exports from the US will be especially damaged as the weaker foreign currencies and stronger US dollar make for pricier goods in faraway markets where demand has been slowing.

Following along the same logic, commodity prices are trending lower as well, which would help companies' bottom line cost structures and help keep them competitive, though traders are not confident there will be strong enough demand to produce meaningful pricing power and sustainable profit margins.

Underlying all these concerns are three major issues: Greece and the Euro, the upcoming presidential and congressional elections, and, political implications of US policy: the expiration of tax cuts at the end of 2012 along with uncertainty regarding President Obama's health care bill (now in the hands of the US Supreme Court) and a closetful of unwritten regulations, many of them centered on the financial industry through the Dodd-Frank legislation.

Further below the surface lies the uncertainty regarding the Fed's next move, as Operation Twist, aka QE3, expires at the end of June. Thus far, Fed chair Ben Bernanke nor any of the Fed's governors have hinted whether further easing would be forthcoming, and, at the end of the day, that is simply a nightmare scenario for the general economy and the banks, because without easy money, the fears are that global commerce will grind to a halt.

Markets hate uncertainty, and there's an abundance of that commodity in the flow right now, so there's no reason to believe that stocks will do anything but decline as profits are taken and few new positions are being staked out until there is resolution on some of these issues.

In the meantime, consumers are enjoying a bit of relief at the pump, as oil has fallen in just the past two weeks to its lowest level since December of last year and show no signs of bottoming. At the same time, housing prices keep declining and therein lies the conundrum of deflation. Everything costs less, but nobody is willing to pay now, because prices will likely be lower in a few days, weeks or months.

Obviously, there's no quick fix to any of this and behind closed doors, the leaders of the world's great nations and their central bankers are scared stiff.

The bad karma that's been spread worldwide by the political and monetary leaders is coming full circle it seems.

Dow 12,598.55, -33.45 (0.26%)
NASDAQ 2,874.04, -19.72 (0.68%)
S&P 500 1,324.80, -5.86 (0.44%)
NYSE Composite 7,592.80, -43.01 (0.56%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,842,974,250
NYSE Volume 4,254,574,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1843-3756
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 76-255
WTI crude oil: 92.81, -1.17
Gold: 1,536.60, -20.50
Silver: 27.20, -0.88

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

NASDAQ Slides in (Unfounded) Apple Anticipation Fears; FOMC Meeting Concludes Wednesday

US markets rebounded from Monday's sharp selloff, though the S&P and NASDAQ were weighed down on fears that Apple (AAPL) would not deliver the usual stellar results after AT&T reported a decline in Apple iPhone activations in the first quarter.

The mercurial company founded and made famous by the recently-deceased Steve Jobs had been ramped up to become the most wealthy company on the planet earlier this year, though investors have been ravenously taking profits in recent weeks. Apple shares, which hit an all-time closing high of 636.23 on April 9th, has sold off viciously over the past two weeks, leading up to today's first quarter earnings announcement, after the closing bell.

Shares have fallen more than 15% to today's close at 560.28, the 10th day the stock has traded lower in the last 11.

After the bell, earnings were released, showing that Apple blew away estimates, as usual. Analysts were looking for earnings per share of $10.04 on revenue of $36.8 billion. Apple's first quarter results were $12.30 per share on $39.2 billion in revenue. Shares were up more than 40 points in after-hours trading, putting AAPL back above $600 per share.

Besides the interest in Apple, there were other issues on the minds of investors, primarily the ongoing FOMC meeting which concludes Wednesday afternoon, at which time the Fed governors are expected to keep interest rates where they have been for more than two years, approaching zero, though market analysts and Fed watchers will be poring over the text of the release and dissecting Fed chairman Ben Bernanke's new conference following the policy statement for any hints that may indicate the Fed leaning toward more QE, without which US markets would likely contract in a big way.

Currently in the final weeks of "Operation Twist," which expires in June, investors are hungry for more free money from the Fed and a continuation of the policy of easy money which has supported stocks since the financial collapse of 2008.

They'll all have to wait until 2:15 pm on Wednesday and thereafter for the news conference, though most see a continuation of QE in some form as a distinct possibility, though the Fed has let some time go by after the first two rounds - QE1 and QE2 - before embarking on further easing.

Dow 13,001.56, +74.39 (0.58%)
NASDAQ 2,961.60, -8.85 (0.30%)
S&P 500 1,371.97, +5.03 (0.37%)
NYSE Composite 7,988.01, +47.28 (0.60%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,691,154,875
NYSE Volume 3,592,090,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2715-1920
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 109-61
WTI crude oil: 103.55, +0.44
Gold: 1,643.80, +11.20
Silver: 30.75, +0.22

Monday, March 26, 2012

Timing the Market with Fed Chair Ben Bernanke

Timing the market is a difficult enterprise, according to just about any trader or analyst, or even the sage Bob Brinker of syndicated radio show Money Talk fame.

However, timing has gotten easier if you just follow the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke around and watch for the proper signals, which, unless you're deaf and blind, are hard to miss.

The signals are easy to discern, even for those not well-versed in matters of the economy, as is our fearless Chairman.

Here you go:

Ben opens mouth, speaks. Buy stocks.

That's it, and that's what happened today when Mr. Bernanke - he of the printing press and money-dispensing helicopters - spoke at an early-morning gathering of the assemblage at the National Association for Business Economics (NABE). It didn't really matter what Bernanke said - he says pretty much the same thing all the time - but, rather, how Wall Street interpreted his words, which they interpreted exactly the same way they have his last eight or ten speeches: He's printing more, not raising the federal funds rate for a long, long time and QE3 is on the Fed's rader. Buy, buy, buy. Don't look, don't analyze, just buy.

And it worked like a charm. The dollar was down, the euro up, but, most importantly, stocks eviscerated all memory of last week's worst-in-2012 decline. Done. Easy. Inflationary. Profit.

Dow 13,241.63, +160.90 (1.23%)
NASDAQ 3,122.57, +54.65 (1.78%)
S&P 500 1,416.51, +19.40 (1.39%)
NYSE Composite 8,288.80, +108.74 (1.33%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,625,670,875
NYSE Volume 3,467,794,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4326-1350
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 409-28 (Thanks, Ben!)
WTI crude oil: 107.03, +0.16
Gold: 1,685.60, +23.20 (Yes, thanks, unca Benji!)
Silver: 32.75, +0.48 (Zounds, Ben, thank YOU!)

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Much Ado About LTRO, or, Ben-Zero Bernanke's Attack on Gold (and silver)

As mentioned here yesterday, the turbid markets were about to get a lot more interesting with the ECB's LTRO and Ben Bernanke's testimony before the House.

What a fascinating and interesting look inside the workings of coordinated central bank policy it was.

Europe's LTRO went off, as expected, without a hitch. According to the Wall Street Journal:
The European Central Bank released the results Wednesday of the second round of its long-term refinancing operation. A total of 800 banks participated, and the ECB allotted €529.53 billion in the three-year refinancing operation.

This was more than the €489 billion the ECB loaned out to 523 banks in December on the same terms, 1% over three years. Giddy-up!

Perhaps the "struggling" banks - which will now park most of the money at the EBC for a 0.75% annual loss - thought that this was their last chance at almost-free money and more of them jumped at the chance, despite the stigma associated with suspect, "bailout" money, which is part of the reason why so many people the world over despise bankers. They will take when money's cheap, but they will not loan it out to businesses or individuals despite usurious rates of return. Rather, they will take a loss in order to retain their lofty position as worthy of "salvation."

Thus, the banks have become the scourge of the earth, keeping their wealth to themselves and impoverishing every man, woman and child on the planet in the process.

So, no big news there. More of the same by the kleptocracy.

European equity markets responded with a large yawn, finishing mixed, but mostly down, the worst hit being the UK's FTSE.

Buoyed by the success in Europe and a positive second revision to 2011 fourth quarter GDP (up to 3.0% after an intial reading of 2.8%), US stocks opened with a mild upside bias.

Then came round two, when the central bank plans really came together. As soon as Ben Bernanke started speaking, gold and silver began dropping, fast, like $3.50 in just over an hour for silver, from $37.50 to $34.00 the ounce.

Gold was off by as much as $80 in the same time span, and oil also took a hit, but - get this - oil recovered to finish the day with a gain. the precious metals, anathema to central bankers, recovered a bit, though not much.

The widely-spread rationale was that Bernanke was not his usual dovish self, as he didn't signal that any further quantitative easing (QE) was forthcoming from the Fed. Naturally, this cover story flies in the face of the Fed's lax monetary zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), Operation Twist and the ceaseless, clandestine money-pumping which the Federal Reserve has engaged in for the last three years running.

As a bonus, the central bank market interventionists even managed to take a little steam out of stocks, as all major US indices finished lower, but nowhere near the percentage losses suffered by those crazy gold and silver investors who believe - rightly - that the PMs are actually money and a better store of value than fiat money which is printed on demand by the globalists. Interestingly, trading volume today was the highest seen in weeks.

Perhaps precious metals investors should have known something bad was about to happen when Texas congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul harangued Bernanke on inflation, monetary policy and the role of the Fed, brandishing a silver coin and telling the chairman that the Fed would eventually "self-destruct."

Here's the fascinating video:



A few more experts weighing in on today's "gold smash" included Jim Sincliar, who called today's action "window dressing" for more QE, and Sprott Asset Management's John Embry, who called out the bullion banks as manipulators.

The situation could not be more clear. Central banks will print, print, print until they've inflated away all wealth, and they will hate gold (and silver) and keep prices artificially low, until the day comes when they dump all their worthless paper assets en masse and buy up every last ounce of the yellow metal.

Until then, don't fall for the "no new QE" stories. The printing presses will run non-stop. They have to, since the global bankers, with tacit permission from the pals in government, have produced a no-win situation by trying to solve a solvency problem with liquidity, throwing more debt on top of already too much debt, as if pouring more water onto a drowning man is supposed to help save him.

Dow 12,952.07, -53.05 (0.41%)
NASDAQ 2,966.89, -19.87 (0.67%)
S&P 500 1,365.68, -6.50 (0.47%)
NYSE Composite 8,113.55, -58.00 (0.71%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,092,803,750
NYSE Volume 4,389,318,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1726-3925
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 230-40
WTI crude oil: 107.07, +0.52
Gold: 1,711.30, -77.10
Silver: 34.58, -2.56

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Dow Finally Closes Above 13,000 as Silver Breaks Out

Fueled by ever-larger injections of liquidity from the world's central banks, US equity markets have been disconnected from economic reality for some time, but today's shrug of the shoulders to two key economic reports has to make old-time "investors" wondering if hard numbers actually mean anything anymore.

Prior to the open, the Commerce Department released durable order data for January, which showed a 4.0% decline over the prior month. (Shrug shoulders if you trade stocks)

At 10:00 am, S&P/Case-Shiller data on home prices came in with a loud thud, matching the durable number at -4.0% for December. The widely watched index of home prices has now exceeded the post-crash lows and is at its lowest level since February, 2003, a 33.8% drop from the peak. If there is a recovery in housing, it certainly is well-hidden.

Despite the negativity of stubborn reality, stocks managed to post small gains across the board, with the Dow Jones Industrials closing above 13,000 for the first time since May, 2008. (cue fanfare here)

So, now that everybody can pop the champagne and don their "Dow 13,000" beanies, what's next?

Just in case you've tired of the constancy of the stock market, hovering around Dow 13,000 for more than a week in a very slow-moving, retarded kind of way on abysmally-low volume, take heart! Things are about to get a whole lot more interesting beginning Wednesday.

That's the day the ECB unleases its latest attempt to advance liquidity and goose markets (and inflation) with the second installment of the LTRO (Long Term Refinancing Operation), in which European banks will be offered up to EUR500 billion in three-year loans at the bargain-basement price of 1% (how appropriate!).

Back in December, the ECB did the same thing, and EUR489 billion was snatched up by some 523 institutions, though much of the money was eventually parked right back at the ECB, earning a measly 0.25%, resulting in small, albeit manageable losses for many of Europe's largest banks. To the banks, the 0.75% negative carry seemed a good enough deal to have funds on hand should the crisis deepen or a rogue trader muck up the balance sheet.

Ideally, the ECB would like the funding banks to snatch up more of that juicy sovereign debt that continues to float around in the Eurozone like so much flotsam and jetsam, but the LTRO also carries something of a stench of its own, via the equity markets, where the takers of the nearly-free money are cast under a dubious light.

No matter the particular cases for individual banks, tomorrow's "funding" should be making headlines about the time US stock markets ring their bells of jubilation.

Also tomorrow, America's central banker, Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, will be before congress, making his required testimony before the House Finance Committee. Since the chairman's stuttering mouthfuls usually carry significant weight for the financial markets, he might make some news, though probably not, being the conscientious type who only prefers to move markets the old fashioned way, by getting the printing presses rolling full boar in the basement at the Fed.

Thursday and Friday feature a full meeting of EU ministers, with the $2 Trillion "firewall" topping the agenda.

Now, to the casual observer, these events may not evoke much excitement, but financial market players will be glued to their tubes, pads or whatever electronic means they have of staying abreast of developments and there just may be some fireworks. Of course, there may not, as these bulwarks of capitalism are about as open-minded and free-speaking as corpses in straightjackets.

On the other hand, any kind of adventurous talk or under-over funding take-up could move markets substantially, which is just what some traders would like to experience, rather than the Chinese water torture of the past seven or so sessions.

Meanwhile, what equity traders hate to admit, is that silver has been outperforming just about every other asset class in the known universe, up 30% on the year and breaking through resistance today on a powerful move forward.

In an interview with King World News, chartist Dan Norcini notes that silver has breached resistance at $35.50 and broken above the 50-day moving average. Today's 4% move higher was largely due to shorts having to cover their positions. Norcini says shorts are panicked and the next resistance level is around $40/ounce.

In the below video, Jon Najarian of Options Monster explains how the big players are looking for a breakout in silver. Enjoy.


Dow 13,005.27, +23.76 (0.18%)
NASDAQ 2,986.76, +20.60 (0.69%)
S&P 500 1,372.18, +4.59 (0.34%)
NYSE Composite 8,171.84, +28.29 (0.35%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,755,641,125
NYSE Volume 3,487,070,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2805-2796
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 253-21
WTI crude oil: 106.55, -2.05
Gold: 1,788.40, +13.50
Silver: 37.14, +1.62

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Santa (Ben Bernanke) Arrives Early in Europe; Gold, Silver Surge

Stocks worldwide were up sharply Wednesday on the news that the Federal Reserve, in conjunction with the Central Banks of Canada, England, Japan, Switzerland and the European Central Bank (ECB) agreed to lower the pricing on the existing temporary U.S. dollar liquidity swap arrangements by 50 basis points.

It was an early Christmas gift that sparked a speculative rally and kept Europe from unraveling, again.

What we've repeatedly heard is that the current calamities of the Euro-zone are nothing like those encountered on American soil in 2008.

The plain fact that banks in Europe are under dire stress and in need of liquidity not only reprises 2008, but adds a crescendo affect that's akin to adding the NY Philharmonic, the Ohio State marching band and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir to the efforts of the Boston Pops.

Stresses on European banks, especially those in France, Belgium and Italy, have been exacerbating on a near-daily basis, with the potential for global contagion even greater than when Lehman Bros. was allowed to flail and fail.

Thus, as some unknown Europe-based bank was about to go under - rumors say $265 million in overnight borrowings from the ECB was the tip-off - the global elitist Central Bankers conspired to lift liquidity by lowering the borrowing rates on US Dollar swap arrangements by 50 basis points (1/2 percent).

Magically, not only was the global Ponzi financial system saved for the day, week or month, but the added benefit of having global equity markets spike 3-4% higher came along as an intended consequence. Yes, the globalists know what they're doing. Too bad for them that it doesn't work long term, as we know so well from recent history, circa September, 2008.

Here's a post, by none other than some character calling himself John Galt, that has both the 2008 and current Federal Reserve press releases. The similarities are striking, but also magnificent was the 2008 aftermath, the worst financial crisis of the last 70 or so years, and the resultant crash of the equity markets.

So, Santa came to town (Europe) dressed as Ben Bernanke, with his trusty elf, Tim Geithner, in tow, passing off presents to the good (and bad) bankers across the continent. While this constitutes Christmas and a Santa Claus Rally about a month prematurely, what can Europe and the global economy expect when the holiday actually arrives on December 25, lumps of coal, or perhaps soaring gold and silver prices?

The actual timing of the eventual collapse is still unknown, though this desperation move seems to indicate that the global financial structure is crumbling faster than the "unseen hands" of the central banks can prop it up. A dive in equities may not coincide with Christmas - that would be a shame - but rather sometime in early 2012, likely in the first quarter and quite possibly in January as profits are taken early in the year on stocks pumped to unwieldy heights in December. The net results being a relatively weaker dollar and higher prices for just about anything one consumes or needs. When the crash comes, of course, the Euro will descend and the dollar will rise, though the effect is probably short-term, until the Easter Bunny fills up those empty bank liquidity baskets again.

As the adage implies, this massive liquidity gift may indeed have a silver lining, encrusted with much-higher-priced gold.

Prior to the Fed's announcement, the People's Bank of China cut bank reserve requirements for the first time in three years, by 0.5%, amid signs that the Chinese economy is slowing due to slack demand for China's exports, particularly from Europe.

After the announcement, with futures up dramatically, ADP released its November Employment Change results, showing the creation of 206,000 private sector jobs during the month. The private survey is a regular precursor to Friday's BLS non-farm payroll data.

Third quarter productivity was measured as up 2.3%, while unit labor costs fell 2.5% as companies hunker down, doing more with fewer employees.

Fifteen minutes into the trading session, Chicago PMI reported a big jump, from 58.4 in October to 62.6 in November. It was an unnecessary boost to a market which had already spiked higher at the open.

There was no fade in this one-day rally, coming conveniently on the last day of the month, traditionally the day reserved for "window dressing" by fund managers. Stocks were up monstrously on the open and continued along a high, flat line for the rest of the session, until a final short-covering episode in the final fifteen minutes pushed indices even higher.

Just speculating, but it had to be one of the best market moves of the year, if not the best. Volume was sufficient, though not overwhelming. The late-day surge may be indicating that even more easy money will flow from the Fed to the hampered Eurozone.

As to whether the moves in stocks are sustainable and the even more important question of whether or not Europe is "fixed," the answers will only be known at some future date. The most cogent commentaries on Europe suggest that today's coordinated central bank motivation only covers over a dire condition in the European banking sector and is nothing more than a liquidity band-aid on a solvency open gash. Europe's funding problems remain unresolved, though any mention of default or collapse has probably been delayed by a few weeks or a month.

And just in case you're worried about food shortages or another recession, the Obama administration and congress actually did accomplish something, recently having lifted the five-year-old ban on slaughtering horses in America. Not to worry, though. Americans won't be eating Little Red Pony or Trigger any time soon (we hope). The meat will likely be shipped to Japan or Europe. However, if this is a trend-setter, cans of Lassie, Rin Tin Tin or Boo Boo Kitty may be in supermarkets soon. Dog food and cat food may take on newer, twisted meanings.

Dow 12,045.68, +490.05 (4.24%)
NASDAQ 2,620.34, +104.83 (4.17%)
S&P 500 1,246.96, +51.77 (4.33%)
NYSE Composite 7,484.49, +334.78 (4.68%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,386,048,000
NYSE Volume 5,808,163,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4913-861
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 161-68 (this has rolled over)
WTI crude oil: 100.36. +0.56
Gold: 1,745.50, +32.10
Silver: 32.73, +0.88

Monday, September 26, 2011

Nothing Has Changed Except Prices of Stocks; Silver, Gold Still Being Punished

The start of the week was another one of those sessions that made little sense in the grand theme of things, unless you're one of those poor, misled types who believe the Fed and central bankers are working for your benefit, not their own, and can magically pull rainbow-belching unicorns from their nether parts.

The rest of us just marvel at the machinations of the market amid the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and laugh or cry, depending on our moods and personal situations.

Volatility is the trader's friend, but an investor's nightmare. Stocks jumping around, up and down, without regard to fundamentals - exactly what's been happening in US equity markets since mid-July - does not make for a friendly investment environment. Your money is just as easily chewed up whether you are long or short. Only the best investors, or those with inside knowledge, like our hedge fund and banking friends running the computer algos on Wall Street, will survive. The small investor literally has no chance of turning trades into profits as the deck is stacked against him or her by the big money players.

So, we watch and wait for Europe to implode, the US government to shut down, or the massive federal debt to either be defaulted upon or paid off (yeah, that's a good one!). Sooner or later, all the debt will bury all the assets of stocks and investors will be left with worthless paper. Or it won't. One never knows what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, President Obama or the insipid, asinine congress will do next, but one thing's for sure, if it's the congress or the president, it's not likely to amount to anything, and even Bernanke's magic touch seems to be a little less deft these days. Confidence is what makes markets, and almost all confidence has been destroyed by decades of borrowing and spending without control, lying to the American people (it happens in Europe, Japan and China too) about the state of the economy while the ringleaders of the criminal banking cartel walk freely.

One item from the weekend was interesting. It seems the Federal Reserve has put out a RFP for a Social Media monitoring system. This is nothing less than an attempt to quell negative public opinion (maybe they can start with Rep. Ron Paul) about the workings and dealings of the Fed. Since the Fed is a private bank, their snooping and interloping is pretty scary stuff, considering they are running the ship that creates monetary policy for the US, and, to a degree, the entire planet. You can read the RFP here.

From the Salon article linked above:
Federal Reserve Bank of New York has issued a "Request for Proposal" to suppliers who may be interested in participating in the development of a "Sentiment Analysis And Social Media Monitoring Solution". In other words, the Federal Reserve wants to develop a highly sophisticated system that will gather everything that you and I say about the Federal Reserve on the Internet and that will analyze what our feelings about the Fed are. Obviously, any "positive" feelings about the Fed would not be a problem. What they really want to do is to gather information on everyone that views the Federal Reserve negatively. It is unclear how they plan to use this information once they have it, but considering how many alternative media sources have been shut down lately, this is obviously a very troubling sign.

Are you worried? You shouldn't be, so long as you say nice things about the Fed, like, "they're the greatest central bankers ever!"

See, not so bad.


Dow 11,043.86, +272.38 (2.53%)
NASDAQ 2,516.69, +33.46 (1.35%)
S&P 500 1,162.95, +26.52 (2.33%)
NYSE Composite 6,940.81, +170.08 (2.51%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,018,322,875
NYSE Volume 4,553,576,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3898-1762
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 16-431
WTI crude oil: 80.24, +0.39
Gold: 1623.50, -33.70
Silver: 30.73, -0.20


Note that the New highs - new lows are still screaming "SELL" every day. We are in a trough and the stocks can't seem to get out of this range. The best guess is that the next move is down and into bear market territory, at least that's what "old reliable" new high - new low data is saying.

The precious metals were shoved all over the map again today. In Thailand, the silver futures exchange was shut down via a circuit breaker when the metal traded down more than 10% in the opening minutes. The CME announced higher margin requirements on both metals. Odd, because they are already down so much over the past week. This is the global banking cartel at its worst.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Stocks Sell Off after Bernanke, Fed Disappoint Wall Street

The Markets

The entire process of Central Bank watching and anticipation is just so ludicrous, especially when a central bank such as the Federal Reserve overtly telegraphs most of their moves well in advance.

The secrecy, the waiting and then the immediate market reaction is simply so annoying, one would almost hope that the process and the players be done away with, once and for all. That sentiment is, in fact, what would happen under a monetary system operating under a gold standard. There would be little need for the Federal Reserve and much less attention paid to their arcane machinations. However, since the United States has been officially off a gold standard since 1971 and under the thumb of the debt-crazed Fed since 1913, hope for change any time soon is slim, though under a monetary breakdown, much like the one begun in 2008 that hasn't yet been resolved, possibilities exist.

After tow days of meeting, the FOMC of the Federal Reserve finally came out today, shortly after 2:00 pm EDT, with another one of their insipid statements, outlining their plans to "save the world" from financial ruin. while some on Wall Street hoped for a resumption of some kind of quantitative easing, what the Fed delivered was not unexpected and something of a disappointment to the money-hoarding bankster types populating lower Manhattan.

In additions to keeping the federal funds rate at ZERO, the Fed announced plans to sell $400 billion of its shorter-term Treasuries to buy longer-term Treasuries through June 2012 in a plan based on a failed 1960's plan known as "Operation Twist," the effect of which will be to bring down longer-dated interest rates. If successful, the program will flatten the yield curve, with short-term rates already well below historical norms, and longer term rates down, but with more room to decline. The economic effect ought to be limited or nearly invisible, which is what sent the Wall Street bears into selling mode after the announcement.

Stocks had hovered around the flat line in anticipation of the announcement and sold off sharply on strong volume afterwards and into the close. All of the major indices finished at or near their lows of the day all but wiping out the gains from last week's phantom, options-induced rally.

Stocks continue to be a very unsound and unsafe choice for investors.

The bond market reaction was swift and decisive, with two-and-three-year bill yields rising and longer-dated bonds, the 10-and-30-year maturities collapsing. The 10-year closed out the day with a yield of 1.85% and the 30-year at 3.01%.

Dow 11,124.84, -283.82 (2.49%)
NASDAQ 2,538.19, -52.05 (2.01%)
S&P 500 1,166.76, -35.33 (2.94%)
NYSE Composite 6,981.33, -236.19 (3.27%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,180,005,500
NYSE Volume 5,446,355,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1135-5427
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 26-562 (OUCH!)
WTI crude oil: 84.76, -2.16
Gold: 1782.10, -22.70
Silver: 39.69, -0.05


A couple of items caught our attention today. One was an excellent summary of decades of manipulation in the price of gold by Chris Powell, Secretary/Treasurer, Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) at the 18th CLSA Investors' Forum, Grand Hyatt Hotel in Hong Kong.

For pure emotion and unbridled rage that captures the pent-up feelings of millions of middle and lower-class Americans, nothing beats the Best of walstreetpro2 (greatest f---ing hits) - 3 of 3 Warning: the video cntains great amounts of vulgarity, adult language, truth about the US economy and the destruction of many consumer goods. All in all, a classic.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Markets Down Without Cause; Bike Riding offers Solutions

The Markets

Stocks could not follow through - as expected - yesterday's momentum rally, despite there being a paucity of news - good or bad. The only actionable events were the pre-open release of weekly unemployment claims, which came in poorly again, at 414,000, up 2,000 from an upwardly-revised 412,000 in the prior week.

Other than that, the ECB and Bank of England kept key interest rates unchanged, so all there was to do was to sell those stocks which were profitable in yesterday's trading and sit in cash until after the president's 7:00 pm EDT speech in which he is supposed to unveil some sort of jobs program.

The Bernanke speech in Milwaukee was a disappointment to those who wished he would announce QE3 - it's not going to happen - and consisted mainly of the Fed chairman droning on about how weak the economy is and how the Fed stands vigilant to do whatever it can to fix it. The takeaway was that the fed really doesn't have much power any more, having used up all the bullets in their six-shooter. The speech, thus, was a big non-event.

While there's been a multitude of opinion surrounding what the president might say in his speech tonight, whatever his jobs program might be, it's proabably going to consist mainly of an extension of the payroll tax holiday, tax credits to businesses who hire new employees (a program that has great potential to be scammed heavily), some kind of infrastructure "bank" (read: borrow and spend, also great scam potential) to repair more highways, bridges and tunnels, and little else.

The president is relying on bad economic information, which he has since he took office. Mr. Obama neither understands the US economy nor the travails of the average American. If he truly wanted to fix things in this country, he'd force phone, cable and power companies to cut their exorbitant rates, put a nationwide cap of $3.00 per gallon on gasoline at retail, announce a larger and more-encompassing tax holiday, slash medicare and social security contributions and simultaneously cut the pay of every federal government employee by five to ten percent (the tax cuts would ease the pain completely), and repeal the monstrosity that is known as Obamacare.

That isn't going to happen, so expect the US economy to remain moribund for at least another year, probably 18 months, and quite possibly longer. Until the government gets it's act together and begins to understand that the problem is that there aren't enough real jobs in the country to re-employ the 14 million out of work and that borrowing more on band-aid programs aren't going to jump start anything any time soon. The time is right for fundamental changes to entitlements and the grotesque tax code. Whether there's the political will to make these changes is highly doubtful, especially when all the politicians are focused only on keeping their jobs and fighting for control of the White House. The election is still 14 months away, but that's all that occupies the minds of our beloved "leaders."

Dow 11,295.81, -119.05 (1.04%)
NASDAQ 2,529.14, -19.80 (0.78%)
S&P 500 1,185.90, -12.72 (1.06%)
NYSE Compos 7,257.36, -97.81 (1.33%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,951,654,250
NYSE Volume 4,277,785,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1603-4886
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 58-56
WTI crude oil futures: 89.05, -0.29
Gold: 1865.80, +48.50
Silver: 42.34, +0.79


Idea: Ride a Bike Whenever Practical or Possible

It's been said that when you learn how to ride a bike, you never forget, and since most Americans grew up riding bikes as kids and teens, there's probably about 150-200,000 million of us who could get on one and ride without fear of falling off. For many, especially those whose diets have caused them to become grossly overweight or obese, a good, sturdy mountain bike and a two mile ride every day would go a long way toward reducing both their weight and future medical costs from everything from diabetes to heart disease.

The advantages of riding a bike are probably too numerous to mention, but beyond the obvious health benefits, bikes require no fuel at all, except that which comes from the furious pedaling of our little legs. With the price of gas hovering near $4.00 a gallon, every mile trekked on a bicycle is a savings in fuel use and expense. Not only does the savings accrue to the individual, but if enough people substituted driving their cars for trips of under two miles and instead rode a bike, it wouldn't be long before those ridiculous gas prices began coming down, providing a benefit to the whole country.

Economic change is usually accomplished at the fringes, and promoting bike riding as a health and financial benefit is right out there on the outer limits, where economists are generally blind.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Swiss Shock Starts Stock Slide

The Markets

While most Americans were munching on burgers, hots and potato salads Monday, the rest of the world was working, and stocks took a major beating in exchanges across the globe. Both Asian and European markets suffered 3-6% declines, capped by a huge fall in the German DAX, as financial woes continue to spread globally, but are hitting the Eurozone especially hard.

On Monday, Asian markets were mixed, but all except the UK and Swiss markets finished in the red.

The workweek in the US began with news that the Swiss National Bank (SNB) decided to peg its "safe haven" currency at 1.20 Euros to stave off a recession and halt the strengthening of its currency that has proceeded at a swift pace since the collapse of Lehman Bros. in 2008.

"The current massive overvaluation of the Swiss franc poses an acute threat to the Swiss economy and carries the risk of a deflationary development," the SNB said in a brief statement. "The SNB will enforce this minimum rate with the utmost determination and is prepared to buy foreign currency in unlimited quantities."

"Unlimited quantities" indeed. The Swiss are prepared to match the Euro and US dollar print for print as the debasement of fiat currencies has now reached a new level of madness/stupidity/desperation (take your pick).

The Swiss move sent the US dollar soaring to two month highs (75.92), and dropped the 10-year note to an historic low yield of 1.91%. The 10-year ended the day at 1.98%.

The trading day began with steep declines, with the Dow off by 308 points at its lows and the NASDAQ shedding 66 points just prior to 11:00 am EDT. After that, it was an uphill climb with a huge ramp job in the final 30 minutes of the session, on either short covering or blithe spirits, though the former seems more appropriate.

With trading on the light side, cutting the losses on the major indices was probably easy work for the criminal Wall Street cartel. Shares will likely be dumped by Thursday when a troika of events - one by Ben Bernanke, one by President Obama and one in Europe by German Chancellor Angel Merkel when she must quell a threatened revolt in her own parliamentary bloc when the Bundestag begins debating the controversial expansion of the European rescue fund, which increases Germany's share of guarantees to up to €211bn (£184bn) from a previous €123bn – about two-thirds of the annual federal budget. Merkel will be first, prior to the open of US markets, followed by Bernanke in Minnesota, with President Obama's highly-anticipated, nationally-televised speech to introduce his jobs program to joint session of congress slated for 7:00 pm, hoping to avoid a conflict with the opening of the NFL season. The Green Bay Packers play the New Orleans Saints at 8:30 pm.

One sector that did not participate in the afternoon rally off the lows was financial, with bank stocks being hit hard once again. Bank of America pared some of its earlier losses, closing at 6.99, down 26 cents, but below the 7.14 price of 700,000 warrants recently offered to billionaire Warren Buffett as a sweetener to his $5 billion investment in the flailing bank. Message to Warren: Don't be in a hurry to own a big chunk of another bank.

Dow 11,139.30, -100.96 (0.90%)
NASDAQ 2,473.83, -6.50 (0.26%)
S&P 500 1,165.24, -8.73 (0.74%)
NYSE Composite 7,148.13, -102.60 (1.42%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,740,810,000
NYSE Volume 5,077,949,500
Combined NYSE, NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1942-4640
Combined NYSE, NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 32-451
WTI crude oil futures: 86.02, -0.43
Gold: 1873.70, -26.60
Silver: 41.96, -0.91


Idea: Ready to get really scared?

How about a report by UBS, which outlines the frightening aspects of Euro dissolution, i.e., the end of the EMU (European Monetary Union) and the resulting chaos, civil strife and even civil wars. Full text below.

xrm45126



Then there's this post on a little-known blog called Nathan's Economic Edge, from March 20, 2010, which concludes, via the U.S. Treasury Z1 Flow of Funds report that the diminishing marginal productivity of debt (a well-understood, but not widely-circulated concept) reached debt saturation sometime in 2009, thus adding new debt, as the Fed and the federal government are always so eager to do, but the Tea Party wants stopped ASAP, produces negative results, as in lower GDP.

What that means is that the era of fiat currencies, without backing of any kind, is backfiring in a big way. The more money the Fed or the government throws at the problem only makes it worse and hastens the eventual implosion of the currency. However, these things take a long time to work themselves out, but we may be only years away from financial Armageddon.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Machines At Work, or, Why Humans Are No Longer Needed (nor Safe) on Wall St.

I am going to take a wholly different approach to today's post.

You'll notice right away that I'm using first person singular rather then the usual third person tense usually employed on this blog, and the reason for that has to do with the absurd trading pattern exhibited on the major indices today, the Monday after the great storm Irene that wasn't so great, and the first trading day after the also-not-so-great Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's Jackson Hole speech.

I'm speaking for myself, as a human being, because what trading on Wall Street has become - with the advent of co-located servers and HFTs - is definitely not anything that can be analyzed using old methodologies. Throw out the old P/E models; earnings per share are also meaningless now that computers and their PhD-designed algorithms perform 70 to 90% of the trading on any given day.

Technical analysis is another dead end. The computers do all the modeling, sampling and trading, as speeds no human can possibly compete. And, for the most part, the computers aren't all that smart. They chase momentum, and today's action, on a diagonal line from left to right, with about a 12-15% incline, is the perfect textbook example of just how broken our equity markets have become.

Buying and selling stocks for profit, gain, retirement, "investment" is old-school and strictly for geezers with nothing but time (and money) on their hands or the completely clueless who can't see the forest for the trees, failing to grasp the obvious point that the HFTs have such an enormous advantage, individuals have no hope of making gains. They will be ground down by untimely, surprise market convulsions and endless fees. The last lost decade on the S&P and NASDAQ should be proof enough.

I suppose what I'm trying to say is that one can do all the analysis and homework and use all the tools offered by the online brokerages, watch CNBC all day long, read Barron's, the Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Forbes, Fortune and read all the right blogs (including this one) and still be completely clueless as to what's really going on down in lower Manhattan.

It's a losing game (BTW: I never did execute the put buys that I mentioned last week, being that the premiums were ridiculous and the chances of the market doing the rational thing and selling off are probably less than 50/50) and anyone who's invested in stocks should have sold them already and moved into gold, silver or hard assets. Personally, I gave up in 2007, when the market turned south and haven't returned, except to have a couple Gs taken from me during the 09-10 rally on options trades.

One realistically could do better betting on horses or football rather than playing in the rigged casino that is Wall Street. Unfortunately for anyone with a pension or 401k plan, you don't have that choice. Somebody does the trading for you - a concept I never could quite wrap my mind around - and your money is stuck wherever your fund manager decides it should go, and they haven't done much better lately, either.

So, I've decided today to try and change the tone here, to offer real world solutions that don't involve stocks, because, personally, and deep in my heart, I don't believe stocks are currently good investment vehicles - not in this environment and not until a lot of Wall Street crooks go to jail or the way markets function and are regulated is radically altered.

There are ways to get around owning stocks that can provide savings and maybe a little bit of sleep at night and I'll strive to unearth these gems while still providing some commentary on the hijinks of the privileged few who make their money on Wall Street while the vast majority of Americans work, save and struggle to make everyday expenses, which, by the way, just keep going up.

I'll still do the market recap and rerun the data on a daily basis, but the thrust of this blog will be - in addition to informing on the various scams and practices that make Wall Street a dead end for most people - will be on ways to make, accumulate and save money and assets, because I believe Wall Street is history and today's fantastic rise on extremely low volume proves my point.

I'll also probably go back to writing in the third person singular, once my pique of angst has subsided.

A couple of interesting articles appeared over the weekend, specifically, Grecthen Morgenson's NY Tmes piece, titled, The Rescue That Missed Main Street and Karl Denninger's screeching commentary from Friday on the illiquid equity markets.

Dow 11,539.25, +254.71 (2.26%)
NASDAQ 2,562.11, +82.26 (3.32%)
S&P 500 1,210.08, +33.28 (2.83%)
NYSE Composite 7,450.30, +204.48 (2.82%)


As expected, advancing issues smothered decliners, 5825-854, a 7:1 ratio. The NASDAQ showed 26 new highs and 30 new lows, while the NYSE reported 30 new highs and 9 new lows, flipping the indicator to positive for the first time in about three weeks (another sign of the fraud) at 56 new highs and 39 new lows. Volume, as mentioned above, was dismal.

NASDAQ Volume 1,598,409,000
NYSE Volume 4,101,816,000


Front-end crude oil futures gained $1.70, to $87.27, to the delight of only those who don't drive or buy consumer goods. Precious metals were slapped down again, with gold losing $41.50, to $1787.60 and silver getting hosed to the tune of a 68-cent loss, to $40.82.

Folks should start looking for credit card offers in the mail from the big banks. I received two from Citi offering 0% interest for 21 months, oddly almost the same time frame offered by the Federal Reserve with their ZIRP on federal funds. They will be coming your way and a good idea is to wait until you've received three or four before applying.

Once you do, make sure to transfer any large balances on high-interest cards over to Zero interest and start paying it down as fast as possible. The best way to keep yourself in the game and prospering is to pay down any and all debt as quickly as possible and live within one's means.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Bernanke Speaks, But Who's Buying the Rally?

As expected, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke gave his highly-anticipated speech at Jackson Hole, Wyoming this morning and did not outline any further Federal Reserve policies - specifically another round of quantitative easing (QE) - that would have signaled not only a weak, struggling economy, but more easy money for bankers, stock traders and the like.

Not that money isn't easy already. The Fed, in its last policy statement earlier this month, specifically stated that they would keep federal funds rates at close to zero until the middle of 2013. In the simplest of terms, the cost of money can't get any lower than zero, so any other stimulative motions would have - as have the last two rounds of QE - essentially been throwing good money after bad.

Wall Street's reaction to the Chairman's relaxed posture on monetary policy was not unexpected, but still a bit obtuse. After falling off precipitously in early trading (the Dow registered a 200+ point loss), stocks gathered momentum, went positive and ended the day - and the week - with broad gains. The only factor missing from the upside move was volume. Today's rally, like many which preceded it during the days of QE2, was rather muffled.

Two events, an ocean apart, will likely have major impacts moving forward into Monday. The Greece rescue plan has run into some turbulence, as Greece has set terms for the level of private participation and Euro nations spar and debate collateral obligations from the Greeks, now that Finland and Austria have secured such from the Greek government.

Along the Eastern coast of the United States, shorelines were being evacuated as Hurricane Irene meanders toward the Mid-Atlantic states of South and North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. The sizable storm is expected to make landfall on Saturday at North Carolina's Outer Banks and proceed with a bee-line path toward the major metropolitan areas of Philadelphia, Northern New Jersey, New York and Boston.

Expected to raise water levels with a storm surge of as much as 20 feet, Irene has the potential to bring devastation to some of the most populated areas of the country.

Traders didn't seem to make much of such turbulent conditions in both the weather and the global economy. They also shrugged off the decline in the second estimate of GDP, from 1.3% to 1.0%, which was announced prior to the opening bell. The University of Michigan's consumer confidence index also rose slightly, from 54.9 to 55.7, but, like Bernanke's speech, the news seemed unimportant.

As it turned out, the major indices put in their first winning week in the last five, a hopeful sign that the averages have encountered only a correction and have not fallen back into bear market territory, even though there's quite a bit of chatter about a resumption of the recession, muted growth prospects and a subtle notion that the FOMC will announce some policy directions at their September meeting, possibly to include some form of monetary easing.

Dow 11,284.54, +134.72 (1.21%)
NASDAQ 2,479.85, +60.22 (2.49%)
S&P 500 1,176.80, +17.53 (1.51%)
NYSE Composite 7,245.82, +96.15 (1.34%)


Despite the exceedingly low volume, advancers slaughtered decliners, 5258-1302. NASDAQ new highs numbered just nine (9), with 106 making new lows. On the NYSE, there were 13 new highs, but 101 new lows. The combined totals of 22 new highs and 207 new lows continue to suggest further downside developments.

NASDAQ Volume 1,860,127,125
NYSE Volume 4,936,341,500


Oil was relatively unchanged for the second straight day, with WTI crude futures posting a gain of just seven cents, closing out the week at $85.37.

Gold roared back against the margin hikes and central bank shorting, posting a wicked gain of $56.20, boosting the price per ounce back to $1827.50. Silver continued its bounce, up 22 cents, to $41.34.

With stocks and precious metals both rising on the day, one questions which group of speculators has the market sentiment measured correctly as the two asset groups are usually polar opposites.

As long as there's more debt being created to pay back already soured debt, you can bet the gold bugs and silver eagles have it right.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Uncle Warren to the Rescue of Bank of America; Jobs Steps Down at Apple

Two luminaries of the corporate world made moves that affected the overall markets, but a couple of stocks in particular.

Late Wednesday, Apple (AAPL) founder and CEO, Steve Jobs, announced that he was, effective immediately stepping down as CEO of the company due to health reasons and will now take up duties as Chairman of the Board.

Jobs' contributions to computing and high tech in general are the stuff of legend. Not since the heyday of Thomas Edison has the world been so influenced by one man's innovations. Jobs was a pioneer in personal computing and communications, first, with the Apple I and II, then the Macintosh, and more recently, the creation of the iPod, iPhone and iPad.

While Jobs will still have a hand in the operation of the company he founded in Cupertino, California (where it is still headquartered today) in 1976, most of the day-to-day operations will be left to newly-named CEO, Tim Cook and his staff.

Today, amid a firestorm of controversy concerning the fiscal health of Bank of America, billionaire Warren Buffett stepped up and injected $5 billion into the bank via a private offering which will net one of the world's richest men a 6% dividend over five years.

Buffett's holding company, Berkshire Hathaway, also received warrants to buy 700 million shares of common stock at just over $7.14 per share, with an unusually long 10-year exercise period.

The deal answers the question of whether Bank of America (BAC) was indeed in need of additional liquidity with a resounding "yes." Otherwise, Buffett's offer would have been turned down, as it is somewhat expensive for the bank.

The deal really solves none of BofA's liquidity and solvency issues. They are highly-levered, beset on all sides by the mortgage mess that has evolved since their purchase of Countrywide Financial in 2008, and in need of funds to meet new capital requirements. A paltry $5 billion from a rich uncle isn't going to cut it, and Buffett's bold maneuver may turn out to be another bad bet. Buffett made similar deals at the height of the financial crisis, taking out stakes in Goldman Sachs (GS) and General Electric (GE).

Inital reactions to both events were highly-charged. Apple stock fell nearly 7% in after hours trading on Wednesday, but, by the market close on Thursday, the stock was only down 2.46, or less than 1%.

On the news of Buffett's investment, Bank of America stock spiked as high as 8.80, after closing Wednesday at 6.99. At the end of the Thursday session, most of the froth had been sold off, with the nation's largest bank by deposits closing at 7.65, nearly a 10% gain.

The broader market fared less well, putting an end to the three-day winning streak which began on Monday. Uncertainty over just what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will say in his Friday morning speech at Jackson Hole had traders on the edge of their seats, with many deciding to take a wait-and-see position.

Bernanke is scheduled to give his keynote address at 10:00 am EDT.

On Friday morning, prior to the Chairman's speech, the government will announce its second estimate of second quarter GDP, which is expected to be revised down to 1.0% after the initial reading of 1.3%.

Most analysts are not expecting Bernanke to make any great policy pronouncements, though some are still clinging to hopes that he will announce another round of quantitative easing.

For the most part, traders were selling off positions in advance of the speech.

Dow 11,149.82, -170.89 (1.51%)
NASDAQ 2,419.63, -48.06 (1.95%)
S&P 500 1,159.27, -18.33 (1.56%)
NYSE Composite 7,149.67, -123.46 (1.70%)


In a broad retreat, declining issues outpaced advancers, 5044-1552. The NASDAQ had just eight (8) stocks making new highs, with 65 hitting new lows. Over at the NYSE, there were 14 new highs and 53 new lows. The combined total of 22 new highs and 118 new lows continues to signal risk to the downside. Volume was light.

NASDAQ Volume 1,812,493,625
NYSE Volume 5,741,944,000


Oil gained 14 cents, to $85.30. Gold, in a dramatic reversal, picked up $22.20, to $1773.50, but silver was the big winner, adding $1.39, to $41.08.

Despite Buffett's "calming effect" markets are still very shaky, as none of the issues which ignited the volatility of the past two weeks have been resolved. Bernanke's speech will likely only add some fuel to the fire, especially if, as many believe, he will not open the door to QE3. On top of all that, Wall Street is bracing for a water-logged Monday, as Hurricane Irene races along the US Eastern seaboard.

The outlook for days and weeks ahead is still quite uncertain.