Showing posts with label IMF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMF. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Greece Passes Austerity Measures; Obama Budget Goes to Congress; Apple Closes Above 500

Any angst over Greece's passing of their mandatory austerity measures was quickly dispelled by the markets on Monday. Most European bourses finished the day solidly in the green, and US markets followed suit, posting gains which pretty much eviscerated Friday's fear-induced declines.

Even though the austerity in Greece is a death-knell for the country and widespread rioting took place in the capitol of Athens and elsewhere, the globalist elements of the EU, ECB and IMF viewed the vote as a positive referendum on the overall health of the Euro system.

Realistically, Greece will never be able to repay its debts nor will it be able to accommodate all of the cuts to social welfare programs and government employment, but the parliament did what was most expeditious to secure financing from its feudal masters in Germany and keep the game going.

The scheme - from the view of the IMF, ECB and Angela Merkel - seems to be to keep Greece functioning as a neo-slave-state to keep the Euro from collapsing, and, thus far, it seems to be working. A disorderly default by the Greeks might just be the catalyst that destroys whatever unity is left in the EuroZone, an outcome the supra-governmental EU leaders will fight bitterly with truckloads of money (it doesn't matter how much, they'll just print more) and the current kind of kabuki theatre that is disguised as "austerity" for the free-spending Greeks.

Their fear is that Greece's demise could foment similar outcomes in Portugal, Ireland and elsewhere, particularly Spain and Italy, and the continental currency experiment of the Euro would come crashing down upon their collective heads. Problematic as it may be, the monetarists in Brussels are committed to spending whatever it takes to keep the EuroZone intact by relentless money printing and worry about the consequences of widespread poverty, inflation, social unrest and ultimately, a continent-wide depression, later. We wish them luck, mostly because they'll need it, as desperate as the situation has become.

Here in the States, President Obama submitted his 2013 budget to congress, where it was deemed by many (mostly Republicans seeking to unseat the president this fall) as dead on arrival. Obama's 3.8 Trillion monstrosity would reduce military outlays while hiking outlays to infrastructure projects and features higher taxes for the wealthy and a $1.33 trillion deficit, marking the fourth straight year that the federal budget deficit would top one trillion dollars, despite an Obama campaign promise from 2008 to cut the deficit in half by the end of his first term.

Investors shrugged off the details and went about their task of re-inflating the corporate sector, sending stock prices close to their highest levels of 2012, though volume on the NYSE was the lowest for a non-Holiday session in over a decade.

Oil closed above $100 per barrel, despite US gas consumption being historically weak and Apple (AAPL) closing above 500 per share for the first time in its history. Apple is currently the largest company in the world by market cap, surpassing oil giant ExxonMobil for the top spot.

The major indices followed their now-routine pattern of a gap-up open followed by a mid-morning decline and rally and a flat-lining finish.

Dow 12,874.04, +72.81 (0.57%)
NASDAQ 2,931.39, +27.51 (0.95%)
S&P 500 1,351.77, +9.13 (0.68%)
NYSE Composite 8,056.25, +64.22 (0.80%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,613,612,250
NYSE Volume 3,462,219,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4236-1411
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 262-12 (par-tay!)
WTI crude oil: 100.91, +2.24
Gold: 1,724.90, -0.40
Silver: 33.72, +0.12

Friday, February 10, 2012

Greece: Deal or No Deal; Booking Profits Today

Finally, after four days of running essentially in place, stocks took a morning downturn and turned it into an all-day event, as US indices suffered their worst loss of 2012.

The catalyst for the day-long decline was none other than Greece, where the deal struck on new austerity measures just yesterday quickly became unglued as the leader of the LAOS party, Giorgios Karatzaferis, said publicly that his 16-seat faction (of Greece's 300-member parliament) would vote against the planned austerity measures this Sunday.

The departure of the small faction caused a major uproar in financial markets, which see the defection as a major blow to the overall refinancing plan put in place by the EU, ECB and IMF (the "troika"). Globalist financial leaders have demanded that the Greek government sign onto the strict austerity measures before taking further steps to ease the crisis in Greece with another round of bailout funds before the deadline for Greece to repay roughly $14 billion occurs on March 20.

Additionally, as many as five cabinet ministers of the newly-formed Greek coalition government have reportedly resigned, signaling even further defections from the nation-destroying plan to keep Greece afloat and the Archbishop of Athens - and leader of the Orthodox church - sent a letter to Prime Minister Lucas Papademos warning of a "social explosion" of poverty, homelessness and rioting should the country continue on its current, destructive path.

Even today, protesters hurled gas bombs and rocks at Greek police in and around the capitol as the nation enters a dangerous, deadly phase of its struggle for sovereignty.

The bottom line is that Greece can and probably should extract itself from the EU and begin - as soon as humanly possible - converting from the disabled Euro currency back to the drachma. The levels of debt are far too onerous for Greece to ever repay without severe costs in lives and livelihoods, and the rising passions of the people may dictate to the government and the gloablist EU statists the correct course for the country, lest it fall to the desires of those clamoring for continued support from the ECB, which thus far have produced only a worsening situation.

A disorderly default by Greece would open the door to similar situations in Portugal and especially Ireland, where debt slavery is becoming a way of life and the citizens of the Emerald Isle find themselves chained to the wishes of their banker overlords. Extrication from the EuroZone and the Euro currency is now being seen as a path toward self-sufficiency and national unity in countries with severe debt issues, including Spain, Italy and Belgium.

Dissolution of the European Union and destruction of the Euro currency caused by domino-like defections is an end-game that the globalists and supra-governing mechanisms of the EU cannot even begin to comprehend and that is why almost all European stock markets - along with US markets - ended the day deep in the red.

The losses today in the Dow, NASDAQ and S&P 500 were a sudden shift from the plodding gains of recent days and may be signaling a shift in global economic expectations. Today was surely a day in which some short-term traders ran for cover, as US Treasury bonds improved, pushing yields lower.

A move lower in oil, gold and silver, as the US dollar rose in value is probably a temporary condition, at least for the metals, but any continued move lower by the Euro - which took a sudden downturn on today's news - would more than likely contribute to a run on equities as the correlation trade between the US dollar, the Euro and risk assets continues to suggest.

With the turn of the new year, the Euro has strengthened, but the destruction today should serve as a warning to investors and speculators that the recent strength is hardly sustainable. Imagining a Euro at 1.20 to the dollar, or even at par, could turn out to be the worst nightmare for many hedge funds and even long-term investors.

US stocks have reached a point of no return - at or near multi-year highs - and the concept of a euro-fomented retreat is not only palpable, but probable at this juncture.

Investors worldwide will be holding their collective breaths this weekend in anticipation of the Sunday vote by Greece's parliament and the response from the European financial authorities. While complete resolution is a distant hope, some clarity should come to markets by Monday, though the projected outcomes are radically different.

Plenty of profits were booked today, and, if the Greek situation continues to devolve into chaos, many more traders and investors will be heading for the sidelines. The markets - indeed, all of Europe and most of the world - are headed toward a climatic conclusion or convulsion in the days and weeks ahead. Should the Greeks decide to reject austerity and the burdens of continued debt, all bets are off.

Dow 12,801.23, -89.23 (0.69%)
NASDAQ 2,903.88, -23.35 (0.80%)
S&P 500 1,342.64, -9.31 (0.69%)
NYSE Composite 7,992.05, -89.20 (1.10%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,786,934,125
NYSE Volume 3,798,787,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1420-4233
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 144-21
WTI crude oil: 98.67, -1.17
Gold: 1,725.30, -15.90
Silver: 33.60, 0.31

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Stocks Remain Sluggishly in Stall Mode Awaiting Greek Workout

Considering that there are nearly 7 billion people on Planet Earth, one wouldn't think that the economic fate of a country as small as Greece (population: 10,787,690 in the 2011 census) would rattle markets as much as the Hellenic nation has, but there's much more to the equation than just Greece and its populace.

If Greece is unable to come to terms with private and public financiers, and have their people agree to even more stringent austerity measures, there's the very real chance that Greece would formally default on its debt and thus be driven from the EuroZone. Ancillary to that argument is the suspicion that other derelict nations which use the Euro as their primary currency - countries such as Portugal, Spain, Italy, Belgium and Hungary - might also fall under the sway of separation from the Euro currency, a chain of events that would surely bring financial markets and whole economies to a state of panic and confusion.

So, while the unity party in Greece and Premier Lucas Papademos ponder their next moves, the world slowly turns.

Stocks were little changed for the third straight session in New York, treading water in a narrow trading range on a paucity of volume. However, if anything has been learned since the near-death experience of 2008, maybe the merry marketeers have discovered that slow is good.

Stocks have advanced at a snail's pace this week, with the Dow adding 19 points and change over the three days. Despite the angst over the situation in Europe, some are still finding equities worth buying and, yes, holding.

Should Greece formally default, it should not be the end of the world for US investors in particular. There's been plenty of time to decouple from Europe, though the effect of a cascading currency crisis would, almost certainly, have a deleterious aftermath.

On the opposite side of the equation is the hope-against-hope that the Greeks will accept austerity, private bondholders will take a 50-70% haircut and the troika will also manage to find a way to sweep the unpaid debts under the rug of international finance.

Since the ECB, IMF and our own Federal Reserve can just flip the money switch at will, there's little doubt that whatever the circumstances, and however dire the conditions for the people of Greece, the economic Ponzi scheme will continue without as much as a loud belch from the bowls of central bank vaults.

As it was in 2008 in America, little will change, although the though of visiting the home of the Acropolis and the Parthenon with American money at an exchange rate measured in cheap drachmas instead of overvalued Euros is rather appealing.

Dow 12,883.95, +5.75 (0.04%)
NASDAQ 2,915.86, +11.78 (0.41%)
S&P 500 1,349.96, +2.91 (0.22%)
NYSE Composite 8,083.47, +13.76 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,952,598,125
NYSE Volume 4,050,664,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3218-2394
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 279-11
WTI crude oil: 98.71, +0.30
Gold: 1,731.30, -17.10
Silver: 33.70, -0.49

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Stocks lower as Europe Weighs Heavily on Risk Assets

Stocks simply stalled out today as the euphoria over a new year continued to wear thin and the realities of Europe took center place in the minds of investors, traders, cheaters, liars and assorted money moguls.

Ancillary to the dilemma on the Continent, US companies are weighing the potentialities of a pan-European recession, which the IMF clearly defined today in cutting their global growth estimate from 4% to 3.25% for 2012. In case anyone's interested, that 0.75% cut in growth amounts to a drop off of 18.75% in their estimate. Whether the IMF economists just throw darts at a wall in search of a politically correct "number" or actually have ferreted out the world's economy to the penny, the sense of this announcement is pretty clear. Europe is big enough to plunge the rest of the world into a prolonged recession or, at best, a slow growth regime for the next four to five years, which, on top of the past three years of uncertainty, confusion and doubt, doesn't bode well for the rest of 2012 and beyond.

The IMF also lowered their forecast for the 17 nations comprising the Eurozone, from 1.1% growth in September to -0.5% today. In ordinary terms, the IMF is calling for a mild recession in Europe, though anyone who's been following this tableau of financial terror, knows that a mere 0.5% falloff would be a rather welcome outcome.

The Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) has released their January 2012 Policy Brief[PDF]. The 13-page report, authored by Peter Boone and Simon Johnson details most of the pressing issues facing Europe and the viability of the EU itself.

The authors cite five key measures towards the survivability of the Eurozone:
Five measures are needed to enable the euro area to survive: (1) an immediate program to deal with excessive sovereign debt, (2) far more aggressive plans to reduce budget deficits and make peripheral nations hypercompetitive” in the near future, (3) supportive monetary policy from the ECB, (4) the introduction of mechanisms that credibly achieve long-term fiscal sustainability, and (5) institutional change that reduces the scope for excessive leverage and consequent instability in the financial sector.

Let's dissect these five measures one by one.

1) an immediate program to deal with excessive sovereign debt. Like what, actually paying down debt rather than continually issuing more bonds to avoid reality?

2) far more aggressive plans to reduce budget deficits and make peripheral nations hypercompetitive” in the near future. What would Greece and Italy do to become "hypercompetitive?" Eat faster? Dance more wildly? This is ludicrous.

3) supportive monetary policy from the ECB. Somehow, that just doesn't exactly jibe with "excessive sovereign debt" outlined in #1.

4) the introduction of mechanisms that credibly achieve long-term fiscal sustainability. Can you say "gold standard" and "kill the Euro" in the same sentence?

5) institutional change that reduces the scope for excessive leverage and consequent instability in the financial sector. Banks, governments acting rationally? The authors have clearly headed into an alternate dimension.

The off-the-cuff remarks notwithstanding, Johnson and Boone come to the startling conclusion that Europe's problems are not going to be fixed either easily nor soon, saying, in their conclusion, "Europe’s economy remains, therefore, in a dangerous state."

Well, somebody tell the stock jocks that their portfolios are about to shrink.

Elsewhere, Greece talks to get private investors on board for a voluntary "haircut" have stalled out once again, as there continues to be no deal on restructuring Greece's largely unpayable debt, while on Wall Street volume dried up completely in advance of tomorrow's FOMC non-eventful rate policy announcement and subsequent (ZZZZZZZZZZZZ) press conference.

Yes, it was another bang-up session for US equities. Now might be a good time to escape, like the hordes of other individual investors already have, having absolutely no confidence in markets, the government, or the sustainability of our glorious "recovery."

After the bell, the legacy of Steve Jobs lived on just a little longer as Apple (AAPL) delivered bang-up 4th quarter results, while Yahoo (YHOO) missed revenue and earnings estimates for the umpteenth consecutive time. It's very telling that Yahoo hasn't been acquired by now. Apparently, any interested buyers are content to wait until it simply disappears from the internet.

Dow 12,675.75, -33.07 (0.26%)
NASDAQ 2,786.64, +2.47 (0.09%)
S&P 500 1,314.65, -1.35 (0.10%)
NYSE Composite 7,840.65, -14.87 (0.19%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,659,757,875
NYSE Volume 3,671,223,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3138-2409 (lots of UNCH today)
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 141-24
WTI crude oil: 98.95, -0.63
Gold: 1,664.50, -13.80
Silver: 31.98, -0.30




















Monday, January 23, 2012

Markets Take Pause, But, If Everything Is so Swell, Why are Gold and Silver Soaring?

While it was somewhat expected for stocks to take Monday off after the successful ramp-up of the past four weeks leading directly into options expiry on Friday, what is more befuddling to anyone with at least half a brain (and all of our readers have fully-engaged complete brains, we are quite sure) is the stratospheric rise in the precious metals, gold and silver, since the end of last year.

In the case of gold, which plummeted to its lowest level since July 7, 2011, precisely on the last trading day of the year, December 29, at 1531.00, the close today at 1,678.30 in New York represents a move of 8.8% to the upside in 2012, easily outpacing the much-ballyhooed gains in the stock market over the same span.

Silver's move from 26.16 on December 29 to its close today of 32.27 is an even bigger move of 18.9% if one was able - or willing - to catch the falling knife precisely at its bottom.

Conventional thinking on precious metals and their relationship to stocks and currencies is rather straightforward. If risk assets, such as stocks are rising, gold and silver, the safe havens, should be lower or, at best, flat, and a strengthening currency would also serve to flatten the price of the metals.

However, the dollar was particularly strong over the first part of the new year, rising, according to the Dollar Index (^DXY) from 79.61 to 81.52 on January 13 before taking a dive back to its close today at 79.70, coming up relatively flat itself in the new year.

A theory on the price and manipulation of gold may be useful in understanding why gold has been so strong. First, the price collapse in the latter half of 2011 may have been a coordinated attempt by the fiat-crazed central banks to make gold look more like a risk asset than a safe haven, as it's gain for the year was a paltry 9.35% (from 1400 to 1531). The same scenario could be applied to the less-liquid silver market.

Understandably, not everyone ascribes to the manipulation theories, so the moves lower at the end of 2011 could have just been year-end selling or profit-taking. Whatever the case, the sellers in late December are now kicking themselves in January.

This does not explain why stocks and precious metals are rising at the same time, though it might be a bit of front-running in the metals as opposed to a pure hope and hype new year rally which Wall Street seems to find irresistible (as in, they do it almost every year). With January options expiration behind us, it will be interesting to keep track of these various price levels (dollar index, S&P, Dow, NASDAQ) going forward.

With Wall Street off to a flying start of the new year, even in the face of sub-par GDP growth worldwide in 2012, one may be suspect of this most recent slow-motion rally in stocks, yet hopeful that the precious metals would continue their decade-long bull run. Just today, Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, politicked for a larger European bailout fund of up to $1 trillion, and mentioned that the IMF would be lowering its global GDP forecast, due out tomorrow, though she would not be specific on the size or scope of the reduction.

In New York, stocks vacillated across the flat line, ending with a split decision and overall flat close. The FOMC of the Fed begins a two-day rate policy meeting tomorrow, with the usually-suspect Wall Street crowd hoping for some signal on a renewal of QE, as a means by which to boost their bottom lines, risk free, though an outright commitment by the Fed at this time is unlikely. There would need to be more signs of sluggishness in the economy, which, after the past four weeks of stocks rallying and fairly benign economic data, have yet to surface.

Dow 12,708.82, -11.66 (0.09%)
NASDAQ 2,784.17, -2.53 (0.09%)
S&P 500 1,316.00, +0.62 (0.05%)
NYSE Composite 7,855.52, +26.19 (0.33%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,689,429,500
NYSE Volume 3,744,960,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2898-2637
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 203-11 (yes, this is extreme)
WTI crude oil: 99.58, +1.25
Gold: 1,678.30, + 14.30
Silver: 32.27, +0.60

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Zombie Earth: IMF Steps Into Euro Fray; US 3Q Growth Lowered

The day was full of economic news that kept market participants awake and jumping at every byte of information that crossed the trading desks.

Morning began with the Commerce Department's second revision to third quarter GDP, originally quoted at 2.5%, but today lowered to 2.0%. The news sent some jitters across the futures trading complex, but, by the opening bell the effect on the major indices was minimal.

Still, stocks took a bit of a header in early trading, extending almost to the noon hour, when the IMF announced a couple of liquidity lending facilities which boosted stocks for a few hours, until everyone realized that 17% of the money would be coming from the US, in the form of money printed out of thin air and exported to Europe to keep the inflationary ball rolling.

The IMF foray is only a small step forward, another can-kicking exercise to get Europe through the holidays with a minimum of stress. It is in nobody's best interests to mess up the Christmas shopping season, so Christine Legarde and her IMF goon squad set the wheels in motion officially with about $80 billion available immediately, though, as we are all well aware, these numbers usually don't stop growing until the money outstanding has reached the trillions. Give it six months and the IMF will own most of what they don't already in Italy, Spain and Portugal. The Global Zombie Ponzi has reached epic and no-turning-back proportions.

Greece? Nobody really wants it. They'll be printing drachmas in six to eight months time and trading goats for Ouzo and other necessities.

After the market closed the session in the red, again, the Federal Reserve announced that 31 financial institutions, all with assets (that's a joke right?) of more than $50 billion, will undergo stress tests, with the six largest banks - JP Morgan, Bank of America, Citi, Wells-Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley - having to undertake a more severe test, that of a “hypothetical global market shock,” based upon conditions from the Fall of 2008. Results of the stress tests (which every bank will surely pass with flying colors, as they always do) will be announced on January 9th, 2012. Happy New Year.

With all the macro-news making the rounds, it was no surprise that traders and speculators (the stock markets are now devoid of "investors" except for the suckers stuck with 401k plans or mutual funds) have trimmed their exposure significantly over the past few days. There are just too many headwinds and too much money being thrown at sovereign states for anyone to rationalize in an investment scenario.

The new world order of global kleptocratic Ponzi economics has the IMF (backed significantly by US suckers, i.e., taxpayers) at the top of the chain, filtering down to the oligarch families of Europe with all the people of the world underneath. And we thought Feudalism was dead?

Briefly, Bank of America made a new closing low at 5.37 (they're solvent, right?) and the 5-year note was sold at a record low of 0.937% as the Treasury sold $35 billion at auction today. Demand was 3.15 times the amount offered.

Here's how the chips fell:

Dow 11,493.72, -53.59 (0.46%)
NASDAQ 2,521.28, -1.86 (0.07%)
S&P 500 1,188.04, -4.94 (0.41%)
NYSE Composite 7,094.89, -39.58 (0.55%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,798,916,500
NYSE Volume 3,926,789,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2043-3490
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 60-220
WTI crude oil: 98.01, +1.09
Gold: 1,702.40, +23.80
Silver: 32.95, +1.84

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Last Gasp or Last Hurrah?

As another day-long rally appeared out of the blue for the second consecutive day on virtually no news, one must question the tendency of the market to gain so vigorously without the benefit of positive reinforcement.

With stocks being nearly the only place to find yield these days, there has to be adequate risk appetite, and that's where the low volume standard comes into play. On these monstrous upside days, the volume has remained quiet, signaling to the astute investor that such rallies are nothing more than algorithm-inspired events and have little to nothing to do with news flow, fundamentals or general sentiment.

As such, there's little to report on today's ramp-job than to mention that the Greek parliament will vote on the austerity plan by which they will get the next portion of their bailout money on Wednesday morning, 5:00 am EDT, so as goes the vote, so will stocks. A failure for the parliament to pass the measure would result - mostly likely - in a massive default by the Greek government or some other form of restructuring, because, as we all know, bankers cannot lose money, even if they lend to the worst, non-performing, severe-credit-risk entities, like sovereign nations such as Greece, Portugal and Ireland.

If the vote passes, the people will riot and burn most of Athens back to it's root of civilization foundations. Thus, nobody wins, except the banks, though it could be a hollow, short-lived victory as not only Greece, but other EU nations, have debt well beyond their ability to repay, no matter how much they tax the populace.

We have reached a tipping point in the global economy and the sooner politicians and bankers realize that their Ponzi scheme has hit a wall, the quicker the world can get back on track to some normalized kind of functioning reality. Until then, though, it's risk on, rally on!

Dow 12,188.61, +145.05 (1.20%)
NASDAQ 2,729.31, +41.03 (1.53%)
S&P 500 1,296.67, +16.57 (1.29%)
NYSE Composite 8,135.98, +104.90 (1.31%)


Advancers finished well ahead of declining issues, 5045-1528. NASDAQ new highs: 100, new lows: 22. On the NYSE, 75 new highs, 23 new lows, bringing the combined total to 175 new highs and 45 new lows on the day. As decisive as those results may be, skepticism abounds due to the aforementioned thoughts and the incredibly low volume.

NASDAQ Volume 1,660,870,000.00
NYSE Volume 3,650,911,750


Oil rose $2.28, to $92.89, defying all manner of logic. Someday soon, hopefully the assholes (that's what they are and that's what I'm calling them) trading oil futures are going to be hit with a bolt of lightning and the realization that absurdly high oil prices are a detriment to global growth. It could not happen soon enough.

Gold was up 4.10, to $1501.00, while silver rose 36 cents, to $33.94, both breaking a three-day losing streak.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Over the Debt Limit and Over the Edge

Just in case you are like about 98% of American's who will think that nothing of importance happened today, we duteously inform you that today, May 16, 2011, is a seminal date in American history, as it happens to be the day the US government purposely and willfully exceeded the statutory debt limit and began raiding the federal employees' pension fund, specifically, the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund (“CSRDF”), in order to keep the federal government operating.

It's all laid out in detail in this letter [PDF] from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to Senate majority leader Harry Reid.

In a nutshell, since Treasury cannot issue any more debt by which to operate the hopelessly bankrupt government, they will take the funds from whatever government agencies have money, with a promise to repay once congress acts to increase the debt limit. In case they don't - and there's ample reason to believe that this current bunch of uneducated, deceptive and uncontrollable legislators may not - then too bad for all those federal employees who thought they had it made in the shade. The government will shaft you first. The rest of the public citizenry will be shafted in other ways, at a later date.

This is pretty serious stuff, and the end-run by Geithner around the debt limit gives the congress until August 2nd to sort things out. But, it's by no means a done deal or even close to it. The Republicans are calling for steep deficit reductions in the upcoming 2012 budget, while the Democrats are pushing for tax increases. In all seriousness, neither idea has any chance of passing, so the obvious alternative is to declare war and issue emergency powers.

What's that? We're already at war? In three different countries? Well, then, no problem-o! Spend at will.

Last week - and in measured ways over the last three years - this blog prepared its readers for calamity of varying degrees to be foisted upon the public, saying that chaos would prevail and with today's action by the Treasury, so it has.

Now we have rigged markets, a rogue government, spending completely out of control and borrowing beyond constitutional limits. The government has commenced paying back debt and paying bills with money collected from federal employees; money that was supposed to fund retirements and payments to disabled workers. And while no current retiree will be affected, future ones may well be. It's all in the hands of probably the worst congress (and that's saying something) ever to be seated. Well, good luck with that.

The stock markets took it in stride, first dipping into the red, then going positive, then the NASDAQ taking a nose-dive, and a final-hour smash-crash which took down the other indices. It was spooky, surreal and and absolutely frightening day.

On top of that, over the weekend, the head of the IMF, one Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was arrested in New York on a range on charges related to his alleged rape and sodomizing of a hotel maid. Since then, Mr. Strauss-Kahn has been denied bail and formally charged.

So, we now have a rogue congress, administration and the head of the world's most powerful and influential financial organization behind bars. Can it get any more ridiculous, any worse? Oh, yes, and it definitely will, shortly.

QE2 ends in a few more weeks, and with the free Fed money spigot about to be closed, expect the ruinous crowd on Wall Street to head for the hills, selling as many stock certificates as they can unload before peeling out the door. One problem may be that there will be no takers for their inordinately over-hyped investments, and they will have to sell them for much less than the levels at which they currently trade. If that occurs, we like to call such events a market crash, and there will be no bailing out this time, no savior from above, like the Fed, because they too are over-leveraged and tapped out. This time it will be for real, and it will not recover.

So, hang in there, buy more silver and gold and hope that your garden vegetables head for harvesting before the wheels fall completely off the federal fiasco and the world ends.

And, if you're scared, worried and/or confused by all this, take heart that you should be and that you are by no means alone. We all stand to lose everything if this doesn't go well.

Dow 12,548.37 47.38 (0.38%)
NASDAQ 2,782.31 46.16 (1.63%)
S&P 500 1,329.47 8.30 (0.62%)
NYSE Compos 8,336.59 35.08 (0.42%)


Declining issues took the measure of advancers, 4744-1843. Just in case more proof of the severity of this unannounced crisis was needed, the NASDAQ provided it in the form of flipping the new highs-new lows metric. Today, there were only 40 new highs and 67 new lows. The NYSE compressed, but did not flip (it will), with 104 new highs and 35 new lows. Volume was fairly pathetic, especially on the NYSE. In coming days and weeks, expect more and more stocks to begin selling off, first, in a somewhat orderly fashion, but as the end of QE2 approaches, in a real rush for the exits. Incidentally, banking stocks fell anywhere from 1/2 to 1% on the day. It's only fitting that the companies that led us into depression will be - again - the worst affected.

NASDAQ Volume 2,071,148,875
NYSE Volume 3,888,652,000


Commodities were a mixed bag. Crude oil slipped $2.28, to $97.37. What's of particular concern, however, is that while oil has slumped 14% over the past two weeks, the price of gasoline in the USA has fallen only ONE CENT PER GALLON. The rule of thumb used to be that the price of gas would rise or fall two to two-and-a-half cents for every dollar per barrel move in oil.

Apparently, now that the kleptocracy has gone full retard, that rule no longer applies. Gas will, from now on, cost whatever the oil cartel believes it can charge whether that price be fair, rational or based upon any measure of supply and demand.

Gold was higher earlier in the day, but now trades $5.40 lower, at $1489.80. Silver continues to be the bankers' favorite whipping boy, losing another $1.70, to trade at $33.60 [ON SALE, BUY MORE]. Under siege from HSBC and JP Morgan Chase, the world's biggest shorters of the commodity, silver should continue to experience weakness and erode down to the upper 20s in price. This is a unique buying opportunity in one of history's most manipulated and currently-undervalued pure forms of money.

It will get even more strange and perverse in global markets. Today was only the beginning.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

QE2, TARP2 Signal Beginning of End for Global Currencies

The mortgage/foreclosure mess created and exacerbated by the banks is still news, big news, but in the long run it is only a symptom of what is really crushing the global economy, and the US in particular.

That would be the failure of unwinding the toxic debt created by the nation's largest banks in the most magnificent swindle in the history of the world that not only allowed the banks and financial institutions to not only profit from their spendthrift, shifty, illegal ways, but to profit from it and then to prop it up when the house of cards began to crumble.

A report from the IMF released yesterday, calls for more quantitative easing by central banks and another round of bailouts for impaired, decrepit banks amounting to another $4 Trillion wasted on the very entities that started the entire mess, calling the banks the "Achilles Heel" of global recovery.

With apologies to the great Achilles, the banks aren't only the heel (though one could maintain that the bankers are "heels"), but the head, neck, shoulders, chest, torso, arms, legs, hands and feet of the financial crisis. They are all of it and they need to be forced to own up to their liabilities, stop the mockery of accounting known as mark to model and head directly into receivership or, more appropriately, to bankruptcy courts.

Not that it isn't where they're headed anyway, but this evil, crooked gang of thieves populating the banks and the halls of congress must not be allowed to rape and pillage the global economy one more day. If there's any time that the US public should be taking to the streets in protest, it is now, or, whenever they try to sneak the next bailout by us, for they truly cannot announce it very publicly or loudly.

There should be a minimum one year moratorium on all foreclosures, evictions and repossessions. Naturally, that will crush the real estate industry, but, at some point, there has to be a mechanism for price discovery. All the mortgages sold during the years 2003-2007 should be examined, documented and written down or forgiven, mostly to alleviate the strain on the courts and the public, but more realistically because the vast majority of these loans were originated under false pretenses or have been or are being foreclosed upon fraudulently, or both.

The banks and the note-holders will take significant hits to their bottom lines, but none could be more deserving. It's certainly a better solution than what's gone on for the past three years, a la foreclosure gone wild. Keeping people in homes, in communities, whether they're paying rent or mortgages or whether they have jobs or don't is the first step toward restoring the nation to some semblance of wholeness, though admittedly, it may already be too late, the pain and suffering inflicted on people and the economy are severely deep wounds which will not heal overnight.

We must, as a people and a nation, take positive steps toward recovery and that begins with thre truth finally being told about the banks, and the crimes they've committed. Most of the hot-shots running the major banks should already be behind bars, but we must start now before the statutes of limitations begin to expire.

No more bailouts, no more quantitative easing and maybe no more Federal Reserve. The time has come that desperate solutions are the only answers to the desperate situation into which the banks and the government have put the nation.

Stocks were basically flat, despite a pumping of $5.5 billion this morning by the Fed in yet another POMO. This amounts to nothing less than QE on the cheap, funding the banks with fresh cash every few days because they simply cannot roll enough notes to keep them going.

Dow 10,967.65, +22.93 (0.21%)
NASDAQ 2,380.66, -19.17 (0.80%)
S&P 500 1,159.97, -0.78 (0.07%)
NYSE Composite 7,448.33, +14.15 (0.19%)


The markets remain chaotic, bifurcated, as is the case today. Decliners took out advancers, 3157-2552. There were 454 new highs to 33 new lows. Volume remained at depressed levels.

NASDAQ Volume 2,127,381,000
NYSE Volume 4,205,435,500


Crude oil lifted 41 cents, to $83.23, but the real story was in the precious metals, which continued to rise in explosive fashion. The latest print for gold was $1348.50, up $7.90, while silver added 30 cents to $23.17. Precious metals prices are moving in direct inverse action to the crumbling currencies of the major industrialized nations, as the race to the bottom ramps up to include the US, all of Europe, Japan and other major nations.

More will be posted about developments in the mortgage foreclosure miasma, since today's news is more than enough upon which to chew for one day. The threat of another round of bank bailouts - which didn't work the first time around - is simply incomprehensible. The global economy will not sustain it.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Bank Oligarchs, the Fiddler President and Congressional Circus Clowns

There were no major economic data releases today, though there were a number of companies reporting 1st quarter earnings, including Bank of New York Mellon Corp., Northern Trust and State Street, all of which showed declines in earnings, though the latter beat analyst estimates.

Disappointing results from banking interests - reported eithe before the open or during the session - didn't deter investors from sparking a rally in financials, however, pushing the major indices to recoup some of Monday's dramatic decline.

After the close, CapitalOne (COF), once the nation's largest stand-alone credit card issuer, reported a net loss for the first quarter of 2009 of $111.9 million, or $0.45 per common share, which was far better than last quarter - a $1.4 billion loss, or -$3.74 per share - but far worse than the same period last year, in which the company reported a profit of $548.5 million, or $1.47 per share. during the session, shares of CapitalOne were higher by 1.67 (12.50%), but were seen lower in after-hours trading, down more than a point shortly after the earnings release.

On the Dow, 25 of 30 component stocks finished with gains. Leading the way were the three bank stocks - JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Bank of America (BAC) and Citigroup (C) - all of which ended the day at least 9.5% to the good. How the very same banks which are controlling the economy are manipulating the markets is a grand shame and these oligarchies need to be dismantled, as explained below.

Caterpillar (CAT) reported its first quarterly loss since 1992 and drug maker Merck (MRK) reported a profit but missed earnings estimates.

As for the rest of the market, suffice it to say that the market is mostly comprised of day-trading Wall Streeters and hedge fund managers who follow the leaders, which is why stocks were broadly higher today, despite the absence of any positive news.

Dow 7,969.56, +127.83 (1.63%)
Nasdaq 1,643.85, +35.64 (2.22%)
S&P 500 850.08, +17.69 (2.13%)
NYSE Composite 5,339.59, +119.47 (2.29%)


Advancing issues turned the table on decliners, beating them 4846-1627, though new lows continued the spread over new highs, by a count of 69-18. Volume was solid, though unspectacular.

NYSE Volume 1,671,525,000
Nasdaq Volume 2,435,768,000


In the commodity markets, a slight bounce from Monday's drubbing, with crude futures up 63 cents, to $46.51. Gold lost $4.60, to $882.70, with silver off a nickel, to $12.06. Futures for various foodstuffs were mostly higher.

Appearing before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress today were, among others, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas Hoenig, Columbia University professor Joseph Stiglitz and MIT professor Simon Johnson, each of whom expressed skepticism over whether current government actions were effective in relieving the economic distress in the banking sector.

Will the government listen, and even more to the point, do the congressional member and senators who convened these hearings, actually understand what they're saying? Probably not. Politicians are a breed of people who understand power and politics and little more. What they do know is that their allegiance is to the Wall Street bankers, because that group, by and large, financed the campaigns that put them or keeps them in positions of power.

As usual, it will be politics first, constituents (the actual ones they're supposed to represent), last, and so, the sad saga of our nation being run into the ground by a coalition of Wall Street financiers and political puppets in Washington will continue unabated. Today's hearings are just more window dressing, designed to keep the public from rising up, rioting and throwing the whole bunch into the East and Potomac Rivers, which is precisely what should happen and very well may happen if this fiasco of keeping insolvent banks operating under clouds of secrecy and mountains of non-negotiable debt is allowed to continue much longer.

Below, Yahoo's Tech Ticker talks with former IMF chief economist and current MIT economics professor Simon Johnson about the big banks and how they stand in the way of a meaningful economic recovery.



Here is Johnson's breathtaking article, The Quiet Coup in this month's Atlantic.

Near the end of his reveling writing, Johnson finally comes to speak the unspeakable:
The conventional wisdom among the elite is still that the current slump “cannot be as bad as the Great Depression.” This view is wrong. What we face now could, in fact, be worse than the Great Depression—because the world is now so much more interconnected and because the banking sector is now so big. We face a synchronized downturn in almost all countries, a weakening of confidence among individuals and firms, and major problems for government finances.

There you have it. A respected economist - not me, a generally disrespected populist pundit blogger - says this current condition could devolve into something worse than the Great Depression. I've held that view all along, since early in 2007, and if you check my archives at Downtown Magazine, probably as early as 2002 or 2003, when I reported on the then-emerging pension crisis which now continues beneath the surface.

Like Johnson, I hold out slim hopes that the elite in Washington and the ruling oligarchs on Wall Street will yield power without a fight of monstrous proportions, against the citizenry of the United States, and to a larger extent, the populations and governments of their trading partners globally.

Mr. Johnson and I are not alone. The chorus for concentrated government action to close down the insolvent banks and replace their inept and likely corrupt management, is growing at a very rapid pace. The longer the government dithers, the closer the nation comes to the precipice of economic, political and social destruction.

Finally, below, here's the second part of Henry Blogett's interview with Simon Johnson, in which he extolls the virtue of quick, decisive action in cleaning up and breaking up the major bank's stranglehold on the country's finances:



It's become clear to just about everyone in the world, except the pols in Washington and the banksters themselves, that breaking up the nation's biggest banks and dismantling their management and interlocking boards of directors would provide the quickest, cleanest and least costly resolution to the global financial condition. Instead, President Barack Obama, like Nero in ancient Rome, fiddles while the empire burns to the ground and the congress can only be compared to circus clowns for all the good they've done over the past six months.