After the German Constitutional Court OK'd the ECB's ESM (love those acronyms!), Thursday was set up for a real bazooka blast of fresh money-printing by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.
And, of course, the chairman did not disappoint, announcing an unlimited bond buying scheme, whereby the Federal Reserve would commit to buying $40 billion per month of MBS (Mortgage-Backed Securities) for a time period that the chairman left open-ended.
According to the FOMC statement: "If the outlook for the labor market does not improve substantially, the committee will continue its purchase of agency mortgage-backed securities, undertake additional asset purchases, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate until such improvement is achieved in a context of price stability..."
The FOMC statement also extended ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy) through mid-2015, another easing which mostly benefits banks, which can borrow at 0-1/4%.
The Fed's move was - and will be - huge, providing liquidity and a lifeline to the banks by sopping up their horrendous MBS, which are almost all underwater, spoiled or otherwise non-performing.
A move of such scope cannot be underestimated for its overall effects to the larger economy, not only in the US, but globally. The world is already awash in US dollars, and these policy actions only exacerbate that situation. In response, the Euro has galloped ahead, trading in excess of 1.31 to the dollar.
Markets all popped, with the Dow at its highest level since autumn of 2007 and now within shouting distance of its all time high, along with the S&P.
It is absolutely amazing that stocks can be artificially propped up due to actions from the public sector, but there is a downside to consumers in the form of higher prices, especially in food and fuel. Gasoline at the pump is nearing $4.00 per gallon nationwide. The average price of a gallon of unleaded regular is now $3.87.
The Fed believes that even with their massively-inflationary policies that inflation will remain below two percent. They must be dreaming, because the price of oil, tied directly to gas and home heating fuel, continues to rise and should continue to do so in the months ahead.
That will effect all consumer prices on everything that needs to be shipped, trucked or transported, which is just about everything except food you grow in your own back yard and items you make at home (depending on where you buy raw materials).
Good-bye Mitt Romney; hello second term for Obama. The election, thanks to the Fed, should be a slam-dunk for president Obama and likely will result in congress continuing to be split, with Republicans ruling the House and Democrats the Senate.
Great. More deadlock from the pols, higher prices for everything, more riches for bankers, a weaker dollar (in just the past two weeks, that European vacation rose in price about 10%) and no way to save unless you buy hard assets, gold and silver.
The status quo remains print, print, and print some more. The middle class is being squeezed out of existence. The big hope is that the Fed will sop up so much of the horrid MBS out there that they will bankrupt themselves and someday the US will return to sound money, though that scenario is probably a few years away.
In the meantime, enjoy. Spend. The Fed and the government have your back with unlimited public spending, a new, higher federal debt ceiling (coming soon and monetized by the Fed) and fiat money out the wazoo.
It's the grandest clusterf--k of monetary policy and make-believe debt-funding in the history of the world.
Dow 13,539.86, +206.51 (1.55%)
NASDAQ 3,155.83. +41.51 (1.33%)
S&P 500 1,459.99. +23.43 (1.63%)
NYSE Composite 8,407.03, +139.71 (1.69%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,884,013,625.00
NYSE Volume 4,616,279,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4230-1321
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 598-27 (flashing red light extreme)
WTI crude oil: 98.31, +1.30
Gold: 1,772.10, +38.40
Silver: 34.78, +1.49
Showing posts with label QE3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QE3. Show all posts
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Germany Goes All In; Wall St. Waits on the Fed
Today was Europe's turn. Tomorrow will be America's.
Before most Americans were even awake, Europeans were rejoicing the German Constitutional Court's ruling that the ESM (Emergency Stabilization Fund), used to bail out failing sovereign governments was, according to German law, constitutional, and the ECB could go forward with its plans to bail out Greece and Portugal, and, possibly Spain and Italy, if need be.
The court did add one stipulation, however, that the German portion of the funding would have to be approved by parliament if there wer any increases to the size of the fund.
Thus, Europe and the Euro were saved, once again, by the alchemy of Ponzi-economics, for now.
The ESM, along with other emergency funding mechanisms from the ECB, should "stabilize" the Eurozone for another year to 18 months. Then, well, who knows?
Hurrah.
In the US, markets hung close to the flat line in anticipation of the FOMC interest rate policy announcement, where the Federal Reserve may or may not announce another round of Quantitative Easing, better known as QE, and, in this case, since it would be the third (or fourth, if you count operation twist) round of easing, QE3.
Three cheers.
The announcement will be delivered around 2:15 pm EDT on Thursday, unless, of course, like the German court ruling, it is leaked to the press first.
Some day, investors will want to know about individual stocks, but not these days.
Dow 13,333.35, +9.99(0.07%)
NASDAQ 3,114.31, +9.78(0.32%)
S&P 500 1,436.56, +3.00(0.21%)
NYSE Composite 8,267.16, +21.01(0.25%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,680,020,000
NYSE Volume 3,555,939,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3429-2094
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 336-30
WTI crude oil: 97.01, -0.16
Gold: 1,733.70, -1.20
Silver: 33.29, 10.27
Before most Americans were even awake, Europeans were rejoicing the German Constitutional Court's ruling that the ESM (Emergency Stabilization Fund), used to bail out failing sovereign governments was, according to German law, constitutional, and the ECB could go forward with its plans to bail out Greece and Portugal, and, possibly Spain and Italy, if need be.
The court did add one stipulation, however, that the German portion of the funding would have to be approved by parliament if there wer any increases to the size of the fund.
Thus, Europe and the Euro were saved, once again, by the alchemy of Ponzi-economics, for now.
The ESM, along with other emergency funding mechanisms from the ECB, should "stabilize" the Eurozone for another year to 18 months. Then, well, who knows?
Hurrah.
In the US, markets hung close to the flat line in anticipation of the FOMC interest rate policy announcement, where the Federal Reserve may or may not announce another round of Quantitative Easing, better known as QE, and, in this case, since it would be the third (or fourth, if you count operation twist) round of easing, QE3.
Three cheers.
The announcement will be delivered around 2:15 pm EDT on Thursday, unless, of course, like the German court ruling, it is leaked to the press first.
Some day, investors will want to know about individual stocks, but not these days.
Dow 13,333.35, +9.99(0.07%)
NASDAQ 3,114.31, +9.78(0.32%)
S&P 500 1,436.56, +3.00(0.21%)
NYSE Composite 8,267.16, +21.01(0.25%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,680,020,000
NYSE Volume 3,555,939,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3429-2094
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 336-30
WTI crude oil: 97.01, -0.16
Gold: 1,733.70, -1.20
Silver: 33.29, 10.27
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Bernanke Thinks Gold is Not Money as it Soars to Record Highs
Before launching into my daily monologue on what's wrong with the global financial system (almost everything), here's a short video clip of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's answer to Texas representative (and presidential candidate, though you wouldn't know it from watching TV) Ron Paul's question as to whether the Chairman of the world's largest central bank thinks gold is money.
Watch the latest iteration of "what's wrong with this picture" below.
Well, there you have it. The Chairman thinks funny-looking pieces of paper with pictures of dead presidents on them are money, but gold, which has been used as a medium of exchange and a store of value, is not. Is there any wonder then, why the global economic system is on the verge of a grand mal seizure?
Bernanke's comments came at a time at which gold was breaking out to record highs, making his remarks seem not only ignorant and ridiculous, but also contrived, disingenuous and bordering on being an outright lie.
If one were to follow Bernanke's train of thought, then, no, gold is not money, land is not real estate, the moon is not a satellite and the sun is not a star. Rubbish, pure, stinking trash.
In addition to making profoundly absurd statements like the one above, the Chairman, in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee, also signaled that he and the Fed were prepared to provide more stimulus should the US economy continue to falter, though he held steadfast to the curious position that the economy was improving.
With that, stocks and commodities took that as a cue to ramp higher, with the Dow gaining more than 160 points just before 11:00 am.
However, the euphoria over the potential for QE3 was fleeting and stocks drifted lower throughout the session, with selling accelerating in the final hour. Equity markets lost about 2/3rds of their earlier gains, as traders left the floor moribund and still confused over fiscal as well as monetary policy.
Elsewhere in Washington, the President and leaders of congress met for a fifth straight day to try to work out a compromise on the budget and raising the debt ceiling. The late-afternoon meeting (3:45 pm) offers little chance of reaching any kind of agreement right away as both sides seem entrenched on their particular set of issues. Republicans are resistant to any kind of tax increase, even if only on the very top earners, while Democrats and the President have been more accommodative, though seem reluctant to make any modifications to Medicare or Social Security without some bending by Republicans. The result is a standstill, with the good faith and credit of the USA hanging in the balance.
So, while it was a winner for the bulls overall, the feeling of failure was pervasive at the end of the day.
Dow 12,491.61, +44.73 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 2,796.92, +15.01 (0.54%)
S&P 500 1,317.72, +4.08 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,246.80, +54.05 (0.66%)
Advancing issues still managed to defeat decliners by a healthy margin, 4557-1978. On the NASDAQ, there were 87 new highs, and 26 new lows. The NYSE had 61 new highs, 24 new lows, putting the combined total for the day at 148 new highs and just 50 new lows. Volume was fairly dull, though the broader NYSE outgained the Dow, which happens rarely and is a sign that assets are shifting from traditional safe havens to more riskier investments, not at all surprising given Bernanke's comments.
NASDAQ Volume 1,874,432,000
NYSE Volume 4,033,702,250
Commodities, especially the precious metals, had a field day. Oil was up 62 cents, to $98.05, but was a laggard by comparison. Gold made another new all-time high at $1,585.50, up $23.20, while silver was a 7% gainer, up $2.52, to $38.15.
The slate of economic data for Thursday is chock-full of interesting readings, beginning with weekly unemployment claims along with retail sales and June PPI at 8:30 am.
After the bell, Yum! Brands (YUM) beat expectations by five cents, posting 66 cents per share for the second quarter, though most of the profits were driven by overseas performance and a favorable shift in its tax rate. US same store sales slipped 4% in the quarter, which was a discouraging sign for the global fast food company.
Mariott International (MAR) posted diluted EPS of $0.37, roughly in line with estimates.
Watch the latest iteration of "what's wrong with this picture" below.
Well, there you have it. The Chairman thinks funny-looking pieces of paper with pictures of dead presidents on them are money, but gold, which has been used as a medium of exchange and a store of value, is not. Is there any wonder then, why the global economic system is on the verge of a grand mal seizure?
Bernanke's comments came at a time at which gold was breaking out to record highs, making his remarks seem not only ignorant and ridiculous, but also contrived, disingenuous and bordering on being an outright lie.
If one were to follow Bernanke's train of thought, then, no, gold is not money, land is not real estate, the moon is not a satellite and the sun is not a star. Rubbish, pure, stinking trash.
In addition to making profoundly absurd statements like the one above, the Chairman, in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee, also signaled that he and the Fed were prepared to provide more stimulus should the US economy continue to falter, though he held steadfast to the curious position that the economy was improving.
With that, stocks and commodities took that as a cue to ramp higher, with the Dow gaining more than 160 points just before 11:00 am.
However, the euphoria over the potential for QE3 was fleeting and stocks drifted lower throughout the session, with selling accelerating in the final hour. Equity markets lost about 2/3rds of their earlier gains, as traders left the floor moribund and still confused over fiscal as well as monetary policy.
Elsewhere in Washington, the President and leaders of congress met for a fifth straight day to try to work out a compromise on the budget and raising the debt ceiling. The late-afternoon meeting (3:45 pm) offers little chance of reaching any kind of agreement right away as both sides seem entrenched on their particular set of issues. Republicans are resistant to any kind of tax increase, even if only on the very top earners, while Democrats and the President have been more accommodative, though seem reluctant to make any modifications to Medicare or Social Security without some bending by Republicans. The result is a standstill, with the good faith and credit of the USA hanging in the balance.
So, while it was a winner for the bulls overall, the feeling of failure was pervasive at the end of the day.
Dow 12,491.61, +44.73 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 2,796.92, +15.01 (0.54%)
S&P 500 1,317.72, +4.08 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,246.80, +54.05 (0.66%)
Advancing issues still managed to defeat decliners by a healthy margin, 4557-1978. On the NASDAQ, there were 87 new highs, and 26 new lows. The NYSE had 61 new highs, 24 new lows, putting the combined total for the day at 148 new highs and just 50 new lows. Volume was fairly dull, though the broader NYSE outgained the Dow, which happens rarely and is a sign that assets are shifting from traditional safe havens to more riskier investments, not at all surprising given Bernanke's comments.
NASDAQ Volume 1,874,432,000
NYSE Volume 4,033,702,250
Commodities, especially the precious metals, had a field day. Oil was up 62 cents, to $98.05, but was a laggard by comparison. Gold made another new all-time high at $1,585.50, up $23.20, while silver was a 7% gainer, up $2.52, to $38.15.
The slate of economic data for Thursday is chock-full of interesting readings, beginning with weekly unemployment claims along with retail sales and June PPI at 8:30 am.
After the bell, Yum! Brands (YUM) beat expectations by five cents, posting 66 cents per share for the second quarter, though most of the profits were driven by overseas performance and a favorable shift in its tax rate. US same store sales slipped 4% in the quarter, which was a discouraging sign for the global fast food company.
Mariott International (MAR) posted diluted EPS of $0.37, roughly in line with estimates.
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