The Dow has registered what is easily the worst month of 2018, while the NASDAQ joined the Dow Jones Transportation Index in bear market territory, down 20% from its August 29 high.
Pundits in the financial media are trying to assign blame wherever they can, on the Fed's recent rate hike, fear of a coming recession, the possible federal government partial shutdown, China's slump, a looming trade war. While those are contributing factors, the real culprits are the Federal Reserve and their cohorts in central banking in Japan, China, the ECB, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank.
These are the architects of the past decade's debacle of debt, beginning in the depths of 2008-09 and continuing through until today. Their schemes of zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), negative interest rate policy (NIRP) and quantitative easing (QE), which made money all-too-easily available to their willing friends in the C-suites of major corporations.
The corporations took the easy money, at rates of one to two percent or less, and repurchased their own corporate stock at inflated prices. Now that the executives have cashed out, milked dry their own businesses, they are upside-down, owning shares of stock purchased at 20, 30, 40 percent or more than they will sell for today.
2018 was the culmination of this global corporate theft, inspired by the gracious money printers at the Federal Reserve and other central banks. Over the past ten years, trillions of dollars, yen, yuan, euros, pounds and other currencies were brought into existence, lent to various large corporate interests in a variety of complex and/or simple transactions and now the gig is up, though one will never hear talk of this in the mainstream media.
What happens to a corporation that is holding shares it bought at $90, when the stock is selling for $60 and may be worth less than that? Nothing good, including cutbacks, rollbacks, layoffs, and the general demise of once-strong companies.
When these companies offer shares for sale - and they eventually will - they will realize losses and they will still have the loans from the central banking system to repay. Some will file for bankruptcy. Others will cut payrolls and expenses to the bone. The past ten years have been nothing short of complete and total corruption of the financial system, from top to bottom. This is why the selling has been intense and relentless and likely will not cease until stocks are 40 to 60 percent off the artificial highs created by reducing the number of shares available through stock buybacks.
It was a swell scheme that paid off handsomely for some of the top executives at many of the largest corporations, and the general public, the people with 401k or retirement or college funds tied to the stock market, are going to end up bag-holders, broke and dismayed, as well they should be.
If there is any justice in this world, the bankers will be fingered, the corporate executives tried and jailed, and money clawed back from their ill-gotten gains. But we all know from the 2008-09 experience that that will not happen. Nobody will be tried. Nobody will serve a single day in jail, and the Federal Reserve will continue on its merry way, inflating and deflating to their heart's content, stealing from the public as they have been since 1913.
That's all there is to it. Hopefully, you are not a victim, though in many ways, we all are.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
12/3/18 | 25,826.43 | +287.97 | +287.97 |
12/4/18 | 25,027.07 | -799.36 | -511.39 |
12/6/18 | 24,947.67 | -79.40 | -590.79 |
12/7/18 | 24,388.95 | -558.72 | -1149.51 |
12/10/18 | 24,423.26 | +34.31 | -1115.20 |
12/11/18 | 24,370.24 | -53.02 | -1168.22 |
12/12/18 | 24,527.27 | +157.03 | -1011.19 |
12/13/18 | 24,597.38 | +70.11 | -941.08 |
12/14/18 | 24,100.51 | -496.87 | -1437.95 |
12/17/18 | 23,592.98 | -507.53 | -1945.58 |
12/18/18 | 23,675.64 | +82.66 | -1862.92 |
12/19/18 | 23,323.66 | -351.98 | -2214.90 |
12/20/18 | 22,859.60 | -464.06 | -2678.96 |
At the Close, Thursday, the solstice, December 20, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 22,859.60, -464.06 (-1.99%)
NASDAQ: 6,528.41, -108.42 (-1.63%)
S&P 500: 2,467.42, -39.54 (-1.58%)
NYSE Composite: 11,222.79, -149.05 (-1.31%)