While the world awaits an edict from the high halls of the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, when the FOMC concludes their two day meeting and announces no change in the federal funds rate, investors appear increasingly nervous, not over the expected nothingness dictum from the Fed, but from the overall malaise that has captured markets, otherwise known as stagnation.
What capitalists fear more than anything else is an economy going backwards. What we have today is an economy at stall speed, needing only the slightest of nudges to fall into recession. The US is not alone in these fears; most of Europe is teetering on the brink of a receding growth curve, and this time, there is not enough left of policy maneuvers by central bankers in the EU, Japan, China, or anywhere else in the developed or underdeveloped world, should a recession occur, to keep it from becoming a global depression.
Lessons learned from the near-collapse of the global economy in 2008-09 are that stimuli only is a short-term fix, QE is a waste of money, and lower interest rates do not stir a dormant economy. In essence, the world's central bankers are out of ideas and have been for some time. They are, and have been, pushing on a string, kicking a can down a road, keeping their fingers crossed, and hoping for an economic miracle all at the same time.
Nothing has worked. Nothing will work... until the economies of both the developed world and underdeveloped world purge themselves of debt, stop trying to implement policies that clearly do not work, go back to money backed by something other than empty promises, and stop allowing governments to run up enormous deficits serviced by ever-lower interest payments (debasing the currency all the way along).
Those are just for starters. The world finds itself on the cusp of economic, societal and philosophical revolution. Ordinary people are fed up with government, the media, and various other institutions supposedly in place to provide for the public weal. They are tired of lies, cheating at the highest levels, institutional regulatory strangulation, higher and higher taxes, and an endless stream of regulations that have stripped away their liberties and much of what some may have previously called the "good life."
The few people currently in power are only interested in keeping and maintaining their control over the populations and their power and positions. They are being seriously questioned by populations who feel betrayed, unappreciated and desperate for relief from the very governments and institutions which are supposed to improve their lives, not impoverish them.
Therefore, stocks continue to wallow. And though today's declines are not noteworthy in and of themselves, there's a growing chorus of discontent that continues to rise.
The policies and practices of the past 20 or 30 years cannot continue indefinitely.
The time is coming for major change.
Today's Dippity-Do:
S&P 500: 2,075.32, -3.74 (0.18%)
Dow: 17,674.82, -57.66 (0.33%)
NASDAQ: 4,843.55, -4.89 (0.10%)
Crude Oil 48.56 -0.65% Gold 1,287.90 +0.08% EUR/USD 1.1208 -0.71% 10-Yr Bond 1.61 -0.31% Corn 435.25 +1.22% Copper 2.04 -0.46% Silver 17.40 -0.25% Natural Gas 2.89 -0.86% Russell 2000 1,147.09 -0.31% VIX 20.54 -2.05% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4109 -0.74% USD/JPY 106.1300 -0.03%
Showing posts with label honest money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label honest money. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Friday, May 27, 2016
The Federal Reserve Faces Insolvency As It Attempts Impossibile Rate Hikes
As has been posited here on Money Daily and elsewhere, the Federal Reserve is facing a severe solvency crisis, due primarily to the bank bailouts from 2008-09.
In a headline story on - of all places - Yahoo! Finance, the Fed faces a real, dangerous situation if and when they try to normalize rates - something many economists say is nearly impossible to do without destroying the entire monetary system of the United States, and, ostensibly, the world.
The article fleshes out how US taxpayers could be on the hook for the Fed's bad debts, stemming from overpayment on mortgage and treasury note, bills and bonds in years past, specifically during the various QE sessions from 2009-2014.
It's long been held that the Fed was buying bad mortgage notes and bonds at par, when the true value of these slips of counterfeit are more than 30-70% lower. This effectively puts the Fed itself in a condition known to many in the world of finance as either insolvent or bankrupt.
Insolvent is the operative term here, since there is no functioning body by which the Fed can go to for a reorganization or liquidation, as do businesses or individuals in bankruptcy.
The solution would be to dissolve the Federal Reserve, extinguish all debts (which is anything numerated in US dollars), and have the US government - as is required by the constitution - issue a new currency, with gold and/or silver as backing, as opposed to the "full faith and credit" backing to which Americans have become accustomed.
This, as the presidential race looks to be one which a certain maverick billionaire, Donald J. Trump, has a solid chance of winning, could be the beginning of the end to the financial repression initiated by the Fed and its member banks and a start toward a return to honest money.
Capping off the week was a speech by Fed Chair Janet Yellen, characterized by the media as being "hawkish" for a rate hike in June or July.
Apparently, investors either disagreed or threw caution to the wind in the face of the three-day Memorial Day weekend, boosting stocks late in the session, ending what was a banner week for US stocks, especially the high-leverage, high-flying NASDAQ.
On the week:
Dow: +372.28 (+2.13%)
S&P 500: +46.74 (+2.28%)
NASDAQ: +163.95 (+3.44%)
For the day:
S&P 500: 2,099.06, +8.96 (0.43%)
Dow: 17,873.22, +44.93 (0.25%)
NASDAQ: 4,933.50, +31.74 (0.65%)
Crude Oil 49.42 -0.12% Gold 1,213.20 -0.78% EUR/USD 1.1114 -0.71% 10-Yr Bond 1.85 +1.54% Corn 412.25 +0.98% Copper 2.11 +0.38% Silver 16.21 -0.81% Natural Gas 2.16 +0.65% Russell 2000 1,150.45 +0.94% VIX 13.08 -2.61% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4613 -0.37% USD/JPY 110.3725 +0.56%
In a headline story on - of all places - Yahoo! Finance, the Fed faces a real, dangerous situation if and when they try to normalize rates - something many economists say is nearly impossible to do without destroying the entire monetary system of the United States, and, ostensibly, the world.
The article fleshes out how US taxpayers could be on the hook for the Fed's bad debts, stemming from overpayment on mortgage and treasury note, bills and bonds in years past, specifically during the various QE sessions from 2009-2014.
It's long been held that the Fed was buying bad mortgage notes and bonds at par, when the true value of these slips of counterfeit are more than 30-70% lower. This effectively puts the Fed itself in a condition known to many in the world of finance as either insolvent or bankrupt.
Insolvent is the operative term here, since there is no functioning body by which the Fed can go to for a reorganization or liquidation, as do businesses or individuals in bankruptcy.
The solution would be to dissolve the Federal Reserve, extinguish all debts (which is anything numerated in US dollars), and have the US government - as is required by the constitution - issue a new currency, with gold and/or silver as backing, as opposed to the "full faith and credit" backing to which Americans have become accustomed.
This, as the presidential race looks to be one which a certain maverick billionaire, Donald J. Trump, has a solid chance of winning, could be the beginning of the end to the financial repression initiated by the Fed and its member banks and a start toward a return to honest money.
Capping off the week was a speech by Fed Chair Janet Yellen, characterized by the media as being "hawkish" for a rate hike in June or July.
Apparently, investors either disagreed or threw caution to the wind in the face of the three-day Memorial Day weekend, boosting stocks late in the session, ending what was a banner week for US stocks, especially the high-leverage, high-flying NASDAQ.
On the week:
Dow: +372.28 (+2.13%)
S&P 500: +46.74 (+2.28%)
NASDAQ: +163.95 (+3.44%)
For the day:
S&P 500: 2,099.06, +8.96 (0.43%)
Dow: 17,873.22, +44.93 (0.25%)
NASDAQ: 4,933.50, +31.74 (0.65%)
Crude Oil 49.42 -0.12% Gold 1,213.20 -0.78% EUR/USD 1.1114 -0.71% 10-Yr Bond 1.85 +1.54% Corn 412.25 +0.98% Copper 2.11 +0.38% Silver 16.21 -0.81% Natural Gas 2.16 +0.65% Russell 2000 1,150.45 +0.94% VIX 13.08 -2.61% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4613 -0.37% USD/JPY 110.3725 +0.56%
Labels:
Fed,
Federal Reserve,
gold,
honest money,
insolvency,
Janet Yellen,
Nasdaq,
silver
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
The Great Give-Back; Stocks Looking Increasingly Risky
Remember all those big gains and happy faces on Wall Street after Tuesday's close?
All gone.
Because, stocks are tremendously overpriced.
Of course, there are other issues plaguing the US and global economies, but there really is no good reason to overpay for anything. From lettuce to gas to stone pavers, there's a worldwide oversupply of everything, and that includes stock certificates.
What is in short supply are honest politicians, central bankers who have morals, and honest money.
Buy gold. Buy silver.
Hump Day:
S&P 500: 2,064.46; -19.93 (0.96%)
Dow: 17,711.12, -217.23 (1.21%)
NASDAQ: 4,760.69, -49.19 (1.02%)
Crude Oil 45.99 +2.98% Gold 1,278.70 +1.10% EUR/USD 1.1427 -0.03% 10-Yr Bond 1.74 -1.31% Corn 376.25 -1.25% Copper 2.10 +0.26% Silver 17.45 +2.09% Natural Gas 2.17 +0.42% Russell 2000 1,114.74 -1.25% VIX 14.69 +7.78% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4443 -0.03% USD/JPY 108.4565 +0.02%
All gone.
Because, stocks are tremendously overpriced.
Of course, there are other issues plaguing the US and global economies, but there really is no good reason to overpay for anything. From lettuce to gas to stone pavers, there's a worldwide oversupply of everything, and that includes stock certificates.
What is in short supply are honest politicians, central bankers who have morals, and honest money.
Buy gold. Buy silver.
Hump Day:
S&P 500: 2,064.46; -19.93 (0.96%)
Dow: 17,711.12, -217.23 (1.21%)
NASDAQ: 4,760.69, -49.19 (1.02%)
Crude Oil 45.99 +2.98% Gold 1,278.70 +1.10% EUR/USD 1.1427 -0.03% 10-Yr Bond 1.74 -1.31% Corn 376.25 -1.25% Copper 2.10 +0.26% Silver 17.45 +2.09% Natural Gas 2.17 +0.42% Russell 2000 1,114.74 -1.25% VIX 14.69 +7.78% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4443 -0.03% USD/JPY 108.4565 +0.02%
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