Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Bernanke's Naked Put Signals End of Fed

Once upon a time, I owned a fairly successful, profitable newspaper publishing business. Due to events mostly beyond my control the business declined and eventually was bankrupted. During the phase of decline, my father, knowing the challenges and tribulations I faced on a daily basis, used to say, "I don't know how you keep going."

Being a resourceful and resolute sort, I usually replied that the alternative would be to ball up in a corner and cry.

Nowadays, I laugh. I laugh quite a bit. And, what keeps me laughing the most is the outright insanity of the global economy and the people who are supposed to be running it. That idea alone, that a few people, like Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and heads of foreign central banks, are supposed to keep the global machinery of commerce well-maintained and regulated.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!! Financial mismanagement of far-flung enterprises, like nations, began with the creation of money, but didn't really gather momentum until the Fed was created in 1913 (just before the Great Depression, I should add) and John Maynard Keynes began commenting and writing on economics. The art was nearly perfected by the expansionist Maestro himself, Alan Greenspan, and is today being expanded to the nth degree of absurdity by Chairman Bernanke.

Today was a literal laugh riot. Bernanke released a transcript of his remarks prepared for testimony before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives. His actual appearance was postponed since the nation's capitol is currently under two to three feet of snow (this is a probably a good thing that won't last), but Chairman Ben decided to unveil it today, since he probably wanted to get the blueprint outlining the devastation of a nation's finances out for inspection by his central banker buddies around the world.

The text of his remarks, lined above, reads like a fantasy. It is almost all fiction and represents the hopes and prayers of the fed Chariman, because, technically, with the federal funds rate essentially at zero and there being no economic conditions which would cause the FOMC to change its policy stance, i.e., raising the rate, the Fed has NO WAY TO INFLUENCE INTEREST RATES.

What our ingenious Chairman has suggested in this little piece of fiction, is that interest rate policy will be tied to interest paid on member bank reserves. In other words, Bernanke has suggested a game-changer because the usual federal funds rate is going to stay at ZERO for much longer than he or anyone else in the banking industry ever imagined it would.

Essentially, he's saying - despite his claims that the economy is improving - that conditions continue to deteriorate and will continue to deteriorate for as far as the eye can see. Inside his veiled statement of "change" (we've heard that one before) is the seed of truth: the Fed has failed in its responsibility to promote a sound economy and stable prices. They have been unable to shake loose from their accommodative posture because the debt burden is still too severe and getting worse.

The only way out for them is to pay interest on their money they themselves hold and hope that credit markets respond in kind to yet another inflationary gesture. In all probability, it won't work, for two good reasons. First, the entire structure of the Fed is based on lending out money at interest, not paying interest on money held in reserve. Their plan is entirely a chimera, a sham, a puppet show. Second, the private markets will not adjust to the "new, improved" interest-on-reserves-as-the-basis-for-all-lending program. Markets, regional and local, have their own priorities and standards and will shake free from the Fed umbrella. Growing markets will encourage higher interest rates. Slowing or stagnant markets, that being most of the nation, will not be able to raise rates with any success.

Bernanke's plan is as boneheaded as most of the ideas spawned by the minds of these Lilliputian thinkers. More than anything else, the Chairman has issued the first statement signaling the end of the Federal Reserve. He admits that the economy's problems began in August of 2007, as I have repeatedly stated at various times on this blog and elsewhere. His highly-fictionalized account of the proceeding events fail to hide the fact that the Fed and his counterparts at the US Treasury have been entirely unable to correct the prevailing conditions of decline.

He is admitting defeat, The US economic system, as it has been engineered by the Federal Reserve, is broken beyond repair. The fed funds rate is ZERO, and will remain at ZERO forever, or, until the Federal Reserve Act is either amended or revoked. Since the Federal Reserve Act did not include a charter or set term for the operation of the Fed, there is no renewal or expiration. They operate in perpetuity, thus, the only way to dispose of or abolish this abominable creation is by an act of congress, so don't hold your breath. By the time the numbskulls in DC come to the realization that the Fed has bankrupted the nation, it will be too late. Besides, the federal government has done their own demolition job with entitlements, deficits and the burgeoning national debt.

In 2007, I suggested taking all money out of the stock market and putting it into cash. This new twist on the entire structure of money reinforces my ideas from yesterday that the only place to put money now is in foodstocks that can be stored, reliable transportation, clothing, arable land and tools of trade. Obviously, an investment in a sewing machine or any kind of gardening instrument would be a worthwhile use of your money in light of today's developments.

The Fed's failure may result in very unusual movements in currency markets. An absolute breakdown of global trade is not out of the question as more and more individuals and countries question the viability of fiat currencies as a whole. The alternatives to our busted system of credit are gold, silver and barter. However, since gold and silver have been highly commoditized and traded as investments, they may be less reliable as stores of wealth as their values should fall along with all other asset classes, albeit to a lesser degree. Add to the list, seeds, for vegetables. They're cheap, and everybody needs to eat more veggies.

The market reaction to Bernanke's comments, released about 10:00 am, was complete horror. Stocks immediately sold off on the very thought that the fed would even consider ending their free-money regime. Cooler heads prevailed, however, sending stocks back up and into a stable area for much of the remaining session. Overhanging everything was the snowstorm ravaging the East coast, which kept Washington shut down and many traders away from their desks. Volume was a dribble and the major indices ended the day without much change, though all were down.

Dow 10,038.38, -20.26 (0.20%)
NASDAQ 2,147.87, -3.00 (0.14%)
S&P 500 1,068.13, -2.39 (0.22%)
NYSE Composite 6,819.12, -16.04 (0.23%)


Declining issues beat advancers, 3271-3086. New highs: 113; New lows: 53. Still no perceptible break in these indicators. Volume was on the low side.

NYSE Volume 4,982,940,500
NASDAQ Volume 2,039,927,875


Commodities were split. Crude oil gained 17 cents, to $74.69. That's about to change. Look for crude at $65 within months, possibly sooner and possibly lower. Gold lost $1.10, to $1,076.10. Silver edged down 11 cents, to $15.33.

Just to reinforce how grossly mismanaged the US economy is, I cite this mainstream article, called, Is America about to go broke?, a brief, yet exceptional insight to the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare by Scott Burns.

Having previously written on this topic just a few days or weeks ago, I discovered that the unfunded liabilities were an amorphous blob, with estimates ranging from $69 to $99 trillion. Burns pegs it at a "mere" $42.9 trillion, citing the actual 2008 Trustee's Report as his source. Burns makes more claims in his article, the most compelling being that the total expense for SS and Medicare will outstrip revenue sometime between 2010 and 2015. Previous estimates had this date pegged as 2037, quite a few years off. Burns also pegs Alan Greenspan as the architect for the detonation of the entitlement time bomb, a point on which he is probably correct.

But then Burns makes the leap to inflation, purporting that in order to keep the payments system going, the Fed will have to print more money. That's where he and I part company. The Fed has been printing money as fast as it can for years. Inflation has not occurred because the banks are hoarding it, keeping an ungodly amount as reserves within the Federal Reserve. Just printing money doesn't cause inflation. It has to be put into circulation, and currently, its not. And, as we learned today, the Fed is going to pay interest on all this money the banks have stored within the Fed as reserves. There's the final solution. The US economy is kaput, forcibly being thrown down a deflationist hole by the Federal Reserve and its member banks.

The plan by the Fed is ingenious, yet utterly transparent. They'll inflate when they see fit. When they have every mortgage in America underwater, when real estate values have plummeted to 30-40% of what they are today, that's when they'll release a torrent of previously-reserved money as they buy up every depressed property in America, converting the nation's most valuable assets from the hands of homeowners, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to their own. Oh, yes, and then, once Americans already have been forced out of their homes, the prices of everything - from food, to fuel to every imported good - will rise out of their buying range.

Yes, we will have inflation, but not before we encounter years and years of crushing deflation.

I'm not laughing as hard as I was earlier, because the conditions are dire indeed. However, the proposed solutions and what passes today for economic analysis are absolutely side-splitting.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Panic Buying on Rumored Greece Debt Solution

Now that there's a rumor that Germany will bail out Greece from its long-term debt problems, it must be not only safe, but profitable, to invest in equities.

This is what substitutes for logic on Wall Street. A country of roughly 11 million, the government of Greece is having serious difficulties financing its debt burden, a fact that has not been lost on EU officials, the European Central Bank, or, your friendly, neighborhood shysters and hooligans in the investment business.

Normally, credit default of an entire nation is serious business. These days, rumors that somebody will issue more debt to "keep them afloat" is supposed to signal that better days lie ahead, not only for the beleaguered nation, but for the entire planet.

Nothing could be further from the truth and those who bought into today's rally were probably well aware of the risks involved with investing in anything at such a precarious economic juncture. Either that, or most investors are really just sheep being led to slaughter.

There's almost no way to put a positive spin on debt restructuring of a country roughly the size and population of New York; its yet another sad chapter in the all-pervasive world-wide debt bomb. Just as they have for the past year, cheery optimists claim that economies will rebound soon and all will be well. Global demand will improve with better economic conditions prevailing globally. Sadly, these prognostications of some recovery, rebound or reflation are little more then idle pipe dreams of crack-smoking Keynesian economists. More sober heads are pointing to Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain (the PIGS as they are known) as the beginning of the end of not only the Euro as a viable currency, but for a continuation of the debt-leveraging that has led the global economy down the abyss.

Eventually, there must be losses in order to purge all the mal-investments made over the last 10-20 years - though mostly in the last 6 to 8 - and restore correct economic balance to the entire global system. These losses include everything from credit card defaults to mortgage write-downs to underfunded pension funds to failed governments. Everyone, from individuals to banks to governments and their currencies is going to take a hit, some ore severe than others. It's not very easy to do, certainly isn't pretty, but debt default will eventually restore - and much quicker, by the way - economies to reasonable levels of functionality. Until the debts are expunged, paid off, paid down, or otherwise disposed of, there can be no hope for any kind of lasting recovery and economic stability.

That's the part most "modern" economists just don't seem to get. Either that, or they know it and are just lining their cards up properly. My best guess is that the global economy is about 1/3 of the way through a process that began in August of 2007. Although it took awhile (a little over a year) before most people took notice, the de-levering had begun when real estate values began to slip. Then, by 2008, stocks took their hit (and subsequently recovered, but understand that this cyclical rally within a secular bear market has great downside risk later on), and the banks cried and wailed though gobs of taxpayer money, most of which is still owed.

By August of 2010, the world will be 3 years into the abyss and nowhere near the bottom, such bottom being measured as widespread unemployment which will dwarf what is prevalent today, homelessness, fear and, for some, starvation and death. That doomsday scenario is probably another 2-3 years away, possibly longer, depending on how long governments can hold onto whatever small shards of credibility they have before bombing and attacking each other.

Wars are the usual method by which the great powers sort out their financial differences, though these days, cyber-warfare is already well-underway as is various forms of economic ju-jitsu. You think Greece owing debt to Germany is such a good idea? Read up on some financial history prior to great wars and you'll get a little education. The aftermath of wars isn't such a rosy picture either, but we'll be getting to that - if still alive - upon the events.

For now, the best "investments" would be cash, clothing, transportation devices, canned food, arable land and tools of trades. All can be procured relatively cheaply and will serve one well in crisis conditions, for which, I believe, we are headed.

For today, investors thought stocks were hot and Greece wasn't much of a big deal. A few months and years from now, that thinking is likely to be looked back upon as foolish, unfounded optimism.

Dow 10,058.64, +150.25 (1.52%)
NASDAQ 2,150.87, +24.82 (1.17%)
S&P 500 1,070.52, +13.78 (1.30%)
NYSE Composite 6,835.16, +121.29 (1.81%)


Advancing issues finally had a day in which they exceeded decliners by a large margin, 4864-1651. There were 114 new highs as compared to 79 new lows. The divergence is still not great enough - and only one day's data - to conclude anything other than the negative bias remains in place. Volume was approaching the higher range, though despite the overall price gains, not equal to the volume on recent down days. We're likely to trend sideways to lower until a suitable catalyst provokes a movement in another direction. This market condition could persist for quite a long time as governments and media efforts seek to keep panic from occurring though future events may preclude them from doing so.

NYSE Volume 6,145,856,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,242,082,250


Oil, gold, silver and most other commodities improved. Despite today's moves, the overwhelming evidence of a widespread, nearly global deflationary environment continues to spread.

Governments and financial institutions have been proceeding at a snail's pace, putting profits before repair and political careers ahead of practical concerns. The recession isn't over, though some of the worst of it is. This second phase may last 2-4 years from here before true structural reforms - not yet even begun - start to have any affect on economies.

To get an idea of just how hard government and financial institutions and regulators are sitting on their collective hands, here's Larry Summers, White House Director of the National Economic Council and architect of the financial collapse, prattling on for 10 minutes on CNBC this morning, essentially saying nothing. Notice how his lips move but no meaningful words come out.












Monday, February 8, 2010

Thain at CIT; Stocks in a Funk

Obviously, John Thain is a hired henchman of the crime syndicate responsible for the financial meltdown of 2008, and all the associated scandals, including TARP, that were ancillary and antecedent to that event.

Why do I make such an overt claim, and just who is John Thain?

Well, John Thain has been around the Wall Street crime syndicate long enough to have attained a position of some authority within that circle. According to this article, Thain was the last chairman and chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch before its merger with Bank of America. Thain managed to get $29 per share ($50 billion) for Merrill, a 70% premium over its market price. Ken Lewis, then CEO of Bank of America, is currently under investigation by the NY State Attorney General, Andrew Cuomo.

Prior to being at Merrill, Thain was president of the NYSE, from 2004 through 2007, meaning he oversaw much of the wheeling and dealing on the exchange and also turned a blind eye to the criminal practices of Bernard Madoff. Prior to that, Thain was at Goldman Sachs, as head of the mortgage desk from 1985 to 1990, and president and co-COO from 1999 to 2004.

Given his history, it's surprising that Thain isn't Secretary of the Treasury or head of one of the regional Federal Reserves, but that's probably because John Thain is basically a bag man. He hides money for his friends. So, what better place for him to resurface after his sudden departure from Merrill Lynch (after he helped inflate its value and 11 top brokers fled to London) in January 2009, than at the beleaguered commercial lender, CIT.

Today, Thain was named CEO of CIT, apparently because CIT's bankruptcy has not worked out to full advantage for the syndicate. Thain will make sure that taxpayers are screwed some more, as one would suppose that stealing $2.3 billion, via TARP would be considered small peanuts in his circles.

With Thain at CIT, one should expect all manner of nastiness, including, but not limited to, falsified accounting, seizure of assets, pleas to the federal government for more bailout money and other not-so-niceties. If John Thain is running a company, one can only expect what he's always provided: fraud, falsity, obfuscation of facts, missing money, missing documents and generally, another round of financial panic.

You have been duly warned. With his track record or greed (he's one of the highest paid on Wall St.) and reputation (a lot of people will speak highly of him in public, because crossing him or the people he's associated with could be harmful to one's health - financial and otherwise) Thain should not be trusted. In any case, having him at CIT virtually assures that financial stocks will be hammered and the economy will suffer through a reprise of the fall of 2008.

With that as background, stocks, led by, you guessed it, large banks, generally fell, putting to rest any notion that Friday's 180-point "turnaround" was anything other than intervention by the PPT (Thain's buddies). It's been 18 months since the breakdown of finance, and since nothing's been done to fix the system - though the bankers and various federal government officials will tell you that MUCH has been done - the usual crowd is back for another round of feeding at investor and taxpayer expense.

Their greed knows no bounds. Not content with breaking the global financial system, they're committed to plunging much of the world - particularly the rich United States of America - into a financial holocaust. Naturally, none of the widespread carnage will affect any of them; they will be above the fray, sitting like vultures with cash in hand to buy up distressed assets at bargain-basement prices. Their true goal is to incite anarchy and revolt, and they're doing a nice job of it thus far. Don't think for a moment that Sarah Palin addressing the Tea Party Convention this weekend was an accident. If the American public is too squeamish to foment revolution, they've got Palin, the absolute perfect Manchurian Candidate, to push us over the edge.

Already, the Tea Parties, originally an amalgamation of loosely-aligned local groups opposed to bank bailouts and financial fraud, have devolved into right-wing bravado-fests, complete with guns, anti-government (and anti-democrat) signs and the tacit support of the the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and FOX News.

It's a two-pronged attack on liberty and rights, using politics and money to separate middle-class people from theirs. The ultimate goal is a state of neo-anarchy and martial law in America, and they're well on their way.

Dow 9,908.39, -103.84 (1.04%)
NASDAQ 2,126.05, -15.07 (0.70%)
S&P 500 1,066.18, -0.01 (0.00%)
NYSE Composite 6,713.87, -68.88 (1.02%)


Advancing issues were trampled upon by decliners, 4120-2442. New highs actually eked out a slight edge over new lows, 86-73, but volume was light, since all the big money already exited on Friday.

NYSE Volume 4,913,621,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,059,284,875


Commodities staged a little bit of a comeback. Oil, gold and silver all finished their trading sessions slightly higher.

The repugnant conditions which prevail in America today have long ceased being casual conspiracy banter or any kind of laughing matter. Lawlessness prevails. Rules, if there are any, are made up on the fly, to suit those who seek to break them. More than just your money is at risk. Beware.

Friday, February 5, 2010

PPT Fingerprints All Over Late-Day Rally

If you're unfamiliar with the term "PPT," you haven't been reading about economic conditions very deeply. The Plunge protection Team (PPT) stems from a presidential order (Reagan) that gives the Treasury Secretary, Fed Chairman and others extraordinary powers to combat financial firestorms, one of which is direct intervention into capital and equity markets, and, presumably, any other market.

Stocks began the day trying to overcome the lingering effects of Thursday's drubbing, and, after January Non-farms payroll data turned out to be more confusing than anything else, began to sell off, until, by 2:00 pm, the Dow had sunk another 167 points, pounding resistance. The S&P, already shattered, was being likewise battered.

That, however, proved to be the bottom for the day, and the week. Stocks quickly re-gathered and regained momentum without any catalyst, a tell-tale sign of intervention, something the PPT has been doing with regularity since 2000. From 3:00 to 3:15 pm, the Dow gained 100 points, putting the index near unchanged. The rest of the session was spent by the underpinning PPT and their henchmen making sure the Dow finished above 10,000 (it did) and all fears would be soothed over the weekend.

Their work is a fool's gambit, always has been and always will be. The problem is that they can play it because nobody is auditing them or their activities. The banks and the superstructure above it are irresponsible because they've been allowed to be and they will continue to be irresponsible until they destroy the economic system (almost did) or are destroyed themselves. But don't start holding your breath. The powers that be are incredible entrenched. Prepare for the worst four years of your economic life.

Dow 10,012.23, +10.05 (0.10%)
NASDAQ 2,141.12, +15.69 (0.74%)
S&P 500 1,066.19, +3.08 (0.29%)
NYSE Composite 6,782.75, -5.11 (0.08%)


As more evidence of the manipulative element in today's trading, consider that decliners beat advancers handily, 3476-3039. 149 new lows beat 96 new highs. Both of those indicators are contrary to the headline numbers. Volume was magnificent, owing both the the depth of selling and to the amount of financial heft necessary to keep the market from collapsing. But make no mistake about it. The decline will continue. The markets put in new lows which must be tested before any meaningful advance can occur. Chances are, today's lows will be surpassed to the downside within short order. Todays' reprieve was only necessary to avert a panic and to give insiders more opportunity to profit from the next leg down.

NYSE Volume 7,762,321,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,836,146,250


Oil closed at $71.19, down $2.98, at its lowest price since mid-December. Gold finished down $9.50, at $1,053.50 and silver finished down 47 cents, at $14.88. The commodities were only benefitted after their New York closes, not quite as fortunate as the equity markets.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Deflation Storm Raging Globally

Thursday, February 4, 2010, may be a date to mark down as a pivotal one in the global economic cycle. As companies, consumers and nations struggle to rebound and refocus from the financial catastrophe of 2008 (actually the end result of decades of loose credit), more and more negative signs point to continued deterioration in capital, labor, commodity and equity markets.

What set the wheels in motion for a disastrous trading day in almost every global stock market, was the failed bond auction in tiny Portugal on Wednesday. The country failed to sell an expected 500 million Euros worth of one-year notes, as participation yielded the sale of only 300 million.

Early in the morning on Thursday, Moody's downgraded the outlook on the government of another tiny Eurozone nation, Lithuania, to negative, citing increased pressure due to a long-lingering recession and high debt-to-GDP ratio.

The two nations join Greece on the European list of sick economies, with no relief in sight. The global credit crunch continues to hamper the governments of smaller countries to borrow and spend. Fewer and fewer participants in government bond functions is like a loud bell clanging the death knell of debt-financed capitalist nations. Despite efforts by the US media to paper over our own failures in the bond market, news is gradually emerging, primarily from sources such as Robert Prechter of Elliott Wave and Jim Willie of Golden Jackass, that the entire US bond-debt function is a colossal sham, with government bonds being purchased by primary dealers and then repurchased by the Fed within a week's time.

The Chinese have virtually ceased participation in anything but the shortest-duration auctions, and other foreigners have followed suit. The Fed's policy of "quantitative easing" (printing money with no backing) was supposed to have ended in November, and, according to the Fed, it has stopped outright purchases of Treasuries, but the quiet, behind-the-scenes purchases of bonds from primary dealers - who cannot sell what they bought - works out to being exactly the same thing in practice.

All of these events are part of the positive feedback loop caused by the over-extension of credit without controls or proper risk analysis. What began in 2007 as the sub-prime mortgage crisis has extended to prime loans, commercial loans, junk bonds, corporate bonds, and finally all the way up the food chain to government bonds. Both Prechter and Willie predict that US Treasury bond defaults are bound to occur, though not until significant damage is done to other nations, particularly in Europe, already well underway.

What our "best and brightest" economists fail to either understand or are unwilling to admit, is that all of this nasty unwinding of credit and economy is the natural outcome of failed credit policies. Everyone, from college students all the way to the federal government, borrowed too much and now servicing the interest and principle payments are killing them. Residential and commercial real estate defaults are continuing to rise, another natural outcome of a bloated (by easy credit), overextended, mythical real estate boom. Today's global events are just another symptom of the same sickness, only to a greater degree.

Barely noticed amid the pre-market futures meltdown caused by another horrific reading of initial jobless claims - 480K - were the postponment of a pair of IPOs that were supposed to have priced overnight and sold into the market today. FriendFinder Networks (FFN) and Imperial Capital Group Inc (ICG) both were supposed to have gone off this week, but, due to weak market demand, neither went ahead with their offerings. Meanwhile, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals priced its offering of 16.7 million shares for $11.25 after its offering at $14 to $16 per share had met with considerable resistance. At the lowered price, Ironwood raised only 75% of their expected amount.

IPOs are having a truly difficult time coming to market. Investors are already highly risk-averse, and new issuance is seen as too risky. This is yet another deflationary signal as assets of all variety are put under microscopes and downgraded.

Then there's the firestorm surrounding Toyota. Problems keep propping up for the world's leading automaker. First, sticking gas pedals have forced a gigantic recall, and now, the brakes on their premium "green" maching, the Prius, are under scrutiny after having been the proximate cause for at least four US crashes. It's interesting speculation, but worth noting in an age of skulldruggery at the highest levels, that these problems should be happening to a foreign automaker just as American car companies find themselves in severe economic conditions. Most of the accidents are occurring in the US, where, incidentally, the parts, and, to some extent, the entire vehicles, were manufactured.

The next case is commodities. Oil, gold and silver are being hammered yet again, though this should come as no surprise. Oil consumption continues to be driven down by slack demand, in addition to artificial overpricing, and, while gold and silver are fine hedges against inflation, they can't escape the inevitable vortex of deflation. Like any other asset, they will be devalued, especially gold, which has been on a tear to the upside for the past decade. All those companies which were advertising "cash for gold" are going to end up just like buyers of overpriced homes in Southern California, upside-down and hopelessly in debt, though some may fare better than others as the metals are at least a somewhat reliable store of value, better than beanie babies, stocks or lawn furniture, though neither, in their raw investment form, have any functional purpose.

All of this sent investors scrambling on Thursday in advance of Friday morning's Non-farm payroll data. Anyone with half a brain is getting out of the way today, selling shares in anticipation of yet another disappointment.

Here's another mention of Great Depression II, only this time, it's in the mainstream.

I sold all my gold today before it went any lower. I received a good price, all cash, and now will watch as its price erodes. Cash is KING!

On Wall Street, they're beginning to run scared. All the talk this AM on CNBC (pays to watch it so you know what NOT to do) was about retail sales, and how the major chain stores reported better-than-expected results for January. But, let's ask, better than what? Last January, which stuck to high heaven? Exactly, and nobody bothered to mention that people who are shopping at Kohl's, Macy's et.al. are idiots with free money from unemployment, SS, disability, etc. The real carnage came from unemployment and the Sovereign Debt crisis mentioned at the beginning of this post.

Here's how stocks looked at the end of the day:

Dow 10,002.18, -268.37 (2.61%)
NASDAQ 2,125.43, -65.48 (2.99%)
S&P 500 1,063.11, -34.17 (3.11%)
NYSE Composite 6,787.86, -254.76 (3.62%)


Those are some pug-ugly numbers, and the volume was elevated, meaning the rush for the exits has begun. You, and your silly 401k or retirement plan, are trapped. Get ready for another colossal blow to your dreams and aspirations, because it's coming and this time it has been telegraphed loud and clear. Declining issues trampled all over the few gainers, 5566-828, a huge 7-1 ratio. And, as I've been saying would happen the past few weeks, the new highs-new lows indicators finally rolled over. There were 117 new lows and just 96 new highs. Folks, it's OVER.

NYSE Volume 6,857,842,500
NASDAQ Volume 2,819,441,000


The Dow finished at its lowest level since November 4, 2009, almost exactly 3 months. The S&P broke through key support levels at 1071 and 1065 and appears doomed for a return to 960 in short order. The NASDAQ didn't do any better, finishing just above its November 6 close.

Commodities were savaged as investors sold to raise cash. Oil lost $4.01, to $72.97. Gold fell $48.00, to $1064 per ounce. Silver shed 99 cents - an enormous 7% decline - to finish at $15.33.

What's truly frightening this time around is that this is only the beginning. All talk of the V-shaped recovery is now being laughed right out of town. Owning anything - stocks, bonds, homes, commercial real estate, art, gold, silver, barrels of oil, sports cards, you name it - may prove fatal to your financial health.

Here's a tip: If you're buying anything today, look at the price, offer 25% less, and you just may get it. One caveat, it still may not be a good deal six months from now. Be careful.

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