There's about an hour to go before the release of the BLS Non-Farm Payroll data for February, and, since listening to ex-chairman Greenspan dodder on CNBC is causing severe intellectual pain and suffering, I've decided to take a stab at what the number will be.
With government work contracting generally over the past 3-6 months, we're likely looking at a reduction in public sector jobs of somewhere between 15,000 and 30,000. That implies that to reach the number some have projected, 175-200,000, the private sector would have to had created upwards of 200,000 jobs, and that seems highly unlikely.
My best guess - and it's nothing more than a guess because I'm not taking into account the arcane and muddy BLS birth-death models and other smoothing mechanisms they employ - is that the private sector created no more than a net 160,000 new jobs, and even that might be a stretch.
Let's put the number at +135,000, below consensus estimates, but, considering how bad January was, this number could - and maybe should - be considered a vast improvement.
Not that anybody should be happy with this number, since the amount of stimulus by government and the Fed has been enormous and we should, at this point in the "recovery," be creating 300-350,000 net new jobs, anything above 125,000 should be almost satisfactory, or, a "D" for underachievement for the Fed.
So, that's it: +135,000. I can live with that, and, even if I'm wrong, I'll be no further off than the majority of the experts out there.
Friday, March 4, 2011
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Big Rebound for Stocks on Low Volume
Today's jump in equities, led by Industrials, Financials and Health Care, was mostly based upon the usually shaded numbers from the BLS on initial unemployment claims, which came in at a three-year low of 368,000.
A good number, without a doubt, but market bettors were staking into stocks on the probability that those figures would translate into a much-improved non-farm payroll number on Friday. The current estimates are calling for the US economy to have created between 175,000 and 200,000 net new jobs in the month of February.
Taking into account the massive sums of money pumped into the economy through various stimuli, tax credits, bailouts, low tax regime and the Fed's QE, QE2 and ZIRP policies, it's about time for companies to begin hiring, and with gusto. Should the number tomorrow fall short of expectations, it would provide more fodder for those who believe the great Keynesian experiments of Ben Bernanke and the oligarchical banker subsidies have been for naught.
Those on the "recovery" side of that argument better hope that the BLS has massaged the numbers sufficiently to manage the message.
While today's gains were awesome to behold - the best for the S&P since December 1 and the biggest percentage gain for the NASDAQ since February 1 - the major indices are still 1-1 1/2% below the recent (Feb. 18) highs. events are still very much in flux, oil is still abnormally high-priced and we're still guessing that unemployment is beginning to come down, and worse yet, that guess is based upon a very faulty - and often revised - series of numbers supplied by a dodgy government agency, the BLS.
Not to poke holes in the recovery argument, for that's becoming a cause for being labeled un-American, but the stock market is such a wild, wide-open casino these days, that a big upside move is nothing upon which to hang one's investment hat. Additionally, it should be pointed out that the huge two-year rally off the March 9, 2009 lows has been upwards of 95% on the major indices and it is nothing more than a cyclical bull rally inside a secular bear market, one which the Western world entered in August of 2007.
Then there's still the question of what will happen when the Fed pulls the plug on QE, come June, or whether they will have the nerve and economic data to allow them to do so. That's when things get really dicey, as the underpinnings of the market are pulled out and interest rates make a natural rise, causing all that glorious government debt to be ever-more expensive to pay back.
And, if the Fed decides to pull the veritable plug of buying all US Treasury issuance, how soon will be see failed auctions? A scenario like that would make 2008 look like a stroll through the amusement park.
Enjoy it while you have it, perma-bulls. It may not last very long, especially in the face of what's gone on in gold and silver, the two behemoths scaring the living daylights out of central bankers everywhere.
Dow 12,258.20, +191.40 (1.59%)
NASDAQ 2,798.74, +50.67 (1.84%)
S&P 500 1,330.97, +22.53 (1.72%)
NYSE Composite 8,465.45, +126.69 (1.52%)
Matching the headline numbers, advancing issues galloped ahead of decliners, 5126-1431. NASDAQ new highs: 160; new lows: 22. NYSE new highs: 228; new lows: 4. Volume was down in the doldrums again, though not as badly as other, weaker days. With all the profits generated over the past two years, one would expect to see much higher volume on big trading days like this, but the bulk of the gain was done by noon, after which markets just marked time ahead of the key job announcement tomorrow morning.
There's also the small technical matter of the key, double-engulfing day on Tuesday, a symptom and a signal for a course correction, that is still in play. Today's high on the Dow was still 20 points shy of the opening high on Tuesday.
NASDAQ Volume 2,005,997,000
NYSE Volume 4,926,878,500
Oil took a bit of a breather, as events in Lybia and the Middle East were downplayed. NYMEX crude dipped 32 cents, but stabilizing over $100 - today's close was $101.91 - per barrel isn't anything anybody should be bullish about, unless one owns a well or three. Higher oil prices precede recessions, every time, and unless the situation in the Middle East isn't quieted soon, that high price is going to remain in place and possibly go higher. Moods change on the turn f a dime these days, and today's price - as well as today's stock gains - could be ancient history in a matter of hours or days.
Precious metals took a well-deserved day of profit-taking, and are consolidating at elevated levels. The next move higher should commence whenever conditions warrant, that being any time there's a flare-up in the Middle East, or, like Jean Claude Trichet mumbled today, interest rates should rise in Europe in order to stave off inflation.
Gold dropped $21.30, to $1,416.40; silver was down 51 cents, to $34.33. Both of those levels are close to historic, recent (yesterday) highs.
The future of the markets hinge upon tomorrow morning's key employment number, though one should not get too tied to this particular measure. There are more forces at work besides employment figures, though traders seem to want to hang their collective hats on this one.
A good number, without a doubt, but market bettors were staking into stocks on the probability that those figures would translate into a much-improved non-farm payroll number on Friday. The current estimates are calling for the US economy to have created between 175,000 and 200,000 net new jobs in the month of February.
Taking into account the massive sums of money pumped into the economy through various stimuli, tax credits, bailouts, low tax regime and the Fed's QE, QE2 and ZIRP policies, it's about time for companies to begin hiring, and with gusto. Should the number tomorrow fall short of expectations, it would provide more fodder for those who believe the great Keynesian experiments of Ben Bernanke and the oligarchical banker subsidies have been for naught.
Those on the "recovery" side of that argument better hope that the BLS has massaged the numbers sufficiently to manage the message.
While today's gains were awesome to behold - the best for the S&P since December 1 and the biggest percentage gain for the NASDAQ since February 1 - the major indices are still 1-1 1/2% below the recent (Feb. 18) highs. events are still very much in flux, oil is still abnormally high-priced and we're still guessing that unemployment is beginning to come down, and worse yet, that guess is based upon a very faulty - and often revised - series of numbers supplied by a dodgy government agency, the BLS.
Not to poke holes in the recovery argument, for that's becoming a cause for being labeled un-American, but the stock market is such a wild, wide-open casino these days, that a big upside move is nothing upon which to hang one's investment hat. Additionally, it should be pointed out that the huge two-year rally off the March 9, 2009 lows has been upwards of 95% on the major indices and it is nothing more than a cyclical bull rally inside a secular bear market, one which the Western world entered in August of 2007.
Then there's still the question of what will happen when the Fed pulls the plug on QE, come June, or whether they will have the nerve and economic data to allow them to do so. That's when things get really dicey, as the underpinnings of the market are pulled out and interest rates make a natural rise, causing all that glorious government debt to be ever-more expensive to pay back.
And, if the Fed decides to pull the veritable plug of buying all US Treasury issuance, how soon will be see failed auctions? A scenario like that would make 2008 look like a stroll through the amusement park.
Enjoy it while you have it, perma-bulls. It may not last very long, especially in the face of what's gone on in gold and silver, the two behemoths scaring the living daylights out of central bankers everywhere.
Dow 12,258.20, +191.40 (1.59%)
NASDAQ 2,798.74, +50.67 (1.84%)
S&P 500 1,330.97, +22.53 (1.72%)
NYSE Composite 8,465.45, +126.69 (1.52%)
Matching the headline numbers, advancing issues galloped ahead of decliners, 5126-1431. NASDAQ new highs: 160; new lows: 22. NYSE new highs: 228; new lows: 4. Volume was down in the doldrums again, though not as badly as other, weaker days. With all the profits generated over the past two years, one would expect to see much higher volume on big trading days like this, but the bulk of the gain was done by noon, after which markets just marked time ahead of the key job announcement tomorrow morning.
There's also the small technical matter of the key, double-engulfing day on Tuesday, a symptom and a signal for a course correction, that is still in play. Today's high on the Dow was still 20 points shy of the opening high on Tuesday.
NASDAQ Volume 2,005,997,000
NYSE Volume 4,926,878,500
Oil took a bit of a breather, as events in Lybia and the Middle East were downplayed. NYMEX crude dipped 32 cents, but stabilizing over $100 - today's close was $101.91 - per barrel isn't anything anybody should be bullish about, unless one owns a well or three. Higher oil prices precede recessions, every time, and unless the situation in the Middle East isn't quieted soon, that high price is going to remain in place and possibly go higher. Moods change on the turn f a dime these days, and today's price - as well as today's stock gains - could be ancient history in a matter of hours or days.
Precious metals took a well-deserved day of profit-taking, and are consolidating at elevated levels. The next move higher should commence whenever conditions warrant, that being any time there's a flare-up in the Middle East, or, like Jean Claude Trichet mumbled today, interest rates should rise in Europe in order to stave off inflation.
Gold dropped $21.30, to $1,416.40; silver was down 51 cents, to $34.33. Both of those levels are close to historic, recent (yesterday) highs.
The future of the markets hinge upon tomorrow morning's key employment number, though one should not get too tied to this particular measure. There are more forces at work besides employment figures, though traders seem to want to hang their collective hats on this one.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Equities Struggle to Small Gains
Stocks bounced around without much conviction a day after taking substantial losses. For most of the stock trading crowd, today's was a pyrrhic victory - at least stock prices didn't go down, for the most part.
Turmoil in the Middle East continued to top concerns, though the fiasco in the nation's capitol, with Republicans and Democrats playing a lousy game of chicken (or chicken little) to see who can outflank whom on budget issues. On the table is a two-week funding bill, meaning that the drama will be played out again over the following two weeks and possibly again and again as the leaders of neither party are willing to take a tough, reasoned stance and actually make real cuts to the overblown federal budget.
Our federal politicians are so devoid of leadership, nerve or basic common sense, that the way congress and the president are behaving, there's simply no reason to believe that our fiscal policy will be anything but endless spending of borrowed money well past most or our lifetimes.
It's a sad and sordid joke being played on the American public, which deserves better than what it's getting from the elected crowd, squatting and ducking in anticipation of the next election cycle. Better to just ignore them all, lest they actually do something beneficial to the good people of this country.
In the meantime, let's just print more money out of thin air, spend that and more and move along.
Dow 12,066.80, +8.78 (0.07%)
NASDAQ 2,748.07, +10.66 (0.39%)
S&P 500 1,308.44, +2.11 (0.16%)
NYSE Composite 8,338.76, +22.91 (0.28%)
Advancing issues overtook decliners, 3913-2578. There were 62 new highs and 45 new lows on the NASDAQ. On the NYSE, a similar set-up, with 73 new highs and 18 new lows. Volume dropped back down to mundane levels after ramping up for the big sell on Tuesday.
NASDAQ Volume 1,987,339,500
NYSE Volume 4,715,524,000
Oil continued to rocket higher, with NYMEX crude at $102.23, up $2.60 on the day. Gold continued its powerful breakout, adding $6.50, to $1,437.70, another new record close. Silver gained 41 cents, to finish at $34.84, another 30-year high.
Turmoil in the Middle East continued to top concerns, though the fiasco in the nation's capitol, with Republicans and Democrats playing a lousy game of chicken (or chicken little) to see who can outflank whom on budget issues. On the table is a two-week funding bill, meaning that the drama will be played out again over the following two weeks and possibly again and again as the leaders of neither party are willing to take a tough, reasoned stance and actually make real cuts to the overblown federal budget.
Our federal politicians are so devoid of leadership, nerve or basic common sense, that the way congress and the president are behaving, there's simply no reason to believe that our fiscal policy will be anything but endless spending of borrowed money well past most or our lifetimes.
It's a sad and sordid joke being played on the American public, which deserves better than what it's getting from the elected crowd, squatting and ducking in anticipation of the next election cycle. Better to just ignore them all, lest they actually do something beneficial to the good people of this country.
In the meantime, let's just print more money out of thin air, spend that and more and move along.
Dow 12,066.80, +8.78 (0.07%)
NASDAQ 2,748.07, +10.66 (0.39%)
S&P 500 1,308.44, +2.11 (0.16%)
NYSE Composite 8,338.76, +22.91 (0.28%)
Advancing issues overtook decliners, 3913-2578. There were 62 new highs and 45 new lows on the NASDAQ. On the NYSE, a similar set-up, with 73 new highs and 18 new lows. Volume dropped back down to mundane levels after ramping up for the big sell on Tuesday.
NASDAQ Volume 1,987,339,500
NYSE Volume 4,715,524,000
Oil continued to rocket higher, with NYMEX crude at $102.23, up $2.60 on the day. Gold continued its powerful breakout, adding $6.50, to $1,437.70, another new record close. Silver gained 41 cents, to finish at $34.84, another 30-year high.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Stock Suckers Swallow Hard; Silver, Gold Soar
The past two weeks have been good times indeed for holders and hoarders of silver and gold, but today's trade may just have been the best of the bunch.
Not only were the precious metals (you realize there's good reason they call them that) up substantially, but, on the heels of morelying dissembling testimony by Chairman Ben the Monkey Man - who steadfastly believes the economy is recovering and that inflation is "under control" - stocks took another well-deserved beating.
Sure, as famed investor Marc Faber pointed out in a recent interview that holding stock is better than holding corporate bonds because you at least have "something" to show at the end of a calamity, but for holders of those paper (now electronic) stock certificates, the calamity hasn't even begun. There will be casualties, even though the financial press, led by cheerleading morons on CNBC, won't bother to shed light on many details.
It was an enjoyable day for those sitting home in robe and slippers, relaxing as their gold and silver holding appreciated. Gold shot past its previous all time high of $1,421.00 en route to a fresh closing at $1,431.20, up a rock-solid $21.30. Silver, already having made a new 31-year high on Monday, eclipsed that mark with another gain of 61 cents, finishing in New York at $34.42.
The downside was that gold bugs and silver surfers will have to pay more to flee the country with their hoard, since crude also popped to new recent highs, with West Texas Intermediate up $2.66, to $99.63 on the NYMEX.
As for the stock suckers, read 'em and weep:
Dow 12,058.02, -168.32 (1.38%)
NASDAQ 2,737.41, -44.86 (1.61%)
S&P 500 1,306.33, -20.89 (1.57%)
NYSE Composite 8,315.85, -122.70 (1.45%)
Declining issues pounded back advancers, 4950-1638, a ratio of better than 3:1. On the NASDAQ, there were 96 new highs, 33 new lows. The NYSE saw 189 new highs and 17 new lows. Volume, as has been the case on all losing sessions, was elevated.
NASDAQ Volume 2,239,243,250
NYSE Volume 5,358,425,500
What really should be worrying the stock jocks at this juncture are three things: 1. economic data has been strong, but stocks haven't followed, suggesting that "good" news is already priced in; 2. the vix has taken a couple of enormous jumps on recent down days, and, possibly the biggest worry of all, 3. the Dow and S&P each experienced today a double engulfing day, in which the day's highs and lows took out the highs and lows of the previous two sessions. That scenario is a textbook indicator, chart-wise, for a directional reversal. If such is the case, the hints that something is not all right with stocks over the past two weeks is really foreshadowing for a classic 10-15% correction.
These indications are all occurring against the backdrop of insolvent banks, fiat money depreciation, global civil unrest and non-stop monetary stimulus by the Fed, the ECB and the CCB (China Central Bank).
Important data is dead ahead for marketeers. On wednesday morning, the widely discredited ADP Private Employment Survey for February is released, and on Friday, the laughable BLS Non-farm payroll report. Both data sets will be released upon the usual suspects prior to market opening.
Stay tuned. The fun has just begun.
Not only were the precious metals (you realize there's good reason they call them that) up substantially, but, on the heels of more
Sure, as famed investor Marc Faber pointed out in a recent interview that holding stock is better than holding corporate bonds because you at least have "something" to show at the end of a calamity, but for holders of those paper (now electronic) stock certificates, the calamity hasn't even begun. There will be casualties, even though the financial press, led by cheerleading morons on CNBC, won't bother to shed light on many details.
It was an enjoyable day for those sitting home in robe and slippers, relaxing as their gold and silver holding appreciated. Gold shot past its previous all time high of $1,421.00 en route to a fresh closing at $1,431.20, up a rock-solid $21.30. Silver, already having made a new 31-year high on Monday, eclipsed that mark with another gain of 61 cents, finishing in New York at $34.42.
The downside was that gold bugs and silver surfers will have to pay more to flee the country with their hoard, since crude also popped to new recent highs, with West Texas Intermediate up $2.66, to $99.63 on the NYMEX.
As for the stock suckers, read 'em and weep:
Dow 12,058.02, -168.32 (1.38%)
NASDAQ 2,737.41, -44.86 (1.61%)
S&P 500 1,306.33, -20.89 (1.57%)
NYSE Composite 8,315.85, -122.70 (1.45%)
Declining issues pounded back advancers, 4950-1638, a ratio of better than 3:1. On the NASDAQ, there were 96 new highs, 33 new lows. The NYSE saw 189 new highs and 17 new lows. Volume, as has been the case on all losing sessions, was elevated.
NASDAQ Volume 2,239,243,250
NYSE Volume 5,358,425,500
What really should be worrying the stock jocks at this juncture are three things: 1. economic data has been strong, but stocks haven't followed, suggesting that "good" news is already priced in; 2. the vix has taken a couple of enormous jumps on recent down days, and, possibly the biggest worry of all, 3. the Dow and S&P each experienced today a double engulfing day, in which the day's highs and lows took out the highs and lows of the previous two sessions. That scenario is a textbook indicator, chart-wise, for a directional reversal. If such is the case, the hints that something is not all right with stocks over the past two weeks is really foreshadowing for a classic 10-15% correction.
These indications are all occurring against the backdrop of insolvent banks, fiat money depreciation, global civil unrest and non-stop monetary stimulus by the Fed, the ECB and the CCB (China Central Bank).
Important data is dead ahead for marketeers. On wednesday morning, the widely discredited ADP Private Employment Survey for February is released, and on Friday, the laughable BLS Non-farm payroll report. Both data sets will be released upon the usual suspects prior to market opening.
Stay tuned. The fun has just begun.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Headlong Into Hyper-inflation
After last week's mini-correction - which is probably the worst decline we'll see for a while - stocks and the Fed are back on track, pumping newly-created POMO dollars into the system for the banking crooks to parlay into stocks. Up, up and away!
According to the Fed's published schedule of monetary injections, today was slated for $6-8 billion in outright coupon purchases. In other words, the Fed is buying back bonds from the Primary Dealers which were purchased just a few weeks ago, presumably at a loss, a small loss, but, nevertheless, a loss, so that the banks will remain willing participants to the Zimbabwe-ification of the US financial system.
These continued injections have become so commonplace that nobody bothers to report on them or even think about them. For those unfamiliar with the process, let's recap:
Step 1: The US Treasury issues bonds in certain amounts and maturities.
Step 2: Primary Dealers (AKA Too Big To Fail (TBTF) banks) buy the bonds.
Step 3: The Federal Reserve buys the bonds from the TBTF banks.
This is the simple process by which our currency is devalued every day and how the banks are shoring up their horrifically-insolvent balance sheets. While the Fed takes a loss of say, half a billion a day, the banks record the transaction as a profit. Viola! The banks are once again sound. The only problem is that the Fed is holding huge amounts of government debt.
Now, if you've been following carefully, you might question the process. Why bother? Why not just give the banks the money directly from the Federal Reserve, since they have the ability to just create money out of thin air?
Ah, what about the government's obligations? They must issue debt, so the game must continue. The auctions, however, conducted in secrecy, electronically, so that only a few people - ostensibly Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner - know who's buying what and for how much.
That's a problem, for obvious reasons, and explains, in part, why some people are beginning to think that the entire economy of the United States has already sunk and is being kept afloat by a massive fraud, perpetrated by the Federal Reserve, Treasury Department and the nation's six to eight largest banks (with assistance from European Central banks who are doing pretty much the same thing).
Nobody is buying US government debt. Nobody could be that stupid. The Fed is buying it all, monetizing the debt, smashing down interest rates and destroying the currency. The tiny little secret nobody wishes to speak of is that the rest of the world had better play along or their currencies will be flushed straight into the toilet along with billions of Ben Bernanke Bucks.
Yes, the Federal Reserve is buying all Treasuries issued, cooking their own books and helping out the banks, because, if they don't do it, we'll just have to liquidate those TBTF institutions and Jamie Dimon (our next Treasury Secretary) and his wealthy friends wouldn't like that. Besides, the Fed and the banks and the politicians they control would no longer be able to sway the American public every which way, as they choose.
Think about it. The Chinese stopped buying our debt at least a year ago. They are trying to unload it as fast as they can without causing a panic. Japan is also no longer interested. Reportedly, the UK has been buying scads of the stuff, but they're even more broke than we are, so that's a gigantic canard.
The Fed is buying all, or nearly all, of US debt issuance. We are a self-dealing, Ponzi-fied, Zimbabwe on steroids. There's no doubt about it and there's also no way out. The Fed cannot stop creating money because it just gets more and more worthless every day. It's being spent as quickly as they can put it into circulation, forcing prices higher and higher, inflating everything on the planet - including stocks - in a very devious, vicious cycle all caused by the bankers who imploded the world's economy back in 2008 when they couldn't figure out a way to cover all their bets without all of them failing.
That is when Hank Paulson, then Treasury Secretary, with Ben Bernanke as his willing accomplice, figuratively held a gun to the heads of the President, George W. Bush, and the leaders of congress and demanded $700 billion dollars with no strings attached. It was the crime of the century, committed in broad daylight, in front of hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
Ever since then, all we've gotten for our time and money is a song and dance, orchestrated to keep us all in line and dong the "recovery boogie." It's such an absolute charade, a sham and a complete lie that a lot - and I do mean a lot - of people are coming to the conclusion that it's not working, that we're stuck in this no-jobs, no-growth, high-inflation limbo until the the bar finally falls to earth.
The big holders of mortgage-backed securities are suing the banks with regularity. They want their money back for all the bad securities issued by the banks, backed by mortgages which were written with no other purpose than to have the homeowner default.
Insurance companies suing banks, with the Fed printing money as fast as they possibly can and prices rising globally because of it results in an unsustainable situation. It's already bad, and quickly getting worse. The rest of what suffices for news these days is just for show.
Think about it. In Wisconsin, they're trying to fill a $3 billion void in their budget. Why, the Fed issues twice that amount through their Treasury purchases EVERY DAY! Oil hitting $100 a barrel? All caused by uncontrolled speculation and outright thievery. There's a glut of oil out there and what the big energy companies are really worried about is people rationing their use of gas, taking fewer trips and buying less. with so many people out of work, they have little driving to do, and the oil companies are just trying to remain as richly profitable as they've always been by CHARGING MORE TO FEWER CUSTOMERS.
QE2, the Fed's gambit to restore economic prosperity by issuing more paper money, is slated to end by June. After that, it's anybody's guess, but the path of least resistance - and most sense, from an OMG mentality - would be to continue printing more. There's no economy, tax revenues have fallen off a cliff, and the Fed, because they've chosen to keep insolvent banks operating instead of closing them down, is powerless to do anything but what they've been doing for 2 1/2 years: print, print, print, and when you're done printing, print some more. Hello hyperinflation, followed by an acute depression, the worst ever seen. See you in Hades, Mr. Bernanke, because that's precisely where you and your policies are sending everyone else.
Dow 12,226.34, +95.89 (0.79%)
NASDAQ 2,782.27, +1.22 (0.04%)
S&P 500 1,327.22, +7.34 (0.56%)
NYSE Composite 8,438.55, +60.51 (0.72%)
Advancing issues outpaced decliners, 4051-2535. NASDAQ new highs: 144; new lows: 21. NYSE new highs: 258; new lows: 15. Volume was back down in the doldrums again, so everything is back to normal.
NASDAQ Volume 2,057,503,500
NYSE Volume 4,593,278,500
Oil prices fell again today, down 91 cents, to $96.97, but the damage has been done. Regular unleaded gas is now at a national average of $3.37 per gallon. Seven states are already over $3.45. Want to see a recession created almost overnight. Push ol to $115 a barrel and gas to a national average of $3.75 and see what happens. The protests in Wisconsin will look more like a picnic compared to the mass outrage that induces. Already, people are reconsidering their choices of paying $75-150 a week to get to and from a job that pays them less than $400 a week, taking home $300-340. For many, it's just not worth it any more.
Meanwhile, gold bugs and silver surfers are loving the chaos. Gold was up again today, but only by 60 cents, to $1,409.90. It was as high as $1,416 in earlier trading. Gold is now being pressured downward, or at least held down, for two reasons. First, the banker's know that everyone watches gold as a proxy to fiat currencies, so they are suppressing demand. Second, the very same banks want to hoard it, because they know everyone is right. The global economy is as close to complete meltdown as it was in the fall of 2008.
Silver got all the gains today, up 91 cents (same as the drop in oil, coincidentally), to $33.80. We're unsure whether or not that's a new 30-year high; we only know that $50 per ounce is the number that stopped the Hunt brothers back in 1979-80. When the bubble they created finally burst, Nelson Bunker Hunt, who purportedly lost more than a billion dollars in one day, said, "a billion dollars isn't what it used to be."
And, so, those immortal words, while the Fed pumps billions into an eventual oblivion, ring more true than ever, today.
According to the Fed's published schedule of monetary injections, today was slated for $6-8 billion in outright coupon purchases. In other words, the Fed is buying back bonds from the Primary Dealers which were purchased just a few weeks ago, presumably at a loss, a small loss, but, nevertheless, a loss, so that the banks will remain willing participants to the Zimbabwe-ification of the US financial system.
These continued injections have become so commonplace that nobody bothers to report on them or even think about them. For those unfamiliar with the process, let's recap:
Step 1: The US Treasury issues bonds in certain amounts and maturities.
Step 2: Primary Dealers (AKA Too Big To Fail (TBTF) banks) buy the bonds.
Step 3: The Federal Reserve buys the bonds from the TBTF banks.
This is the simple process by which our currency is devalued every day and how the banks are shoring up their horrifically-insolvent balance sheets. While the Fed takes a loss of say, half a billion a day, the banks record the transaction as a profit. Viola! The banks are once again sound. The only problem is that the Fed is holding huge amounts of government debt.
Now, if you've been following carefully, you might question the process. Why bother? Why not just give the banks the money directly from the Federal Reserve, since they have the ability to just create money out of thin air?
Ah, what about the government's obligations? They must issue debt, so the game must continue. The auctions, however, conducted in secrecy, electronically, so that only a few people - ostensibly Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner - know who's buying what and for how much.
That's a problem, for obvious reasons, and explains, in part, why some people are beginning to think that the entire economy of the United States has already sunk and is being kept afloat by a massive fraud, perpetrated by the Federal Reserve, Treasury Department and the nation's six to eight largest banks (with assistance from European Central banks who are doing pretty much the same thing).
Nobody is buying US government debt. Nobody could be that stupid. The Fed is buying it all, monetizing the debt, smashing down interest rates and destroying the currency. The tiny little secret nobody wishes to speak of is that the rest of the world had better play along or their currencies will be flushed straight into the toilet along with billions of Ben Bernanke Bucks.
Yes, the Federal Reserve is buying all Treasuries issued, cooking their own books and helping out the banks, because, if they don't do it, we'll just have to liquidate those TBTF institutions and Jamie Dimon (our next Treasury Secretary) and his wealthy friends wouldn't like that. Besides, the Fed and the banks and the politicians they control would no longer be able to sway the American public every which way, as they choose.
Think about it. The Chinese stopped buying our debt at least a year ago. They are trying to unload it as fast as they can without causing a panic. Japan is also no longer interested. Reportedly, the UK has been buying scads of the stuff, but they're even more broke than we are, so that's a gigantic canard.
The Fed is buying all, or nearly all, of US debt issuance. We are a self-dealing, Ponzi-fied, Zimbabwe on steroids. There's no doubt about it and there's also no way out. The Fed cannot stop creating money because it just gets more and more worthless every day. It's being spent as quickly as they can put it into circulation, forcing prices higher and higher, inflating everything on the planet - including stocks - in a very devious, vicious cycle all caused by the bankers who imploded the world's economy back in 2008 when they couldn't figure out a way to cover all their bets without all of them failing.
That is when Hank Paulson, then Treasury Secretary, with Ben Bernanke as his willing accomplice, figuratively held a gun to the heads of the President, George W. Bush, and the leaders of congress and demanded $700 billion dollars with no strings attached. It was the crime of the century, committed in broad daylight, in front of hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
Ever since then, all we've gotten for our time and money is a song and dance, orchestrated to keep us all in line and dong the "recovery boogie." It's such an absolute charade, a sham and a complete lie that a lot - and I do mean a lot - of people are coming to the conclusion that it's not working, that we're stuck in this no-jobs, no-growth, high-inflation limbo until the the bar finally falls to earth.
The big holders of mortgage-backed securities are suing the banks with regularity. They want their money back for all the bad securities issued by the banks, backed by mortgages which were written with no other purpose than to have the homeowner default.
Insurance companies suing banks, with the Fed printing money as fast as they possibly can and prices rising globally because of it results in an unsustainable situation. It's already bad, and quickly getting worse. The rest of what suffices for news these days is just for show.
Think about it. In Wisconsin, they're trying to fill a $3 billion void in their budget. Why, the Fed issues twice that amount through their Treasury purchases EVERY DAY! Oil hitting $100 a barrel? All caused by uncontrolled speculation and outright thievery. There's a glut of oil out there and what the big energy companies are really worried about is people rationing their use of gas, taking fewer trips and buying less. with so many people out of work, they have little driving to do, and the oil companies are just trying to remain as richly profitable as they've always been by CHARGING MORE TO FEWER CUSTOMERS.
QE2, the Fed's gambit to restore economic prosperity by issuing more paper money, is slated to end by June. After that, it's anybody's guess, but the path of least resistance - and most sense, from an OMG mentality - would be to continue printing more. There's no economy, tax revenues have fallen off a cliff, and the Fed, because they've chosen to keep insolvent banks operating instead of closing them down, is powerless to do anything but what they've been doing for 2 1/2 years: print, print, print, and when you're done printing, print some more. Hello hyperinflation, followed by an acute depression, the worst ever seen. See you in Hades, Mr. Bernanke, because that's precisely where you and your policies are sending everyone else.
Dow 12,226.34, +95.89 (0.79%)
NASDAQ 2,782.27, +1.22 (0.04%)
S&P 500 1,327.22, +7.34 (0.56%)
NYSE Composite 8,438.55, +60.51 (0.72%)
Advancing issues outpaced decliners, 4051-2535. NASDAQ new highs: 144; new lows: 21. NYSE new highs: 258; new lows: 15. Volume was back down in the doldrums again, so everything is back to normal.
NASDAQ Volume 2,057,503,500
NYSE Volume 4,593,278,500
Oil prices fell again today, down 91 cents, to $96.97, but the damage has been done. Regular unleaded gas is now at a national average of $3.37 per gallon. Seven states are already over $3.45. Want to see a recession created almost overnight. Push ol to $115 a barrel and gas to a national average of $3.75 and see what happens. The protests in Wisconsin will look more like a picnic compared to the mass outrage that induces. Already, people are reconsidering their choices of paying $75-150 a week to get to and from a job that pays them less than $400 a week, taking home $300-340. For many, it's just not worth it any more.
Meanwhile, gold bugs and silver surfers are loving the chaos. Gold was up again today, but only by 60 cents, to $1,409.90. It was as high as $1,416 in earlier trading. Gold is now being pressured downward, or at least held down, for two reasons. First, the banker's know that everyone watches gold as a proxy to fiat currencies, so they are suppressing demand. Second, the very same banks want to hoard it, because they know everyone is right. The global economy is as close to complete meltdown as it was in the fall of 2008.
Silver got all the gains today, up 91 cents (same as the drop in oil, coincidentally), to $33.80. We're unsure whether or not that's a new 30-year high; we only know that $50 per ounce is the number that stopped the Hunt brothers back in 1979-80. When the bubble they created finally burst, Nelson Bunker Hunt, who purportedly lost more than a billion dollars in one day, said, "a billion dollars isn't what it used to be."
And, so, those immortal words, while the Fed pumps billions into an eventual oblivion, ring more true than ever, today.
Labels:
Ben Bernanke,
Federal Reserve,
hyperinflation,
inflation,
Tim Geithner
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