Sunday, June 25, 2017

The Long and Short of the Approaching Recession (Depression)

For those out there reading this short missive, a warning that time and space are constraints upon the lives we live, the bread we bake, the food we eat, the products we produce, the jobs that sustain us and the government that pretends to cater to us.

Time and space - according to most adherents of pure physics - are not constraints upon thinking, thought, creativity and imagination.

Indulgence should be given more, in these days of financial peril and social inequality, to solutions derived in the mind, translated to the body by practicality and functionality.

In both the long and short discussions of current finance, there can be little doubt that the system of capitalism by which the developed world has grown and prospered is under severe strain and the solutions offered by the central bankers and government entities who pretend to know how it all works are nothing more than stop-gap measures intended solely to prevent, or at least, delay, a complete collapse of a fragile, human-made system.

Economics, being mostly theoretical, and therefore, unbound, unfortunately needs to operate in a closed, bound, system, restrained by those old devils of time and space. As has been frequently mentioned in higher-level economic discussions, "infinite growth is unsustainable in a finite world."

With that in mind, this weekend edition of Money Daily offers but a brief insight into the unraveling of the world order of finance already well underway.

On the whole, Friday was a washout to a week in which the major indices - with the notable exception of the NASDAQ - vacillated around the unchanged line. In the current nomenclature, stock indices - wherein the vast bulk of trading is performed by computer algorithms and central banks - are a control mechanism. So long as they are stable or going higher, the general population feels comforted and won't look around for cracks in the not-so-golden facade of global finance. As such, this week was very much like the previous six, or eight, or eighty. It was, in general terms, a big nothing-burger.

But, what does the outsize gain on the NASDAQ tell us, when the other indices were going exactly nowhere fast?

It says that the NASDAQ is where the speculation exists, where all the funny money or phony money is going to seek yield, mostly in tech-land, but also in energy stocks and in short-squeezes on the most-shorted list. It's how the game is being played at the top. If shorts are numerous on a particular equity, that where the money flow will be most pronounced, on the long side. Boom! Instant profits and a great weekend in the Hamptons awaits.

For the rest of us, we are placated with the rest of the market going sideways. At least - we comfort ourselves in saying - it didn't go down, much.

An expanded view looks at a couple of issues. Oil took another beating this week as the glut continues, though this fact is not to be promulgated to the general population. We are led to believe that oil is scarce and the price of gas with which to fill our cars should remain at elevated levels.

Nothing could be further from the truth. A variety of factors, including, but not limited to, better fuel consumption, an aging population, alternative energy sources, stagnant or slowing employment, and a more stay-at-home, economically-depressed middle America, is leading to the reality of oversupply meeting slack or declining demand. Oil will continue to fall until it becomes apparent that the big energy companies are squeezing every last nickel and dime out of consumers in the form of stubbornly high gas prices. At some point, the price of gasoline will merit a meeting with reality and then, gas will average, nationally, under $2.00 a gallon, notwithstanding the absurdly-high state and federal taxes on each and every gallon pumped. It's coming. It cannot be denied.

Overseas, the demise of two Italian banks on Friday was, typically, underreported. Banca Popolare di Vicenza and Veneto Banca, with combined assets of roughly 60 billion euros, were green-lighted by the ECB on Friday for liquidation. In other words, these banks are belly-up, bankrupt, kaput!

The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Bloomberg, the AP, all reported the story. The mainstream media, such as ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, et. al., i.e, the fake news propagandists, did not.

There you have it. The general public will not be told the truth about the fraility of the banking system for fears people would recall the horrors of the GFC of 2008-09.

Two Italian banks failing may not make the radar of disinterest parties such as the 98% of Americans who don't pay attention to nor understand economics or finance. Neither did the closure of two Bear Stearns funds back in the Spring of 2008. You are now forewarned and forearmed, with knowledge.

The world'd financial system is unwinding and the pace is quickening. Disruptions are already apparent in the forms of capital controls - mostly overseas, but heading to US shores soon - supply chain disorder, falling tax receipts, social unrest, and, most importantly and glaringly obvious, income disparity.

Stay informed, not from the mainstream sources, but from outside. The internet is s treasure trove of information that you're not supposed to know about. It will help you form opinions and strategies by which you can deal with the coming hard times.

Your thoughts and ideas have no limits. Time and space cannot prevent you from thinking, strategizing and planning for your won welfare.

At the Close, 6/23/17:
Dow: 21,394.76, -2.53 (-0.01%)
NASDAQ: 6,265.25, +28.56 (0.46%)
S&P 500: 2,438.30, +3.80 (0.16%)
NYSE Composite: 11,733.20, +20.68 (0.18%)


For the Week:
Dow: +10.48 (0.05%)
NASDAQ: +113.49 (1.84%)
S&P 500: +5.15 (0.21%)
NYSE Composite: -38.83 (-0.33%)

Friday, June 23, 2017

Mixed Stocks Ahead Of Quad-Witching; Fed Gearing Toward Recession

For the second straight session, stocks closed mixed, with the Dow and S&P finishing in the red while the NASDAQ and NYSE Composite registered marginal gains.

Essentially, markets were flat as the trudge through June continues.

As the week draws to a close, Friday looks to be a troublesome day, owing largely to options expiration and the fact that with the exception of the Dow, the major indices are right back where they began the month.

This condition - known as quadruple witching - may result in increased volatility, and, with prices flat, many stock options and futures may close without redemption, i.e., losses.

Quad witching is the simultaneous expiration of options and futures tied to individual stocks and stock indexes occurring on the last month of each quarter.

While the name may sound frightening, it often is not, especially when stocks are gaining, which, over the past eight years, has been more often than not. This quarter may prove a hurdle too high, sending stocks screaming lower.

Psychologically, losing money on a Friday sends traders home to unhappy weekends with thoughts of carnage fresh in their minds, so Monday's trading may prove more prescient in terms of market direction.

Meanwhile, bonds are telling. The 10-year note slipped to 2.15 on Thursday, with the 30-year bond holding steady at 2.72. The curve has continued to flatten, and that could actually be due to the Fed's tightening. With the overnight federal funds rate at 1.00-1.25 - the highest in nearly a decade - the Fed may be - inadvertently or otherwise - prompting the US economy into a recession.

GDP growth continues to flag and employment is stagnant. Raising rates during a period of slow to no growth makes sense only to Federal Reserve governors or others who bear no consequences for their actions.

Friday's action in the markets deserves close attention.

At the Close, 6/22/17:
Dow: 21,397.29, -12.74 (-0.06%)
NASDAQ 6,236.69, +2.73 (0.04%)
S&P 500 2,434.50, -1.11 (-0.05%)
NYSE Composite: 11,712.52, +16.24 (0.14%)

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Broken Markets Yield Strange Results

How does it happen that all the major indices closed lower on Wednesday, but the NASDAQ finished with a gain of nearly three-quarters of a percent, up 45 points on the day?

Algorithms gone wild, that's how.

With the computers cranked up to stuff speculative stocks with ever-high bids, the NASDAQ has been outperforming the other indices over the past year, but especially so in 2017. Over the past 12 months, the NAZ is up nearly 30%, the Dow gained by 21% and the S&P 18%.

In the past three months, the NASDAQ has improved by 7.59%, while the Dow is up a mere 3.58%, the S&P 500 up 3.92%. That substantial edge has begun slipping however, as the NASDAQ took a major hit on the 8th of June. Prior to that massive outflow, the index was up 9.10% since March 22.

Apparently, that was not to the liking of the speculative sorts populating the concrete canyons of lower Manhattan. That's how results such as Wednesday's occur. Given that computers do more than 60% of all trading, it's not a stretch to believe that certain goal-seeking altos could be cranked up by human hands behind the scenes and the screens.

Markets have been broken by computer-driven trading, lack of oversight by the SEC and meddling by central bankers and the Federal Reserve. With the Swiss National Bank (SNB), Bank of Japan (BOJ), and European Central Bank (ECB) all active purchasers of stocks (not sellers), such meddling behavior is bound to cause distortions such as seen on Wednesday and in a myriad of other sessions, issues, and especially in ETFs.

Stocks may be at or near all-time highs, but caution is urged in such a speculative, managed market. A misstep or fat finger could cause any manner of disorder.

At the Close, 6/21/17:
Dow: 21,410.03, -57.11 (-0.27%)
NASDAQ: 6,233.95, +45.92 (0.74%)
S&P 500: 2,435.61, -1.42 (-0.06%)
NYSE Composite: 11,696.28, -42.67 (-0.36%)

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Stocks May Be Near Peak; Fed Plans Going Up in Flames

It's been a troublesome two weeks for stock jockeys. Even as the Dow and S&P have rocketed to new highs, the shakeout on the NASDAQ last Friday may have been a harbinger of things to come and the die came up snake-eyes on Tuesday as all of the major indices took losses which accelerated into the closing bell.

On the surface, everything seems to be going according to plan. The Fed continues to lie to themselves - and everybody else - that the solvency trap of the GFC of 2007-09 has been permanently put in the rear view mirror and the future offers nothing less than roses and unicorns, otherwise termed "normalcy." Real people know better. While the official unemployment figures approach fantasy levels of sub-four percent, those in and out of the workforce haven't had sustained economic prosperity since prior to 2000. Wages have been absolutely stagnant for the better part of 20 years, not only in the United States, but in established economies around the world.

Since debt had reached unsustainable (read: unpayable) levels during the housing crisis period, all the central bank could do was double down with easy money to banks and connected investors and financiers via QE and ZIRP while the bulk of the population got dosed with 22% interest rates on credit cards, ballooning college tuition costs and, the ultimate teaser, cheap credit on new car loans and leases.

Well, the carousel is slowing to a stop as the world demographic ages not-so-gracefully into their 50s, 60s and 70s, an age at which one does less of everything, including driving, eating, buying, spending, racking up credit card debt and buying bigger houses. This simple fact is probably not lost on the central bankers, but, being mired into last-century Keynesian economic theories and practices, there's little they could do except what they did last week, a desperate attempt to buy more time via higher federal funds rates, a plan that allows a small comfort zone to ease into the next recession, which seems to be gathering momentum daily.

Stocks have never told the entire story of a nation's economy and they won't this time either. While the power elite jiggle their algos to capture the little gains that remain, real estate prices have peaked and are heading lower in many locales, gold, silver, and especially, oil are displaying tendencies one would normally associate with a deflationary economy, which, actually is what has been the experience for much of the past eight years.

Tech stocks have outperformed and rightfully so, but what tech has proven to do time and again is lower costs and prices via efficiencies of scale and market. This time is no different, the recent acquisition of Whole Foods by internet giant, Amazon, offers yet another chilling reminder that the past is pretense and the future will be won by the fastest and most agile companies, individuals and, yes, governments.

The Federal reserve and their crony central bankers across the globe have painted themselves - and everyone else - into a no-win situation, thinking that inflation equals salvation, when, in fact, it is nothing more than gloss. Making matters even more untenable is the idea that the Fed has been trying to induce inflation for the past eight years, without success. They've pumped trillions into the global economy with nil effect because the two things most important to free, functioning markets - price discovery and an honest discounting mechanism - have been missing due to their constant fiddling and control fraud.

Thus, the world approaches another financial Waterloo, more serious than the last, as global credit creation has stalled with growth being nothing more today than amalgamated numbers which are fictitious in the main. The overhang of government debt, pension shortfalls and corporate insouciance have created the perfect scenario for calamity.

If the Fed, ECB, BOJ and other central banks are in search of drama, this summer is likely to be a grand provider of entertainment for all. With stocks overvalued close to the point of absurdity, the assets to be hoarded - if one is in a position to exit the Wall Street casino - are real estate, currencies, gold, silver, tools and machinery.

Since June 9, the NASDAQ has closed negatively six of eight sessions. The Fed finalized their rate hike on the 14th after weeks, if not months, of telegraphing their move. The weakness in the NASDAQ is not a coincidence, but rather, a distinct message from the market.

At The Close, 6/19/17:
Dow: 21,467.14, -61.85 (-0.29%)
NASDAQ: 6,188.03, -50.98 (-0.82%)
S&P 500 2,437.03, -16.43 (-0.67%)
NYSE Composite: 11,738.95, -94.39 (-0.80%)

Dow Sets New Record; NASDAQ Rebounds

Well, it's Monday, so stocks have to go up. It's some kind of rule.

There's no need for any comment on this. It's just part of the current theme.

At the Close, 6/19/17:
Dow: 21,528.99, +144.71 (0.68%)
NASDAQ 6,239.01, +87.25 (1.42%)
S&P 500: 2,453.46, +20.31 (0.83%)
NYSE Composite: 11,833.34, +61.32 (0.52%)