Sunday, August 31, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: Stocks Take A U-Turn as Gold, Silver Explode Higher; Trump Tariffs Under Pressure; Bond Spreads Widen; Happy Labor Day!

Editor's Note: Due to time global developments, time constraints, and physical obligations (holiday weekend happenings) this edition of the WEEKEND WRAP strayed somewhat from the usual format. Follow developments beginning Tuesday (9/2) when markets re-open. - FR

The last week of August, in advance of the U.S. Labor Day three-day weekend holiday, was consequential in a number of areas, but mainly in international finance and precious metals.

This post, while striving to be as circumspect as possible, cannot possibly cover all of the issues adequately. Readers are advised to follow the links provided.

There were three big developments this week concerning precious metals:
1. Gold closed above $3,500 on the COMEX
2. Silver closed above $40 on the COMEX
3. Gold has surpassed U.S.$ in central bank balance sheets globally.

The global importance of that third item cannot be understated. In essence, the U.S. dollar is no longer the world's reserve currency. It has been replaced by GOLD.

De-dollarization by a wide swath of mostly BRICS-aligned nations buying gold, combined with the rising price of gold and the declining value of U.S. treasuries pushed the value of central bank holdings of gold past those of U.S. cash and U.S. debt obligations held mainly in Treasury bills, notes, and bonds.

It bears repeating: the US$ is no longer the world's reserve currency. Gold is, and that trend is still in an early stage of development. This was first reported by Otavio (Tavi) Costa on August 29, via X, citing Bloomberg as a source, so this is surely not alt-media hyperbole.

The ramifications of this development are monumental, epochal and ongoing. Anybody who has not seen this development coming over the past few years and made no adjustments to portfolio allocations has nobody to blame but themselves, financial advisors be damned. On that note, there is a growing trend among wealth managers (even big ones like JP Morgan Chase) to advise clients to allocate five or more percent of their portfolios to gold, which, in the infinite wisdom of such leeches on the financial system, would be to derivatives, such as the GLD ETF or other such "paper" vehicles.

While the paper chase may be fine for high net worth individuals, it's not the real thing, as in bars or coins, stored in a vault, preferably in one's own possession or with reliable access to. As events unfold, rich folks can thank their otherwise "brilliant" advisors for missing out on gold more than doubling in price over the past three years. Increased buying at this juncture is exactly what gold needs to become a complete precious metals mania, similar to the late 1970s.

Moving on...

A federal appeals court ruled Friday that President Donald Trump had no legal right to impose sweeping tariffs on almost every country on earth but left them in place until October 14, in anticipation of what will likely be an expedited Supreme Court hearing on the matter.

With the October 14 date in mind, there are other key events between now and then, including the September 16-17 FOMC meeting, at which the committee members are expected to cut the federal funds rate from its current 4.25-4.50% level by 25 or 50 basis points. As events unfold, odds may lean for the 50 basis point cut, especially if weakness in tech stocks that emerged this past week continues.

Prior to the Fed meeting is Friday's August Non-farm Payroll release from the BLS, which may put U.S. labor conditions in a more transparent light. Expectations for a light reading of less than 100,000 new jobs and possibly a negative number could add fuel to the rate-cut fire.

The 30th of September marks the end of the 2025 fiscal year and one of the largest deficits in the history of the federal government, currently standing at 1.63 trillion through the end of July, according to the U.S. Treasury.

The U.S. congress comes back to the nation's capital after its usual August recess, a development that is certain to be significant, given the weight of issues now before Washington lawmakers. From tariffs to Ukraine, the Middle East, immigration and crime issues, the blathering from the corruption center of the Western world is certain to be non-stop and full of finger-pointing, posturing, and laced with invectives. As another unacceptable deficit is thrust upon American taxpayers, the cretins who assume to be in control will do little to remedy any of the conditions that face the country.

The following was derived and parsed from an AI query, so, please, do your own due diligence.

U.S. tariff policy, if they stand after October 14, will have profound effects on U.S. exports. A bipolar economic world is evolving in its face.

The most consequential effect of the tariffs is accelerated consolidation of the BRICS+ bloc. By collectively being targeted by U.S. trade policy, these nations are incentivized to deepen trade relationships within the bloc, creating a self-reliant economic ecosystem.

Evidence comes in the form of China sourcing soy from Brazil instead of the U.S., BRICS nations redirecting energy exports (oil, LNG, propane) to each other, and developing alternative financial messaging systems to SWIFT.

The world will increasingly split into two competing economic spheres of influence: an eroding U.S.-centric and the BRICS+-centric expansion. This will force nations to choose sides, leading to further supply chain fragmentation and "friend-shoring."

The efficacy of U.S. tariffs and sanctions is another major stumbling block for the West. The tools of economic coercion (tariffs, sanctions) are losing their force because the target countries have created viable alternatives. The U.S. can no longer assume its market is indispensable.

Despite tariffs, the U.S. trade deficit is widening dramatically ($103.6B). This is because the global response is more about diversification than capitulation. Countries like India simply find other partners within the BRICS framework, ultimately reducing demand for U.S. exports, to the detriment of American farmers and energy producers.

Future U.S. administrations will find it increasingly difficult to use trade policy to achieve geopolitical goals. The more these tools are used, the faster the rest of the world builds immunity to them, reducing long-term U.S. leverage.

The volatile "seesaw pattern" of trade data reflects businesses gaming the system around tariff deadlines rather than healthy economic growth, creating artificial booms and busts in specific sectors (e.g., gold, copper, clothing imports surging before tariffs). The record import surge in July was a direct result of companies stockpiling goods before new tariffs hit. This artificially inflated economic numbers, but will likely lead to a sharp drop in subsequent quarters, creating instability.

This volatility makes it difficult for businesses to plan, invest, and hire, ultimately acting as a drag on sustainable economic growth in the U.S. particularly and Europe tangentially. It projects a future of greater economic uncertainty and supply chain inefficiency.

As economic tools become less effective, U.S. power is declining. There is an increased risk of escalation into military brinksmanship or conflict to reassert dominance and divert domestic attention from economic pain. Rather than avoid the devastating effects of war, the U.S. appears to be on a path of advancing belligerence. Inability of the NATO countries to accept reality belies this dynamic. Unable to cripple Russia economically through sanctions and energy wars, the conflict risks escalating to a more dangerous level.

The projection of a future wherein the United States' formerly unilateral economic power is diminishing relative to a more multipolar world is apparent. Tariff and sanctioning tactics and compromised media outlets are creating statistical and economic noise that masks a deeper, more troubling strategic trend: the rapid organization of a rival economic bloc that is learning to operate without reliance on the U.S. market or financial system.

The long-term projection is of a world fracturing into competing blocs, with increasing economic volatility, reduced market access for U.S. exporters, and a higher risk of geopolitical conflict.

Stocks

U.S. stocks began catching down to the rest of the world on Friday, taking an abrupt U-Turn that was mostly reflected in the NASDAQ, but barely caused a scar on the weekly figures. Any sane person would expect that to mark the continuance of the bear market sentiment that Dow Theorists understand to be still in place.

Friday and the weekly drop was led by the Dow Transports, which now can be reliably considered a leading indicator. The often overlooked Dow Jones Transportation Average has been between a bear market (-20%) and a correction (-10%) for most of 2025 and displayed its usual weakness this past week.

Wall Street, considering the cloudy environment in which it operates, will probably take the long holiday weekend to sharpen their salesmanship tactics, trying to convince those already not "all in" that stocks are the best investments ever. This ride is about to get a little bumpier.

The economic calendar will be dominated by employment, with ADP private payrolls out on Wednesday and the BLS Non-farm Payroll for August hitting pre-market on Friday.


Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
07/25/2025 4.37 4.46 4.46 4.42 4.42 4.31 4.09
08/01/2025 4.49 4.46 4.44 4.35 4.30 4.16 3.87
08/08/2025 4.48 4.43 4.39 4.32 4.27 4.15 3.93
08/15/2025 4.48 4.42 4.35 4.30 4.22 4.12 3.93
08/22/2025 4.47 4.38 4.36 4.27 4.21 4.08 3.87
08/29/2025 4.41 4.34 4.30 4.23 4.17 4.01 3.83

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
07/25/2025 3.91 3.86 3.95 4.15 4.40 4.92 4.92
08/01/2025 3.69 3.67 3.77 3.97 4.23 4.79 4.81
08/08/2025 3.76 3.70 3.84 4.03 4.27 4.84 4.85
08/15/2025 3.75 3.73 3.85 4.07 4.33 4.91 4.92
08/22/2025 3.68 3.64 3.76 3.98 4.26 4.84 4.88
08/29/2025 3.59 3.58 3.68 3.92 4.23 4.86 4.92

The yield curve remained partially inverted with the nexus (low point) at 2-and-3-year maturities.

Chairman Powell's Jackson Hole speech had "legs" which spread into treasuries from 30-day bills out to the 10-year note, after which the curve rapidly elevates.

Spreads widened significantly, with 2s-10s reaching +64, an extreme level, the highest since Money Daily began recording. Full spectrum advanced back to prior levels, at +51, as yields at the short end fell and those at the long end rose.

Spreads:

2s-10s
9/15/2023: -69
9/22/2023: -66
9/29/2023: -44
10/06/2023: -30
10/13/2023: -41
10/20/2023: -14
10/27/2023: -15
11/03/2023: -26
11/10/2023: -43
11/17/2023: -44
11/24/2023: -45
12/01/2023: -34
12/08/2023: -48
12/15/2023: -53
12/22/2023: -41
12/29/2023: -35
1/5/2024: -35
1/12/2024: -18
1/19/2024: -24
1/26/2024: -19
2/2/2024: -33
2/9: -31
2/16: -34
2/23: -41
3/1: -35
3/8: -39
3/15: -41
3/22: -37
3/28: -39
4/5: -34
4/12: -38
4/19: -35
4/26: -29
5/3: -31
5/10: -37
5/17: -39
5/24: -47
5/31: -38
6/7: -44
6/14: -47
6/21: -45
6/28: -35
7/5: -32
7/12: -27
7/19: -24
7/26: -16
8/2: -08
8/9: -11
8/16: -17
8/23: -09
8/30: 00
9/6: +06
9/13: +09
9/20: +18
9/27: +20
10/4: +5
10/11: +13
10/18: +13
10/25: +14
11/1: +16
11/8: +5
11/15: +12
11/22: +4
11/29: +5
12/6: +5
12/13: +15
12/20: +22
12/27: +31
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33
4/11: +52
4/17: +53
4/25: +55
5/2: +50
5/9: +49
5/16: +45
5/23: +51
5/30: +52
6/6: +48
6/13: +45
6/20: +48
6/27: +56
7/3: +47
7/11: +53
7/18: +56
7/25: +49
8/1: +54
8/8: +51
8/15: +58
8/22: +58
8/29: +64

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
9/15/2023: -109
9/22/2023: -99
9/29/2023: -82
10/06/2023: -64
10/13/2023: -82
10/20/2023: -47
10/27/2023: -54
11/03/2023: -76
11/10/2023: -80
11/17/2023: -93
11/24/2023: -95
12/01/2023: -105
12/08/2023: -123
12/15/2023: -154
12/22/2023: -149
12/29/2023: -157
1/5/2024: -133
1/12/2024: -135
1/19/2024: -118
1/26/2024: -116
2/2/2024: -127
2/9: -117
2/16: -103
2/23: -112
3/1: -121
3/8: -125
3/15: -109
3/22: -112
3/28: -115
4/5: -93
4/12: -87
4/19: -77
4/26: -70
5/3: -85
5/10: -87
5/17: -94
5/24: -99
5/31: -83
6/7: -92
6/14: -113
6/21: -103
6/28: -96
7/5: -101
7/12: -108
7/19: -103
7/26: -104
8/2: -143
8/9: -131
8/16: -138
8/23: -141
8/30: -121
9/6: -125
9/13: -117
9/20: -80
9/27: -80
10/4: -75
10/11: -58
10/18: -54
10/25: -38
11/1: -18
11/8: -23
11/15: -10
11/22: -12
11/29: -40
12/6: -23
12/13: +18
12/20: +29
12/27: +38
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5
4/11: +38
4/17: +44
4/25: +40
5/2: +41
5/9: +46
5/16: +52
5/23: +68
5/30: +59
6/6: +69
6/13: +67
6/20: +69
6/27: +66
7/3: +51
7/11: +59
7/18: +65
7/25: +55
8/1: +32
8/8: +37
8/15: +44
8/22: +41
8/29: +51


Oil/Gas

WTI crude oil closed out the week at $64.01, a dollar below the high of $65.04 on Monday, but nearly unchanged from the prior week's close at $63.77. Fundamentals do not support price increases almost anywhere in the world.

Crude has hovered between correction and bear market since the January 15 peak of $78.71. Because oil is not subject to tariffs and most people, after basic necessities like rent, mortgage payments, and food, cannot afford excessive fuel purchases (demand destruction), a supply glut is possibly building. After Labor Day, leisure driving tails off significantly, so demand will slow, reducing the need for crude. It's the one bright spot in an overall dismal situation, wherein the government receives all the benefits (money) from the tariffs and consumers pay via increased prices. The tariffs will ultimately be seen as bad public policy resulting in global chaos or depression.

Gas prices have leveled off over the past month and remain near the low end, but were up about four cents, to $3.18 on Sunday, as Gasbuddy.com reports. Leave it to the price-gouging energy giants to rip prices higher even with plenty of cheaper fuel already in gas station tanks. The disturbing hubris of the elites never ends.

State-by-state numbers show California remaining at the top, up six cents, at $4.59 per gallon. The lowest prices remain in the Southeast, with Mississippi the cheapest, at $2.71.

The Northeast and Midwest, out to Michigan and Illinois, are all $3.00-plus.

Sub-$3.00 gas can be found in 20 states, the same as last week, exclusively concentrated in the South and Midwest, most marginally higher.


Bitcoin

This week: $108,241.07
Last week: $114,536.60
2 weeks ago: $118,309.30
6 months ago: $86,273.05
One year ago: $59,123.20
Five years ago: $10,166.73

Bitcoin took a beating this week and has not performed nearly as well as precious metals over the past month, highlighting the difference between "digital gold" and the real thing.

1 month performance (July 30 - August 29, 2025)
Gold: $3,516.10, +$192.10 (+5.78%)
Silver: $40.75, +$2.46 (+6.42%)
Bitcoin: 107,906.70, -10,269.50 (-8.69%)


Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 86.28; last week: 86.75

Per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 8/1: $3,416.00
Gold price 8/8: $3,458.20
Gold price 8/15: $3,381.70
Gold price 8/22: $3,417.20
Gold price 8/29: $3,516.10

Silver price 8/1: $37.10
Silver price 8/8: $38.51
Silver price 8/15: $38.02
Silver price 8/22: $39.39
Silver price 8/29: $40.75

It's possible that the gains in gold and silver on Friday, adding to the already rapidly-advancing price structure, may be the beginning of a mania for precious metals. Be on the lookout (BOLO) for print, TV, radio, and internet ads hawking gold or willing to buy gold, as those are adequate signals that the general public has been awakened.

There's little doubt that the usual suspects will try to suppress prices in coming days and weeks, but it appears that their efforts are increasingly less effective and soon to fail. The wheels of the Western economic wagon have been falling off since 2008 and accelerated with the pandemic. We are witnessing wholesale dollar destruction on a grand, global scale. Now the wagon itself is beginning to splinter, eventually ending up in pieces on the dirt road of economic, political, and social calamity.

Stack harder.

Sunday's survey on eBay displayed higher prices for gold in particular. It appeared that silver had already peaked last week, but that now appears to have been only a disguise for the coming hyperbolic move to record levels. The focus is clearly on gold, but silver's move on Friday was dramatic and a welcome development.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (numismatics excluded, free shipping):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 39.00 52.00 45.67 45.00
1 oz silver bar: 45.00 54.47 48.88 47.98
1 oz gold coin: 3,569.40 3,724.96 3,629.75 3,607.36
1 oz gold bar: 3,485.00 3,670.45 3,608.47 3,613.30

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) rose modestly for the week, albeit to a new record high since Money Daily began recording in 2021, of $46.88, a gain of $0.18 from the August 24 price of $46.70 per troy ounce.


WEEKEND WRAP

It's kind of disturbing that Americans celebrate "Labor Day" just as congress returns from a month-long holiday. In a just and righteous world, American workers and small business employers would take all of September off and refuse to pay taxes. Sadly, American exceptionalism has been supplanted by elitism, foisted upon the public by inflation and propaganda.

We must do better.

At the Close, Friday, August 29, 2025:
Dow: 45,544.88, -92.02 (-0.20%)
NASDAQ: 21,455.55, -249.61 (-1.15%)
S&P 500: 6,460.26, -41.60 (-0.64%)
NYSE Composite: 21,151.46, -13.58 (-0.06%)

For the Week:
Dow: -86.86 (-0.19%)
NASDAQ: -40.99 (-0.19%)
S&P 500: -6.65 (-0.10%)
NYSE Composite: +1.35 (+0.01%)
Dow Transports: -197.16 (-1.22)



Disclaimer: Information disseminated on this site should not be construed as investment advice. Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily and it's owners, affiliates and/or employees are not investment advisors and do not offer specific investment advice. All investments have risk. You should consult a professional investment advisor or stock broker or use your individual judgement when making investment decisions. By viewing this site, you hold harmless Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily, its owners, affiliates and employees against any and all liability. Copyright 2025, Downtown Magazine Inc., all rights reserved.

Friday, August 29, 2025

Trump Betrays Base, Sending More Arms to Ukraine, Closes De Minimus Exemption, Urges Fed to Cut Rates, as PCE Rises

Just like boiling frogs or lobsters, the heat is rising gradually on American consumers, otherwise known as citizens, muppets, or chattel.

Trump’s overt betrayal of his base is astounding. Campaigning on ending the Ukraine conflict in one day and promising lower prices for Americans, Trump has done little if anything to relieve his countrymen of a rising cost of living as living standards continue to deteriorate and the Ukraine war intensifies, the recent summit in Alaska with Russia and meeting with European allies afterward, all in the name of peace, provided cover for escalating the conflict.

Most people identified as middle or lower classes in the United States can barely get through a week without reaching for a credit card to pay everyday expenses. Food prices have remained high and continue to increase. Rents are outrageous and buying a home is almost completely unattainable for anybody making less than $100,000 a year.

Late Thursday, President Trump approved an $825 million arms sale to Ukraine that will include extended-range missiles and related equipment. Trump's timing on this latest betrayal could not have been better, right before a three-day weekend celebrating slavery labor.

The Trump administration has also close the de minimus exemption on shipments coming into the United States. For years, packages coming into the United States valued at under $800 were exempt from tariffs. That will no longer be the case. The new policy places tariffs on all shipments into the U.S. unless they are under $100 and identified as "gifts." Good luck with that.

Inbound postal supply lines are beginning to experience bottlenecks because of the tariff collection issues, including Asia's Korea Post and SingPost, halting standard parcel services. Japan also warned of delays. In Europe, Norway, Finland, Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, and the UK are suspending or limiting services. Deutsche Post/DHL halted all business parcels to the U.S. via postal networks. Shipments through Australia to the U.S. have been paused as well. FedEx and UPS are fighting a logistical nightmare from the new tariff fees, as their businesses specialize on small packages.

In effect, U.S. consumers will henceforth pay higher prices for imported food and goods because of the tariffs and added shipping and compliance costs. Companies that specialize in small packages, like DHL, have already halted shipments to the United States

Consumers and small businesses will suffer and trade will decline. American consumers of some products need not worry about higher prices because there won't be any available on the empty shelves of the few retailers remaining open.

At the same time the federal government will collect more taxes and congress will waste it on bailouts, the MIC, militarized policing, more lawfare, and tax breaks for the already wealthy campaign contributors.

The BEA announced the latest statistical lie Friday morning, the Personal Consumption Index, the Federal Reserve's favored inflation gauge (because it is the least accurate).

From the same month one year ago, the PCE price index for July increased 2.6 percent. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 2.9 percent from one year ago.

For the month of July, Real PCE, +0.3; PCE price index, +0.2; PCE price index, excluding food and energy, +0.3. Annualized, the so-called "Super Core" PCE (Services less Shelter) rose to 3.32%. Apparently, neither President Trump nor Fed Chairman Jerome Powell pay much attention to these numbers, as Trump has urged - and Powell now appears willing to comply - the Fed to lower interest rates.

Politicians and bankers come from the same cloth. They all lie, all the time.



Thursday, August 28, 2025

Stocks Continue to March Higher; Nvidia Somewhat Disappoints; Dollar General, Ollie's Top Retail 2Q Earnings; Gold, Silver Bid

U.S. stocks continued their relentless rally on Wednesday, as bourses in other countries struggled for gains. India's SENSEX has been particularly hard hit, down three of the past four sessions, while European stocks have chopped along to lower levels.

With Nvidia (NVDA) reporting generally positive results after the close Wednesday, invstors seemed concerned about the prospects for continued growth from the world's leading AI chip maker, the stock trending about two percent lower in the aftermarket and prior to Thursday's opening bell.

At the same time, gold and silver prices have spiked higher, with gold heading for record prices on the futures market, hitting $3,466 around 8:30 am ET. Silver was bid very strongly, with $39.72 the most recent price.

A number of important retailers reported Thursday morning.

Briefly, Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) beat expectations and issued positive guidance, but the stock is marginally lower over concerns about its recent acquisition of Foot Locker.

Best Buy (BBY) reported modest sales recovery fr the most recnt quarter, but issued a warning of sorts, expressing a view that tariffs are complicating its turnaround efforts. Shares are down less than two percent in the pre-market.

Dollar General (DG), one of the nation's largest discount chains, reported strong earnings and raised fiscal year guidance, saying that shoppers are seeking bargains on household items, which is making their stores a destination for struggling consumers, though sales have been consistent. The stock is trading up about five percent prior to the open.

Surplus retailer Ollie's (OLLI) reported strong results for the second quarter, with revenue at $679.6 million versus analyst estimates of $661.9 million (17.5% year-on-year growth, 2.7% beat), and adjusted EPS of $0.99 against analyst estimates of $0.93, a 6.8% beat. Shares of the company are soaring pre-market, up as much as six percent.

At 8:30 am ET, the BEA issued the second estimate of second quarter real GDP, revising the initial estimate 0.3% higher, to 3.3% for the quarter.

Weekly unemployment claims were moderate, at 229,000 intial claims, down 5,000 from last week. Continuing claims remain stubbornly high, with nearly two million seeking work.

That news moved the neddle slightly, but U.S. stock futures fluctuated around unchanged. The Dow was the most prominent, up around 50 points less than an hour before the bell.

Strong showings by a handful of companies, consumer spending relatively stable, a solid employment market and GDP at 3.3% doesn't exactly scream "rate cut," though that continues to be the preferred path for the Fed following last week's Jackson Hole speech by Chairman Jerome Powell.

With the S&P making another record high close on Wednesday, the Shiller PE (CAPE) hit 39.04 and appears to be heading toward the record level of 44.19, made in December, 1999, at the peak of the dotcom boom.

This time the techology pushing stocks is AI. The biggest names in tech - Google, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Meta Platforms - have invested heavily in data farms and faster chips required to power the Large Language Models (LLMs) on which AI relies. There is some concern that the hundreds of billions spent on building out AI might be a bridge too far, as there have only been spotty financial results stemming from the boom, though it is still early in the game.

So far, this week has been positive for stocks, despite a handful of issues overhanging the markets, but, heading toward the end of the month and a three-day weekend, U.S. stocks appear to be in good shape.

At the Close, Wednesday, August 27, 2025:
Dow: 45,565.23, +147.16 (+0.32%)
NASDAQ: 21,590.14, +45.87 (+0.21%)
S&P 500: 6,481.40, +15.46 (+0.24%)
NYSE Composite: 21,132.43, +49.88 (+0.24%)



Wednesday, August 27, 2025

U.S. Stocks Continue to Defy Gravity, Even as Markets and Economies Elsewhere are Crashing; Trump and Federal Reserve at Odds

Attempting to figure out U.S. equity markets has become an exercise in futility.

Amid geo-political upheaval from heavily-indebted countries in Europe - France, Germany, and England in particular - tariff and inflation concerns in the U.S., ongoing conflicts in which the United States is deeply intertwined, and President Trump's unpredictable actions domestically, stocks have been oddly complacent and accommodating to shareholders, with all of the major indices at or near all-time highs.

Tuesday's trading was a case-in-point. While stocks were down everywhere from Asia to Europe, U.S. markets displayed remarkable resilience as if it was on its own trajectory and conditions in the rest of the world didn't matter, when, naturally, they do. Wall Street and the money fueling the rallies seems to have little in the way of conscience or risk assessment.

On Tuesday, in a rare move, Donald Trump fired Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve board of governors. The markets didn't even blink. Perhaps the assumption is that Trump's firing was more misdirection or revenge and that the Supreme Court will nullify the president's attempt to stack the board with appointees more favorably aligned with his "lower rates, now" mantra.

But, what if the court decides that the firing is within Trump's constitutional authority? It makes the Fed vulnerable to outside influence by setting a precedent that the current president can use to his political and economic advantage, along with future presidents who may use the firing mechanism as a tool of fiscal policy.

The Fed itself is not beloved by most people, especially consumers and anybody who has a credit card or mortgage. The Federal Reserve consistently acts in its own interests, not in those of the American public. If they did, the U.S. dollar would not have been ravaged by inflation over the many decades the Fed had control of the currency in the U.S. and the greenback was the reserve currency of the world.

Compared to its value at the Fed's birth in 1913, the dollar has lost nearly all of its value, debased by a minimum of 97% and currently on a trajectory to eliminate the last three percent of value within a very short time.

Still, the Fed stands between the government and constitution. Federal Reserve Notes, which Americans and most of the world regard as "money" are only IOUs, debt instruments created either out of thin air or by bank loans. While they continue to be a safe medium of exchange, they are by no means a store of value. They lose value consistently over long periods of time.

Beyond the relative security of everybody using the same currency as issued, the Fed also acts as a lender of last resort, especially during crises, as has been obviated as recently as 2008, when they bailed out most of the world's leading banking institutions. Should U.S. presidents gain control of the institution's policy mechanics, the next crisis could be the Fed's last, and maybe that's a good thing.

Heading into Wednesday's "Nvidia day" (the company reports after the close), futures have essentially flat-lined, which leads to no consensus on direction. How long stocks can remain bubbly is something nobody seems able to reasonably predict, only that they'll fly high until the next crisis hits, although one might consider the imminent economic collapse of both England and France, waving white and red flags, to indicate the next crisis is already well underway.

At the Close, Tuesday, August 26, 2025:
Dow: 45,418.07, +135.60 (+0.30%)
NASDAQ: 21,544.27, +94.98 (+0.44%)
S&P 500: 6,465.94, +26.62 (+0.41%)
NYSE Composite: 21,082.56, +81.99 (+0.39%)



Tuesday, August 26, 2025

International Sea of Red Greets U.S. Stocks as Tariffs, Inflation, Debt Begin to Bite at Fiat Regimes Globally; Bitcoin Hammered

If you like your deli meats to be of the fake variety, i.e., phoney baloney then the U.S. stock market is where you want to be.

On the heels of the big upside rally on Friday, sparked by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's acquiescence to rate cut pressure, stocks took an alternate route to reality on Monday, shedding more than 300 points on the Dow, the S&P slip-sliding away, and the NASDAQ, which notably did not mark a new record high on Friday, pumping and dumping all in one strange session. Down more than 90 points just after the open, the index was up 75 by midday, only to lose is all and finish 47 points in the red.

Stock trades on the NAZ were probably made with assistance from AI, which has shown itself to be vastly overrated and magnificently overpriced in terms of what big tech firms have been spending on implementing newer, better, faster iteration of chatboxes. The Large Language Models (LLMs) that the likes of Google, Microsoft, Apple, X.com, and others have been developing have come with enormous up-front costs in material, learning, coding, and implementation, and the ongoing costs of maintaining the hardware for these massive server farms figure to be extreme, to the point of negative marks on company balance sheets.

While getting answers quicker than a Big Mac at a drive-through may be a marvel of technology, in basis terms, it costs a ton of money to find out who had the highest batting average in the National League in 2004 or what's the best way to make pizza at home. It used to be a matter of just cruising the internet until one found a site with the information, but, in their infinite knowledge and commitment to not being evil (looking at Google here), big tech decided to glom up all the traffic on the internet and keep it on Google or Bing or wherever the AI beast has been positioned, taking the best from the websites that produced the information in the first place and paying them nothing for it.

Webmasters and site owners around the world are very upset at this development, especially those which relied on traffic from the search engines for revenue, via ad programs such as Google AdSense, which the AI option has canabalized. Thus, Google gets more traffic and hits on their self-generative ads, websites get nothing for providing the information, and, ultimately Google just plain eats itself. So far, AI has done little other than stifle innovation on the internet and made more than a few humans a little bit dumber, as if that was a prerequisite goal of AI, which, it must be constantly remembered, stands for Artificial Intelligence.

Yes, there have been real profits and stock price jumps, but the piper is playing and he likes to get paid. It's beginning to look like the only real thing about AI was the hype, as in, it was really, really hyped to the max!

With stocks in the tech space rivaling valuations from the dotcom era, there's a high degree of risk in owning these names presently. Sure, in 1999-2000 the internet was the thing and all companies needed to do to launch an IPO was attach .com to their name and come up with some funny ad campaigns and $100-500 million would come into their coffers. The AI craze is a little bit different, because the internet is still there, it's more robust, and AI is just another app, or SaaS (Software as a Service) to be monetized by the tech titans.

Could be an "oopsie!" moment waiting to happen.

It's worth pointing out that the Dow Industrials made an all-time closing high on Friday, but the Transportation Average, which, according to Dow Theory, needs to confirm, is nowhere near record levels. For purists, the primary trend remains bearish.

While Monday's trading indicates that Friday's rally was built entirely on hype and hope, Tuesday's set-up is not encouraging for the bull camp. President Trump intensified efforts to oust Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, fanning the flames of the ongoing rift between the Fed and the White House. Inflation concerns are sending bond yields higher as tariff issues intensify.

The Commerce Department reported orders for durable goods fell 2.8% after declining 9.4% in June. Around the world, stock indices are lower everywhere from Tokyo to New Delhi to Berlin and London. France is being ravaged, with the CAC-40 off more than 1.25%.

Stock futures in the U.S. are dropping a half hour before the open.

Gold and silver are bid, WTI crude oil is lower. Bitcoin continues to be sold off, dropping below $109,000 earlier Tuesday morning.

From the looks of things, if Friday's rally was a last hurrah for stocks in a buy the rumor, sell the news kind of way, the remainder of this week could become very interesting.

At the Close, Monday, August 25, 2025
Dow: 45,282.47, -349.27 (-0.77%)
NASDAQ: 21,449.29, -47.24 (-0.22%)
S&P 500: 6,439.32, -27.59 (-0.43%)
NYSE Composite: 21,000.56, -149.55 (-0.71%)