Crude Oil 38.24 -0.26% Gold 1,234.30 -0.11% EUR/USD 1.1382 0.00% 10-Yr Bond 1.79 -2.40% Corn 351.50 0.00% Copper 2.18 +0.05% Silver 15.45 -0.06% Natural Gas 1.97 +0.46% Russell 2000 1,114.03 +0.32% VIX 13.95 +2.88% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4370 +0.02% USD/JPY 112.4150 -0.12%
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Millenials May Be The Last Free Americans
On this day, a conversation was had with a couple of millennials, roughly in their mid-20s, working (or acting like they were working) in a smoke shop.
The conversation - following them chiding a senior citizen for talking about rolling your own and growing your own tobacco while he was buying rolling papers - was inferior, not even worth mentioning, which is why it is being mentioned.
At issue is the future, and the current youth... or, at least a sizable portion of them, want to vote for Bernie Sanders, who promises a $15/hour minimum wage, free college for everybody, and a host of other liberal-ideological non sequiturs that would essentially turn a once-prosperous free-market country (USA) into another stinking hell-hole like much of Europe, or the Middle East, or perhaps, Japan.
The problem lies not with the millennials. They don't know any better. Most of them haven't been around for more than 25 years, meaning that scads of them were in high school during 9-11, and those images are burnt into their psyches, as too the neo-liberal education they've been given, in which they know little about history, economics, language, culture or just about anything that would promote a thriving, free nation.
No, to blame are largely baby boomers, who foisted upon their youth such undistinguished values as participation trophies, non-judgemental attitudes, video games, addiction to cell phones, social media and other claptrap that promotes laziness, sloth, stupidity, class hatred, and decline.
Between the educational system run from afar in Washington, D.C., the Federal Reserve (also a D.C. inhabitant), and a mainstream media intent on propaganda du jour rather than objective journalism, the millennials may just be the last generation of Americans who can claim any level of freedom.
Americans are being taxed, silenced, tabooed, and numbed into a state of slavish devotion to media and government.
As a nation, America is pretty much doomed unless radical changes in the culture are made, and soon. Traditional values would be a welcome relief, but, whenever they are proposed, millennials scoff and pay, and continue down the path to self-destruction.
Thank you, Janet:
S&P 500: 2,068.46, +13.45 (0.65%)
Dow: 17,748.61, +115.50 (0.66%)
NASDAQ: 4,881.76, +35.14 (0.73%)
Crude Oil 38.38 +0.26% Gold 1,229.00 -0.69% EUR/USD 1.1335 +0.36% 10-Yr Bond 1.83 +0.88% Corn 369.25 -1.01% Copper 2.19 -1.02% Silver 15.25 +0.11% Natural Gas 1.99 +0.66% Russell 2000 1,113.52 +0.40% VIX 13.40 -3.04% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4378 -0.06% USD/JPY 112.4500 -0.22%
The conversation - following them chiding a senior citizen for talking about rolling your own and growing your own tobacco while he was buying rolling papers - was inferior, not even worth mentioning, which is why it is being mentioned.
At issue is the future, and the current youth... or, at least a sizable portion of them, want to vote for Bernie Sanders, who promises a $15/hour minimum wage, free college for everybody, and a host of other liberal-ideological non sequiturs that would essentially turn a once-prosperous free-market country (USA) into another stinking hell-hole like much of Europe, or the Middle East, or perhaps, Japan.
The problem lies not with the millennials. They don't know any better. Most of them haven't been around for more than 25 years, meaning that scads of them were in high school during 9-11, and those images are burnt into their psyches, as too the neo-liberal education they've been given, in which they know little about history, economics, language, culture or just about anything that would promote a thriving, free nation.
No, to blame are largely baby boomers, who foisted upon their youth such undistinguished values as participation trophies, non-judgemental attitudes, video games, addiction to cell phones, social media and other claptrap that promotes laziness, sloth, stupidity, class hatred, and decline.
Between the educational system run from afar in Washington, D.C., the Federal Reserve (also a D.C. inhabitant), and a mainstream media intent on propaganda du jour rather than objective journalism, the millennials may just be the last generation of Americans who can claim any level of freedom.
Americans are being taxed, silenced, tabooed, and numbed into a state of slavish devotion to media and government.
As a nation, America is pretty much doomed unless radical changes in the culture are made, and soon. Traditional values would be a welcome relief, but, whenever they are proposed, millennials scoff and pay, and continue down the path to self-destruction.
Thank you, Janet:
S&P 500: 2,068.46, +13.45 (0.65%)
Dow: 17,748.61, +115.50 (0.66%)
NASDAQ: 4,881.76, +35.14 (0.73%)
Crude Oil 38.38 +0.26% Gold 1,229.00 -0.69% EUR/USD 1.1335 +0.36% 10-Yr Bond 1.83 +0.88% Corn 369.25 -1.01% Copper 2.19 -1.02% Silver 15.25 +0.11% Natural Gas 1.99 +0.66% Russell 2000 1,113.52 +0.40% VIX 13.40 -3.04% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4378 -0.06% USD/JPY 112.4500 -0.22%
Labels:
America,
education,
Europe,
Fed,
Middle East,
millennials,
suck,
USA
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Yellen Spikes The Punch Bowl With Dovish Comments
In a midday speech before the Economic Club of New York, Janet Yellen's comments included comments concerning weak growth abroad, low oil prices and uncertainty over China, saying that the Federal Reserve would proceed "cautiously" on further rate hikes this year.
At their March meet two weeks ago, the FOMC of the Fed lowered the number of expected rate hikes from four to two for 2016, and Yellen's speech today was the first public commentary form the Fed Chair since that time.
Other members had voiced opinions which could be considered mildly hawkish, but Yellen was decidedly dovish in today's prepared remarks.
Obviously, Wall Street was rather pleased with the Fed Chair's stock market elixir, sending the S&P 500 to its highest level of 2016. Stocks ended a five-week streak of positive gains with a lower close last week, but Yellen and her friends at the Fed apparently didn't want the market to turn down again.
With the kind of policy the Fed has been brandishing for the past seven years, stocks should be headed back toward all-time highs in due time, likely within the next few months. With the Dow running up a spectacular 2000 points in the last six-plus weeks, the DJIA stands just more than 700 points from the record set last year (May: 18,351.36).
The S&P needs to gain another 80 points to surpass the all-time high of last May (2134.72).
Party on, Janet!
S&P 500: 2,055.01, +17.96 (0.88%)
Dow: 17,633.11, +97.72 (0.56%)
NASDAQ: 4,846.62, +79.84 (1.67%)
Crude Oil 38.49 -2.28% Gold 1,242.50 +1.84% EUR/USD 1.1293 +0.87% 10-Yr Bond 1.81 -2.99% Corn 372.25 +0.47% Copper 2.21 -1.49% Silver 15.36 +1.12% Natural Gas 1.98 +2.38% Russell 2000 1,109.08 +2.67% VIX 13.82 -9.32% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4387 +0.92% USD/JPY 112.6685 -0.69%
At their March meet two weeks ago, the FOMC of the Fed lowered the number of expected rate hikes from four to two for 2016, and Yellen's speech today was the first public commentary form the Fed Chair since that time.
Other members had voiced opinions which could be considered mildly hawkish, but Yellen was decidedly dovish in today's prepared remarks.
Obviously, Wall Street was rather pleased with the Fed Chair's stock market elixir, sending the S&P 500 to its highest level of 2016. Stocks ended a five-week streak of positive gains with a lower close last week, but Yellen and her friends at the Fed apparently didn't want the market to turn down again.
With the kind of policy the Fed has been brandishing for the past seven years, stocks should be headed back toward all-time highs in due time, likely within the next few months. With the Dow running up a spectacular 2000 points in the last six-plus weeks, the DJIA stands just more than 700 points from the record set last year (May: 18,351.36).
The S&P needs to gain another 80 points to surpass the all-time high of last May (2134.72).
Party on, Janet!
S&P 500: 2,055.01, +17.96 (0.88%)
Dow: 17,633.11, +97.72 (0.56%)
NASDAQ: 4,846.62, +79.84 (1.67%)
Crude Oil 38.49 -2.28% Gold 1,242.50 +1.84% EUR/USD 1.1293 +0.87% 10-Yr Bond 1.81 -2.99% Corn 372.25 +0.47% Copper 2.21 -1.49% Silver 15.36 +1.12% Natural Gas 1.98 +2.38% Russell 2000 1,109.08 +2.67% VIX 13.82 -9.32% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4387 +0.92% USD/JPY 112.6685 -0.69%
Monday, March 28, 2016
Provable Nixed Markets: VIX or Natural Gas, Take Your Pick
Noting that markets are in a near-trance module of late (thank you, Janet Yellen and central bankers everywhere), it has occurred to financial followers that possibly one could track the big movers of the day in an effort to ferret out any semblance of a pattern in the current conundrum.
With that, taken from the list below are the (un)usual suspects, the venerable VIX, which moved up by 3.39% on the session, and natty natural gas, ahead by 2.71%.
Actually, these moves tells nobody nothing (or, perhaps, everybody everything they need to know), since the VIX, a supposed measure of volatility, moved in such a manner as to suggest, well, volatility, when none existed.
As for natural gas, the price alone dictates large moves in percentage terms. With the price generally below two dollars for the past two years, a twenty-cent move is automatically good for 10%. Thus, today's gain of 2.71% was the result of a price move of roughly five cents. So, just because it is expected to be a little cooler than normal in Nashua, NH, next week, it does not automatically imply that the price of natural gas will be necessarily higher, nor does it mean that the price will stay there for any reasonable expectation of time.
Thus, the discovery du jour isn't so much based on any magic or even logical formula, but simple understanding of markets and central bank control through various proxies: markets are in a semi-permanent state of broken, and there's little any concerted effort by any group of individuals, investors, or fund managers can do about it. A volatility index moves when there is no volatility present, and a five-cent move in the price of natural gas won't set the commodity world afire.
In just a few words, these are not real markets, and you only need to have your eyes open to realize that.
Today's Laughable, Lamentable Louse:
S&P 500: 2,037.05, +1.11 (0.05%)
Dow: 17,535.39, +19.66 (0.11%)
NASDAQ: 4,766.79, -6.72 (0.14%)
Crude Oil 39.39 -0.18% Gold 1,220.10 -0.12% EUR/USD 1.1196 +0.28% 10-Yr Bond 1.87 -1.58% Corn 371.25 +0.34% Copper 2.24 +0.63% Silver 15.20 +0.01% Natural Gas 1.93 +2.71% Russell 2000 1,080.23 +0.06% VIX 15.24 +3.39% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4255 +0.92% USD/JPY 113.3830 +0.08%
With that, taken from the list below are the (un)usual suspects, the venerable VIX, which moved up by 3.39% on the session, and natty natural gas, ahead by 2.71%.
Actually, these moves tells nobody nothing (or, perhaps, everybody everything they need to know), since the VIX, a supposed measure of volatility, moved in such a manner as to suggest, well, volatility, when none existed.
As for natural gas, the price alone dictates large moves in percentage terms. With the price generally below two dollars for the past two years, a twenty-cent move is automatically good for 10%. Thus, today's gain of 2.71% was the result of a price move of roughly five cents. So, just because it is expected to be a little cooler than normal in Nashua, NH, next week, it does not automatically imply that the price of natural gas will be necessarily higher, nor does it mean that the price will stay there for any reasonable expectation of time.
Thus, the discovery du jour isn't so much based on any magic or even logical formula, but simple understanding of markets and central bank control through various proxies: markets are in a semi-permanent state of broken, and there's little any concerted effort by any group of individuals, investors, or fund managers can do about it. A volatility index moves when there is no volatility present, and a five-cent move in the price of natural gas won't set the commodity world afire.
In just a few words, these are not real markets, and you only need to have your eyes open to realize that.
Today's Laughable, Lamentable Louse:
S&P 500: 2,037.05, +1.11 (0.05%)
Dow: 17,535.39, +19.66 (0.11%)
NASDAQ: 4,766.79, -6.72 (0.14%)
Crude Oil 39.39 -0.18% Gold 1,220.10 -0.12% EUR/USD 1.1196 +0.28% 10-Yr Bond 1.87 -1.58% Corn 371.25 +0.34% Copper 2.24 +0.63% Silver 15.20 +0.01% Natural Gas 1.93 +2.71% Russell 2000 1,080.23 +0.06% VIX 15.24 +3.39% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4255 +0.92% USD/JPY 113.3830 +0.08%
Friday, March 25, 2016
Durable Goods Not So Good; Stocks End Five-Week-Long Rally; GDP Is Bogus
Markets are closed on Friday in observance of Good Friday (who said we weren't a religious nation?), so the paltry returns on equites ended a dull week in the red, the first time a week has ended negative since mid-February.
Prior to the open on Thursday, durable goods for February were released and the numbers were far from encouraging.
Durable Goods New Orders (Ex-Transports) fell 0.5% YoY, extending its losing streak to 13 months. All segments of the durable goods report saw negative month-over-month direction with headline -2.8%. Prior data was revised lower, Capital goods orders fell more than expected (-1.8% MoM).
Durable goods new orders down -2.8%, exp. -3.0%; prior revised down to 4.2% for Jan. from 4.7%
New orders ex-trans. down 1%, Exp. -0.3%; prior revised to 1.2% from 1.7%
Capital goods orders ex-aircraft down 1.8%, Exp. -0.5%, prior revised to 3.1% from 3.4%
Capital goods shipments ex-aircraft down 1.1%, Exp. +0.3%, prior revised to -1.3% from -0.4%
That was about all the market could stand and not puke up more gains.
On Friday, with markets closed, the government released the final estimate for 4th quarter 2015 GDP, posting a figure that was above all estimates, a suspicious gain of 1.4%. This spurious number followed a first estimate of 0.7% in January and a second estimate at an even 1.0% in February. Apparently, everything is improving in the alternate reality that is Washington D.C. (please, please, indict Hillary). It has been pointed out by various writers that GDP is a poor measurement of the health of an economy. Such as this current reading, which is heavily influenced by health care costs and soaring rents, in addition to the hedonic adjustments and other blunt instruments of deception, the numbers end up meaning little in terms of the common man, woman or family.
Lastly, we'd like to share this fine post from the blog Viable Opposition, with readers of Money Daily:
The Long Wave and the Failure of Central Banks. Highly recommended reading and a great chart at the end.
Posts such as this - and the general appeal of the blog overall - points up why the establishment is failing and fearful of the rising tide of populism. Bloggers don't get paid for appearances on CNBC or Bloomberg but their views and opinions are often superior, better researched, unbiased and non-political than what the mainstream media tries to sell as gospel.
God (or Donald Trump) save us.
For the week:
Dow: -86.57 (0.49%)
S&P 500: -13.64 (0.67%)
NASDAQ: -22.14 (0.46%)
Thursday's Finish:
S&P 500: 2,035.94, -0.77 (0.04%)
Dow: 17,515.73, +13.14 (0.08%)
NASDAQ: 4,773.50, +4.64 (0.10%)
Crude Oil 39.63 -0.40% Gold 1,217.20 -0.56% EUR/USD 1.1180 -0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.90 +1.33% Corn 369.25 +0.20% Copper 2.24 -0.02% Silver 15.19 -0.57% Natural Gas 1.89 +1.12% Russell 2000 1,079.54 +0.36% VIX 14.73 -1.41% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4152 +0.23% USD/JPY 112.8450 +0.42%
Prior to the open on Thursday, durable goods for February were released and the numbers were far from encouraging.
Durable Goods New Orders (Ex-Transports) fell 0.5% YoY, extending its losing streak to 13 months. All segments of the durable goods report saw negative month-over-month direction with headline -2.8%. Prior data was revised lower, Capital goods orders fell more than expected (-1.8% MoM).
Durable goods new orders down -2.8%, exp. -3.0%; prior revised down to 4.2% for Jan. from 4.7%
New orders ex-trans. down 1%, Exp. -0.3%; prior revised to 1.2% from 1.7%
Capital goods orders ex-aircraft down 1.8%, Exp. -0.5%, prior revised to 3.1% from 3.4%
Capital goods shipments ex-aircraft down 1.1%, Exp. +0.3%, prior revised to -1.3% from -0.4%
That was about all the market could stand and not puke up more gains.
On Friday, with markets closed, the government released the final estimate for 4th quarter 2015 GDP, posting a figure that was above all estimates, a suspicious gain of 1.4%. This spurious number followed a first estimate of 0.7% in January and a second estimate at an even 1.0% in February. Apparently, everything is improving in the alternate reality that is Washington D.C. (please, please, indict Hillary). It has been pointed out by various writers that GDP is a poor measurement of the health of an economy. Such as this current reading, which is heavily influenced by health care costs and soaring rents, in addition to the hedonic adjustments and other blunt instruments of deception, the numbers end up meaning little in terms of the common man, woman or family.
Lastly, we'd like to share this fine post from the blog Viable Opposition, with readers of Money Daily:
The Long Wave and the Failure of Central Banks. Highly recommended reading and a great chart at the end.
Posts such as this - and the general appeal of the blog overall - points up why the establishment is failing and fearful of the rising tide of populism. Bloggers don't get paid for appearances on CNBC or Bloomberg but their views and opinions are often superior, better researched, unbiased and non-political than what the mainstream media tries to sell as gospel.
God (or Donald Trump) save us.
For the week:
Dow: -86.57 (0.49%)
S&P 500: -13.64 (0.67%)
NASDAQ: -22.14 (0.46%)
Thursday's Finish:
S&P 500: 2,035.94, -0.77 (0.04%)
Dow: 17,515.73, +13.14 (0.08%)
NASDAQ: 4,773.50, +4.64 (0.10%)
Crude Oil 39.63 -0.40% Gold 1,217.20 -0.56% EUR/USD 1.1180 -0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.90 +1.33% Corn 369.25 +0.20% Copper 2.24 -0.02% Silver 15.19 -0.57% Natural Gas 1.89 +1.12% Russell 2000 1,079.54 +0.36% VIX 14.73 -1.41% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4152 +0.23% USD/JPY 112.8450 +0.42%
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