22 January 2015

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Madness


"What Wall Street and credit card companies are doing is really not much different from what gangsters and loan sharks do who make predatory loans. While the bankers wear three-piece suits and don't break the knee caps of those who can't pay back, they still are destroying people's lives."

Bernie Sanders

The ECB brought out a 'bigger than expected' asset purchase program this morning, as least compared to the leaks which they put out into the market earlier this week.

Stocks rallied on the news. This is pure financial asset inflation, and it will not end well.

The ECB will be 'proportionate' in the asset purchases, meaning France and Germany get the lion's share, and the Banks and financial firms will have their hands out at the very back of the truck, which has been backed up to their loading docks.

This is more 'trickle down' stimulus. It will not trigger broad inflation, because the money being created is wrapped nicely in packages and sent to the wealthiest in the form of the mispricing of risk on financial assets paper.

Have a pleasant evening.





NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds

 

The gold/silver ratio has come back down a bit from the stratosphere, but it is still historically a bit high.

The premiums/discounts have certainly picked up a bit, from the very depressed levels of last year.

The cash level in the Sprott Silver Trust continues to fall, indicating a secondary offering ought to be in the works.

 
 

21 January 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Early Days


After a morning smackdown gold was able to hold its level just below 1300, with silver showing a little more resilience.

Tomorrow we should hear the official word from the ECB, after the 'leak' today of over a trillion in QE per year.

The central banks of the West are 'plowing the oceans.'

The Bank of Canada gave us a surprise rate cut, justified by the shocking slump in oil revenues.

This interview with Jim Rickards is worth a look.

Next week we will see an option expiration on the Comex which *could* be a test for this rally.

For this precious metals rally, it is still early days.

Have a pleasant evening.

 
 

Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Exceptional Delusions


Stocks managed to work out a ragged rally after poor economic news, and triumphalism about The Recovery in the State of the Union speech.

Have a pleasant evening.

 
 
 

20 January 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Sailing - Greek Elections, Europe's Identity Crisis


"Every man has a right to his own opinion, but no man has a right to be wrong in his facts...

Gold has worked down from Alexander's time. When something holds good for two thousand years I do not believe it can be so because of prejudice or mistaken theory."

Bernard Baruch


“What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.”

Oscar Wilde, Lady Windermere's Fan

I think you might replace the word 'cynic' in Oscar Wilde's famous quote with the word 'trader.'  Especially the traders we have out and about in today's markets, who are better conmen than policy advisors.  Of course one might say the same thing about our esteemed Congressmen, so perhaps it is better to say nothing, except to grasp your wallets more firmly.

President Obama will be giving his State of the Union tonight. Expect to hear some nice headline making proposals that will not have any impact on real legislation or policy. And this is by intent.

The plutocrats of Europe will be watching the Greek elections carefully on January 25.  You may wish to keep an eye out for them as well.  The EU is concerned that a left leaning government may be voted in that will buck the austerian trend.

American leadership has dementia, and is going to keep blundering around doing the same old, ineffective things, until something happens to change the situation.

Middle class income has been stagnant for forty years. Expect this to get a little attention, talk-wise. But little will be done.

Gold continued to climb today, which is remarkable given how far it has come. It has now taken out all of its more widely watched moving averages including the 260 DMA which I watch.

I would like to see it break out above 1320 and firmly put a stake into the old trading range from a couple years ago.

Longer term gold may very well have much more upside. However, until we see at least a de facto default on the price-rigging scheme involving leverage and paper gold, I am not ready to assume that the banking cartel has thrown in the towel.

It is fascinating though, to see the congruence between the collapse of the Swiss franc-euro rig and the gold-dollar rig. I don't believe that the Swiss were the major leader of that gold pool. They do not have enough gold or throw weight in terms of the precious metal. They are more of a handler, a facilitator.

Rick Harrison, the 'star' of Pawn Stars, was a bit more on his 'home turf' as the conversation continued to turn to things he understands from his day to day business.  Rick is a retail merchant of gold.  And he said, flat out, that his biggest trouble now is that his suppliers in the US have no supply for him.  They are out. 

And the continuing depletion of the West's readily available gold inventory by China has put pressures on the banking cartel that have caused the price to rise.  Again, one has to remark on the timing, with gold rallying as the Swiss peg to the euro, failed.

This I can believe, because I have heard this and seen circumstantial evidence of it.  Higher prices would ordinarily be the remedy for a shortage in the supply of something.

The problem is that supply has to catch up with over leveraged speculation and multiples of rehypothecation and undisclosed risks, which is what caused the capital markets to freeze up in 2008  This market does not need more paper gold.  It needs bullion.

Let's see how gold and silver proceed from here, to see something on the charts that might help us to determine what the upsides might be, and how good this breakout is.

Have a pleasant evening.




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Financial TV Wasteland


Stocks managed to pull out a little counter-trend gain today. 

This is a light week for economic news.

We are getting into the earnings season. 

After the bell, both Netflix and IBM beat their earnings estimates, but missed on top line revenues.

Both are fine examples of low growth companies using accounting games to provide the appearance of vitality.  IBM has been shrinking for quite some time, and Netflix, while it has potential, needs to change its model badly. 

Or perhaps it would be more correct to say it should expand its portfolio of activities.  But not being a true content provider, or a supplier of the pipe that carry its products, it is an interesting strategic position. 

Let's see how the wash and rinse cycle proceeds.  The Street would like to see stocks move higher now. 

I turned to CNBC for relief from Trish Regan's pretty but nasal banality.

I noticed that CNBC had Rick Harrison, the purveyor of a Las Vegas pawn shop, and reality show star on as a guest commentator on macro-economics, providing policy advice.   He may know the retail trade, but public economic policy, not so much.
 
I kept waiting for Steve Liesman to come on and provide the comic relief that Chumlee ordinarily delivers to give some entertainment value to Pawn Stars.  Larry Kudlow was doing his schtick earlier on as 'Pops.'  

The intellectual poverty of financial television is appalling:  five miles wide, and an inch deep.  No wonder the ratings were plummeting.  See the quote from my friend Arby at the top of the page.  Our elite ruling class is in the throes of cultural dementia. 

Have a pleasant evening.