Showing posts with label jackals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jackals. Show all posts

25 October 2011

Gold Has a Go to the Upside as Stocks Slump on Euro Fears - Flight From Fraud


"The desire of gold is not for gold. It is for the means of freedom and knowledge."

Ben Davies

Gold and silver diverged from US equities today as fresh jitters over the Euro bailout put a damper on stocks.

Keep the $45+ rally in context of the current trading range however as is shown below. It has not yet broken out.

If you are trading with Level II market view in something like the miners or a less liquid ETF, you may place a bid or ask of a thousand shares or more, and it quickly finds a lot of 'friends' of a lesser amount jumping in front of it. And when you place a sell into a group of bids, a tiny amount may be filled, but then the bids disappear and drop lower.

These are thin, volatile markets, permeated by fraud, deception, and front-running of everything from global headlines down to individual bids. The talking heads and Wall Street demimonde are spinning stories and alternatively feeding hysteria and euphoria, greed and fear, under cover of the lax regulation and co-opted public policy.

The US financial system has gone predatory. The political system has given itself over to the corporate interests. Nothing could be more clear in the regressive tax proposals coming out of the Republican debates, and the Democrats are feeding greedily at the same trough of foul campaign funds and special privileges.

If you are a daytrader and can make money playing the momentum in this then good for you. But I think that most people who attempt to trade these markets will make very little on net, and are more likely to lose money. Better to stay with the longer term trends based on fundamentals. This will get worse before it gets better.



25 February 2010

Bernanke Says He Will Investigate


What Goldman and other the other banks have done in Greece is no different from what they have been doing around the world for the past ten years. They facilitate various forms of questionable financial instruments with corrupt partners, and then trade on their detailed knowledge of that misrepresentation, mispricing and even outright fraud to reap enormous profits, often at the expense of the productive economy and programs designed to protect legitimate commercial banking activities. This is at the very core of the CDO financial crisis in the States.

Banks should not be able to trade in their own proprietary portfolios on the integrity of financial assets of their own devices. Otherwise, the conflicts of interest are irresistible. This is the very problem that Glass-Steagall was originally enacted in 1933 to prevent.

Only the most conservative and restrained banking system can function in the face of such obvious temptations for self-dealing. And this does not describe the financial system in the US.

Setting up regulatory hurdles, 'chinese walls,' and capital requirements to try and stem such obvious temptation to greed is a fool's errand, but one that the banks encourage, knowing full well they will find ways to circumvent them as fast as they can be created.

The banks must be restrained, the financial system reformed, and the economy brought back into balance, before there can be any sustained recovery.

Bernanke: Looking at Goldman Sachs role in Greece
Thu Feb 25, 2010 10:03am EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is examining the role that Wall Street firms including Goldman Sachs (GS.N) played in helping Greece arrange credit default swaps, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Thursday.

"We are looking into a number of questions related to Goldman Sachs and other companies in their derivatives arrangements with Greece," Bernanke said in response to a question for Senate banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd.

Bernanke said the Securities and Exchange Commission was also "interested" in the issue and added: "Obviously, using these instruments in a way that potentially destabilizes a company or a country is counterproductive."