18 March 2011

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts


They are struggling to take the equity markets higher, but the short term downtrend is still intact.

There was an air of disassociation with reality in the markets today in honor of options expiration.

The Fed announced the results of their stress tests, and began to allow the banks to increase their dividends and buy back their stocks. This is a windfall for wealthy shareholders and corporate insiders, supplied by the Fed using what are essentially public funds, as subsidies to the monied interests. 

But it does not help to revitalize the real economy, even while it continue to debase the currency. This is the root cause of a future inflationary episode that will rock the status quo to its foundations.


Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts


Gold and silver rallied back with the G7 intervention in the currency markets on behalf of the Japanese yen.

I think the rationale that this was in support of Japanese exporters is more rationale than fact. The exporters' biggest problem is that their supply chains and manufacturing are disrupted.

Rather, the intervention at this time was most likely in response to what the central bankers euphemistically call 'disorderly markets.' The intervention and its timing had everything to do with the yen carry trade, and the pressures that the extraordinarily strong yen was placing on global financial institutions, especially in their hedges and spreads.  There was also some concern that the dollar was falling too far, too fast.

I am rethinking my estimates of a hyperinflation. There is also and increase in the forecast of inflation that will accompany the stagflation to which I am more positively inclined in the intermediate to long term forecast.

I consider a real deflation very unlikely, only as a policy decision. The risk as I see it is an inept slide into a deeper inflation than the central bankers intend.

As such I am now even more inclined to protect my own assets in hard currency and precious metals.