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Another weak day on stocks.
They are pressing on the pivots, wherein this starts changing from a correction to a new downtrend.
The techs were leading the way down today, followed by consumer discretionaries.
The markets were shocked a bit today by the startling events in NYC, as IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn was arrested on very serious sexual assault charges. DSK was one of the leading candidates for French political office, and was in the midst of critical meetings at the IMF on global currency and European solvency issues.
Strauss-Kahn's position at the IMF will be filled for the time being by John Lipsky.
John Lipsky assumed the position of First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund on September 1, 2006. Before coming to the Fund, Mr. Lipsky was Vice Chairman of the JPMorgan Investment Bank. Previously, Mr. Lipsky served as JPMorgan's Chief Economist, and as Chase Manhattan Bank's Chief Economist and Director of Research. He served as Chief Economist of Salomon Brothers, Inc. from 1992 until 1997. From 1989 to 1992, Mr. Lipsky was based in London, where he directed Salomon Brothers' European Economic and Market Analysis Group.
Here is some general knowledge on Fibonacci Retracements
The placement of the pattern on the chart is given to some subjectivity. I prefer to do it according to the patterns I am attempting to analyze. Obvoiusly there are other ways of doing it.
This is by way of saying that these are my own calculations. There are others.
The Anglo-American banking cartel will resist change with increasing determination, and at times bitter opposition.
It is easy to be misled by short term trending in money supply charts, especially those showing year over year growth as a percentage. Money supply changes are seasonal and often very volatile, but nevermoreso during a credit collapse and quantitative easing.
A look at the longer term trends is most useful. And if necessary a review of Money Supply: A Primer.
The last chart is an index where 100 equals the M2 supply around the end of 2007, and the onset of the credit crisis. Since then it has grown almost twenty percent.
Has GDP or the population grown 20 percent? So money per capita or per unit of productive effort is growing. All one has to do is look at some reality based metric of money supply growth and negative real interest rates to understand the ten year bull market in gold and silver, and commodities in terms of US dollars.
I understand people like to look at the various independent M3 estimates, but since the Fed no longer reports Eurodollars I have not seen what I could consider a credible recent estimate. And I doubt VERY much that M3 is underrunning M2 given the dollars that the Fed has been spreading around the world's banks.
Can the Fed keep this QE up? Will deflation set in, finally? It is a policy decision in a purely fiat currency. That could change, and I will know what to look for when it does. The Fed could be subjected to some external force, either from foreign creditors or domestic politics. I expect that foreign shock to be inflationary rather than deflationary however. As for the domestic forces, a choice for third world status is always an option.
The top five percent of Americans hold by far most of the country's wealth. And deflation may be in their short term interests, as in the case in the UK which seems to be going down that path. These policy decisions bring up a different set of considerations, many of which will stress the social fabric to the breaking point. But a people grown coarse by war and ideology have done much odder things before.
But for now the trend has not changed, and it would probably take a global economic collapse to change it. That is possible. And in such an event everything will get sold, for a time, as they were in the market crash of 2008.
Those who have been betting on deflation for the past five or ten years have been wrong. They could be right some time in the future. But one can be wrong on a mistaken principle for a very long, long time.
US Bonds have been in a long term disinflationary rally. There seem to be a number of 'name' people now looking for a trend change. That is the crux of Bernanke's short term focus, and the target of QE^n.