13 March 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Chart - Tender Mercies


 
March is a tough month historically for the metals. I would that it were not, but it is.

And don't the wiseguys know it, and they and their shills help it along.
 
And it seems to be a month that attracts quite few supercilious comments about values and valuations.
 
However, it is what it is.  Gold and silver have failed to break out of the downtrend.  That has been obvious for some time, since gold broke down hard through 1200.
 
Let's see what happens next week, with an eye towards Asia and the physical markets there.
 
This Eurodollar Riot by Cumberland Advisors is very much reading about the US dollar rally and the Eurodollar 'short squeeze' that I discussed a few times in the past.  I used to track these Eurodollar moves through the BIS reports. 
 
I have not done so lately.  They are usually about two quarters in arrears.  I think this example by Cumberland is good, but it ignores the primary impacts in the currency markets, and instead concentrates on the central bank impacts which are less volatile.  They also do not mention the large number of loans and transaction overseas that are denominated in dollars. 
 
There was a little action in the delivery department by the bucket shop boys, and nothing moves out of the gold bullion warehouses these days.  The Comex silver warehouses are being used as a delivery point interestingly enough, and there is a great deal of movement in and out.
 
FOMC meeting next week.  I think the big tickle will be centered on wording, specifically the word 'patient.'   The Fed is a failed institution.  But it is supported by a large and powerful infrastructure of vested interests.
 
The Fed's actions these days are somewhat disconnected from the real economy.  The idea of raising rates while the rest of the world is cutting, with a soaring dollar, is almost ludicrous.  
 
The Fed has the itch to raise because they ought to have done so before this latest stock asset bubble took off about two years ago, and changed their method of stimulus which does few outside the financial system any real good. 
 
They are raising rates, not to fight inflation of which there isn't any, even on the horizon except that which is monopoly-driven like healthcare and pharmaceuticals, and of course, paper financial assets.
 
Rather, they wish to raise rates for their own future policy reasons, so that they can cut them again when their latest asset bubble bursts. 
 
This is the credibility trap in action.  Past errors and complicity prevent them from addressing the real problems, or even stating what they are honestly and frankly. 
 
How can a co-conspirator gracefully introduce necessary reform without harming their credibility, or their cash flow?
 
Do you envy the rich and powerful?  Don't. 

"It would be far better for that man if he had never been born."
 
Remember the poor, and the creatures of the air as well, as Spring slowly arrives.  The harsh coldness gives way slowly to the warmer breezes and life giving sun.  And we can help nature to heal and bring forth its bounty anew. 
 
Remember the things that, in the end, are the only things that really matter, the only that are really worth remembering.  Life may be hard, but love endures.
 
Behold, He makes all things new.
 
Have a pleasant weekend.
 

 
 
 
 



SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - The Hunger Games


 
“I am the victim of an error of judgement. Now that I look back, I realize that a life predicated on being obedient and taking orders is a very comfortable life indeed. Living in such a way reduces to a minimum one's need to think...

I may have made an error in judgement-- but one thing is beyond dispute: the man was able to work his way up to leader of a people of almost 80 million. His success alone proved that I should subordinate myself to him."

Adolf Eichmann

Just another week in the financialized wash and rinse cycle that runs the economy for its own benefits through the banking system.
 
And may the odds be every in your favour.
 
Especially if you control the games.

Have a pleasant weekend.

 
 
 








Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson on Congress and their 18 Percent Approval Rating


"Journalism is one of the devices whereby industrial autocracy keeps its control over political democracy; it is the day-by-day, between-elections propaganda, whereby the minds of the people are kept in a state of acquiescence, so that when the crisis of an election comes, they go to the polls and cast their ballots for either one of the two candidates of their exploiters."

Upton Sinclair, The Brass Check

Congress has an approval rating hovering around 18% according to the latest Gallup poll.  

Yikes! How can that be in a 'democratic' system?
 
Even President Obama's approval rating is hovering around 48% with about the same disapproval in our polarizing society.
 
Can 18% of the people pick the representative they like, while ignoring the other 82%?

Is it the fault of the people, the voting public?

Yes, but mostly by inaction, and their obvious confusion in the face of well funded onslaughts of command, control, and propaganda across most of the media spectrum. 
 
Gerrymandering.  Disgracefully obvious voter suppression. A insider controlled two party candidate selection process. Distorted primaries.  Rabid framing of the issues based on stereotypes and emotions.  Purposeful deceit.  Secrecy.  Manipulation.  Even the results of polls and headlines are distorted to support the 'messaging.'
 
And powerful private interests would definitely like to convince you that government is necessarily evil by its very nature, and that you should just get rid of it, and trust the monopolies and moneyed interests to be naturally benevolent and virtuous.  

They have been waging this campaign to overthrow democracy and repeal every reform, one by one, for thirty years.  And they seem to be winning, little by little, in overturning most safeguards for fairness and justice. 
 
The massive pollution of the airwaves by corporate funds and the moneyed interests with an almost incessant stream of persuasion and propaganda.  They phrase the questions carefully, and then give us the answers they want the people to hear.

And most people still believe what they see on television, the radio, and the mainstream media.
 
You give the 'wrong answer' on television, and you are never invited back.  You are also cut off from access to power and information.   You would not believe have many times I have heard this.  
 
The key morning message from Bloomberg Television this morning was an old meme from almost exactly this time last year by David Zervos, chief market strategist of Jefferies, with Eric Schatzker and Stephanie Ruhle nodding approvingly:
"Stocks are for lovers, gold is for haters."

"In short, he said that if you're somewhat of a pessimist — a hater — and think the Fed's monetary easing can't go on forever, and the system is destined to crash, then you think we're going back to the 1970s and want to be in hard commodities, such as gold. But if you think the U.S. economy is eventually going to emerge from this period of low growth and eventually recover, much like the 1990s, then you're a lover and should be in equities."
 
Yes, that 'worked' as stocks greatly outperformed metals for quite some time now, about three years.  The trend is your friend.  And so is the Fed and their method of implementing monetary policies.  Not so much for workers and real median wages though.  I think we can stipulate that Wall Street has been a major beneficiary of the Fed and the government.  Why not, they paid well enough for it.
 
And yes, we are just about at that point in the banal insipidness of our economic discussion.  Whatever works for whatever reason, just go with it.   Bear and bull markets make people economic forecasting geniuses.  Until they don't.  And then they blame you for listening.

Speaking of geniuses, next year will you may have the privilege to vote Bush v. Clinton, or Clinton v. Bush.

You get to vote for the candidates that the insiders select for you.

I am not sure about Wilkerson's assessment that 95% of the Congress are just stupid.  Jim McGill's opinion on lawyers in the second video is of course exaggerated, but has some merit.  And it seems applicable to quite a few other professions these days, where people say what their paychecks demand.