17 September 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Timely Caution Is Advisable


The Fed did nothing today, except note that there are problems in the rest of the world, but everything here is fine.   Nevertheless in the spirit of noblesse oblige the Fed has condescended not to raise its benchmark rate by 25 basis points.  It's good to be the king.

And after they did nothing, the dollar fell sharply, stocks staged a spectacular rally with an even more spectacular retracement to finish negative, and of course the precious metals took off for a little run higher.

That was quite a bit of action for something that 'everybody knew.'

The skeptical me is pretty much ignoring the Fed at this point except for the diversion of seeing them trying to wriggle out of the corner into which they have painted themselves.  On one hand they say all is well, and on the other they would dearly like to get off the zero bound but cannot find the traction to do it, amidst all this lousy economic data.

And so they do nothing, and blame China or the weather or anything else but their own monetary fan service for the libertines of Wall Street.

A more interesting development to me at least is in the precious metals market.

I know there are some who are more than glad to just discount all of it as business as usual, but I do not think the data supports that premise.

That does not preclude the possibility that the bullion banks may wriggle and bluff their way out of this one, again, most likely with the help of some friendly central banks leasing out more physical bullion on the cheap, again.  But the general trend of what I have come to call 'the gold pool' is not promising, and could prove to be of some more than passing interest to us.

To that end I put out a briefing overnight titled Timely Caution Is Advisable With Your Gold Holdings with a companion piece, On the LBMA and Their Unallocated Holdings .

You may wish to read them both carefully. With regard to the latter, someone forwarded an email message from Jim Rickards that says "Jesse has this right."

More importantly I hope Jim R. has it right, since he has much better sources of information.

Here is a thumbnail sketch of the situation.

There is an unusual amount of extra leverage in the precious metals,  not only in the Comex but apparently in the LBMA.   The London market is the more important echange because it is the bullion gateway to the East and a more physical exchange by design, despite the recent rigging scandals there which are apparently not fully resolved in transparency.

It is thought that some very serious players may have been found offsides and badly short of physical bullion in London, thanks to their usual gambling antics and the inexhaustible bullion maws of Asia.

And the problem may be even worse because not only are these players short, but on the whole the exchange itself is tight on the old claim checks to items counts.  In other words, the bullion may not even be there at the current prices.  Even in a fairly big pond the whales can make waves.

Comex is easy to manage, because it is more of a betting shop, dominated by a few players who are willing to cash settle, whether by design or professional courtesy.  Although this does allow for some oddities in the reports that everyone is urged to ignore because 'you just don't understand.'

And in that vein we had almost no 'deliveries' at The Bucket Shop yesterday, but the warehouses continue to mark a steady bleeding out of physical bullion.   Along with the Western ETFs and Funds by the way.  Nothing of note there, move along.

Today's move higher in metals prices was a good start to clearing up any short term inconveniences in supply, but it may have to go a bit higher, like a hundred dollars or so at least.  Unthinkable!

And it would be a good time to remind everyone that gold itself does not vary, but the prices of other currencies including the dollar are fluctuating against it.  Gold has preeminence as a currency because in its physical form it bears no counterparty risk.

And gold has been rallying against a broad set of other currencies for a while now, but not so much the dollar.

Caution in uncertainty is not a bad course of action.  Especially when the only certainty is change, and the gales of November come early.

Have a pleasant evening.








SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - More of the Ineffective Sameness


“Since the 1980s, we have given the rich a bigger slice of our pie in the belief that they would create more wealth, making the pie bigger than otherwise possible in the long run. The rich got the bigger slice of the pie all right, but they have actually reduced the pace at which the pie is growing...

Once you realize that trickle-down economics does not work, you will see the excessive tax cuts for the rich as what they are—  a simple upward redistribution of income, rather than a way to make all of us richer, as we were told...

We need to design an economic system that, while acknowledging that people are often selfish, exploits other human motives to the full and gets the best out of people. The likelihood is that, if we assume the worst about people, we will get the worst out of them.”

Ha-Joon Chang, University of Cambridge

As you may have gathered, the Fed did nothing in particular today.

They did give a nod to the rest of the world however, with this sentence in their policy statement.
"Recent global economic and financial developments may restrain economic activity somewhat and are likely to put further downward pressure on inflation in the near term."

When it is not the Winter, it's China and/or market volatility.

It is always something but certainly no fault on the might FOMC, font of wisdom, paragon of virtue.

There was some intraday commentary on the Fed here and here.

The Fed's policy errors might be more interesting to watch if one was not within the blast radius of their many abuses of the real economy.   Unfortunately with their finger on the trigger of the world's reserve currency, there are not as many places to hide as there may have been before.

I just love all this talk of the 'tight labor market' with Labor Participation at multi-decade lows and record levels of child poverty, among other things.  You have to ask, do these people really believe what they are saying?  And if so, is that even more frightening than if they were just being politically expedient?

Have a pleasant evening.




Why the Fed's Policy Actions Are Not Working


“Trickle-down theory - the less than elegant metaphor that if one feeds the horse enough oats, some will pass through to the road for the sparrows.”

John Kenneth Galbraith

As I said earlier today in a reaction to the FOMC announcement:
"This is all a bit moot really, because except for the betting parlors it doesn't matter whether the Fed raises 25 basis points or not. You can print money and give it to the banking system and the very wealthy for their personal gambling and asset acquisitions activities all day long.

The system is broken, the real product of the nation has been hijacked by financialization, the international monetary exchange is in chaos, and almost all of the gains are going to the top.

And the Fed and the government are doing virtually nothing to change this."

The Banks must be restrained, and the financial system reformed, with balance restored to the economy, before there can be an sustainable recovery.

And keep the financial system on life support while the rest of the economy languishes, the poor suffer, and the middle class deteriorates is not coherent, except for a narrow band of beneficiaries.

Let us be reminded that the Fed is also a primary regulator of the financial system as well as an interest rate joystick operator.

And the mainstream media and the politicians wonder why the public is not doing what they expect.

This chart below is from Bloomberg News, The Richest Americans Are Winning the Economic Recovery.
"U.S. Census Bureau data out Wednesday underscore just how lousy the recovery has been if you aren't rich.
Looking at eight groups of household income selected by Census, only those whose incomes are already high to begin with have seen improvement since 2006, the last full year of expansion before the recession. Households at the 95th and 90th percentiles had larger earnings through 2014, the latest year for which data are available.

Income for all others was below 2006 levels, indicating they're still clawing their way out of the hole caused by the deepest recession in the post-World War II era."

And this result, after eight years of some of the biggest expansion of a central bank balance sheet in US history!