19 February 2010

"How Could I Be So Selfish and So Foolish"


Were Lloyd and Jamie and the pigmen of Wall Street and Washington taking notes during Tiger Woods' apology?

Doubtful.

No one is perfect, of course. Everyone makes mistakes, everyone sins. We are all weak, and insufficient in ourselves. And yet we attempt great things, in fear and trembling. The spirit endures and abides.

But there are moments in history that are epidemic with excess, a pathological pursuit of lust, greed, and deceit with a nihilistic determination that is more like a fashion of the age than an aberration. Chic to be above conventional morality and the law, lacking all proportion. Accepted, and even admired.

Tiger himself is what they call 'small potatoes,' the personal foibles of a star athlete. What is more significant is the festival of fraud going on in the financial world, centered around Chicago and New York.

Tiger's words could be the new American Anthem for a generation of reckless, selfish, and self-destructive behaviour by those most blessed by its freedom, offered the greatest opportunities and privileges, sometimes undeserved, and most often paid for by the sacrifice of others.

Most of them still have no regrets, except of course for the fear of discovery. They will have to somehow grow a conscience for that. Or face the withdrawal of support by their sponsors. In the case of Tiger it was Nike. In the case of the Banks it is the US government. And in the case of the US government it is a gullible and complacent public.

"Many of you in this room know me. Many of you have cheered for me, have worked with me, always supported me. Now, every one of you has good reason to be critical of me. I want to say to each on of you simply and directly I am deeply sorry for my irresponsible and selfish behaviour I engaged in. I know people want to find out how i could be so selfish and foolish.

I knew my actions were wrong but I convinced myself that the normal rules didn't apply. I never thought about who I was hurting. Instead, I only thought about myself...

I felt that I had worked hard my entire life and deserved to enjoy all the temptations around me. I felt that I was entitled.

Parents used to point to me as a role model for their kids. I owe all those families a special apology. I want to say to them that I am truly sorry.

I recognize I have brought this on myself and I know, above all, I am the one who needs to change.

I was wrong. I was foolish. I don't get to play by different rules."


18 February 2010

Managing Perceptions: Fed Raises Discount Rate After the Close


"The last duty of a central banker is to tell the public the truth." Alan Blinder, former Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve

In a largely symbolic move, the Fed raised the Discount Rate after the bell by 25 basis points to .75%.

As you know, the Discount Rate is the interest rate that the Fed charges banks who borrow from them short term on an emergency basis.

This is the shaping of perception by the Fed. It does not raise rates for the consumer or businesses, and does not affect the rates and guarantees in the many Fed and Treasury programs which are still supporting the commercial banks.

One has to wonder why the Fed chose to jawbone at this time. Is this a move to help them with next week's $100+ Billion Treasury auction? We are discounting rumours that the nose counts among the Primary Dealers showed the risk of another 'failed' auction was rising.

Or was this mainly to provide another opportunity for the bullion banks to take the prices down ahead of their option expiration next week? Plan B stands for Bernays.
"We looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further. A further rise would have taken down one or several trading houses, which might have taken down all the rest in their wake. Therefore at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold price, manage it. It was very difficult to get the gold price under control but we have now succeeded. The US Fed was very active in getting the gold price down. So was the U.K." Eddie George, Bank of England Governor to Nicholas J. Morrell

Its all about managing perception.

When the Fed starts backing off on quantitative easing, we will know that things are truly changing. Bernanke is all too aware of the Fed's policy error in 1931 of raises rates prematurely, which caused the second leg down to the trough of the Depression in 1933. So let the Fed wave their hands all they want, but watch the Adjusted Monetary Base. In other words, its not what they say, but rather what they do.

One wonders if Obama is also aware of Hoover's policy error in trying to balance the budget as the nation slid into the most serious part of the Great Depression. He is certainly no FDR, and the nation is unlikely to be on the road to recovery during his hapless Administration. Will he, like Greenspan, later confess that he erred for a theory, a mistaken belief? A small comfort for those they have ruined.

Man wird nie betrogen, man betrügt sich selbst.
[We are never deceived; we but deceive ourselves.]
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

WSJ
Fed Raises Discount Rate Quarter Percentage Point
By LUCA DI LEO And JON HILSENRATH

WASHINGTON— The U.S. Federal Reserve Thursday raised the rate it charges banks for emergency loans by a quarter percentage point, but emphasized that the step didn't represent a broader tightening of credit.

In a widely expected move, the U.S. central bank said the increase in the discount rate to 75 basis points from half a point was part of its step away from its emergency-lending efforts. The increase will be effective from Friday.

"Like the closure of a number of extraordinary credit programs earlier this month, these changes are intended as a further normalization of the Federal Reserve's lending facilities," the Fed said in a statement...

SP and Nasdaq 100 Futures


Here is where the equity markets stand.

Remember that tomorrow is options expiry for February.

As an aside, the bear raid on gold that occurred in conjunction with a non-announcement from the IMF about their previously announced gold sale did not stick, with prices snapping back today to the paint at which the raid hit, first the miners, and then the metals, largely in the thin after hours trade.

Next week is an option expiry in the metals futures markets, and the US is planning on auctioning an enormous amount of Treasuries, so we would not be complacement at this point.

Still, it was gratifying to see that Dennis Gartman bought back the gold position he sold before the rally. He sold at the bottom, let's see if he can do better and not jinx us for a short term top.


17 February 2010

Risk? What Risk? We Don't See No Stinkin' Risk..


"It is the absolute right of the state to supervise the formation of public opinion." Paul Joseph Goebbels

As measured by the VIX, the volatility index, the perception of risk in US markets has declined significantly in the last twelve months from over 50 to current readings around 20.



As a response to this changed perception, mutual funds are once again fully invested, with levels of cash reserves at record lows. In other words, the 'other people's money' crowd are all in.



There is an interesting distribution top forming in the US equity markets. This rally has been driven by liquidity delivered from the Fed and the Treasury primarily to the Wall Street banks, who are deriving an extraordinary amount of their income from trading for their own books, at least based on published results.

Much of the rally in US stocks has occurred on thin volumes and in the overnight trading sessions. Definitely not a vote of confidence, and a sign of potential price manipulation in fact.

Is this a 'set up' to separate the public from even more of their own money, using their own money? Perhaps.

The government is frantic to restore confidence in the US markets, and the toxic asset rich banks are more than capable of using that sincere interest to unload their mispriced paper on the greater fools again.

The perception of risk is a powerful tool in shaping the response of markets, and as an instrument of foreign and domestic government policy actions. It is nothing new, as indicated by the quote from Joseph Goebbels, but it is rising to new levels of sophistication and acceptance in nations with at least a nominal commitment to freedom of choice and transparency of governance.

"There is a social theory called reflexivity which refers to the circular relationship between cause and effect. A reflexive relationship is bidirectional where both the cause and the effect affect one another in a situation that renders both functions causes and effects.

The principle of reflexivity was first introduced by the sociologist William Thomas as the Thomas theorem, but more importantly it was later popularized and applied to the financial markets by George Soros. Soros restated the social theory of reflexivity eloquently and simply, as follows:

markets influence events they anticipate – George Soros

This theorem has become a basic tenant of modern central banking. The idea is that manipulation of the psychology of market participants affects the markets themselves. Therefore, if you artificially suppress the price of gold, you reduce inflationary expectations and reduce inflation itself…so the theory goes."

Why Do the World's Central Banks Manipulate the Price of Gold?

For now we must watch the key levels of resistance around 1115 in the SP. A trading range is most probable but there is a potential distribution top forming with a down side objective around 870 on the SP 500.

It does bear watching, closely, keeping in mind that this is an option expiration week, and the traders expect the market to misrepresent its price discovery, as the result of conscious manipulation.