05 October 2012

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts


Stocks had a big pop in the morning from the drop in unemployment, even though the actual number of jobs added were a bit below expectations.

Traders took profits in the afternoon. AAPL weighed on the tech sector all day.

Very quiet day and traders were complaining that the volumes on most exchanges are down from their heyday. Is there anything but traders left in these markets? Mom and pop seem to be keeping their money closer to home, much to Wall Street's dismay.

The CEO of Morgan Stanley said that Wall Street employs too many people at too high a rate of pay. Amen to that, but he's about five years to late in realizing it.

How many times have we said here that we can foresee a day when the traders will be back to tossing paper airplanes at each other in the pits? I suppose HFT and their wash trades is the electronic equivalent of that.

I suspect that increasingly the money centers of London and NY and Chicago will begin to lose their influence over world commodity prices.

You can cheat some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time...

Monday is a bank holiday in the States. Columbus Day.

Have a pleasant evening and weekend.




04 October 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts



Gold and silver popped a bit today on a sunnier outlook for the economy and the continued running of the printing presses.

Non-Farm payrolls tomorrow.





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts



The market rallied on a 'Romney win' in the presidential debate and a decent Spanish bond auction.

The ECB left rates unchanged.

The Non-Farm Payrolls report is tomorrow.





Simon Johnson: Money, Power, and the Rule of Law


The dominant political parties in the US or the UK really 'get this,' because they do not want to. They are fine with collaborating with the status quo as long as it serves them.

They have become a brothel for the monied interests and nationless corporations.

They seem to have lost their sense of honor and civic duty. It has been choked by greed and selfishness, a lack of empathy and proportion. Their hypocrisy knows no bounds

NY Times
Money, Power and the Rule of Law
By Simon Johnson
October 4, 2012

Economic policy is always torn between helping the broader social interest – lots of ordinary people – and favoring particular special interests. Unfortunately, special interests typically win out in the kind of situation we have in America in 2012, when it’s all about spending money to win friends and influence people.

The most effective way to push back against powerful special interests is to have the same rules for everyone – and to enforce those rules fairly, even when they are broken by the richest and most politically connected people in the land. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman of New York took a major step toward restoring the rule of law this week, by bringing a case against JPMorgan Chase. But it will be an uphill battle; the forces against him are incredibly strong, including some within the Obama administration.

Special interests always want to take over and organize society for their own benefit. In the terminology of economics, there are always some “rents” to be had – meaning some form of extra compensation that you get from tilting the playing field in your favor. Powerful people are always “rent-seeking,” another way of saying that they would like to feather their own nests. And such activities impose costs on society, lowering incomes and limiting opportunities for everyone else.

When money is the primary source of power, the special interests win hands down. They can create advantages for themselves. One way is through the market mechanism – as monopolists did with railroads and industrial sectors at the end of the 19th century.

Or they can capture the government and use state policies to help themselves – for example, by deregulating the financial sector and allowing excessive risk-taking in big banks. The ability to take such risks hurts all consumers and taxpayers while helping the special interests who get this advantage...

Read the rest here.