18 March 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Pop Goes The Weasel - JPM Wins Silver Case Dismissal


As expected, JPM has won a dismissal of the civil price-fixing lawsuit.  What a surprise!

I found this piece called Cyprus, Oh the Irony! by Hinde Capital to be an interesting read.

Gold and silver had a modest advance, nothing as one might have expected given the extraordinary risks that remain in Europe and the international financial system.

Stocks even managed to rally today based on 'good homebuilder news' and a series of rumours about the Cyprus situation.

This was almost exactly as I had said it would happen. There is a definite market operation going on to inflate stocks and to cap the precious metals. The hedge funds have significant event exposure here, although it is hard to determine it without seeing all of the trades on their books.

So what next?

Spain had a 'bank holiday' today as well as Cyprus. While Cyprus' banks will remain closed until Thursday, the banks in Spain will reopen tomorrow and there are concerns about 'contagion' as depositors may choose to move their funds to safer waters.

So let's see what happens. I expect that the central banks will wish to paper over this problem and move back to a muddle through strategy in which an uneasy equilbrium is achieved through the continuing force of printing money. But events can get out of hand, and rather quickly at times.




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - American Exceptionalism


The equity market operated pretty much as I had expected, with a few opportunities for playing the volatility.

There is a definite bid under the US equity markets led by the SP futures. Whether it can continue to shrug off risk and rally higher is an open question. Supposedly the impetus for the stock market recovery off the overnight lows was the 'good news' from the homebuilders.

VIX shot up to the 50 day moving average today, and I took some off the table from Friday.  I am still looking for some additional intraday swings as rumours abound.

I still believe that 1570 remains a target on the SP futures for the wiseguys. And they may get it, and more, if the global financial system can hold together. I think they are taking profits and managing the hand off to mom and pop and their pension funds and 401k's.





Cyprus Update - The Calm Before the Storm - One Europe?


I am sure you are aware of the events unfolding in Cyprus, at least if you follow the financial news and the internet.

The vote in the Cyprus Parliament has been postponed until Tuesday, most likely because the votes were not there to pass a resolution that was acceptable to the EU.

The bank holiday has been extended to Thursday, and it is doubtful they will reopen until the Parliament has sorted out a plan of action.  The shutting of the banks while the politicians wrangle over the details of the confiscation is not designed to heighten confidence.

As you may recall, the President of Cyprus, Nicos Anastasiades, a member of the conservative Democratic Rally (DISY) party, was elected in February of this year with about 58% of the vote. He is known as a blunt, chain-smoking 'strong man' with strong ties to the right wing politicians of Europe. Indeed, these connections and his promise of a solution favorable to Cyprus were strong factors in his recent electoral victory.

The extenuanting factors here are that Cyprus is viewed as a bellwether for Italy and Spain. There are many who would dispute this, and point to the particularities of the size and structure of the Cyprus banking sector. But there is a widespread perception that the heavy hand of Germany is running the EU these days, and prior pledges and principles cannot be trusted if the central rulers of the EU are willing to confiscate the insured deposits of private citizens, no matter how they try to rationalize it.

I tend to view this as the overall progress in the foregone drama of an inherently unstable European Union that has fallen into a financial plutocracy. Any actions they take now are merely delaying the inevitable. And the consequences for the global financial sector are profound.

The EU and the Fed may be able to paper over the problems and achieve an uneasy stability that could last a year or two, but without profound changes to the European financial arrangements that include transfer payments, a single currency spanning such diverse national economies is inherently unstable.  It is the child of the overreach of bureaucratic arrogance and economic fairy tales.

This *could* be a rather clever move to force at least a portion of Europe into a single political government of twelve or fifteen members, but I hate to give the plutocrats that much credit for planning. 

I know there is and has been talk for quite some time of dividing the world into five or six major spheres of political influence, including North America and a few South American client states, Europe, Russia, China, and Japan.  The particularities of southeast Asia and the Pacific are very much in play, along with the status of various economic colonies in the Third World including Africa.  India and Australia are major outliers.  The UK has been particularly troubled by its relatively minor role, and aspires to be the financial center and interface to the world for the rest of Europe.

Whether any of this happens or not is very much open to question.  But the establishment of a 'new order' in the world has quite a few globally powerful adherents who are willing to work for this in the long term.  It should be remembered that the fashions of 'centralization and decentralization' of power have their swings, seemingly like a natural ebb and flow over time,  quite similar to what we often see in the corporate world.

17 March 2013

SP 500 Futures - 'Tax On Deposits' Triggers Tremors in La La Land


"News of the tax triggered a run on cashpoints in Cyprus over the weekend. Monday is a bank holiday and measures need to be approved before banks reopen on Tuesday.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades, a conservative elected just three weeks ago, said the tax on deposits was an alternative to a disorderly bankruptcy.

In a televised address, he said it was painful but "will eventually stabilize the economy and lead it to recovery."

Savers who lost money would be compensated by shares in commercial banks, with equity returns guaranteed by future revenues expected from natural gas discoveries, Anastasiades said.

Reuters, Cyprus Works On Tax Levy Deal To Get Bailout Approved

The futures are down 16+ points this evening, most likely on jitters over bank instability in the eurozone.

According to one of my friends, Dennis Gartman sent out the following:
"By now I suspect that most of you have heard the news from Cyrpus over the weekend, but just in case you’ve not the Cypriot government has chosen to confiscate money from any and all accounts at any and all banks in Cyprus to pay for its banking problems...

This is astounding, and the decision was… if not fully decided in Brussels… was approved by Brussels and Berlin and Paris et al. This is unlike anything I’ve heard in my 40+ years of being in the market. This is HUGE news; this is massively bearish news for the EUR; this is massively bullish news for gold and this is THE MOST IMPORTANT BUSINESS NEWS OF THE YEAR THUS FAR. Please believe me on this; this is Europe’s “Lehman” moment.

I shall be around all day tomorrow trying to figure out what has happened here and why, but if the EUR… which closed on Friday at 1.307… does not open below 1.2900 and then continue lower, and if gold, which closed on Friday at $1590/oz does not open above $1625 and head higher I will be truly, truly stunned."

Be prepared; Monday is going to be violent"
I had a couple of email messages after a post about the sacredness of trust in money and banking earlier today.  They implied that I had a misplaced sympathy for the crooked Russians, and the little people of Cyprus.

That post was not intended to be a moral message, although morality is certainly involved.  It is more of a practical matter. 

When your money system is based on trust, it is critically important to maintain appearances.  Simply reaching out and confiscating the insured savings of depositors is very bad form, especially when everyone knows you are doing it to support a rigged system that is run for the benefit of a fortunate few.

The sophisticates are fairly used to discussing the darker corners of injustice of the system in their own circles.  And they have become comfortable with it, as they are in viewing the victims of their greed as 'takers.'  I am sure that this played some part in the expedient decision to support the Eurocrony corporatist zone by simply stealing depositors' money, and deriding them as either crooks or hapless fools who 'must contribute.' 

 But what the cynical plutocrats do not realize is that most people still believe in the system, in rules and justice.  And it is this belief that sustains a system based on promises and guarantees and trust.

I am fairly certain that the financiers and central bankers will wish to shut down any incipient panic in the Euro banks. After all, the entire global reserve currency system is a confidence game.

Buying the SP futures and selling more paper gold and silver might do the trick.  And their talking heads will carry the message that this is much ado about nothing, and merely another buying opportunity.

They certainly have dipped into that bag of tricks many, many times in the recent past.  And personally I will be stunned if they do not make a determined effort to do it again.