13 June 2013

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Wax On, Wax Off - $yria


My own take is that today was a 'technical trading day.' The economic news of this morning was 'so-so' if you take a closer look at it.

After the sell off for the past two days, and the big losses on the Nikkei overnight, the wiseguys saw an opportunity for a near term short squeeze when the futures we able to hold 1610. So they ran it right back to the top of the short term downtrend channel.  It is easy to shove prices around in these lightly participated markets.

Wax on, wax off.

Tomorrow we get PPI and Michigan sentiment. As a reminder, the wealthy will get the Consumer sentiment reading about five minutes before you do.

FOMC next week and that will weigh on the markets.






NAV of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - Metals Brace For Friday's Bug Hunt




Hudson: Is this gonna be a standup fight, sir, or another bughunt?
Gorman: All we know is that there's still no contact with the colony, and that a xenomorph may be involved.
Frost: Excuse me sir, a-a what?
Gorman: A xenomorph.
Hicks: It's a bughunt.



Comex Registered Gold Continues to Fall To All Time Lows


"I have no spur
To prick the sides of my intent, but only
Vaulting ambition, which overleaps itself,
And falls on the other. . . ."

Macbeth Act 1, scene 7. 25–28

Every time the Comex registered gold has moved to these extreme lows, it has marked a bottom and a major trend change.

The value of global currencies, Comex gold, JPM's vault bullion, and the confidence of the people in the markets.

All in all, it seems like a race to the bottom.

This has many people just shaking their heads.  And one can hardly blame them.

How low can they go?




Max Keiser and Mark O'Byrne Discuss the Gold and Silver Markets


"The tyranny of a prince in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the public welfare as the apathy of the citizens in a democracy."

Montesquieu

I do not see the NSA involvement which Max mentions.  It does not seem to be necessary if you have big market principals and insiders involved, able to operate in secret with the acquiescence of the regulatory bodies and exchanges.   And if there is a need to obtain more specific information, the industry dominant Bloomberg terminal offer a wealth of information about how and when it is being used.

I do think there is serious fraud and abusive market rigging going on, as we have seen in LIBOR, energy, ISDA spreads,  advance selling and leaking of key economic data, insider trading, Bernie Madoff, MF Global, the London Whale, and now currency markets.

There is a general disregard for the rule of law when it is overruled by 'expediency.'   And the threshold for overruling it has gotten lower and lower, to whenever it is of benefit to one's friends and associates, rather than isolated to key issues of national interest. That is a corrosive condition.    It is crony capitalism, and it is destructive of real economic productivity and of markets.

It is ironic that the freest exchanges of information on some of these market abuses are occurring in Asia, and in governments that have made much less pretense to transparency and freedom of information than the US and UK.  They see what is coming and are making it easier for their people to protect themselves.  This is because they are not beholden to the Anglo-American banking cartel.

I am sure that the Congressional hearings that would follow the 'failure to deliver' of a major bullion bank or exchange will be very impressive, full of faux anger and histrionics from outraged politicians.  But like the MF Global hearings, I would expect much noise and heat, little light, and no effective redress for those who have been harmed, 'bailed-in' if you will. 

I expect the whole thing, all the leverage, deception, and fraud to be swept under the rug, and the event attributed to the course of human events.  The madness of crowds, practically an act of God, like the rewriting of the CDO/Housing financial crisis.  It is the most likely outcome in a credibility trap.  And apathy just encourages greater and bolder excesses and abuses.  Greed and fraud are usually not self-limiting, but self-reinforcing. If it worked once it will work again, so keep expanding.  Nothing is sacred.

Here is a reminder of the fundamentals.