01 July 2013

NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - Weighed, and Found Wanting


Premiums remain thin and oriented towards access to physical metal in the Sprott funds.

We may get yet another 'gut check' if the specs pile on the bounce.   That is how these bluffs run.

But I get the sense that the tide is turning, in many things and matters.

The physical side, the reality of this trade, is starting to assert its power in ways that are hard to resist or ignore.  It may not seem like it because it happens gradually, but it is happening.

These naked short sellers are bully boys and charlatans.  They don't have the goods. They don't have the stuff.  They are in control only while you play their game in their way.  They have been weighed and are found wanting.  They have sown the wind, and will reap the whirlwind.  They have sold what they do not own.  And they are fearful at being called to account on it, as well they should be.

Stand and deliver.


29 June 2013

Corporate Media: Journalism In the Service of the Powerful Few


"But the biggest clue that Sorkin's take on Greenwald was no accident came in the rest of that same Squawk Box appearance:
"I feel like, A, we've screwed this up, even letting him get to Russia. B, clearly the Chinese hate us to even let him out of the country.

I would arrest him . . . and now I would almost arrest Glenn Greenwald, who's the journalist who seems to want to help him get to Ecuador."
"...As a journalist, when you start speaking about political power in the first person plural, it's pretty much glue-factory time."

Matt Taibbi, All Journalism Is Advocacy Journalism


"And remember, where you have a concentration of power in a few hands, all too frequently men with the mentality of gangsters get control. History has proven that."

John Dalberg Lord Acton

While I obviously can not agree with everything in this long documentary, Orwell Rolls In His Grave, I found the discussion and examples to be interesting.

I have included a short video clip concerning the standard visual media set piece afterwards just for fun.

The problem is not that there is advocacy in journalism. There is always advocacy in journalism, even despite a striving for objectivity. Taibbi goes to some lengths to show this in the piece I quoted from above.

The problem is the concentration of ownership in a few powerful hands, and the accompanying diminishment of the exposure of all the facts and perspectives. Even deciding what is not covered becomes a form of censorship.

Like the deregulation of the financial industry, the concentration of the media in a relatively few corporate hands was a ongoing trend that took a great leap forward under the presidency of Bill Clinton, and was then continued and reinforced under George Bush and Barack Obama. It was the conscious undoing of reforms from past lessons learned.

It is the concentration of ownership of the corporate media that is at the heart of the problem of the decline of independent journalistic standards. That, and the culture of unprincipled expediency in the service of power and shameless greed.

We are not responsible, but are culpable to the extent we accept this decline in decency and justice, even by doing nothing as simple as passing on a leaflet, conveniently electronic these days. As Sophie Scholl once said, many years ago in Munich, a people deserve the government which they are willing to tolerate.





28 June 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Oh Say Can You See


The propaganda coming out of the mainstream media is reaching a crescendo.   And the carnies on the financial networks are getting so obvious and clumsy it is almost funny, like watching a bad magic show.

Next week will be lightly traded in the States because of the Thursday national holiday.

If the specs start piling on in the metals they will likely get another 'gut check' or two in the off hours because that is often how these things go in dysfunctional markets as are common in New York and London these days.

The physical markets opening in Asia and Russia are going to turn NY and London into the carnival sideshows that they deserve to be.

I would like to see gold take out its 50 Day Moving Average. That is a technical signal that could spark a rather robust reversal.

Someone may be getting set up to take a beating a little later this year. But let's not get ahead of ourselves. The lack of transparency in the markets makes good forecasting difficult. The use of offshore entities, trading gimmicks, and shell companies by some of the big financials is a serious problem.


SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Paint Spills Off Tape a Bit Into End of Quarter


And the second quarter is finally over.

Stocks extended their rally in a choppy trade for much of the day but then slumped into the close as traders took profits and squared up ahead of a holiday shortened week.

As a reminder there will be no trading in the US on Thursday, 4 July, and the volume on Wednesday and Friday is likely to be rather light. So I think we will see a lot of 'technical trading' unless something happens.

I do think these markets have been so corrupted by gimmicks that they have become virtually dysfunctional to the real economy.

Have a pleasant weekend.