06 September 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Holding the Line On a Breakout


Today was filled with cross currents, as the Non-Farm Payrolls report came in light, and looked even worse if you peered into the details of it.

The unemployment rate is less meaningful now because of the large number of people who have been long term unemployed and are falling off the unemployment benefits rolls. Labor Participation Rate and average workweek are therefore a bit more important.  And things are not looking good because the jobs that are being created tend to be low wage and often part time.

There is no real sustainable recovery, except for a few sectors that were ironically at the heart of the financial crisis five years ago: FIRE sector and the Beltway Elites. Except for some regional pockets of recovery, most everyone else is just getting by.

As you know the failure to reform a broken system is very high on the list of policy failures. Close behind are the Fed's trickle down stimulus approach, and the sequester and failure to act meaningfully on the fiscal side by the political class.

But the more jarring event today was Putin's strong stand on Syria. The case the US has been making is weak, and allies are few. It seems like the Obama Administration is listening to a few groups and advisers, and is tone deaf to what the mass of the public and the rest of the world is saying. This is not to say that Putin is right.

Rather, Putin is playing chess, and Washington is playing checkers, and also playing footsie under the table with the usual special interests, and ignoring the persuasion that must accompany any movement to military action. And the explanations and evidence that must accompany a grave decision were facing a high bar given the context of a war weary public that feels, with much justification, that their politicians are not listening to them, and are quite willing to say whatever it takes to get their way.

When a former US president, Jimmy Carter, says that the country no longer has a functioning democracy, it is hard to make a case that you just didn't know things were that bad. Well, they are, and they are getting worse with every week that passes and the political class continues to muddle through a credibility trap of their own making.

So in times of uncertainty and deception, when it is difficult to correctly price risk, people seek safety in certainty where they can obtain it, and that involves places a percentage of their wealth in things with less counterparty risk.

And so we saw a rally in gold and silver, although there is quite an effort behind the scenes to keep them from breaking out. They will break out, eventually, and the shorts are going to be hard pressed to deliver the bullion which has been rehypothecated many times. And when this does result in a market dislocation, the economists and the politicians and the regulators will stand open mouthed and say, 'who could have known?'

So let's see what happens.  Things are not all that bad from an historical perspective, unless you have a somewhat romantic view of the past.  My grandparents and parents faced things that were just as bad or worse,  and I myself grew up during the Cold War, the Cuban missile crisis, and Vietnam, and riots that tore cities apart.  

I remember as a young boy riding a public bus with an overhead advert of Khrushchev pounding a shoe on the table saying, "We will bury you."  Now we have the Tea Party and would be demagogues, and then we had the Dixiecrats and Joe McCarthy.  And three of our greatest lights for hope, John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, and Robert F. Kennedy, were all brutally killed by assassins bullets within a few years. 

If you were not a part of it, it is hard to imagine what it was like.  Some of my friends say that we are doomed, and things are much worse now than they ever were.  Well, they are like this for most generations, that face difficult, almost seemingly insurmountable obstacles.  And yet life goes on.

But certain times call for certain actions, and now is a good time to look to your portfolios, and to remain calm and discerning in your thoughts as you take whatever measures that you can to not become a part of the problem, and look to your families and friends.

Have a pleasant weekend.






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Push Pull


The market volatility picked up today, although it may be a bit deceptive to look at because the indices finished almost even on the day.

More on this in the metals commentary.

US Unemployment figures are now not working the usual manner because of the length of this recessionary period following the financial crisis.  John Williams from Shadowstats explains this phenomenon I have discussed quite well this evening:
"...headline unemployment reporting suffers seriously-flawed definitions, and the continuing declines in headline U.3 and U.6 are bad news for the U.S. economy.  In relatively shallow and short-duration recessions, a declining unemployment rate usually reflects the good economic news of unemployed people going back to work. 

In the current circumstance—with ongoing casualties of the deepest and longest economic contraction since the Great Depression—the declining U.3 and, increasingly, the U.6 employment rates reflect the unemployed giving up looking for work, because they cannot find gainful employment.  Consider, for example, that the number of U.3 unemployed declined by 198,000 in August, but there was no offsetting gain in employment, which would have been positive economic news.  Instead, the offsets to the unemployment drop were a 115,000 decline in headline employment, and a 312,000 decline in the headline labor force."

Have a pleasant weekend.






05 September 2013

Monthly Imports of Gold From Hong Kong To China Soar On Strong Demand


"Gold shipments to China from Hong Kong increased in July as importers took advantage of local prices that were an average 2.1 percent higher than global markets and as mainland investors bought jewelry and coins.

Net imports, after deducting flows from China into Hong Kong, were 113 metric tons, from 101 tons a month earlier, according to calculations by Bloomberg. Mainland buyers purchased 129 tons in July, including scrap, compared with 113 tons in June, data from the Hong Kong government showed today."

Bloomberg, Gold Imports to China From Hong Kong Climb on Physical Demand

Physical gold is flowing from west to east, and much of it is now passing through Hong Kong to China.  It is going into many strong hands, and may not readily return except at much higher prices.

Price manipulation over long periods of time can create structural supply deficiencies and chronic shortages.  This seems to be the case in both gold and silver.

Weighed, and found wanting.

Stand and deliver.





Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Metals Hit Ahead of Non-Farm Payrolls Report


For regular patrons of le café a bear raid on the metals in conjunction with a Non-Farm Payrolls report is a familiar tradition.

I have to admit I did not suspect it would gain even this much traction given the thin level of deliverable of inventory and, more importantly, the war jitters in the Mideast.

But neither war, nor widespread economic damage, nor privation inflicted on commodity countries will keep these jokers from their appointed rounds.

See you tomorrow.