01 October 2013

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - If You Don't Know Who the Sucker at the Table Is...


There is an old poker saying that if you don't know who the sucker is at the table, it is probably you.

Quite a few people remarked their puzzlement today about the rally in stocks and the hit on the metals. It seems counterintuitive that 'investors' would embrace risk on a government shutdown and shun risk havens.

You have to understand the nature of the game in order to understand what is going on.

In the short term, this market is about as rational as a crooked roulette wheel. The market insiders can see what the broad public is holding and the numbers in which they are holding it.

Yesterday there was a big spike higher in volatility as shown by the VIX. What that means is that people were seeking safety in puts.

Pros rarely direct their bets in one direction but lean toward spreads and other things that diverge and converge, unless of course they have fixed the results somehow or have access to asymmetric information and then bigger directional bets make sense. This is how big firms achieve 'perfect' trading records, which of course would be impossible in a 'free market,' where freedom implied honesty rather than a lack of rules and oversight.

So, the smaller specs piled into puts and other downside bets ahead of the shutdown, the big insiders saw it, and they bid the markets up today to clean them out of their positions. That is what happened. Note the plunge in VIX today. As I say, 'wax on, wax off.'

Should you start 'thinking like a criminal' as some say? Better than guessing stay the hell out of options and other short term leveraged bets in this market and let the insiders try to cheat each other. Amateurs have no business in the futures or options markets.

I suspect the thinking is that the shutdown will be short lived and that there will be no consequences. That *might* be correct as it is how things often go. But I am not so sure this time will be just like that, for reasons which I will elaborate on in the gold commentary.

Have a pleasant evening.




Excess Reserves: No Government Shutdown There


And besides, the Banks own the Fed which is not a part of the government as you may recall.

And by statute the Congress must not skip a single payday or perk. So no problems there either.

Obama is meeting with the Bankers today, who will be asked to help him out with the Congress.

Is Putin coming for the G20 meeting in Washington on October 10-11? Perhaps he can mediate the deadlock amongst the keepers of the world's reserve currency.

We know he likes Super Bowl rings. Maybe he would like a souvenir billion dollar platinum coin ahead of the holiday rush.

I hear the Chinese like bright shiny things and would gladly trade their nasty Treasuries for newly minted billion dollar coins.

Where is Peter Minuit when you really need him?




'Investors' Shun Safe Havens To Bid Up Risk Ahead of US Debt Ceiling and G20 Banking Meeting


Must have been a mass shunning on cue.

I see where Obama has solicited the Bankers like Blankfein and Dimon to help to persuade the Congress.  He is meeting with them today.

It appears they have already had their persuasive hands on the markets this morning.

The government shut down includes market regulators according to CFTC commissioner Bart Chilton.  "No regulators looking at markets due to government shutdown."

Economist Brad DeLong says Obama's only alternative is raw fiat money creation, aka the trillion dollar coin.  Bring it, Brad.  lol.

Aptly enough, there will be a G20 meeting in Washington DC on October 10-11 which will include all the finance ministers and Central Bank governors.  One can only wonder might be said, especially after Italy's bold statements to the LBMA the other day. 

Gold futures tumble as investors shun safe havens
Oct. 1, 2013, 8:50 a.m. EDT

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures tumbled Tuesday morning, with the traditional safe haven failing to find support as investors shrugged off a long-anticipated shutdown of the U.S. federal government to bid up equities and other assets perceived as risky..."


Chalmers Johnson: The Decline of Empire


Signs of Decay
  1. Internal corruption
  2. Imperial overreach
  3. Inability to reform.