20 April 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Overreach, the Graveyard of Empires



"This empire, unlike any other in the history of the world, has been built primarily through economic manipulation, through cheating, through fraud, through seducing people into our way of life, through the economic hit men."

John Perkins


‘Whatever happens, the [1997 Asian currency] crisis probably signaled the beginning of the end of the American empire and a shift to a tripolar world in which the United States, Europe, and East Asia simultaneously share power and compete for it.’

Chalmers Johnson, Blowback, 2004

In addition to the tripolar arrangement noted by Chalmers Johnson above, Russia will occupy a pivotal role between Asia and Europe, as well as the Mideast.  This is why I have previously identified the likelihood of three to four regional spheres of influence if or when the push for a one world government under the dollar and the central banks falters.
 
The bucket shop has been fairly quiet, at least in terms of physical activity.
 
There were some ounces of gold claimed as 'delivered' last Friday as noted on the report below. 
 
But other than that the warehouses remain quiet, with little gold flowing in or out, and silver being 'pushed around the plate.'
 
Someone corrected me to day saying that the Comex was never intended as a physical market, but as 'a means to manipulate prices.' 
 
I will take some issue with that.  The intent of the futures markets were not to manipulate prices.  They may have become that, but it is not in their original or even stated intent.  I do not see many mission statements for the CME and their minders at the CFTC admitting that our intent is to manipulate the prices of real goods in the world.
 
It is important to keep some account of what is intended, and what is a deficiency and a corruption. 
 
There can be a place for a futures market.  It has very specific hedging and risk spreading functions to perform for those who wish to use and sell particular commodities.   They facilitate the price discovery mechanism of the real markets.
 
But when the price discovery mechanism gives way to raw speculation, and the purposes of a market give way to the predations of powerful speculates who neither make nor utilize that thing productively, then the price discovery mechanism becomes broken, and the consequences for real work markets begin to build, and with time, can become almost exponential.
 
That we have allowed our markets to become broken does not mean that this is their proper function by any stretch of our modern narcissism that sees what we are as the epitome of all human progress and development.
 
Have a pleasant evening.
 
 
 
 
 
 

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Whistling Past the Boneyard

 
"The fact is that white-collar criminals are, in general, incredibly good at deluding themselves that they’re good people, even when they clearly aren’t."

Felix Salmon

"Sauve le voleur de la potence, et il te coupera la gorge."

French proverb

There was not much in the way of US economic news this morning.

A calendar of major macroeconomic news is included below.

Stocks were in rally mode in volumes much lighter than the selling volumes last Friday. Smells like a wash and rinse may be underway.

The big tickle du jour was the news that China might be stimulating their economy more, despite the bubble in equities.

A major Chinese developer just defaulted on their dollar denominated bonds. Who could not get enthusiastic about buying financial paper in light of that?

IBM beat its greatly and recently lowered earnings and revenues numbers after the bell. It is sad to see what IBM is becoming. I remember them as a fierce, often domineering competitor from many years ago. Now that seem to be shrinking, badly mismanaged, and rotting beneath a veneer of accounting gimmicks and spin.

How does a hardware and software big black box vendor reinvent themselves in the era of the internet and distributed computing? They have been spinning the outsourcing wheel for some time, and the latest big whoop is 'cloud computing' which is fiercely competitive and for which they do not have all that many competitive advantages.

I am thinking that, ex-seasonal hyperbole that will get adjusted out over time, the US economy was stagnant to contracting in the first quarter. It will be written off to the weather, probably with the real numbers coming out in the third iteration when no one cares any longer.

The stock market is a shell of its former self, more a wealth transfer system than a capital investment mechanism in a vibrant and growing economy.

Things will change and be reformed, but the price to be paid is now quite high.

Have a pleasant evening.





 

Analyzing Wall Street, Banks, and Big Money: A Checklist and an Example

 
"Journalism is one of the devices whereby industrial autocracy keeps its control over political democracy; it is the day-by-day, between-elections propaganda, whereby the minds of the people are kept in a state of acquiescence, so that when the crisis of an election comes, they go to the polls and cast their ballots for either one of the two candidates of their exploiters."

Upton Sinclair, The Brass Check

Rather than present someone else's analysis, here is a simple checklist for you to consider, and a few simple questions.
 
Run down the performance over the last ten years or so of the Too Big To Fail Banks and assess them for yourself.
 
Is further deregulation the answer?   Should we place even more power in the hands of the Banks themselves and then trust them to be good, or give that power to their own industry associations and instruments, including those attached to the revolving door? 
 
Is the Federal Reserve an unbiased and objective regulator fully transparent and answerable to the people before all others?
 
Does the libertarian idealism of assuming that people are all naturally good and rational, weighing long term benefits for all against personal short term gains, serve the public interest?  Is it realistic?   Is it always even real?

What results do we see from the last twenty years of overturning regulations that had stood in place since 1933?  

What sort of people do we elect?   What types of organizations are acquiring much more power, sometimes even tremendous control over healthcare, food, and the military, and with it the power of life and death?

The twenty traits assessed by the PCL-R score are:
• glib and superficial charm
• grandiose (exaggeratedly high) estimation of self
• need for constant stimulation
• pathological lying
• cunning and manipulativeness
• lack of remorse or guilt
• superficial emotional responsiveness
• callousness and lack of empathy
• parasitic lifestyle
• poor behavioral controls
• sexual promiscuity
• early behavior problems
• lack of realistic long-term goals
• impulsivity
• irresponsibility
• failure to accept responsibility for own actions
• many short-term marital relationships
• juvenile delinquency
• revocation of conditional release
• criminal versatility
Robert Hare: Psychopathy Checklist
 
  
Sovereignty?   Sovereignty is bad for business.  And so are democracy, local standards, and home rule.
"The powers of financial capitalism had another far reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole."

Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope
 

Jon Corzine, the Black Knight of Finance


“Crime, once exposed, has no refuge but in audacity.”

Tacitus

If there is a blatant, wanton theft of property for all to see, but no one is convicted or even indicted because of the lack of integrity in the justice system, is it still a crime?

Being a shameless narcissist means never having to say you are sorry, much less that you have failed so dishonorably that you deserve nothing more than public shaming, shunning, and oblivion.

Surprising though, how often this works in finance and politics.  And Jon has spent his time wallowing in both these wretched cesspits. 
 
How readily the failed, slippery eels of business and banking slide into politics and public influence, and how craven, political hacks find such welcoming showers of wealth from their business cronies after 'public service.'   It is corporatism, and a fellowship of disgrace, disorder, and dishonour.
 
Why I hear that even reformers, these days at least, are talking about change on one hand, while scooping in vast amounts of personal wealth through 'donations' from the all-corrupting status quo with the other.   They do not even have to wait until after office to begin collecting their rewards.
 
All the fashionable people of both parties, and most of the developed nations, are doing it, some less cleverly and quietly than others.   So who can judge, who will speak ill of other insiders and still remain one?   It is the credibility trap.

Jon Corzine Considers Launching Hedge Fund
By Julie Steinberg and Rob Copeland
April 19, 2015 7:05 p.m. ET

Jon S. Corzine, the embattled former MF Global Holdings Ltd. chief executive and ex-chairman of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., has discussed plans to start his own hedge fund in recent months, according to people familiar with the matter...

Read the entire article if you have a strong stomach for the self-delusion of the audacious oligarchy here.



NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds

 
 
 


 

18 April 2015

Nomi Prins: The World Is In Play


Lars Schall talks with bestselling author Nomi Prins about current developments in finance and geopolitics, such as: the strength of the US dollar; the Chinese-lead Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank; the relationship between Wall Street and the City of London; and the planned free-trade zones in Asia and Europe with the United State

The interview was originally posted here.