18 December 2015

The Warning: A Financial Cauldron of Very High Leverage and Interwoven Risks


"The current bubbles in junk bonds and foreign debt are not in any way driving the economy. Presumably we are seeing somewhat more investment as a result of the fact that uncreditworthy companies were able to borrow at a low cost, but there is no notable boom in such investment.

Similarly, if foreign borrowers have a harder time getting access to credit, it may be bad news for them, but the impact on the U.S. economy will be limited.

If some banks or other financial institutions have over committed themselves in these areas, the plunge in prices may threaten their survival. This could lead to some late nights for folks at the Fed and other regulators, but it will not pose a major risk to the economy."

Dean Baker, Bubbles that We Have to Worry About and Bubbles We Don't, 18 December 2015

And how large was Long Term Capital Management? And the Knickerbocker Trust?

Could they have been said to be 'driving the economy?

And most importantly, is the failure of any major financial institution likely to be an 'isolated incident' in this current financial structure?

I like Dean Baker quite a bit, and read his column every day, often linking to it.

But he may be greatly underestimating the size and interconnectedness and the leverage in the derivatives markets, which while it is a bit harder to see than the housing or tech bubbles is nonetheless there and even more deadly.

It is not the bubble itself that causes the problem alone, but the context in which a risk like that develops, the 'transmission' of the failure throughout the system.  Often in a system that has become sufficiently vulnerable the actual event that causes a collapse can seem relatively minor, until it is examined with an open systems mind after the fact.

The system is at the heart of the problem, not the source of the particular failure that sets its tumbling.

Should one ignore the estimated notional size of the $1.2 quadrillion global derivatives market. And the estimates that put it at more than 10 times the total world GDP.

Oh yes, I know, the insurance and cross-party netting surely mitigates these risks.  And this is the same bad estimate and theory that feeds and precedes almost every major financial panic and crisis.

What happens when a large failure of a 'single institution' takes down a major counterparty affecting multiple financial firms in a cascading of mispriced risks?

Suddenly these theoretically controlled derivatives turn into a tsunami of cross party financial contagion.   This is the real risk, not the derivatives themselves, but their size and their relative fragility to the unexpected, and the concentration of their holdings in a few systemically important places.

Does Dean really believe that it may be too bad for some 'foreign borrowers' but the exceptional American financial system will be able to withstand the winds that blow through the world markets?

What is the estimate of the damage that can be done when confidence fails and there is a widespread and sudden withdrawal of liquidity and a freezing of the short term global credit markets from an enormously interconnected and grossly leveraged financial system that resembles a pyramid scheme?

Are we going to go through all of this again, with the hopes that only the Fed and few Bank regulators will have some sleepless nights but otherwise all is well?   The last time they quickly panicked and went to the Congress with a blank check and a threat of civil chaos.

And what is so different now?   Now they are like the 300 Spartans, willing to risk all and lay down their careers for the sake of the American public, saving them from the consequences a financial system that has been gorging itself on the rich rewards of massive speculation?

Are you kidding me?

Genuine financial reform and hard systemic firewalls like Glass-Steagall are the only remedy.  And we most certainly do not have them now.

Why are there so many plans that now include the 'bail-ins' of public savings and pensions?

I am not fear-mongering.  I am raising all of the hard questions that politicians like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders have been asking, and which have largely gone unanswered behind a wall of opaque secrecy inside a crony club of the revolving door,  with deriding dismissals and vague assurances of hope for change.

And we had all of that before the financial crisis of 2008 as well.

Remember Brooksley Born?
"We didn't truly know the dangers of the market, because it was a dark market," says Brooksley Born, the head of an obscure federal regulatory agency -- the Commodity Futures Trading Commission [CFTC] -- who not only warned of the potential for economic meltdown in the late 1990s, but also tried to convince the country's key economic powerbrokers to take actions that could have helped avert the crisis. "They were totally opposed to it," Born says. "That puzzled me. What was it that was in this market that had to be hidden?"

PBS Frontline, The Warning

And the risks are still hidden, and growing rather than diminishing, such is the tide of the influence of Big Banking and Big Money.

In this current financial system, no TBTF Bank is an island of secular failure anywhere in the world.

17 December 2015

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Gloria In Excelsis Deo


The precious metals' gains from yesterday were smacked lower in the London PM fix and the NY open, as the currency reversal higher in the dollar took down almost the entire commodity index as expressed in the buck.

Gold and silver are now both short term oversold.

There was another large gold delivery 'house to house' at The Bucket Shop from HSBC/Nova to JPM. This has been the theme for this month. I would not be surprised to see JPM continuing to take the role as 'stopper' of customers standing for deliveries.

There will be a quad witching option expiration in the US equity markets tomorrow.

The weather report is for antics abounding.

And next week is Christmas.  Let's see if the annual 'Santa Claus' rally shows up.

Have a pleasant evening.













SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Quad Witching Expiry Tomorrow


"Every century is like every other, and to those who live in it seems worse than all times before it... thus much of comfort do we gain from what has been hitherto, not to despond, not to be dismayed, not to be anxious, at the troubles which encompass us. They have ever been; they ever shall be; they are our portion."

John H. Newman

All the gains from yesterday were swept aside.

In a very real sense, I believe that yesterday was a wash and rinse setup for today ahead of the quad witching expiration in stocks tomorrow.

The economic news this morning continued to be dour.

Have a pleasant evening.






NAV Premiums of Precious Metals Funds and Trusts - Quad Witching Expiry Tomorrow


It appears that the Central Gold Trust, Sprott Gold and Sprott Silver have all sold some bullion to return their cash assets back into the black.

The only one that did not have to sell was the Central Fund. Although it has the currently worst discount to NAV, as it generally does, it now has one of the better cash to expense positions perhaps of these.

Weathering the storm and all that.



16 December 2015

Darth Trump






And here is where The Donald got his public speaking mannerisms.




Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Gold and Silver Rally Back From Antic Lows


And so the Fed raised rates, in the manner in which you would have expected if you frequent this site.

We are not quite out of the woods yet since the markets are certainly not transparent and efficient by any means, and this Friday is a quad witch. While it does not directly involve the metals at The Bucket Shop, it certainly has plenty of intermarket connections through the miners and the ETFs.

There was another handoff of gold from the house account of HSBC to the house account of JPM.

I suspect at some point if we get some customer who is willing to stand for delivery, JPM is the designated stopper.

The other day I read a fairly contrived comparison of the Comex Hong Kong to The Bucket Shop that was so twisted out of meaning as to be almost grotesque

To elaborate, as you may notice I often include the 'loco Hong Kong' Comex licensed warehouses in the gold reports each day, of which at this time Brinks is the only one of note.  

And as you may have further noticed, there is no 'registered' category for the gold bullion there, and large quantities of it tend to get taken out of the warehouse(s) on a fairly regular basis.  So obviously comparisons of the 'leverage' feature, or potential claims per ounce at a given price from The Bucket Shop is meaningless.

The reason why is that the Comex Hong Kong, such as it is, is not really in practice a paper market dealing in synthetic gold that fluffs around between players, rarely going anywhere.  Rather, it is significantly an 'over-the-counter' market in which, and such a thing is hard to believe these days, customers actually BUY gold and take it out of the warehouse to be used in some manner other than for wagering.

I am wondering if Harriet H., the Ex-Executive Director of the Comex who just took a permanent and unexpected departure from her position, had set this one up, much to the chagrin of the synthetic gold crowd.  It certainly does most thing in quite the opposite manner from New York.

Have a pleasant evening.









SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Obvious


If Yellen had written a personal email to everyone in the markets I do not think what the Fed did today could have been more obvious.

The 'big tickle' was supposed to be the use of the word 'gradual' rather than 'measured.'

If the economic data and the dovishness of the Fed did not make that form for this current 'policy tightening cycle' completely obvious one can only wonder what it would take.

Let's see how the wiseguys, having dissembled their way to mid-week, can figure out new ways to skin the naive and the trading tourists.

Have a pleasant evening.