22 August 2012

Interviews with 'The New Economists' From Mindful Money


Mindful Money has published an eclectic collection of short interviews with those whom they describe as 'the new economists.'

These include Steve Keen, Unlearning Economics, Positive Money, Modern Monetary Mechanics, Pragmatic Capitalism, and a little known Café which they describe as:
An anonymous blogging site with a pleasant relaxed feel ("an oasis of civility in an increasingly uncivil world", the site includes images from the Café's signature dishes in the left margin), wry humour and a global readership. Jesse has a strong interest in reining in the banks and reforming economics and incorporates some stunning graphs into his blog posts.

However in a a recent, somewhat resigned post, he wrote: "I do not think the US is ready to insist on serious reform. It will take another crisis. The anti-regulatory slogans are too effectively ingrained in the public psyche. And self-deception is a powerfully addictive state of mind. Especially for those whose expansive lifestyles depend on it."

I don't feel as resigned as exasperated at times. But that is the nature of a sea change which happens slowly and quietly over a long interval until one suddenly notices it and, voilà.

Do not expect profundity and lengthy expositions of economic thought from yours truly, because after all it was a Q&A and I was able to give what I thought were plain answers that struck to the heart of the questions right 'off the cuff' as they say. We become lost in a fog of words, at a time when action is becoming ever more important on the individual level.

The menu of answers should surprise no regular patron of Le Café. But I see in reading it now that I did manage a quip or two to quicken the sauce of the dismal science.

Q. If you could travel back in time and change something in the financial world that would benefit society, what would it be?

A. I would help Alan Greenspan achieve a wonderfully rewarding career as a professional clarinetist.

And then I would skip forward ten years or so and stop the Bankers' campaign to repeal Glass Steagall.
Enjoy.

You can read the entire interview here and the entire piece with links to the entire collection of interviews here.

21 August 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - The Old Switcheroo



Gold and silver had a nice rally today, and ran up into hard resistance as one can see from the charts.

I published a note on the Net Asset Value Premiums today that shows that for the first time in my memory the premiums on gold versus silver had turned decisively in favor of gold.

This has occurred before, when a fund was expanding its size using a shelf offering for example. They sell units and raise cash to buy metals, and the size of their cash reserves go up and then down. This affects the NAV premium quite a bit.

Sprott's PSLV has recently completed a large expansion which showed up in the premiums in the end of July and August.   These expansions have caused PSLV to underperform SLV for the year to date. 

And in early August we saw the premiums at par in the Central Funds as well.  That might be a drag on effect as investor enthusiasm for silver become subdued.

But now gold is clearly edging out silver. I'm not sure why, but I suspect that if this trend continues and deepens then the market is pricing in some event as yet unforeseen, at least by us.

A change in monetary policy, war, a new trade regime? All these exogenous events are possible, in addition to endogenous factors such as a big official buyer or two in gold.

Let's see what happens.




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts



Stocks ran up to resistance around 1425, and then the buying seemed to fall apart for no reason.

Stocks gave up all their gains and ended the day with a slight loss.

For now this is just a pullback since stocks did not violate any key support.

After the bell Dell cut its forecasts. Even though the company is troubled, the economy is certainly not robust in the states.



Net Asset Value Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - The Oddest Thing


My net asset value premium indicator shows that gold is commanding a higher premium over NAV as compared to silver, for the first time that I can ever recall.

I do not remember seeing the premium on gold higher than the premium on silver, as shown in the Sprott precious metal funds. Ever.

At least not while the funds are not in the midst of implementing a shelf offering. Sprott silver (PSLV) recently completed a major buy and the premium there often lags in such a period of time.

When I saw the results my jaw dropped. I have checked and rechecked them. And my own estimates of their NAV track perfectly with their indicative intraday indicators, so I am fairly sure there is not an error in the fund calculations.

And as confirmation, the premium of the Central Gold Trust (GTU) is higher than the premium of the Central Fund of Canada (CEF), which is a mix of silver and gold. That is also strange.

In early August the premiums in the funds had pulled equal, but I tended to dismiss that as a drag on effect from the Sprott silver expansion. CEF and PSLV have some correlation in premiums with the larger PSLV being the price leader.

Something is a bit odd in this market.

Last week someone notified me of some unusual trading patterns in the gold funds. I have been keeping an eye on them, but never expected this.

Silver has a much higher beta than gold. If this continues, if the gold premium continues to exceed silver, it would suggest a clear signal that at least some market participants are pricing in an unusual financial event.

What that might be, I cannot say. I do not even know if it is positive or negative for the precious metals market or their related markets, except to speculate.

On one hand it could represent some manipulative action in the silver market, some unusual effort to cap its tendency to rally.

On another hand it might be a precursor to a dramatic market decline in equities, with a safe haven move into gold ahead of time.

And it could also merely be particular buying pressure from official sources in gold that has not yet spilled over into the silver market.

Take your pick. They are all equally defensible at this point, until we obtain more data.