04 August 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Just Another Series of Unfortunate Events



If you look at the warehouse report for Friday you will see that almost 600,000 ounces of gold took a hike out of the JP Morgan Comex metals warehouse.  That was almost half of their total gold.  Let's see where it turns up, since nothing seems to actually leave the Comex metals warehouses anymore these days.

Do you think that the charges that JPM was fudging its reports to the CFTC on trader's metal positions was any factor in this?  Probably not.  But there seems to be a decided erosion of confidence in the process as it exists in the New York metals market, at Madame Tussaud's on the Hudson.

The big dogs holding gold for the Comex in their warehouses now are HSBC and Scotia Mocatta. 

So far this month of August, approximately 226,000 ounces of gold have been stood for delivery, as compared to a total of a little more than 968,000 ounces registered for delivery at these prices.  As we have seen lately, it does not bother the banksters to allow the inventories to shrink down to a small percentage of the global metals market.  And so price discovery is divorced and diverges from pricing.

The metals were mildly hit on the New York open, and then capped pretty much for the rest of the day.  The exercise seems to be protecting the psychologically important levels of 1300 and 21 for gold and silver respectively.

If I were of a mind to hold gold and silver in some venue for trading for a quick buck, I might consider keeping it at some Comex warehouse, or holding it in some ETF like GLD or SLV.  After all, it is a relatively low cost venue.

But if it was for anything except a quick trade, I would personally be inclined to get it out.  At my earliest convenience.  But that is just my preference.

When it is too late to move your wealth, they will most likely be blaming no one in particular, just a series of unfortunate events.  Like MF Global. 

Or the Hotel California.  You can check out, but you can never leave:  except on their terms.

Have a pleasant evening.







SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Be Careful With a Fool


Stocks caught a bounce today, which was a little weaker than one might have expected given that it is a bounce off strong support.

I think part of the problem that the pros are having here is that they are having difficulty handing off their positions at these higher prices.

Those that have money are all in, and there are few bears. Those that don't have money, or who are eschewing the markets, are chasing new bubbles in housing, which looks like a fairly risky bet.

And underpinning it all is the very artificial and narrow 'recovery' that is leaving Main Street behind.  I see great danger ahead.

You might hope that these jokers in New York, London, and Washington will wise up before they reap the whirlwind.  And you might be wrong.   Be careful with a fool.
Johnny Winter was professionally active until the time of his death near Zurich, Switzerland, on July 16, 2014.  He was found dead in his hotel room two days after his last performance, at the Cahors Blues Festival in France on July 14, at the age of 70.
RIP Johnny.

Have a pleasant evening.












01 August 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Good Vibrations


"Love does not consist in gazing at each other but in looking outward together, in the same direction."

Antoine de Saint-Exupery

As it is in love, so it is in most endeavors involving groups of people.  There must be a meeting of the minds, and a commitment to common goals despite any differences.  
 
More simply, it is the priority of caring.   It is torn apart and rendered helpless by stubborn grudges, obstinate pride, and the indifference of selfishness and injustice.

I have seen even venerable organizations torn apart by the willful selfishness and jealousy of a relative, but powerfully articulate, few.  They took the ship itself down, fighting for every last perk, every last vestige of power.
 
Gold had a bounce back today, while silver tended to linger near the lows for the week.   For some reason I had a very good feeling about the action in gold as I watched the tape.
 
There was nothing particularly remarkable in the price action, except for the obvious capping which is back on, keeping gold below the psychological level of 1300 and silver below 21.
 
What was surprising is that in the first report for the month of August almost 20% of the registered gold in the Comex warehouses was stood for in delivery at the price of $1281. We won't see what happened today until next week.
 
This is not to say that the Comex will run out of gold, or that this is some kind of default scenario. As we have seen, the Comex is no longer a delivery market, and most of the metals there just move around the plate within the warehouses and the ETFs and Funds.

Rather it was an indication that a price level of 1281 brought out a lot of buying. So we will take it for what it is worth.
Geopolitical jitters will continue to dominate, and the US economy will continue to stagger on, given the life support trickled into it by the Dr. Feelgoods at the Fed, and the Dr. Frankensteins in the Congress.
 
Remember the innocents, and all those who suffer in quiet with their own burdens and trials everywhere.  Harshness is the easy course, and a strong temptation, to finally become what we hate.   Love is the way of all goodness, and life.

In the beginning, a man will marry a woman because he thinks that she will not change.  And a woman will marry a man because deep down she thinks that she can change him.   As they get older, a man grows sentimental, and a woman grows much more practical.

But in the end, it is all the same if they are still together, as one looking outward at life together.
 
Have a very pleasant weekend.
 










SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Key West and the Weekend


Today's Non-Farm Payrolls report was mediocre, and the lack of wage growth was discouraging.

Markets had big swings up and down early on before they settled into their own form of low volume mediocrity.

The big resistance is fairly obvious underneath this pricing action here, and I suspect strongly that the next moves will be determined by the course of geopolitical events, or the lack thereof.

Some years ago I used to take the occasional trip down to Key West when I was in the southern Florida area on a long business trips, and visiting friends in the Miami and Tampa areas. My wife often came with me before the children arrived.

On one trip we rented a big green station wagon we nicknamed 'The Shark' and drove down the keys to Key West.  It was a wonderful, generally unspoiled place.  I wanted to see Hemingway's house down there, which is a great stop, and also wanted to stand at the beginning of US Route 1, and the southernmost point of the US.

I had a chuckle or two at Hemingway's.  The receptacle he had tiled and turned into a fountain for the cats from the original Sloppy Joe's Bar is a hoot.  And the way in which they constructed the brick fence and the backing for it made me laugh out loud. I won't give anything away. You'll have to go down to see it.   I was never much of a Hemingway (or Fitzgerald fan) much past high school, but he was certainly interesting, and I liked his house there quite a bit.  It would have suited my tastes quite well..

 I flew in one time, and the airport was a one room building with a little area for baggage. It was remarkably simple.  We had been there a few times a year, but on the last few visits in the late 1990's the town and beaches seem to have gotten much more built up and touristy, like Las Vegas. The housing prices had gone through the roof, and hotel and resort developments have changed the character of the place.  From the pictures it looks like they have jammed the place up with condominiums.

Still, I am sure that it is still nice to have some fresh lobster and conch chowder, and go down to the quay at Mallory Square for the sunset if you get a chance, and watch the natives gather.  lol.  We still have some baskets of shells which we had gathered while walking hand in hand on the beaches in the 1970's. 

It's the weekend.  Have a good one.












31 July 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Into the Storm: Sharknado II - Embracing the Con


Today was not unexpected.  Let me repeat.  I was not surprised. 

The markets today were so boring, in the manner of a staged match in professional wrestling, that I actually broke down and watch a DVR'd copy of 'Sharknado II.
 
It was absurd to the point of being clichéd and campy but without genuine laughs, just like the current US Congress.

This was the 'wash and rinse' that was being written all over the charts.

Stocks dropped about 2%, and gold and silver were under continuing pressure for most of the day.

It did not seem like a panicky sell off, based on the Argenine default, although the VIX spiked pretty hard.

 Rather, it looked like the type of very cynical market move that has characterized almost everything we have seen from the equity markets Matrix for some time now.  Now that we have run them up, let's do a quick dump of stocks to once again try to skin the pension and mutual funds, along with mom and pop.

The gold and silver sell off, despite the big drop in stocks, ahead of the Non-Farm Payrolls report tomorrow, was just too much.   Wow, precious metals hit ahead of a Non-Farm Payrolls Report.  What a surprise.

Well, let's see how things progress. This *could* turn into something else, but for now it seems about as manufactured and orchestrated as the crisis in the Ukraine, and the neo-con beating of the war drums with Russia. 
 
The markets are not as invincible as this newest crop of the Masters of the Universe think that they are, even though they have been on quite a market-rigging, justice fixing roll.

Doesn't this whole thing with Russia seem about as weird as the sudden push for war in Iraq that we saw in the Bush Administration?  Its pretty clear what the motives were then in terms of making the most of a phony crisis.  I wonder what they are up to now?

Have a pleasant evening.
 
 









SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Don't Worry Baby


Today was 'laundry day' at the US markets, as the foamy stock peak of the past month took a hard turn in the old 'wash and rinse' cycle, that blew off the froth.

That's what it was.  Pure and simple.  Any talk of 'gloom and doom' and imminent collapse is pretty much rubbish, although the economy is certainly grossly underperforming its potential despite the rosy numbers the bureaucrats like to display.  And we know what the problem is, pure and simple.  The system needs to be reformed, and is caught in a credibility trap.

So what happened today?  The wise guys and chuckle heads have been driving up stock valuations pretty steadily for the past few months as you can see from the charts.  They hit some stiff resistance which they pounded against for the past two or three weeks.

And today with the growing troubles in the Ukraine and Gaza, the default of Argentina, and the extremely dodgy impulse of the US to lead the G7 into another cold war with Russia, the boys just decided to have a day.

Stocks dropped about 2% today.  It seems like a lot because we have not seen such a thing in quite a while.  But the market's underpinnings were made of highly compressible foam, which I had warned about a few times.

The 'tell' was the selling of gold and silver along with stocks today.  This was no flight to safety of cash on geopolitical jitters.

Let's see if we get some follow through off the Non-Farm Payrolls report tomorrow.  But I suspect that if the Alibaba IPO were still scheduled for August 8 this decline would be a one day affair.  As it is they gave up on the 'lucky numbers date' of 8/8, and have pushed it back into September.

I think it is hard to be too cynical about this market, with its hot money, computerized trading games, and pervasive dark pools.

Have a pleasant evening.








NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds


It is interesting that the precious metals are moving with the equity markets today.

I suspect it is more about the events of the week with regard to monetary policy and economic reports than anything else.

The gold/silver ratio remains historically high around 62.5.