29 December 2014

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts


Stocks popped on the open to the upside, but then it was pretty much a Brownian motion for the rest of the day, with stocks same or lower to the open on low volumes.

Pleasant evening.




The Pursuit of Global Corporatism


The need for a third party in the US becomes more compelling every day.  Or a bipartisan effort to stem the corrosive, anti-democratic influence of Big Money.
 
But I do not see the forces for reform cohering yet.  The attraction and example of power politics and money is too embedded in the mindsets of those whose thinking flows from the status quo. 

Even the reformers can fall quickly into a model of force and compulsion, and heavy handed techniques in pursuing a 'freedom' which they seek to define and control, too often ignoring history and reason.
 
The sign of this is the attitude that there is an elite who, operating in secret and with autonomy, can best decide the meaning of value, and the course of economic events.  It is ironic to see 'reformers' eager to replace one form of oligarchic rule with another that they believe will be more friendly to their own policy decisions, but somehow more benign and resistant to corruption without firm checks and balances on power. 

Sustainable good does not flow from more effective rules but from a better choice of and commitment to a priori values.  Honesty, openness, toleration, justice and kindness are values.   Right over might is an enduring act of balance in human affairs. 

Watch what they do, and not what they say.   If a 'reform movement' is quick to engage in censorship and deception, intolerance and harshness, creating more and cleverer rules and complex theories to achieve their ends, it is most likely another face of the same underlying problem of injustice, no matter what self-delusions they may choose to promote. 
 
As historian Christopher Dawson noted, 'As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy.'

In point of fact, complexity and 'cleverness' are often the very models of a false premise as much as the repetitive simplicity of the Big Lie.  What is presented as new and modern is too often the same old thing wrapped differently.  The truth is often hidden in between, but actions speak loudly.

It will be interesting to see how this situation develops.

TPP Is Not a Free-Trade Agreement
Dean Baker
27 December 2014

People in places like rural Kansas and downtown Washington, DC often have a misplaced trust in authority and elected officials. They are inclined to take their comments at face value, not realizing that these people often have ulterior motives.

The Washington Post gave us an example of this confusion in a front page article on President Obama's effort to push the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which it repeatedly refers to as a "free-trade" pact. The piece follows the administration's line in telling readers that:
"the president threw his full support behind the pact as part of a broader effort to rebalance U.S. foreign policy to the fast-growing Asia-Pacific region."
This assertion makes little sense since the administration is simultaneously pursuing a similar trade pact, the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Pact, with Europe. What both deals have in common is that they are primarily about imposing a business-friendly structure of regulation on both our trading partners and the United States. The more plausible explanation is that President Obama is trying to get more business support for the Democratic Party...

Read the entire article here.



27 December 2014

China Takes 60.657 Tonnes of Gold in Week Ending December 19th


China took 60.657 tonnes of gold through the Shanghai Gold Exchange in the week ending December 19th.




26 December 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - At the Last


"Praise to the Holiest in the height,
and in the depth be praised;
in all His words most wonderful,
most sure in all His ways!"

John Henry Newman
 
Gold and silver moved back to about where they had started things out this week.   The wash and rinse reached the end of at least one cycle, and a particularly blatant one.
 
I particularly enjoyed the trade today, because I barely looked at it, as was its due.
 
I spent most of the day listening to lectures on some subjects of particular interest to me, the lives of a few historical figures, including More and Newman, and an interesting fellow from the 4th century called Athanasius of Alexandria.   I had read extensively in the 'ante-Nicene fathers and doctors' at a younger, more ambitious, age.  Now I have to take things in a more measured pace. 
 
One of the advantages of living for a while is that you can often revisit territory over which you may have tramped, and even extensively so, in your younger days, and while many of the landmarks are familiar, it is like you are doing it with a freshness and a better attention to nuance and details than you were capable at the first. 
 
You know the general lay of the ground, the feel of the paths, and while walking back over them you can see so many new things, because you are bringing 'more to the party' so to speak.  You mind is a slower, but better, instrument.
 
Facts that you have heard before suddenly mean something, and convey an understanding that even a first rate mind, but lacking a depth of experience, might not have obtained.  It is certainly true in my own situation.  There is knowing, which is an achievement, and then there is understanding, which is a joy.
 
It was certainly more enjoyable for me, and quite likely more instructive, than all the nonsense from all the day on the financial news networks, or from every tick of every trade on the markets this day.
 
I have included a list of some of the major economic news events for next week below.
 
Have a very pleasant weekend.