27 February 2017

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - Here Come Donnie and Snapchat


There are two notable events in particular this week that may affect the markets.

The first will be President's Trump address to the joint session of the Congress tomorrow night.

Since this is his first term, it will not be called a 'State of the Union.'  And I doubt he will start with the traditional opening phrase, 'the state of the union is strong.'

But he has expressed the intention to make a 'big announcement,' so we'll have to see if anything of substance falls on the table with regard to infrastructure spending and tax cuts, not to mention healthcare.

The second event will be the IPO of Snapchat, in the form of SNAP, which is likely to be coming out to market on Wednesday.   I am going to be watching the aftermarket action closely, as well as the ability of the wiseguys to sustain these lofty levels in equities.

As you know I am leaning towards a suspicion of the usual shenanigans and antics by the money men, but still keeping an open mind.  It is hard to tell exactly what flavor of scam they may be weaving.

Next week we will get the February Non-Farm Payrolls report.

Gold and silver were attempting to rally higher today, but gave up their gains and went negative, even as stocks rallied.   Interestingly enough the VIX finished higher.

AngloGold Ashanti (AU) has indicated it will begin to pay a dividend again today. The stock is troubled by speculation about its South African holdings and some share sales by its CEO.

The US Dollar did not show much in the way of gains.  That chart is included below.

The warehouses at the Comex were relatively quiet.

Have a pleasant evening.


24 February 2017

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - God and Mammon and Power


"The world is ours, we are its lords, and ours it shall remain. As for the host of labor, it has been in the dirt since history began, and I read history aright. And in the dirt it shall remain so long as I and mine and those that come after us have the power.

There is the word. It is the king of words— Power. Not God, not Mammon, but Power. Pour it over your tongue till it tingles with it. Power.”

Jack London, The Iron Heel


"What is good?  All that heightens the feeling of power in a man, the will to power, power itself.  What is bad?  All that is born of weakness.  What is happiness?  The feeling that power is growing, and that resistance is overcome."

Friedrich Nietzsche, The Antichrist


"No one can serve two masters, for he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one, and be neglectful of the other; and so you cannot serve both God and Mammon."

Matt 6:24

Gold stuck a close over the 1250 mark, largely on dollar weakness.

Once perceived volatility starts picking up, I suspect that gold and silver will obtain enough energy to take on the more important downtrend and psychological resistance on the charts, around the 1290 to 1300 level.

For the higher volatility silver weekly chart, I have an eye on 21.50 to 22.   If silver can take out those levels and hold them decisively, then one must look at a potential run to 30.

Stocks are pausing here as I had suggested they might.  I don't quite see a big downtrend developing yet.  I do think a market break is possible in March.   If that does happen, then we will have to start keeping a close eye on how the markets and the policymakers react to it, with some potential thoughts towards a bleak October.

But that is far, far ahead of ourselves.  For now things seem relatively stable.  But there are some clouds on the horizon.

There were few clouds on the horizon here today, as the skies were sunny and blue, and the temperatures were in the high 70's, a surprisingly nice surprise for February.

Try to remember to feed God's creatures, and the poor, and to pray for those poor in spirit, who do not even comprehend their spiritual poverty.

Have a pleasant weekend.


23 February 2017

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - No Breakouts or Breakdowns Yet


After the bell the Trump Administration's DOJ rescinded the ban on the use of private prisons for Federal prisoners. Progress!

Perhaps they can explore the use of private workhouses and poorhouses for those who will continue to become impoverished by policies that favor a redistribution of the wealth to the top few percent.

Oh wait, they already have those. It is called working for below poverty wages while having to compete with near slave labor working in deplorable conditions in authoritarian and plutocratic regimes.

Stocks were weak to sideways today. Unless something happens to trigger selling, I suspect we will see the major market indices hanging in there until at least the SNAP IPO comes out in early March.

And the band played on.

Have a pleasant evening.


Net Asset Value Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds




22 February 2017

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - Round and Round She Goes - 2 March 2017


The Fed's minutes came out today, and they were yet again mildly hawkish in that vague sort of way that has preceded twenty-nine of the last two actual rate increases.

There is a theory going about that because of the failure of the EU and alternatively China, the inflows of monies into dollar assets are bound to continue to drive the major stock indices higher, and will prompt the Fed to raise rates higher than many think.

This is a variant of the 'money on the sidelines' theory that, for whatever reasons, will be compelled to toss their wealth into overpriced assets because they have no other choice.  For a free people, getting the public to act by coercion seems a familiar resort.

Now of course this is possible. The real question is, 'how probable.' And what sorts of things might we watch to determine if this particular scenario is genuinely falling into place.

Nothing in the markets is one dimensional. A Fed raising rates to try and stem a stock bubble fueled by a flight to safety from Europe or Asia is certainly a scenario, but there are a lot of other things that go along with it.

For example, what happens to the real economy and wage growth in the US as the Fed starts jacking up rates to try and halt an exogenously driven stock bubble? What other steps might the Fed and the regulators take?  How does ever increasing inequality affect the mood of the voters?

To what extent will the market ignore expectations for US business performance and just run with the rallies with abandon?

I do not know. But one thing I am almost certain of is that no one else does either.  And to the extent that they do know, they certainly are not telling the general public about it, or selling it to retail investors.    There is a legitimate market for buying research on specific companies, no doubt.  That is different than buying sweeping predictions from gurus.

The SNAP IPO should be coming out around the 2nd of March.  As you know I would be waiting for some time around then if I were of a mind to take a bearish stance toward equities, barring any unforeseen events of consequence.  But we have to be watchful regardless as the Trump administration is leaning towards rolling back what little protections the Banks had received.

I see some good things and bad things almost everywhere I look. We are seeing a lot of new construction in our corner of the world. Since I think this is one of those 'fortunate' areas of the US, I am not sure how heavily that weighs on my thinking about things overall.

But in addition to all this new, big time construction for commercial square footage, we are also seeing investment money buying up existing properties, and attempting to drive their rents higher.

So we are seeing quite a few long-established businesses folding up and moving along, because the rentiers are driving prices up against the market's ability to pay. And I am not talking about fly by night storefronts, but places that have been around for forty to sixty years, and weathered a lot of business cycles reasonably well.  And not retail stores displaced by Amazon either.

Is this a 'creative destruction' or the ongoing malinvestment and distortions fueled by the Fed's top down approach to stimulating an economy caught in a very painful household balance sheet recession?

And of course, the current leadership in Washington is toying very seriously with the 'A' word. They are looking to cut back on 'entitlements' for people to help to finance more tax cuts and favours for the 'jobs creators.'  

What happens when few have the surplus income to provide the broad buying demand for these new big jobs black boxes?

Recently the 'liberal establishment' economists, aka the minions of Hillary, have been circling the wagons around those care worn Clinton principles of governance;  globalism, financialism, and corporatism, as an agenda taken forward by the combined powers of the military and the Banks.

Unfortunately, they have not yet realized fully that they are speaking to themselves and a small circle of those who believe that they have few other options.

The Council on Foreign Relations recently promoted an article in their house magazine Foreign Affairs that was subtitled, 'How Dissing the Experts is a Danger to Democracy.'   

Yes, shame on you idiots.   How dare you lose confidence in the professional class, the 'experts' who have been caught manufacturing conclusions for pay, and presenting unicorn myths as sound economic policy options?

Do you not have more respect for your betters?

Would you believe that a very similar point of view was promulgated by the Clinton Democrat's in the 1990's under the title, Illiberal Democracy?  The answer for those foreign countries who embraced their freedoms in the wrong way, regime change and colour revolutions were the prescriptions.

And so we might ask, what about now?

Have a pleasant evening.