Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Top Gold, Silver & Iron Stocks - 10/5/11

These are the Top Gold , Silver & Iron stocks are is my watch list.If you are looking to day trade, you might want to check out the following stocks. I usually throw these on my watch list and monitor with resistance & support levels.These are the Top-Performing Stocks of the Day October 05, 2011.Also more stock to watch for today   Right Here.

I also have  technical analysis different stocks-Right Here.

Commodities Closing Prices - 10/5/11

Gold Close - 1642.80
Silver Close - 30.33
Copper Close - 3.10
Oil Close - 79.68
Natural Gas Close - 3.57

These are the Top Gold  stocks
Ticker    Company       Performance 
BRD    Brigus Gold Corp    15.00%
FSM    Fortuna Silver Mines Inc Ordina    12.91%
GSS    Golden Star Resources, Ltd.    11.83%
CGR    Claude Resources, Inc.    11.11%
UXG    US Gold Corporation    10.92%
NSU    Nevsun Resources Ltd.    10.47%
RIC    Richmont Mines Inc.    9.27%
XRA    Exeter Resource Corporation    9.09%
KBX    Kimber Resources Inc.    8.55%
TRX    Tanzanian Royalty Exploration Corp.     8.54%
NG    NovaGold Resources Inc.    8.40%
AZK    Aurizon Mines Ltd.    8.11%
BAA    Banro Corporation    8.02%
GORO    Gold Resource Corp    7.75%
AUY    Yamana Gold, Inc.    7.27%
BVN    Compania de Minas Buenaventura SA    7.03%
ANV    Allied Nevada Gold Corp.    7.03%
XG    Extorre Gold Mines Ltd. Ordinar    6.95%
KGJI    Kingold Jewelry, Inc.    6.67%
NXG    Northgate Minerals Corp.    6.48%
VGZ    Vista Gold Corp.    6.25%
IAG    IAMGOLD Corp.    6.06%
EGO    Eldorado Gold Corp.    5.53%
HMY    Harmony Gold Mining Co. Ltd.    5.36%
MGH    Minco Gold Corporation    5.26%
AUQ    AuRico Gold Inc. Ordinary Share    5.20%
PPP    Pogo Producing Co.    4.98%
GOLD    Randgold Resources Ltd.    4.85%
SA    Seabridge Gold, Inc.    4.81%
GG    Goldcorp Inc.    4.64%
RGLD    Royal Gold, Inc.    4.51%
RBY    Rubicon Minerals Corporation    4.11%
JAG    Jaguar Mining Inc.    3.92%
AU    AngloGold Ashanti Ltd.    3.85%
EGI    Entree Gold Inc.    3.79%
LSG    Lake Shore Gold Corp Ordinary S    3.76%
ABX    Barrick Gold Corporation    3.72%
DROOY    DRDGOLD Ltd.    3.12%
NEM    Newmont Mining Corp.    2.82%
LODE    Comstock Mining, Inc.    2.63%
GTU    Central GoldTrust    2.59%
KGC    Kinross Gold Corporation    2.53%
AEM    Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd.    2.20%
THM    International Tower Hill Mines Ltd.    2.17%
GFI    Gold Fields Ltd.    1.63%
KGN    Keegan Resources Inc.    1.25%
GRZ    Gold Reserve Inc.    0.90%
XPL    Solitario Exploration & Royalty Corp.    0.68%
FNV    Franco Nev Corp Common (Canada)    0.11%
GBG    Great Basin Gold Ltd.    0.00%
MDW    Midway Gold Corp.    -4.90%

These are the Top Silver stocks 
Ticker    Company    Performance
AG    First Majestic Silver Corp.    10.30%
EXK    Endeavour Silver Corp.    9.45%
SSRI    Silver Standard Resources Inc.    7.79%
SLW    Silver Wheaton Corp.    6.89%
SVM    Silvercorp Metals Inc.    5.60%
GPL    Great Panther Silver Ltd    5.50%
CDE    Coeur d`Alene Mines Corporation    5.11%
PAAS    Pan American Silver Corp.    5.10%
HL    Hecla Mining Co.    5.00%
MVG    Mag Silver Corp.    2.85%

These are the Top Steel &  Iron  stocks
Ticker    Company    Performance
CPSL    China Precision Steel, Inc.    23.68%
SUTR    Sutor Technology Group Limited    12.94%
HAYN    Haynes International Inc.    7.40%
CLF    Cliffs Natural Resources Inc.    7.40%
CMC    Commercial Metals Company    7.23%
SYNL    Synalloy Corp.    7.14%
AKS    AK Steel Holding Corporation    7.12%
FRD    Friedman Industries Inc.    6.92%
STLD    Steel Dynamics Inc.    6.71%
TS    Tenaris SA    6.63%
GSI    General Steel Holdings, Inc.    6.46%
SCHN    Schnitzer Steel Industries Inc.    6.12%
SIM    Grupo Simec S.A.B. de C.V.    6.09%
GNI    Great Northern Iron Ore Properties    5.19%
X    United States Steel Corp.    5.05%
SXC    SunCoke Energy Inc.    5.03%
NUE    Nucor Corporation    4.75%
CRS    Carpenter Technology Corp.    4.22%
MT    Arcelor Mittal    4.07%
WOR    Worthington Industries, Inc.    3.90%
MTL    Mechel OAO    3.77%
USAP    Universal Stainless & Alloy Products Inc.    3.69%
MUSA    Metals USA Holdings Corp.    3.56%
HSC    Harsco Corporation    2.56%
ROCK    Gibraltar Industries, Inc.    2.05%
PKX    POSCO    1.96%
GGB    Gerdau S.A.    1.59%
TX    Ternium S.A.    1.32%
SID    Companhia Siderurgica Nacional    0.94%
MEA    Metalico Inc.    -1.46%
OSN    Ossen Innovation Co., Ltd.    -1.94%
NWPX    Northwest Pipe Co.    -2.46%
CHOP    China Gerui Advanced Materials Group Ltd.    -3.44%
IIIN    Insteel Industries Inc.    -4.03%

For the latest updates on the stock market, visit, 
http://daytradingstock-blog.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 15, 2011

40 Years After Nixon Killed the Gold Standard, The Great Sucker Rally of 2011

Those savvy traders who toil at their computer screens, doping out the finest of five-minute investments, went at the markets today like the economy was in the midst of a major boom, sending the Dow up by more than 200 points and all major indices back to levels prior to the careening downshift from August 4th.

Like it never even happened...

Like there's no debt crisis in Europe. Like the US debt to GDP ratio isn't close enough to 100%. Like the unemployment rate isn't 9.2% (really, upwards of 17%).

Supposedly, according to experts at these kinds of things, this is what the Fed was saying when it pegged federal funds rates at zero percent last Tuesday - that treasuries and savings were for fools and that the only way to make money was to invest in risky assets, like stocks.

It just so happens that today is the 40th anniversary of then-President Nixon closing the gold window, and setting global economies off on a fiat money adventure, wherein currencies are backed by nothing but "good faith and credit" of sovereigns, and nothing more. Whatever hell in which Richard M. Nixon is currently residing, one hopes that the flames are hot enough to toast his dead bones to a crisp, because, more than anything else, taking the US - and thus, the world's reserve currency, and thus, all other currencies - off the gold standard in 1971 has created the gross inequalities in income levels and the bankster/crook/casino mentality that pervades capital markets today.

Nixon destroyed the concept of sound money and replaced it with a world of volatile, floating currencies, mountains of debt and middle class wage slavery. If anyone asks who caused the great collapse of currencies and the three-year financial mess that the world is currently embroiled in, tell them, "Nixon did it," because he started it all (and maybe, when people wake up to reality, they'll elect Ron Paul president to undo it).

Traders (not investors) took to the market like hungry wolves right out of the gate, ignoring the August Empire State Manufacturing Index, which delivered the third straight month of negative readings, coming in at -7.7, an hour prior to the opening bell. It was the third straight month the index came in below zero, which indicates that the economy of NY state has been contracting since May.

Well, it's just one state, like Greece, and Italy, and Portugal and France, are each just one country. But, if New York is contracting, you can bet other states are doing similar, or just barely expanding. Besides, New York is one of the biggest states, by population, 4th in the US.

No problem. Just move along, the government will fix all the bad economic data that's coming out this week, including industrial production, capacity utilization, new and existing home sales, PPI and CPI. Besides, Ben Bernanke has made it very clear that the only place to put your money to work is in equities (oh, and oil), not bonds, or gold or silver.

As CNBC's chief cheerleader, Jim Cramer, would say, BUY, BUY, BUY.

Dow 11,482.90, +213.88 (1.90%)
NASDAQ 2,555.20, +47.22 (1.88%)
S&P 500 1,204.49, +25.68 (2.18%)
NYSE Composite 7,482.71, +178.83 (2.45%)


Stock winners beat losers by a count of 5737-970, in a broad-based beat-down. On the NASDAQ, new lows continued to outnumber new highs, 49-14. The opposite was true on the NYSE, with 11 new highs and just six (6) new lows. The combined total of 25 new highs and 55 new lows, still retains a modest downside bias.

Volume returned to more pedestrian levels after the ridiculous wind and unwind of the previous seven sessions.

NASDAQ Volume 1,915,922,250
NYSE Volume 4,952,016,500


Oil caught a bid, gaining $2.50, to $87.88. With any luck, the speculators and oil barons controlling the futures markets will have it back to $100/barrel by Labor Day. In case nobody's noticed, even though oil is well off it's highs around $100 just three weeks ago, prices at the pump have barely budged. The oil companies say that's because the gasoline already delivered was bought at a higher price and has to be sold at a higher price. When that runs out, and gas can be bought lower, then prices will come down.

Yeah, sure. AAA reports the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular at $3.594 per gallon, down about a nickel from July 22nd, when oil began to slide.

Gold and silver suppression schemes seem to be running out of fuel, however. Gold gained $15.40, to $1,758.00, while silver was up 19 cents, at $39.31.

On Tuesday, a slew of data hits the street, though it will mostly be ignored since there is no other way to make money than by buying stocks.

Finally, below is a video (ain't technology great?) of Richard Nixon forty years ago today, dissembling, in his own beautiful, self-destructive way, in front of the entire world. Enjoy.




Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Fed Honesty and Insane Markets

This was the mother of all snap-back, double-back rallies.

Let's see, first, after the sixth-worse day in US market history - taking the Dow as our guide - stocks opened sharply higher, then fell back to the flat line in the first fifteen minutes of trading, then rallied 200 points in the next 20 minutes.

After that, stocks just drifted along, as though yesterday's massive decline was some kind of mirage or a bad joke.

At 2:15 pm EDT, the FOMC issued what might be the most useful statement in the 98 year history of the Federal Reserve. It's not very long, so here's the whole thing (worth a look):

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in June indicates that economic growth so far this year has been considerably slower than the Committee had expected. Also, recent labor market indicators have been weaker than anticipated. Indicators suggest a deterioration overall in labor market conditions in recent months, and the unemployment rate has moved up. Household spending has flattened out, investment in nonresidential structures is still weak, and the housing sector remains depressed. However, business investment in equipment and software continues to expand. Temporary factors, including the damping effect of higher food and energy prices on consumer purchasing power and spending as well as supply chain disruptions associated with the tragic events of Japan, appear to account for only some of the recent weakness in economic activity. Inflation picked up earlier in the year, mainly reflecting higher prices for some commodities of imported goods, as well as the supply chain disruptions. More recently, inflation has moderated as prices of energy and some commodities have declined from their earlier peaks. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee now expects a somewhat slower pace of recovery over coming quarters than it did at the time of the previous meeting and anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Moreover, downside risks to the economic outlook have increased. The Committee also anticipates that Inflation will settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below both consistent with the Committee's dual mandate as the effects of past energy and other commodity price increases dissipate further. However, the Committee will continue to pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.

To promote the ongoing economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent. The Committee currently anticipates that economic conditions--including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013. The Committee also will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings. The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate.

The salient points are many, but the stunner of them all was the statement that the federal funds rate would remain at ZERO to 1/4 percent and that this accommodative measure would remain in effect until the middle of 2013, or, put another way, for about the next two years.

At first, market reaction was positive, then turned completely negative just minutes after the release. What the Fed is saying, in effect, is that the US economy has just about sputtered out, but there's nothing the Fed can do at this point. They surrender to market forces and will keep rates at the absurdly low levels for the next two years.

What they didn't say might have been even more important. There was not even a hint of more quantitative easing (QE), as the last two rounds produced nothing other than price inflation and the build-up of the too-big-to-fail (TBTF) banks' balance sheets. The Fed also did not mention how or when it would begin unwinding its own over-stuffed balance sheet, currently at historic highs.

Once the market got the gist of the Fed's generosity and after falling more than 350 points from before the statement's release, it was off to the races and a nearly 600-point rally in the final hour and fifteen minutes of trading.

Us markets are, and will continue to be, completely insane, out of control except under that of the TBTF banks who control it. Some people lost money today and some made quite a bit. Anyone with any knowledge of the corrupt, inner workings of the stock market knows who won and who lost, and most of the losers were surely people without super fast computers and gee-whiz algorithms.

Dow 11,239.77, +429.92 (3.98%)
NASDAQ 2,482.52, +124.83 (5.29%)
S&P 500 1,172.53, +53.07 (4.74%)
NYSE Composite 7,258.04, +362.07 (5.25%)


Advancers clobbered decliners on the day, 5880-966, but new lows remained at elevated levels over new highs. There were just 16 new highs, but 484 new lows on the NASDAQ, while on the NYSE there were only 3 new highs and 702 new lows. That puts the combined numbers at 19 new highs and 1186 new lows, an extremely negative bias.

Volume was extreme once again, nearly as pronounced as yesterday's.

NASDAQ Volume 3,819,984,500
NYSE Volume 10,180,450,000


Commodities were literally all over the place. Oil zig-zagged over the unchanged line to a $2.01 loss, at $79.30 by the end of the day. Gold was higher all day, finally settling at $1,743.00, up $29.80, another record close. Silver, however, has become the whipping boy of the lovers of fiat, losing $1.50, to $37.88. Apparently, either the decade-long love affair with gold's first cousin is over or the shorting machinery of HSBC and JP Morgan has the markets covered. The latter is more than likely the case, though eventually silver will score enormous gains, once the masters of the universe are satisfied they've done their best to squelch any thought of making silver a negotiable currency again.

The gold-silver ratio is historically around 16-1, which, were that the case today, silver would cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $109 an ounce. The current gold-silver ratio is 46-1, though that is lower than what it's been in previous years. It still needs to find equilibrium. No doubt that silver is too cheap, but is gold too high? Probably not.

Thus ends another adventure through the canyons of Wall Street. Tune in tomorrow to find out that 90% of all trading is done by computers over which humans have no control. We are slaves to technology.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Congress Passes, President Signs Debt Ceiling Increase; Markets Tank

Passing with a bi-partisan majority of 74-26 in the Senate, the debt ceiling increase and associated debt reduction elements became law today as the President signed the bill this afternoon.

The bill, laden with policies and procedures for further debt reductions from an all-star panel of twelve senators and house members - not yet announced - has been panned by economists as well as by the same politicians who voted for or against the measure, saying the proposed cuts are too small and don't begin to take effect until 2013.

Once again, as congress heads off for a month-long vacation, the deficit and debt issues, along with Medicare, Medicade and Social Security reforms, have been kicked clear down the road until Thanksgiving, when the select panel will present its recommendations.

Wall Street, meanwhile, has other concerns, namely the continuing deterioration of the the US and global economies. Stocks were especially hard-hit at the end of the day, with losses cascading into the closing lows of the day, a more calamitous condition than has been seen in markets in nearly three years.

One would have thought that with the passage of the debt ceiling increase, stocks would rally, but the opposite turns out to be the case as economic data suggests the US is heading into another recession.

The S&P lost ground for the seventh straight session; the Dow made it eight down days in a row. Eash of those situations has not occurred since the disastrous month of October, 2008.

At the other end of the spectrum, gold and silver holders had a field day, with precious metals up sharply in response to a debt reduction bill that more or less satisfies the status quo, while doing little to address the structural issues presented.

Dow 11,866.62, -265.87 (2.19%)
NASDAQ 2,669.24, -75.37 (2.75%)
S&P 500 1,254.05, -32.89 (2.56%)
NYSE Composite 7,831.98, -208.95 (2.60%)


Declining issues buried advancers, 5276-1367. On the NASDAQ, 31 new highs were overwhelmed by 140 new lows. On the NYSE, only 20 stocks made new highs, while 160 reached new 52-week lows. The combined total of 51 new highs and 300 new lows puts further emphasis on the importance of the high-low indicator, which has been presaging a deep pull-back for weeks and is now sending out the strongest sell signal of all, with expanding numbers of stocks making new lows.

Volume was quite strong, yet another indicator that the trouble for equity investors is only beginning.

NASDAQ Volume 2,411,239,500
NYSE Volume 5,976,464,500


Crude oil finished to the downside as well, losing $1.10, to $93.79, the lowest price in over a month. As mentioned above, gold was a stellar performer, picking up $22.80, to a new record high of $1,644.50. Silver was also favored, gaining 78 cents, to $40.09 and higher in the after-hours.

An advance look at Friday's non-farm payroll for July will be made available Wednesday morning at 8:15 am, when ADP releases its monthly Employment Change report.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Traders Still Positive on Debt Limit Deal; Markets Spooked

It could have been so much worse.

US stocks took another tumble Friday, on revisions to 1st and 2nd quarter GDP and fears that the debt ceiling debate in Washington was running out of time.

An hour prior to the opening bell, the government reported its second revision to second quarter GDP, which came in at a measly 1.3%, but the greater shock was the revision to first quarter GDP, which was revised lower, from 1.9% growth to a frighteningly-low 0.4%. That sent shock waves through the futures market and US indices fell sharply at the open, hitting the lows of the day within the first 15 minutes of trading.

Just before 10:00 am EDT, Chicago PMI was reported to have fallen to 58.8 in July, lower than forecast, from 61.1 the prior month. That wasn't bad enough news, however, to shake off the nascent rally on rumors and hope that congress would decide on a debt ceiling increase by the end of the day or over the weekend.

As the session wore on, stocks moved sharply on any unfounded rumors, but eventually gave way late in the day, as lawmakers in the House of Representatives agreed, 236-186, to begin debate on House majority leader John Boehner's debt ceiling proposal, which had been in limbo since Tuesday because the measure did not have the backing of the Tea Party wing of the Republican party and - even if it did pass the House - was seen as almost certain to fail in the Senate. An actual vote on the measure is expected to come around 6:00 pm EDT Friday.

At the end of the day and end of the week, with no resolution on the debt issue and economic data overshadowing even the best corporate second quarter reports, the Dow finished lower for the sixth straight day, the S&P down for the last five, and the NASDAQ in negative territory for the fourth day out of the last five. On Thursday, the NASDAQ registered a gain of just over one-and-a-half points.

For the week, the Dow lost 538 points, a 4% decline. The S&P slipped 53 points, the NASDAQ shed 102 points and the NYSE composite fell by 328 points.

As bad as it was, stocks actually recovered half of their earlier losses on Friday. Still, it was the worst weekly performance for US indices in a year.

Dow 12,143.24, -96.87 (0.79%)
NASDAQ 2,756.38, -9.87 (0.36%)
S&P 500 1,292.28, -8.39 (0.65%)
NYSE Composite 8,079.44, -44.59 (0.55%)


Declining issues again dominated advancers, 4113-2476, and the gap between the expanding number of new lows and shrinking new highs worsened. On the NASDAQ, there were just 26 new highs, as compared to 114 new lows. The NYSE showed even worse, with just 16 new highs and 177 new lows. The combined totals of 42 new highs against 291 new lows is sending the strongest sell signal imaginable. Even if the congress does find a way to pass a debt ceiling increase by Tuesday, August 2, the damage for wasting time has been done the Moody's and S&P will likely downgrade US debt in short order, as they both have warned would occur if serious measures were not taken at this impasse.

Add to that the non-recovery "recovery" which has been represented by high unemployment and falling home prices and the recipe for further declines in equities is writ large.

Volume on the day was strong, another sign of a weakening stock market poised on the brink of turning losses into a major correction and a resumption of the bear market.

NASDAQ Volume 2,274,169,000
NYSE Volume 5,045,403,000


Among other interesting notes were the 10-year, which rose in price, but slumped in yield, down to 2.80%. The 30-year bond also hit a fresh low yield of 4.13%.

Oil took some losses, down $1.74, to $95.70. Gold made another intra-day high of $1637.50, before settling back to close at $1,628.30, up $14.90 for the day. Silver was up 31 cents, to $40.11 per ounce.

With the markets suffering their worst weekly losses in a year - coincidentally at the same time top economists are partying at their annual convention in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the same place that Fed Chairman announced the launch of QE2 last summer - the onus is on the congress to come with a plan that appeases not only both parties but the ratings agencies as well.

While it is doubtful they would let the August 2 date pass without a debt ceiling increase, the chances of them passing a bill before then that actually cuts spending appropriately are still quite long.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

No Debt Ceiling Deal Sends Stocks Lower Again

While the plutocrats in Washington dither away valuable time trying to figure out the most politically-expedient way out of their self-imposed debt ceiling crisis, the rest of the world goes on, mostly oblivious to the debacle in the capitol.

Stocks, however, as money substitutes, aren't taking the "no news" as good news. In fact, markets are absolutely terrified, not that the current congress and president will find a solution by the artificial August 2 deadline, but that their efforts will be so futile and pointless that the ratings agencies will lower the US debt/credit rating from its now pristine AAA sovereign status.

While the majority of people neither understand nor care about this delicious little surprise coming down the road like a 60-ton freighter, Wall Street and other governments are frightened out of their boots because a drop in the US rating would add something like $100 billion of cost - in interest - to the annual federal budget, which is already way out of whack.

Whether it be Obama's refusal to put a concise deal on the table, or the Tea Party wing of the Republican party insistence that there be no revenue enhancements in any kind of deal, the result will be the same as it has been for the past 12 years for congress and the presidency: abject failure, and a hike in interest rates.

Without poring over details of how the past three years have played out, we are approaching a seminal moment in the history of the United States of America and in the financial policies post-Bretton Woods. Nixon's closure of the gold window was the first inflection point, at which currencies were no longer backed by gold. The accumulation of nearly $15 trillion in debt and the failure of government to not only foresee the problem, but then to not be able to deal with it, is the second great event.

With just seven days until the government begins defaulting on some debt, markets are skittering about like schoolchildren at recess and there's nobody in his or her right mind who wishes to be exposed to inordinate risk at this point. With each passing day that there is not a deal and signed legislation increasing the debt ceiling, expect markets to recoil in terror. By Friday, we could be witnessing an all-out crash as many participants choose to sit on the side rather than engage in the dizzying dance of death.

The outflows from stocks were seen mostly at the end of the day, when the major indices peaked just after 2:00 pm EDT. From there until the close it was nearly free-fall, with all of the day's tiny gains wiped out in a flurry of near-panic selling.

One hates to beat a dead horse, but this debt ceiling debate is still alive and kicking, barely, and it will dominate financial news until something - anything - is done to rectify the situation. Absolutely nobody is holding their breath waiting for that, however.

Naturally, there were swing trades and day trades made during the session, but nobody is staking out new positions in the most uncertain market of the past two-and-a-half years.

Dow 12,501.30, -91.50 (0.73%)
NASDAQ 2,839.96, -2.84 (0.10%)
S&P 500 1,331.94, -5.49 (0.41%)
NYSE Composite 8,331.67, -25.90 (0.31%)


Declining issues overwhelmed advancers for the second straight day this week, 4096-2434. NASDAQ new highs 29; new lows: 36. NYSE new highs: 44; new lows: 46. Combined totals: 73 new highs, 82 new lows, a slight shift to the negative for that particular indicator. Volume was reliatively light, as expected.

NASDAQ Volume 1,716,556,125
NYSE Volume 3,988,655,750


Crude oil advanced modestly, up 39 cents, to $99.59. Gold racked up another record high, gaining $4.60, to $1,616.80. Silver notched a 38 cent increase, to $40.70.

The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price index showed marginal gains of one per cent in the month-to-month numbers, but most of the 20 cites surveyed showed declines on a year-over-year basis.

New home sales sunk to 312,000 on an annualized basis in June. Some analysts were calling the number "unexpected," while the home construction industry has been in outright depression for more than three years.

Any further declines will be "expected" and those acting surprised will be executed by a firing squad of Mexican construction workers, as soon as they can be rounded up from immigration detention centers. (That's a joke, folks.)

Friday, July 22, 2011

Week Ends with Split Decision; Gold, Silver on the Rise

After a week of ups and downs, it's probably appropriate the Friday ended with a bifurcated market: the Dow and NYSE down and the S&P and NASDAQ up.

It makes little sense to the casual observer, though the condition becomes more understandable if one is an insider, playing long and short, hedging positions, trading momentum and running super-fast computers in the 2011 version of "timing the market."

For the rest of us, forget it. Stocks have become nearly impossible to trade with any success unless one is truly gifted or just dumb lucky.

The White House and congress still haven't decided what to do about raising the debt ceiling. The Republicans' ploy of passing their ridiculous Cut, Cap and Balance bill in the House is a desperate and dangerous maneuver, costing more time as the ratings agencies and the rest of the civilized planet look on with alternate views of shock, horror and amusement. The continued stalemate virtually assures that the United States will receive a number of ratings downgrades no matter what happens from here on out.

By comparison, Europe appears far worse, though they have more than enough gall and arrogance to keep the media and the ratings agencies in check for the time being. With all of the Mediterranean nations in some sort of trouble or already having been bailed out, the European Union seems to be held together by duct tape and crewing gum.

There was nearly nothing worth reporting about this week, as the Ponzi schemers made it through another week without anybody receiving a subpoena or getting caught cheating. Score another one for the rich guys.

Dow 12,681.16, -43.25 (0.34%)
NASDAQ 2,858.83, +24.40 (0.86%)
S&P 500 1,345.02, +1.22 (0.09%)
NYSE Composite 8,408.20, -3.25 (0.04%)


Advancing issues narrowly beat decliners, 3293-3194. The NASDAQ showed 79 new highs and 23 new lows, while the NYSE registered 102 new highs and 24 new lows. The combined total of 181 new highs and 47 new lows is about par for the course in an upward-sloping market. Volume, however, dipped back into apathetic mid-summer malaise.

NASDAQ Volume 1,674,379,250
NYSE Volume 3,538,032,250


The commodity markets gave both good and bad news. Oil was up another 74 cents, to $99.87, which is bad news for everybody except oil company executives and Arab sheiks. The precious metals bore most of the good news, with gold up $14.50, to $1,601.50, and silver higher by $1.17, to $40.12. Silver appears ready to head into orbit, now that the new Hong Kong silver futures vehicle is offering some variation in pricing.

As the US economy becomes more and more bad theater, expect gold and silver to grind higher, with most of the explosive moves in silver, which is still underpriced at a 40-1 gold-silver ratio. The long-term trend is 16-1.

Today, House Republican "leader" John Boehner walked out of debt ceiling negotiations with the president, saying the two sides, "couldn't connect." No kidding, John, when you won't even allow for closing tax loopholes on millionaires and billionaires when we're suffering the worst depression of all time.

Boehner, and the rest of the "Tea Party" Nancies ought to be ashamed of what they're doing to the country. When the collapse comes, they should be handed the great bulk of the blame. President Obama has tried to deal with them, but it has become a losing battle.

God save us.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Investment Ideas: Gold, Silver or Penny Stocks?

If you're young and brash, or even if you're old and still have some risk appetite, you may be looking around for new investment ideas.

Trouble is, you probably won't find any on CNBC, Fox Business or any of the traditional media outlets. You'll have to dig a little deeper, maybe even start researching financial blogs, but there are literally thousands of them. Finding the right kind of investing advice for your particular risk level can be as daunting a task as picking a particular stock out of thousands of those listed on the major exchanges.

For some, whose primary goal is to protect wealth, the answer is simple. Gold, gold and more gold, but make sure it's physical and you can keep it in your own possession. Playing around with the SPDR Gold Trust EFT (GLD) may bring you profits, but in the end you have paper, not gold. You want physical, and it's as easy to get as a trip to a local coin or precious metals dealer or from various international dealers such as AMPEX or KITCO, who generally can suit the needs whether you're spending $10,000 or $10 million.

Those same coin shops and dealers usually also do a brisk business in silver, which is a little more speculative, but carries the same kind of wealth protection as gold, but at a fraction of the cost (the current gold:silver ratio is right around 40:1, though it's traditionally been closer to 16:1).

Another place to buy silver and gold is - of all places - eBay, where there are hundreds, if not thousands of auctions for gold and silver every day. The prices are fair, usually around spot, often less, and the action is fast-paced and addictive.

For those who are tired of the mainstream stocks, many of which have been gyrating and grinding higher and lower without any regard to fundamentals, a more rigorous test of one's due diligence comes in the form of penny stocks, which are just what they sound like, small companies selling shares in a smaller, and consequently, less liquid, market, known in the trade as the "pink sheets" or simply, "the pinks."

Penny stocks are not for conservative investors; they carry a high level of risk. Many of these companies aren't even known to the general investing public and most of them are unprofitable or just barely turning a small profit. The key is to know which ones are actually going somewhere, have good management and are on their way to becoming the next Microsoft or Google. Most companies start small and penny stocks offer investors to get in on the ground floor, before their idea, application, service or product goes viral or mainstream.

Many of these companies are bought out by larger firms, resulting in hefty profits for shareholders, but finding the good ones takes time and research, to say nothing of an iron stomach.

There are dozens of sites offering penny stock picks but clicking the preceding link will take you to one that has a proven track record, offers quality content and does great research on companies you may have never heard of but could be regional powerhouses, national or global leaders years from now.

So, there you have it: three investments for three different levels of risk appetite. Low: Gold; Medium: Silver; High: Penny Stocks. And you don't have to watch a minute of CNBC for any of them.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Stocks Drop, Metals Pop, BofA a Major Flop

As the debt crisis in Europe evolves, worries over the US debt ceiling non-negotiations continue to complicate matters for traders. Fear is pervasive on the Street and the pace of progress (what little there is) seems to suggest that congressional Republicans and President Obama are on a collision course in which the August 2 deadline for raising the debt ceiling might come to pass without a resolution, or, at least one with any real teeth.

The stalemate over raising the debt limit has been pushed by the Tea Party faction in the House of Representatives, and it's done nothing but squander time and any understanding between the opposing factions. Talks have broken down twice in the past two weeks and lawmakers seem to be no closer to a deal than they were a month ago.

What's at stake should the deadline pass without a resolution to raise the debt limit would be the credit rating of the US, which has been threatened by ratings agencies Moody's and Standard and Poor's. Even if a deal is somehow worked out, the wrangling over the issue has sent the wrong message: America looks more like a third world country than the leader of the free world.

The arguing and posturing has helped to stall the economy because businesses don't want to make major moves - like hiring or opening new facilities - with so much uncertainty in the air, and that has taken its toll on stocks.

The week started off the same way last week ended, on the wrong foot, with stocks down sharply at the open and plummeting to the lows of the day by noon. The Dow was down 180 points at that point and the NASDAQ had shed some 46 points before bargain hunters (read: morons or the PPT) stepped in to shore up the losses. None of the major indices saw even a glint of the positive side. In fact, closing levels were near the high points of the day.

Dow 12,385.16, -94.57 (0.76%)
NASDAQ 2,765.11, -24.69 (0.89%)
S&P 500 1,305.44, -10.70 (0.81%)
NYSE Composite 8,135.53, -91.51 (1.11%)


Decliners led advancers by a wide margin, 5363-1213. The NASDAQ recorded 36 new highs and 71 new lows, while the NYSE had 37 new highs and 93 new lows. The combined total favored new lows, 164-73. With that indicator flipping over again and no progress on any economic front, the recently-resumed slide in stocks should lengthen and deepen. Volume was sluggish, and that's being generous.

NASDAQ Volume 1,726,375,125
NYSE Volume 4,103,216,500


Commodities were led by gold, which broke through the $1600 mark, finishing at $1,602.40, up $12.30 on the day. Silver was up more than 3%, rising $1.27, to $40.34. The ascent of the metals over the past two to three weeks has been a resounding note of no confidence in the fiat money system and general financial malaise caused and exacerbated by central bank intervention.

Crude oil continued doing its odd two-step, as WTI finished down $1.31, to $95.93. Of course, this one-off loss will likely be offset by gains tomorrow. Such is the way rigged markets function. In the end, there will be no summer relief for drivers who are paying close to $4 per gallon. The nationwide average for a gallon of unleaded regular remains high, at $3.68, with ten states over $3.77.

Bank of America continues to be the least-loved stock or bank in the nation. Shares of the beleaguered financial institution fell to yet another 2-year low, closing at 9.72 as reports emerge that the company needs to raise $50 billion in order to become a healthy, functioning bank again. One can only imagine how the bank's books would look had they not been bailed out in 2008 by the federal government (taxpayers). Some - this writer included - still believe it would have been better to allow BofA to go into default and bankruptcy and have the huge bank broken up into smaller parts.

The jury is still out on that one, though it still appears that those favoring bankruptcy for the biggest banks may have been on the right track all along. BofA still may not make it through to 2012 and beyond. They are broke, busted and insolvent and are a primary reason for the suffering of millions of Americans who have lost homes and jobs because so much effort was spent by the government to help the bank, rather than actual citizens.

After the close, IBM reported second quarter earnings with an EPS of $3.09, ahead of analysts' estimates of $3.03. The company raised guidance for the full year to “at least $13.25″ per share, up from a prior estimate of “at least $13.15″ per share.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Last Hour Rally Salvages Gains, Though Markets Down for Week

A tumultuous week came to a very anti-climatic conclusion on Friday, as the President issued a challenge to congress to come up with the "framework" of a deal within the next 24 to 36 hours to solve the wrangling over the debt ceiling and budget issues.

President Obama's 11:00 am new conference did little to move the matter in a more positive direction, and stocks languished throughout the day, finally putting together a half-hearted momentum rally in the final hour of trading.

In Europe, 82 of 90 banks passed the European banking Authority stress tests, but eight failed - four of them in Spain - and 12 more received barely passing grades.

Citigroup posted better-than-expected second quarter results, but still finished in the red for the day. Taking its cue, Bank of America (BAC), which reports on July 19, fell below $10 per share, finishing exactly at 10.00, after trading as low as 9.88, the lowest in more than two years.

The entire day was rather disjointed and purposeless, as stocks drifted around until the ramp-up at the close.

For the week, the Dow shed 177 points, the NASDAQ fell 70, the S&P gave back 27 and the NYSE composite dropped 183 points.

The late rally made little sense, unless one gives credence to the thought that it was a positive sign from the markets that a debt ceiling deal would be hatched by Monday.

Dow 12,479.73, +42.61 (0.34%)
NASDAQ 2,789.80, +27.13 (0.98%)
S&P 500 1,316.14, +7.27 (0.56%)
NYSE Composite 8,227.04, +35.91 (0.44%)


Advancers led decliners, 3945-2570. The NASDAQ offered 40 new highs and 34 new lows, while the NYSE had 62 stocks make new 52-week highs and 51 reach new lows. The combined total of 102 new highs and 85 new lows is cutting the margin rather closely and is reflective of the choppiness inherent in current markets.

NASDAQ Volume 1,825,291,125
NYSE Volume 4,370,969,000


A swath of economic data points offered no suggestion of improvement. The CPI fell 0.2%, the Empire Index returned a -3.76, industrial production and capacity utilization were both stagnant at 0.2% and 76.9%, and the Michigan consumer sentiment fell from 71.5 in May to 63.8 in June.

Crude oil continued on its zig-zag path, gaining $1.55, to $97.24. Gold hit another record, up 80 cents, to $1,590.10. Silver was up 38 cents, at $39.07 per ounce.

The NFL lockout continued, but both sides seem intent on reaching a deal, saying they would continue working over the weekend in order to conclude talks as early as possible without jeopardizing the preseason or regular season.

Maybe congress should take a hint from the players and owners. The American people have had about as much stalling and posturing as they can handle.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Bernanke Thinks Gold is Not Money as it Soars to Record Highs

Before launching into my daily monologue on what's wrong with the global financial system (almost everything), here's a short video clip of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's answer to Texas representative (and presidential candidate, though you wouldn't know it from watching TV) Ron Paul's question as to whether the Chairman of the world's largest central bank thinks gold is money.

Watch the latest iteration of "what's wrong with this picture" below.



Well, there you have it. The Chairman thinks funny-looking pieces of paper with pictures of dead presidents on them are money, but gold, which has been used as a medium of exchange and a store of value, is not. Is there any wonder then, why the global economic system is on the verge of a grand mal seizure?

Bernanke's comments came at a time at which gold was breaking out to record highs, making his remarks seem not only ignorant and ridiculous, but also contrived, disingenuous and bordering on being an outright lie.

If one were to follow Bernanke's train of thought, then, no, gold is not money, land is not real estate, the moon is not a satellite and the sun is not a star. Rubbish, pure, stinking trash.

In addition to making profoundly absurd statements like the one above, the Chairman, in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee, also signaled that he and the Fed were prepared to provide more stimulus should the US economy continue to falter, though he held steadfast to the curious position that the economy was improving.

With that, stocks and commodities took that as a cue to ramp higher, with the Dow gaining more than 160 points just before 11:00 am.

However, the euphoria over the potential for QE3 was fleeting and stocks drifted lower throughout the session, with selling accelerating in the final hour. Equity markets lost about 2/3rds of their earlier gains, as traders left the floor moribund and still confused over fiscal as well as monetary policy.

Elsewhere in Washington, the President and leaders of congress met for a fifth straight day to try to work out a compromise on the budget and raising the debt ceiling. The late-afternoon meeting (3:45 pm) offers little chance of reaching any kind of agreement right away as both sides seem entrenched on their particular set of issues. Republicans are resistant to any kind of tax increase, even if only on the very top earners, while Democrats and the President have been more accommodative, though seem reluctant to make any modifications to Medicare or Social Security without some bending by Republicans. The result is a standstill, with the good faith and credit of the USA hanging in the balance.

So, while it was a winner for the bulls overall, the feeling of failure was pervasive at the end of the day.

Dow 12,491.61, +44.73 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 2,796.92, +15.01 (0.54%)
S&P 500 1,317.72, +4.08 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,246.80, +54.05 (0.66%)


Advancing issues still managed to defeat decliners by a healthy margin, 4557-1978. On the NASDAQ, there were 87 new highs, and 26 new lows. The NYSE had 61 new highs, 24 new lows, putting the combined total for the day at 148 new highs and just 50 new lows. Volume was fairly dull, though the broader NYSE outgained the Dow, which happens rarely and is a sign that assets are shifting from traditional safe havens to more riskier investments, not at all surprising given Bernanke's comments.

NASDAQ Volume 1,874,432,000
NYSE Volume 4,033,702,250


Commodities, especially the precious metals, had a field day. Oil was up 62 cents, to $98.05, but was a laggard by comparison. Gold made another new all-time high at $1,585.50, up $23.20, while silver was a 7% gainer, up $2.52, to $38.15.

The slate of economic data for Thursday is chock-full of interesting readings, beginning with weekly unemployment claims along with retail sales and June PPI at 8:30 am.

After the bell, Yum! Brands (YUM) beat expectations by five cents, posting 66 cents per share for the second quarter, though most of the profits were driven by overseas performance and a favorable shift in its tax rate. US same store sales slipped 4% in the quarter, which was a discouraging sign for the global fast food company.

Mariott International (MAR) posted diluted EPS of $0.37, roughly in line with estimates.

Friday, July 01, 2011

What a Week for Stocks; Metals, Not So Much

Once word that the Greek government was going to pass the severe austerity measures on its people, so as to get another $17 billion in loans from the EU/IMF, stock traders were treated to a rare "all green" week of trading, as though risk had been taken entirely out of the equation.

Even the end of QE2 and the regime of free money for primary dealers didn't slow down the express train to the upside in equities. It was truly one of the best weeks ever for US markets in terms of gains, logging in five straight days of positive returns.

Here's how they fared.

INDEXCLOSE 6/24CLOSE 7/1POINTS +/-
DOW11,934.5812,582.77+648.19
NASDAQ2,652.892,816.03+163.14
S&P 5001,268.451,339.67+71.22
NYSE COMP7,974.728,425.46450.74

On Friday, after closing out the second quarter with very positive vibes, stocks continued to rally on the first day of July and the third quarter with the best performance of the entire week, in hopes that there will not be many more natural disasters - such as Fukushima, Midwest tornadoes or Northwest floods - and that the messy situation in Greece is at least solved for now.

Apparently, there is little worry over when and whether congress will reach a deal on the debt ceiling, now that legislators have put off their usual Independence Day week-long recess, to supposedly work towards some kind of compromise on the matter.

Today's results:

Dow 12,582.77, +168.43 (1.36%)
NASDAQ 2,816.03, +42.51 (1.53%)
S&P 500 1,339.67, +19.03 (1.44%)
NYSE Composite 8,425.46, +106.36 (1.28%)


Advancing issues had their way, beating decliners, 5104-1468. NASDAQ new highs: 148; new lows: 26; NYSE New highs 168; New lows: 4. Combined: 316 new highs, 30 new lows. Volume was even softer than what has normally been a lightly-traded market, leading some to conclude (perhaps rightfully so) that the movements of stocks in the age of whirring computers and unsolvable algorithms are highly manipulated by the big brokerages.

NASDAQ Volume 1,604,401,500
NYSE Volume 3,721,877,750


While stocks were soaring along, commodities - with the notable exception of oil - took it hard. Crude oil futures declined 48 cents, to $94.94, after gaining most of the week. Gold finished at its worst level in six weeks, down $20.20, to $1,482.60, and silver was pounded down once more, losing $1.13, to $33.70, a loss of more than 3%.

By the way, just in case someone comes along and tries to tell you that oil is priced so high because we're running out of it, you do have the right to punch that person in the nose or kick in the groin, as appropriate. The worldwide collusion in the price of oil and gasoline to consumers has been going on for some time (a long time) and the "peak oil" theory is about as useful as science as an ace bandage is to a torn ACL.

In a word, it is "bunk." For more information, see and read the work of F. William Engdahl.

Seriously, do you really believe that those "fossil fuels" - coal, natural gas and oil - come from the remains of dinosaurs? Considering the amount that's been dug, mined, stripped, pumped and drilled out of the earth the past 200 years alone would lead one to believe that the Jurasic period was a shoulder-to-shoulder affair.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

The Old Dump and Pump

Stock traders - not investors - love action like today's on the US stock markets.

At the open the major indices plunged on news that the IEA and the United States would jointly release 60 million barrels of strategic reserves - 30 by the US, 30 by the IEA - to make up for supply shortages from the Lybian conflict. Furthering the desperate mood was the usual horrific chorus from Initial Unemployment Claims which came in much higher than anticipated (by idiots) at 429,000, plus, the prior week's claims were adjusted upward from 414K to 420K.

The revision should come without explanation. The BLS, who mangles the numbers, has revised claims upward just about every week for the past year-and-a-half, but those seeking an end to the jobs problems in America are surely going to have to wait longer.

Now, with all that bad news baked in, stocks were down precipitously, with the Dow off by more than 200 points for much of the session. But, lo and behold, just before 3:00 pm, word came from Europe that everything between Greece, the IMF and the ECB was just hunky-dorey. Greece would get their loans, the people would riot (a two-day general strike is already planned for next week), but all the bankers would be paid in full.

With that, the markets shaved a good 2/3rds off their losses, with the NASDAQ actually finishing in positive territory. Is this a stable economy, a stable market?

We will leave that question unanswered, hoping that bigger, brighter minds might offer some clues.

In any case, a lot of people got slaughtered, but you can bet your bottom dollar (if you still have one) that the bankster types at Goldman Sachs, JP MOrgan and Morgan Stanley had field days.

It's all good. Until it's not.

Dow 12,050.00, -59.67 (0.49%)
NASDAQ 2,686.75, +17.56 (0.66%)
S&P 500 1,283.50, -3.64 (0.28%)
NYSE Composite 8,054.08, -47.76 (0.59%)


Declining issues still led advancers, 3611-2936. On the NASDAQ, there were 42 new highs and 71 new lows. The NYSE had just 28 new highs and 49 new lows. Uh-oh, our key indicator has flipped bearish again, so maybe the Greece bailout isn't all that important to the US. Or maybe it is? The combined total of 70 new highs and 120 new lows puts things back into perspective, despite the obviously-rigged nature of the equity markets. Volume was actually a little spunky for a change. After all, it takes a lot of trading to move stocks around so much.

NASDAQ Volume 2,070,676,500
NYSE Volume 4,946,733,500


With the news of new supply coming on the market (at a rate of 2 million barrels a day), WTI crude futures fell $4.39, to $91.02, and traded under $90 briefly in the morning. One might think this was all about oil, but maybe it was really about gold, the enemy of central bankers worldwide, which made a new record close yesterday and appeared ready to vault towards $1600 per ounce. It didn't happen, as the morning downdraft took apart all long trades. Gold was decimated, losing $26.90, to $1521.10, wiping out a month's worth of gains. Silver was not spared, losing $1.07, to $35.27. It was a pretty ugly day for everyone, but particularly for commodities traders.

Hot fun in the Summertime. Rigged markets are so much fun!

Friday, June 10, 2011

Stocks Down for Sixth Straight Week; Worst Since 2002

Whatever happened to the recovery? All of a sudden, nobody on Wall Street or in Washington is talking about "green shoots", improvement, growth or any of the associated nonsense that went along with the previous two years' worth of stimulus, easy Fed policy, bailouts and handouts.

But who's counting, anyway? Stocks fell for the sixth straight week, and, due to a sudden turnaround at 2:00 pm in the financial sector, the day's losses could have - and should have - been a whole lot worse. By now, the only people who don't know that we're in the throes of pure economic upheaval in its most base form - that of currency destruction - are the President (who took off early today, heading for a weekend at Camp David) and Larry Kudlow, who said last night on his CNBC show, The Kudlow Report, that he thought the "correction had run its course."

Naturally, both Larry and Mr. Obama are clueless, or hiding behind the facade of officialdom, because what's weighing most on stocks these days is the total distaste and/or disregard for all manner of equities by the general public. It should be apparent that most Americans either don't have the money to invest in stocks or have, and not liking the results, are completely out of the paper market and turning to cash, gold, silver, art, collectibles, or other commodities.

Nobody likes Wall Street's paper except Wall Street, and that's a fact well-known to anybody who's been following these things for more than the past couple of months. Wall Street paper is made up by Wall Street, distributed among themselves, and bought, sold, sliced and diced as many ways as humanly (or by computer) possible... until... there's nobody else to take the paper, and that's the condition we have today.

What other reason could there be for such a massive sell-off on such paltry, absolutely slush-fund-looking volume? The churn upwards has reversed course and the majors are now going to eat each other in a massive orgy of short-selling all the way to the bottom, wherever that might be.

In months ahead, look for blown up hedge funds, even more absurdly-underfunded pension funds and the near complete collapse of Wall Street's most-favored institutions. Some contend that the great unwind has already commenced, begun in earnest in 2007, completed in 2008 and the Spring of 2009. All that's occurred since has been a perverse show with no underlying value.

Whatever the case, stocks are no place to park money right now, and probably won't be for another few years, as the masters of the universe scramble to hold onto what little is left of the markets and the US economy.

A couple of side notes to benefit those who didn't see the carnage:

From Barron's Blog: "Financial stocks were falling in early trading, but shot up around 2 p.m. after CNBC reported that capital requirements for big banks will likely be less onerous than the market had been expecting."

That's just what we need, more leverage and easier capital requirements for the world's biggest banks. My, oh, my, what great leverage you have. Might as well make it 1000-1 and blow everything up.

Zero Hedge reports: Fed releases final POMO schedule of $60 billion.

Well, let's see how stocks fare without free money. Anybody not dreading July - the end of the Fed's slimy handouts to the banks - is living in a dream world, which would include 90% of the global population.

So, down we go. BTW: there have been other declines of six straight weeks, but the last one was in 2002. See you on the other side, if there is another side to this horrible story.

Dow 11,951.91, -172.45 (1.42%)
NASDAQ 2,643.73, -41.14 (1.53%)
S&P 500 1,270.98, -18.02 (1.40%)
NYSE Composite 8,016.39, -133.26 (1.64%)


As expected, declining issues buried advancing ones, 4462-1202. Our favorite indicator showed even more trouble ahead. New highs on the NASDAQ were subsumed by new lows, 24-163. On the NYSE, there were only 20 new highs and 95 new lows, which makes the combined total the worst since the lows overtook the highs, six sessions ago, 44-258. If history is any guide - and it's usually a good one - this indicator will not turn over for at least six months, probably longer. Once either the new highs or new lows take an edge, it's generally for an extended period. For instance, new highs held sway over new lows on a daily basis for nearly two years before this most recent change.

Volume was again pathetic. Calling it light would be quite the understatement.

NASDAQ Volume 1,978,513,625
NYSE Volume 3,972,811,750


In today's great downdraft, commodities didn't fare any better, WTI crude futures on the NYMEX tumbled $2.64, to $99.29. Gold was taken down $12.20, to $1532.10, if only because of fund managers scrambling to meet margin calls. Silver took the worst of the action, falling $1.37, to $36.20 per ounce.

Putting the recent slide into perspective, since April 29, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen by 858 points, still closing in on official correction territory, soon to become bear market territory. The Dow is less than 400 points from falling into negative territory for the year. The NASDAQ is already sporting a decline for all of 2011, closing today about nine points lower than where it ended 2010. It's lost 200 points since the market top, April 29.

As for the S&P, it's 93 points down over the past six weeks and is up a mere 13 points for the entire year. Time wasted, indeed. Does anyone now think that bailing out the too-big-to-fail banks was a good idea? Had the government done what was proper - that being nothing - and allowed the banks to go under and reorganize in other mysterious forms, the global economy would most likely be booming right now. Instead, we have a global catastrophe completely of their own making which is falling down upon their heads.

A pox on all their houses. Kick a banker to the curb today. They've been doing it to us since 1913.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Random Notes as Stocks Slump Near Lows of Month

In the absence of earnings or economic data, let us suffice to say that stocks did today what they should have done yesterday, given the housing and Philly Fed data. That said, it seems we now are actually getting somewhere in the coming great unwind, which must happen if QE2 ends.

With the close of the Dow today, we can see that the decline is going to be gradual - about 100 points per week on average - which should get the Dow down to around 11,000 by Labor Day.

Along those lines, allow me to close the week with some random thoughts on the current working environment and the accelerating deflation:

Current economic conditions are fostering an environment where work has changed and what you call the "existential needs" might more reasonably be filled by the technology-marginalized workers, such as home gardening, DYI home repair and generally more resourcefulness and less dependence on the "system", the grid.

I am one of these technology-marginal types, in my own home business, with very limited overhead, having to actually do work about five to six hours a day, and that only four days a week. The rest of my time is spent raising my own vegetables, making my home more energy efficient and sourcing other income streams. It's actually a pretty sweet spot.

The promise of technology was always presented - back in the 60s and 70s - as more leisure time, but the banksters and politicians stole that luxury lifestyle from the common man. However, through their own rampant greed, this is backfiring, because more people are now on welfare (read: government-supplied leisure), not paying mortgages (bankster inspired leisure), and working less (congress, thanks for doing nothing).

With all this free time on their hands, common folks - the smart ones - are devising ways to capitalize and take back their leisure, which has some new definitions, such as, leisure as not spending, leisure as self-education, leisure as efficiency.

Deflation is going to hurt the most at the top of the food chain. Those already at or near the bottom will be scarcely affected, while the smartest of that group will actually prosper, just as during the Great Depression. Fortunes will be lost, but many others will be made.

It's all coming at very slow speed, thanks to the Fed's unending fight against deflation, but it's coming, no matter what. There is no other good alternative.

Always remember - and I don't know where I got this, maybe Malcolm Gladwell - but economies are always created at the margins. It't not LinkedIn with a $10 billion capitalization that will make change - that is simply a misallocation of capital on a grand scale - but the guy building solar heaters in his garage, or the people in Cleveland harvesting fish and vegetables in the same facility.

There may be the Googles and eBays of the world which created great shareholder value, but, both of those companies profited on the margin of hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of small entrepreneurs, buying and selling ads, goods, services.

I tend to think the raw data on the level of entrepreneurship in this country is vastly understated because so many people are not reporting what they are doing nor what they are making because of the absurdly high level of government invasion and regulation. There's more wealth hidden in the underground economy than ever.

Sound familiar? Same thing happened during prohibition. Read the book, "Last Call" for a clue.

Dow 12,512.04, -93.28 (0.74%)
NASDAQ 2,803.32, -19.99 (0.71%)
S&P 500 1,333.27, -10.33 (0.77%)
NYSE Composite 8,357.53, -70.42 (0.84%)


Declining issues finished well ahead of advancers on the day, 4314-2224. On the NASDAQ, 58 new highs and 53 new lows. The NYSE was ever the outlier, with 97 new highs and 22 new lows. However, all week we've witnessed the gap between the new highs and new lows narrow and considering the dipsy-do taken in July and August of last year, may not revisit equilibrium until the end of summer. The stimulus is still being worked through the system, but cracks have become visible in the facade of recovery.

Volume was once again light, though considering that it was an options expiration day, it was actually horribly so. Fewer players means lower velocity, leading eventually to atrophy.

NASDAQ Volume 1,786,991,750
NYSE Volume 4,011,100,500


WTI crude oil was lower by as much as $2.00 during the morning, but finished the day with a gain of $1.05, closing at $99.49. Gold rocketed $20.50, to $1514.30, though silver barely budged, up 11 cents, to $35.05 per ounce.

This choppiness in commodities and stocks should persist until traders are more certain of the future, which could be a long, long time, considering the state of negotiations on the debt limit and the 2012 budget in Washington. They are at standstills on both issues. Our president and congress should be absolutely ashamed of themselves as they dawdle over pressing issues.

This is the worst government, on the federal level, maybe of all time.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Dollar Wins; Stocks, Commodities Whacked Again as Chaos Commences

Whatever one thinks about the policies of the Federal Reserve, one has to respect their inside job ability to influence and move markets, thus, it should surprise nobody that everything went down today as the dollar rallied past 75 on the Dollar Index.

The dollar gained nearly one per cent today, closing at 75.29, its best level since April 18. That surge brought down stocks and with them, most commodities. No doubt the Fed has responded to inflationary pressure and the stock junkies have expressed themselves by selling off riskier assets, such as stocks, though their commitment has been anything but binding.

A more cynical view might be expressing serious doubt about the trustworthiness of all markets, as rule changes, manipulation and front-running make price discovery more an abstract art than a defined science. The movement in stocks seems to be suggesting that "buying the dips" may have become out of favor in recent days, and a prolonged correction is at hand. With the Fed ending QE2 this would be an opportune time to begin shedding positions in many overpriced stocks.

That's the flavor of the day, and maybe of the month. Stocks finished well off their lows, but still took a significant drubbing, a scenario that seems to be repeating itself with increasng frequency.

Dow 12,630.03, -130.33 (1.02%)
NASDAQ 2,845.06, -26.83 (0.93%)
S&P 500 1,342.08, -15.08 (1.11%)
NYSE Composite 8,428.09, -122.40 (1.43%)


Declining issues hammered advancers, 4955-1719. New highs totaled 89 on the NASDAQ, offset by 46 new lows. On the NYSE, there were 133 new highs to just 22 new lows. Volume was up to decent levels, indicating that the selling, which began in earnest just over a week ago, has resumed.

NASDAQ Volume 2,229,573,750
NYSE Volume 4,265,927,000


Crude oil took another steep loss, dropping $5.67, to $98.21 at the close on oversupply issues and a dampening of China's economy. The Energy Information Administration reported that demand for gas has fallen for seven consecutive weeks and today reported a 2.4% decline in demand. This prompted the CME to halt trading in gas futures for five minutes as the price plummeted 25 cents, triggering the automatic trading suspension.

Additionally, OPEC reported that member nations were only 65% in compliance with production quotas, and 17 senators, led by Oregon's Ron Wyden, sent a letter to the CFTC, urging them to impose position limits on oil futures trading.

If anything is for certain, it's that the world's driving population has been taken over a barrel recently by the oil cartel and Wall Street traders. While it's encouraging to see a bi-partisan group of senators calling for change in how oil and gas are priced, one should not get too excited until we see oil back to some reasonable level - under $75/barrel - and gas back to $3.00 a gallon or lower. As usual, the price hikes at the pump had little to nothing to do with basic supply/demand fundamentals, but certainly, the demand destruction caused by gas rising to over $4/gallon in much of the United States should serve as ample evidence that high oil and gas prices are a major contributor to economic stagnation or even recession.

Elsewhere, gold dipped $15.90, to $1500.90 and silver took another beating, losing $3.34, to $35.11, after rising for three straight sessions. It certainly appears that the banking oligarchs are not yet through punishing those who would speculate in potentially competing forms of money, such as precious metals. Silver traders have been particularly whipsawed in recent days, though true believers, who buy, hold and do not sell, are looking at any drops with gleeful anticipation of more accumulation.

Strength in the dollar is almost certain to be - to use one of Chairman Bernanke's favorite terms - transitory, which means the collapse in silver and any declines in the price of gold will only lead to more enthusiastic buying.

The true measure of the strength of the decade-long precious metal bull market lies in the ability of gold and silver bugs to hold until the government gives up supression measures completely. That may turn out to be a long time frame, as the printing presses at the Fed will be turned on full throttle and efforts to manage or mangle gold and silver price advances will be well-funded.

Unusual movements and increased volatility in prices of all goods and services are signatures of an economy on its knees, with price discovery completely blown away and manipulation rampant. And while there are major camps of support on Wall Street and in Washington to keep money flows into bonds and equities, the battle may already have been lost. There is simply too much debt and more being piled on every day, to expect an orderly unwinding.

Chaos will become common.

Monday, May 09, 2011

Citi Reverse Split Causes Volume Dump; PPT Still Engaged

Covering the daily machinations of a stock market that is now nearly a vast wasteland of swap trades, churning and "gotcha" moves seldom offers much of anything substantive of which to report, but today's reverse split of Citigroup (C) may turn out to be a watershed moment for our contrived and trivial stock markets.

With Citi now a $44 stock instead of a $4.40 stock - and it being the nearly indisputable daily volume leader for many months - America's 3rd largest bank has cost the NYSE about 450,000 trades on a daily basis, today, tomorrow, forever. This dramatic upside-down-sizing caused today's NYSE volume to dip to its second-lowest level of the year.

It is more than dismal on Wall Street; it is so scary that the PPT was brought in today just before noon for a quick fixer-up, sending all the indices close to their highs of the day in a 20-minute ramp job that is certain to destroy what little remains of confidence in the veracity of US markets.

From about 11:50 am to 12:10 pm, the Dow gathered itself up for an 80 point gain, the NASDAQ gained about 27 points and the S&P added nine. The indices had been hugging the flat line until the PPT (yes, we're absolutely certain they're still working) showed up. Afterwards, stocks drifted along the new highs and closed near those newly-elevated levels.

Yet another fantastic display of why nobody trusts these markets and nobody should be trading here: the stocks are all traded between the biggest brokerages and selected hedge funds, and the whole game is rigged for their benefit. Someday, we can only hope, the whole miasma gets thrown a loop by the HFT computers and never recovers. Maybe then, the greed, corruption and utter uselessness of US stock markets can be exposed.

Dow 12,684.68, +45.94 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 2,843.25, +15.69 (0.55%)
S&P 500 1,346.29, +6.09 (0.45%)
NYSE Composite 8,478.19, +52.29 (0.62%)


For the record, advancing issues beat decliners, 4534-2055. NASDAQ new highs: 81; new lows: 39. On the NYSE, there were 120 new highs and 17 new lows. Combined volume for the NYSE and NASDAQ was at or below the lowest level of the year. While the trading volume on the NYSE was expected, the absurdly low number of trades on the NASDAQ is telling market timers that now is the time to get out of Dodge.

NASDAQ Volume 1,654,697,000.00
NYSE Volume 3,366,898,000


Commodities must be the new playground, because they had a banner day. Forget the massive drop in crude oil from last week. Today's ramp job of $5.37 on NYMEX WTI crude futures brought the price back to $102.55 at the close. One wonders whether it's actual volatility driving the wild price swings or just plain revenge by the traders who were nearly wiped out in last week's plummeting decline. In any case, the price of oil has absolutely nothing to do with fundamental. It's almost as though price discovery has become a function of speculation. There is no real price for a barrel of oil, only that which appears or appeases for the day. These markets are broken beyond repair. Time to dust off and oil up that old bike. You'll need the energy boost in order to stay ahead of the coming rolling panics in cities across America.

Gold buyers were back in earnest, raising the price $18.20, to $1513.60. Silver recovered as well, gaining $2.28, to $37.90.

If anybody can make sense of any of this, please call 1-800-CONFUSED and leave a long, descriptive message.

Friday, May 06, 2011

Skimming Off the Fear Factor

Another week in the books for the crippled economy saw stocks rise on a better-than-expected jobs report and commodities take a bit of a breather as the dollar and bonds both gained.

for the week, the major averages were down anywhere from 1.3% to 1.7%, with the Dow faring best and the S&P the worst.

For analysis of the control factor in all trading, see this morning's post.

When the BLS' non-farm payroll report came out prior to the opening bell, futured roared back to life and equity markets opened sharply higher. The Dow was up as many as 175 points, but the rally fizzled as renewed weakness in Europe prompted a flight to safety to the US dollar.

News that Greece was pondering a move to leave the EU, or at least abandon the Euro as its main currency, kept the Euro sliding right into the weekend.

As the dollar gained strength, trades came off in risk assets, mainly equities, as investors were once again cheered then spooked by forces other than fundamentals.

Dow 12,638.74, +54.57 (0.43%)
NASDAQ 2,827.56, +12.84 (0.46%)
S&P 500 1,340.20, +5.10 (0.38%)
NYSE Composite 8,425.90, +28.50 (0.34%)


Advancing issues finished well ahead of decliners on the day, 4144-2356. New highs beat new lows on the NASDAQ, 68-36. The story was more exaggerated on the NYSE, where 133 new highs towered over 15 new lows. Volume was back in the doldrums, following heavy flight volume the previous two sessions.

NASDAQ Volume 2,007,823,250
NYSE Volume 4,907,953,500


After being whipsawed into submission, a few brave souls ventured back into the commodity trade, but it was definitely not for the faint of heart. NYMEX WTI crude oil continued to sell off, losing another $2.62, to finish out the week in NY at $97.18.

Gold bugs were welcomed back with open arms, as the shiny yellow metal yielded a gain of $19.30, to stand at $1492.40 as of this writing. Silver was less warmly received, but still managed to bounce of the lows and add 65 cents, to $35.31, though there is still concern another round of trimming is yet on the way.

The calendar for next week is rather light until Thursday, which kicks off with unemployment claims, PPI and retail sales, followed on Friday with the monthly CPI figures and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index. With first quarter earnings now winding down, the markets will be looking for clues for direction, as this week's action has left many dazed and confused.

Thursday, May 05, 2011

Armageddon Arrives in Commodities; Stocks Next

As has been the ongoing motif of this blog for many months, the grand Bernanke experiment is now experiencing some of the nasty side effects. Today's action in commodities, particularly silver and crude oil, came as a stark reminder that leveraged positions can go very, very badly in very, very short spans of time.

It was just last Friday that silver stood at the precipice of $50/ounce, approaching the all-time high. As of this writing it is now trading on the spot market at $34.76, a drop of 30% over just four days. WTI crude oil futures were at $116 on Monday, and today it closed on the NYMEX at $99.80. All those sheiks and oil robber-barons drooling over $4/gall gas across the USA can now wipe their chins with their sell tickets.

Stocks were also not immune from the liquidity trap. The Dow was down as many as 200 points around midday, but recovered a bit into the close. Still, leveraged bets (margin) on selected stocks have finally begun to display inherent risk and the carnage has only begun.

What set off today's massive selling spree were a number of unrelated events which combined to turn the trading day into an economic tornado, tearing through asset classes like a Midwestern twister. First, a series of margin tightenings on silver speculation that has been ongoing from Sunday night began the unwinding process. Silver had been hammered for three straight days without buyers on the downside. Then, with the 8:30 am release of some truly horrible weekly unemployment claims, the spring was coiled tighter.

Initial claims for the most recent week (last week in April) came in at 474,000, the highest since August of 2010, off expectations for a number around 400,000. So much for Hope and Change, Bernanke's Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) and QE2. The smart money has made its way out of Dodge and the rest of the pilgrims are scrambling to leave town with whatever they can salvage.

While commodities were being ravaged one after another, stocks were salvaged from the brunt of the storm, though they eventually faced capitulation and will likely be under pressure from the opening bell on Friday, after the April non-farm payroll report goes public at 8:30 am EDT. Following the unemployment number, expectations have been ratcheted lower. The expected number of new jobs created during the month was supposed to be around 200,000, though that's been trimmed to 185,000 and even lower by some analysts. Anything under 185,000 will produce a bloodbath. Even anything over that will likely induce more selling, on a faster pace than today's, because this is a liquidity trap, and economic numbers - good, bad or indifferent - may not matter at all.

The winners on the day were the US dollar, which majestically made its move all the way from a low of 72.81 (about the point at which Mssrs. Bernanke and Geithner were having accidents in their pantaloons) to a close at 74.08, a move of roughly 1.5%, which, in the world of currencies, is enormous. This created a vicious, self-reinforcing virtuous loop, with the dollar's rise causing commodity margin calls, and a risk-off scramble in stocks.

The other winner was bonds, which explains much. Bonds are the lifeblood of the Ponzi scheme between the Treasury, Primary Dealers and the Federal Reserve which gave us the illusion of prosperity against the backdrop of an eroding dollar. Bumping right up to the debt ceiling, the Fed intervened in a very big way today - behind the scenes, of course - to dampen risk appetite and make fixed income investments the choice for the foreseeable future. They had to, being backed into an untenable position.

It was truly a momentous day, one which we've been preparing you for with our reminders all week that the narrative was changing with the (fictitious) slaying of Osama bin Laden. And now, change has come to us all.

Dow 12,584.17, -139.41 (1.10%)
NASDAQ 2,814.72, -13.51 (0.48%)
S&P 500 1,335.10, -12.22 (0.91%)
NYSE Composite 8,397.40, -109.21 (1.28%)


Advancing issued were submerged by decliners overall, 4183-2412. The NASDAQ recorded 48 new highs and 52 new lows, the second straight day of high-low reversal. On the NYSE, there were 100 new highs and 36 new lows, mostly due to the elevated levels reached recently. It's hard to imagine the daily lows not overtaking the highs within the next week. Volume was magnificently higher as sellers sold with both hands.

NASDAQ Volume 2,241,177,750
NYSE Volume 5,510,796,500


Crude oil took an earth-shattering drop of over 8%, losing $9.44, to finish at $99.80. The selling is certainly far from over as the tempering of emotions in the Middle East after the slaying of OBL will surely push prices back to some level of sanity and take out the majority of the risk premium and speculative fever.

Gold, which had been holding up relatively well with respect to other precious metals, finally took a beating, losing $43.40 (nearly 3%), to its current trading level of $1473.10. Silver took the worst of it again, falling another $4.73, to $34.66, but there is a silver lining for the faithful in precious metals. Most of the true believers - who only hold physical metal and use the futures and ETFs only as a hedge - have a cost basis below $20/ounce.

Technically, they've lost nothing, and could still sell right here for a hefty profit. But they won't, and are actually looking at this momentous correction as a buying opportunity, hoping to snatch up more metal at what they perceive as bargain-basement prices. The general strategy is to buy once everything has more or less settled out. Nobody is really worried about catching the absolute volume, and a few days of upwards trending will not entice the hardiest of the breed. They will wait until a bottom is confirmed. Like love, they'll know it when they see it. The same strategy holds more or less true for gold bugs worldwide.

The holders of gold and silver will eventually rule the world as we approach - at breakneck speed - the eventual destruction of the global fiat money regime and the likely collapse of more than a few governments. What has happened in Greece, Iceland, Ireland and Portugal will eventually visit the shores of Japan, the USA, Great Britain, France and even China.

We are still reeling from the catastrophe of the housing bubble and collapse and the general liquidity and solvency crisis of 2008. The measures taken by the Federal Reserve and other central banks has been to throw more money at the credit monster they created, but it has resulted in extreme imbalances everywhere. The thinking at the top of government is focused already on the elections of 2012. The betting is that the US government and the financial community will have a time making it there unscathed.

If this looks anything like 2008 to those wizened enough to learn from history, those people would be on the right track, except, this time, it's likely to be worse and without any magic bullets, because the Fed is all out of them.

Monday, May 02, 2011

Death of Osama bin Laden Springs Bernanke Trap

Whether or not one accepts the story of the demise of Osama bin Laden as gospel or Golem, there is no doubting that the mainstream news media is treating it as the truth, and celebrating it with requisite aplomb.

It served as the leading commentary to an otherwise dull Monday, especially in the financial markets. At one time, the capture or death of the man who was widely recognized as the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks was thought to able to create a market rally of dizzying proportions, but today's response was muted, if not downright dismissive of the manhunt that took nearly ten years, untold thousands of lives and over a trillion dollars.

The euphoria felt at the White House on Sunday night was not reflected in the trading on Wall Street, though the death of the world's most infamous terrorist did manage to provide a suitable cover story for crashing silver, and, to some degree, calming the Midas effect in the gold pits.

Other than those obvious manipulations, the death of OBL did less to inspire confidence than it did to induce relief that the most evil person in the world had finally met his maker. The rest of the moves in the market could widely be attributed to nothing as earth-shattering as the ordinary movement of the US Dollar against other fiat currencies, particularly well=reflected by the dollar index (DXY).

Initially higher on the news, the DXY lost ground throughout the day, finally bottoming out at 72.72 in early afternoon before rallying back to 73.04 at the 4:00 pm NY close. The decline and subsequent rise in the dollar index was the primary mover of stocks throughout the session, in an inverse relationship that has been in effect since the first round of QE in 2009.

In essence - apply tin-foil hat here in appropriate degree - the timing of OBL's death came at the perfect time for the world's money men. The dollar had been in a vicious slide over the past three months, which fueled the commodity and stocks boom, but was also threatening to undermine the reserve status of the US dollar. The decision to "pull the trigger" - whether real or imagined - quieted dollar devaluation fears, for now, but also took down stocks, creating a Bernanke Trap, in which monetization of US debt and the associated demise of the dollar gives rise to inflation and commodity speculation but the inverse could foment a stock market correction or crash and more severe economic fallout.

Thus, with the death of Osama bin Laden, we have a new enemy, the evil genius chairman of the Federal Reserve, the man behind the curtain pulling the levers, Ben Bernanke, and he is hopelessly trapped into a scenario in which neither outcome is preferable or palatable. One might assume that the esteemed chairman will side momentarily with the monetarists who believe dollar hegemony is preferable to runaway inflation and rioting at gas stations, though making assumptions in the age of political markets is a dangerous game.

For today, the dollar and Bernanke have survived, barely, but tomorrow may be another story altogether. In the very least, we can be assured that the killing of Osama bin Laden represents a shared view at the very pinnacle of power that the the overarching narrative needed to be changed, and abruptly.

Mission Accomplished.

Dow 12,807.36, -3.18 (0.02%)
NASDAQ 2,861.84, -11.70 (0.41%)
S&P 500 1,361.22, -2.39 (0.18%)
NYSE Composite 8,641.56, -29.85 (0.34%)


Market internals belied the slight declines. Stocks which lost ground far outnumbered those gaining, 4135-2454. On the NASDAQ there were 177 new highs and 28 new lows. The NYSE had 337 stocks make new highs and just 13 reach new lows. Obviously, the new highs were made early in the session, before the dollar began to rise and kill the carry trade (now known as risk on). Volume could best be described as either laughable, embarrassing or just plain disinterested.

NASDAQ Volume 1,768,677,875
NYSE Volume 3,669,946,000


WTI crude futures actually fell 41 cents, to $113.52, though that hardly can be construed as relief for motorists already feeling the pinch from $4.00 gasoline. According to AAA, the average price for a gallon of unleaded regular gas is now $3.95, so, $5.00 by summer becomes a distinct possibility in at least 10 states. Already 14 states are experiencing average prices above $4.00, with Hawaii the highest, at $4.57. The lowest average price is in Wyoming, at $3.60, hardly a bargain.

Precious metals were hammered down by the movers and shakers at JP Morgan and the Fed, with gold getting hit with a $19.80 decline, down to $1545.90 as of this writing. Silver took the brunt of the action, with five margin hikes in the past two weeks putting the kibosh on larger speculation in the paper markets. Silver fell $4.39, to $43.55, a point which may actually trigger more paper selling and eventually result in ramped up physical buying.

There's little doubt that the masters of fiat money at the Federal Reserve will do anything to keep gold and silver from appreciating, though they've been an abject failure up to this point. The Fed simply cannot stomach competing currencies and gold and silver amply qualify. If it means the end of screenings at airports and reduction of global tensions, maybe it's a worthwhile tradeoff, but the other side of the Fed's coin is already painted red. Any squelching of precious metals by pumping up the US dollar is likely to have similar deleterious effects on the risk trade in stocks.

At the end of the trading day, Tim Giethner made his appearance and the purpose of all the frenetic activities of the past 18 hours suddenly became crystal clear. The Treasury outlined plans to extend the deadline for raising the debt ceiling to the first week of August, thus delaying or deferring a crisis in the congress.

America teetering on a debt default with the currency debased for the whole world to see must have appeared as the opportune moment to divert attention by killing public enemy #1.

Mission accomplished, indeed, but beware the ultimate costs.
Powered by Blogger.