The Fed Has Pumped the System in 90+% of Months Going Back to 2008

 

The markets have been extremely quiet the last few days. With the exception of the hard selling that occurred on Thursday it’s been a snooze fest.

The reason for this is that no one wants to commit heavily to a position at the moment. We’re all well aware of the negatives the market is facing, namely declining earnings, a weakening economy, the decreasingly marginal effect of Fed intervention, etc.

 

However, no one wants to commit heavily to shorting the markets because they’re all too afraid that the Fed or “someone” will step in to prop up the markets should any significant drop occur.

 

This has happened repeatedly in the last year: every time the market began to crumble and take out support, “someone” stepped in a started buying. And soon stocks were back off to the races.

 

 

At this point we all know that the “someone” is the Fed. Numerous Fed officials have pointed to the rising stock market as a sign that Fed intervention has been “successful.”

 

Moreover, the Fed has barely left the markets alone since 2008.

 

If you go back to the first announcement of QE 1 in November 2008, there have only been two periods in which the Fed wasn’t engaging in direct monetary interventions its balance sheet between the end of QE 1 and the launch of QE 2 (June 2010-November 2010) and from the end of QE 2 until the launch of Operation Twist (June 2011-September 2011).

 

A total of 60 months have passed since the Fed announced QE 1. The Fed was not engaged in major monetary interventions in only six months out of these 60. Put another way, the Fed has been actively intervening to the tune of billions of dollars in 90% of ALL months since it began QE 1.

 

Even during the brief periods in which the Fed wasn’t officially engaging in a major monetary program, it still routinely expanded its balance sheet during options expiration week every month.

 

If you remove those weeks from the periods in which the Fed wasn’t officially engaging in a program, you’re left with a total of just 4.5 months in which the Fed wasn’t actively pumping the markets.

 

That’s 4.5 months out of 60, or less than 8%.

 

For a FREE Special Report outlining how to protect your portfolio a market collapse, swing by: http://phoenixcapitalmarketing.com/special-reports.html

 

Best Regards,

 

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 

 

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oqpKO3xJyyQ/story01.htm Phoenix Capital Research

Will Shitty Obamacare Ads Get Young People to Buy Insurance?

…or just increase the number of victims of side-splitting
hoolarity?

As part of something called the “Thanks Obamacare
campaign
,” a bunch of folks at various grammatically challenged
Colorado-based nonprofits have rolled out an ad campaign at
doyougotinsurance.com.
Check out all the ads at the site, or just peruse these three
lowlights.

Here’s one titled “Brosurance”:

Question: Is there a copay for butt-chugging accidents? I’m just
asking for a friend.

Then there’s this one, which has already been dubbed Ho-surance
by the wags on the Twitter:

More tips to save the $10 a month cost for oral contraceptives
are online at
Woman’s Health
.

Finally, we don’t have to put away our machetes after clearing
brush!

Go
here
to look at even more ads that will make you not only think
twice about Obamacare but about the decision to let Colorado enter
the union way back when. Among the gags are jokes about drinking
(beer, shots), kid sports, Ryan Gosling (natch), kayaking, and so
much more. About the only possible meme missing is a Richard Gere
gerbil motif. But you gotta save something for the second round,
right?

None of the ads explains why you should bother signing up for
insurance before showing up at the hospital or the doctor’s office
by the way.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/will-shitty-obamacare-ads-get-young-peop
via IFTTT

Landmark takes cross country title

The Landmark War Eagles came home from Carrollton Saturday afternoon with the Georgia High School Association’s Class A Private state championship in boys’ cross-country.
It was the boys’ eighth state championship in cross-country since 1995. The team has also finished as state runner-up five times.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-12-2013/landmark-takes-cross-country-title

Football playoffs start Friday

The 2013 regular season is completed as far as Georgia high school football in concerned, and several local teams are now moving on to the state playoffs.
The Sandy Creek Patriots locked up first place in Region 5-AAAA two weeks ago with a win at Carrollton, then rolled 56-0 over last-place Columbus Saturday afternoon. The defending AAAA state champions and ranked first in the state since the start of the season, the Patriots will host Cedartown, the fourth seed in Region 7-AAAA, this Friday in Tyrone.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-12-2013/football-playoffs-start-friday

Americans 34 Times More Interested In Buying Guns Than Obamacare

It would appear that the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) website – required when purchasing a gun or explosive – is capable of handling large volumes of users…

 

Source: FBI

(h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer)


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/kW13ouM6ZG0/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Why a Powerless Female Figurehead Might Still Cure Hamas' Misogyny: Shikha Dalmia in TIME

Hamas, the militant Palestinian group that rules over Gaza,
picked Isra al-Modallal, a woman, as its spokesperson forPalestinian Women the
first time ever to spruce up its image in the Western press. But
Reason Foundation Senior Analyst Shikha Dalmia notes that Isra will
mostly be a figure head who will use her British-accented English
to recite narrow talking points crafted by Hamas’ Islamist
patriarchs. Hence, notes Dalmia:

This 23-year-old British-educated, divorced mother of a toddler
girl is unlikely to do much for the Palestinian struggle against
Israel, as Hamas
wants. She will, however, be great for the struggle of Muslim women
against Islamic repression.

 Go
here
to read why.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/why-a-powerless-female-figurehead-might
via IFTTT

Why a Powerless Female Figurehead Might Still Cure Hamas’ Misogyny: Shikha Dalmia in TIME

Hamas, the militant Palestinian group that rules over Gaza,
picked Isra al-Modallal, a woman, as its spokesperson forPalestinian Women the
first time ever to spruce up its image in the Western press. But
Reason Foundation Senior Analyst Shikha Dalmia notes that Isra will
mostly be a figure head who will use her British-accented English
to recite narrow talking points crafted by Hamas’ Islamist
patriarchs. Hence, notes Dalmia:

This 23-year-old British-educated, divorced mother of a toddler
girl is unlikely to do much for the Palestinian struggle against
Israel, as Hamas
wants. She will, however, be great for the struggle of Muslim women
against Islamic repression.

 Go
here
to read why.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/why-a-powerless-female-figurehead-might
via IFTTT

Decoding Glamour

Fromer Reason editor Virginia
Postrel
‘s book
The Power of Glamour
has just been published, and the
reviews I’ve seen so far have been very favorable. Here is
Kirkus, for example:

Glamour to the people.Glamour, she argues, is not equivalent to luxury
and cannot be bought; instead, it depends on the object in question
and its audience’s imagination and desire. “It is not a product or
style but a form of communication and persuasion,” she writes. “It
depends on maintaining exactly the right relationship between
object and audience, imagination and desire. Glamour is fragile
because perceptions change.” In two- to three-page sections,
Postrel unpacks so-called icons and archetypes, including
princesses, superheroes, makeovers and cities like Shanghai, and
judges each on its illusory powers and pitfalls.

You can read the rest of that piece
here
, and you can read a feminist take on the text in The
New Inquiry
here.
We’ll be publishing an excerpt from the book in the January
Reason, so keep an eye out for that.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/decoding-glamour
via IFTTT

Welcome Back, Carter! Labor Participation Drops to 1978 Levels.

The unemployment rate may have ticked back up to 7.3
percent
, partially reflecting furloughed federal workers, but
more concerning is that the share of the population actively
looking for work dropped to Carter-era levels. That’s right, the
labor
participation rate
in October was down to 62.8 percent, a rate
that hasn’t been seen since March of 1978.

Labor participation rate

I doubt that anybody has a full explanation as to why
labor participation is on such an impressive downward streak,
reflecting Americans effectively dropping out of the workforce.
Retiring
Boomers
(PDF) have been fingered as a contributing factor, but

some research
shows the old hippies hanging on to their jobs by
their fingernails, even as younger workers disproportionately drop
out. A Cato Institute
study released in August
suggests that, with the weak job
market, some efforts to cushion the blow of the lousy economy are
actually counter-productive because “The current welfare system
provides such a high level of benefits that it acts as a
disincentive for work.” Taking benefits may be a tad more
attractive than trying to assemble a couple of
Obamacare-dodging

part-time gigs
into a living.

Whatever the explanation, welcome back, Carter.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/12/welcome-back-carter-labor-participation
via IFTTT

The Wages Of Fear

Authored by Epsilon Theory

You don’t know what fear is. But you’ll see. It’s catching, it’s catching like small pox! And once you get it, it’s for life! So long, boys, and good luck.

      – Henri-Georges Clouzot, “The Wages of Fear”

I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me.

      – Frank Herbert, “Dune”

The Wages Of Fear

In “The Wages of Fear”, Yves Montand and three other down-on-their-luck French expats agree to drive two truckloads of unstable nitroglycerin hundreds of miles across an impossibly difficult South American terrain. Driving 30 minutes apart so that the destruction of one truck won’t blow up the other, the two teams wind their way across one obstacle after another, facing the constant danger that an unanticipated bump will mean their deaths. One truck blows up in just such an unexpected way, killing two of the drivers in a giant fireball. A third driver is killed in the effort to traverse a final obstacle, a huge pit of oil and muck, but the lone truck and single surviving driver make it to their destination with the deadly cargo intact. Paid double wages … enough to live comfortably for years … and recovered from his exhaustion, the surviving driver must only drive the unloaded truck back to the origination point, where his girlfriend has already started putting together a celebratory party. But living with constant and overwhelming fear has changed the surviving driver’s psyche. He starts taking crazy chances driving the perfectly safe truck home, ultimately taking a turn way too fast and careening to his death in the chasm below. The End.

This is what living with fear does to an individual, a tribe, or a nation … it warps their view of the world and creates massive behavioral change even after the source of that fear is removed. These are the wages of fear, and this is the hidden and awful cost of 9/11 and Lehman’s collapse.

In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, we created a massive NSA eavesdropping and spying apparatus to combat the very real and immediate threat posed by a decentralized terrorist organization that we suspected had significant sovereign sponsors. Today al Qaeda is a pale shadow of its former self, and its sovereign sponsors are in retreat or eliminated. We won this war. Yet we have not scaled back or reduced our spying apparatus. On the contrary, we have created a bureaucratic and judicial structure to support the program, and we are expanding its technical and operational scope to identify and combat potential threats to national security. Why? Because our collective fear of another 9/11 has created a social and political sanction for such a bureaucratic capture. And because these potential threats to national security will always be present, this emergency NSA eavesdropping policy has become a permanent government program with enormous social and economic costs.

In the immediate aftermath of Lehman’s collapse, we created a massive monetary policy program called Quantitative Easing to combat the very real and immediate threat posed by a deflationary spiral as markets seized up. Today there is zero chance of a deflationary freefall with a US epicenter, and we have returned to our regularly scheduled entertainment of a lackluster business cycle. We won this war. Yet we have not scaled back or reduced our QE apparatus. On the contrary, we have created a bureaucratic and judicial structure to support the program, and we are expanding its technical and operational scope to identify and combat potential threats to economic security. Why? Because our collective fear of another Great Recession has created a social and political sanction for such a bureaucratic capture. And because these potential threats to economic security will always be present, this emergency QE policy has become a permanent government program with enormous social and economic costs.

In the parlance of strategic military doctrine, we have transformed our goals from fighting a responsive war against a specific threat that has injured us to fighting a preventive war against a potential threat that might injure us in the future. There’s nothing inherently wrong or stupid with fighting a preventive war, but it has a very different set of goals and effective social modalities than a responsive war. If this is our choice … fine, but let’s make it an honest choice as opposed to a fait accompli imposed on us by powerful interests. It’s always important to call things by their proper names, but never more so than when you’re fighting a war.

The classic example of a preventive war is the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Squeezed mercilessly by the coal, oil, and steel embargo imposed by the US, the Japanese leadership concluded that although they would probably lose a war with the US, they would definitely lose the peace. Rather than accept the slow decline of the status quo and the economic constraints imposed by US policy, Japan decided to accelerate an outcome by launching the Pearl Harbor attack.
While there are quite a few historical examples of insurgent or up-and-coming countries like Japan challenging dominant or status quo countries with a preventive war, it’s actually rather hard to find examples of a dominant country starting a preventive war. That’s probably because dominant countries have other policy levers they can pull – like a coal, oil, and steel embargo – to keep the insurgent countries in their place without resorting to war. But we have a very good example of the consideration of preventive war by a dominant country in the internal US debate over how to deal with the growing power of the Soviet Union and China in the 1950’s and 1960’s. By examining the arguments in favor of preventive war (or its close cousin, pre-emptive war) made by some US strategists during this period, and why those arguments were ultimately rejected in favor of a less aggressive policy of containment, we can
gain some insights into the risks and rewards of the preventive wars we are currently fighting and why we might prefer a less aggressive approach.

Here’s a snapshot and a few indicative quotes from probably the most effective and outspoken proponent of a preventive/pre-emptive stance regarding US nuclear policy – Curtis LeMay.

Killing Japanese didn’t bother me very much at the time. I suppose if I had lost the war I would have been tried as a war criminal. …

I think there are many times when it would be most efficient to use nuclear weapons. However, the public opinion in this country and throughout the world throw up their hands in horror when you mention nuclear weapons, just because of the propaganda that’s been fed to them. …

That’s the reason some schools of thinking don’t rule out a destruction of the Chinese military potential before the situation grows worse than it is today. It’s bad enough now.

Gen. Curtis LeMay, Air Force Strategic Air Command (SAC), youngest 4-star general since Ulysses Grant, 1968 Vice-Presidential candidate with George Wallace

It’s easy from our modern perspective to poke fun at how LeMay presented himself with a giant cigar, and it’s very hard to get comfortable with a man who directed the low-altitude firebombing campaign of Japanese civilian populations and who ran on a national ticket with noted segregationist George Wallace. But LeMay was also a brilliant contributor to the US victory in the Cold War. He almost singlehandedly transformed SAC into the most powerful warfighting force in human history (my favorite story is the mock bombing run he ordered on Dayton, Ohio to figure out which of his pilots could hit a target), and it would be a mistake to underestimate his arguments just because we don’t like his politics.

LeMay’s advocacy of preventive/pre-emptive war is based on a very specific utility function – nothing is worse than US military defeat. If that’s your view, that it’s better to be dead than Red, then a preventive attack on a relatively growing Soviet Union or China is an easy call. Far better to strike today, when the correlation of forces (to use a phrase favored by Soviet strategists of the day) were still tilted to the US, than tomorrow when we might not be so fortunate. Because the avoidance of US military defeat was LeMay’s end all and be all goal, he was prepared to “do whatever it takes” including “the killing of a nation” (his words) in the furtherance of that goal.

Anyone who says that he or she is prepared to “do whatever it takes”, whether it’s Mario Draghi and Angela Merkel talking about support of the euro, Ben Bernanke talking about preventing deflation, George W. Bush talking about pursuit of terrorism, or Barack Obama talking about growing the economy … is making a preventive war argument just like Curtis LeMay. Not a preventive war against a particular nation, but a preventive war against some conceptual social ill. Of course, you can’t defeat a conceptual social ill like you can defeat a nation. You can’t accept the surrender of General Deflation. These social ills will always be with us in one form or another, which means that a preventive war in the modern context is a permanent and constant war.

It may not seem like we are on a war footing when it comes to NSA eavesdropping or QE, because the trappings of war … mobilizations, set battles, etc. … may not be present. But the language associated with a war footing is definitely present, and this is what creates the social space that allows these policies to exist and thrive. I am struck almost every day by how the language of extremism and war pervades our domestic political and social institutions, on both the left and the right. I hear the voice of Curtis LeMay everywhere! Unfortunately, I think it’s a voice that tends to promote the wages of fear, and I’m certain it’s a voice that drives game-playing in markets. But it’s also a voice that diminishes as it is identified for what it is, and that’s a pretty worthy goal for Epsilon Theory.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/2J4D0YfGRpI/story01.htm Tyler Durden