The Case Of The Missing Recovery

Submitted by Dr. Paul Craig Roberts via Alt-Market.com,

Have you seen the economic recovery? I haven’t either. But it is bound to be around here somewhere, because the National Bureau of Economic Research spotted it in June 2009, four and one-half years ago.

It is a shy and reclusive recovery, like the “New Economy” and all those promised new economy jobs. I haven’t seen them either, but we know they are here, somewhere, because the economists said so.

Congress must have seen all those jobs before they went home for Christmas, because our representatives let extended unemployment benefits expire for 1.3 million unemployed Americans, who have not yet met up with those new economy jobs, or even with an old economy job for that matter.

By letting extended unemployment benefits expire, Congress figures that they saved 1.3 million Americans from becoming lifelong bums of the nanny state and living off the public purse. After all, who do those unemployed Americans think they are? A bank too big to fail? The military-security complex? Israel?

What the unemployed need to do is to form a lobby organization and make campaign contributions.

Just as economists don’t recognize facts that are inconsistent with corporate grants, career ambitions, and being on the speaking circuit, our representatives don’t recognize facts inconsistent with campaign contributions.

For example, our representative in the White House tells us that ObamaCare is a worthy program even though those who are supposed to be helped by it aren’t because of large deductibles, copays, and Medicaid estate recovery. The cost of this non-help is a doubling of the policy premiums on those insured Americans who did not need ObamaCare and the reclassification by employers of workers’ jobs from full-time to part-time in order to avoid medical insurance costs. All it took was campaign contributions from the insurance industry to turn a policy that hurts most and helps none into a worthy program. Worthy, of course, for the insurance companies.

Keep in mind that it is the people who could not afford medical insurance who have to come up with their part of the premium or pay a penalty. How do people who have no discretionary income come up with what are to them large sums of money? Are they going to eat less, drive less, dress less? If so, what happens to people employed in those industries when demand falls? Apparently, this was too big a thought for the White House occupant, his economists, and our representatives in Congress.

According to the official wage statistics for 2012, forty percent of the US work force earned less than $20,000, fifty-three percent earned less than $30,000, and seventy-three percent earned less than $50,000. The median wage or salary was $27,519. The amounts are in current dollars and they are compensation amounts subject to state and federal income taxes and to Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes. In other words, the take home pay is less.

To put these incomes into some perspective, the poverty threshold for a family of four in 2013 was $23,550.

In recent years, the only incomes that have been growing in real terms are those few at the top of the income distribution. Those at the top have benefited from “performance bonuses,” often acquired by laying off workers or by replacing US workers with cheaper foreign labor, and from the rise in stock and bond prices caused by the Federal Reserve’s policy of quantitative easing. Everyone else has experienced a decline in real income and wealth.

As only slightly more than one percent of Americans make more than $200,000 annually and less than four-tenths of one percent make $1,000,000 or more annually, there are not enough people with discretionary income to drive the economy with consumer spending. When real median family income and real per capita income ceased to grow and began falling, Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan substituted a credit expansion to take the place of the missing growth in income. However, as consumers became loaded with debt, it was no longer possible to expand consumer spending with credit expansion.

World War II left the US economy the only undamaged industrial and manufacturing center. Prosperity ensued. But by the 1970s the Keynesian demand management economic policy had produced stagflation. Reagan’s supply-side policy was able to give the US economy another 20 years. But the collapse of the Soviet Union brought an era of jobs offshoring to large Asian economies that formerly were closed to Western capital. Once corporate executives realized that they could earn multi-million dollar performance bonuses by moving US jobs abroad and once they were threatened by Wall Street and shareholder advocates with takeovers if they did not, American capitalism began giving the US economy to other countries, mainly located in Asia. As high productivity manufacturing and professional service jobs (such as software engineering) moved offshore, US incomes stagnated and fell.

As real income growth stagnated, wives entered the work force to compensate. Children were educated by refinancing the home mortgage and using the equity in the family home or with student loans that they do not earn enough to repay. Since the December 2007 downturn, Americans have used up their coping mechanisms. Homes have been refinanced. IRAs raided. Savings drawn down. Grown children, now adults, are back home with parents. The falling labor force participation rate signals that the economy can no longer provide jobs for the workforce. In such a situation, economic recovery is impossible.

What the Treasury and Federal Reserve have done, with the complicity of the White House, Congress, economists, and the media, is to focus on rescuing a half dozen banks “too big to fail.” The consequence of focusing economic policy on saving the banks is rigged financial markets and massive stock and bond market bubbles. To protect the dollar’s exchange value from quantitative easing, the price of gold has been forced down in the paper futures market, with the consequence that physical gold is shipped to Asia where it is unavailable as a refuge for Americans faced with currency depreciation.

At a time when most Americans are running out of coping mechanisms, the US faces a possible financial collapse and a high rate of inflation from dollar depreciation as the Fed pours out newly created money in an effort to support the rigged financial markets.

It remains to be seen whether the chickens can be kept from coming home to roost for another year.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/zKXT_wDJ43s/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Other Side Of Marc Faber: Gold, Hashish, And ‘Efficient’ Whiskey-Drinking

From hashish to drinking cheap whiskey in Chiang Mai clubs, the following clip rounds up the ‘best of’ Marc Faber over the last few years…

  • On the elites – “I am not sure the thinkers are in Davos
  • On the media – “you are an optimist, keep on dreaming… us foreigners just laugh”
  • On solutions – “cut government expenditures by 50%; fire half the government… including the President”
  • On Americans – “people in the western world have abandoned personal responsibility
  • On government – “who would have faith in the US administration, certainly not someone who thinks”
  • On Gold – “not to own gold is to trust central banks, and that you don’t want to do in your life

And another oldie but a goodie that sums up stimulus perfectly…

“The federal government is sending each of us a $600 rebate.
If we spend that money at Wal-Mart, the money goes to China.
If we spend it on gasoline it goes to the Arabs.
If we buy a computer it will go to India.
If we purchase fruit and vegetables it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.
If we purchase a good car it will go to Germany.
If we purchase useless crap it will go to Taiwan and none of it will help the American economy.”

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/baFJYgGstn8/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Other Side Of Marc Faber: Gold, Hashish, And 'Efficient' Whiskey-Drinking

From hashish to drinking cheap whiskey in Chiang Mai clubs, the following clip rounds up the ‘best of’ Marc Faber over the last few years…

  • On the elites – “I am not sure the thinkers are in Davos
  • On the media – “you are an optimist, keep on dreaming… us foreigners just laugh”
  • On solutions – “cut government expenditures by 50%; fire half the government… including the President”
  • On Americans – “people in the western world have abandoned personal responsibility
  • On government – “who would have faith in the US administration, certainly not someone who thinks”
  • On Gold – “not to own gold is to trust central banks, and that you don’t want to do in your life

And another oldie but a goodie that sums up stimulus perfectly…

“The federal government is sending each of us a $600 rebate.
If we spend that money at Wal-Mart, the money goes to China.
If we spend it on gasoline it goes to the Arabs.
If we buy a computer it will go to India.
If we purchase fruit and vegetables it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.
If we purchase a good car it will go to Germany.
If we purchase useless crap it will go to Taiwan and none of it will help the American economy.”

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/baFJYgGstn8/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Overstock’s First Day of Bitcoin – $130,000 in Sales, 850 Transactions, CEO is “Stunned”

Upon the conclusion of the Senate hearing on Bitcoin this past November, I tweeted that I thought we had entered Phase 2 of the Bitcoin story. A month later, following news that Andreessen Horowitz had led an venture capital investment of $25 million in Coinbase, I wrote:

As I tweeted at the time, I think Bitcoin began phase two of its growth and adoption cycle upon the conclusion of the Senate hearings last month (I suggest reading: My Thoughts on the Bitcoin Hearing).

I think phase two will be primarily characterized by two things. More mainstream adoption and ease of use, as well as increasingly large investments by venture capitalists. In the past 24 hours, we have seen evidence of both.

Phase 2 so far is going even more positively than I had expected. Overstock.com accelerated its plans to accept BTC by many months, and the early rollout has been a massive success. The company’s CEO just tweeted:

This is absolutely huge news and any retail CEO worth their salt will immediately begin to look into Bitcoin adoption.

I hope financial publications that missed the biggest financial story of 2013 continue to mock it with covers of unicorns and waterfalls. It’s the most bullish thing I can imagine.

In Liberty,
Mike

Like this post?
Donate bitcoins: 1LefuVV2eCnW9VKjJGJzgZWa9vHg7Rc3r1

 Follow me on Twitter.

Overstock’s First Day of Bitcoin – $130,000 in Sales, 850 Transactions, CEO is “Stunned” originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on January 10, 2014.

continue reading

from A Lightning War for Liberty http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2014/01/10/first-day-of-bitcoin-sales-on-overstock-850-transactions-130k-in-sales-ceo-is-stunned/
via IFTTT

Irish Finance Ministry Reveals It Has Lost Banking Crisis Files

We are sure there is a joke in here somewhere but it is no laughing matter. Following a request for copies of 8 documents  of correspondence between Ireland’s (former) finance minister and the nations’ largest bank executives, the Irish minstry of finance has been forced to admit that it cannot find two out of the eight. The documents, previously 100% redacted, raises questions as to whether other documents have gone ‘missing’. As RTE reports, the Department of Finance said it had carried out a widespread search for the documents and it was not clear why the original versions could not be located. Those darn leprechauns… We are sure, however, it has nothing to do with the Irish banks “picking bailout numbers out of their arses.”

 

Via RTE,

Documents relating to the banking crisis have gone missing at the Department of Finance.

 

The department has conceded that some correspondence forwarded from Bank of Ireland to the former minister for finance Brian Lenihan can no longer be located.

 

 

In 2009, the department was asked under Freedom of Information to release copies of all correspondence between the late Mr Lenihan and the chief executives of the banks during the period August 2008 to March 2009.

 

The department released eight items.

 

Late last year, Sinn Féin finance spokesperson Pearse Doherty requested repeat copies of these documents.

 

He was told that two out of the eight could no longer be found.

 

When released in 2009, both had been completely redacted.

 

They concerned correspondence between the governor of Bank of Ireland Richard Burrows and an advisor to the Jupiter group, Noel Corcoran.

 

Jupiter was trying to buy Bank of Ireland at the time.

 

Mr Doherty said the fact that the department could not locate records was worrying ahead of the banking inquiry.

 

He said it raised questions as to whether other documents may have gone missing.

 

In a statement to RTÉ News this evening, the Department of Finance said it had carried out a widespread search for the documents and it was not clear why the original versions could not be located.

 

It said that it had undertaken a project which would ensure the completeness and integrity of its records from the time of the bank guarantee.

 

 

It said that it was not aware of any documents relating to the bank guarantee which may have gone missing.

 

Mr Doherty said: “These letters existed in 2009.  They were released but the content was fully redacted to a journalist under the Freedom of Information legislation.

 

“However I have now been informed that these letters have gone missing from the Department of Finance.

 

These are some of the only documents between the Governor of the Bank of Ireland and the Minister for Finance during a period when the government decided to pump €3.5m of taxpayers’ money into that bank.”

 

He went on to say: “The only reason we know that these documents are missing is because two separate FOIs were made on the same document over a four year period.  The question has to be asked about what other sensitive documents have gone missing.  The reality is that we may never know.

 

“If the upcoming banking inquiry is to be successful it is important that all relevant documents are found or returned.”

 

Good job they got that bond issue off eh?


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1gZvNsK Tyler Durden

The US Is Not Switzerland: Weighs Sanctions Against South Sudan

Despite telling us just yesterday that it would not take sides in the tensions in South Sudan…

  • *U.S. NOT TAKING SIDES IN S SUDAN: PSAKI

the US government is on the verge of deciding to… take sides. As Reuters reports, the United States is weighing targeted sanctions against South Sudan due to its leaders' failure to take steps to end a crisis that has brought the world's youngest nation to the brink of civil war. Africa, as we have discussed at length, remains the only region on earth with incremental debt capacity (and therefore growth in a Keynesian world) and so it is no surprise the US wants to get involved in yet another conflict.

 

Via Reuters,

"It's a tool that has been discussed," a source told Reuters on condition of anonymity about the possibility of U.S. sanctions against those blocking peace efforts or fueling violence in South Sudan. Another source confirmed the remarks, though both declined to provide details on the precise measures under consideration.

 

No decisions have been made yet, the sources added. Targeted sanctions focus on specific individuals, entities or sectors of country.

 

The U.S. government was unlikely to consider steps intended to economically harm impoverished South Sudan but would likely focus on any measures on those individuals or groups it sees as blocking efforts at brokering peace or committing atrocities.

 

As we discussed previously, there is an African scramble so it is unsurprisng the US would choose to take sides and get involved:

While those in the power and money echelons of the "developed" world scramble day after day to hold the pieces of the collapsing tower of cards in place (and manipulating public perception that all is well), knowing full well what the final outcome eventually will be, those who still have the capacity to look, and invest, in the future, are looking neither toward the US, nor Asia, and certainly not Europe, for one simple reason: there is no more incremental debt capacity at any level: sovereign, household, financial or corporate. Because without the ability to create debt out of thin air, be it on a secured or unsecured basis, the ability to "create" growth, at least in the current Keynesian paradigm, goes away with it. Yet there is one place where there is untapped credit creation potential, if not on an unsecured (i.e., future cash flow discounting), then certainly on a secured (hard asset collateral) basis. The place is Africa, and according to some estimates the continent, Africa can create between $5 and $10 trillion in secured debt, using its extensive untapped resources as first-lien collateral.

Africa is precisely where the smart money (and those who quietly run the abovementioned "power echelons"), namely China and Goldman Sachs, have refocused all their attention in the past year precisely because they both realize that Africa is the last and only bastion of untapped credit growth and capacity. But you won't read about it in the mainstream papers: the last thing those who are currently splitting up Africa into its constituent parts want is for the general public to become aware what is in play. You will, however, read about it on these pages (see here and here and here). Also, if you are a Goldman client, you will certainly know all about it, as the firm ventures out with reverse inquiry indications of interest to its wealthy clients giving them the right of first equity refusal, and slowly but surely providing "financial services" to the last great hope for the developing world, which ironically is what most still consider the poorest continent…

Africa in geographical perspective…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/CANdQYv5E5A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Humana Warns of “‘Adverse ObamaCare Enrollment Mix”

Thought the incredibly unpopular ObamaCare health plan (the most epic disaster story was the woman who was touted as a success and then later kicked off her plan) had put most of its problems behind it? Think again. Yesterday, after the stock market close, health insurer Humana warned that the “risk mix” of those who have signed up for the program will be “more adverse than previously expected.”

In plain english what this means is that only old and sick people are signing up, while younger generations with piles of student debt, a couch in their parents’ basements and no jobs decide to ride things out uninsured.

Honestly, I can’t blame them, as I just received my own 12% rate hike the other day. Happy New Year to you too Barry.

From Investor’s Business Daily:

Humana said the “risk mix” of its ObamaCare exchange members will be “more adverse than previously expected,” the latest evidence that the health reform is attracting older, sicker Americans than originally projected.

The health insurer, in an SEC filing late Thursday, cited the Obama administration’s 11th hour decision to let people stay on plans that had been cancelled due to ObamaCare regulations. The White House was reacting to political anger of President Obama’s “if you like your plan, you can keep it” vow.

Humana made no mention of the administration’s late December decision to let people with cancelled plans avoid the individual mandate tax penalty in 2014. Those who choose to forgo insurance presumably will be younger and healthier.

continue reading

from A Lightning War for Liberty http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2014/01/10/humana-warns-of-adverse-obamacare-enrollment-mix/
via IFTTT

5 Things To Ponder: Markets, Valuations & Investing

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

In yesterday's post, I showed several charts that "Market Bulls Should Consider" as the mainstream media, analysts and economists continue to become more ebullient as we enter the new year.  This weekend's "Things To Ponder" follows along with this contrarian thought process particularly as it appears that virtually all "bears" have now been forced into hibernation.

David Rosenberg recently penned a piece for the Financial Post discussing his views on why the market in 2014 still has room to run.  While his arguments of stronger economic growth via increased fixed capital investment (discussed in detail here), a steep yield curve and rising leading economic indicators (LEI) are certainly compelling; it is worth noting that the last two arguments have been directly impacted, to a large degree, by the interventions of the Federal Reserve.  The article is well worth reading as it provides the context behind today's missive.

 

1) The US Is The Most Expensive Developed Market In The World via Zero Hedge

"The chart speaks for itself, but for those greatly rotating their 'cash on the sidelines' into stocks; JPMorgan points out that US equities are 2 standard deviations rich to their average valuation and are in fact the most expensive in the developed world…"

zero-hedge-011014

 

[Note:  The reference to "cash on the sidelines" is part of Cliff Asness' 10 Pet Peeves which is a must read for any investor.]

For more charts from JP Morgan on market valuation go here.

 

2) The Biggest Redistribution Of Wealth From The Poor To The Rich by Shane Obata-Marusic (@sobata416)

While the current administration has continued to promote the "war on poverty" the reality is that, as stated by Robert Rector, it has been less than successful.

"Fifty years and $20 trillion later, LBJ's goal to help the poor become self-supporting has failed."

Shane's most recent study discusses the ongoing impact of the Federal Reserve's "quantitative easing" programs as a wealth transfer mechanism from the poor and middle class to the rich.  The implications of this transfer effect, as shown in the chart below, on an economy that is nearly 70% driven by personal consumption expenditures suggests that the real "wealth effect" of the Fed's interventions has been a negative rather than a positive.

The-Great-Wealth-Transfer

 

3) 5 Questions On The Economy To Be Answered In 2014 via The Wall Street Journal

Economic forecasters are counting on 2014 to be a breakout year. But whether the economy finally moves past its sluggish growth will rest on several forces playing out differently than they have since the recovery began. Some of the key questions that must be answered in the coming year are:

  • Will businesses finally shed their caution?
  • Will Washington's tentative truce continue?
  • Will the Fed's path out of the bond buying get bumpy?
  • Will housing adjust easily to higher interest rates?
  • Will the rest of the world cooperate?

While the WSJ gives their assessment the importance of the questions, and how you personally answer them, are critical as to how you structure your current asset allocation.

 

4) How To Lose Money In A Hurry by Mark Hulbert; WSJ MarketWatch

Mark Hulbert wrote a great piece discussing the most often forgotten phrase by investors; "Past performance is no guarantee of future results."  As he states:

"'This phrase, ubiquitous in the small print of financial products, often falls on deaf ears,' according to Adam Reed, a finance professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 'Investors have a tendency to rush into those funds that are at the top of the previous year's performance rankings,' he says, citing numerous studies.

 

They shouldn't. The evidence is that last year's top performers will lag the market in 2014 — if not lose a lot of money."

This is clearly shown in the following periodic table of returns by Callan.  While it is entirely possible that chasing the stock market in 2014 could yield a positive return, it is also likely that an unloved asset class like "bonds" could just as well rise to the surface.  Just food for thought.

Callan Periodic Table of Investment Returns-2012-notated

 

5) The Death Of Long Term Thinking (1800-2013) an Obituary by Morgan Housel

I have written and articulated many times in the past that the "long term investor" is dead.  In a market driven by artificial interventions, high frequency and program trading and a "casino" mentality by individuals the age old axioms of "buy cheap and sell dear" have all but been forgotten.  This idea was brilliantly opined in this obituary of "Long Term Thinking."

"Long-Term Thinking died on Tuesday. His last true friend, Vanguard founder Jack Bogle, was at his side. He was 213 years old.

 

Long-Term Thinking lived an illustrious life since the start of the Industrial Revolution, when for the first time, people could think about more than their next meal. But poor incentives and the rise of 24/7 media chipped away at his health. The final blow came Monday, when a trader on CNBC warned that a 10% market pullback — which has occurred on average every 11 months over the last century — could be 'devastating' for investors. 'That's it,' Long-Term Thinking whispered from his hospital bed. 'There's no more room for me here.' He died soon after Bloomberg published its daily tally of how much the net worths of the world's billionaires changed in the previous 24 hours."

And on that sad note I leave you to ponder the risk in your portfolio, the potential for 2014 and how the "evolution of cats explains why they are grumpy."


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nEPXU9hALDk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

5 Things To Ponder: Markets, Valuations & Investing

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

In yesterday's post, I showed several charts that "Market Bulls Should Consider" as the mainstream media, analysts and economists continue to become more ebullient as we enter the new year.  This weekend's "Things To Ponder" follows along with this contrarian thought process particularly as it appears that virtually all "bears" have now been forced into hibernation.

David Rosenberg recently penned a piece for the Financial Post discussing his views on why the market in 2014 still has room to run.  While his arguments of stronger economic growth via increased fixed capital investment (discussed in detail here), a steep yield curve and rising leading economic indicators (LEI) are certainly compelling; it is worth noting that the last two arguments have been directly impacted, to a large degree, by the interventions of the Federal Reserve.  The article is well worth reading as it provides the context behind today's missive.

 

1) The US Is The Most Expensive Developed Market In The World via Zero Hedge

"The chart speaks for itself, but for those greatly rotating their 'cash on the sidelines' into stocks; JPMorgan points out that US equities are 2 standard deviations rich to their average valuation and are in fact the most expensive in the developed world…"

zero-hedge-011014

 

[Note:  The reference to "cash on the sidelines" is part of Cliff Asness' 10 Pet Peeves which is a must read for any investor.]

For more charts from JP Morgan on market valuation go here.

 

2) The Biggest Redistribution Of Wealth From The Poor To The Rich by Shane Obata-Marusic (@sobata416)

While the current administration has continued to promote the "war on poverty" the reality is that, as stated by Robert Rector, it has been less than successful.

"Fifty years and $20 trillion later, LBJ's goal to help the poor become self-supporting has failed."

Shane's most recent study discusses the ongoing impact of the Federal Reserve's "quantitative easing" programs as a wealth transfer mechanism from the poor and middle class to the rich.  The implications of this transfer effect, as shown in the chart below, on an economy that is nearly 70% driven by personal consumption expenditures suggests that the real "wealth effect" of the Fed's interventions has been a negative rather than a positive.

The-Great-Wealth-Transfer

 

3) 5 Questions On The Economy To Be Answered In 2014 via The Wall Street Journal

Economic forecasters are counting on 2014 to be a breakout year. But whether the economy finally moves past its sluggish growth will rest on several forces playing out differently than they have since the recovery began. Some of the key questions that must be answered in the coming year are:

  • Will businesses finally shed their caution?
  • Will Washington's tentative truce continue?
  • Will the Fed's path out of the bond buying get bumpy?
  • Will housing adjust easily to higher interest rates?
  • Will the rest of the world cooperate?

While the WSJ gives their assessment the importance of the questions, and how you personally answer them, are critical as to how you structure your current asset allocation.

 

4) How To Lose Money In A Hurry by Mark Hulbert; WSJ MarketWatch

Mark Hulbert wrote a great piece discussing the most often forgotten phrase by investors; "Past performance is no guarantee of future results."  As he states:

"'This phrase, ubiquitous in the small print of financial products, often falls on deaf ears,' according to Adam Reed, a finance professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 'Investors have a tendency to rush into those funds that are at the top of the previous year's performance rankings,' he says, citing numerous studies.

 

They shouldn't. The evidence is that last year's top performers will lag the market in 2014 — if not lose a lot of money."

This is clearly shown in the following periodic table of returns by Callan.  While it is entirely possible that chasing the stock market in 2014 could yield a positive return, it is also likely that an unloved asset class like "bonds" could just as well rise to the surface.  Just food for thought.

Callan Periodic Table of Investment Returns-2012-notated

 

5) The Death Of Long Term Thinking (1800-2013) an Obituary by Morgan Housel

I have written and articulated many times in the past that the "long term investor" is dead.  In a market driven by artificial interventions, high frequency and program trading and a "casino" mentality by individuals the age old axioms of "buy cheap and sell dear" have all but been forgotten.  This idea was brilliantly opined in this obituary of "Long Term Thinking."

"Long-Term Thinking died on Tuesday. His last true friend, Vanguard founder Jack Bogle, was at his side. He was 213 years old.

 

Long-Term Thinking lived an illustrious life since the start of the Industrial Revolution, when for the first time, people could think about more than their next meal. But poor incentives and the rise of 24/7 media chipped away at his health. The final blow came Monday, when a trader on CNBC warned that a 10% market pullback — which has occurred on average every 11 months over the last century — could be 'devastating' for investors. 'That's it,' Long-Term Thinking whispered from his hospital bed. 'There's no more room for me here.' He died soon after Bloomberg published its daily tally of how much the net worths of the world's billionaires changed in the previous 24 hours."

And on that sad note I leave you to ponder the risk in your portfolio, the potential for 2014 and how the "evolution of cats explains why they are grumpy."


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nEPXU9hALDk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Stocks Stick-Saved While Bond Bears Battered

Treasury yields collapsed 10-12bps today with the largest decline since 9/18/11. Treasury yields in general slipped back to the lowest level in 3 weeks. The USD was slammed lower (except against CAD which pushed lower – down 2.5% on the week!). JPY strength was offset by AUD and the cross provided the ammo to lift equities back to day-session highs in the last hour (104 USDJPY was defended aggressively). Stocks broadly bounced immediately after the knnjerk selling off the NFP print, then leaked lower until 3pmET when a decidedly low volume meltup took NASDAQ and Russell back to almost unchanged on the year. Trannies outperformed, Dow underperformed (TRAN +0.65%, DOW -1% YTD). Silver and gold surged back into the green for the week with the latter closing above its 50DMA for the first time since October and its highest in a month. VIX tumbled to 12.2% as hedges were lifted and recoupled with the S&P.

 

From the US open, AUDJPY was in charge of stocks today…(as USDJPY 104 was defended aggressively)

 

Which lifted stocks handsomely back into the green (apart from the Dow)… but Trannies are the major outperfomer…

 

As Healthcare takes over the top-spot post-Taper (with a huge day for homebuilder and Utilities are rates tumbled)….

 

Gold (and silver) rallied back into green for the week.. gold closed back above its 50DMA…

 

But today's big news was in the Treasury complex… as bonds ripped lower in yield…

 

Spot the odd one out in FX land… CAD is getting slammed…

 

VIX dumped back to recouple with stocks as hedges were lifted…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: ICPT – you just gotta laugh eh?!

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/pecga2u16mc/story01.htm Tyler Durden