Steve Chapman on America’s Irrelevance in Ukraine

Ukraine flagsThe Russian invasion of Crimea occurred in a
place little known to Americans, for reasons rooted in a tangled
and bloody history. The showdown between President Vladimir Putin
and the new Ukrainian government is a fight about tangible matters
of intense mutual interest. But many Americans can’t address
international crises without sounding like a Toby Keith song: “I
Wanna Talk About Me.” If bad things are happening anywhere in the
world, it must be something we caused and something we can fix. In
Washington, writes Steve Chapman, many politicians assume the world
revolves around us. The people in power in Moscow have a very
different and puzzling trait: They think it revolves around
them.

View this article.

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Obamacare is ‘God’s Work’ Says First Lady, CPAC Kicks Off With Christie, Crimea Votes To Join Russia: P.M. Links

  • “You are doing God’s work,” Michelle Obama
    told
    healthcare enrollees and application counselors in
    Miami.
  • The Conservative Political Action Conference kicked off today.
    Gov. Chris Christie (NJ-R) received a
    standing ovation
    and Sen. Mitch McConnell (KY-R)
    brought a gun
  • The Crimean Parliament voted today to join
    the Russian Federation
    . Ukraine’s interim president called the
    decision “illegitimate” due to pressure imposed by the presence of
    Russian soldiers in the region.
  • A top-ranking general assured Congress that it will take a
    mitigation task force two years and “billions of
    dollars
    to overcome the loss of security that has been imposed”
    by Edward Snowden’s document leaks.
  • Hillary Clinton would beat Jeb Bush with a
    14 percent margin
    , according to a Rasmussen poll on potential
    presidential candidates for 2016.
  • The FBI is investigating a video that purportedly
    shows
    Los Angeles gangmembers fighting in Syria. Is
    L.A. that bad? 

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Will There be a Parabolic Rise in Gold Equities..?

By: Mark Wallace at

http://ift.tt/146186R

 

 

This is the question on the mind of many a gold share “bug.” I can say with relative certainty that the answer is YES. Why? I think the reason should be fairly obvious. Everything moves in cycles.

As we’ve discussed ad nausea within these pages, gold has had a dismal few years. In 2011 gold hit a high of around $1,900 USD per ounce, fueled by easy money and fears of a currency debasement. Money printing continues to this day, but the dollar is alive and well. As of December 2013 gold sat below $1,200 USD per ounce. Silver fared worse yet, declining from almost $50 USD per ounce, to under $20 USD per ounce.

When we look at the gold mining equities it’s really ugly. The NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index lost about 70% of its value in that time frame. Many junior companies lost 90% plus, and some just blew away like so much pixie dust in the wind.

Chris and I were casualties of this decimation ourselves. Most of our junior stocks, and almost all of our recommendations related to anything gold/silver were just taken out back and shot. Plain and simple.

In general though 2013 was a bit of an anomaly, in that gold declined while the broader equity indexes rose substantially. Over the past 13 years prior, gold had outperformed equities. With the decline in gold it’s no surprise that gold stocks got clobbered so badly, as the fundamentals were awful.

Bellwethers like Goldcorp and Barrick Gold had massive losses and reduced reserves in anticipation of lower gold prices. In the last quarter of 2013 Goldcorp lost a whopping $1 billion USD, while Barrick claimed a $2.83 billion USD loss. These “big guys” were forecasting gold could be as low as $1,100 going forward.

As they so often are, the “big guys” were wrong. Gold has risen to $1,335 USD per ounce as I write this, and the stocks of the senior miners have risen over 25% on average. The old axiom, “Buy when there’s blood in the streets” seems to have held once again. The time to buy a stock, whether its a resource stock or otherwise, is when they begin rising on negative news. This is precisely what has happened with the miners.

GDX

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our very own Brad Thomas put out a Trade Alert to subscribers on Barrick saying the following:

“I continue to hold the view that there will be an ultimate price to pay for all of the unprecedented monetary “stimulus” and money printing that we have observed over the last 5 years across most developed markets. This ultimate cost will be inflation, with a resulting dramatic rise in precious metals.

If ever there was a time to invest in gold stocks now is probably the best time due to a number of factors:

  • Sentiment towards gold stocks is exceptionally bearish – how much more bearish can sentiment become
  • Given the above it is highly likely that this is the most under-owned that gold stocks have been in a couple of decades, with the result that shares of mining companies are likely to be concentrated in the hands of a relative few – where is the marginal seller of gold stocks going to come from?
  • Most gold producers are making losses, which suggests that the cost of producing gold is about $1200 an ounce – how much below the cost of production can gold go before material shutdown of capacity occurs?
  • Fundamental valuations are exceptionally low with most of the big producers trading more or less @ book value – are we likely to see any further compression of price multiples?

Why ABX specifically? In essence while the price of gold has continued to fall over the last 8 months, Barrick’s share price hasn’t, which suggests that Barrick’s stock price has probably found a long-term bottom.”

Brad recommended the January 2016 $25/$35 spread. With this trade you would buy the $25 option and sell the $35 option. At expiration if ABX was to close:

  • Below $26.50 – loss = 100%,
  • @ $28.00 – profit of 100%,
  • @ $30 – profit of 220%,
  • @ $35 – profit of 567% (a maximum profit will be achieved if ABX closes @ 35 or higher).

Taking a look at the weekly chart of ABX, that price level being achieved within the next 2 years looks to be a good bet!

ABX

The moral of this story is that the bear market in the precious metals and the associated equities may be coming to an end. The bad news has been delivered, and now we are seeing prices rise. This is likely a new trend forming, with the classic higher lows patterns developing in the individual equities.

Insitutional and retail investors are starting to take notice. Reuters reported on February 27th that, “The world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, New York’s SPDR Gold Shares, is on track for its first monthly inflow of metal in more than a year after a run of weaker U.S. data boosted investment interest in gold. The SPDR fund added 10.5 tonnes to its reserves so far this month. That means that, barring a large outflow on Friday, February would be the first month to show an increase since December 2012.”

GLD

The chart above is courtesy of StockCharts.com and John Murphy, an EXCELLENT technical analyst that I’ve followed for the last 15 years. According to John, the chart, “Focuses on the two month advance in the Gold SPDR (GLD). With GLD trading near 130, it has retraced just over 62% of the prior decline. Even though the 62% area could mark a reversal zone, the trend since early January is clearly up.

The trend line zone and late February lows combine to mark support in the 126-127 area. The indicator window shows the Commodity Channel Index (CCI) moving into positive territory in early January and remaining largely positive during this advance.”

Everything seems to be lining up for gold at this point in time.

Brent Cook, former associate of Eric Sprott and one of the best mining analysts in the world believes that, “2014 should be a good year for investors to begin positioning themselves in the better metal deposits, mining companies, and the most competent explorers. The reason is quite simple: the industry is not finding enough economic deposits to replace mine production.

To further that, Grant Williams, the prolific editor of Things That Make You Go Hmmm, in regards to an impetus for a potential violent upwards move in the gold price has stated, “I fear that it will be a shortage in physical metal because that could be very, very extreme…”

For an excellent timeline of important developments in 2013 that will affect the gold price going forward, I recommend reading Alasdair Macleod’s (Gold Money) recent post, Gold in 2013: The Foundation For 2014.

If you want to skip to the conclusion, which by the way we agree with, Alasdair states:

“The events of 2013 persuaded investors in western capital markets that gold’s bull market had definitely been broken, and that gold would probably go lower or at best move sideways in 2014. The underlying reality is very different, with China in particular managing to corner the physical market with trend-following Western analysts caught unawares.

So far, instead of continuing to fall the gold price actually bottomed on 31 December at $1182, and since then has rallied over 13% to $1340. The position today is that some hedge funds which were short have closed their positions and there are more yet to do so. There is growing evidence for the trend-chasers that the price is entering a new bull phase, with the 50-day and the 200-day moving averages both rising and about to complete a golden cross.

Central banks appear to be facing a problem of their own making. The lesson from Germany’s attempt to repatriate her gold appears to have provided prima face evidence that central banks have little or no physical liquidity left. Minor central banks, such as Finland’s, must now be wondering if gold out on lease will ever be returned to them, so may be increasingly reluctant to make their gold available for further leasing. Instead they are likely to end current leasing agreements as they mature rather than extend them.

In 2014 there is likely to be a growing realisation that the vaults in the West are very low on stock.”

Turning once again to Grant Williams:

“Gold is a manipulated market. Period.

 

“2013 was the year that manipulation finally began to unravel.

“2014? Well now, THIS could be the year that true price discovery begins in the gold market. If that turns out to be the case, it will be driven by a scramble to perfect ownership of physical gold; and to do that you will be forced to pay a lot more than $1247/oz.”

Well, gold is now well on its way, having risen $100 since Grant penned those words last month. Don’t get left behind!

 

 

Next week we’ll be making a special offer to those who are receiving our FREE Trade Alerts. To get on that list and receive our offer just drop us your email HERE.

 

– Mark

 

“There’s going to be a bubble in gold stocks.” – Doug Casey


    



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High-Probability Of Russian Assault Overnight, Ukraine Pravda Says

On the heels of the Russian navy intentionally sinking a vessel blocking the Ukrainian navy from entering The Black Sea, Ukraine Pravda reports that it is “most probable that Russian troops will assault units in Ukrainian Crimea overnight continuing to the weekend.” Citing a source in the uniformed services, Ukraine Pravda warns that “despite reports that Russian troops ended in learning, active phase lasts. They did not return to the barracks,” and maintain “peak readiness.”

 

Via Ukraine Pravda (via Google Translate),

On the night of Thursday to Friday a great opportunity to assault Ukrainian part of the Russian special forces.

 

This “Ukrainian Pravda” reported a source in the uniformed services.

 

Despite reports that Russian troops ended in learning, active phase lasts. They did not return to the barracks. Could maintain peak readiness by the end of the weekend,” – said the source.

 

“The most probable that the assault would take place that night, but the danger will persist to the end of the weekend” – source added.

 

“There are three scenarios. First – this air strike,” – said the source.

 

He said that if Russian troops will withdraw from parts of the Ukrainian, that would mean this version.

 

“Helicopters are already relocated, and it is possible that they will do exactly helicopters,” – said the UP.

 

“The second option – a special operations force for disarmament,” – he said.

 

The interviewee said that in the Crimea are Russian special forces “Alpha”, “Vympel” and “Zaslon.”

 

“The third option: they can come up with ryazhenymy Cossacks, as with a living shield. Example is happening” – he added.

 

He also reminded that the Russian troops flooded his ship to block the path of Ukrainian courts.

 

According to the source, impacts may not be in all parts, but only by those who are the most combat-ready, including Sevastopol and Feodosiya.

And this follows the sinking of a ship to block the Ukrainian Navy

An anti-submarine boat may have been the first casualty of the Russian incursion into Crimea, but it was hardly an act of violence, much less war: The Russian navy sank one of its own, junked vessels to create an obstacle, a Ukrainian official said on Wednesday.

The sinking was the latest in a series of moves by Russian naval forces in the area that were jangling the nerves of Ukrainian officers… the mouth of the bay was blocked by 10 Russian vessels including the formidable guided missile cruiser Moskva.


    



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Are the Uninsured Signing Up for Obamacare? Maybe Not.

One
of the things we still don’t know about Obamacare is how many of
the people who have signed up for coverage under the law were
previously uninsured. The administration, which has long emphasized
that the central goal of the law is to expand coverage, says it
isn’t tracking that information. “That’s not a data point we are
really collecting in any sort of systematic way,” a senior federal
health official told
reporters
 earlier today. 

At least for now, then, we have to rely on imprecise, outside
data. And as The Washington Post
reports
this afternoon, two new surveys suggest that the
uninsured are not exactly turning out in droves:

The new health insurance marketplaces appear to be making little
headway so far in signing up Americans who lack health insurance,
the Affordable Care Act’s central goal.

A pair of surveys released on Thursday suggest that just one in
10 uninsured people who qualify for private health plans through
the new marketplace have signed up for one — and that about half of
uninsured adults has looked for information on the online exchanges
or plans to look.

One of the surveys, by
the consulting firm McKinsey & Co.
, shows that, of people
who had signed up for coverage through the marketplaces by last
month, just one-fourth described themselves as having been without
insurance for most of the past year.

This is preliminary information; there’s still a month to go in
the sign-up process. It’s a survey sample, not a comprehensive look
at the entire sign-up population. And data from New York finds a
much higher percentage of sign-ups were previously uninsured
(although
New York is a special case
with an essentially nonexistent
individual insurance market prior to Obamacare). Even still,
however, it seems to indicate that the sign-ups we’ve seen so far
haven’t been concentrated amongst the long-term
uninsured. 

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Cop Who Fatally Shot Wii Controller-Wielding Teen Had Been Fired Before

fatally shot a teenagerThree weeks ago, Beth Gatny, a police officer in
Euharlee, Ga.,
fatally shot
17-year-old Christopher Roupe after he opened the
door for cops. According to the family and some witnesses the
teenager was holding a Wii controller (which is a white stick, more
or less) when he was shot once in the chest. Police claim Roupe was
holding a handgun, and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has not
yet completed its report on the incident. Gatny remains on paid
leave. Now, 11 Alive, the NBC affiliate in Georgia, reports that
Gatny, who has been employed with Euharlee police for less than a
year, had been fired from
her last job
:

Gatny worked at the Acworth Police Department for 10
years prior to that and personnel records indicate that she was
written up and suspended a number of times for various
infractions.

In a timeline, her supervisors say she “refused to follow orders”
on everything from filing paperwork to carrying her walkie
talkie.

Other details:

Gatny was involved in four car accidents in two years.
In 2007, she reportedly “left her duty belt, along with her
weapon..with a civilian employee” while she had her picture taken
with someone.

In 2008, while confronting three suspects, she fired her service
weapon.  An internal investigation found the suspect was
trying to remove his backpack. She was convinced he was going for a
gun, but a fellow officer said he never thought the suspect was
armed.

Internal Affairs concluded she should not be punished because the
initial call for service said the suspects could have been
armed. 

We’ve covered many police officers
with the type of records and background that ought to, by common
sense alone, end their law enforcement careers and preclude them
from future employment as police officers. I’ve suggested
zero tolerance for cops
. Every time an irresponsible gun owner
does something stupid or someone commits a prominent enough crime
using a gun, the incident is used by anti-gun activists to
challenge the notion that individuals have the right to arm
themselves for self-defense. Yet the right to a gun is heavily
restricted. A prior felony, for example,
led to a 20 year sentence
for a Philly man who shot his gun
into the air. In the meantime, when former law enforcement officers
are involved in acts of “gun violence,” their background is often
not highlighted. For example, the Florida man who shot a fellow
moviegoer for
texting in the theater
was a retired police officer, but it
didn’t stop this anti-stand
your ground editorial cartoon
from using the incident to draw a
broader point. Yet, even in states like New York with restrictive
gun laws, politicians have carved out exemptions not just for law
enforcement but
former law enforcement
, like the Florida man who fatally shot a
texter. Police officers around the country are pushing back against
the NFL’s no guns rule, not because they believe we all have the
right to bear arms, but because they do. How sick is that
worldview?  

Beth Gatny shot and killed a 17-year-old boy. She should be
presumed innocent in a court of law until proven guilty, a right
that needs to be preserved for all accused. But Gatny isn’t
enjoying those rights right now, but privileges carved out for her
and other police officers around the country, in union contracts
often signed by local government officials long out of power.
Earlier today, for example, I wrote about a Baltimore cop who
choked his girlfriend’s puppy to death and then sent pictures of
the dead dog to her. He admitted as much, and has been charged with
animal cruelty. But he, too, remains employed with the police
department. Unlike Gatny, he is suspended without pay until he is
convicted. But the fact that a police officer can choke a puppy to
death and admit it, or shoot a 17-year-old in the chest after he
opens the door, or
brutally beat a homeless man to death
, and expect to keep their
jobs until they have their “due process” is a perversion of the
term. Being fired by a police department is not the same as being
treated as a guilty person, it would be an acknowledgement that
police officers are held to an extremely high standard because
government has decided to give them costumes, guns, badges, and the
wide discretion to use them. In too much of the United States, that
higher standard simply doesn’t exist.

Beth Gatny and Alec Taylor, the puppy-choker, and every other
cop with obviously poor character ought to be fired, and the police
departments and municipalities that employ them should have that
power. Only then will it not be Orwellian to call them “public
servants.”

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Vid: Sick – NYC’s Bill de Blasio Puts Politics Before Poor Kids

About 11,000 charter-school students and their parents descended
on the state capitol building in Albany on Tuesday to protest New
York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s decision to block two new charter
schools from opening next year and to halt the expansion of a
third.

De Blasio will allow 16 other charter schools to move forward
with their plans to open next year. So what does he have against
these three schools in particular? The answer: He’s settling an old
political score on behalf of his cronies in the teachers union.

View this article.

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More Americans Say Obamacare Has Hurt Them and Their Family

Since Obamacare’s health insurance exchanges launched in
October, an increasing number of the uninsured have said they hold
an unfavorable view of the law. They’re not the only ones whose
negative feelings have increased. A
Gallup poll released today
reports that an increasing number of
people say Obamacare has already hurt their families—23 percent, up
from 19 percent over the last few months and 16 percent in 2012.
Just 10 percent say Obamacare has helped their family. 

As Gallup’s write-up notes, responses are fairly strongly
correlated with party affiliation: Republicans view the law
negatively, while Democrats tend to be more positive. Even still,
the poll makes two things clear: that the energy and momentum is on
the side of the opposition, and that, overall, opinions about the
law are getting worse, not better. 

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House Passes $1 Billion Ukraine Loan Guarantee, Gazprom Sends Thanks

The oligarchs have taken over the asylum:

  • *UKRAINE $1 BLN LOAN-GUARANTEE BILL PASSED BY U.S. HOUSE
  • *HOUSE VOTES 385-23 TO PASS $1 BLN UKRAINE LOAN GUARANTEE

We are sure the auditors will be aggressively checking that this money does not flow directly from the US to Ukraine to Gazprom. But notably, we suspect, Jordan and Tunisia might be pissed as they just lst their funding. Not so much for Detroit or Puerto Rico also…

 

Measure, H.R. 4152, doesn’t entail any new funding because money remaining in a program for loans to Jordan and Tunisia would be transfered; exact amount of loan guarantees won’t be determined until Ukraine applies for assistance


    



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Happy 5th Anniversary To The Bull Market

5 years ago today, the S&P 500 made its post-crisis low at the oddly demonic 666 level. What many may not remember is… the last so-called-at-the-time “secular” bull market lasts exactly 5 years and 1 day (from October 10th 2002 to October 11th 2007)… it’s different this time though.

 

The last “secular bull market”

 

The current “secular bull market”

 

h/t Brad Wishak of NewEdge

 

Of course – nothing changes…

As a gentle reminder: At the end of October 2007, right before markets began their descent to their current lows Cramer gave out investment advice on his wildly popular show, Mad Money.

Here was his game plan at the time:

You should be buying things and accept that they are overvalued, but accept that they’re going to keep going higher.

 

I know that sounds irresponsible, but that’s how you make the money.

 

Right now, up is down, left is right, peace is war.

Indeed. Just don’t look at the following chart…


    



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