The Great Reset

Via ChicagoStockTrading.com,

In December’s article “The Yellen that Stole Christmas”, the point was to show how buyers in the SP500 were caught above 2040, and needed a Yellen rescue.  The market attempted to breakout to start December, however the rug was pulled from underneath as Yellen reiterated a rate cut later in the month.  After bluffing the market for 2 years on this rate cut, the call fell on many deaf ears. 

So it was. Buyers were left caught at higher prices, betting on a “Santa Claus Rally” only to be hoping for Yellen to save Christmas.  For the first time in 6 years and exactly 3 years from December 2012’s FOMC that placed a 6.5% target on NFP for a decision on Fed Funds rate, the FOMC reset the market and hiked the Fed Funds rate by a quarter point.  Bulls did not get what they were looking for and saw the market fall back to retest 1982 support.  The level barely held on December 18th, as the market rallied back for Christmas holiday and the “Santa Claus Rally” was actually a gift from Yellen for stuck longs above 2040 to “breakeven”, or as we like to call it “get out of jail free card”.  

The bounce back to retest the FOMC high gave these buyers their opportunity to exit at breakeven.  As new buyers failed to step in and carry the ball above the FOMC high, remaining longs that became stubborn and did not take the breakeven out, were left to close the year lower at 2035.  They say fear turns to greed at break even.  The SP500 started the year of 2016 with no holds barred as it flushed to run stops below 1982 to punish greedy and trapped buyers above 2040, giving way for the market to retest the August low and fill the gap down to 1940.  Attempt to hold this level was seen, before falling into next gap at 1875 where once again the market fought to hold.  Both levels eventually failed as the overhead supply gave way for the market to breach the 2015 low of 1831 and take out the 2014 low of 1813.  Lows of 1804 were made in the month of January, before bouncing back to retest old support at 1940 and finding the level to turn into new resistance. 

Remember it was the BOJ that stepped in October of 2014 at 1970, and again in October of 2015 at 1970 again.  The Japanese bought Yellen a year of time, and gave her a market of 2070 to hike rates.  Now that the market has fallen back to the August low, it is the BOJ who has turned their monetary policy to negative rates.  What does this tell the market? That after attempting to pump it twice above 1970, with the market at 1870 they have switched to negative rates. Sign of desperation? So far the market is not buying it.  An attempt to rally was seen, only to find old support at 1940 turn into major resistance as the market double topped.  Going forward, failure to recover above 1870, gives room for the market to push into next major support at 1750 to retest the 2014 low of 1732.  Buyers must recover through 1890 for a retest of 1940 resistance in attempt to retrace back to the failure at 1980.  Yellen is expected to testify today, and once again bulls are in trouble and looking for help.  Even if she mentions negative rates, remember it will not be the first time. It was Yellen that said “Negative rates are not on the table right now” on October 22nd which many also did not notice, was another factor in the upside squeeze.  Did the BOJ copycat the move?  What we know is our central bank has moved into a hiking position, while other central banks are trapped and have gone negative. 

This is the great reset, because 3 years ago when 6.5% was placed as a target for unemployment, the SP500 was trading at 1400, gold at 1700, and the 30 year bond at 148.  In the year of 2013 we saw the SP500 run away as it freighted toward 2100, whilst gold and the bonds dropped lower.  What have you noticed take place after this rate hike?  The SP500 has changed course lower, while gold and the 30 year bond market have reversed higher. 

Gold fell from 1700 down to 1200 from December of 2012 to January of 2014 when 6.5% NFP target was met.

With the objective met, the gold market attempted to reverse course as it rallied up to 1392.  The market failed to take out its prior high of 1434, keeping the bearish trend in control and as the market found the FOMC was not going to hike rates, this gave way for gold to wind down again.  Since these highs the market has coiled lower, making new lows for the year of 2015 in December at 1045 just before Yellen’s rate hike. After her hike, the low was retested and held, and gold has since then been in reverse as the news is being sold (in this case bought). Gold has taken out its prior high of 1191 from October 2015 to stop some shorts.  The U turn gives room for an attempt to build a base and try to target next major resistance against 1270. Gold remains in a downward trend, however the recent U turn, gives room for an attempt to build a base and target next major resistance against 1270. Pullbacks are to be defended down to 1120-1080, with stops below the year low of 1061.  A breach of the 2014 high at 1307 squeezes out the short side to give the market room to retrace back to 1550, from where the market broke down in January of 2013 from the FOMC decision.  

The bond market also front running the 6.5% objective as it traded down from 148 to 127 in January of 2014 as the 6.5% unemployment target was met. 

The bond market in contrast to gold, sp500, and the yen, called the FOMC’s bluff on not raising rates, and rallied all the way to take out the 2012 highs to make new highs up to 16627.  Since this high and pullback to the 2012 level of 148, old resistance turned into new support as the market consolidated into Yellen’s 2015 rate hike.  As we see, the bond market not only front ran this rate hike, but has continued to march higher following the decision.  The uptrend in 2016 being fueled recently by panic buying as investors see Japans negative decision as a bull trap in stocks and use bonds to hedge positions.  This panic buying, has given way to take out the 2015 high as the market has gone parabolic.  Continuation of the move sees next resistance against 171.  Failure to expand above new highs sees sell stops below 16228 for a retest of the February lows of 16015. Breach of this level is needed to trap panic buyers above to give way into 156 to test major support off the year low of 15309.  Pullbacks should be defended, and a break of the year lows is needed to create a double top. 

A rounded top and a failed breakout in December, giving way for the move down to retest August lows.

January pushed down to take out the lower vol window at 1869 before bouncing back and rejecting the 6 month pivot at 1922.  Hold below 1869, gives the market room down to next support at 1750, and ultimately a retracement of the breakout from December of 2012 down to 1420.  Recovery through 1870 will have the market working against major resistance being the 6 month pivots, with room up to 1980 to retest old support.  The “Great Reset”, gives the market room to retrace down to 1400 of where the market broke out.  One thing is that many of the bulls that were dismissive in January and laughed at the bears, are laughing no more and have actually turned bearish themselves.  This can give way for the continued bear market rips we have seen, as well as panic selling as the perma bulls are forced to come to the realization that the party is over.  Once again however, bull awaiting Yellen to save the day…


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1TeWwa9 Tyler Durden

The Crash In US Bank Stocks Is Only Half-Way Through

It appears by the total lack of coverage that the utter collapse of Europe’s banking system is entirely irrelevant to the “fortress-like” balance sheets of US banks… but it is not. Once again today, US financials saw bonds dumped across the senior and subordinated segments…

 

…and while US financial stocks have fallen hard year-to-date, if credit is right – and it usually is on a cyclical basis – US bank stocks have a long way to go (as believe in book values is battered).

 

Of course, the CEOs will all tell investors there is nothing to worry about – just as David Stockman warned

“in my experience is that when the crunch comes, bank CEOs lie”


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1Ke8GNF Tyler Durden

Despite Huge Tail And Sliding Bid To Cover, 30Y Treasury Prices At Lowest Yield Since January 2015

After yesterday’s strong 10Y auction few were expecting ugliness in today’s final for this week 30Y issuance: after all with markets crashing, the flight to safety and duration surely would mean strong demand for the long-end of the curve.  Only that wasn’t the case.

Yes, the high yield of 2.50% (allotted 37.52% at the high) was the lowest since January 2015, but this came at a huge concession to the 2.467% When Issued, which resulted in a whopping 3.3 bps tail, the biggest in over three years. Furthermore, the Bid to Cover, plunged to just 2.092, down from the 2.288 last month, and the lowest going back to May 2014, as well as one of the lowest on record.

Perhaps the saving grace was that both Directs and Indirects took down a comparable amount of the final allotment as they did last month, at 10.3% and 31.7% respectively. This means that despite the weakness on the top, the Indirects ended up with a very strong 58%, which as can be seen in the red bar on the chart below, was quite respectable despite the overall poor tone to the auction.

All that said, if indeed the Fed proceeds to unleash NIRP, a yield of 2.50% will seem like an unprecedented bargin in one year, when the same CUSIP will likely be trading in the low to mid 1% range, if not lower.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1Ke8Dlb Tyler Durden

Central Banks Are Trojan Horses, Looting Their Host Nations

A Nobel prize winning economist, former chief economist and senior vice president of the World Bank, and chairman of the President’s council of economic advisers (Joseph Stiglitz) says that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank loan money to third world countries as a way to force them to open up their markets and resources for looting by the West.

Do central banks do something similar?

Economics professor Richard Werner – who created the concept of quantitative easing – has documented that central banks intentionally impoverish their host countries to justify economic and legal changes which allow looting by foreign interests.

He focuses mainly on the Bank of Japan, which induced a huge bubble and then deflated it – crushing Japan’s economy in the process – as a way to promote and justify structural “reforms”.

The Bank of Japan has used a heavy hand on Japanese economy for many decades, but Japan is stuck in a horrible slump.

But Werner says the same thing about the European Central Bank (ECB).  The ECB has used loans and liquidity as a weapon to loot European nations.

Indeed, Greece (more), Italy, Ireland (and here) and other European countries have all lost their national sovereignty to the ECB and the other members of the Troika.

ECB head Mario Draghi said in 2012:

The EU should have the power to police and interfere in member states’ national budgets.

 

***

 

“I am certain, if we want to restore confidence in the eurozone, countries will have to transfer part of their sovereignty to the European level.”

 

***

 

“Several governments have not yet understood that they lost their national sovereignty long ago. Because they ran up huge debts in the past, they are now dependent on the goodwill of the financial markets.”

And yet Europe has been stuck in a depression worse than the Great Depression, largely due to the ECB’s actions.

What about America’s central bank … the Federal Reserve?

Initially – contrary to what many Americans believe – the Federal Reserve had admitted that it is not really federal (more).

But – even if it’s not part of the government – hasn’t the Fed acted in America’s interest?

Let’s have a look …

The Fed:

  • Threw money at “several billionaires and tens of multi-millionaires”, including billionaire businessman H. Wayne Huizenga, billionaire Michael Dell of Dell computer, billionaire hedge fund manager John Paulson, billionaire private equity honcho J. Christopher Flowers, and the wife of Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack
  • Artificially “front-loaded an enormous [stock] market rally”.  Professor G. William Domhoff demonstrated that the richest 10% own 81% of all stocks and mutual funds (the top 1% own 35%).  The great majority of Americans – the bottom 90% – own less than 20% of all stocks and mutual funds. So the Fed’s effort overwhelmingly benefits the wealthiest Americans … and wealthy foreign investors
  • Acted as cheerleader in chief for unregulated use of derivatives at least as far back as 1999 (see this and this), and is now backstopping derivatives loss
  • Allowed the giant banks to grow into mega-banks, even though most independent economists and financial experts say that the economy will not recover until the giant banks are broken up. For example, Citigroup’s former chief executive says that when Citigroup was formed in 1998 out of the merger of banking and insurance giants, Greenspan told him, “I have nothing against size. It doesn’t bother me at all”
  • Preached that a new bubble be blown every time the last one bursts
  • Had a hand in Watergate and arming Saddam Hussein, according to an economist with the U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Committee for eleven years, assisting with oversight of the Federal Reserve, and subsequently Professor of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin.  See this and this

Moreover, the Fed’s main program for dealing with the financial crisis – quantitative easing – benefits the rich and hurt the little guy, as confirmed by former high-level Fed officials, the architect of Japan’s quantitative easing program and several academic economists.  Indeed, a high-level Federal Reserve official says quantitative easing is “the greatest backdoor Wall Street bailout of all time”. Even Fed officials now admit that QE doesn’t help the economy.

Some economists called the bank bailouts which the Fed helped engineer the greatest redistribution of wealth in history.

Tim Geithner – as head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York – was complicit in Lehman’s accounting fraud, (and see this), and pushed to pay AIG’s CDS counterparties at full value, and then to keep the deal secret. And as Robert Reich notes, Geithner was “very much in the center of the action” regarding the secret bail out of Bear Stearns without Congressional approval. William Black points out: “Mr. Geithner, as President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York since October 2003, was one of those senior regulators who failed to take any effective regulatory action to prevent the crisis, but instead covered up its depth”

Indeed, the non-partisan Government Accountability Office calls the Fed corrupt and riddled with conflicts of interest. Nobel prize-winning economist Joe Stiglitz says the World Bank would view any country which had a banking structure like the Fed as being corrupt and untrustworthy. The former vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas said said he worried that the failure of the government to provide more information about its rescue spending could signal corruption. “Nontransparency in government programs is always associated with corruption in other countries, so I don’t see why it wouldn’t be here,” he said.

But aren’t the Fed and other central banks crucial to stabilize the economy?

Not necessarily … the Fed caused the Great Depression and the current economic crisis, and many economists – including several Nobel prize winning economists – say that we should end the Fed in its current form.

They also say that the Fed does not help stabilize the economy. For example:

Thomas Sargent, the New York University professor who was announced Monday as a winner of the Nobel in economics … cites Walter Bagehot, who “said that what he called a ‘natural’ competitive banking system without a ‘central’ bank would be better…. ‘nothing can be more surely established by a larger experience than that a Government which interferes with any trade injures that trade. The best thing undeniably that a Government can do with the Money Market is to let it take care of itself.’”

Earlier U.S. central banks caused mischief, as well.  For example,  Austrian economist Murray Rothbard wrote:

The panics of 1837 and 1839 … were the consequence of a massive inflationary boom fueled by the Whig-run Second Bank of the United States.

Indeed, the Revolutionary War was largely due to the actions of the world’s first central bank, the Bank of England.   Specifically, when Benjamin Franklin went to London in 1764, this is what he observed:

When he arrived, he was surprised to find rampant unemployment and poverty among the British working classes… Franklin was then asked how the American colonies managed to collect enough money to support their poor houses. He reportedly replied:

 

“We have no poor houses in the Colonies; and if we had some, there would be nobody to put in them, since there is, in the Colonies, not a single unemployed person, neither beggars nor tramps.”

 

In 1764, the Bank of England used its influence on Parliament to get a Currency Act passed that made it illegal for any of the colonies to print their own money. The colonists were forced to pay all future taxes to Britain in silver or gold. Anyone lacking in those precious metals had to borrow them at interest from the banks.

 

Only a year later, Franklin said, the streets of the colonies were filled with unemployed beggars, just as they were in England. The money supply had suddenly been reduced by half, leaving insufficient funds to pay for the goods and services these workers could have provided. He maintained that it was “the poverty caused by the bad influence of the English bankers on the Parliament which has caused in the colonies hatred of the English and . . . the Revolutionary War.” This, he said, was the real reason for the Revolution: “the colonies would gladly have borne the little tax on tea and other matters had it not been that England took away from the colonies their money, which created unemployment and dissatisfaction.”

(for more on the Currency Act, see this.)

And Georgetown University historian Professor Carroll Quigley argued that the aim of the powers-that-be is “nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole.” This system is to be controlled “in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert by secret agreements,” central banks that “were themselves private corporations.”

Given the facts set forth above, this may be more conspiracy fact than whacko conspiracy theory.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1SjP6lK George Washington

Janet Yellen Admits Fed Is Evaluating Possibility Of Negative Rates

One week before the BOJ shocked the world by adopting negative interest rates and unleashed the next leg lower in global risk assets, it warned everyone “please not to worry, all is under control

Moments ago at least Yellen had the courtesy of “warning” market participants in general, and banks and savers in particular that legal, logistical or monetary concerns aside, the Fed is already evaluating the possibility of negative rates.

“We had previously considered them and decided that they would not work well to foster accommodation back in 2010. In light of the experience of European countries and others that have gone to negative rates, we’re taking a look at them again because we would want to be prepared in the event that we needed to add accommodation.

As Bloomberg reported first earlier this week, a Fed staff memo posted on the central bank’s website last month showed Fed economists grappled with a number of issues related to implementation of negative rates at the time, including possible legal obstacles. Yellen said Thursday that negative rates might be legal, but the question remained open to further examination.

Among the other concerns were whether the Fed has the logistical capacity to implement NIRP:

… the Federal Reserve computer systems used to calculate and manage interest on reserves do not currently allow for the possibility of a negative IOER rate, although these systems could be modified over time if needed.

And a further concern about NIRP is the potential lack of physical cash:

DIs might opt to shift a significant quantity of their reserve balances into currency. Present Federal Reserve inventories of currency, at about $200 billion, would not be adequate to cover large-scale conversion of the nearly $1 trillion in reserve balances to banknotes.

This is what she added today:

“I am not aware of any legal restriction that would mean that we could not establish negative rates, but I will say that we have not looked carefully at the legal side of this.”

So she is “aware” without actually looked into it. That’s ironic because it just happens to be standard operating procedure for the Fed regarding pretty much everything.

And finally there was this:

we don’t even know if payment systems will be able to handle negative rates.” 

Surely that is a minor obstacle. Ultimately the Fed will do whatever the banks tell it to do, and furthermore let’s not forget what Ben Bernanke himself said last month:

“I think negative rates are something the Fed will and probably should consider.”

We agree with him, and in a worst case scenario where Goldman and JPM decide that NIRP is not the “best option”, there is always QE4 – after all we know there are no legal or logistical issues with that.

In any case, at least one person is happy today.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1SjP6lz Tyler Durden

If You Want To Be Wealthy, Don’t Buy A House – Build A Business

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

The key take-away: focus on owning income-producing assets, not a primary residence.

One truism of investing is to follow the lead of those who are building wealth. This chart reveals the foundation of the wealth of the top 1% and the next 9%; business equity, i.e. ownership of enterprises. Compare the assets boxed in red:

The wealthiest households' primary wealth is businesses and shares in businesses. The bottom 90% depend on the family residence as a store of wealth, and on debt as a means of funding asset purchases and consumption.

Primary residences were once a reliable store of wealth–a store that was accessible to working families who were willing to pinch pennies and save up a down payment.

But now that housing has been financialized and globalized, it is prone to boom and bust cycles like every other risk-on financialized asset. Unfortunately, recent history shows that many middle-class households bought homes at the top and rode the post-bubble burst down.

Those fortunate enough to own homes in bubble-prone regions may benefit from speculating in housing, but playing this speculative game requires cashing out at the top of the bubble–something few have the knack for.

Building a profitable business isn't easy. That's why many of the wealthy let entrepreneurs take the risk of starting businesses and then buy the business for a premium once it has proven to be profitable.

But many entrepreneurs refuse to sell out, preferring to hold their businesses as a family asset that can be passed on to the next generation.

It's also worth noting that the wealthiest 10% own over 90% of the securities and stocks, 84% of trusts (essentially tax havens) and almost 80% of non-home real estate (i.e. second homes and income-generating properties).

Primary residences represent a mere 10% of the wealthiest 1%'s assets.

The key take-away: focus on owning income-producing assets, not a primary residence. The second key take-away:

Don't finance your assets with debt; finance your income-producing assets with savings and sweat equity, not borrowed money.

It is not accidental that the wealthiest 1% hold very modest levels of debt.


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

Iran Holds Nothing Back: “It’s A Suicide Mission That Will Have A Very Dark End”

Earlier today we reported that Saudi Arabia has made a “final” decision to invade Syria.

Of course they won’t use the term “invade.” They’ll say the same thing the US says, which is that they need to send in a limited number of ground troops to help fight ISIS.

The timing of the announcement quite clearly suggests that the Saudis are going to try and shore up the rebels who are facing imminent defeat at Aleppo where Hezbollah, backed by Russian airstrikes, is about to overrun the opposition.

That outcome is unacceptable for the Saudis, who have been funding and supplying the Sunni opposition in Syria for years. For Turkey, it’s pretty much the same story. How Riyadh and Ankara plan to assist the rebels while maintaining the narrative that they’re only in the country to fight Islamic State is an open question, but one thing is for sure: it’s do or die time. In the most literal sense of the phrase. “Publicly, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain are calling for troops to be deployed as part of the US-led international coalition already ranged against Isis,” FT wrote, earlier this week. “But regional observers say the moves are cover for an intervention to help the Syrian rebels.”

“If Saudi and Turkish forces were deployed at Syria’s northwestern border crossings with Turkey, for example, they would be inside Russia’s operational theatre,” The Times continues. “This would be a total nightmare for the US,” said analyst Aaron Stein, of the Atlantic Council in Washington. “What happens if Russia kills a Turk? They would be killing a Nato member.”

Yes, a “total nightmare” for the US and to let one Iranian military source tell it, a “total nightmare” for the Saudis as well. Read below to see what Tehran thinks about Riyadh’s chances of securing a desirable outcome in Syria (note the reference to Saudi Arabia and Islamic State’s shared ideology):

*  *  *

Via Al-Monitor quoting unnamed Iranian military personnel:

It’s a joke. We couldn’t wish [for] more than that. If they can do it, then let them do it — but talking militarily, this is not easy for a country already facing defeat in another war, in Yemen, where after almost one year they have failed in achieving any real victory.”

“The Saudis might really take part in this war. Such a decision might come from the rulers of the kingdom without taking into consideration the capabilities of their troops, and here is where the tragedy would occur. They are not well-trained for such terrain. I’m not sure if they sorted out the supply routes they would use — this is assuming that they would only fight [IS] — but it’s obvious they [want to] implement their agenda, after their proxies failed.

“This would mean a regional war. Mistakes can’t be tolerated, especially with the tension mounting around the region. It’s not about Iranians, but about all troops on the ground fighting with the Syrian army. How would the Syrian army deal with a foreign country on its soil, without its permission, and maybe aiming [guns] at them? That would be an occupation force. Can the Saudis control their army? Who can guarantee that some of them might not defect and join [IS]? They have the same ideology and they hold the same beliefs, and many of them are already connected [to IS].”

The Saudis are simply putting themselves in a very weird position that might have a very dark end. The worst thing is that the implications aren’t only going to affect the region, but world peace.”

*  *  *


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After an Absolutely PERFECTLY Timed Warning on the Financial Sector in October, This Is What Lies Ahead for the Banking Sector

On October 16, 2015, I warned that the banking industry was entering a strong cyclical AND structural downturn. See the full explanation below…

This is a chart showing the how well that warning has panned out thus far…

XLF vs SP500

Now, of course, the banks have a different perspective, as reported by FT.com: Credit Suisse chief says bank sector sell-off ‘not justified’. As investors “lose faith” in banks that I’ve warned about several times over the last few years, even the insiders are agreeing with me

Here’s the rub, it’s worse than many percieve. The concept of Pathogenic Finance will take the financial industry by storm.

Here’s the full research report for those who want to know exactly how this will take place (click the graphic to download)…

 

 

For those of you who’d rather look at pretty pictures than read the reason behind this paradigm/macro/fundamenal shift, this chart of the music industry infected by MP3 and P2P technology will be replicated by the financial industry once P2P technology sinks in. When will that be? Very soon!

Even if the banks succeed in incorporating blockchain tech into thier respective back ends, what happens when their clients realize the P2P tech works? Well, P2P of course!

Feel free to reach out to me at reggie AT veritaseum DOT com to discuss this and more. I love to chat.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1QYr908 Reggie Middleton

Lines Around The Block To Buy Gold In London; Banks Placing “Unusually Large Orders For Physical”

This is the best quarterly performance for Gold in 30 years…

 

And as Mike Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog details, physical demand is soaring…

First, let’s look at the improved fundamentals. Gold bugs will exasperatingly proclaim that fundamentals have been great for the past four years yet the price plunged anyway, so who cares about fundamentals? To this I would respond with two observations. First, large institutional investors and sovereign wealth funds have been anticipating a rate hike cycle for a very long time now. They didn’t know when, but they expected it. The fact that the gold bugs never believed this is irrelevant; what matters is that big money believed it, and it was perceived to be very gold negative. In their minds, this anticipated rate hike cycle would confirm that things were getting back to normal, and if things are normal you don’t need to own gold, right?

 

The problem is that this assumption is quickly being called into question. Sure the Fed hiked rates once, but it is starting to look more and more like a policy error. Meanwhile, other major central banks around the world are going in the opposite direction, toward negative rates. I am a huge believer in market psychology, and the psychology dominating the minds of most institutional investors over the past few years has been that things were slowly getting back to normal. This has weighed on institutional demand for gold in a big way, and been a meaningful factor in the bear market (manipulation aside). If this psychology shifts, the shift back into gold could be very meaningful.

 

While that backdrop is interesting in its own right, what may make the move into gold that much more explosive is the lack of alternative investments…

 

– From the February 3, 2016 post: GOLD – It’s Time to Pay Attention

What a difference a couple of weeks can make. The Telegraph is reporting the following:

BullionByPost, Britain’s biggest online gold dealer, said it has already taken record-day sales of £5.6m as traders pile into gold following fears the world is on the brink of another financial crisis.

 

Rob Halliday-Stein, founder and managing director of the Birmingham-based company, said takings today had already surpassed the firm’s previous one-day record of £4.4m in October 2014.

 

BullionByPost, which takes orders of up to £25,000 on the website but takes higher amounts over the phone, explained it had received a few hundred orders overnight and frantic numbers of phone calls this morning.

 

“The bullion market has been building with interest since the end of last year but this morning things have gone bananas,” said Mr Halliday-Stein. “Some London banks are placing unusually large orders for physical gold.”

 

London-based ATS Bullion added it had been inundated with orders for the past week. The firm has sold 4,000 gold bars and coins since February 1, a 40pc rise on the same period a year ago when it sold 1,500.

 

“It’s been crazy – it’s been the best week since 2012. We’ve had people queuing round the block,” said Michael Cooper of ATS Bullion, a family run firm that trades online and also from an outlet in the West End.

But that’s just part of the story. As reported by the World Gold Council, the buying really started to pick up in the fourth quarter, courtesy of the Chinese and central banks. Reuters notes:

Buying by central banks as well as Chinese investors seeking protection from a weakening currency helped lift demand for gold in the final quarter of last year and the trend looks set to continue, the World Gold Council said on Thursday.

 

Chinese demand for gold coins surged 25 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier as consumers sought to protect their wealth after Beijing devalued the yuan currency. But stock market turmoil and a slowing economy knocked consumer sentiment and Chinese demand for gold for jewelry fell 3 percent from a year earlier, WGC said.

 

Central banks have been buying gold to diversify their reserves away from the U.S. dollar and their purchases edged up to 588.4 tonnes last year, second only to a record high 625.5 tonnes in 2013, the report showed.

 

Central bank buying accelerated sharply in the second half of last year and jumped 25 percent in the fourth quarter, from a year earlier, as the need to diversify was reinforced by falling oil prices and reduced confidence in the global economy, WGC said.

 

Chinese demand for gold totaled 985 tonnes last year, followed by India on 849 tonnes. They accounted for nearly 45 percent of total global demand, with consumer demand up 2 percent and 1 percent respectively in those countries.

Think about the lack of gold buying from the U.S. relative to its global wealth and it becomes quite easy to see where the fuel for the next bull market will come from.

Meanwhile, on the supply side…

Global supply of gold fell 4 percent last year to 4,258 tonnes, partly because of slower mine production.

 

Mining companies have scaled back since 2013 in a bid to slash costs and mine production shrank in the fourth quarter of 2015, the first quarterly contraction since 2008, WGC said.

For related articles, see:

GOLD – It’s Time to Pay Attention

4 Mainstream Media Articles Mocking Gold That Should Make You Think


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1KdZXv9 Tyler Durden

The War on Cash is About to Go into Hyperdrive

The global Central Banks have declared War on Cash.

 

Historically, one of the safest things to do when the markets begin to collapse is to move a significant portion of your holdings to cash. As the old adage says, during times of deflation, “cash is king.”

 

The notion here is that cash is a safe haven. And while earning 1-2% in interest doesn’t do much in terms of growing your wealth, it sure beats losing 20%+ by holding on to stocks or bonds during their respective bear markets

 

However, in today’s world of fiat-based Central Planning, cash represents a REAL problem for the Central Banks.

 

The reason for this concerns the actual structure of the financial system. As I’ve outlined previously, that structure is as follows:

 

1)   The total currency (actual cash in the form of bills and coins) in the US financial system is a little over $1.36 trillion.

 

2)   When you include digital money sitting in short-term accounts and long-term accounts then you’re talking about roughly $10 trillion in “money” in the financial system.

3)   In contrast, the money in the US stock market (equity shares in publicly traded companies) is over $20 trillion in size.

 

4)   The US bond market  (money that has been lent to corporations, municipal Governments, State Governments, and the Federal Government) is almost twice this at $38 trillion.

 

5)   Total Credit Market Instruments (mortgages, collateralized debt obligations, junk bonds, commercial paper and other digitally-based “money” that is based on debt) is even larger $58.7 trillion.

 

6)   Unregulated over the counter derivatives traded between the big banks and corporations is north of $220 trillion.

 

When looking over these data points, the first thing that jumps out at the viewer is that the vast bulk of “money” in the system is in the form of digital loans or credit (non-physical debt).

 

Put another way, actual physical money or cash (as in bills or coins you can hold in your hand) comprises less than 1% of the “money” in the financial system.

 

Here is the financial system in picture form. I’m not including hard assets such as gold, real estate, or the like. We’re only talking about relatively liquid financial assets items that can be sold (turned into cash) quickly.

 

 

 

Of course, Wall Street will argue that the derivatives market is notional in value (meaning very little of this is actually “at risk”). However, even if we remove derivatives from the mix, the system is still very clearly based on credit, with only a small sliver of actual physical cash outstanding:

 

 

Put simply, the vast majority of wealth in the US is in fact digital wealth that moves from bank to bank without ever being converted into actual physical cash.

 

As far as the Central Banks are concerned, this is a good thing because if investors/depositors were ever to try and convert even a small portion of this “wealth” into actual physical bills, the system would implode (there simply is not enough actual cash).

 

Remember, the current financial system is based on debt. The benchmark for “risk free” money in this system is not actual cash but US Treasuries.

 

In this scenario, when the 2008 Crisis hit, one of the biggest problems for the Central Banks was to stop investors from fleeing digital wealth for the comfort of physical cash. Indeed, the actual “thing” that almost caused the financial system to collapse was when depositors attempted to pull $500 billion out of money market funds.

 

A money market fund takes investors’ cash and plunks it into short-term highly liquid debt and credit securities. These funds are meant to offer investors a return on their cash, while being extremely liquid (meaning investors can pull their money at any time).

 

This works great in theory… but when $500 billion in money was being pulled (roughly 24% of the entire market) in the span of four weeks, the truth of the financial system was quickly laid bare: that digital money is not in fact safe.

 

To use a metaphor, when the money market fund and commercial paper markets collapsed, the oil that kept the financial system working dried up. Almost immediately, the gears of the system began to grind to a halt.

 

When all of this happened, the global Central Banks realized that their worst nightmare could in fact become a reality: that if a significant percentage of investors/ depositors ever tried to convert their “wealth” into cash (particularly physical cash) the whole system would implode.

 

As a result of this, virtually every monetary action taken by the Fed since this time has been devoted to forcing investors away from cash and into risk assets. The most obvious move was to cut interest rates to 0.25%, rendering the return on cash to almost nothing.

 

However, in their own ways, the various QE programs and Operation Twist have all had similar aims: to force investors away from cash, particularly physical cash.

 

After all, if cash returns next to nothing, anyone who doesn’t want to lose their purchasing power is forced to seek higher yields in bonds or stocks.

 

The Fed’s economic models predicted that by doing this, the US economy would come roaring back. The only problem is that it hasn’t. In fact, by most metrics, the US economy has flat-lined for several years now, despite the Fed having held ZIRP for 5-6 years and engaged in three rounds of QE.

 

Let me put this very bluntly. The Fed and other Central Banks literally took the nuclear option in dealing with the 2008 bust. They have done everything they can to trash cash and force investors/ depositors into risk assets. But these polices have failed to generate growth.

 

Rather than admit they are completely wrong, Central Banks are reverting to more and more extreme measures to destroy cash and force investors to move into risk against their will.

 

Over 20% of global GDP is currently sporting NEGATIVE yields on their bonds.

 

This is just the start of a much larger strategy of declaring War on Cash.

 

Indeed, we've uncovered a secret document outlining how the Fed plans to incinerate savings to force investors away from cash and into riskier assets.

 

We’re talking cash bans, NIRP, even a carry tax on PHYSICAL CASH (meaning the longer the bill is out of the system the less it is worth).

 

We detail this paper and outline three investment strategies you can implement right now to protect your capital from the Fed's sinister plan in our Special Report Survive the Fed's War on Cash.

 

We are making 100 copies available for FREE the general public.

 

To lock in one of the few remaining…

 

Click Here Now!

 

Best Regards

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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