Liberation Of Europe From Gazprom Due To Nat Gas Exports Is Nonsense, Cheniere CEO

Despite the ongoing propoganda machine’s push for a bailout plan to ‘liberate Europe from Gazprom’s claws’, The FT reports that the head of Cheniere Energy, which is due to become the US’s first new natural gas exporter next year, said the ability of US energy to save Europe from its dependence on Russian supplies had been overstated. Simply put, as Putin knows all too well (but Obama and his merry men in the mainstream media seem destined to perpetuate), Cheniere’s CEO blasts “It’s flattering to be talked about like this, but it’s all nonsense. It’s so much nonsense that I can’t believe anybody really believes it.”

 

As The FT reports,

Charif Souki, Cheniere’s chief executive, said that the idea of his company’s exports alone liberating Europe from Russia’s Gazprom was “nonsense” and that only six to eight of 20-plus proposed rival export projects were “real”.

 

 

The east-west stand-off over Ukraine has sparked a political debate over whether the US should loosen its energy export restrictions so Europeans can buy liquefied natural gas, or LNG, from America’s shale energy boom.

 

Asked if Cheniere’s terminal could rescue eastern European countries from their dependence on Russia, Mr Souki said: “It’s flattering to be talked about like this, but it’s all nonsense. It’s so much nonsense that I can’t believe anybody really believes it.”

The US is working to increase the number of trade agreements to enable any LNG exports but…

Mr Souki said the only ones he considered to be real were the six to eight that had started a separate process – which he said entailed $100m in costs – of gaining permits from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or Ferc, which assesses environmental and safety standards.

 

“Until somebody tells me they’re willing to spend $100m, I don’t consider them real,” he said.

And that’s not happening anytime soon in a cash strapped and bureaucratically constrained Europe. Furthermore,  prices are likely to rise because not even Obam acan mandate where the free market moves its product…

Mr Souki said he had no control over where his customers would sell that LNG. “I’m pretty sure they will be opportunistic and, if they need it for their home market, they will take it for their own markets and, if they don’t need it, it will go somewhere else.”

Or can he.




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Here Is The Reason Why Half Of Today’s IPOs Were Pulled

The market is 4% off its all time highs which means the time to pull IPOs due to “market conditions” has come.

Indeed, out of today’s 8 scheduled IPOs, only 4 have been successful. The other four, which also include all of today’s proposed biotech IPOs and not to mention Paycom Technologies, a company whose S-1 includes every buzz word imaginable to cloud-based, social-networked man, and which provides “comprehensive, cloud-based human capital management or HCM, software solution delivered as Software-as-a-Service,“, have been delayed either temporarily or permanently. Why? The chart below should explain it.

Shown below is the proposed capital raise (based on the midpoint of the indicated IPO range) relative to the company net income, or rather, net loss. It is one of those that needs no comment, but for those who are confused – momentum chasing lemmings suddenly aren’t as impressed with cash-burning companies that rely soly on stories of unlimited upside when looking for the greatest fool.

 

And yet, something is odd about this chart. It is oddly reminiscent of our chart from last Friday showing the IPOs that succeeded. In fact, the two are almost identical.

 

In other words, in the span of 7 days, something has dramatically changed. What that something is will be revealed as increasingly more market top-ticking IPOs by cash-burning companies are pulled.




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Is the Market Primed For a Major Collapse?

Today the markets face a number of major headwinds.

 

They are:

 

1)   Abenomics is failing. Inflation has risen in Japan, increasing the cost of living. At the same time period, incomes have fallen, as has household spending. And Year to Date the Nikkei is down over 14%, making it the worst performing stock market in the world thus far for 2014.

 

2)   We are entering a period that has historically been very poor for stocks. According to the Ned Davis (NDR) database, had you invested $10,000 in the S&P 500 every May 1st starting in 1950 and sold October 31 of the same year, your initial position would only be worth $10,026 today in 2007. Put another way, by investing only from May through October, a $10,000 stake invested in 1950 would have only made $26 in 57 years.

 

3)   The regulators are beginning to crack down on High Frequency Trading. While this is overall a very positive development for the capital markets, it will be removing one of the primary props for asset prices over the last five years.

 

4)   The Federal Reserve is tapering the pace of its QE purchases. This is also very positive for the capital markets in the long-term as it lowers the Fed’s manipulation of the world’s risk profile. However, short term the tapering of liquidity will generally be market negative.

 

5)   The market is sharply overbought and overvalued with a record number of investors bullish, margin debt at record highs, record high profit margins, and a forward valuation that matches that attained during the 2007 peak.

 

All in all, the market is facing an increasingly negative environment. Historically speaking April and May have not been big months for crises, but the number of negatives the market is facing today is rather unique.

 

Watch the key support line below. In particular, the key issue is how the market reacts if we break it. A sharp drop below followed by a strong bounce would maintain the momentum of the last two years. But if we break this line and fail to reclaim it… we’re in more serious trouble.

 

 

For a FREE Special Report on how to protect your portfolio from bear market drops, swing by

http://ift.tt/RQfggo

 

Best Regards

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 




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What’s Wrong With This “Housing Recovery” Picture?

We asked this question a quarter ago following the quarterly results by Wells Fargo – America’s biggest mortgage lender – but we never got an appropriate answer. So now that the data has been updated for the latest Wells mortgage origination and application numbers, we ask the question again: considering both mortgage originations and applications are crashing to levels not seen since the Lehman crisis, just what is wrong with this “housing recovery” picture?

Mortgage originations:

Mortgage applications:

And a bonus chart: remember when in late 2013 and early 2014 the pundits (probably the same ones who said it was a “stock picker’s market”) were screeching daily how bank Net Interest Margins were set to soar. Can they please comment on the following Wells NIM chart?

Source: Wells Fargo




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Is This Why Copper Is Tanking?

From “world renowned” Dennis Gartman’s letter to investors (sent overnight):  

“NEW RECOMMENDATION: our interest in copper is piqued and we’ll “punt” copper this morning from the long side, buying May copper at or near to $3.0630/lb. as we can, with stops at this morning’s low of $3.025. We look for copper to make a run to $3.15 or even higher and on a close above $3.07 today… if possible… we’d add a 2nd unit to the trade.”

Sure enough, first thing this morning:

 

 

The best “fade” $29.99/month can buy…




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Prepare For Dollar Collapse With 33% Allocation To Gold – Rickards

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,317.25, EUR 948.62 & GBP 785.71 per ounce.               

Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,321.50, EUR 953.19 & GBP 787.73 per ounce.  


Gold gained $6.90 or 0.53% yesterday to $1,318/oz. Silver rose $0.17 or 0.86% to $20.05/oz.   



Gold in U.S. Dollars – 1 Month  (Thomson Reuters)

Gold has eked out further gains today and is trading near its highest in 2 and a 1/2 weeks. It is on track for its best week in a month after equities fell sharply and due to renewed concerns that the U.S. Federal Reserve continuing their unprecedented ultra loose monetary policies.

 

Spot gold was steady at $1,322.10 an ounce by 1137 GMT, after three straight days of gains. The precious metal is up 1.4% for the week, having hit a high of $1,324.40 on Thursday – its highest since March 24.

Gold looks set to continue its recovery from last years battering due to still robust demand from India, China and increased safe haven demand due to much more pronounced geopolitical risk. The technicals have reversed and they and momentum are favouring gold again.

Bullion, already supported by significant tensions between the West and Russia, got a further boost on Wednesday when the Fed’s March meeting minutes showed that the Fed are not keen on increasing interest rates straight after the wind-down of bond purchases.

Certain members of the Fed appear to realise that the economy and asset markets are now very dependent on near zero percent interest rates and continuing debt monetisation.




Gold in U.S. Dollars – 2 Years  (Thomson Reuters)

The Fed’s tapering is largely priced into the gold market. What is not priced in is the real possibility that a weakening U.S. and global economy will lead to the Fed having to increase QE to previous levels and possibly even increase QE above the $85 billion level. The market is completely discounting this and we believe that this is a not negligible risk.


Quarter ends appear to be a good time to buy as seen on June 28th 2013, December 31st 2013 and now on March 31st, 2014.

These anomalies would appear to more than coincidental. They may be due to traders painting the tape or manipulation through HFT and computer trading. Goldman Sachs have been very vocal in their bearishness on gold at quarter ends. It is worth considering whether there is an attempt to “jaw bone” gold prices lower.


Silver continues to be favoured by contrarian investors who see it as oversold and very undervalued vis a vis other assets, including gold.


Gold Silver Ratio – 1996 to April 2014 (Quarterly) – Thomson Reuters


The gold silver ratio is now at 65, meaning that with one ounce of gold, one can buy 65 ounces of silver. The historic average throughout most of history is 15 to 1. Even in the 20th Century, the century in which silver was demonetised, the gold silver ratio averaged around 40.


GoldCore believe the ratio will revert to the mean average again in the coming years. There are a number of reasons that silver should revert to the long term historical mean but the two primary ones are the fact that geologically in the earth’s crust.  there are fifteen parts of silver to every one part of gold.



Secondly, the other reason is that silver is used in many industrial, medical and  technological applications today including photovoltaic cells in solar panels. Since the Industrial Revolution and in recent times, a huge amount of silver has been used up in industry. Silver is unlike gold in this regard. Rather it is akin to oil and other consumable commodities in this regard.

Thus, importantly silver is an attractive hybrid of commodity and precious metal used by investors as a store of value.

 


Thus, for every ounce of gold in the world today, there is less than 15 ounces of silver. Passionate silver buyers or “silver stackers” say the actual ratio of above ground refined silver to above ground refined gold is close to 1 to 1. Even if one uses a conservative number of 20 to 1, it shows that silver remains very undervalued versus gold. The supply demand equation in silver has gotten much more favourable in recent years and gets more favourable with every passing year.

For this reason we remain very confident that silver will surpass its 1980 record nominal high of $50/oz in the coming years. Indeed, the inflation adjusted high of $140/oz remains a viable price target in the long term.

Silver will in the coming years reward the patient, long term investor and buyer.


Prepare For Dollar Collapse With 33% Allocation To Gold
James Rickards, author of best selling book, Currency Wars and now The Death of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System has done another great interview, this time with Erik Schatzker and Stephanie Ruhle from Bloomberg Television’s “Market Makers.


Topics covered included the risk of a deflationary collapse and depression, the risks of printing and creating too many dollars, the manipulation of gold and the importance of focusing on the long term and not just trying to make money in the short term but rather on preserving wealth.

DEFLATION AND THE RISK OF COLLAPSE

“The system is now larger than 2008 — make the system bigger and you’re going to have a bigger collapse …  we are further down the timeline,” Rickards warns.

“Are you going to believe me or the IMF? I have a little better track record.”


“The ultimate thesis is that deflation is the biggest problem in the world.”


“The world wants to deflate but central banks and governments cannot have deflation –  it increases the Debt-to-GDP ratio, destroys tax collection, creates bad debts and hurts the banks.”


“So central banks will do anything to avoid deflation. The way they do this is to print money. But if you print too much money then you’ll collapse confidence in the U.S. dollar.”


“The U.S. dollar is ultimately backed by confidence, as also said by Paul Volcker.”


“The FED is insolvent on a mark to market basis. I came to this conclusion himself, but insiders have also told me this privately  … they won’t say it publicly.”


“Money is a perpetual non-interest-bearing note issued by an insolvent central bank.
How long can that go on before people walk away from it?”


DEPRESSION

Rickards questions the consensus mantra of recovery and asserts that “we are in a depression and we have been in one since 2007.”


He admits that “if the FED had not done everything they’ve done, then things would have been much worse than they were in 2010. No question about that — unemployment would have been higher and growth would have been lower.


“But we should have been much stronger today. We should be having 7% growth now. We can’t have 7% for a long time, but we can for a short time while people come back into the workforce.

Instead we’re Japan — we’ve got 1.9% growth as far as the eye can see.


“So I would much rather have a little pain up front and then have robust growth”.


“Everyone wants a ‘V’ shape recovery, but you can’t have a ‘V’ unless you get to the bottom. We didn’t get to the bottom because the FED truncated the ‘V’.

WHY SHOULD PEOPLE CARE HOW MUCH MONEY THE FED PRINTS?

In answer to the assertion that investors should not care how much is printed, Rickards points out that  “the Fed’s safety net of printing has holes in it.”
 

“If the money printing could go on indefinitely then you would be right and I would agree with you but it cannot go on indefinitely.”
 

“The Fed could legally print more than the $4 trillion they’ve already created — $8 trillion, $12 trillion, $16 trillion. Some people say that they can do that — legally they can but my view is that that will destroy confidence at some point.”


 
“People say why doesn’t the FED just forgive the Treasury debt and make $4 trillion go away? They could do it legally but what would that do to the confidence?”
 

ECONOMY NOT RECOVERING

Rickards questions the assertion that the economy is recovering.

“The Fed said we had “green shoots” in 2009. Timothy Geithner declared a recovery in 2010. Nobody has a worse forecasting record than the FED. They do a one-year forward forecast each year … they have been wrong and off by orders of magnitude every year.”


 
When asked “who cares?”

Rickards says “listen to yourself … who cares about unlimited printing of money, who cares about bad forecasting, who cares about   destroying confidence. 

“I care. I think we all should all care.”


THE CURSE OF THE 2 SECOND ATTENTION SPAN

People are investing based on what they think is going on right now, because they have “the curse of the 2 second attention span … So when the stock market is down 30% a couple of years from now,  you can kiss those investments goodbye.”


“WARREN BUFFETT IS BUYING HARD ASSETS AS FAST AS HE CAN”
“Look at Warren Buffett, he is getting out of cash and into hard assets as fast as he can — railroads and oil … Warren Buffett is buying hard assets as fast as he can.”


“I talk about this in Chapter 3 of ‘The Death of Money2, the FED is manipulating every market in the world with zero interest rates … I don’t like to be in manipulated markets …  I’d rather be in things that retain their value”.


RESULTS: GOLD VERSUS STOCKS
Bloomberg TV’s Erik Schatzker brings up a chart and points out that “March 9, 2009 was the bottom of the equity market. Since then the S&P has returned 170%. Gold is up 40% and hedge funds are up 20%.”

In answer to this question regarding gold’s underperformance versus stocks since stocks bottom in 2009, Rickards says, “this is exactly the chart I would expect to see if the market is manipulated by zero interest rates and margins sending stocks higher, and gold being manipulated lower.”


GOLD MANIPULATION

“The IMF sold 400 tonnes of gold in 2010. We know 200 tonnes went to India and Sri Lanka.Where did the other 200 tonnes go that they dumped on the market? They are funded by U.S. taxpayers but they are not being transparent.”


“If you manipulate stocks higher and manipulate gold lower, then you’ll see the chart from 2009 looking as it does.”

DATA MINING
Rickards points out that the chart is an exercise in data mining as they have  cherry picked the bottom for stocks.   “If you look back from 2000 you’ll see a very different chart”.


MAKE MONEY OR PRESERVE WEALTH
When asked what people should be doing with their money, Rickards says that he has “always recommended about 10% gold, not all in, not 50%”

“Do you want to make money or do you want to preserve wealth?”


Because you could make money today and lose it tomorrow.

Or you can preserve wealth.


We talk about the ‘old money’ in the U.S. , the 100 year money, and the ‘new money’. When you go to Europe, some of that money is 400 or 500 years old … and you say how did you survive the Thirty Years War, Napoleon and World War I etc and they will say …


A third — a third — a third …


One third gold.

One third art.

One third land.


And a little cash to run your jet and your yacht” he jested.


“That’s how you preserve wealth for the long run.

If you want a short pop go buy some stocks.”



It is a very interesting interview and we like the conclusion where he said investors can all make money in the short term but we can lose it just as easily.

Rickards does not expressly say one should put 33% of one’s wealth in gold but suggests that an allocation of between 10% and 33% would be prudent. In this regard, he echos Dr
Marc Faber who suggested a 25% allocation to precious metals to us last week. Wealth preservation is something we have talked about since 2003. Indeed, our mission statement is to protect, preserve and grow the wealth of our clients.

The interview with James Rickards can be watched here: Should Investors Prepare for a Dollar Doomsday?

Protect And Grow Your Wealth > The Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Singapore




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Europe Folds As Putin Tells It To Pay Ukraine’s Gazprom Bill, Or Else

Another day ending in “y” means another day in which Putin plays the G(roup of most insolvent countries)-7 like a fiddle.

The latest: Europe should provide aid to Ukraine to ensure uninterrupted natural-gas deliveries to the region, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said as reported by Bloomberg.

“Russia is the only country helping Ukraine’s economy with energy supplies that are not paid for,”  Dmitry Peskov told reporters today in Moscow,  commenting on President Vladimir Putin’s letter yesterday to 18 European heads of state. “The letter is a call to immediately review this situation, which is absurd on the one hand and critical on the other.

Said otherwise: PUTIN SAYS EUROPE GAS TRANSIT DEPENDS ON UKRAINE: IFX

Or, as we explained yesterday, Russia is quite happy to keep the EU gas flowing… as long as Ukraine has enough gas in storage to assure Gazprom it won’t syphon off gas destined for Europe. So how much gas does Ukraine need to pre-stock? About $4-5 billion worth. The problem is that Ukraine doesn’t have a dime to spend on gas.

So putting the question aside if Ukraine will or won’t import even one bcf of Russian gas ever again (thanks to some fracking or US natgas exporting magic), what Putin just said is that if Europe wants an uninterrupted supply of gas it better find a way to fund Ukraine to the tune of up to $5 billion, or else the gas may just get shut off.

And guess what: Putin is about to win yet again:  

European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger is working on a plan to help Ukraine pay some of its gas bills to Russia, he told Austria’s ORF radio on Friday, saying there was “no reason to panic” about Russian gas supplies to Europe.

 

We are in close contact with Ukraine and its gas company to ensure that Ukraine remains able to pay and the debts that the gas company has to Gazprom do not rise further,” he said, adding he would meet Ukraine’s energy and foreign ministers on Monday.

 

“I am preparing a solution that is part of the aid package that the IMF, the European Union and the World Bank is giving to Ukraine and from which payment for open bills will be possible.”

The chass game continues: Putin X+1 – Pidgeons 0




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