Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Pondering Our Collapse While We Watch Others Fall

Stock Assault 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence Stock Market Software
The current dollar rally wont endure, questions for the future of the Euro, No collapse of currency overnight, but we see it coming, record low interest rates drive bond purchases, Fed will continue to feed the economy, the threat is deflationary depression, China continues to dump dollars, US in a box, Fannie and Freddie bondholders should not hold their breath, unemployed are also exhausted...

Every important factor we see is working against the dollar and we believe that trend is irreversible. That means the present dollar rally probably cannot endure and it could well be the time to short the USDX.

Most observers discuss Europe’s problems and the plight of the euro, pound, and the Danish and Swedish koronas. They believe these European currencies will plunge lower versus the dollar and that the dollar will maintain, even after a dollar rally from 74 to 81 on the USDX. As we have said before the euro was unnatural creation born of a desire to usher in a world currency. As we shall see in the future the euro will fail. In spite of that the dollar is certainly no bargain, because next year America will be totally bankrupt. As a result of the terrible conditions among currencies, gold makes great gains. Last year and so far this year gold is up 10% to 24% against many major currencies. This kind of action of cours e proves again that gold is the world’s strongest currency. We might add here that we believe that it is only a matter of time before the LBMA, or Comex, or the ETFs, GLDs and SLVs are enveloped in scandal. As so often has happened in history fiat currencies have collapsed. Thus, it will happen again. Those of you not in gold and silver related assets will lose most of what you have worked for your entire lives.

The collapse of currencies and nations won’t happen overnight, because their demise has been planned, and a subtle collapse is in process. Our guess is that next year is when the collapse will finally take place followed by one of the greatest deflationary depressions of all time. During the last 2-1/2 years all the toxic investments have been and will continue to be transferred from the Illuminist banks, brokerage houses, insurance companies and transnational conglomerates to the public. The Federal Reserve is the repository for this junk, which includes Treasuries and Agencies. That means the public foots the bill. Every government and bank in the world will be affected. This magical game of 3-card-Monte will never work and the Illuminists know it won’t work. That is why they have war on demand to distract the public and to escape punishment for the devastating thing they have brought upon mankind. What we are facing is as bad if not worse than the collapse of the Lombard system in Venice in 1348, the year of the plague and the collapse of the Hanseanic League in the 1600s, the creation of the Medici’s. For starters we already have 19 bankrupt or near bankrupt major countries and many others that will be pulled into the vortex of financial and economic calamity. In each country we see the Illuminists doing their evil work, legends in their own minds, in a system that they know cannot survive. They are waiting for orders to pull the plug in each and every country. These masters of the universe all know tha t prosperity cannot be created by printing money and issuing credit indefinitely. They know full well that such a system cannot survive.

Overall the issuance of bank credit declined $470 billion, or about 5% y-o-y. Loans to individuals and small to medium sized companies fell some 20%. We do not interpret this as deflationary, but it sure doesn’t reflect a growing economy. These small to medium sized companies are the ones that create 80% of the jobs. Fed mantra has been save the banks and NYC and then we’ll see what we can do for the 21-1/8% of unemployed. At the same time Fed holdings of MBS was $69 billion. Today it is $1.027 trillion. This was not done to save the public or their homes, but to bail out banks and allow the taxpayer to pay for it.

The sales of bonds are booming at record low interest rates. Buyers obviously think rates are going to stay low forever. Just last week investors bought $2.6 billion in global bond fund s. This has been going on for more than a year. Buyers are left with slight gains and small yields, risks hardly worth taking. At the same time gold and silver and related shares rose more than 24%. What could they be thinking about? In the meantime debt prices have held in spite of the disruption in Europe over Greece and the euro. Then the international elitists oversubscribed Greece’s bond offering by three times. The yield was 6-3/8%, but Greece is bankrupt and has been for years.

All this considered inflation is still strongly in place at least for another year and perhaps beyond. A lot depends on how quickly, financial conditions deteriorate among the 19 nations, in the financial system. All indications are that liquidity is being removed. If this continues one year to 1-1/2 years down the line things will freeze up.

Presently the dollar carry trade moves relentlessly onward, but not at its previous pace. A higher dollar impede s such activity. This is why presently the 19 current basket cases can continue to float along. There is still plenty of liquidity out there.

Just to show you how far from the world of reality the Fed is, last week Fed of Richmond President Jeffrey Lacker told us the central bank was being made a scapegoat to satisfy anger over bailouts as Congress seeks to limit its consumer-protection and bank-supervision powers. This just doesn’t wash. There is no question that the Fed was at the center of the problem. It blatantly was to save the financial sector and screw the public.

We conclude that the Fed will continue to provide low interest rates and vast liquidity to the US and world financial systems. The Volcker Rule” will be used to deflect criticism, but little will change unless we can get rid of the Fed. The excesses and bubbles will go on unless the Fed is disarmed. What is really distressing is that none of the financial media, n or alternative media, points out that the Fed is at the root of this credit crisis. They caused it and it was done deliberately.

The idea of too big to fail will persist even after any deflationary collapse. Nothing will change unless the elitists want it to change - the concept is at the base of power in the financial world. This finance bubble can only be disrupted by the failure of national economies. There are 19 in that position presently, and what it boils down to is whether and when these elitists want to pull the plug on liquidity and seriously want to enter a deflationary era. For the time being, over the next 18 months, inflation and perhaps hyperinflation will prevail. Politicians are 90% in the pockets of these people, so unless we can unseat more than half of the incumbents in Congress, the elitist grip on our society will prevail. In the meantime it is inflation and or hyperinflation followed by deflation this year and next year.

As a result investors are in a tear again buying stocks and bonds with obviously little fear of any consequences. They have forgotten what we just went through and the chance of that reoccurring is excellent. They are of course in league with those who are doing “God’s work.” This is representative of those on Wall Street, who said they could not have seen what was coming. They made billions of dollars and walked away from destroying our economy scott-free. These people are not stupid, thus, they are liars, gloating over their riches and how the public cannot touch them because they own the politicians, regulatory agencies and the courts.

Greece and 18 other countries have financial problems, but just as much in trouble are the states â€" some 40 of them. The states cannot print money, so they’ll have to face the music. They’ll all have to face austerity, which is the anti-thesis of growth, which creates a death spiral and perpetual r ecession or depression. The only alternative, short of a deflationary depression, is to expand money and credit.

The dollar rally we have seen over the past couple of months could soon be coming to an end, as world deflation reasserts itself. The surge and undertow of deflation has to be met with ever more inflation to offset it. The bubbles that fueled inflation, the stock market of the late 1990s and the real estate bubbles are long past gone. All that is left is massive credit.

Just as in the 1930s the Federal Reserve will eventually take us into a deflationary depression. That is what Greece was all about. The table is being set for the end of inflation probably within the next two years.

We see a general contraction of credit worldwide and unless reversed the inevitable will unfold. What is even more dangerous than in the 1930s is the enormous leverage that exists today. When this come down it will be with a th undering roar. That is because few have the ability to pay. It is totally inconceivable that the US government can pay back its liabilities. That means that other nations that hold 60-1/2% of their foreign exchange in US dollars will take tremendous losses from which they won’t easily recover. China and Japan, along with Middle East oil producers, will take unbelievable losses. All creditors will be big losers.

In this wringer no nation seems to want to reduce spending or is prepared for any kind of austerity. Greece is a good example. Each day sees more and more demonstrations. No one wants to take the economic and financial pain. The good days are supposed to go on endlessly. Not only does the public not want reduced employment, but they also do not want increased taxation. What is extremely interesting is that those in charge of monetary theory at the Fed know that monetary inflation does not work. They also know that the minute they can no longer co ntrol deflation with inflationary monetary policy the game is over. The Fed and other central banks are currently playing a very dangerous game. That is keeping inflation up, but only enough to stop hyperinflation. This is like sitting on the edge of a knife. One false move the game is over. Global credit is evaporating and the Fed and others are attempting at the same time to remove some of the excess in the system. We do not think it will work. If it does not work it is depression for many years to come.

As this transpires lending to individuals and small and medium size businesses have fallen some 16% to 20% dependent on whose figures you use. On a national basis credit, some $700 billion to $1 trillion has been lost.

If you put this all together you will find that the only logical outcome can be devaluations, multilateral debt default and a deflationary depression. That is ultimately where we are headed and where we have always bee n headed.

Last week the Dow gained 2.3%; S&P 3.1%; the Russell 2000 6% and the Nasdaq 100 3.8%, all on a doctored employment report. If the Dow does not break out to new highs shortly it is liable to descend downward fairly quickly. Banks rose 2.4%; utilities 2.8%; high tech 3.6%; semis 3.7%; Internets 4.8% and biotech 12.7%. Gold bullion rose almost $15.00, the HUI gained 6.1% and the USDX stalled at 0.46.

Two-year Treasury bills rose 8 bps to 0.81%; the 10-year notes rose 7 bps to 3.68% and the 10-year German bunds rose 5 bps to 3.15%.

The Freddie Mac 30-year fixed rate mortgage rates fell 8 bps to 4.97%. The 15’s fell 7 bps to 4.33% and One-Year ARMs jumped 12 bps to 4.27%. The 30-year jumbos fell 1 bps to 5.87%.

M2 narrow money supply rose $10.3 billion to $8.537 trillion. Total money market fund assets rose $1.7 billion to $3.168 trillion.

China is taking its own c ourse, and will continue to dump dollars as best they can. They see trade tariffs on the horizon. China is now challenging Japan in trade, as the US acts in its own interests against both countries. Due to their large dollar denominated holdings the US dollar has to head lower as US debt continues to pile up, only to be monetized. US, Wall Street, banking and government just do not care. They just keep running up debt, running the economy and finances into the ground. Due to this course of action over the past 25 to 30 years they have now made China, Japan and others into adversaries. Next comes the big fall in the dollar and sometime over the next two years the multilateral devaluations and defaults. Foreigners hold $3.3 trillion in US debt and the US is going to get a good part of it back, which will push the country into bankruptcy.

The US is in a box and they cannot get out. There is no viable exit other than bankruptcy. This is why you have to have gold and silver related assets. It is impossible to pay off debt. This time it is really different. Based on history America is financial toast. The path for destruction was set on August 15, 1971, when America fled the gold standard. It took 38 years but it is time to pay the piper.

US Treasuries and other national government debt are "the most dangerous market there is" and investors should avoid the securities because of governments' excessive borrowing, Dan Fuss, vice chairman of investment manager Loomis Sayles, told Reuters on Tuesday.

"The most dangerous market there is national government debt because the borrowing doesn't seem to be ending soon -- and it's not just a US phenomenon," Fuss, who helps oversee more than $142 billion in assets at Boston-based Loomis, said in an interview.

Fuss added he thinks that the Federal Reserve -- the US central bank -- will not raise short-term interest rates for all of 2010.


The thawing of the credit markets in 2009 spawned record debt sales as companies sought to ensure they had enough capital to run their businesses and meet their debt obligations. Corporate bond sales worldwide climbed 31% to $3.04 trillion and issuance of high-yield, high-risk securities -- the most lucrative market for underwriters -- ballooned by 181% to $207 billion. Both set records.  The new bond issues earned bankers $18.8 billion in fees from debt underwriting, a 31% increase over 2008 and equal to the record set in 2007.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. sold $1.81 billion of debt backed by mortgage securities, as it seeks to raise cash after the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

The rise of carry trades, in which investors take advantage of interest-rate differences between countries, may signal bigger swings in currencies during crises, the Bank for International Settle ments said.  Variations in interest rates played a larger role in the latest financial turmoil than in either the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998, or following the Russian debt default in 1998. That may reflect the ‘increasing role carry trades play in exchange rate movements,’ it said.  ‘This factor may have changed the dynamics of exchange rates around crises more generally, affecting a broader set of currencies and leading to more pronounced swings in exchange rates during and after crisis episodes,’ the BIS said.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bondholders shouldn’t assume the government will make them whole on their investments as Congress retools the companies, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank said.  Please don’t think this is federally guaranteed, I don’t think it is, I don’t think it should be, I don’t feel any obligation to bail you out, Frank told reporters. Congress will ‘certainly not’ extend an y new protections to bond and mortgage-security investors beyond what exists, Frank said.  A ‘whole range’ of options is being considered for investors in the two government-seized companies, from paying nothing to a haircut to whatever, Frank said. 

In fall 2008, after Lehman Brothers collapsed and other Wall Street firms seemed ready to topple, New York appeared to be headed for a brutal recession, one that would rival the worst downturns in the city’s history.  Now city officials and private economists are revising their forecasts with a drastic change in tone. The gathering consensus is that the recession is nearly over in the city and, largely because of the enormous amount of federal aid poured into the big banks, the toll on New York will be much less severe than most had feared.

Initially, the BLS did not publish any Net Birth/Death Adjustments in the February Employment Report. About two hours after the report was i ssued the BLS posted the February B/D Adjusted of 97k jobs.

Household Survey Data

In February, the number of unemployed persons, at 14.9 million, was essentially unchanged, and the unemployment rate remained at 9.7 percent.

In February, the civilian labor force participation rate (64.8 percent) and the employment-population ratio(58.5 percent) were little changed.

The number of persons working part time for economic reasons (sometimes referred to as involuntary part-time workers) increased from 8.3 to 8.8 million in February, partially offsetting a large decrease in the prior month. These individuals were working part time because their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job.

This pushed the U-6 to 16.8% from 16.5%.

U-6 Not-Seasonally Adjusted is unchanged at 17.9%, barely above the record 18% set in Janu ary.

US corporations have cut millions of workers to part-time status in order to avert large-scale layoffs. This has kept the headline unemployment number from being far worse.

Due to the huge number of part-time workers (8.8m) & temporary workers (2m) when the economy starts to improve materially, firms will not hire a significant number of workers until millions of part-time employees regain their full-time status. [Heed IRS tax data to discern the bounce.]

The average workweek for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls declined by 0.1 hour to 33.8 hours in February. The manufacturing workweek for all employees dropped by 0.4 hour to 39.5 hours, and factory overtime decreased by 0.2 hour…the average workweek for production or nonsupervisory employees on private nonfarm payrolls fell by 0.2 hour to 33.1 hours. [This clearly refutes ISM and PMI claims, doesn’t it?]

In February, temporary help services added 48,000 jobs…temporary help services employment has risen by 284,000…In February, employment in the federal government edged up. The hiring of 15,000 temporary workers for

Census 2010 was partially offset by a decline in U.S. Postal Service employment.

The Household Survey shows an increase of 308,000 jobs, but the BLS did not report this in the preamble to the report [see above]. Most of the gain is due to 233,000 gain in ‘Men 20 years and older’.

‘Men 16 year and older’ account for 297,000 of the 308,000 jobs gain in the Household Survey!

Last month, ‘Women 20 years and older’ produced 529,000 of the 541,000 job gain. ‘Men 20 years and older’ lost 1,000 jobs. This is absurd!

For February, ‘Women 20 years of age and older’ increased only 11,000.

Why is there such a ridiculo us and improbable imbalance between the genders in employment for January and February? Someone is getting very careless with the ‘adjustments’. Self-employed workers increased 22,000.

The ‘Exhaustion Rate’ of unemployment benefits hit a record 54.11% as of January 31, 2010.

Gallup: Underemployment 19.8% in February, on Par With January

A majority of the underemployed are not hopeful about finding work.

Gallup estimates that nearly 30 million Americans continue to work less than their desired capacity, and the majority of these remain unhopeful that they will find work in the next four weeks.

The only reason that Jan consumer credit expanded, but it declined NSA, is due to federal intervention.

The Fed: Consumer Credit Outstanding (Millions of dollars; not seasonally adjusted)

Federal Government credit for: Jan 2008 is 103121.91; Jan 2009 is 118005.64 (+14883.73 y/y) and Jan 2010 is 196346.67 (+78341.93y/y)

The Federal Government component of Consumer Credit increased 10.36187B m/m in January 2010. In January 2009, it increased 7.02095B m/m. In January 2008 it increased only 4414.86 million.

This is a perfect illustration on how government intervention coupled with seasonal adjustments that do not account for government intervention manufacture better-than-reality economic data.

Motorists are well down the road to higher pump prices as warmer weather and the driving season approach.

Average retail gasoline prices, continuing a surge that started last month, have now matched their 2010 high on the way to prices that many analysts believe will top $3 per gallon this spring.

The nationwide average retail gasoline price rose 0.6 cents Monday to $2.753 per gallo n, virtually identical to the high water mark of $2.7583 reached on Jan. 14, according to AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service.

Prices have risen 9.2 cents in the last month and are now 80.6 cents higher than levels of a year ago.

A Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. plan to auction more than $1 billion in assets seized from failed banks next month, including a loan to build a W Hotel in Atlanta, may trigger writedowns that weaken lenders nationwide.

Almost half of the loans were originated by Silverton Bank N.A., whose collapse last May was the biggest in Georgia history. Community banks that joined Silverton in providing $80 million for the 237-room hotel and condominium complex, as well as backing for 39 other projects, could be forced to write down their stakes to reflect sale prices.



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Indications: U.S. stock futures cling to tight range

Stock Assault 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence Stock Market Software Alert Email Print

By Steve Goldstein & Kate Gibson, MarketWatch

Fixes description of speculation surrounding Citi on Tuesday.

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures on Wednesday pointed to an indecisive start as investors waited for guidance, with only a smattering of merger news and economic data to focus on after the run-up in prices from one-year depths.

S&P 500 futures fell two-tenths of a point to 1,140.30 while Nasdaq 100 futures rose 1.25 points to 1,903. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 3 points to 10561.

U.S. stocks finished with slight gains Tuesday on the anniversary of the worst levels of 2009, buoyed by a report the U.S. may sell its Citigroup Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!c/quotes/nls/c (C 3.82, +0.26, +7.30%) stake and as General Electric Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!ge/quotes/nls/ge (GE 16.49, +0.22, +1.35%) predicted its 2010 earnings would be flat before growing again in 2011. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 11 points, and the Nasdaq Composite and Russell 2000 gauges finished at 2010 closing highs.

TODAY'S INTERNATIONAL MARKET STORIES

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• MarketWatch Topics: Greece • Asia Markets | Europe Markets | LatAm Markets • Canadian Markets | Israel Stocks | London • U.S.: Market Snapshot | After Hours

Tools• Latin American/Canadian indexes • European indexes | Asian indexes

More on the Markets • Bond Report | Oil News | Earnings Watch • Currencies | U.S. Economic Calendar

/conga/story/misc/international.html 53366

"Money was not running from risk, but was coming out of some of the staples," said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald, who said the market is doing very well to hold onto recent gains.

The Wall Street Journal report said the Federal Reserve is debating how to signal the next rate move, though the central bank is unlikely to change its phrasing about keeping interest rates near zero for a long time during next week's meeting.

The U.S. economic calendar is slight, with wholesale inventories for January due for release.

Data from China showed the country's surplus narrowed to $7.6 billion in February from $14.2 billion in January as imports surged. See China story.

Chinese stocks broke a three-session winning run on worries that Thursday's report on consumer prices will lead to tightening of monetary policy.

Exports from Germany, meanwhile, unexpectedly slumped over 6% in January, and industrial production fell in the U.K. during January. See Germany story.

The British pound fell sharply, losing 0.8% to $1.4884, and the dollar also rose vs. the Japanese yen and the euro.

Oil futures rose 5 cents to $81.54 a barrel while gold rose 60 cents an ounce. Weekly energy inventories data are due at 10:30 a.m. Eastern time.

Europe stocks also were broadly steady. See Europe Markets.

Facet Biotech /quotes/comstock/15*!fact/quotes/nls/fact (FACT 16.21, -0.30, -1.82%) jumped 66% to $26.95 a share on a deal to be purchased by Abbott Laboratories /quotes/comstock/13*!abt/quotes/nls/abt (ABT 54.80, +0.38, +0.70%) for $722 million, or $27 a share.

Navistar /quotes/comstock/13*!nav/quotes/nls/nav (NAV 44.25, +0.83, +1.91%) slumped 6.4% as the company reported a 93% profit fall.

The insurance sector may attract attention as Swiss Re and Munich Re both detailed their exposure to the Chile earthquake and a European winter storm, with the industry as a whole facing a tab of between $4 billion and $7 billion. See earthquake story.

Steve Goldstein is MarketWatch's London bureau chief. Kate Gibson is a reporter for MarketWatch, based in New York.


NYSE Arca Morning Update - 08:30:00 ET

NYSE Arca Morning Update for Wednesday, Mar 10, 2010 :

STOCKS TRADING ON NYSE Arca AT A PRICE 15% OR MORE AWAY FROM
THE PREVIOUS TRADE DAY'S CONSOLIDATED CLOSE PRICE (AS OF 08:30:00 ET)

Stock Tuesday's Close Current Price Pct Change Current NYSE ARCA Vol
FACT $16.24 $26.95 65.9% 2,700,413
CHOPW $2.24 $2.92 30.4% 9,080


10 MOST ACTIVE STOCKS ON NYSE ARCA AS OF 08:30:00 ET

BASED ON DOLLARS TRADED: | BASED ON SHARES TRADED:
Stock $ Volume Price PctChg | Stock Share Vol Price PctChg
C $95,262,630 $3.99 4.2% | C 24,179,658 $3.99 4.2%
FACT $72,784,895 $26.95 65.9% | FACT 2,700,413 $26.95 65.9%
SPY $47,013,169 $114.60 0.1% | BAC 853,854 $17.05 1.4%
BAC $14,510,193 $17.05 1.4% | SUSQ 703,407 $8.30 ( 1.7%)
AAPL $8,170,302 $224.40 0.6% | FNM 512,032 $1.12 5.8%
IWM $7,889,575 $67.07 0.2% | SPY 410,459 $114.60 0.1%
BIDU $6,188,916 $540.42 0.2% | FRE 283,173 $1.32 5.3%
SUSQ $5,848,045 $8.30 ( 1.7%) | SOLR 233,380 $5.05 ( 1.8%)
AIG $4,974,243 $33.61 3.3% | UNG 154,730 $8.15 ( 0.5%)
GOOG $4,910,353 $564.63 0.8% | AIG 149,010 $33.61 3.3%


Price changes may be affected by symbol splits and dividends.

Consolidated close price is the last print (excluding prints with trade
conditions) prior to 4PM ET.

This information is also updated on our web page every morning at 8:35ET:
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