I believe what the Federal Reserve has begun was completely idiotic and unnecessary which will ultimately hurt the majority of the American people. However, many economists disagree with what I just said. I guess you can fool the people sometimes, but economists can be fooled all of the time. Part of economist’s problem, and why they are so horrible at predicting things, is because they live inside of models and rarely look up. They are also way overpaid for what they do which adds more of a problem with their theories since higher prices do not impact them as fast as it impacts 80% of Americans who live paycheck to paycheck.
Paul Krugman is one of those people who has been far more wrong than right, but for some reason people still listen to him, odd, really, really odd. Mr. Krugman has taken aim at Jim Rogers recently claiming that inflationist’s have gotten the last few cycles’ dead wrong. Really? So, oil going from $50 to $147 never happened. Gold rising to new highs isn’t happening. Food prices going ballistic did not happen then and is not happening now, sure, whatever. The fact is that prices, including food and energy, have moved higher this year and before the collapse of 2008, but Krugman says that did not matter… why do people read him?
It is my opinion that higher food and energy prices helped collapse the system in 2008. As prices rose people diverted more money to the things they needed the most, food and heat which took away from our consumption oriented GDP. After the collapse began we saw these prices ease, a lot, and GDP did pick up after the crossing point was reached. Of course, government intervention helped and many people simply stopped paying much of their debt which has helped GDP since now one cannot pay their bills, not lose their home and now needed a new Kindle or iPad. Now we have rising commodity prices again, but no one seems to think this is bad news. Well, it is.
While mainstream economists talk about “sticky” CPI, excluding food and energy while concentrating on wage inflation as the sole indicator of inflation proves that most economists have lost their minds. Wage inflation does not have to come before food and energy inflation, I am not sure why anyone thinks this is always the case, and if we look back at 2008 we see a similar situation, rising commodities and flat to lower wages. This is a major red flag, but most mainstream economists don’t care. These economists look at me or a Jim Rogers and assume we do not have a clue about what we are talking about. The do not seem to understand that an economy can go from deflation/disinflation to inflation overnight, it happened in Germany. Maybe they are right, but at the same time they are so devoid of reality it is not even funny.
To think food and energy prices do not matter to people is idiotic. It is the same as saying fish can live fine out of water as long as they can hold their breath long enough. With money being diverted to $4 gas or $5 loaves of bread it is clear that we will continue to have deflation in color TV’s which means economists will not see any inflation, anywhere. This is a common sense issue which might fool Wall Street people into believing everything is fine, but Main Street, well, Main Street is not quite that stupid. They know $4 a gallon gas and $5 loaves of bread is bad news. They know that those iPads will be out of reach when a greater portion of their incomes are moving towards those unimportant things… like eating. This is bad news for the economy.
I have no illusions, the market will go up and economists will demand more QE because it is “working”, but this policy is not benefiting Main Street, it is killing it. More and more investors are moving out of stocks which negates the “wealth effect” of magical 9% S&P gains which are based on pure liquidity and not fundamentals. While stocks will move higher I am betting silver and gold will continue to outperform, along with other commodities. This is a catch 22 to the Fed because higher commodity prices is bad for the people, but good for GDP growth, even though it is imaginary growth, but that doesn’t seem to matter as long as the politicians are happy. So much for an independent Fed.
I think the recent views and writings of major economists have proven that they are completely worthless. To think intentionally driving the prices up for the basic essentials in life with high unemployment and flat incomes is barbaric. The worst part is economists all say this is a good thing, what world do they live in? We might get wage inflation out of this at some point, but it will be after price inflation is in full swing and major damage is done to the consumer. I also have no idea how the Fed can reverse this latest policy decision without blowing itself up, I actually believe this is now a permanent policy the Fed is following, just like Zimbabwe.
The biggest question is will Tim Geithner and Ben Bernanke be impeached for lying to Congress when they said they would not monetize the national debt? They should be, the last I checked lying to Congress was frowned upon, but we do now live in bizzaro world.
The Fed is doing everything I feared it would do and they are inflating the country out of its debt, they say they are not, but what credibility can they possibly carry with the people now? On top of that, their actions speak louder than words. When you are intentionally trying to create inflation and write an op-ed about it that makes it harder to say we are not trying to inflate our way out of our trillion’s in debt. Everyone can see what is happening and when Brazil is giving you a smack down, as well as Russia, man, you got problems.
As far as economists, perhaps they should be put on a salary that mirrors the national average in their respective areas so they can understand how higher commodity prices really impact the people. It is easy to say higher prices don’t natter when you make high 6 or 7 figure salaries for playing with computer models, but on a modest 5 figure salary I bet they will see things differently. I am not one of those ‘social justice’ people, but in this case I might make an exception since they are all being complacent in one of the greatest snow jobs ever given to the people. This will do nothing for the people other than create misery and it certainly will not improve the image of Wall Street. We are not a banana republic because we voted in Republican. We are a banana republic because we have idiots in charge of our monetary policy. Stay long commodities.

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There have been lots of things happening in the silver market lately all of which reinforce my bull case for being long. Long time readers know I have been pounding the table of silver for the better part of 2 years now. The one aspect of the market that I have concentrated on is the supply/demand side of the equation. It stands to reason that with some 2 billion souls entering the middle class they will all want cell phones and other modern toys. All of these toys involve silver to some extent in their production.
The supply of silver is not unlimited and very few miners solely look for the shiny metal, it is typically a byproduct of copper and gold mines. Silver is also not recycled the way many other metals are which means it is used once and never again and that is unlike many other metals that are usually recycled. I believe that the reason people believed silver had an unlimited supply is because it was so cheap, but now we find out, I have known for awhile, that the prices were manipulated by 2 big banks, HSBC and JPM. This is not conspiracy talk anymore as 2 lawsuits have been filed and Bart Chilton has admitted the manipulation.
Moving forward I believe we will continue to see higher prices as the shorts cover in the silver market. I also think that COMEX does not have enough supply to meet physical demand for the metal if investors want to take possession, which they will eventually. That means there may not be enough silver at any price to meet demand. It sounds unbelievable, but it could happen. I would not bet the farm on the COMEX thing being the driver, but I would bet the farm on Asia and India driving demand well into the future.
The other very obvious factor in the recent rise in silver prices is the dollar. In the US we have to ask if silver is really climbing or is the dollar just tanking so hard making it more expensive to us. Frankly, it is both things happening at once which should worry my fellow dollar bulls out there. I think the dollar will break its all-time low in the near future thanks to Mr. Bernanke. You cannot print as much money as you want without repercussions and the repercussions of massive printing are the dollar losing much of its value. Out of everything happening out there right now the dollar’s slide is what scares me the most and it should scare you too.
Silver is the barometer of inflation, in my book at least, and the rise in price is signaling trouble ahead. Everyone believes the dollar will always be there in its current form and nothing like Zimbabwe or Argentina can happen in the good ole US of A, but bad things can and do happen here all the time and with an obscene monetary policy that Brazil, Russia, China and now Germany are criticizing bad things are sure to happen here. I would be a buyer of silver not just to profit from it, but to hedge my wealth with it. That means owning it physically, not in a brokerage account or in storage somewhere, but where I can see it. If the dollar breaks its all-time low things may get ugly and as we buy up our locally produced products we will see what the inflationary pressure is like when we are forced to buy, suddenly, very expensive Chinese goods.
Doom and gloom you are thinking, maybe, but I prefer to say this is a realistic situation now. I know I would rather be prepared instead of just hoping things will work out. In my experience hope is a wonderful thing, but hope isn’t reality. Reality is that thing outside your window and our reality may just turn into a nightmare and suddenly moving from the city to the country, farmland specifically, with a shot gun and you silver and gold hoard may suddenly make sense. After all, this is the advice some hedge fund managers gave their wealthier clients in recent years.
Buy silver on any dip and I am sure that in 5 years, or much sooner, you will be extremely happy. As for equities, well, if you think these gains are real you are delusional. Ben is simply propping up prices to make people think they are wealthy, but if the dollar keeps falling at some point the rise in equity prices will not offset the loss of purchasing power of your dollars, just ask any Zimbabwean about that. They had the best performing market over the last 10 years, but would you be holding their currency? I think not. Silver, gold or other commodities are your hedge, not stocks and not TIPS.

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I admit I have been delinquent on checking out the Euribor rates lately since the Federal Reserve has me scared to death about QE2, more on that later, but I do not think it will be what you believe it will be in November. However, the Euribor went ballistic thanks to the ‘perfectly safe’ Irish banks began to show that the ‘stress test’ were pure bull. How can a bank pass a stress test a couple of months ago and then do insolvent, basically? That doesn’t happen in a normal world and it proves that the ECB totally flubbed the stress test.
The fraud that the stress tests were showing up in the inter banking lending rates which went from benign to cancerous in a heartbeat. While the Euribor first continued to climb after the stress tests it did level out later in the summer, but now it went vertical and it probably is not looking back. Considering that European banks are still holding only God knows how much US MBS’s, which our current foreclosure fraud situation may render those MBS’s worthless over time, along with how much Greek, Portugal, Italian and Spanish debt and you got serious problems. The media is not going to touch this, but the bank lending markets talks about it only if you look at them.
The 3 month Euribor rate was below .90% until a week ago when it jumped to about 1%, .993% as I write this, which isn’t much until you consider we are in a zero interest rate policy (ZIRP). Actually, we are in a negative interest rate policy right now if you count all the QE going on. When you factor that in it kind of brings to light that something is wrong in Europe, still. US treasuries for 3 months are yielding about .14% so clearly European banks are pricing in a risk premium. The question is, what is the risk premium for? Clearly default is part of it and I think you will see more issues with banks very soon.
It is impossible to have bank holdings that consist of sovereign debt that is in trouble plus MBS holdings and not have any problems. There certainly will be more insolvency issues, but even if a bank is not insolvent their balance sheets will be impaired further. It is a mess and the real problem is that it is just not European banks, but US banks as well. While US banks do not hold a lot of sovereign debt, they do own tons of MBS holdings, unless the Fed buys them from the banks, which foreclosuregate, I hate these names we have now, will make many of these securities worthless or at the very least impair them well below par.
I do not know what is going to happen, but I am convinced that the serious problems that many thought were behind us never really went away. All we ended up having done was the government and the Fed paper over the problems. This went on all over the world with the ECB following suit as well. The Eurubor is telling us something, are many listening? Nope. Stocks are moving higher on some idiotic belief that inflating our way out of this mess will work, it might in nominal terms, but not in real terms. Phony stress tests clearly are not the answer as the fraud gets uncovered when banks that passed suddenly need a bailout. How central banks and governments have any credibility is simply beyond me. When a fraud is uncovered people usually talk about it, but the news on some financial channels is mute on the issue. When lending costs climb rapidly it usually makes news, did you hear about it? Nope. It is all just one big farce out there. I personally believe that the only safe haven seems to be commodities and I believe stocks are not as safe as people believe.

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I have previously laid out my thoughts as to what will eventually happen with the whole inflation-deflation debate, but the issue is still raging full speed ahead. It is interesting that it is hard to find 2 experts that actually agree on what will happen or is happening, deflation or inflation. I think it is obvious that we have disinflationary forces here as producers cannot pass along higher prices or they will lose business. In fact, only food, a basic necessity, has any real pricing power right now.
While I am comfortable claiming we have disinflation right now I do not think it will last for a very long period of time. I believe we will see more easing by the Fed via asset purchases, but that will not create immediate inflation. However, over a longer period of time we will see that inflation pick up and not because of money velocity, but because of straight out dollar devaluation. Let me explain.
We did not experience inflation in the 1930’s because no one spent large sums of money on a regular basis. People actually were starving even as food prices declined, sad really. The thing is that since we were on the gold standard, or a form thereof, it was impossible to have true inflation even though FDR was spending like a madman. The Fed was also not in the practice of buying assets because, well, they followed the rules. Because of the gold standard and there were no asset purchases, government bonds or otherwise, inflation remained tame, deflationary in fact. This is a very 30,000 foot view of the situation, but I think you get the gist of what I am saying.
Now we do not have the gold standard, I am not preaching for a gold standard either, just pointing out the obvious, and we have a completely fiat money supply. The Fed has used its “emergency powers” to do what it would not do in the 1930’s, buy assets. It is clear that the asset purchases are doing nothing for the economy other than keeping rates low on loans, which no one wants or are really willing to make unless you have a perfect credit score. It is not even kicking up much inflation, at all, which is because there is simply zero money velocity. Since there is no money velocity the typical economist will say that inflation is impossible and it can never happen, never say never.
What the heads buried in the sand do not realize, because they are using the Depression as their road map (they always do this at the wrong time I might add), is that the dollar is floating now with nothing backing it. That in itself is not bad, as a matter of general opinion, as long as the printing press is used sparingly and every country prints money at relatively the same pace. The problem is that now, after the crisis supposedly ended, countries are printing money at a slower pace or they stopped printing altogether. Many are certainly not doing asset purchases.
Forgetting the fact that QE will do nothing to ease the pain of the economy being bad, sorry, but it will do nothing whatsoever, what it will do is wreak havoc on the dollar. Since the currency is floating more printing and asset purchases will diminish the value of the currency. This has been Ben’s and Obama’s plan all along since Obama wanted to double exports within 5 years, something that can never be accomplished. We are seeing the impact of what more printing will do to the dollar now, unless you think 1.5 cent moves in the Euro/USD pair is normal, as investors move to a currency that is somewhat more sound, not that the Euro is sound, but perception is half the game.
The citizens, us, will not feel the devaluation right off the bat because we consume 87% of what we produce domestically. However, imported products will cost more and we do import a lot of goods, obviously. As domestic supplies are sucked up by foreign countries, as our dollar is worth less thanks to Ben, we will have to import more from elsewhere. This is how our next bout of inflation will begin, dollar devaluation without an increase of money velocity. If you think about it it will make sense, capital flows to the land with the cheapest goods and a weak dollar means China, Europe or whoever, will find more value, cheaper products, from America.
That actually sounds good, more purchases of American goods means higher production as we have to replace what others are buying, but that may not be the case. Why? Simple, prices domestically will be rising and our government, always trying to do the right thing will institute some sort of protectionist legislation to stop prices from rising as incomes are stagnant. It would be a form of capital controls of sorts, but in reverse. Can’t you see it now? Prices are rising and people are not able to get those big screen TV’s or something less important, food, so the government tries to stop it through making new laws. It sounds counterintuitive, but it would happen, look at what Congress wants to do to China in order to get the yuan to appreciate in value? Actually, if we do more QE Congress will not want that to happen because China will literally own us if or when the dollar is devaluated.
While all of this is happening the treasury market, after an initial huge ramp up in prices, this is what the Fed will be buying, will be in freefall as no one will want to be repaid, without a substantial risk premium, in devalued dollars. This will lead the Fed into more massive buying because even at this stage Americans will not even want to buy our own debt. Also, China will have no need to hold their massive treasury holds so they will be selling like mad. All of this is happening without money velocity picking up. Even if you think I am wrong about the previous paragraph think of it this way, if our production did pick up because of foreign country buying sprees that means we will have the money to buy things, but it will only increase the inflation rate… damned if it does, damned if it doesn’t.
It has nothing to do with actual money velocity anymore, we even have mild inflation with dwindling velocity now, and has everything to do with confidence in the system. More QE will be bad news for global confidence in the USD, it is on shaky ground as is. If we look at today’s market action it proves how the market will react, lower dollar, higher commodity prices and equities stuck because it is good news on one hand and bad news on the other hand. Longer term high inflation is bad news for stocks, in my opinion, and bullish for commodities, obviously. Stocks are horrible inflation hedging instruments, look at the last 10 years for proof, while silver (by far my favorite investment right now), gold and other metals should do very well. Of course, precious metals are not really an inflation hedge, but a currency hedge instead. Since we are looking at a currency issue rather than straight out inflation it makes bullion of any flavor very attractive.
Could anything change my mind about what I think will happen? Sure. If no QE happens it will be great news, but the likelihood of no QE ever happening again are about as long of a shot as you can get. While I am using QE for my defense of my position in this article I believe we can safely assume that budget deficits will not get better so even if no QE happens our spending will accomplish the same thing. I say that knowing that if the deficit does not resolve itself the Fed, to save the US, will still have to do QE eventually on a massive scale no matter what, to keep rates low so the interest doesn’t bust us. However, the Fed cannot suck in all that paper and treasuries will fail eventually.
Outside of no QE I think there is not much that can change my mind about what I think will happen. It is pretty much in stone and will happen either as I laid it out or in a somewhat similar fashion. In the near-term I am still bullish on treasuries, now that we sold off, and on silver, gold too, but I am more partial to silver right now. I am not crazy about stocks and would be very hesitant about committing major capital to any position right now, the market is trading odd to say the least. At this point bullion is your best play, silver looks very promising and a recent Scientific American article points out that there is only 19 years left of easily mined silver, a no brainer to me, buy it.
People always wait to buy metals to “see how it does” and while they are waiting the price goes nuts and then they buy it and wonder why they lost money. Don’t be one of those people, but buy it smart, some every month. Because even if you think the bulk of my argument is wrong, or all of it, we have disinflation and higher bullion prices, what do you think will happen when we do have inflation? Not to mention silver is not only a precious metal, but an industrial metal. So, if you think the world is going to end, buy silver. If you think we are in a real recovery, buy silver.

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It is official, we live in Bizzaro World for sure. In this new normal there is no such thing as efficient markets, price discovery or any rational reason for the erratic movements in the markets from day-to-day. Just a couple days ago Europe was falling apart causing the markets to selloff hard, but today all is good again and the markets are up a couple hundred points. Bad news is now good news while horrible news is temporary, literally.
As for valuations of equities, who knows anymore, but one thing is for sure, price to earnings ratios are under attack, for the second time in a decade. I have read several stories talking about why P/E ratios are so passé and you need to measure a stock via the PEG or some other nonsense. We had this argument in 2000 and the traditional fundamental investors won that argument and I assume we will win it again. The P/E ratios are under attack because, drum roll please, earnings estimates are coming down. So much for the $90+ earnings estimates for the S&P 500 which, if those earnings per share were met, priced the forward P/E ratios, which is an absurd notion to begin with, at an attractive 12 or so right now. However, lower estimates means a higher forward P/E of say 16 or so, that is less attractive.
Fundamental analysis or value investing is about finding cheap stocks and those are getting tougher to find in today’s market. Not only that, but investors are leaving stocks, how many weeks or net outflows have we had? The outflow from equities is, I am afraid to tell you, permanent. Why? The Baby Boomers, it is that simple. They are retiring and making a fundamental, permanent, shift in their portfolios which involve less risk. That means fewer stocks for this group of investors which are the wealthiest generation, dare I say, in the history of America. I always wondered what would happen when the Boomers all started to retire, I always thought that systematic withdrawals would simply lead to wild swings in the market, never did I believe that they would just pack up and leave the market. Well, they are leaving the market after investing through 2 major crashes, plus worthless property now, in the markets they simply want much less risk. I do not blame them.
The big question is, with all this money leaving equities who is buying and why are we still at the current levels? It makes little sense, if you ditch the permabull thought process for a minute and use logic. More sellers than buyers means lower equity prices, that is always the way it worked until now. Today we have more sellers than buyers, based on net fund flows, and the averages are holding their own. We certainly have a ton of volatility, which makes the VIX seem really cheap at this level, but no real movement in the markets, either way. It simply makes no sense whatsoever and I am positioned neutral in the market right now so I have no vested interest in anything that might happen.
If we look at today’s data, for example, it was not good, mixed with the Beige Book it was horrible, we had a huge trade deficit, certainly smaller than last months, but wow, and we had 451,000 initial jobless claims. In what world were that data is good? Obviously in today’s world it is for some reason, but the facts remain that we are losing 1.85M jobs a month, through firings, almost 3 years into this mess. That is unreal. As Rosenberg points out these are the numbers we saw right after Lehman collapsed, so how is this good news? I can hear some people saying, well it is getting better or it could have been worse. Sure, but you have been saying that for a year now and it is the same, bad. At some point you have to realize that it is not going to get better anytime soon and the faster you realize it the sooner you can exit your positions, hopefully at a profit. The retail investor already figured all of this out, hence the wholesale selling of their funds.
That is what it comes down to, who is going to be able to get out before it is too late? I still find it hilarious that market pundits still preach the bull market is here and the sky is the limit for equities. These are the same people who never saw the tech bubble or the housing bubble, both times saying ‘this time is different,’ but now they claim they can see bubbles and everything is now a bubble, gold, bubble, treasuries, bubble, stocks, undervalued. Have you ever noticed that stocks are ALWAYS undervalued? Sorry, but we played this game before and the only one that loses are the investors while the pundits are still on TV making huge money while, clearly, being subpar at their chosen profession.
The bottom line is that computers are running the markets now. This explains the huge outflows from funds and the sideways movements of the markets as computers get the advantage of liquidity rebates and sub-penny pricing. In this environment I cannot explain bad news sending stocks higher other than computers taking over. I have nothing against them, I think they are a problem, but at the same time what kind of advantage does the ordinary investor have competing against algorithms that react in milliseconds. Yes, one can make money, but this action really screws up price discovery and creates a false sense of confidence because we could have another flash crash when the computers decide to back away, again. This is also, in my opinion, another reason why investors are moving away from stocks and heading to bonds, precious metals and dividend yielding stocks.
Based on what I have seen I am not interested in trading right now. I have a select few investments, precious metals and that is it. I had some nice trades, leveraged treasuries and more gold from the beginning of August, but have moved out of those positions. I see no value in this market and think it is merely a matter of time before we see a major move lower, but who knows when that will be. When we have that move lower I believe that will be the time to buy and only then might we see the retail investor come back to stocks. However, they will not be chasing growth stocks rather stocks that pay dividends. I do believe that when the selling subsides we will see a crackdown on HFT, but it will have been too late, as always. Boring is back and that is a good thing, but until we get true price discovery there is little sense to chase this market and those that do will get hurt.

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