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	<title>&#187; dollar collapse</title>
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		<title>Silver, the trade that was easy to see</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/silver-the-trade-that-was-easy-to-see/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/silver-the-trade-that-was-easy-to-see/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Nov 2010 18:39:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chilton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[comex]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conspiracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gold mines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[manipulation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[metals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[middle class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[miners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shiny metal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver prices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the fed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USD]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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		<title>Bring on the European Stress Test</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/bring-on-the-european-stress-test/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/bring-on-the-european-stress-test/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 21:38:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bad debts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[banks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[commercial real estate]]></category>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Look, things in the U.S. are certainly better, even though I am bearish on the economy, but they are just a “less worse” type of better rather than a true recovery or whatever you want to call it. Someone once commented that I would not know a V shaped recovery if it sat on my face, or something to that, as the recession in the early 1980’s saw a lag in initial claims of some 6 months before the recovery in employment happened. Boy, I hope that person is reading this because that comment was made in august or September of last year, almost a full year ago, and initial claims barely broke the 500K mark as we speak, is that the ”V” we are looking for? The fact is in a post credit collapse employment is a leading indicator, I said it a year ago and I am saying it now and the only difference is the unemployment rate is HIGHER today than a year ago.</p>
<p>What changed over the last 12 months?</p>
<p>Nothing. Wait, I take that back, a lot. The U.S. is now $3T more in debt, we performed a “stress test,” which we are telling the ECB to do, more on that in a minute, and the Fed expanded its balance sheet by how much? What did we get for all of that? A 5.2% GDP print based on inventory a rebuild that was probably premature, if we take away the stimulus would firms have rebuilt their inventories so much? I think not. Unemployment is slightly better thanks to temporary jobs and government hiring, not exactly what I would call “robust” at all. The bottom line is all my criticism of the stimulus was right, it failed.</p>
<p>The banks are better you say, right? Are they? If you think that, well, I just don’t know what to tell you. Did the banks get rid of the “toxic assets?” Did they write all their bad debts off? Did real estate values increase? How about commercial real estate, is that sector flying strong again? No. Are banks loaning money again? Sure, if you have a credit score of 850 or better and don’t need the money they will gladly make a loan to you. However, if you need to refinance your home you better hope you qualify for a government program or you are out of luck. The “stress test” was a joke and meant nothing because we are at the outer limits of the stress test, remember, 10% unemployment, etc., etc.? What saved the banks was one thing and one thing only, the repeal of mark-to-market account, period, end of story.</p>
<p>If we brought back mark-to-market accounting today we would have a handful of big institutions left, I guarantee it. Just look at Wells Fargo’s balance sheet with the “Pick-A-Pay Loans” they inherited, worse, they bought, from Wachovia, the LTV’s, except for Texas, God Bless Texas, are all horrible. I am not saying WFC would fail, I am just saying they would have to realize pretty significant losses is all. It is no coincidence that right after, literally right after, the repeal of mark-to-market accounting rules by the FASB, by Congressional pressure I might add, bank earnings went through the roof. What replaced mark-to-market accounting? Mark-to-model accounting, do you know who made that model famous? Enron, need I say more?</p>
<p>Europe</p>
<p>Now, Timmy Geithner is over in Europe telling the Europeans to do a “stress test” to let the world know all is well. Sorry Tim, I do not think this will work since it is technically not the banks in question, but rather the sovereign debt that they are holding. Why not do a stress test on governments instead, maybe that will solve the problem. This is a banking problem, again, that was brought on by huge deficit spending and countries inability to service their debt loads, this is big, huge actually. While this will impact banks it is not really banks that caused it, but politicians who decided to bribe the people with their own money.</p>
<p>It is likely that one of the PIGS, or whatever we are calling them now, will default given the issues they have and the inability of politicians to say no to spending. It is just odd, it always has been, that the people demand all this gravy from the government in the form of give a ways, tax credits or straight cash in some form. Don’t these people realize that they are only getting back their own money? Actually, if governments spent less and had lower debts that means they would have lower overall taxes which means the people would have more money on their own… they would be better off! However, the people insist on being bribed with their own money and politicians are only too happy to oblige.</p>
<p>The point is that this bigger than the banks as we are talking about the solvency of countries now. Bailouts are much more difficult to do for countries and the implications of a default by any country has widespread ripples that most people have no idea can or would occur. Even if Hungary or Greece defaults it is a huge deal and will impact governments and banks all over the world. I have been saying this for months now, Greece is a big deal and all those people saying it is not are, well, disqualified to render their opinions anymore as the markets have spoken and they have sided with me.</p>
<p>Run a stress test, it doesn’t matter because it really doesn’t matter Tim. The problem is with government spending this time and I do not think mark-to-model accounting can fix this problem.</p>
<p>The real problem</p>
<p>The real problem is I do not know where the sovereign debt problems will end, I know it will get worse. I know that more European countries will succumb to this very same issue as most European countries are socialist by their very nature and their debt levels are very high. As the weaker countries fall they will drag the stronger countries down with them, it is just how it works. I made a call that the Euro will fall to 1.18, we are about there. Do I think it will go lower? Yes, to parity in the near future. I think 1.16 is the next level, but the ECB will have to intervene and China has to intervene as a weak Euro is a major problem, it is, another story for another time. The currency will not survive without a mechanism to eject the weak states, period.</p>
<p>After the carnage in Europe is done, I do not have a timetable for that, it could be tomorrow or 10 years from now, but more than likely it will be sooner rather than later, the debt problems will spread, to the U.S. We have $13T in debt and an economy that is not recovering, I am not happy about that, but those are the facts. We are spending $4.9B a day, 3 times the amount George Bush, not exactly the face of fiscal conservatism I might add, was spending. We are in major trouble and what are our politicians doing? Trying to figure out how to get stimulus 3 out the door, that’s what.</p>
<p>I have been saying for months that our debt to GDP level is almost at parity, but it takes the Drudge Report for people to start listening? OK, at least people are listening now. The problem is we have no politicians willing to take the steps to fix out problems. Go ahead, elect the Republicans, look what they did from 2000-2006, they really helped to speed the process up, in my opinion. Of course, out current President and Congress has surely kicked what the Republicans did into hyper drive as they added 30% to our debt load in less than 2 years, that is $3T, an astounding figure. Neither of these parties really want to fix the problems, in my opinion, because they have a vested interest in perpetuating the problems so they can stay in power, it is just how it works.</p>
<p>What this means is we are all in very big trouble. I am not talking about, oh, gee, go buy an ounce of gold and protect yourself from inflation, I am talking about the Weimar Republic, hyperinflation, type of trouble. I see no way out besides inflation and in a big way. As Paul Krugman points out, there is a big difference between Greece and the U.S., we can print our own money. We also know Ben Bernanke has no problem with hitting that print money either. I am also confident that the Fed is, basically, completely incompetent.</p>
<p>If we cannot go to the market to finance our debt, which we have trillions of dollars of that most of it matures in under 10 years, the Fed will monetize it. That is how we will deal with our sovereign debt crisis, we will print our way out of it and it will be the very worst thing we can do. Instead of cutting our government, spending or doing anything else that is logical, because politicians want to get reelected, they will choose to inflate their way out. Will gold protect you? Yes, but so will food and any other useful commodity including toilet paper. It disturbs me to no end that we are where we are and that the President is listening to the likes of Mr. Krugman who thinks deficits don’t matter, they do, and that since we can print money it is OK, printing money is not OK.</p>
<p>In the meantime I am still short the market. We will have a bounce I am sure and I almost took a nice broad long position today, but I passed. While I am sure we will have that bounce I did not think the risk reward was worth it. My target is still 900 on the S&amp;P 500.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Look, things in the U.S. are certainly better, even though I am bearish on the economy, but they are just a “less worse” type of better rather than a true recovery or whatever you want to call it. Someone once commented that I would not know a V shaped recovery if it sat on my face, or something to that, as the recession in the early 1980’s saw a lag in initial claims of some 6 months before the recovery in employment happened. Boy, I hope that person is reading this because that comment was made in august or September of last year, almost a full year ago, and initial claims barely broke the 500K mark as we speak, is that the ”V” we are looking for? The fact is in a post credit collapse employment is a leading indicator, I said it a year ago and I am saying it now and the only difference is the unemployment rate is HIGHER today than a year ago.</p>
<p>What changed over the last 12 months?</p>
<p>Nothing. Wait, I take that back, a lot. The U.S. is now $3T more in debt, we performed a “stress test,” which we are telling the ECB to do, more on that in a minute, and the Fed expanded its balance sheet by how much? What did we get for all of that? A 5.2% GDP print based on inventory a rebuild that was probably premature, if we take away the stimulus would firms have rebuilt their inventories so much? I think not. Unemployment is slightly better thanks to temporary jobs and government hiring, not exactly what I would call “robust” at all. The bottom line is all my criticism of the stimulus was right, it failed.</p>
<p>The banks are better you say, right? Are they? If you think that, well, I just don’t know what to tell you. Did the banks get rid of the “toxic assets?” Did they write all their bad debts off? Did real estate values increase? How about commercial real estate, is that sector flying strong again? No. Are banks loaning money again? Sure, if you have a credit score of 850 or better and don’t need the money they will gladly make a loan to you. However, if you need to refinance your home you better hope you qualify for a government program or you are out of luck. The “stress test” was a joke and meant nothing because we are at the outer limits of the stress test, remember, 10% unemployment, etc., etc.? What saved the banks was one thing and one thing only, the repeal of mark-to-market account, period, end of story.</p>
<p>If we brought back mark-to-market accounting today we would have a handful of big institutions left, I guarantee it. Just look at Wells Fargo’s balance sheet with the “Pick-A-Pay Loans” they inherited, worse, they bought, from Wachovia, the LTV’s, except for Texas, God Bless Texas, are all horrible. I am not saying WFC would fail, I am just saying they would have to realize pretty significant losses is all. It is no coincidence that right after, literally right after, the repeal of mark-to-market accounting rules by the FASB, by Congressional pressure I might add, bank earnings went through the roof. What replaced mark-to-market accounting? Mark-to-model accounting, do you know who made that model famous? Enron, need I say more?</p>
<p>Europe</p>
<p>Now, Timmy Geithner is over in Europe telling the Europeans to do a “stress test” to let the world know all is well. Sorry Tim, I do not think this will work since it is technically not the banks in question, but rather the sovereign debt that they are holding. Why not do a stress test on governments instead, maybe that will solve the problem. This is a banking problem, again, that was brought on by huge deficit spending and countries inability to service their debt loads, this is big, huge actually. While this will impact banks it is not really banks that caused it, but politicians who decided to bribe the people with their own money.</p>
<p>It is likely that one of the PIGS, or whatever we are calling them now, will default given the issues they have and the inability of politicians to say no to spending. It is just odd, it always has been, that the people demand all this gravy from the government in the form of give a ways, tax credits or straight cash in some form. Don’t these people realize that they are only getting back their own money? Actually, if governments spent less and had lower debts that means they would have lower overall taxes which means the people would have more money on their own… they would be better off! However, the people insist on being bribed with their own money and politicians are only too happy to oblige.</p>
<p>The point is that this bigger than the banks as we are talking about the solvency of countries now. Bailouts are much more difficult to do for countries and the implications of a default by any country has widespread ripples that most people have no idea can or would occur. Even if Hungary or Greece defaults it is a huge deal and will impact governments and banks all over the world. I have been saying this for months now, Greece is a big deal and all those people saying it is not are, well, disqualified to render their opinions anymore as the markets have spoken and they have sided with me.</p>
<p>Run a stress test, it doesn’t matter because it really doesn’t matter Tim. The problem is with government spending this time and I do not think mark-to-model accounting can fix this problem.</p>
<p>The real problem</p>
<p>The real problem is I do not know where the sovereign debt problems will end, I know it will get worse. I know that more European countries will succumb to this very same issue as most European countries are socialist by their very nature and their debt levels are very high. As the weaker countries fall they will drag the stronger countries down with them, it is just how it works. I made a call that the Euro will fall to 1.18, we are about there. Do I think it will go lower? Yes, to parity in the near future. I think 1.16 is the next level, but the ECB will have to intervene and China has to intervene as a weak Euro is a major problem, it is, another story for another time. The currency will not survive without a mechanism to eject the weak states, period.</p>
<p>After the carnage in Europe is done, I do not have a timetable for that, it could be tomorrow or 10 years from now, but more than likely it will be sooner rather than later, the debt problems will spread, to the U.S. We have $13T in debt and an economy that is not recovering, I am not happy about that, but those are the facts. We are spending $4.9B a day, 3 times the amount George Bush, not exactly the face of fiscal conservatism I might add, was spending. We are in major trouble and what are our politicians doing? Trying to figure out how to get stimulus 3 out the door, that’s what.</p>
<p>I have been saying for months that our debt to GDP level is almost at parity, but it takes the Drudge Report for people to start listening? OK, at least people are listening now. The problem is we have no politicians willing to take the steps to fix out problems. Go ahead, elect the Republicans, look what they did from 2000-2006, they really helped to speed the process up, in my opinion. Of course, out current President and Congress has surely kicked what the Republicans did into hyper drive as they added 30% to our debt load in less than 2 years, that is $3T, an astounding figure. Neither of these parties really want to fix the problems, in my opinion, because they have a vested interest in perpetuating the problems so they can stay in power, it is just how it works.</p>
<p>What this means is we are all in very big trouble. I am not talking about, oh, gee, go buy an ounce of gold and protect yourself from inflation, I am talking about the Weimar Republic, hyperinflation, type of trouble. I see no way out besides inflation and in a big way. As Paul Krugman points out, there is a big difference between Greece and the U.S., we can print our own money. We also know Ben Bernanke has no problem with hitting that print money either. I am also confident that the Fed is, basically, completely incompetent.</p>
<p>If we cannot go to the market to finance our debt, which we have trillions of dollars of that most of it matures in under 10 years, the Fed will monetize it. That is how we will deal with our sovereign debt crisis, we will print our way out of it and it will be the very worst thing we can do. Instead of cutting our government, spending or doing anything else that is logical, because politicians want to get reelected, they will choose to inflate their way out. Will gold protect you? Yes, but so will food and any other useful commodity including toilet paper. It disturbs me to no end that we are where we are and that the President is listening to the likes of Mr. Krugman who thinks deficits don’t matter, they do, and that since we can print money it is OK, printing money is not OK.</p>
<p>In the meantime I am still short the market. We will have a bounce I am sure and I almost took a nice broad long position today, but I passed. While I am sure we will have that bounce I did not think the risk reward was worth it. My target is still 900 on the S&amp;P 500.</p>
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		<title>The Bugs were right</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-bugs-were-right/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-bugs-were-right/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 01:43:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[contagion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[currencies of the world]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[currency crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gold bugs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[greece]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lack of confidence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[portugal spain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[price of gold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[world economies]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Much is being made over the price of gold over the past few days and questions are being raised. The main question is; why is gold going up while the dollar is gaining strength? To me it is fairly obvious, there is no faith in any of the currencies of the world at the moment. It is not as if gold is making highs in only Euros or dollars, but it is making highs in most currencies at this point. Again, it is because of a complete lack of confidence of currencies rather than, but not completely devoid of, inflationary fears.</p>
<p>In short, the gold bugs were right and the jokes that many made are suddenly not so funny any longer. What we are witnessing is nothing short of spectacular and one should not underestimate the importance of what is going on either locally or on the other side of the world. It is not very often that we see developed world economies default or come to the edge of default which should make everyone extremely nervous. This is not Ecuador defaulting or the Congo, but we are talking about Greece, which is no surprise in itself, Portugal, Spain and Italy who are or were on the verge of default. It does not end there though, even though they are the countries grabbing the headlines, because if they go France, Germany and the UK could all go as well, this is serious.</p>
<p>This has all the making, as I have said before, of a currency crisis and contagion that can and will more than likely grip the whole world, ending in the U.S. at some point in the near future. To many this is news to them as they fell into the “that cannot happen here” crowd, but the gold bugs, like myself, have been saying for years that at some point the markets will tell you that you have borrowed too much and they will cut you off. When that happens the currency becomes worthless and inflation will inevitably set in making life miserable for the inhabitants of said countries. This is why gold bugs accumulate gold for years because they see it coming and this is why we are witnessing Europeans scramble to buy bullion now. Rumors are that European mints are almost out of bullion, both gold and silver, which may be one reason why prices are spiking. The rumors are not verified, but it would not surprise me one bit as the Euro continues its slide and I do not believe we have seen anything yet in terms of the decline in the Euro or the price of precious metals. </p>
<p>Many wonder why people run to gold for safety during times of stress and the answer is simple, it is a well known store of wealth with a 5,000 year history. It is recognizable, rare, relatively speaking, it cannot be diluted, it is inversely correlated to currencies and you can usually tell if it is fake or not as well as it is portable. All of those reasons make it attractive as an alternative to currencies during times of stress and why people are buying it now. The common reason people present, lately, for not buying gold is that it is not a safe haven because it got crushed in 2008 with everything else. That is true, but the world was in liquidation and seeking dollars to try and settle trades, dollars were tough to find remember, which is why everything went down, except for treasuries. Others claim that other commodities are better, like food, that is true, but food goes bad, you would need a lot of it, it is not as rare and people always need a medium of exchange, currency, to trade with which is exactly what gold is. I am not saying it is perfect or it will work, but I would rather own it than not own it at this stage of the game.</p>
<p>What does have me concerned is the fact that while the jokes about gold bugs have stopped the talk about gold has escalated dramatically lately as we are pushing new nominal highs. I am bullish long-term on gold, I mean, come on, the Fed by its very nature devalues the dollar by about 3% a year by design which makes gold a no brainer for the long-term, but shorter term when everyone is bullish I get bearish, kind of. I believe this time is different as we are facing, literally, a confidence issue if a major currency which is bullish for gold, but I am concerned that the price might get ahead of itself in the near-term. This happened the last time we got in this area and all the chatter stopped when it broke its winning streak, which I was happy about, and the same thing might happen again. However, the situation is different and unlikely to resolve itself.</p>
<p>What amazes me is that while all the talk is about gold no one is talking about silver. We are pushing almost $20/oz on silver right now, which is close to a breakout, and conditions are right for silver to really take off. With JPM making headlines about price manipulation, a currency issue, tight and dwindling supply, high demand, a metal no one recycles, a metal that is in everything we use makes silver, in my opinion, the trade of the century. I can see silver trading much higher than it is currently based on figures I have seen which estimates all the above ground silver consumed within the next 5 or 6 years. If that happens, $20/oz silver is a steal. </p>
<p>Regardless, metals make sense right now and while one should wait for a better entry point the idea is to be looking for that entry point to begin with. This is not rocket science as metals have fixed extraction costs and then it is supply demand after that. With the world’s population growing precious metals make complete sense especially since the vast majority of the world’s population considers precious metals the ideal investments. That in itself should make you think of adding some to your portfolio since the emerging markets population dwarfs the developed markets by a long shot and I would rather be selling it to them at a profit rather than trying to buy it from them at inflated prices. </p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Much is being made over the price of gold over the past few days and questions are being raised. The main question is; why is gold going up while the dollar is gaining strength? To me it is fairly obvious, there is no faith in any of the currencies of the world at the moment. It is not as if gold is making highs in only Euros or dollars, but it is making highs in most currencies at this point. Again, it is because of a complete lack of confidence of currencies rather than, but not completely devoid of, inflationary fears.</p>
<p>In short, the gold bugs were right and the jokes that many made are suddenly not so funny any longer. What we are witnessing is nothing short of spectacular and one should not underestimate the importance of what is going on either locally or on the other side of the world. It is not very often that we see developed world economies default or come to the edge of default which should make everyone extremely nervous. This is not Ecuador defaulting or the Congo, but we are talking about Greece, which is no surprise in itself, Portugal, Spain and Italy who are or were on the verge of default. It does not end there though, even though they are the countries grabbing the headlines, because if they go France, Germany and the UK could all go as well, this is serious.</p>
<p>This has all the making, as I have said before, of a currency crisis and contagion that can and will more than likely grip the whole world, ending in the U.S. at some point in the near future. To many this is news to them as they fell into the “that cannot happen here” crowd, but the gold bugs, like myself, have been saying for years that at some point the markets will tell you that you have borrowed too much and they will cut you off. When that happens the currency becomes worthless and inflation will inevitably set in making life miserable for the inhabitants of said countries. This is why gold bugs accumulate gold for years because they see it coming and this is why we are witnessing Europeans scramble to buy bullion now. Rumors are that European mints are almost out of bullion, both gold and silver, which may be one reason why prices are spiking. The rumors are not verified, but it would not surprise me one bit as the Euro continues its slide and I do not believe we have seen anything yet in terms of the decline in the Euro or the price of precious metals. </p>
<p>Many wonder why people run to gold for safety during times of stress and the answer is simple, it is a well known store of wealth with a 5,000 year history. It is recognizable, rare, relatively speaking, it cannot be diluted, it is inversely correlated to currencies and you can usually tell if it is fake or not as well as it is portable. All of those reasons make it attractive as an alternative to currencies during times of stress and why people are buying it now. The common reason people present, lately, for not buying gold is that it is not a safe haven because it got crushed in 2008 with everything else. That is true, but the world was in liquidation and seeking dollars to try and settle trades, dollars were tough to find remember, which is why everything went down, except for treasuries. Others claim that other commodities are better, like food, that is true, but food goes bad, you would need a lot of it, it is not as rare and people always need a medium of exchange, currency, to trade with which is exactly what gold is. I am not saying it is perfect or it will work, but I would rather own it than not own it at this stage of the game.</p>
<p>What does have me concerned is the fact that while the jokes about gold bugs have stopped the talk about gold has escalated dramatically lately as we are pushing new nominal highs. I am bullish long-term on gold, I mean, come on, the Fed by its very nature devalues the dollar by about 3% a year by design which makes gold a no brainer for the long-term, but shorter term when everyone is bullish I get bearish, kind of. I believe this time is different as we are facing, literally, a confidence issue if a major currency which is bullish for gold, but I am concerned that the price might get ahead of itself in the near-term. This happened the last time we got in this area and all the chatter stopped when it broke its winning streak, which I was happy about, and the same thing might happen again. However, the situation is different and unlikely to resolve itself.</p>
<p>What amazes me is that while all the talk is about gold no one is talking about silver. We are pushing almost $20/oz on silver right now, which is close to a breakout, and conditions are right for silver to really take off. With JPM making headlines about price manipulation, a currency issue, tight and dwindling supply, high demand, a metal no one recycles, a metal that is in everything we use makes silver, in my opinion, the trade of the century. I can see silver trading much higher than it is currently based on figures I have seen which estimates all the above ground silver consumed within the next 5 or 6 years. If that happens, $20/oz silver is a steal. </p>
<p>Regardless, metals make sense right now and while one should wait for a better entry point the idea is to be looking for that entry point to begin with. This is not rocket science as metals have fixed extraction costs and then it is supply demand after that. With the world’s population growing precious metals make complete sense especially since the vast majority of the world’s population considers precious metals the ideal investments. That in itself should make you think of adding some to your portfolio since the emerging markets population dwarfs the developed markets by a long shot and I would rather be selling it to them at a profit rather than trying to buy it from them at inflated prices. </p>
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		<title>Venezuela, a sign of things to come?</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/venezuela-a-sign-of-things-to-come/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/venezuela-a-sign-of-things-to-come/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 2010 01:00:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[banking system]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[current administration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[devaluation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dxy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economic stimulus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[employment situation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[federal reserve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foreign debt]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[money printing]]></category>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>I am watching the happenings in Venezuela carefully as this might be an indication of things to come in the US. While most people naively think that “it can never happen here” I would like to warn you that every country where these things have happened uttered that exact same phrase. Whether it happens because the Federal Reserve loses control over the devaluation of the USD or because foreign debt buyers just stop buying US debt the one thing I am sure of is that it can and will happen here at some point in the future.</p>
<p>What I am talking about is massive devaluation of the currency which leads to inflation or, in this case, hyperinflation. I have stated that for the moment we do not have to worry about inflation, and I stand by that prediction, for now, at some point we will have to cleanse our demons and massive balance sheet. The one and only thing that is saving us right now from inflation is our pitiful employment situation, which is not getting any better I might add. Without employment there will not be wage inflation and we will continue to have subdued demand for products with the exception of food and energy.</p>
<p>Even though I fully believe deflation is here for the near-term, reinforced by the Fed itself, there is one caveat to my prediction, the devaluation of the USD. I have made no secret that I believe that the Fed and the current administration, along with the former administration, have had an unofficial policy of maintaining a weak dollar. The reason for the weak dollar policy is simple, it boosts GDP and earnings in a globalized world along with a host of other seemingly positive economic stimulus. However, a weak dollar is not good long-term for a country and hurts the population as dollar sensitive products become very expensive, i.e. $140 a barrel oil marks the low point of the USD in 2008, and is inflationary without the benefit of actual inflation.</p>
<p>Let me explain, inflation created by excess money printing usually enters the banking system and is loaned out to the population. This is called money velocity and creates too many dollars chasing too few of goods. However, without money velocity traditional inflation cannot happen, but even if the excess money printing does not enter the economy it can still devalue the currency based on the future expectation of it entering the system. This is what was happening up until the last dollar rally and I would like to point out that the last dollar rally was because, depending on who you listen to, short covering, fear about sovereign default (i.e. people were afraid of another systemic meltdown which, in turn, initiated short covering. This is the scenario I favor), or people felt the Fed was actually going to raise interest rates which is absurd, in my opinion.</p>
<p>The dollar devaluation that we have seen explains why oil prices are on the rise as demand simply is not there. It also explains why metals have also climbed for most of 2009 as well. What is scary about both oil and metals going up, especially in 4Q09, are the fact that these prices increased in the face of a stronger dollar which is counterintuitive. Well, it is for gold at least as oil could increase with a strong dollar if there is sufficient demand, but, frankly, there is not as much demand as the price indicates. Regardless, rising energy prices when the economy is weak, to me, is a warning sign of a problem and should forewarn you of things to come, inflation.</p>
<p>If we continue with our insanity that Washington and the Fed is telling us we need it is inevitable that we will end up in a situation like Venezuela where we will either willingly or unwillingly have to devalue our currency. There are pluses to devaluation as your debt, assuming a fixed interest rate, will remain static and your earnings will eventually increase allowing you to pay off your debt faster. However, the negatives outweigh the positives by a long shot as your savings are worthless. This is why we saw the people of Venezuela go out and buy everything they could because goods will be worth more than the paper money.</p>
<p>What is disturbing though is the fact that even though devaluation creates higher prices the Venezuelan government shutdown some stores for “price gouging” which is humorous, in a sick way. The government intentionally creates inflation to make their balance sheet look better, but because new goods will cost more stores cannot compensate by charging more for products they currently have. How in the world are these stores supposed to stay in business or id the governments point to put them out of business? The next logical question to ask is how would this type of scenario play out in the US?</p>
<p>While we do not really have any past history to use as a bench market I think what we see happening in Venezuela is probably a very good example. Right down to the black markets that are more than likely popping up all over the place to provide goods and services the population cannot receive from the usual sources. What I would be interested in knowing is if these black markets are using another medium of exchange, i.e. US dollars, gold, silver, Euros, whatever it might be, to pay for these goods and services. I would be inclined to believe that is what is happening, but there is simply no proof and I am willing to bet no one wants to openly talk about such things for obvious reasons.</p>
<p>What is usually accompanied with this type of devaluation is the government imposing its will that its citizens continue to use its currency no matter what. We saw this happen in Zimbabwe, but just like in Zimbabwe the black market switched over to an alternative payment system, gold. It is important to note that gold is being used because dollars or other currencies simply are not plentiful in the country and gold can be mined, of course gold has also been used as currency for thousands of years as well and at current prices a little bit goes a long way. Basically, forced price controls and forced use of devalued, or worthless, currencies simply do not work, that type of system never has in 4,000 years.</p>
<p>I am not suggesting the US or Venezuela will turn into Zimbabwe, but I am saying that we are facing certain financial Armageddon at some point in the future. All the US has managed to do is kick the can further down the road for others to manage and we are running out of road, unfortunately. We will have only a few choices in the very near future and the most obvious, because it is politically easier, is to inflate our way out of our problems. While this seems like a good idea I am thinking that the 77 million soon to be retired Baby Boomers who are about to be living on a fixed income will like this strategy. However, it is unlikely that they will like the alternative either, much higher taxes, less Social Security and steep cuts in Medicare.</p>
<p>We live in unique times and the one certainty we have is that there is no certainty of anything. I do not believe that there is any question of whether or not we will follow Venezuela, in my mind it is only a matter of when it will happen, not if. However, before we go down that road you will be comforted in knowing that Japan or the UK will more than likely go down that path before us as they are in worse shape than the US. Regardless, watching what happens now will give you an idea of what could happen here and is also why I am a big proponent of investing in precious metals.</p>
<p>So far holding gold, silver, platinum or palladium has been a very sound move on my part, but I actually hope that these investments turn out to be horrible for me because that will mean I was wrong about the future of the US monetary system. While I might be wrong what concerns me is that there are many people who are a lot smarter than I who are sounding the same alarm I am. I would also like to not be naïve enough to believe that “it could never happen here” either because I am sure there are millions of people throughout history who would tell us that you should never, ever, utter those words because no person or country is special.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>I am watching the happenings in Venezuela carefully as this might be an indication of things to come in the US. While most people naively think that “it can never happen here” I would like to warn you that every country where these things have happened uttered that exact same phrase. Whether it happens because the Federal Reserve loses control over the devaluation of the USD or because foreign debt buyers just stop buying US debt the one thing I am sure of is that it can and will happen here at some point in the future.</p>
<p>What I am talking about is massive devaluation of the currency which leads to inflation or, in this case, hyperinflation. I have stated that for the moment we do not have to worry about inflation, and I stand by that prediction, for now, at some point we will have to cleanse our demons and massive balance sheet. The one and only thing that is saving us right now from inflation is our pitiful employment situation, which is not getting any better I might add. Without employment there will not be wage inflation and we will continue to have subdued demand for products with the exception of food and energy.</p>
<p>Even though I fully believe deflation is here for the near-term, reinforced by the Fed itself, there is one caveat to my prediction, the devaluation of the USD. I have made no secret that I believe that the Fed and the current administration, along with the former administration, have had an unofficial policy of maintaining a weak dollar. The reason for the weak dollar policy is simple, it boosts GDP and earnings in a globalized world along with a host of other seemingly positive economic stimulus. However, a weak dollar is not good long-term for a country and hurts the population as dollar sensitive products become very expensive, i.e. $140 a barrel oil marks the low point of the USD in 2008, and is inflationary without the benefit of actual inflation.</p>
<p>Let me explain, inflation created by excess money printing usually enters the banking system and is loaned out to the population. This is called money velocity and creates too many dollars chasing too few of goods. However, without money velocity traditional inflation cannot happen, but even if the excess money printing does not enter the economy it can still devalue the currency based on the future expectation of it entering the system. This is what was happening up until the last dollar rally and I would like to point out that the last dollar rally was because, depending on who you listen to, short covering, fear about sovereign default (i.e. people were afraid of another systemic meltdown which, in turn, initiated short covering. This is the scenario I favor), or people felt the Fed was actually going to raise interest rates which is absurd, in my opinion.</p>
<p>The dollar devaluation that we have seen explains why oil prices are on the rise as demand simply is not there. It also explains why metals have also climbed for most of 2009 as well. What is scary about both oil and metals going up, especially in 4Q09, are the fact that these prices increased in the face of a stronger dollar which is counterintuitive. Well, it is for gold at least as oil could increase with a strong dollar if there is sufficient demand, but, frankly, there is not as much demand as the price indicates. Regardless, rising energy prices when the economy is weak, to me, is a warning sign of a problem and should forewarn you of things to come, inflation.</p>
<p>If we continue with our insanity that Washington and the Fed is telling us we need it is inevitable that we will end up in a situation like Venezuela where we will either willingly or unwillingly have to devalue our currency. There are pluses to devaluation as your debt, assuming a fixed interest rate, will remain static and your earnings will eventually increase allowing you to pay off your debt faster. However, the negatives outweigh the positives by a long shot as your savings are worthless. This is why we saw the people of Venezuela go out and buy everything they could because goods will be worth more than the paper money.</p>
<p>What is disturbing though is the fact that even though devaluation creates higher prices the Venezuelan government shutdown some stores for “price gouging” which is humorous, in a sick way. The government intentionally creates inflation to make their balance sheet look better, but because new goods will cost more stores cannot compensate by charging more for products they currently have. How in the world are these stores supposed to stay in business or id the governments point to put them out of business? The next logical question to ask is how would this type of scenario play out in the US?</p>
<p>While we do not really have any past history to use as a bench market I think what we see happening in Venezuela is probably a very good example. Right down to the black markets that are more than likely popping up all over the place to provide goods and services the population cannot receive from the usual sources. What I would be interested in knowing is if these black markets are using another medium of exchange, i.e. US dollars, gold, silver, Euros, whatever it might be, to pay for these goods and services. I would be inclined to believe that is what is happening, but there is simply no proof and I am willing to bet no one wants to openly talk about such things for obvious reasons.</p>
<p>What is usually accompanied with this type of devaluation is the government imposing its will that its citizens continue to use its currency no matter what. We saw this happen in Zimbabwe, but just like in Zimbabwe the black market switched over to an alternative payment system, gold. It is important to note that gold is being used because dollars or other currencies simply are not plentiful in the country and gold can be mined, of course gold has also been used as currency for thousands of years as well and at current prices a little bit goes a long way. Basically, forced price controls and forced use of devalued, or worthless, currencies simply do not work, that type of system never has in 4,000 years.</p>
<p>I am not suggesting the US or Venezuela will turn into Zimbabwe, but I am saying that we are facing certain financial Armageddon at some point in the future. All the US has managed to do is kick the can further down the road for others to manage and we are running out of road, unfortunately. We will have only a few choices in the very near future and the most obvious, because it is politically easier, is to inflate our way out of our problems. While this seems like a good idea I am thinking that the 77 million soon to be retired Baby Boomers who are about to be living on a fixed income will like this strategy. However, it is unlikely that they will like the alternative either, much higher taxes, less Social Security and steep cuts in Medicare.</p>
<p>We live in unique times and the one certainty we have is that there is no certainty of anything. I do not believe that there is any question of whether or not we will follow Venezuela, in my mind it is only a matter of when it will happen, not if. However, before we go down that road you will be comforted in knowing that Japan or the UK will more than likely go down that path before us as they are in worse shape than the US. Regardless, watching what happens now will give you an idea of what could happen here and is also why I am a big proponent of investing in precious metals.</p>
<p>So far holding gold, silver, platinum or palladium has been a very sound move on my part, but I actually hope that these investments turn out to be horrible for me because that will mean I was wrong about the future of the US monetary system. While I might be wrong what concerns me is that there are many people who are a lot smarter than I who are sounding the same alarm I am. I would also like to not be naïve enough to believe that “it could never happen here” either because I am sure there are millions of people throughout history who would tell us that you should never, ever, utter those words because no person or country is special.</p>
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		<title>Bond, interest rates and why no one gets it</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/bond-interest-rates-and-why-no-one-gets-it/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/bond-interest-rates-and-why-no-one-gets-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Dec 2009 14:52:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bear market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[central banks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[corporate bonds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[corporate debt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economic recovery]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[high yield bonds]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[mathematical probability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mutual funds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rising interest rates]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[sovereign debt]]></category>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Regular readers know that I am or have become a bigger proponent of income investing lately and if you don’t know what I am talking about you should be reading my material more. However, there seems to be preconceived disconnect with my philosophy and what you believe to be true about interest rates moving forward. Some people see my bullishness on bonds in the face of rising interest rates as purely insane, especially given what treasuries are doing, but I can assure you it is not.</p>
<p>Keep in mind I am talking about investment grade corporate bonds and high yield bonds, my favorites are ‘BB’ and ‘BBB’ rate paper in an ETF format, I do not like mutual funds because of the once a day pricing. As an aside I do like selective sovereign debt as well, but don’t go out and buy Eastern European government debt or anything, be selective as the risk return is there, but supply is going to be an issue moving forward so it will pay to be extremely selective in 2010. Anyhow, back to corporate debt and why I like it.</p>
<p>Treasuries are entering a bear market for the first time in my memory and I expect there to be a bear market until the next crisis hits, so for only a few months. The reason there is a bear market is simple, supply, end of story. You cannot issue an endless amount of paper and expect the market to eagerly accept it without paying more for it because people, foreign central banks in this case, know they will never fully be repaid for the US debt they buy now, it is mathematically impossible for the US to repay its debt so don’t shoot the messenger hate the calculator. Because of that mathematical probability interest rates on treasuries are going higher and, according to those wonderfully bullish, and misguided, government data figures investors are pricing in interest rate hikes which kill treasuries and other high grade corporate debt, high grade being the operative word, so remember that please.</p>
<p>High grade corporate debt is technically, and in my opinion, anything rated higher than ‘A’ and issues interest rates slightly above treasury yields. We are talking about your really safe corporate paper issued by IBM and similar firms. Essentially, those are a riskless investment which is why your yield is so close to treasuries and why those bonds will get crushed when/if interest rates go higher. For those who do not understand how bonds work think of bonds and interest rates like a teeter-totter with interest rates on one side and bond prices on the other side, when one goes up the other side goes down. Therefore rising interest rates are bad for bonds because new bond issues will have higher yields so your existing bond will have less appeal in the marketplace and if rates go down new issue bonds will have lower rates which means your existing bond will be more attractive because it has a higher interest rate. Make sense, good.</p>
<p>All of that is important because we are at zero interest, technically we are in the negative interest rate area because of quantitative easing and deflation which is bond friendly. However, this red hot economy we are in, sarcasm is my trademark, many people are expecting an interest rate hike to happen at some time this year and they are right. The Fed will raise interest rates in 2010 from 0-.25% to .25-.50%, wow. There is an outside chance that rates may go to 1% by the end of the year, but that is pure speculation right now because the economic data or ‘recovery’ is spotty at best. Even if rates go up it is relatively meaningless to lower grade corporate bonds because it does not hurt the spread as badly as it does for higher grade corporate bonds.</p>
<p>What I mean is newer higher grade corporate debt and treasury debt will have higher yields than current issues so existing paper will get slammed. However, existing lower quality corporate paper will do OK as we would need rates to go up substantially in order to really hurt the spread. I am not saying that there is no risk in lower quality corporate debt, defaults will be a huge issue moving forward, but I am also betting that the Fed’s liquidity programs end up not going away either. In fact, I would speculate that the Fed’s balance sheet will continue to expand over the next 12 months, perhaps double again if the FASB gets its way and the SIV’s have to be added to banks balance sheets right away, but again that is speculation right now.</p>
<p>If the Fed does actually raise interest rates this would be a bullish signal to the markets because it means we have real growth in the economy as well. This means lower grade paper would perform better, even if that growth is only at lower levels. However, higher interest rates will not be good for stocks, in my opinion, which is why I shifted focus to lower quality corporate bonds and to companies like Alteria. I would not expect, even if the economy is cruising, to see rates go much higher than 1-1.5% though because the Fed is stuck and it cannot move rates higher or to a meaningful level ever again. Regardless, corporate bonds of ‘BBB’ or ‘BB’ and selective ‘junk’ should do OK moving forward in the face of higher interest rates because of what I said previously. We will not see huge returns like that of 2009, but I think they will do better than stocks moving forward, plus you are first in line when the company folds, something to think about.</p>
<p>Why the Fed is stuck</p>
<p>What do I mean by that, a meaningful level? You see, the US is in a debt trap that we cannot escape from, it is simple mathematics. The Fed will not be raising rates to protect the dollar, they want a weak dollar that is for another post, they do not really care about inflation as they really want massive inflation but we cannot create it. The Fed will raise interest rates to keep politicians off of its back and that is about it, but raising rates higher than 1.5% presents problems that the US cannot handle.</p>
<p>Congress just had to raise the debt ceiling by a few hundred billion to fund the government for the next 6-8 weeks, unbelievable, and a more ‘permanent’ fix of raising the debt ceiling to about $14T will be coming soon.</p>
<p>I know this is no big deal to liberal democrats because, after all, under Bush we had to raise the debt ceiling 7 times and to them 8 or 9 wrongs make a right, but this is a major, major problem. Considering that raising the debt ceiling to $14T moves the total US debt to just about 100% of GDP marks a new low for the US and is the greatest amount of debt any country has ever attempted. What I am saying is that our current debt servicing costs with the Fed holding rates at 0% and using QE is about $500B+ a year and our average maturity of our debt is less than 10 years, again this is a first in all of the world’s history.</p>
<p>If the Fed moves rates up past 1.5% then that debt servicing cost will go up, dramatically, and there will be major consequences that the American people are not ready to face. Forget the debt ceiling, we will repeal that silly little rule, especially since we have to raise it almost every year anyhow. Within 7 years out debt servicing costs will begin to take its toll on the national budget squeezing out typically paid for items, like earmarks. Defense spending will have to decline immensely which is why the US remains a superpower even though we have a relatively small manned military compared to say a China, India or North Korea. The dollar will decline much further, it will anyhow as the latest rally, which I anticipated, is a head fake and was driven by Dubai, Greece, Fear, short covering and the selling will comeback harder and faster than you could ever imagine.</p>
<p>All of the senseless spending is coming home to roost, now. China is telling us where to stick it as there is not enough dollars to buy our debt, which is kind of funny in a sick way, and they said no to strengthening their Yuan which makes sense for them and smells of protectionism to me. When we demand a foreign country make their products more expensive in the US just so we can shrink out trade deficit thereby boosting our GDP and sell more products to them that is protectionism, straight up. I do not like to be so grime, but many of the things I foresaw and have been keeping to myself are coming out in the open. Things are not good, but hey as long as the market keeps going up, who cares right? Well, you will when it comes crashing down around you. Fixed income never looked so attractive right now.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>Regular readers know that I am or have become a bigger proponent of income investing lately and if you don’t know what I am talking about you should be reading my material more. However, there seems to be preconceived disconnect with my philosophy and what you believe to be true about interest rates moving forward. Some people see my bullishness on bonds in the face of rising interest rates as purely insane, especially given what treasuries are doing, but I can assure you it is not.</p>
<p>Keep in mind I am talking about investment grade corporate bonds and high yield bonds, my favorites are ‘BB’ and ‘BBB’ rate paper in an ETF format, I do not like mutual funds because of the once a day pricing. As an aside I do like selective sovereign debt as well, but don’t go out and buy Eastern European government debt or anything, be selective as the risk return is there, but supply is going to be an issue moving forward so it will pay to be extremely selective in 2010. Anyhow, back to corporate debt and why I like it.</p>
<p>Treasuries are entering a bear market for the first time in my memory and I expect there to be a bear market until the next crisis hits, so for only a few months. The reason there is a bear market is simple, supply, end of story. You cannot issue an endless amount of paper and expect the market to eagerly accept it without paying more for it because people, foreign central banks in this case, know they will never fully be repaid for the US debt they buy now, it is mathematically impossible for the US to repay its debt so don’t shoot the messenger hate the calculator. Because of that mathematical probability interest rates on treasuries are going higher and, according to those wonderfully bullish, and misguided, government data figures investors are pricing in interest rate hikes which kill treasuries and other high grade corporate debt, high grade being the operative word, so remember that please.</p>
<p>High grade corporate debt is technically, and in my opinion, anything rated higher than ‘A’ and issues interest rates slightly above treasury yields. We are talking about your really safe corporate paper issued by IBM and similar firms. Essentially, those are a riskless investment which is why your yield is so close to treasuries and why those bonds will get crushed when/if interest rates go higher. For those who do not understand how bonds work think of bonds and interest rates like a teeter-totter with interest rates on one side and bond prices on the other side, when one goes up the other side goes down. Therefore rising interest rates are bad for bonds because new bond issues will have higher yields so your existing bond will have less appeal in the marketplace and if rates go down new issue bonds will have lower rates which means your existing bond will be more attractive because it has a higher interest rate. Make sense, good.</p>
<p>All of that is important because we are at zero interest, technically we are in the negative interest rate area because of quantitative easing and deflation which is bond friendly. However, this red hot economy we are in, sarcasm is my trademark, many people are expecting an interest rate hike to happen at some time this year and they are right. The Fed will raise interest rates in 2010 from 0-.25% to .25-.50%, wow. There is an outside chance that rates may go to 1% by the end of the year, but that is pure speculation right now because the economic data or ‘recovery’ is spotty at best. Even if rates go up it is relatively meaningless to lower grade corporate bonds because it does not hurt the spread as badly as it does for higher grade corporate bonds.</p>
<p>What I mean is newer higher grade corporate debt and treasury debt will have higher yields than current issues so existing paper will get slammed. However, existing lower quality corporate paper will do OK as we would need rates to go up substantially in order to really hurt the spread. I am not saying that there is no risk in lower quality corporate debt, defaults will be a huge issue moving forward, but I am also betting that the Fed’s liquidity programs end up not going away either. In fact, I would speculate that the Fed’s balance sheet will continue to expand over the next 12 months, perhaps double again if the FASB gets its way and the SIV’s have to be added to banks balance sheets right away, but again that is speculation right now.</p>
<p>If the Fed does actually raise interest rates this would be a bullish signal to the markets because it means we have real growth in the economy as well. This means lower grade paper would perform better, even if that growth is only at lower levels. However, higher interest rates will not be good for stocks, in my opinion, which is why I shifted focus to lower quality corporate bonds and to companies like Alteria. I would not expect, even if the economy is cruising, to see rates go much higher than 1-1.5% though because the Fed is stuck and it cannot move rates higher or to a meaningful level ever again. Regardless, corporate bonds of ‘BBB’ or ‘BB’ and selective ‘junk’ should do OK moving forward in the face of higher interest rates because of what I said previously. We will not see huge returns like that of 2009, but I think they will do better than stocks moving forward, plus you are first in line when the company folds, something to think about.</p>
<p>Why the Fed is stuck</p>
<p>What do I mean by that, a meaningful level? You see, the US is in a debt trap that we cannot escape from, it is simple mathematics. The Fed will not be raising rates to protect the dollar, they want a weak dollar that is for another post, they do not really care about inflation as they really want massive inflation but we cannot create it. The Fed will raise interest rates to keep politicians off of its back and that is about it, but raising rates higher than 1.5% presents problems that the US cannot handle.</p>
<p>Congress just had to raise the debt ceiling by a few hundred billion to fund the government for the next 6-8 weeks, unbelievable, and a more ‘permanent’ fix of raising the debt ceiling to about $14T will be coming soon.</p>
<p>I know this is no big deal to liberal democrats because, after all, under Bush we had to raise the debt ceiling 7 times and to them 8 or 9 wrongs make a right, but this is a major, major problem. Considering that raising the debt ceiling to $14T moves the total US debt to just about 100% of GDP marks a new low for the US and is the greatest amount of debt any country has ever attempted. What I am saying is that our current debt servicing costs with the Fed holding rates at 0% and using QE is about $500B+ a year and our average maturity of our debt is less than 10 years, again this is a first in all of the world’s history.</p>
<p>If the Fed moves rates up past 1.5% then that debt servicing cost will go up, dramatically, and there will be major consequences that the American people are not ready to face. Forget the debt ceiling, we will repeal that silly little rule, especially since we have to raise it almost every year anyhow. Within 7 years out debt servicing costs will begin to take its toll on the national budget squeezing out typically paid for items, like earmarks. Defense spending will have to decline immensely which is why the US remains a superpower even though we have a relatively small manned military compared to say a China, India or North Korea. The dollar will decline much further, it will anyhow as the latest rally, which I anticipated, is a head fake and was driven by Dubai, Greece, Fear, short covering and the selling will comeback harder and faster than you could ever imagine.</p>
<p>All of the senseless spending is coming home to roost, now. China is telling us where to stick it as there is not enough dollars to buy our debt, which is kind of funny in a sick way, and they said no to strengthening their Yuan which makes sense for them and smells of protectionism to me. When we demand a foreign country make their products more expensive in the US just so we can shrink out trade deficit thereby boosting our GDP and sell more products to them that is protectionism, straight up. I do not like to be so grime, but many of the things I foresaw and have been keeping to myself are coming out in the open. Things are not good, but hey as long as the market keeps going up, who cares right? Well, you will when it comes crashing down around you. Fixed income never looked so attractive right now.</p>
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		<title>Death of the dollar confirmed by Lazard</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/death-of-the-dollar-confirmed-by-lazard/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/death-of-the-dollar-confirmed-by-lazard/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Oct 2009 14:35:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar decline]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dump the dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[international holdings repriced out of dollars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lazard dumps the dollar]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>In a surprise move by Lazard Asset Management’s “The World Trust Fund” as dumped the USD as its primary currency in favor of the Sterling. Typically these funds trade in the USD, but the fund’s board apparently felt pressure from shareholders and investors to change its primary currency from the USD to the Sterling, one can imagine it is because of the recent slide of the USD from 89 to 75 in recent months impact the real return of the fund’s performance.</p>
<p>In the filing the fund stated that; “<em>In response to comments from a number of shareholders and potential investors in the Fund about the liquidity of the Fund’s shares, the Board, having consulted with the Fund’s brokers, Arbuthnot Securities, believes that having a larger number of shares in issue with a lower share price than at present and changing the currency in which the shares are traded from US dollars to Sterling, should assist in improving the marketability and liquidity of the Fund’s shares and support the attraction and retention of a diverse shareholder base.</em>”</p>
<p>That is a stunning statement to read and is a possible sign of the times as the USD is under pressure from every direction and in jeopardy of losing its reserve currency status. Lazard Asset Management is a rather prestigious firm and to make such a drastic move is shocking to say the least. Will other asset managers follow suit? More than likely, but only time will tell. However, if they do this will cause unneeded selling in the USD that could cause further declines given the large holdings of international mutual funds within the US.</p>
<p>This is something that I am keeping a close eye on and I suggest you do the same. As I have state before, much of your real return in the markets has been phantom returns because of the decline in the dollar and the same can be said about international returns as your assets are priced in the USD. If your international assets were priced in foreign currencies you would have had substantial returns this year, i.e. Brazil’s Real appreciated 32% against the USD, so if you invested in the BOVESPA in the Real you would have had an outstanding year. Of course, if the currency went the other way the opposite would be true, but given the fiscal largesse the US is under it is unlikely the USD will have any meaningful lang-term strength, apparently Lazard feels the same way.</p>
<p>Read the sory <a href="http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/home/permalink/?ndmViewId=news_view&amp;newsId=20091023005211&amp;newsLang=en" target="_blank">HERE</a></p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>In a surprise move by Lazard Asset Management’s “The World Trust Fund” as dumped the USD as its primary currency in favor of the Sterling. Typically these funds trade in the USD, but the fund’s board apparently felt pressure from shareholders and investors to change its primary currency from the USD to the Sterling, one can imagine it is because of the recent slide of the USD from 89 to 75 in recent months impact the real return of the fund’s performance.</p>
<p>In the filing the fund stated that; “<em>In response to comments from a number of shareholders and potential investors in the Fund about the liquidity of the Fund’s shares, the Board, having consulted with the Fund’s brokers, Arbuthnot Securities, believes that having a larger number of shares in issue with a lower share price than at present and changing the currency in which the shares are traded from US dollars to Sterling, should assist in improving the marketability and liquidity of the Fund’s shares and support the attraction and retention of a diverse shareholder base.</em>”</p>
<p>That is a stunning statement to read and is a possible sign of the times as the USD is under pressure from every direction and in jeopardy of losing its reserve currency status. Lazard Asset Management is a rather prestigious firm and to make such a drastic move is shocking to say the least. Will other asset managers follow suit? More than likely, but only time will tell. However, if they do this will cause unneeded selling in the USD that could cause further declines given the large holdings of international mutual funds within the US.</p>
<p>This is something that I am keeping a close eye on and I suggest you do the same. As I have state before, much of your real return in the markets has been phantom returns because of the decline in the dollar and the same can be said about international returns as your assets are priced in the USD. If your international assets were priced in foreign currencies you would have had substantial returns this year, i.e. Brazil’s Real appreciated 32% against the USD, so if you invested in the BOVESPA in the Real you would have had an outstanding year. Of course, if the currency went the other way the opposite would be true, but given the fiscal largesse the US is under it is unlikely the USD will have any meaningful lang-term strength, apparently Lazard feels the same way.</p>
<p>Read the sory <a href="http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/home/permalink/?ndmViewId=news_view&amp;newsId=20091023005211&amp;newsLang=en" target="_blank">HERE</a></p>
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		<title>USD Hitting New Lows</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/usd-hitting-new-lows/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/usd-hitting-new-lows/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2009 02:38:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[currency crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dxy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USD]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>There is no question that the cheap dollar has had its benefits for the US in the short-term. It has propelled earnings higher for most firms who deal internationally, narrowed the trade deficit and pushed stocks higher at the expense of our buying power. It has also pushed oil and commodity prices, mainly gold and other metals higher, as well as the dollar continues to touch new 52 week lows.</p>
<p>There is a point where the cheap dollar begins to lose its appeal and begins to concern traders and we have to wonder if we are there yet. After we breached the 76 level on the DXY I actually expected to see a rebound in the greenback simply because it is such a crowded trade and other countries have also printed vast amounts of their currencies as well. However, this seems to not be happening and we are at the point where the 75 handle is in jeopardy of being breached.</p>
<p>Frankly, at this rate we are heading right to the 2008 lows of the 71-72 levels and there is not much there to stop it from going lower. All I have to say is if you thought $147 barrel oil was bad, try $200 or more a barrel. Yes, it could get that bad and food prices could go up as well, even though we technically have deflation energy prices would and could create inflation. This would be catastrophic considering we have massive wage deflation and a huge unemployment problem right now. I am inclined to believe that the treasury or the Fed would intervene if we breached those levels, but my faith is not strong and given the trading programs and deep pockets of the banks, ironically, because of the Fed it could become a crisis.</p>
<p>The odds are against this happening, but it does exist. If this does happen it would also not be good for stocks as there is a difference between cheap money and worthless money. It is not like I am the first to warn of such a problem, Jim Rodgers warned of this type of currency crisis in the recent past and thought it could be either the USD or the Sterling, since we both started down the same destructive paths. I will say that I believe the next 2 weeks will be critical for the greenback and everyone should keep an eye on it for an indication of its direction. A steep move in either direction would mean a selloff in equities.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>There is no question that the cheap dollar has had its benefits for the US in the short-term. It has propelled earnings higher for most firms who deal internationally, narrowed the trade deficit and pushed stocks higher at the expense of our buying power. It has also pushed oil and commodity prices, mainly gold and other metals higher, as well as the dollar continues to touch new 52 week lows.</p>
<p>There is a point where the cheap dollar begins to lose its appeal and begins to concern traders and we have to wonder if we are there yet. After we breached the 76 level on the DXY I actually expected to see a rebound in the greenback simply because it is such a crowded trade and other countries have also printed vast amounts of their currencies as well. However, this seems to not be happening and we are at the point where the 75 handle is in jeopardy of being breached.</p>
<p>Frankly, at this rate we are heading right to the 2008 lows of the 71-72 levels and there is not much there to stop it from going lower. All I have to say is if you thought $147 barrel oil was bad, try $200 or more a barrel. Yes, it could get that bad and food prices could go up as well, even though we technically have deflation energy prices would and could create inflation. This would be catastrophic considering we have massive wage deflation and a huge unemployment problem right now. I am inclined to believe that the treasury or the Fed would intervene if we breached those levels, but my faith is not strong and given the trading programs and deep pockets of the banks, ironically, because of the Fed it could become a crisis.</p>
<p>The odds are against this happening, but it does exist. If this does happen it would also not be good for stocks as there is a difference between cheap money and worthless money. It is not like I am the first to warn of such a problem, Jim Rodgers warned of this type of currency crisis in the recent past and thought it could be either the USD or the Sterling, since we both started down the same destructive paths. I will say that I believe the next 2 weeks will be critical for the greenback and everyone should keep an eye on it for an indication of its direction. A steep move in either direction would mean a selloff in equities.</p>
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		<title>The Dollar Collapse: Is it Coming?</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-dollar-collapse-is-it-coming/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-dollar-collapse-is-it-coming/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2009 02:31:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar devaluation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[failed treasury auction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[october 25 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[october dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USD]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>The internet is riddled with rumors of the imminent collapse of the US dollar with time frames ranging from hours to months away. Now, there are legitimate concerns over the value of our currency and clearly the only thing that has buoyed its value is the entire globe has printed money on a colossal scale. However, we have certainly done more than most when it comes to printing currency with our super bailouts and mammoth stimulus projects.</p>
<p>The question is when will the dollar collapse? There is no real answer to this question and that is the beauty of free market capitalism. The one thing I can say is this, on the short-term I am probably more bullish than I am bearish on the US dollar simply because everyone and their grandmother is short the USD and if/when US equities head south people will run to the dollar for safety. Proof of this was last year when the markets crashed and we saw the DXY climb to the high 80’s. However, I don’t think we will see that type of rally again if we see the markets tank this time around because the fundamentals are far worse than they were last year and the dollar is far more diluted.</p>
<p>On a longer term basis I am very bearish on the dollar and I believe when we see the Chinese Yuan or RMB float or if we see the IMF SDR issued in greater quantities we could see the US dollar lose its reserve currency status. Those who think that this cannot happen need to learn their history as it happened to the British and many other nations in the past and the US is no different. Given our debt load and the current administration’s willingness to spend money like it’s going out of style, on top of our staggering existing liabilities, we are in serious trouble. Not only has that, but the rebalancing of central banks as of right now proved that they are not comfortable holding vast quantities of US dollars.</p>
<p>The question that remains is whether there will be an orderly or disorderly exit out of the dollar. This is a tough question for anyone to answer and there are a ton of variables to calculate in. For example, we have 2 wars that could escalate and possibly a third with, pick your axis of evil country, we could have another trillion dollar stimulus package, heath care reform could get passed and it could end up adding a trillion a year to the deficit, programmed trading could cause a precipitous drop in the currency and the list goes on. At this point in time I would say it is 51 to 49% in favor of a disorderly drop in the currency versus an orderly drop in the currency. Mainly because Ben thinks he can actually control the devaluation process, which no government in history has ever been able to do.</p>
<p>There is no doubt that this is a scary topic and that we should al be concerned about this issue on a longer term basis. Do I think we need to worry about this happening this month or year? No. However, this could happen within a 12 month period of time very easily, but again, I think it is unlikely. We know that the name of the game is supposed to be a slow devaluation of the currency, but, as I just said, no country has ever been able to actually control the devaluation process and with computerized trading this is more dangerous than ever. A few things need to happen before we see a total failure of the currency and as of right now these events are not happening.</p>
<p>For example, I often talk about the treasury bubble of the late 1970’s when the US suffered from inflation and dollar devaluation. There was a buying spree and a bubble in long-term treasuries and when Volker became the Fed Chairman he was charged with stomping out inflation. He did not know there was a bubble and let the market raise rates for him, which was odd, but it worked. Unfortunately, it basically almost put out of business most of the primary government bond dealers and led to credit controls. What it did was save the currency and stopped inflation cold, along with economic growth.</p>
<p>Many people familiar with that story seem to think we are close to that scenario today, effectively failed treasury auctions, which is not true. We have a long way to go and many more steps to go before that happens, but those steps could come fast and furious. Unlike the late 1970’s the dollar is falling a lot faster now than it did then, but the buying in the treasury market is a lot more fierce now and on the shorter end of the yield curve, unlike then when we saw it on the longer end of the curve. So, we will see what happens, but things move so fast in today’s market anything is possible and this boom bust economy cyclical period is getting shorter and much more severe. The signs are coming for a currency crisis, but not in the immediate future.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>The internet is riddled with rumors of the imminent collapse of the US dollar with time frames ranging from hours to months away. Now, there are legitimate concerns over the value of our currency and clearly the only thing that has buoyed its value is the entire globe has printed money on a colossal scale. However, we have certainly done more than most when it comes to printing currency with our super bailouts and mammoth stimulus projects.</p>
<p>The question is when will the dollar collapse? There is no real answer to this question and that is the beauty of free market capitalism. The one thing I can say is this, on the short-term I am probably more bullish than I am bearish on the US dollar simply because everyone and their grandmother is short the USD and if/when US equities head south people will run to the dollar for safety. Proof of this was last year when the markets crashed and we saw the DXY climb to the high 80’s. However, I don’t think we will see that type of rally again if we see the markets tank this time around because the fundamentals are far worse than they were last year and the dollar is far more diluted.</p>
<p>On a longer term basis I am very bearish on the dollar and I believe when we see the Chinese Yuan or RMB float or if we see the IMF SDR issued in greater quantities we could see the US dollar lose its reserve currency status. Those who think that this cannot happen need to learn their history as it happened to the British and many other nations in the past and the US is no different. Given our debt load and the current administration’s willingness to spend money like it’s going out of style, on top of our staggering existing liabilities, we are in serious trouble. Not only has that, but the rebalancing of central banks as of right now proved that they are not comfortable holding vast quantities of US dollars.</p>
<p>The question that remains is whether there will be an orderly or disorderly exit out of the dollar. This is a tough question for anyone to answer and there are a ton of variables to calculate in. For example, we have 2 wars that could escalate and possibly a third with, pick your axis of evil country, we could have another trillion dollar stimulus package, heath care reform could get passed and it could end up adding a trillion a year to the deficit, programmed trading could cause a precipitous drop in the currency and the list goes on. At this point in time I would say it is 51 to 49% in favor of a disorderly drop in the currency versus an orderly drop in the currency. Mainly because Ben thinks he can actually control the devaluation process, which no government in history has ever been able to do.</p>
<p>There is no doubt that this is a scary topic and that we should al be concerned about this issue on a longer term basis. Do I think we need to worry about this happening this month or year? No. However, this could happen within a 12 month period of time very easily, but again, I think it is unlikely. We know that the name of the game is supposed to be a slow devaluation of the currency, but, as I just said, no country has ever been able to actually control the devaluation process and with computerized trading this is more dangerous than ever. A few things need to happen before we see a total failure of the currency and as of right now these events are not happening.</p>
<p>For example, I often talk about the treasury bubble of the late 1970’s when the US suffered from inflation and dollar devaluation. There was a buying spree and a bubble in long-term treasuries and when Volker became the Fed Chairman he was charged with stomping out inflation. He did not know there was a bubble and let the market raise rates for him, which was odd, but it worked. Unfortunately, it basically almost put out of business most of the primary government bond dealers and led to credit controls. What it did was save the currency and stopped inflation cold, along with economic growth.</p>
<p>Many people familiar with that story seem to think we are close to that scenario today, effectively failed treasury auctions, which is not true. We have a long way to go and many more steps to go before that happens, but those steps could come fast and furious. Unlike the late 1970’s the dollar is falling a lot faster now than it did then, but the buying in the treasury market is a lot more fierce now and on the shorter end of the yield curve, unlike then when we saw it on the longer end of the curve. So, we will see what happens, but things move so fast in today’s market anything is possible and this boom bust economy cyclical period is getting shorter and much more severe. The signs are coming for a currency crisis, but not in the immediate future.</p>
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		<title>The Fed’s not so Secret Plan</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-fed%e2%80%99s-not-so-secret-plan/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/the-fed%e2%80%99s-not-so-secret-plan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 16:08:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar devaluation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[federal reserve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the fed]]></category>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>A lot is made of the dollar’s value lately, even I make a big deal over it, and we should be concerned, but I believe it is an ego thing more than a reality thing. It is tough to see the most powerful nation in the world currency lose its value, but I actually believe this may be the goal of the Federal Reserve and the current administration. Now bear with my before you tune me out as a lunatic.</p>
<p>We owe a lot of money, mostly in unfunded liabilities, and that number varies wildly between $55T and $77T. Those numbers include Social Security, Medicare and, of course, our National Debt. No matter how we cut it we cannot pay that amount off, even if we raised taxes to the moon, which would stifle growth, and we certainly cannot grow our way out of this mess. The logical way out is to devalue our currency which makes perfect sense, albeit severely painful and extremely unfair to the population.</p>
<p>By devaluing the currency we are essentially inflating our way out of debt which is dishonest at best, but is considered “legitimate” from a political prospective because they are not officially raising taxes. Of course, those Americans who do not prepare by buying things that react to dollar devaluation, i.e. precious metals, will get hurt badly as their savings will be devastated it is probably the only feasible way to save face long-term. Worst of all, we know it is coming as the Fed as all but admitted that this is the plan, as in Ben’s recent Congressional testimony he stated that the declining dollar is not an immediate problem, but a long-term issue.</p>
<p>I am not advocating this method, just saying that it makes logical sense since our political structure lacks a backbone to make tough decisions or face the facts of our situation. Some potential benefits would be improved manufacturing as countries like China, after they freely float their currency, would likely become net importers instead of exporters given their size and growing wealth. The same goes for other BRIC countries as well as they continue to grow. This is all hypothetical at this point in time, but it does look like a reality as the Fed has no real plan on defending the dollar.</p>
<p>One of the major problems with this plan is if the devaluation process goes out of control of the powers that be. Meaning the markets take control and take action prematurely or over devalue the currency. If that were to happen, then the consequences could be severe, but whether it is controlled or uncontrolled it is sure to be ugly for those who are unprepared as we will see actions taken that will be unusual. Such as price controls, which never work, merchants forced to accept dollars and things of that nature. This may be a bit tin foil hat, but there are several people much smarter than I that suggest that the dollar will depreciate by 50% over the next 14 years because, they say, we cannot afford the liabilities we have. They state we can afford some $30T, but not the $55T or so we have to pay for or made promises on.</p>
<p>Based on what the experts have said and what the Chairman has said it is safe to draw your own conclusions, but I believe I am on the right path of dollar devaluation as an official, yet unofficial, policy. It will be ugly, but it may be necessary for America to dig itself out of the hole that we are in. The question you have to ask yourself is how did we get here? The answer is, the politicians you keep electing cycle after cycle is the reason. Until you are willing to face reality and break the cycle of electing the people who got us here we will be doomed to face a future of financial uncertainty.</p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>A lot is made of the dollar’s value lately, even I make a big deal over it, and we should be concerned, but I believe it is an ego thing more than a reality thing. It is tough to see the most powerful nation in the world currency lose its value, but I actually believe this may be the goal of the Federal Reserve and the current administration. Now bear with my before you tune me out as a lunatic.</p>
<p>We owe a lot of money, mostly in unfunded liabilities, and that number varies wildly between $55T and $77T. Those numbers include Social Security, Medicare and, of course, our National Debt. No matter how we cut it we cannot pay that amount off, even if we raised taxes to the moon, which would stifle growth, and we certainly cannot grow our way out of this mess. The logical way out is to devalue our currency which makes perfect sense, albeit severely painful and extremely unfair to the population.</p>
<p>By devaluing the currency we are essentially inflating our way out of debt which is dishonest at best, but is considered “legitimate” from a political prospective because they are not officially raising taxes. Of course, those Americans who do not prepare by buying things that react to dollar devaluation, i.e. precious metals, will get hurt badly as their savings will be devastated it is probably the only feasible way to save face long-term. Worst of all, we know it is coming as the Fed as all but admitted that this is the plan, as in Ben’s recent Congressional testimony he stated that the declining dollar is not an immediate problem, but a long-term issue.</p>
<p>I am not advocating this method, just saying that it makes logical sense since our political structure lacks a backbone to make tough decisions or face the facts of our situation. Some potential benefits would be improved manufacturing as countries like China, after they freely float their currency, would likely become net importers instead of exporters given their size and growing wealth. The same goes for other BRIC countries as well as they continue to grow. This is all hypothetical at this point in time, but it does look like a reality as the Fed has no real plan on defending the dollar.</p>
<p>One of the major problems with this plan is if the devaluation process goes out of control of the powers that be. Meaning the markets take control and take action prematurely or over devalue the currency. If that were to happen, then the consequences could be severe, but whether it is controlled or uncontrolled it is sure to be ugly for those who are unprepared as we will see actions taken that will be unusual. Such as price controls, which never work, merchants forced to accept dollars and things of that nature. This may be a bit tin foil hat, but there are several people much smarter than I that suggest that the dollar will depreciate by 50% over the next 14 years because, they say, we cannot afford the liabilities we have. They state we can afford some $30T, but not the $55T or so we have to pay for or made promises on.</p>
<p>Based on what the experts have said and what the Chairman has said it is safe to draw your own conclusions, but I believe I am on the right path of dollar devaluation as an official, yet unofficial, policy. It will be ugly, but it may be necessary for America to dig itself out of the hole that we are in. The question you have to ask yourself is how did we get here? The answer is, the politicians you keep electing cycle after cycle is the reason. Until you are willing to face reality and break the cycle of electing the people who got us here we will be doomed to face a future of financial uncertainty.</p>
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		<title>October 25th, The Day of Doom…</title>
		<link>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/october-25th-the-day-of-doom%e2%80%a6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.annuityiq.com/blog/main/october-25th-the-day-of-doom%e2%80%a6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Oct 2009 14:09:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ray</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[currencies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dxy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[october 25 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[palladium]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[platinum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[system collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USD]]></category>

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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>I have been reading this all over the internet over the past couple of days mostly from folks who receive the Webbot Prediction alert, or whatever it is called. Essentially, this program scans the internet for predictions of the future based on some algorithmic method. It was first developed in the 1990’s to find hot stocks, but then was used for such useful things as finding out the end of the world.</p>
<p>Now, do I believe such predictions? No. Basically, the creator even says its accuracy is as about as good as flipping a coin, so I guess we are all just as good as this multimillion dollar program if we just have a mere quarter in our pocket. Could something happen on October 25, 2009? Sure, who knows. Certainly the news today is not encouraging and the DXY is in dangerous territory again, but a complete collapse is not really likely in the near-term. There is simply too much liquidity in the market right now.</p>
<p>However, the value of that liquidity is a completely different question and issue. The value of the USD can fall to zero in one tick, we know that to be a fact, but even that is unlikely. As stated before, I believe we are in more danger of a bank run than a collapse of the currency in the near-term, but even that seems to have sorted itself out. In fact, what has saved all the currencies of the world, including the USD, is the fact that they all printed their way out of this mess almost equally debasing their own currencies. Even though that is a true statement it is also true that the US is definitely guilty of printing more money than most other countries and it is also true that we have poor leadership and dismal fiscal policies which is why the USD is the poster child of a weak currency.</p>
<p>Super power or not, we are in the last throws of glory days thanks to decades of selfishness and political indifference to fiscal sensibility. You cannot borrow and spend your way to prosperity, regardless of what Ben Bernanke, Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi and Obama thinks. This means that we will eventually suffer the decay of currency collapse, perhaps “soon” and that depends on your definition of soon, but it is unlikely on October 25, 2009.</p>
<p>I would encourage you to be prepared for currency devaluation, because we are experiencing it now in a very small way, by investing in hard assets such as gold, silver, palladium, and platinum. I believe that silver and palladium represent the best value at this time, silver is at $17 when gold just made a fresh high, the last time gold was at $1030 silver was at $20/oz. Palladium could easily be trading higher given the green push we are in and the rarity of the metal. Either way, if you won it and things do get worse and the headlines are true, you will have your wealth preserved and protected. </p>
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<?php if (function_exists('ams_listmenu')) { ams_listmenu(); } ?><p>I have been reading this all over the internet over the past couple of days mostly from folks who receive the Webbot Prediction alert, or whatever it is called. Essentially, this program scans the internet for predictions of the future based on some algorithmic method. It was first developed in the 1990’s to find hot stocks, but then was used for such useful things as finding out the end of the world.</p>
<p>Now, do I believe such predictions? No. Basically, the creator even says its accuracy is as about as good as flipping a coin, so I guess we are all just as good as this multimillion dollar program if we just have a mere quarter in our pocket. Could something happen on October 25, 2009? Sure, who knows. Certainly the news today is not encouraging and the DXY is in dangerous territory again, but a complete collapse is not really likely in the near-term. There is simply too much liquidity in the market right now.</p>
<p>However, the value of that liquidity is a completely different question and issue. The value of the USD can fall to zero in one tick, we know that to be a fact, but even that is unlikely. As stated before, I believe we are in more danger of a bank run than a collapse of the currency in the near-term, but even that seems to have sorted itself out. In fact, what has saved all the currencies of the world, including the USD, is the fact that they all printed their way out of this mess almost equally debasing their own currencies. Even though that is a true statement it is also true that the US is definitely guilty of printing more money than most other countries and it is also true that we have poor leadership and dismal fiscal policies which is why the USD is the poster child of a weak currency.</p>
<p>Super power or not, we are in the last throws of glory days thanks to decades of selfishness and political indifference to fiscal sensibility. You cannot borrow and spend your way to prosperity, regardless of what Ben Bernanke, Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi and Obama thinks. This means that we will eventually suffer the decay of currency collapse, perhaps “soon” and that depends on your definition of soon, but it is unlikely on October 25, 2009.</p>
<p>I would encourage you to be prepared for currency devaluation, because we are experiencing it now in a very small way, by investing in hard assets such as gold, silver, palladium, and platinum. I believe that silver and palladium represent the best value at this time, silver is at $17 when gold just made a fresh high, the last time gold was at $1030 silver was at $20/oz. Palladium could easily be trading higher given the green push we are in and the rarity of the metal. Either way, if you won it and things do get worse and the headlines are true, you will have your wealth preserved and protected. </p>
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