Posted by Ray on June 6, 2011 under Main |
I suppose it was back in the late fall and reiterated again in mid-winter that I believed the market would simply go up for no real reason until QE2 ended and then it would begin to decline as liquidity ended. It looks as though I was somewhat accurate in that prediction although you did not have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out unless you were a permabull with your blinders on and absolute faith in the government and the Fed in which case please move along.
The Fed knew the same thing I and many others did and that is why at the last meeting they emphasized that they would continue to reinvest maturing paper and interest from the existing portfolio, kind of a QE infinity if you will, but on a small scale. I do believe they will let QE2 go and not announce anything new until the fall when they see the economy really weaken. I think a couple months of sub 100K jobs reports, with a healthy BLS birth/death adjustment, along with softening other indicators such as the PMI and so forth the Fed will get the point and step in with $1T in QE since $600B did not work.
That is how it works as one QE is ineffective the next one gets bigger. The really unfortunate part is that Japan has done the same thing and it did not work but there is a big difference between the US and Japan, we are the reserve currency and they aren’t. In other words, Japan could print all they wanted because their citizens bought their own debt and the world settled trades in dollars. However, the US is limited in what they can really do in QE because as the value of the dollar sinks, and we really had a nice scare a week or so ago, the world will pick a new reserve currency on its own. You know how that story ends.
Ben knows this and he knows that his QE options are limited and he can probably only get away with 1 more so it will be big, it has to be. If that one does not work and spur growth, well, the Fed is done and completely out of bullets in a traditional sense. We would see some new things coming to the table like in 2008 with all the new facilities and such, but I have no idea what they will be or what they will look like since we do not know how things will play out.
What I do know is that we should get a nice bounce in the dollar here sending commodities lower for a bit. This will give Ben and Washington a little relief and you an opportunity to buy, buy, buy every commodity you like. I love silver, still, wheat, gold, palladium, soybeans and corn (unless the subsidy is pulled). If those go on sale buy them either directly or via the growers or agricultural ETF’s.
In the mean time enjoy watching Ben sweat it out as he will not have answers for the weakness in the economy or the weakness is ‘transitory’ which is the longest transitory period I have ever seen. Kind of like this recovery it is the longest start of a recovery ever as it gains steam and loses steam every other week. Good luck.

Subscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
LS Blogs
Sphere: Related Content
Tags: ben, BLS, commodities, Economy, gold, inflation, Japan, liquidity, Markets, pmi, qe, reserve currency, silver, the dollar, the fed, wheat
Posted by Ray on March 16, 2011 under Main |
I rarely wear my beliefs on my sleeve and I do not mean to start doing so now, but I have been doing a lot of thinking and praying for the people in Japan. The images we are seeing and the reports we are bombarded with are horrifying to say the least. It also proves that we are all interconnected and what happens abroad does indeed impact us here in the US, even earthquakes and tsunamis. I hope that all who read this will take a minute to at least think a few kind thoughts of well being for the people if not outright say a prayer, donations to the Red Cross would not hurt either.
With all that said it is shameful for many of the pundits to hop in the TV and talk about how good this tragedy is for the Japanese economy. It is not a good thing and it will not bring prosperity to anyone let alone to the US. First and foremost, Japan likes to keep its business local so I can assure you Caterpillar will not win out on contracts versus its local competitors. Over and above that this horrible event will create a huge drag on global GDP as the number 3 player is out of the game and who knows how the nuclear situation will turn out. That means Apple should have saved its $200 on its press release announcing its plans on postponing the launch of the iPad 2 in Japan since everyone knew that already and, frankly, who really cares about the iPad launch in Japan when the locals are being exposed to radiation.
With the number 3 player out of the game the economy in the US, China and the world will slow, I am sure of this. It also means QE 3 is a given and the next one will be a fairly sizable easing program. I am so sure about more QE because the Japanese will have to sell treasuries at some point to cover the rebuilding effort. Their central bank have added an astounding 55 trillion Yen, $700B USD, of extra liquidity, but not even the Japanese can print their way out of this thing. They will have to sell and there is no one to pick up the slack for US treasuries right now, to the level of selling that will come. On top of that I believe Japan selling may be the trigger for China to unload some holdings as well, we will see about that. The Fed is the only one around to pick up the slack and give the US Treasury interest free loans, since earnings must be repaid to the treasury department.
Even before this tragedy I was perplexed about the Fed’s QE 2 program. It was not needed, in my opinion, as rates were low already and capital was flowing again. The only reason I could see QE 2 being needed for was to prop up the stock market and by Bernanke’s own admission that is what it did since bond yields have only gone north since the start of the program, the opposite of what Ben wanted to happen. Besides the markets needing a boost the only other reason I could think of for this type of easing program was that the end of the line was here. What I mean is that the Fed may have known that the market was going to want higher interest rates from the US since we have piled on the debt in the last few years.
Basic mathematics tells you that the US cannot handle higher debt servicing costs which is why the treasury rolled out over 50% of our debt to mature in less than 7 years. On top of that every 1% increase in debt servicing costs adds about $120B a year to the budget which is also known as the debt death spiral. However, with QE 2 the Fed can jump in and buy up this higher yielding paper and kick back 95% of the interest back to the treasury department, almost an interest free loan, which explains why the Fed is monetizing, sorry, buying just issued higher yielding paper. This signals to me that the US government may have reached a breaking point in its debt load.
I am not saying the US cannot issue more debt, not at all, what I am saying is people will want higher rates to hold the paper. No one believes that there is no inflation out there and the only time we see any interest is when things really hit the fan like right now. Think back a couple of weeks ago when the Middle East was revolting treasuries sis nothing and the dollar sank. Compare that to now treasuries are going up but only on the short end of the curve and the dollar, what you really should be watching, is not doing well at all. It is very odd because as treasuries rally the dollar should be seeing some decent strength and here we are sitting below 77 on the DXY still.
This all signals trouble to me as we have seen many revolutions combined with a major economy stopped due to a tragedy and the only thing going up is the short end of the treasury curve. The dollar is not the safe haven it once was and I am not sure what is anymore. I believe gold and silver offer a better alternative than the dollar at this point, but there is volatility there as well. At the end of the day though, precious metals are still the place I would rather be as I see no end in sight for easing and I see higher inflation. I believe this is the end of the line and the Fed has no choice but to monetize more debt. The sad thing about all this is that rates will continue to climb anyhow because it is just too risky to loan money to the US government at this stage of the game.

Subscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
LS Blogs
Sphere: Related Content
Tags: earthquakes, federal reserve, global gdp, horrible event, ipad, Japan, Japanese economy, liquidity, nuclear situation, pundits, qe, rebuilding effort, red cross, the fed, treasuries, Yen
Posted by Ray on February 21, 2011 under Main |
We have witnessed the Middle East go up in flames and the troubles in Europe start to percolate again, but the dollar is not doing anything. I am only surprised that it is happening so soon, I thought there was more time. While I highly doubt that anyone will rush back into the greenback it could happen. The world’s faith in the US has been shaken by our inability to seriously discuss our deficit and debt problems. A perfect example is the latest round of talks encompasses cutting some tens of billions of dollars from a mere 12% of our total budget leaving the entitlements and military spending off the table, is it any wonder why no one trusts us to seriously address our debt issues?
If people are not buying dollars what are they buying? Gold and silver. The prices do not lie and both metals have moved significantly over the past few weeks as the Middle East began to demand regime changes. All the while the USD has basically treaded water or moved slightly down. Not only does the lack of interest coincide with the latest budget battle but it also coincides with the fact that we are right in the middle of QE2 which was frowned upon by most nations. The double whammy of our inability to seriously deal with our debt and our very own central bank monetizing large amounts of our debt, over mythical low inflation figures I might add, makes other countries stop and think about how to allocate their assets during times of uncertainty.
Overall the US total debt and monetary policy is also inflationary which makes an inflation protected asset more attractive than UST’s and dollars. Why would investors choose gold and silver over TIPS? Because no one trusts the government to actually track inflation honestly which is why you are seeing lower inflation expectations in TIP yields right now. Again, gold and silver fit the bill as an alternative as a flight to safety. Granted, gold is considered safer than silver, but lately silver has picked up more prestige and I believe silver will make some spectacular moves in the near future. In other words, gold has likely picked up more of the safe haven assets than silver but it is clear that both metals have outperformed the dollar and may be replacing the dollar until something else comes along.
So, is the dollar dead? I think it is one its way if we do not address our debt and annual deficits this year. The deficits are so bad, so outrageous and so dangerous that ignoring them for one more year may be devastating. Our total national debt, officially, if 100% of GDP and our unfunded liabilities is tens of trillions of dollars… we got serious problems. Adding insult to injury is the whole QE situation which is debt monetization no matter how you slice it. This shows weakness and is highly inflationary which will drive foreign investors away from the USD. Why would you buy an asset today that you know will be worth less in the future? You wouldn’t and either will other countries when it comes to USD’s.
The fact that we have had a few governments get toppled and a few more on the way in the most volatile region in the world and the dollar has not rallied is kind of scary. Instead we have seen commodities continue to rally, stocks (I guess the only source of our economic success) go straight up, and the dollar trend a bit lower. In the meantime gold and silver are being treated as currencies and when turmoil kicks up they go up in value. I have known for a long time that the dollar is in trouble and would blow up because we have a lack of leadership in Washington who do not want to make hard choices and the Federal Reserve who seemingly has lost its mind and has missed every major issue with our economy over the last 10 years who has decided to monetize our debt.
This will end with high inflation and the fact that the Fed disagrees is exactly why you should agree with me. Gold and silver make sense, own them physically, along with other soft commodities. I fear that the dollar has seen its best days and while I do not know exactly what will come in the longer term I do know it will not be pretty. I think you will know who to blame by then, I hope at least.

Subscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
LS Blogs
Sphere: Related Content
Tags: debt issues, debt problems, dollar is dead, federal reserve, gold and silver, greenback, hyperinflation, inflation, inflation expectations, inflation figures, metals, middle east, monetary policy, qe2, the fed, treasuries, uncertainty, USD
Posted by Ray on November 4, 2010 under Main |
There have been lots of things happening in the silver market lately all of which reinforce my bull case for being long. Long time readers know I have been pounding the table of silver for the better part of 2 years now. The one aspect of the market that I have concentrated on is the supply/demand side of the equation. It stands to reason that with some 2 billion souls entering the middle class they will all want cell phones and other modern toys. All of these toys involve silver to some extent in their production.
The supply of silver is not unlimited and very few miners solely look for the shiny metal, it is typically a byproduct of copper and gold mines. Silver is also not recycled the way many other metals are which means it is used once and never again and that is unlike many other metals that are usually recycled. I believe that the reason people believed silver had an unlimited supply is because it was so cheap, but now we find out, I have known for awhile, that the prices were manipulated by 2 big banks, HSBC and JPM. This is not conspiracy talk anymore as 2 lawsuits have been filed and Bart Chilton has admitted the manipulation.
Moving forward I believe we will continue to see higher prices as the shorts cover in the silver market. I also think that COMEX does not have enough supply to meet physical demand for the metal if investors want to take possession, which they will eventually. That means there may not be enough silver at any price to meet demand. It sounds unbelievable, but it could happen. I would not bet the farm on the COMEX thing being the driver, but I would bet the farm on Asia and India driving demand well into the future.
The other very obvious factor in the recent rise in silver prices is the dollar. In the US we have to ask if silver is really climbing or is the dollar just tanking so hard making it more expensive to us. Frankly, it is both things happening at once which should worry my fellow dollar bulls out there. I think the dollar will break its all-time low in the near future thanks to Mr. Bernanke. You cannot print as much money as you want without repercussions and the repercussions of massive printing are the dollar losing much of its value. Out of everything happening out there right now the dollar’s slide is what scares me the most and it should scare you too.
Silver is the barometer of inflation, in my book at least, and the rise in price is signaling trouble ahead. Everyone believes the dollar will always be there in its current form and nothing like Zimbabwe or Argentina can happen in the good ole US of A, but bad things can and do happen here all the time and with an obscene monetary policy that Brazil, Russia, China and now Germany are criticizing bad things are sure to happen here. I would be a buyer of silver not just to profit from it, but to hedge my wealth with it. That means owning it physically, not in a brokerage account or in storage somewhere, but where I can see it. If the dollar breaks its all-time low things may get ugly and as we buy up our locally produced products we will see what the inflationary pressure is like when we are forced to buy, suddenly, very expensive Chinese goods.
Doom and gloom you are thinking, maybe, but I prefer to say this is a realistic situation now. I know I would rather be prepared instead of just hoping things will work out. In my experience hope is a wonderful thing, but hope isn’t reality. Reality is that thing outside your window and our reality may just turn into a nightmare and suddenly moving from the city to the country, farmland specifically, with a shot gun and you silver and gold hoard may suddenly make sense. After all, this is the advice some hedge fund managers gave their wealthier clients in recent years.
Buy silver on any dip and I am sure that in 5 years, or much sooner, you will be extremely happy. As for equities, well, if you think these gains are real you are delusional. Ben is simply propping up prices to make people think they are wealthy, but if the dollar keeps falling at some point the rise in equity prices will not offset the loss of purchasing power of your dollars, just ask any Zimbabwean about that. They had the best performing market over the last 10 years, but would you be holding their currency? I think not. Silver, gold or other commodities are your hedge, not stocks and not TIPS.

Subscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
LS Blogs
Sphere: Related Content
Tags: chilton, comex, conspiracy, dollar collapse, gold mines, inflation, manipulation, metals, middle class, miners, shiny metal, silver market, silver prices, the dollar, the fed, USD
Posted by Ray on November 3, 2010 under Main |
The long awaited decision was announced today by the Fed, $600B in fresh money printing followed by continued reinvestment of proceeds from its first round of easing. This equals about $900B in total QE by our monetary masters. Speculation is rampant in the media about its success or how it will be an epic failure. The funny thing is, no one really knows what will actually happen. Personally, I am still perplexed as to why they are doing it at all, it is stupid.
The Fed is also completely out of ammo which many have stated, myself included, and all they have is the printing press. I want to stress something here and you should pay attention, this whole QE thing is experimental and no country that has ever tried has succeeded. Therefore, I have a predetermined outcome, but at the end of the day you or I have zero idea if it will work. I will lay out a case for its failure based on what I know. I am sure many will disagree and that is fine, but in time one of us will be right.
The economy has a demand problem, not a liquidity problem. Over 2 years ago we had a massive liquidity problem which is why Lehman failed, but now the Fed has dumped trillions into the system along with the federal government. All of that money dumping ended the liquidity crisis and now banks, supposedly, have excess reserves just sitting at the Fed waiting to be loaned out to that sucker who wants to pay 15% interest on money the bank got for free in order to buy that new LED flat screen TV that is just calling his or her name. The problem is the sucker doesn’t want to buy that TV because he doesn’t know if he will have a job next week or is worried about retirement, etc.
We have a demand problem, not a money shortage. I say that with a grain of salt because money velocity is dropping which technically means there are dollar shortages. However, I contend that that dollar shortage is because people are paying off debt to simply saving their money somewhere 9under the mattress??). Regardless of the reason no one wants to buy big ticket items and I do not blame them. After all we got here because of excess debt and no one wants to leverage up to buy senseless items. No amount of QE will change this, sorry, but it won’t. Job security and rising wages will create demand, but that is not happening either. Demand is stuck where it is, weak.
The Fed knows this and they know QE will not change this so why did they do it? I really do not know. Sure, everyone has their own reasons for it, but at the end of the day it is all speculation. I know what they are trying to do, create wage inflation and inflation in general, which they will do eventually, but by their chosen path, QE, they are creating the worst possible outcome, inflation without wage inflation. Stop laughing, it can happen. How you may ask, simple dollar devaluation is inflation, but dollar devaluation does not guarantee wage growth. The only way to get wage growth is through demand with inflation, what the Fed did will not do this. Frankly, everyone should be terrified of Mr. Bernanke and he should be punished for lying to Congress when he said he would not monetize the debt, he is.
I can rattle off all sorts of conspiracy theories as to why the Fed is doing QE, but they are too laughable to mention. I do think one thing makes sense, it is a back door bailout of the banking system, again. There is a little issue I am sure you are familiar with, the foreclosure crisis, and this crisis is a huge, enormous, problem. If you are a bondholder it is one thing to have a borrower default on the debt, the cash flow ends and you get to take the collateral, a home in this case, to recover your capital. However, this whole chain of custody issue, there is no legal remedy for it and all those pundits who claim that this is no big deal are either stupid or scared to admit the truth, means that there is no collateral to collect now. Essentially the borrower can keep the house and screw the lender if the paperwork is messed up, how would you like to own a MBS now? Your bonds are worthless… or are they?
If there was fraud in the loan, as we are now seeing, the bondholder can put back the bond and be repaid their original capital. This is the problem that is starting to rear its ugly head, the put back, and it could be huge. Think about all the paper the banks would have to buy back and now think of all the synthetic derivatives that were written against that bond. What a mess. A big costly web of a mess. I do not know how big the problem can be, but I think part of the QE might help these banks by either allowing the bank to front run the bonds the Fed is buying or by infusing the bank with capital.
It doesn’t matter really, but I think that was one of the reasons for QE2. We have been told for over a year now how great things are now and we are in a recovery so why do QE at all? We have inflation, it is not sky high, but it is there in the PPI and the CPI is still positive. If the CPI were negative I would say we have deflation, but it isn’t and at best we had disinflation which does not justify such a crazy move as monetizing almost a trillion dollars in paper. The Fed sees that no real recovery has happened and maybe that is the reason for the latest round of easing. Regardless, the banks are going to benefit from this, remember the Fed asked them how much they should buy from them.
I stated about a year ago that we can have inflation without wage inflation. We are about to see if that once crazy theory of mine is right. The Fed has now monetized trillion’s in debt and I can say, with history on my side, this has never ended well for any country who has ventured down this path. America is a special place because of our freedoms, but we are not so special that math and history doesn’t pertain to us. All of the people warning about the Fed’s insane moves might be right and the sky very well might be falling. Heck, if things were as great as we have been told over the past few months by the talking heads and our politicians, who no one believes, why are we even having this conversation? Things are not well and I fear we may be in the calm before a very bad storm like we have never seen before.

Subscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
LS Blogs
Sphere: Related Content
Tags: bernanke, liquidity crisis, liquidity problem, money printing, money velocity, printing press, qe, speculation, sucker, the dollar, the fed, trillions, USD