"As a technician, I feel that there are few analysts that offer value for me, but you do. Your work on Gold ratios has helped my analysis greatly." --Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT (The Daily Gold) 4.9.10

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Gold/Euro - Cup & Handle (continuation pattern)

From a subscriber this morning:

"Hello Gary, as a reader from Germany I appreciate your work a lot because we are a country without precious metals companies, experience and therefore little interest in this complex. I live in the Euro-Zone and therefore I would be very much interested in your view about Gold measured in Euro. Thank you very much in advance, --A"

Well, thank you very much 'A'. Had you not mailed this morning, I would not have taken a look at this compelling picture of gold-euro today. Aside from what I consider to be bullish fundamentals for gold in all major currencies, even as gold takes a much needed breather in USD, it looks technically compelling in Uncle Buck's chief competition in the toilet paper sweepstakes, the euro.

The chart shows a textbook Cup & Handle, complete with the right side high of late November, '09 having exceeded the February, '09 high. I always like to see the right side (most recent) higher then the left (previous high) as this implies momentum and allows for a higher measured target, which in this case would be around 10 if and when the handle breaks consolidation to the upside. I say if because we do not try to predict, but rather show the probabilities. The probabilities, both fundamentally and technically say 'GOLD GOING WELL HIGHER IN EURO'.




















As a side note to all subscribers, if there is anything in your particular area of interest you would like to see highlighted in NFTRH, let me know and I'll at least try to see if it can work with the letter, or at least with the blog. I can get a little US-centric after all, from my vantage point within the belly of the Ponzi finance beast.

NFTRH70 Out Now

Last week saw a bit of a draw down on the NFTRH portfolios. Nothing major mind you, but just enough to sharpen my focus. Well, actually the focus is coming from the likelihood that NFTRH's long awaited 'deflation impulse' scenario is finally coming in.

Short term it is time to preserve capital. Intermediate term it is time to take advantage once again of the misperceptions game that is just starting to get cranked up among the herd. See the fright mask over there to the left (w/ all due respect and affection :-)? Well, as I wrote a while back, it is time for the herd to get a heaping helping of Robert Prechter. Or as written last week on the blog:

"Prechter must be right from time to time. It is a law of the current system. Prechter is a lever, but while he is being pulled, a lot of destruction can happen in a short amount of time."

Hope '09 has been a long, drawn out affair. Everybody is right as a construct floats along with an upward bias, as newsletters, investment managers, Wall St. strategists and individual investors all go red-line bullish. But when long term treasury rates are also at the red line, it is time to don the mask and scare the crap out of these people. From pain comes opportunity.

NFTRH70 out now.

Enjoy the rest of your weekend.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

NFTRH 1 Year Ago - Stock Market

One year ago, the NFTRH market stance was forced back into caution mode as the 'early warning' EMA 20 and SMA 50 were violated yet again on the broad market. What came next was the downside capitulation in March.

From NFTRH18 dated 1/31/09:

Stock Market

In yesterday’s update, it was noted that most holdings that are positively correlated to the economy were sold from NFTRH accounts. This was in part due to the continued degradation of the broad stock market and in part due to the idea that we have come a long way since the October bottom and with risk high, as it is now, I prefer to be sidelines with cash. I was brave when it was called for as the gold stocks demanded my funds. But this mess, this ship of fools will make no such demand upon me.

Risk is very high as our tolerance in the form of the SMA 50 and EMA20 were violated on the downside and then this week’s official ‘hope’ pump ran into failure at the very same moving averages. Making matters worse is the down triggered MACD and confirming TRIX, both of which are below zero. The market has not broken last ditch support, but it can attempt to save itself without NFTRH funds aboard.

[SPX chart omitted]

Another factor weighing against the bulls is the Trannies, still clinging to support, but having violated our tolerance of 3200. Again, I am not fundamentally engaged with this stuff so it is best to live to fight another day. The economy is in a shambles and the historic presidency is bringing with it a lot of crosscurrents and hope does not seem to be finding traction. When the CPC put/call ratio moves to the 1.20 area on its 20 day EMA, things may begin to get interesting. In short, it appears hope needs to be annihilated much like most asset classes, before its revival.

[Put/Call ratio chart omitted]

Friday, January 29, 2010

Gold CoT

Well what do you know? The commitments of traders took a favorable turn earlier in the week with commercials doing some decent short covering and large speculators selling. Open interest is back on the decline as well.

One wonders if just maybe the numbers have improved still more since the last official release of the data on Tuesday.

We got fear and loathing, a declining gold price and herds on the run. Not a bad enviro to cover into is it? Remember the calm of the monthly chart? All in the cards as the players assume their roles.

Have a good weekend.

What about this wild man?

Pig man due for a bounce?

And if so, will it be sustainable?

VIX - Bull flag?

If that is a tight bull flag flying in the VIX, then we are about to get additional downside action in most markets. As such, I bought back the VXX (loose) tracker right around where I sold it the other day, for additional protection.

One thing about the VIX however; being an indicator and not an equity, it has a real tendency to invalidate normal technical signals with routine cruelty. So, that's why the title asks 'Bull flag?'

Uncle Buck

The dollar is close to an important resistance point, both from a short term and long term standpoint. Very interesting juncture for Unc. We will look at the dollar from several angles in NFTRH70. Yup, you betcha. That is because all the familiar players are aligning per script to act out their roles yet again.

Speaking of Deflationists...

Evidently Robert Prechter is gaining airplay with a 'Gold is over owned' thing he did in the major media. Here is Adrian Ash's take on it: Gold's Inflationary Bogey, Part 1.

It is time once again to present BullionVault as a good alternative for gold ownership (the etf's are highly suspect in my opinion) and trading now that the hype has eased, the momos are getting flushed, the metal is declining toward our downside correction target and Mr. Deflation has once again dawned the fright mask, scaring many oh so emotional gold bug wannabes and inflation trade automatons.

You buy gold when it is hated or dismissed. You prepare for turbulence when it is popular.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Gold

Wha?? What is the meaning of this? I am outraged I tell you... OUTRAGED!! It's a conspiracy... evil manipulating Satanists is what it is.

At least that's the convenient excuse for those suddenly becoming aware that they took the bait last month. The herd will always be the herd.

Next up? Ooh, how about some professorial admonishments from the deflationists? Now that would be bullish. I love getting schooled by those guys. Love it.

This is not bullish - GSR

Gold-Silver ratio proxy GLD-SLV breaks out from our short term resistance level. Real or Memorex?

This is Bullish - Regional banks

This chart looks like a buy...

Oh, but wait... it's not a stock. It's a ratio.

LAM.to... Dohhh

Sold the traders for profit and riding the holders back down.

Satan looking quite bearish

Big picture chart of gold...

A chart created when the hype was deafening... Now? Not so much.




Dow big picture

Do you think the bulls are finished? No technical sign of it here. However, if the expected (by NFTRH) bounce materializes and comes to certain levels, then it will be time to bear down (no pun intended) and figure out its nature. There are things on daily and weekly charts that argue a more lasting decline may be not too far off.

Meanwhile, as I added gold stocks - which have become MUCH better on a risk/reward basis since the silly season commenced on December 1st - yesterday another protective bear position was released (VXX) to go along with the departed FXP, in anticipation of some bull games.

Back to the Dow, this (live) monthly chart shows no worries for the bulls. Unfortunately, the monthly does not exist in a vacuum. Its daily & weekly are not quite so forgiving, technically.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Getting Fizzy

Here is the original Fission Energy chart I used in one of the year-end NFTRH's, when highlighting some uranium companies I was willing to put my money on. Besides the chart, which I liked as a bottom feeding exercise, there is a fundamental reason I liked the company as well, speculative though it is. And that reason is management, just like with fellow U holding LAM.to.

My positions in FIZZY are not large, but are just right for a speculation on a company that is up another 8% today (127% for the week).

The chart has obviously been updating, but it was highlighted in NFTRH as FIZZY's eye was merely twinkling at the thought of breaking out (blue line). Perhaps some have sold, but the bag holders at NFTRH continue to hold on.

The uranium play was a potentially good opportunity for traders or long termers to establish positions. But right now, all eyes on... you know where. Da goldies.

Liquidity & Money Supply

Excerpted from NFTRH68 dated 1/17/10:

Let’s not get hung up on doing the stock market today. Friday was Op/Ex, the market took a bit of a tumble and the construct generally remains as it has been; high risk and extended. Technicals remain the same. Full Denial ’10 chugs on until it doesn’t.

Let’s do get hung up on liquidity however, since this is FrankenMarket’s primary fundamental underpinning or as the graphs show, increasingly lack of underpinning. M2 has leveled off in alignment with our theme that it is now time for the economy to prove itself on its own merits (or lack of same). The panic of 2008 into 2009 has been followed by [the predictable 'recovery’] we now enjoy. Why, they have even terminated the gray area on the graph. Recession over I guess.



MZM is actually declining slightly. These graphs mesh with the idea that a deflationary event is still in play. Ironically (and sadly), in the age of inflate or die, policy makers need a disaster from which to come to the rescue.



The setup argues that the long bond will turn up and negate the Head & Shoulders, which it is posturing to do. If this happens, the ‘inflation trade’ is going to be halted in its tracks.



Meanwhile, Nowandfutures.com has a nice recreation of the M3 money supply data, which most readers will know was discontinued as irrelevant by the US government. Here is what Nowandfutures.com has to say about its M3 calculation:

“We did some sleuthing and data extraction and put M3 back together from various weekly Federal Reserve reports that are still available.
  1. The formula we're using has five 9s correlation to the original data back to 1980.
  2. There is only one missing element that is apparently no longer available (Eurodollars) and an adjustment has been applied to generate it. Its only about 3% of total M3 so should not have a material effect on the total.
Here is our article on M3b, which details our work and notes the sources for the data. Note that as of Nov. 10, 2006 the Eurodollar estimation formula has changed - see the article for details.

John Williams' monthly reconstruction of M3 is here . Ours tends to be more volatile and averages slightly higher than his, partly because it's weekly and partly because of our minor differences in calculating the Eurodollar component of M3 and repos.

Finally and to put M3 into proper perspective with inflation (as measured by CPI without lies), the M3 and M2 strong inflation link is virtually unquestionable. The longer term inflation picture is clear, although M2 shows a pause and likely temporary disinflation as of 2008 [emphasis mine --GT]. Certain bloggers are incorrect and have continually avoided these facts and the linked chart."

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Want to see another chart the blow horns do not like?

It is our old friend the gold-silver ratio as represented by GLD-SLV. They demanded the dollar was dead... they demanded that commodities are your savior... they demanded that it was all inflation, all the time.

GSR argues along with Uncle Buck that it may be time to open wide for a heaping helping of Prechter, regardless of what the basher at IKN has to say. ;-)

Prechter must be right from time to time. It is a law of the current system. Prechter is a lever, but while he is being pulled, a lot of destruction can happen in a short amount of time.

The draining of liquidity is necessary for certain Wizards hiding behind tattered curtains. Where Prechter goes wrong is in his view that deflation can actually unwind the near limitless powers arrayed against it. Only when the sheep lose total confidence does that view have any chance of coming in. Even then, in my opinion a total loss of confidence would more likely result in hyperinflation than deflationary Armageddon. But in the interim blips, Prechter gets to be right.

USD proxy UUP sports potential Inverted H&S

If this neck line breaks I want you to try to recall all the blow horns you heard demanding upon you that the US dollar was dead not so long ago.

Attn: Subscribers - EMAIL ISSUE

I am not able to send email after a cable outage last night. Something has gone wrong on all SMTP (outgoing) servers. So, if you have sent mail and received no response, this is why. I am receiving all mails. Just can't send.

While I am here, I know a few of you (and any other blog readers -- PLEASE HELP) know your way around the tech end of things. I am getting a 550 5.1.0 'Authentication Required' error. This is on 3 different computers, three different email clients (Outlook 2007, Outlook Express and Windows Mail). Ports are configured correctly. When I check the 'Outgoing Server Requires Authentication' button, the password prompt comes up but WILL NOT ACCEPT the password.

And again, this is happening on DIFFERENT SMTP servers.

Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. My incoming servers are fine so just pop a mail to gt@biiwii.com if you have a moment and think you might know what the heck is going on here. Comcast is clueless.

THANK YOU.

Edit (12:43) Solved... Yey!

Monday, January 25, 2010

FIS.v - I am a genius I tell you!! +94% today

Obnoxious headline aside, I am not a stock picker fly boy trading genius a-hole. But Fission Energy, one of NFTRH's year end uranium picks is up 94% today. Edit a few minutes later: Make that err, 105%. Funny how a former bubble sector can decline so persistently as to become a future value to patient bottom feeders. One day the herd will trample all over itself to pay higher prices.

Monthly USD for perspecive...

Uncle Buck crashes the party

Where once there were beautiful people, toasting with fine champagne, dressed in Armani and... okay, that's the only designer I can think of, which tells you something about the writer's high society sophistication level :-)... anyway, well dressed and complimenting each other on their financial prowess.

Then the bum shows up. Flatulence and inappropriate conversation are the highlight. He was never invited, but you just knew he was going to crash the joint, didn't you?

USD in an uptrend by daily chart. STO & RSI argue that the dollar can pump a bit higher (markets drop a bit lower (to support levels noted in NFTRH69) before a likely bounce. But a bounce is different from a bull market or even real rally. It will be a bounce that could provide a quick opportunity for those err, less bullishly inclined.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

NFTRH69 Out Now

Why yes, of course they are getting easier to write as market volatility increases. There are several options in play and half the fun of managing markets is interpreting the myriad choices we have before us, based on the most relevant indicators.

Hell, if it were easy anyone could just throw it on autopilot and await continued bullishness. Oh wait, individual investors, newsletter writers, Wall St. strategists and professional money managers are all doing just that.

For others, actually interested in getting it right, an understanding of what is a whipsaw and what is a real move in a given direction will be critical. Anyway, hope your weekend has been a good one.

NFTRH69 out now.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

NFTRH 1 Year Ago - Change

Excerpted from NFTRH17, dated 1/24/09:

Change

The title of this segment is meant as a demand upon the conventional herd more than a descriptor of anything likely to happen as a result of the Obama presidency or Wall Street having learned its lesson in the wake of a systemic financial meltdown. The title of this segment is meant to implore a few more people to consider the degree to which everything has changed, not since the deflation impulse became readily apparent in October 2008, but since secular forces began to cycle in very early in the decade.

A relatively few people will implement real change in their financial viewpoints, but humans being human, the vast majority will cling to conventional constructs as long as they can. Despite the financial horror that is on full display and its implications for the future, there seems to be no sign that people have left behind the etched in stone precepts of Jeremy Siegel’s Stocks for the Long Run and those put forth by the investment king of the great bull market of the previous secular cycle, Peter Lynch (his best known philosophy “Invest in what you know” is an all-time keeper, however).

The herd will likely focus its attention on the current crop of financial perp walkers like Bernie Madoff , just as it did with that other bad Bernie (Ebbers) a few years ago. Cartoons are much easier to digest, after all, than doing the work of understanding how the system works, where the real faults can be found, and where the sound investment themes can be found.

The herd will not change because the herd does not change. The herd’s perceptions may change, but because the herd is the herd, these new perceptions will ultimately be incorrect. The herd is the counterparty to the winning trade. The herd defers to the experts. The herd sleeps soundly in the comfort of its desire to remain disengaged.

Take the ‘dollar to zero!’ and the ‘you must be 100% cash in a deflation!’ herds for example. Two powerful armies led onto a battlefield, each expecting to triumph. But neither of them will win the war. Some experts tell us that the dollar is the contrary play because the euro is as bad fundamentally and over valued to boot. Some experts cite the profound and unmanageable issues particular to the US as the reason the dollar will be destroyed as we ‘devalue and inflate our way out of our debts’.

The answer is of course that the dollar, the euro and every other currency are likely to survive as long as the… Beuller? As long as the herd buys the idea that a currency’s value is anything more than its government says it is. Their exchange rates flash like red and green lights in the FOREX casino and meanwhile, gold just sits there as it always has, holding monetary value against the lot of them.

But surely the letter writer is a cranky crackpot. Well maybe it takes a crackpot to successfully navigate insanely complex and dysfunctional financial markets. Maybe it takes a small army of crackpots to see the value of a monetary metal and deploy their debt-backed paper money accordingly. Maybe it takes a crackpot to do what my friend Chris has done, and build something from the ground up, helping thousands find answers to some very complex questions. Maybe it takes a crackpot [Ron Paul] to summon the nerve to run for President armed with nothing other than an honest message.

NFTRH has now had enough track record to prove that the crackpot stance of being long gold miners and putting more money where my mouth was at HUI 150’s was correct. The stance of ‘if gold declines, it will do so to a lesser degree than positively correlated stuff and it will fuel the miners’ bottom lines’ has proven out despite the deflation alarm on code red. The NFTRH speculative portfolio is now more than 15% above baseline where not too long ago it was 27% below.

The Obama administration ran and won on a message of change. I suppose in the context of politics, plenty will indeed change. But I believe politics and sociology spring from economics in many ways, and in that regard real change is definitely not on the agenda. In actuality, Mr. Obama, aided by Mr. Summers and the rest of the Clinton holdovers, are bringing opportunity. But it will take investors who are willing and able to get outside the box to take advantage of it, because the dynamics at play in the ongoing boom/bust drama are not going to change. They are going to intensify, and convention is going to be punished more intensely than it has in the past.

Okay, sermon over. Let’s get to the good stuff…

Friday, January 22, 2010

RUT Roh

Silver-Gold Ratio

Chart originally produced many weeks ago. Funny how patience pays off ultimately.

Failed breakout - EEM

Thank you FXP, goodbye for now...

You make 13+% shorting a bubble? Well, you may be selling out too soon or you may be taking sensible profits while not getting greedy. Either way, China short etf FXP is now in the books as it is getting short term over bought.

I would love to add back shortly, as markets are nearing potential bounce levels.

For now, I remain short other items, and long volatility. Also, added back a premier gold miner today. Looking for other opportunities.

Speaking of Banks...

Satan himself did not like the regulatory talk from the president... not one little bit.



While the regional banks move definitively above what is becoming a strong support area. Now that's what we call rotation, looking at the volume. Hmmm, a country that values enterprise that conducts its business in the light of day, sometimes even for the benefit of regular people? Maybe certain aspects Mr. Obama's Utopia can be reached after all.



Edit (7:23) I just watched a video over on Karl Denninger's blog on the subject featuring financial TV clown Jim Cramer interviewing a babbling idiot from congress. These creeps are already out trying to mitigate the message. Denninger says to president Obama "follow through NOW!". I second that.

Cramer? Are you shittin' me? Barney Frank?? They conjure up the fabled name of Paul Volcker, and I say bring him in - slash and burn style - and shut these bums up. Cramer to Barney at the end of the babble fest: "I feel better"... and if it makes Cramer feel better you can bet it is not good policy.

I can live without the 'bj' comment, but the essence is right on; Obama, with the commanding presence of Volcker behind him, must stand firm.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

New bank regulations...

I am all for it. These high wire fly boyz were and are anything but buttoned down institutions we can have confidence in. The big boyz, that is.

Now (placing tin foil hat comfortably on head) you don't suppose that the president just happened to utter scary words about regulating the banks at this tentative juncture of the 'recovery' by chance do you?

Or do you suppose that maybe a little interest in treasury bonds needs to be generated right about now? A little confidence in Uncle Sam and Uncle Buck that seems to generate during times of... stress.

FXI still indicating bearish things

As this topping pattern has persisted, I have continued to exercise the most patience I ever have with a short position. Look at the beautiful series of lower highs and lower lows.

I had no sooner published an article stating bearish technicals on this pig when FXI exploded higher on Tuesday on whatever the hype du jour was. Now, all is right with the world. Oh, and it seems as though another pig is getting in line with the message as well.

Yes, all is right as of noon today at least. Markets are shaking off the dullness of Hope '09 come Full Hubris '10.

Oh yeah, the stock market!

Yup, back on message. Now I know why politics is a borderline taboo subject to many people. I am going back to where I belong, am comfortable and most importantly, enjoy.

This morning we find all the usual players aligning in their proper roles; the herd perhaps beginning its awakening process with a dim 'duhh, what the?' as the market fails to respond to strong earnings reports - again.

We find the precious metals doing the expected with greedy downside targets all mapped out as the misperception game is about to get cranking. As we have gotten closer and closer to the secular 'inflation' trigger point (EMA 100 on the monthly long bond) risk of reaction has only increased along nearly all asset classes, excluding notably dear old Uncle Buck and potentially the treasury bond so closely tied to his wagon (or is it the other way around?).

I dearly want to post a couple charts of the HUI for you, with several scenarios in play. That is my wheel house after all. But people pay me to give them something extra so I need to withhold certain tactical information from public view. But suffice it to say, you just need to keep your head screwed on straight and try not to become a casualty of the noise that may be directly ahead.

Meanwhile, here is a weekly chart of the long bond's yield, having turned down from the area of the 'trigger point'. Ponder it, because it is for all the marbles.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Churning through final issues before a return to regular programming...

Mr. Brown goes to Washington... It was really great experiencing history (and the eyes of the world on our little corner of it) as the pre-ordained seat was taken back by the people, from the Democrats. Okay, now we move on.

It seems that for the majority in the US, this is all about healthcare or repudiating Obama, or whatever. Well, here is a little healthcare story for you. My (other) business's healthcare insurance has gone up nearly 50% from last year to this year based on a flimsy story by XYZ (provider not to be named - yet) about having made a mistake in pricing last year. Seems they all made the same mistake.

This gives me an opportunity to tell you what I think of Republicans. What I think of Republicans is that they are the party that with its last near-mortal breath killed the 'public option' (PO) segment of the health bill and in so doing, protected a major benefactor, big healthcare insurance providers.

Now, what does this mean? Well, the way I see it it means that the Republicans took care of their pals by eliminating the Utopian competition Obama had in store for them. It was pre-determined to get the PO killed. Meanwhile, their pals in the insurance company board rooms know a windfall when they see one; it was a free 'gimme' to stick it to the little guy under guise of the ObamaCare threat even though the PO was DOA. Touche' boyz!

Never mind that I have had two big corporations try to stick it to me, personally (a major brokerage) as well as my company (a major bank) only to watch them fold like cheap tents when informed by registered mail that I was err, displeased with their incorrect positions. It did not hurt to inform them that I write stuff that is read around the world, and their actions* (which many people would not have the energy or clout to fight) were definitely ON topic for my writing.

I might mull whether or not XYZ needs to be looked at more closely. It will require research that I do not wish to have to do. They are now FREE to set market prices however they want after all. So thanks Republicans, if things had gotten bad enough for my company, perhaps the only thing in the healthcare bill that would have helped in an emergency situation, the PO, was killed.

And thank you too Barrack, as I recall, the sun hadn't even set on the public option's grave before you were out touting that you will be getting the majority of the bill through and all remained well.

I was the small business guy... the dope stuck in the middle set to PAY for this mess and as I said, if things had gone as bad as they had threatened to last year, I would be gone. So would lots of other little guys. It is from these dynamics that talk of corporatocracy, oligarchy and corporate fascism spring forth from the people.

Gee, to my little guy eye, it sure looks like the Republicans got the back of the big corporations and the Democrats play up the unions and other interests. Meanwhile, the segment that both parties pretend to have an allegiance to - all us hard working little guys - take the high hard one.

I guess my innocent feel-good nature lasted not even until Scott could get in his truck and head south. Imagine how I would sound if things were not currently going well for me?

Okay, back to work... and this time I promise, back to regularly scheduled programming for the blog. Time to get unemotional and time to GET THIS RIGHT. And yeah, I still love it.

* The broker 'lost' some shares of a Canadian listed uranium miner I held, and the bank conjured up a mysterious balloon payment at the end of a capital equipment note through dubious wording on the original contract.

'Scott Heard Round the World'

I was born in Boston and grew up about 5 or 7 miles from the Old North Bridge. Not to sound corny, but when you walk through that area in Concord, you feel the ghosts that helped birth this nation. It is unspoiled and pretty much as it was back then.

"By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled;
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
and fired the shot heard 'round the world." --Ralph Waldo Emerson

I am so proud of the people of Massachusetts right now, not because they elected a seemingly good guy with good intentions (Scott, remember where you came from and beware of the corruptive nature of the place your truck is taking you), and certainly not because they elected a Republican, but because they rose up and unified, across party lines led by the independent voters who just knew the country was gaining momentum down the wrong path.

In my opinion there are a multitude of problems on the current path, but none more important than the fact that the US government is currently attempting to print its way out of its financial problems with a huge bias toward ideologically favored groups.

But for the purposes of this blog, you cannot print and debit your way out of economic cycles, not if you want your country to exist in some recognizable form for your children. I mean yeh, it is hokey... Massachusetts, the home of the Minute Men and all. Okay, hokey it is. But it is also awesome. We (the people) did something, and we will continue doing something whether it is in resistance to Democrats or Republicans or monetary inflationists in high places.

Now for the really good part (from my personal perspective). This from a subscriber who dealt with the urge to be alienated by my generally 'not liberal' viewpoints. This is what it is all about; we must come together as PEOPLE.

"Gary,

For what it’s worth: I could be voted “most likely to defect Gary’s service.” Demographically speaking, you should really be pissing me off. I’m a red-diaper baby of union organizers, life-long advocate for lefty causes, professional staffer in national environmental movement (up with government regs!) and fervent Obama voter.

And yet . . . our country is careening dangerously toward a state I can only describe as financial fascism or corporate oligarchy — a project presided over by every greedhead President and Fed Chief of the past three decades, with Obama being only the latest and most disappointing (to me; those wiser may have seen it coming). I have a friend who made gazillions on Wall Street who was tapped by Geithner to unwind one of TARP’s biggest messes. He did it, truly, out of public service and wanting to give back. I saw him last week in Washington and his eyes have been opened: to what he describes as a lethal combination of corruption and stupidity that reigns supreme, especially on Capitol Hill. He considers the situation hopeless. I, for one, refuse to go down with that ship. I will protect my very hard-earned cash by continuing to listen to contrarians like you. And if crippling the system altogether is what it takes to awaken America to the ticking debtbomb, then I’d even send Scott’s truck to Washington.

Sometimes one has to hold two seemingly opposing thoughts in one’s head simultaneously, as in: I’m politically progressive AND fiscally conservative.

Keep up the good work."

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

AAU - Patience pays off again

No, not calling a bottom here. In fact, there are lower support levels where I would love to buy more at as noted a few NFTRH's ago.

Off to vote for Scott's truck

In a little while I am going to head out and do my duty as a citizen. I am going to vote. I happen to be voting for Scott Brown's truck because if he wins, that truck will drive him to Washington. And when he gets to Washington he is going to gum up the works of a machine that has gone out of control.

Now, at the risk of more reader defections - and frankly I don't run this blog as a popularity contest, so whoever is left is the proper audience and the rest well... thanks for having hung around a while, it's been real - I am not a Democrat and I am not a Republican. I am independent and a financial survivalist because as an old friend once put it, the financial system is 'fuck baked', and I have my children (our children) to think about.

All the abstractions that people so desperately want to put their beliefs and hopes in are not real to me. Obama's change... Brown's change... none of it is real because we have NO MONEY. Got it? We manipulate interest rates and confidence, sell debt to willing suckers and keep a giant Ponzi construct going. That is our financial system and while I am fairly retarded politically, I have been watching the thing that it all comes down to, the financial system, for years. No political wonk is going to school me there.

Interacting with people during this MA senate race has been extremely dissatisfying to me because I am once again reminded that I live down a rabbit hole while the nation carries on up on the surface as if things are symmetrical, maybe just needing the right influence from one of the two major political parties.

Well, the Republicans ushered us into this mess and the Democrats amped it up on steroids. It can be argued that Clinton had sewn the seeds leading into the GWB disaster, and on and on it goes. I could give fuck all about politics and people's conventional political opinions. Most of the wonks don't know thing one about finance, the financial system or where their money even comes from.

So I am off to vote for Scott's truck. One day, I hope to vote for a bulldozer that will flatten the Fed and the treasury, paving the way for sound institutions to be built on those grounds. Think I wear a tin foil hat? I am not saying anything the honest man who used to run the US General Accounting Office did not say - on US government letterhead, no less.

After this screed, it is back where I belong... the market. With all its defects, it is the place in which we must operate in order to protect ourselves financially and perhaps even benefit from the mayhem.

The good (FRG) and the bad (JAG)

Well, this is not a place where we will tout our winners and avoid showing the losers. FRG continues skyward today, quality company that it is.

JAG is not a loser by any means, as even after today's dumpage, it is up 37% in the NFTRH portfolios for this latest trade. But it feels like a loser because management has once again over promised and under delivered. Therefore, JAG has just earned itself a trip to the NFTRH doghouse. It will heretofore exist as a profit generating trading vehicle in the NFTRH ports.

I repeat, these companies like all companies, are run by human beings. Some more faulty than others and JAG's management must be considered as being faulty enough NOT to be considered one that gets my respect. Too bad, I really liked the story.

PS: This is one of the big reasons why the bottom feeder is a bottom feeder. If he is going to put faith in these often faulty people - I have done business with all types - then I have got to be sure I am not setting myself up to get screwed.

China, Inc.

Excerpted from NFTRH68: China, Inc.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Let's put it over the top... MA Residents VOTE BROWN!

At the risk of alienating more blog readers and my remaining liberal friends, here is one more push for Scott Brown. We simply must try to break the stranglehold here in MA.

Get out there tomorrow... send the Globe running with its tail between its legs. Let the people speak for themselves.

Obama visit fails to slow Scott Brown's momentum in Massachusetts.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

NFTRH68 Out Now

As stated on the blog, NFTRH68 leads with a piece on China, Inc. that got away from me a bit length-wise, before transitioning into the regular - and important - stuff. A pretty good letter all in all I think. But then, I am biased. :-)

I may throw the China segment out there into the great wide open this week, given the Chanos coverage last week.

NFTRH 1 Year Ago - Tug Of War

From NFTRH16, dated 1/17/09:

Tug Of War

The broad markets are at a critical juncture and as Mr. Alan Gayle observes in the AP piece Wall Street rebounds after banks report big losses: http://tinyurl.com/9ozq9z “It’s that tug of war between problems and promise.” Yes Alan, it is, except that I would qualify the problems as being real and ultimately devastating and the promise as being nothing more than the ‘hoped’ for technical rally that the market is attempting in fits and starts.

The NFTRH working plan calls for global stock markets to stabilize, with idealistic sentiment getting whooped up in anticipation of the ‘change’ that the new presidency will bring to the US and its relations with the rest of the world. The plan also considers the traumatic over sold condition on weekly charts (with bullish divergence). The markets are due, but will that translate into something of substance?

Typically, the banks should be leading the broad market but a look at the Bank Index shows a red flag of bearish divergence to the broad market. Or is it? Can the wall of agony that the market is attempting to climb even as the Piggies tank be a positive sign? Yes it can, and I could see a ‘wall of worry’ pretense get constructed to go along with the Obama ‘change we can believe in’ (with all those old Clinton people helping orchestrate said change) hysteria and general ‘the worst is over’ noise. This may of course lead up to a very good shorting opportunity as hope springs eternal. You have got to love herd sentiment and group think if you actively trade the stock markets.

[BKX chart omitted]

The BKX, representing the finest financial institutions of the illusion known as the US financial system, just keeps on driving lower in a tacit demand upon the new administration that ‘you will not change anything with regard to reflation… you will dutifully carry on the policies set in motion by the previous administration, or else’.

The 20 day exponential moving average of the CBOE Put/Call Ratio does not inspire much confidence for a significant rise. The SPX (black line) tends to rally strongly only after a spike to the top line. Have we already had that rally? The little hitch higher to just under the 1.0 level does not provide a good platform for a sustainable continuation.

[CPC chart omitted]

The structure of the CPC’s EMA 20 is negative because if it follows its ‘normal’ pattern, any continued stock rally from this point should be relatively weak, or a sustainable rally will begin only after a drop back down to the .90 area, which would likely mean a test of or breakdown below the November lows before said sustainable rally begins. The minor caveat for the bulls is that the historic panic events of October and November have surely built some distortions into markets relative to what is and is not ‘normal’.

But, what of the broad market? Let’s take a look at the daily status of the S&P 500. The chart certainly does not inspire much confidence after our broad market tolerance level was violated with the breakdowns through the SMA 50 and EMA 20.

MACD is triggering below zero and is bearish. On the plus side, the market has had two up days in a row on productive volume in the face of bad news, and hope is waiting to get some play. The market is over sold by short term indicators like the Full Stochastics. I would not hesitate to call the last two up days a bearish flag if not for the relatively good volume and again, a weekly chart shows that the post-holiday bearish action is but short term noise as the market continues to grind out a would-be bottom.

[SPX chart omitted]

The conclusion is that a test of, or drop below the Q4 lows remains very much in play short term. I would expect that if the market continues to rally from here, it would be a weak rally indeed. If however, a final plunge were to occur near term, driving the CPC to a more productive level, we may get something of substance eventually. Incidentally, the VIX, which I hope to look at on the blog again shortly, is in alignment with the CPC message.

There are many wild cards in the mix including da boyz (AKA ‘the goons’) settling back in after the low volume holiday melt up, a historic presidency in ascension that will no doubt inspire historic levels of hope following what was historic and climactic downside action in a national Ponzi scheme of historic proportions. If things play out according to plan, we will get another chance at a historic shorting opportunity in a few months as being short ‘hope’ could work well.

If, on the other hand, the whole mess unravels in the face of the Obama ascension and fear once again becomes acute, we may actually begin to think about a brand new inflation-fueled bull market later in 2009 or in 2010. That, or the end of the economic world as we know it. All or nothing as it were.

As you know, as far as equities go, gold mining companies are by far my first interest in the current climate for reasons illustrated below, and all along during NFTRH’s brief history. That is because their product is acting as if it were sane money in a monetary world gone insane even as these companies’ cost inputs have gone through the floor in Armageddon ’08. In fact, it appears that the fundamental picture is in transition from the lonely few (including NFTRH) writing amid the panic that ‘the same forces driving the USD higher and gold miner stock prices lower are actually driving gold miner fundamentals higher’ to an environment where this fact is becoming more readily acknowledged in the investment mainstream.

But there are other opportunities shaping up as the world considers ‘change’ and indeed does change. Some opportunities will be ‘long’, some will be ‘short’ as a couple recent trades illustrate (successful ‘shorts’ were completed in long term treasuries and real estate). Right here, in the middle of secular changes that the herd barely perceives, we will find opportunity in the ongoing tug of war that is likely to last a lot longer than the short term events described by Mr. Gayle above.

Friday, January 15, 2010

FRG - A good day and a new recovery high...

Aside from FRG, my ports were about even as the few bearish positions balanced out the other holdings. FRG, sporting new highs accounted for the gains. This is what can happen when one commits to a quality company. It may bum me out to have to decide whether or not to sell at target. I can live with such problems.

Hey, have a good weekend.

Gold - CRB ratio, inflationists in control by a thread

Jim Chanos - Interesting Interview

This post goes up to be referenced by NFTRH68 as part of an overall segment digging into China, based on Chanos' view that it is a bubble, two subscribers' polar opposite conclusions and my own intimate experience.

Lots of other good info in the video as well.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Daily Caller

Now that you know which way I lean (away from socialism and away from divisive partisan politics), it is an opportune time to introduce to you Tucker Carlson's new online news source, DailyCaller.com. I believe this has the potential to be a decent (or better) news source for the times. I've always liked this kid and I think he has assembled a quality organization upon initial review.

By the way, the image on page one needs no words. Just prayers and help in whatever form you see fit.

Perspective - yes, that old concept again...

Because without perspective, what are we but a bunch of flailing creatures, subject to the blow horns of media and agenda?

Here is an old monthly chart of the Dow I had hanging around on the live list. We have bull market triggered, now in the 3rd successive month above the Dow's bull market moving average, the monthly EMA 25. You cannot argue with the chart, nor the SPX equivalent that NFTRH has been following all throughout Hope '09 and Full Hubris '10.

You also cannot argue that risk vs. reward is any good. It's not, and this is a traders' market right now, because without a 'healthy' correction, a move to NFTRH's original 'best' targets may yet register on the 'as good as it gets' scale.

Lead subject for NFTRH68: China

Now that I have done my best to alienate blog readers, it is time to transition back to what the newsletter and blog are actually for; macro-economics.

Between yesterday and today, I have received emails from two different subscribers (one a former exec of a well-known auditing firm and current bank CEO, and the other an exec at a financial services firm) centered around the evidently controversial Bloomberg (good on you Bloomy!) article about hedge fund manager Jim Chanos looking into the books of China, Inc. (reproduced below).

The conclusions of the two mailers are wildly opposite, but time frames must be considered as well. I have my own intimate experience with China, which I am going to share a bit of as well. Personally, in the short term it is all about the technicals and market leadership. Longer term may be a different story. In other words, there may well be bearish and bullish in the story, subject to time frames.

Commentary by William Pesek
Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) -- It’s good to be skeptical when
virtually every major economist agrees on something.
As the Great Recession wanes, there’s no better example of
the Great Consensus than China. The overwhelming view is that it
can grow 10 percent indefinitely, its potential is boundless and
it’s run by omnipotent geniuses who can’t lose. China is today’s
New Economy and anyone who disagrees just doesn’t get it.
That sounds familiar to those who bought into America’s New
Economy in the 1990s. Call it China.com. Things didn’t end well
for the dot-coms, so how about China’s $4.3 trillion economy?
Enter hedge-fund manager Jim Chanos, whose views about a
Chinese crash are making headlines. Perhaps it’s not surprising
that an investor who has flagged numerous accounting frauds,
including Enron Corp., is examining China’s books.
As fanciful as it sounds, don’t rule out trouble in China.
Just 20 years ago, the herd was convinced of Japan’s
invincibility. Today, Japan Airlines Corp.’s expected bankruptcy
reminds us of the blind bullishness on a nation’s prospects.
Chinese policy makers are a bright bunch. Anyone who steers
around the chaos of 2009 and achieves growth of close to 10
percent deserves a standing ovation. For all the collective
wisdom in Beijing, though, why does China make life so difficult
for itself by adding to its $2.3 trillion of currency reserves?
And why do it so, well, wastefully?

$10 Equals $20

Let’s say the Economist magazine’s Big Mac Index is right
and the yuan is almost 50 percent undervalued. That means when
China buys $100 billion of U.S. Treasuries, it’s paying almost
twice as much. It’s like buying $10 bills with $20 bills,
squandering piles of state money and, in the process, worsening
inflation risks. It helps exporters, but holds back the
economy’s development.
If China were a hedge fund, it wouldn’t be in business very
long. When China says it’s growing 10 percent, it’s still hard
to know how much reflects Enron-like siphoning of stuff on the
national balance sheet and putting it on the income statement.
Hence the interest of hedge-fund types such as Chanos. The
head of Kynikos Associates Ltd. in New York has become perhaps
the most outspoken critic of China’s economic figures and
balance sheet. He was profiled in the New York Times on Jan. 7.
Those who want to dismiss such views, as wildly contrarian
as they are, should consider another name: Ezra Vogel. Thirty
years ago, Vogel wrote one of the most talked-about books of the
time, “Japan as Number One.” It argued that this tiny island
nation was destined to dominate the economic world.

Japan’s Example

Such predictions swept through corporate boardrooms with
great ferocity in the 1980s, a time when the biggest banks
measured by deposits were all Japanese. Members of Congress
talked about the U.S. becoming a colony of Japan. Purchases of
Rockefeller Center, Universal Studios and Pebble Beach golf
course had commentators buzzing about a commercial Pearl Harbor.
It was not to be, of course. Crashes in Japan’s stock and
real-estate markets humiliated the conventional wisdom. A bad-
loan crisis of historic proportions ensued and, in many ways, it
has never ended.
Even today, Japan carries considerable baggage. Japan bulls
conveniently forget that modest growth from 2002 to 2007 was
only made possible by zero interest rates and a public debt now
approaching 200 percent of gross domestic product. Economic
steroids are the drug, and Japan has yet to kick the habit.
JAL’s plight says it all. Rather than let capitalism
dictate its fortunes, politicians bailed out the carrier three
times in the past nine years. It had no incentive to change. Now
the debt-laden company is preparing for what may be Japan’s
sixth-largest bankruptcy. And that’s where JAL belongs.

Cautionary Tale

Japan is a cautionary tale. It should concern officials in
Beijing that economists such as Michael Pettis, of Peking
University, likewise see China’s 2009 performance as “growth on
steroids.” The question is whether massive stimulus is creating
unbalanced growth, fueling bubbles and paving the way for a
Japan-like bad-debt crisis.
How bad could things get? “Dubai times 1,000” is how
Chanos described the risk in a CNBC interview in November. While
that may be going too far, the idea of the No. 3 economy
imploding is too horrible to consider. In 2009, China edged out
Germany to become the world’s biggest exporter.
Investors are focused on overheating. China’s central bank
last week began to roll back its monetary stimulus. By raising
the cost of three-month bills, policy makers aim to contain
asset-price inflation after a record surge in credit.
The real problem is the quality of growth. The trillions of
yuan lavished on the economy last year won’t boost demand for
exports. Nor will it soon morph the nation’s rabid savers into
enthusiastic consumers. If today’s public borrowing doesn’t
create a domestic-demand-driven economy, then it’s risky.
China’s overinvestment in 2009 may have delayed this day of
reckoning, not averted it. Officials in Beijing are on notice
that savvy short-sellers are delving into their books.

(William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions
expressed are his own.)

Cartoon Nation

This blog has probably lost some democrat readers of late, because now you know my views on that party. So be it. To a large degree, I feel the same way, with differences around the details, about the republicans. You guys gonna leave too? We are all hamstrung by cartoon politics and the real evil exists in the room where they keep the printing press.

I am hopeful that over the years the blog has helped shine a light on what is really wrong with the system. Divisiveness between democrat cartoons and republican cartoons has nothing to do with real solutions and everything to do with what keeps us proudly, stupidly Cartoon Nation.

Okay, that is probably it on the politics for me. I hate this stuff. Back to making money, preserving capital and generally understanding this mess for what it is and using it to advantage where ever possible.

Edit (8:18) I guess you do not write so many tens of thousands of words on a blog without screwing up sometimes. The 'crazy person' comment in the previous post about McCain's VP choice is uncalled for and in questionable taste. I probably should have said 'neophyte political animal promoting divisiveness - the kind of divisiveness that keeps us from gaining insight into the real problems that go beyond democrat & republican'.

Now, dat's it! No more politics.

Tired of protest voting... voting Scott Brown

Yeh, I am flip flopping. Nothing like a blog to highlight one's inherent humanity.

In 2004, fully aware of the disaster that Greenspan, Bernanke and a den of crooks on Wall Street and in Washington had locked and loaded for us economically, I wrote in Ron Paul for president. I could not vote for either of the supremely underwhelming mainstream choices. In 2008, I wrote him in again after John McCain - underwhelming in my view on his own - picked a crazy person for VP.

I am getting tired of protesting, and while Scott Brown did not impress me in the debate the other night - not going beyond the oft-argued bullet points on economics and the financial system, while Joe Kennedy spoke rationally and clearly - it is time for me to get with the mainstream and do what makes sense.

I have since listened more to Brown, and while I have still not heard a level of sophistication about what really needs to be done to empower the people against an out of control leviathan, I will vote for him because the alternative must be stopped if we can at all help it.

All week, we in Massachusetts have been subjected to a disgusting attack ad from Martha Coakley's vile and entrenched democrat machine while Scott refuses to go negative and presents himself as HIMSELF, with nothing to hide from. The contrast he presents to the animal he is running against is stunning.

Now, they say attack ads run because they work. Sad but true. But Scott Brown may just win by sticking to his message. MA residents: Get out there, vote for change and keep the bums out of the seat that they felt was pre-ordained up until now. Vote for Scott Brown if you are a hard working person who would rather see a larger portion your labors go toward supporting your family and your freedom as opposed to the worst, and most embedded rat's nest of political patronage in the country.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Bear Market Comparisons - Nominal, CPI Adjusted & CPI w/out Lies Adjusted...

Bart's Nowandfutures.com is a site with lots of econo-geek stuff. Take a look at these 3 graphs and tell me how anyone can believe that supposed economic recovery and bull markets in stocks are anything but the effects of massive inflationary policy on demand. This is grand theft of the future. Your childrens' future... so that we may perpetuate a lie.

Two Charts - Ignore at your own risk...

Two charts shown previously, that have been stored and updating.

First is the current status of the 'baby' and the big daddy inverted H&S' on the $TYX weekly chart.



Then we have the big picture view of the long bond and its secular journey, that has allowed 'conventional' wisdom to remain in force and validated all these years.



You of course know that these trends must remain intact or else we've got some big changes in the offing.