"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

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

HUI-Gold ratio...

Wow, that is some intense hit to the barbarous relic huh?  For a while there it actually propelled the HGR upward impulsively.  It's settled back down and is probably more a picture of an epic smash in gold than it is anything bullish for the miners.  Okay, I think I've worked you over enough for one day. Keep your head down out there.  They're using real bullets.









http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Doctor Copper has a headache...

From banging his head against the ceiling for the last 6 weeks.  Found this chart while looking through the list for the EXK chart.  Edit (3:28)  Err, forget the EXK chart; it's still in a Symmetrical Triangle but I'm not buying anything.  In fact, taking into account certain parameters that are under threat today and this scary looking chart of Cu, I am managing R.I.S.K by taking profits and limiting losses.  The precious metals often lead some nasty events.  The market will still be here tomorrow.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Gold & Silver CoTs were degrading after all...

So tell me again, why were the CoT reports degrading of late?  It couldn't have been some entities shimmying toward a coming intervention, could it?  I don't like to play to the cheap seats, and always bitching about gold manipulation is just that.  It comes with the territory in gold.  Always has.  There is manipulation in the precious metals market.  Don't like it?  Get out of it.  It is why we manage risk... ALWAYS.

Nice timing by the silver pitch [wo]man that called me last week, and nice timing by the hype sent out about large fund buyers in silver bullion.

Edit (2:43) I certainly cannot claim to have been bearish or seen such an intense smash down coming in the PM's, but NFTRH176 had this for Ag in its Current Outlook summary table.  It always helps to keep balanced and remain alert.  Aside from that, days like today - and indeed what may follow directly - make me more bullish.  But that is me, die hard true believer managing risk.

"Ag continues to look strong, but note that it is approaching the top of its major
down trend channel that intersects the 36 area. With silver currently at 35.43, it
is either close to a pullback or going to break out. At least be on guard for a
pullback, esp. considering current CoT structure, which has been degrading."


http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

30 Year Yield updated

The long bond's yield has not turned up strongly, but it has not broken down either.  Will it break down?  Look, here we go by the charts and try not to out think ourselves.  This chart says the bond yield is still bottoming, and as long as it says that then i2k12 remains on track.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Attn: NFTRH Subscribers...

Important email update just sent with regard to today's reversal (compliments of the Jawbone in Chief) and its implication on gold, silver and the miners.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

HUI daily chart

I'd say Huey is at an important resistance point, wouldn't you?  Make or break Huey.













http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Endeavour Silver (EXK) close to bullish breakout

MACD is positive, the stock is above 50 & 200 MA's and it is in a bullish Symmetrical Triangle.  What's not to like?  I do not own it (yet), however.













http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Newmont (NEM) still holding support zone...

I have not bought NEM (preferring for now, the royalty model of RGLD, SLW, etc.), but still keep an eye on its chart, which continues to look good.  If the chart wants to do what I tell it to do, NEM 'should' bounce here at the EMA 200.  If it does, the target is around 68.

 













http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Boobus Americanus

Last night I went to the gym to run a few miles on the treadmill.  As I was warming up I looked up at one of the TV's they have there and who was looking down at me, from an MSNBC interview?  Why none other than a personal hero of mine, David Walker, former chief financial cop at the US GAO.

You probably recall me writing about him several times in the past as being one of the people who 'created' me (along with Prechter, Hoye, a mysterious internet and phone acquaintance who shall remain nameless, and some old gold bugs I read at gold-eagle.com).

Anyway, there I am no doubt with a goofy look of admiration on my face, though not listening because I use an iPod (last night Eve 6 got me through the workout).  Then a lady on the treadmill next to me called one of the gym's staff over to change the channel.  "I can't STAND this!!  I don't want to HEAR this!!  Change the channel!!"  To which I said "yeh, who wants to hear about a few more $Trillion in debt, anyway?"... she responds "Oh I can't stand this!!  Oh it's terrible!!"  I put the ear phones in quickly and tuned her out.

Fittingly, she had the channel changed to the Food Network where a somewhat rotund woman was baking miniature muffins.  As she tipped the baking pan over and all the little muffins tumbled out I could not help thinking of each muffin as carrying roughly the same level of discriminating brain power as that of the average American.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

SLW-RGLD ratio updated

Still bullish... and I still own both of these items.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Canadian Venture Exchange updated

The home of the speculative dot-veeee's AKA the CDNX is still looking good on the top part of the weekly chart, as the lower panel indicators continue to struggle with various obstacles. 


http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Sometimes they are worth waiting for...

Almaden Minerals (AAU) has for years been a company that I have had a twinkle in my eye for.  They say don't fall in love with stocks and indeed, I don't.  I have sold when I thought appropriate, and bought enthusiastically as appropriate.

But this one, like Fronteer Gold (bought by NEM) before it and like fellow current holding Pretium (PVG), is one that I have infinite patience with because I trust its management and by expert accounts (like a certain 2 geologists I also trust) think highly of its Ixtaca project in Mexico.  I also like the respectful way this company goes about doing its business, to shareholders and the its associates and indigenous peoples.

Anyway, NFTRH has been managing the neat little bottoming pattern in AAU and today it is pepping up again.  There are some targets up there that I have noted to subscribers, but for myself, I cannot see myself selling anything close a majority of shares there.  Not unless the macro backdrop says to.  Because this is an excellent little explorer and I think for my needs - much like FRG before it - it is as close to 'investment grade' as a gold explorer can get.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

'Durables' drop contradicts Gary's post...

I wrote this post last week that included some words about brisk machine tool orders, to which a commenter responded with this link.

Confusing?  Well, remember that I am boots on the ground in the real US manufacturing economy.  I did not just theorize about machine tools.  I sold one (pending the buyer's funding of course) that was excess to my [other] company's needs and was pleasantly surprised by the price it sold for.  It got snapped up in a day, by the way.  This was very different from the environment 2 years ago.

The dealer's words to me were that people just cannot find these things and the demand is strong.  He said 2011 ended strong, January dropped off (right in line w/ the commenter's link) but February heated back up again.  Then he sold my machine in a day.

The January number is backward looking and gives deflationists a chance to get excited.  For all I know, the current brisk February environment will crash and burn promptly.  We just do not know.  But I did not write that post based by having cooked up what I wanted to believe.  I just reported the details as they have come in.

There are too many people promoting entrenched viewpoints and agendas out there.  No here.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Au-Cu Ratio flashes 'not bullish' for broad market

It is just one indicator - and they need to be taken collectively to keep an ongoing narrative on course - but the Au-Cu ratio gives me pause with regard to the ongoing broad rally.

This is a classic consolidation as the ratio has declined out of our early October 'bull pivot', just as it would be expected to.  But if this ratio bottoms and turns up, it is going to do so in conjunction with a routine (or maybe not so routine, per evolving analysis) correction in broad markets.

The ratio's support area is at the 200 day moving averages (EMA & SMA).  I did indeed remove the 10 & 20 in favor of a cleaner picture. 


http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Monday, February 27, 2012

Ag chart noodling...

Noodling around with the daily silver chart, I have added in the SMA's 50 and 200 (simple moving averages, faded blue & red dotted lines) to go with the preferred EMA's 50 and 200 (exponential moving averages).  Also in there are the faded orange and green dotted EMA's 10 & 20).  I added the SMA's 50 and 200 to be able to see what the majority of chartists are seeing, as most of them tend to use SMA's vs. EMA's.  Though I personally like the tighter controls of EMA's.  Not sure if this is going to look too noisy or not.  If so, I may drop the 10 and 20.














http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Sunday, February 26, 2012

NFTRH176 Out Now

First we talk about gold; its value proposition, status compared to the the S&P 500, the ever-present mischaracterizations and disinformation by the mainstream and of course, it's value proposition.

Then, transitioning to the gold mining sector, I think I have found some very sensible and logical fundamental information that goes hand in hand with the ongoing technical consolidation of the senior gold stock index (HUI) above epic long term support.  This kind of stuff keeps me focused on why I am firm on the miners in the big picture.

NFTRH176 takes a look at markets, commodities and the US dollar as well, and finds a hint that perhaps I have not been quite bullish enough on the markets short term (with expectations of a 'routine' correction) but have been perhaps too bullish out later in the year.  This is all in motion and subject to fine tuning.  There are a few markets and indicators we watch to give an early nod one way or the other.

This is why writing this thing each week helps me, first and foremost and why I think a lot of subscribers find it helpful; because there are no crystal balls and preordained rights to know all.  There are just the markets and hard work that is ongoing and subject to refinement every step of the way.

NFTRH176 out now.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Friday, February 24, 2012

Gold & Silver CoTs continue to degrade (FWIW)

Fed green lights risk taking...

In line with what was speculated upon earlier, junk bonds are one 'asset' class that perceives a perpetual backstop compliments of our friends at Policy Central.  The ratio of 'junk' to 'investment grade' (lower panel) however, remains a bearish divergence below the red dotted lines.  But that pattern in nominal JNK ultimately targets 43+.  Edit (3:30) Oh and this post is not to be taken as a green light on risk taking.  Quite the contrary; the risk vs. reward ratio for the broad markets sucks at the moment.

















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Newmont Mining (NEM)

I do not own it (yet), but I have seen worse charts than this daily one of NEM (look at that cute little Inverted H&S), pulling back toward a support area.  The reasons I am interested are that it is a dividend paying senior gold miner and it is also the acquirer of NFTRH's long time star portfolio performer, the former Fronteer Gold and its Long Canyon property in Nevada.  I loved that stock (and yeh I know yer not supposed to love 'em).
















Edit (11:41) While not a mining or stock analyst, taking a look at Newmont has caused me to dial in a bit to some recent challenges facing gold producers as they 'write down' certain projects due to costs (NEM wrote down the remotely located Hope Bay which, if memory serves was the project they acquired in a buyout of Miramar Mining years ago?).  Then there is AEM with Meadowbank, which again if memory serves was the property of the former Cumberland Resources (I am dating myself I know).  This was another geographical outlier I think.  Well, before this turns into an NFTRH segment, I'll can it here.  But there is food for thought, including with regard to a current NFTRH holding.  The gold sector is never boring, that's for sure.

Edit (11:53) Point was that there appear to be some complexities in the way costs must be reported that could be pressuring the seniors to write down lesser performing projects.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Despite Obvious Signs of Recovery, Inflation Marches On

Despite obvious signs of economic recovery, including the brisk demand for 'big ticket' machine tools as noted on the blog yesterday, seasonally and non-seasonally adjusted jobless claims improving, a constructive Silver-Gold Ratio (SGR, chart below), implying improving general market liquidity with SGR's proximity to major support that NFTRH has been following for the last couple of months; despite these positive signs Ben Bernanke and the US Fed hold resolutely to a cautious view of the US economy.  As part of this resolution, they have committed to hold rates near zero until late 2014.  Huh?  What gives?  Will this not create inflation?











One might be confused by this easy policy if one believes that organic economic cycles are anything more than a distant memory.  As credit and leverage related abuses began to be hard wired into the system at the end of the 20 year secular bull market in 2000, the age of 'Inflation onDemand' began.  Inflationary monetary gimmicks of epic proportions are now employed the world over in order to micro manage economies through ever more desperate policy.  Evidently, bear markets have been made illegal in favor of a secular inflationary 'asset grab'; now over a decade old and subject to periodic 'deflationary' meltdowns.

What NFTRH and indeed this blog have been calling i2k12 (inflationary 2012) is not to be celebrated.  It is something to be speculated upon and thankful for if you are on the right side of it.  But when it begins to ramp down (my guess is sometime post-US election) and ultimately resolve in another meltdown, it will be time to once again to give Prechter (along with the entire cadre of lesser 'dBoys') his due once again.

Presenting again the absolute, number one most important chart in the financial world.  The monthly view (AKA the 'Continuum' here in Biiwii land)  of the 30 year Treasury yield is a general road map.  Within this chart's generalities, we must dial in shorter term analysis for ongoing market management.  But in the big picture we are able to lock on to a view that allows us to keep perspective and balance as the cycles play out.  These cycles ping between inflationary and deflationary and grind up the best of 'em, like Bill Gross and his T bond short play early last year (most recent red arrow).


It is a sad irony in the financial markets that the deflationists and bears tend to look like heroes at the exact moment they should be shunned (green arrows) and goats when they should be heeded (red arrows), for an intermediate down cycle at least.

Human beings by their nature are social beings and they tend to look to each other for guidance, comfort and inspiration.  This is such a nice quality in life, but it will kill you in the financial markets.  Man needs tools... so he will not out think himself!

The bottom line that we are leading up to is this; if the yellow shaded area on the chart above holds - and shorter time frame charts of TYX hint that it will - then there is a lot of room left in i2k12 for bears to get out of the line of fire.  The interim cycles tend to ping the boundaries and if 2012 unfolds the way I expect, the time to once again shift out of asset markets will not be until a red arrow appears once again at the monthly EMA 100.  Meanwhile, I have been expecting an interim (and routine) correction, which thus far has not visited.  Bears might take note and at least consider using the next correction to get right with the market gods.

Another point to consider is that with the debt and leverage hard wired in to the system (Bernanke is no idiot), a bubble in precious metals is not only technically possible, but could be desirable for global policy makers looking to re-liquefy the monetary system.  Or maybe they want a more generalized asset grab, making the rich (asset owners) richer and the poor well, more marginalized and more dependent.  This would of course have profound implications on near future tax policy.

There is so much more to write about here in Wonderland (the alternate world constructed where relatively normal financial markets once stood), but once again a post that was meant to be succinct got a little out of hand.  Luckily, there will be plenty of time to paint in the details going forward.  If you would like to join me in what has been a very successful journey so far, consider a subscription to NFTRH.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Attn: NFTRH subscribers - email update on HUI (daily)

An email update went out this morning with a review of HUI's technicals by daily chart.  Another 'no biggie' update, but a quick review of the situation.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Updating Royal Gold

The SLW-RGLD ratio chart told me to buy SLW, which I did last week.  But then the nominal RGLD chart told me to take a try on this one at support the other day; which I also did.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Random thoughts while reflecting on the chart of PH

Parker Hannifin not only has a chart that is threatening all time highs (even as bears hope it is an ill-fated A-B-C upward correction scenario), but the division of PH that I deal with is doing good, brisk business. PH you will recall, tends to benefit from a weaker dollar.  This would be another sign of i2k12.














Other random thoughts from my vantage point in the real world:
  • Machine Tools - big ticket items selling in the $100k to $300k range are moving briskly.  This is not opinion, it is fact... right here in the real economy.
  • The shady silver pitch [wo]men are working the phones again.  I got a call the other day from some lady seeking to let me in on a big silver trade.  Her company is making a recommendation on silver and I can be part of it!  Ha ha ha...  I tried hanging up with a "thank you I am not interested..." and she keeps pitching and I am like "okay I am going to hang up now..." and she keeps yammering on and I let out a laugh and hung up.  The only question is from what levels are the boiler rooms going leave the unsuspecting victims holding the bag?
That's it for now I guess...

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

S&P 500 Gets 9% Cheaper!!!

And the tout is on, compliments of our friends in the financial mainstream media.

S&P 500 Gets 9% Cheaper as Record Profit Restores $3.2 Trillion

Alternate headline:

Dear Public: You Were Too Much of a Dumbass to Buy in October - Or at Least Stop Shorting; So We Might as Well Suck You in Near the End of the Initial Stage Up (Just Don't Sell the Corrections and You Will be Fine; Trust Us)

“The world is profoundly underinvested in U.S. equities,” Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist at Raymond James & Associates in St. Petersburg, Florida, said in a phone interview on Feb. 21. His firm manages $300 billion. “The public is bombarded with all these negatives. Greece this, Portugal that, dysfunctional governments. The retail investor is frozen.” 

Isn't Jeff Saut supposed to be a smart one?  A guru to the adviser herd, no?  Well, if US equities are profoundly under invested, then global equities and some commodities are on a raving fire sale.

I am by no means bearish beyond a need for a routine correction, but this headline is just another manifestation of i2k12 (inflationary 2012) that looks more and more likely.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

FOREX Free Week

No strings as always.

Just use this trial as you will and then go on about your life; or subscribe to EWI's services.  Totally up to you and it's cut, dry and clean.

But there are no nagging, clingy after effects, which is why I like EWI and why I always check out their stuff when it is made available.  Oh that and the fact that Prechter is one of the 5 or 6 people who created me, so to speak.  Not that this trial is Prechter mind you.  It's a FOREX analysis service.

I used to subscribe to Prechter's Theorist and Hochberg's shorter term updates, and I often found myself in disagreement with them.   But then I used them as a counter balance, to make sure that I knew why I was doing what I was doing at any given time.  Then, I eventually terminated the service as I have found that there is really only room in my skull for what I think - and even that can get a little crowed sometimes!  :-) :-) :-)

Just click here for a free week of FOREX at EWI.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

HUI-SPX Updated

And of course, let's not forget about Huey's 'big picture' monthly risk/reward setup vs. the big stock market.  The RvW as compared to SPX is err, how would one put it?... good.










http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

HUI Gold Bugs Index - Big Picture Monthly View

NFTRH175 took an extensive look at the HUI, ranging from a 15 minute (in-day, in-week) short-term management chart to a daily chart, a weekly chart and finally on out to the biggest - and most compelling of pictures - this monthly chart.

The nearer time frames generally look okay, with some caveats; notably including the over bought, over loved state for the broad US market.  These time frames must be managed on an ongoing basis, but throughout all of the ups and downs, euphoria and agony, there is and has been the monthly chart and its Cup & Handle target of 1000, which has been active since 2010.

Here is an excerpt of the final segment of the precious metals analysis:













Time again for the HUI monthly chart with Cup & Handle and measured upside target.  To this point we have followed the ‘3 Snowmen (888)’ because I think it is a cute way to keep HUI’s huge upside potential on radar. But the target is actually more like 1000. If you are a gold stock bull – and please don’t take my word for it, NFTRH is just one publication with its own viewpoints, among many and disciplined research should consider many different angles – then you probably find this big picture compelling. You view the Handle consolidation (if that is indeed what this is) as an opportunity to be positioned for that unknowable time in the future that it may break upward.

An easy way to look at this is to put a mental ‘STOP’ just below the confluence of the Handle, the moving averages and the visual shaded support area. So how about this for a range of perspective on the HUI? 15 minutes all the way up to monthly.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Canadian Venture has changed trend by daily view

CDNX, holder of so many speculative Canadian resource stocks, most definitely bottomed (for a small trend at least) at our October Bull Pivot (which is turning out to be quite a party, isn't it?) and has changed the daily trend to up.



















Sorry bears, but that is the trend and if you have been shorting the trend you have been wrong since October.  CDNX weekly however, has not yet changed trend.  There is still hope for the deflationists, doomsayers and crash fetishists.



















If we are to move forward with i2k12 (inflationary 2012) establishing itself as THE theme for the election year however, this index is going to move significantly higher off of what is really just a strong bullish hint by weekly chart.

I know a lot of people hate charts and hate chartists even more because we are just practicing voodoo (and in many cases from what I have seen out there, serious doo doo).  That is fine because I am not here to win a popularity contest.  I am here to be as right as I can be and if wrong, to get right ASAP.

As long as this - and so many other charts tells me to avoid shorting anything and to be open to a decidedly good 2012 for commodities and many markets, I'll just do what the chart says.

The yellow shaded break above the moving average for example, says that the weekly trend could go 'up' soon.  The moment this is proven not to be the case, I'll adjust.  These are the markets after all, they are not a testament to my nor anyone else's ego.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Attn: NFTRH Subscribers... Email update

Email update just sent out discussing the HUI 15 min. and daily charts.  No biggie, but Huey has broken the in-day resistance point and this parameter should hold for all to remain happy in the very short term and keep the other noted targets in play beyond the micro term.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

So, have long term interest rates bottomed?

Answer that and get the keys to the kingdom.



















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

A ton of risk has come out of Gold-Euro as well...

MACD has not yet triggered, but we can say that the time for Europeans to be getting bearish gold has long since passed with the unbridled momentum of last summer.  This is an old chart I found showing the Cup & Handle we were managing a couple years ago in those halcyon days before the Euro crisis became front page news.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

A friendly reminder on Risk vs. Reward... Au-SPX

GLD-SPY proxy shown here... where is the risk vs. reward in this equation?









http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

A Repeat of 2008, Only Worse?

Here's Steve Saville again, articulating my own thoughts really well:

"Aside from the fact that it helps in the marketing of newsletters and other publications, there isn't any practical value in concocting detailed descriptions of what the 'coming crisis' will entail. Some people are bound to get lucky and guess right, but rather than relying on a lucky guess as to what the future holds in store it is better to rely on real-time analysis. There are always signs along the way that can help you steer in the right direction."

It never fails; when I get emails demanding that we are all going down an MF Global sink hole or that this is the final Armageddon,  it feels to me like the newsletter heavies are stirring up their readers again.  Chasing them in the direction that markets have already gone.  The hardest part of what I do is filtering the emails that come in, because they often sound like they know something I should know or at least be on high alert for.  Then what happens?  Why, the likes of the wonder rally on which we still find ourselves today.  These markets eat up and spit out emotional people with regularity.

Anyway, check out Saville's 'A Repeat of 2008, Only Worse?' here: http://www.biiwii.com/analysis.htm along with several other items for your consideration.  By the way, I have no association with Saville.  I just find that he routinely cranks out sense-making material.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Post President's Day wrap up and then...

moving on again to where I belong, down the Rabbit Hole.

In addition to the commenter to the previous post, an emailer writes: 

"So what you are saying is essentially that there is nothing a president could do whether criminal, venal, or perverse, or that would destroy this country for you and your children that would cause you to treat him with disrespect."

No, I am saying that I have been concerned about what is being done to this country since Bush's first term, and in hindsight should have been concerned back through Clinton.  I have always viewed a coming reaction to the Bush years as being something out of Sherwood Forest; a socialist corrective that really corrects nothing, but makes things worse and punishes a different set of people.

But I cannot see why the hatred of Obama by hard working and self reliant people should be any greater than the hatred of Bush by hard working people who fell further and further behind (going paycheck to inflation eroded paycheck) as corporate greed, influence and power grew out of bounds into 2008.

As a speculator, I made money under Bush and so far, I am doing so under Obama although it will be harder to keep more of it I am sure.  As Bush benefited me personally, I realized that things going on directly under his watch were hurting the country.  Same goes for the current president.

All I am saying is that maybe you should depersonalize it.  And that includes Maher.  Everybody it seems, takes sides and defines their views through the lens color issued by their official side.  I happen to find Maher's jokes funny.  But he's also a partisan wise ass.  So what?  The right has its share of partisan robots.

There is only one way to fix the country and in my opinion, it is not to be found in firing Obama and hiring Romney.

Since Ron Paul won't be elected because he is not smooth and maybe just a little too honest for the majority of Americans still, the way we will fix the country is by incrementally learning, watching the movement he has set in motion grow - our kids will take their own country back by becoming EDUCATED - and meanwhile, not blowing ourselves up by focusing our anger on one president who is only doing what we (or I) knew was coming, even during the Bush years.

Bush took so much grief and even had a shoe thrown at his head in Iraq.  But that was in Iraq (or wherever it was).  This finger pointing thing, in the nose of the president of the United States implies that the new set of people on the wrong end of policy has any more right to display their righteous anger than the last set of people did.

If we disrespect that office, then we may as well tear down the whole thing.  Now tell me, how many Americans were out buying cars, TV's and whatever the hell else was on sale yesterday?  Do you think they are ready for revolution?  I don't.  Reactions toward Obama are IMO a child-like lashing out, coming from individuals within a whole that is not yet fully aware of its own problems.  The problems were there before he got into office.

Thus ends an awkward political post by a non political writer who neither sees nor seeks a solution to anything from the two party system.  Not yet, anyway.

Edit (10:59)  Blog reader, subscriber and smart, honest person PJV responds per the following.  Posting political stuff is indeed as he says "bad business", but I figure if it helps readers know me better, than at least we are above board.  Especially since the subject gets to the core of psychology and herd mentality, which are THE two most important aspects to understand in market management. 

But then again, this isn't about me, is it?  FWIW, I did not say I respect these people in office.  You know that I put politicians only one notch above the true bottom feeders, the financial media commentary robots :-).  But I was speaking to this idea that one is worse than the other.  IMO, it isn't.  Obama is in my view just the predetermined corrective to what came before in a corrupt and screwed up system.

Hi Gary,

For what its worth, I completely agree with your assessment of where things are in the US in terms of the sheeple's readiness for a revolution.

I also completely agree with your bipartisan blame argument, and the delusional partisanship of those who are publicly flouting their disrespect of Obama at present. I even agree that those who are part of that game on one side or the other have no place showing disrespect to its various pieces in public.

In my reality though, respect must be earned and there is no respect inherently due the office of the President (and I am personally absolutely ready to "tear down the whole thing" because we really need to start over). As an individual who has seen that office abused by the presence of one super-criminal after another (red criminal, blue criminal, yada yada yada), if I had had an opportunity for a private tete a te with Bush and Obama I'd have put a finger in each of their faces, along with that of every one of them back to Carter perhaps, who seemed like some kind of weird accident; an honest President.

I am an honest man who has worked hard to create value in the world without exploiting my fellow travelers on the big blue ball. My assessment of both Bush and Obama, and pretty much all of our fearless leaders (excepting Ron Paul), is that they are largely parasites and psychopaths. If I showed them respect, I'd be disrespecting my own sense of honesty and integrity.

It's probably bad business for you to post "political" stuff on your blog. But again fwiw, I for one appreciate feeling the human behind the newsletter I read every weekend.


http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Monday, February 20, 2012

Bill Maher makes a point; a good one

Here in the town with the NHL goalie (Tim Thomas, Bruins) that snubbed a White House visit recently, this video is timely.  If I had been a member of the Bruins and had Thomas' political orientation (I don't, and I certainly don't share Obama's either) I'd have gone to that White House and I'd have shaken the President's hand and I'd have come home and told my kids all about it.

Maher's 'New Rules' addresses the subject of face to face disrespect of this president about 1:40 in and I could not agree more.  That picture of the Arizona governor is disgusting.  Makes me wonder how Maher managed to make the whole spot so funny.

Just a little off topic post for a US market-free President's Day.



http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Sunday, February 19, 2012

NFTRH175 Out Now

It is 28 pages of theorizing about my most core beliefs.  But it is also, and more importantly nuts and bolts analysis of the precious metals, US and global stock markets, commodities, sentiment and all sorts of other indicators as we move forward into what I continue to think will prove to be an i2k12 (inflationary 2012).

I do not tout the 28 page length as necessarily being a good thing because sometimes very succinct points can be made with less clutter.  But #175 is what it is and maybe next week we'll compact the message.  That is my ongoing goal, anyway.  I personally like this letter for what I think it tells me in my personal ongoing sensible strategy toward market management.

NFTRH175 Out Now!



















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

Friday, February 17, 2012

CoT Gold & Silver Report hot off the presses...

CoT lurches gold favorable vs. silver not favorable.
GOLD - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC.                                       Code-088691
FUTURES ONLY POSITIONS AS OF 02/14/12                         |
--------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE
      NON-COMMERCIAL      |   COMMERCIAL    |      TOTAL      |   POSITIONS
--------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------
  LONG  | SHORT  |SPREADS |  LONG  | SHORT  |  LONG  | SHORT  |  LONG  | SHORT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CONTRACTS OF 100 TROY OUNCES)                       OPEN INTEREST:      431,164
COMMITMENTS
 200,332   32,912   24,718  146,818  356,226  371,868  413,856   59,296   17,308

CHANGES FROM 02/07/12 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST:     -4,897)
  -7,288    2,799    1,177    3,733   -7,931   -2,378   -3,955   -2,519     -942

PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADERS
    46.5      7.6      5.7     34.1     82.6     86.2     96.0     13.8      4.0

NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS:      315)
     183       65       71       47       48      262      157
SILVER - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC.                                     Code-084691
FUTURES ONLY POSITIONS AS OF 02/14/12                         |
--------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE
      NON-COMMERCIAL      |   COMMERCIAL    |      TOTAL      |   POSITIONS
--------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------
  LONG  | SHORT  |SPREADS |  LONG  | SHORT  |  LONG  | SHORT  |  LONG  | SHORT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CONTRACTS OF 5,000 TROY OUNCES)                     OPEN INTEREST:      104,872
COMMITMENTS
  32,860    7,192   19,371   31,427   68,737   83,658   95,300   21,214    9,572

CHANGES FROM 02/07/12 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST:     -1,136)
     621   -1,460     -648     -368    2,292     -395      184     -741   -1,320

PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADERS
    31.3      6.9     18.5     30.0     65.5     79.8     90.9     20.2      9.1

NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS:      154)
      70       30       41       32       45      125       96
http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

SLW-SLV Ratio 1.3 years later...

Here is a chart I found while rummaging around in old NFTRH chart lists.  This is from October of 2010 and NFTRH107.  It was used as a leading indicator to gauge the health of the precious metals sector.

As it turned out, the ratio was only making the left shoulder of a H&S topping pattern that NFTRH also came to manage later.  As it turned out, a lot of the disturbance in the ratio was due to Silver's blow off to 50 last year.  SLW-SLV lost support levels (green lines) but has been slowly climbing back ever since spring of 2011 when the mini bubble blew out into the Euro crisis.  Boy what a tout that was in silver.

Anyway, SLW-SLV is working its way back above 1.10, which is the neckline to the H&S.  What's it mean?  Hey look, no one indicator is going to give us a pot of gold.  But it may be worth reintroducing this one going forward as another signpost along with the likes of SLW-RGLD and a whole host of others. 

It's the invisible world of ratio indicators and their messages, which go unheard by most casino patrons.  Hmmm, wonder what JNK-LQD is doing right about now?  :-)

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.com/NFTRH/subscribe.htm

One more little preparation made...

Since becoming concerned by the unnatural imbalances being placed upon the financial system in 2002 and becoming outright alarmed by 2004, I have done all I can do to get my house in order, so to speak.  This, as a normal citizen and business owner has included normal things like paying off debt and seeking out the safest cash vehicles (and for this I'll always thank Robert Prechter, no matter what criticism is launched his way from casino patrons), and some abnormal things like becoming a gold bug and a financial market writer.

Today, the requested change (to revoke margin 'privilege') has gone through on our brokerage account, which doubles as the NFTRH 'capital preservation' portfolio.  I mean, in the wake of MF Global and years of knowledge that the modern financial system is ultimately sitting on a foundation built of Balsa Wood and Duct Tape, who needs the convenience of margin anyway?  Routinely shorting the stock market is a fool's game anyway.  I'll use options or those inefficient short funds if I feel a need to hedge.  But this account is for 'preservation' after all, as it is balanced by actual things of value in real life, so going high cash and T bills - as it is now, along with a very few investments - is by far the preferred route.

So this morning I pulled up Fidelity and looked at the new, margin-free brokerage account and had a familiar feeling.  It is the feeling of having taken yet one more small step away from the casino and its wild eyed patrons.  I'll speculate along with the best of 'em, but at the same time I will never get lost in being a patron at a rigged game.

Sometimes I get caught up in market management in the newsletter and even here on the blog.  But the reminder is that all of this comes after the house is put in order with regard to debt, physical property, cash, monetary stores of value and now, a limiting of the damage that the institutions I deal with can do to my personal financial health.

Again, this is not to say that Fidelity acts in a manner that some brokers do, re-hypothecating peoples' money all over the global casino, but I am a 'if it even has the slightest chance of going wrong, ELIMINATE it' kind of guy.  One more thing was eliminated today and the mind is freer still to do what I enjoy doing.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Thursday, February 16, 2012

And then there is the 'Continuum'...

AKA, NFTRH's big daddy of macro indicators.  The yellow shaded area is a critical hold for TYX to keep the 'inflationary 2012' (i2k12) theme going.  If it is to really get cooking into reelection season, TYX will need to clear the noted resistance at 3.5%.

Right now, all we can say is that the TYX still looks constructive to bottom in the shorter term time frames.  If they prove out, this big view of the intermediate cycles is going to define the play across many asset markets.  If rates rise to the top of the channel (100 month EMA), bears and deflation cultists are not likely to enjoy 2012 at all.  That enjoyment - for those left standing - will probably be pushed out to 2013.









http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

TYX weekly

TYX weekly says "maybe, just maybe..."












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

30 Year Yields still in potential bottom making process...

So is TYX still making a bottom?

















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Royal Gold still looking good technically...

Holding the bottom Triangle line and the EMA 200.














http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Notes From the Rabbit Hole

Stay Ahead of the Market's Intermediate Cycles With a Subscription to NFTRH. 


GSR & USD chart spawns stream of consciousness ramble

A problem that NFTRH has been focused on in recent weeks is the broad market's extended sentiment and technical profiles (we are at the SPX 1340-1360 target zone and over bought, after all).

So a question has been, with regard to the sector on which I am fundamentally bullish, what if the market turns down hard?  What happens to the gold stocks (and HUI's tenuous position above major support)?

I do not own any HUI components and indeed have done a lot of profit taking and risk managing on the explorers, and I want to see certain things happen in the macro before stepping up to the plate as an aggressive buyer.

If all things were equal, I'd be all over this from a bullish contrarian perspective.  But the broad market's bad risk vs. reward profile has given me pause.  Are the miners going to suddenly decouple from all of this?  Well, to a degree they already have because the price activity has totally sucked relative to the SPX and other featured bull indices.

Anyway, without writing a book or turning this into something that should be reserved for NFTRH, here is an update of the gold-silver ratio correlated with the US dollar from a weekly perspective.  USD of course tends to gain the bid along with T bonds when things go south.  Make of it what you will.  I know what I make of it and while I do not see the end of the world by any means, there is some wiggle room for some short term angst in the markets.

When this near term situation clears and defines its true nature, we just may clear the track for what 2012 will actually come to have been known for when viewed in the rear view mirror.  We are not going to see policy makers blink with the stock market flying around up here and bulls feeling wonderful.  The daily GSR posted yesterday gave me pause.  This weekly one tells me that the analysis to date is on track beyond any expected short term disturbances that may generate.

Good stuff I say, because this is not easy by any means and the various herds are aligning on cue with their various ideologies and dogma the world over.  

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

How to get fired in under 5 minutes...

And now for a message from the dark side...

NFTRH174 had a look at the gold-silver ratio highlighting the similarities between the two yellow shaded areas.  This is a daily chart and the previous posts' (SLW-RGLD) is a weekly.  Can we be looking at intermediate good and short term not so good type of thing?  Am I making sense?  The broad market is due for a correction and the GSR would indicate the trigger if these two clusters beneath the EMA 50 prove at all similar.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

New indicator persists bullishly (SLW-RGLD)

I don't know, I am supposed to be scared right now and truth be told, I am in caution mode all around.  But here is a persistently bullish signal as silver royalty play Silver Wheaton remains in a bullish posture vs. gold royalty play Royal Gold.  For for thought, eh?












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Royal Gold Updated

I suppose it could be bottoming... gap is filled and lower line nearly pinged.  Whether or not it has bottomed, it sure was better to wait for the gap fill than to have bought the momo.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

A closer look at the HUI vs. SPX

Let's dial in the ratio of the HUI Gold Bugs index vs. the S&P 500 that we have been reviewing from a monthly 'big picture' perspective.  This weekly chart is also a big picture, but it adds the 250 week moving average and weekly MACD, along with its slower brother, TRIX, for more definition.


People should realize that while there is significant reason for fundamental optimism about quality companies within the gold stock sector this is, on a pound for pound basis, one of the most aggressively hyped stock sectors on the planet.  The same can be said for gold itself.

Why is this?  I believe it stems from a core and righteous belief by many gold bugs that things are not right with the system (thanks Captain Obvious :-)), gold should be money again (or at least it should anchor the paper of the modern realm) and it is simply a matter of time before destiny is achieved.

Gold, while in a predictable phase of under performance due to the Euro relief and US earnings and temporary 'jobs' pumps, has been beaten back from its impulsive highs during the acute phase of the Euro crisis.  Hype took gold up, and hype is taking it down or more accurately, is causing it to under perform what is now being hyped; namely the salvation of the system as we know it and the ever present tout of conventional stocks.

Ah, but we saw this relief coming did we not?  It was gauged as a necessary sentiment adjustment/volatility flattener and labeled the "October Bull Pivot", which marked a top in unreasonable levels of fear and anxiety and a bottom in the broad markets.  Sentiment now rests squarely on the opposite pole, and risk vs. reward is simply terrible for conventional stocks for the short to intermediate term at least.

The HUI-SPX ratio now rests at a point that implies the risk vs. reward proposition is now on the side of the gold sector, at least in its relationship to the broad US stock market.  The ratio now rests at a visual lateral support level, is near a supportive moving average and is sufficiently over sold by MACD to a level that can (not will, but certainly can) mark a bottom.  TRIX is getting down to a range that has proven supportive during the 11 year rise.

Yet the weekly AROON trend is down (along with the daily, while monthly 'big pic' remains positive) and the STO has not yet formed a positive divergence or gotten solidly above 20.  So the ratio remains in an intermediate chop and grind for now and there is always a chance that Goldilocks skips along with her basket of stocks right on through election season.  But Risk vs. Reward is... anyone?  Bueller?  Yes, it is aligned against broad stock bulls right now.

Risk vs. reward players should be all over the gold stock case right now, at least in a watching and waiting mode.  As I often find myself writing, perceptions are being cemented and the herd is being tended to the wrong end of the risk vs. reward ratio once again.  Last summer, it was into the precious metals.  Today, it is out of them and into the broad stock market.  Heck, just follow Warren and it'll be okay!

This post goes up - and may be distributed elsewhere - as a way to once again portray the quiet stuff that goes on beneath the surface as the cycles play out.  People dumping the gold sector now are likely to be about as successful as those that dumped it into the first yellow shaded area shown on the chart and those that dumped broad stocks and bought gold and gold stocks last summer (second yellow shaded area).

Just some perspective for your consideration.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Dr. Cu - thick resistance

Copper has some good things going on, but is banging its head on that thick red roof right there.  That would be comparable to the red roof above the stock market's head too.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Attn: NFTRH Subscribers...

Important Email Update just sent out discussing HUI technicals and even more importantly, HUI's relationship to an extended broad market.

Back to Au-Euro for a moment...

I just found this old chart in the stored list.  The solid blue lines represent an Ascending Triangle I was managing early last year.  In fact, the orange oval represented a point where a potential breakout was noted, before failure and retest of the lower line of the Triangle.  Isn't that the way markets always seem to work, testing your soul before ultimately making a move for real?

Today, Au-Euro has broken out of something of a Symmetrical Triangle, which would of course be a 'continuation' pattern just like the Ascending one.  It is now testing the souls and commitment of market players.  Casino patrons will be weeded out and people with a longer term plan will remain alert for the next trend.

Don't you just love the markets?  You have got to.










http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Nominal Gold tests support

Maybe it is just me, but the situation looks simple, technically.  Au should hold 1675-1700 or else open up further negative possibilities.  But the thing is, that is a pretty good looking support zone.  I know everyone is getting negative again, but maybe we should just wait to see how Au behaves as it tests this zone? 















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Gold-Euro Updated

Back below resistance.  Policy makers in control for now.  Do not adjust your Television.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Recommended reading: Monetary vs. "Price Inflation"

The first article here http://www.biiwii.com/analysis.htm is called Monetary vs. "Price Inflation" by Steve Saville.  It gets to the point of how inflation is what policy does, not what prices do in response.  Read it.  In my opinion, prices are only starting to respond to chronic inflationary policies after policy makers were given license during a nice 'deflationary' 2011.

There is other good reading for you to consider as well.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Monday, February 13, 2012

GLD vs. SPY

By the same token, is the proxy for gold vs. SPX (GLD-SPY ratio) to be looked at bearishly just because gold bugs are whining and writhing while broad stock touts carry the day?  I say go ahead, look at it however you want.  I am going to look at it from a risk vs. reward standpoint and have a lot of patience.

This 'patience' thing does not sell a lot of newsletters; just as it did not last summer when the warning was that gold was very over bought and sponsored by manic momos as people wanted to party and make coin.  But it is the only rational way to go about it.

The fact is, gold was extremely vulnerable last summer.  Now?  Not so much.  Gold will never get where it is going filled with a bunch of contented, comfortable holders.  That goes quadruple for the gold stocks.  Now the momos love the stock market and hate the PMs.  That's fine.  Actually, better than fine.  It is the way I like it, from a comfort standpoint anyway.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com