Dow Industrials Drop 400 Points; Major Averages on Track for Worst Day Since May 2010 (Click for story.)
The epic blow out accelerates with the widely followed (by the administration) DJIA dropping by over 400 points at last check. And as we warned earlier, the liquidation sell offs in PM, to no small part driven by rumors of yet another CME margin hike, are picking up pace, with silver tumbling from over $42 to just $38.50. We are very concerned we may see another Flash Crash, or Crash Crash as it would be better known assuming there is no imminent bounce back. As such we urge readers to immediately put limit buy prices across the entire S&P that are 19.99% down, as down 20% is the magical border below which the exchanges cancel all trades. Just in case, with circuit breakers at 10% for the top 1000 stocks, a 9.99% limit buy may be a better deal.
Euro Zone Policymakers Fail to Extinguish Market Fire
Flash Crash (Or Crash Crash) Imminent? Put On Those 19.99% Down Limit Buy Orders Now
The epic blow out accelerates with the widely followed (by the administration) DJIA dropping by over 400 points at last check. And as we warned earlier, the liquidation sell offs in PM, to no small part driven by rumors of yet another CME margin hike, are picking up pace, with silver tumbling from over $42 to just $38.50. We are very concerned we may see another Flash Crash, or Crash Crash as it would be better known assuming there is no imminent bounce back. As such we urge readers to immediately put limit buy prices across the entire S&P that are 19.99% down, as down 20% is the magical border below which the exchanges cancel all trades. Just in case, with circuit breakers at 10% for the top 1000 stocks, a 9.99% limit buy may be a better deal.
What A Day
The U.S. remains hopeful that QE3 is coming. The tone of messages I get seems to be of people caught long (possibly recently) trying to show that market isn't really that weak. We tried the "Europe has gone home rally" and it pushed SPX cash all the way up to 1229, but since then we have faded. I think people will get more and more nervous about NFP as we head into the close. It is not just the number tomorrow that people are worrying about, but possibly massive downward revisions. Is it possible we get a 10% unemployment rate print tomorrow? Probably not, but given the price action, the fact that too many people still seem to be hoping for QE3 (I was one of those overnight and early today), and the NFP revisions fear, I think we will see a new low today before we close.Euro Zone Policymakers Fail to Extinguish Market Fire
Gold Reaches New Highs, Everything Else Falls (lc)
Author: goldnews | Filed under: Central Bank News, Economic News, Forex News, Precious Metals News Gold touched $1,683/oz today and made new highs in many currencies including the yen and euro. The yen fell against gold after recent currency intervention and the euro is straining on a dovish ECB following Trichet’s press conference.Meanwhile, US equities are down more than -2.0%, crude oil is just below $90/barrel, and the US Treasury 10 yr yield is down to 2.53%. Equities around the world are falling deeply as well, and the US dollar is gaining some across the board with the USD index topping 75.
US initial jobless data was released this morning with claims reaching 400K ahead of tomorrows non-farm payroll numbers, signalling the labor market continues to remain strained. Tomorrow’s data should be a major driver of global marekts as the jobs numbers will likely indicate the direction of monetary policy from the Federal Reserve. This maybe an opportunity for gold to top $1,700/oz.
I
had two purposes in writing today’s commentary. The most obvious intent
is to help people avoid committing financial suicide in our real estate
markets. However, an equally important goal was to provide people with
some sort of quasi-objective “measuring stick” to answer an important
question: how high is “high”, when it comes to precious metals prices –
and in particular the price of silver?
The first topic can be dealt with (in general terms) rather quickly. The criminal
near-zero interest rates imposed on us by our banker-serving
governments mean that any and every economy which allows such
recklessness will always have a housing market in some stage of “bubble”.
Near-zero
interest rates punish savers. When near-zero interest rates are
combined with high inflation, this is nothing less than the economic
rape of savers – the specialty of Western bankers. With savers forced
to disgorge any/all savings (to avoid it being ‘stolen’ via
banker-created inflation), the first place capital flows in such
situations is into real estate markets.
There
are two reasons why real estate will always represent the first/worst
bubbles to afflict such markets. First of all real estate is the most
obvious asset-class to turn to in such circumstances. Secondly,
many/most Western economies provide some level of subsidization for
home-ownership – further “juicing” these real estate bubbles. The fact
that the U.S. subsidizes home-buying more than any other economy is one
of the reasons the U.S. housing market continues to represent the
world’s worst real estate bubble (with massive, systemic fraud being the other main driver).
In such circumstances, there is no such thing as “investing” in real estate – only in gambling on it. The exponential money-printing and
near-zero interest rates have resulted in more capital sloshing around
asset markets than at any other time in history – by a factor of ten. In
such circumstances no one
can attach a rational/objective assessment to home prices. With
absolutely no way of determining how overvalued is any particular real
estate market, then obviously any/every purchase is a gamble.
This
means that any sane individual contemplating buying a home today would
do only one thing: run! With no real estate market on the planet being a
desirable place to invest our capital, the only sane strategy for future buyers is to delay buying a home – and instead to prepare to make that purchase under more optimal conditions.
While
we wait for our interest rates (and eventually our housing markets) to
return to sanity, the obvious step for future-buyers to take today is to
buy silver – to
reduce the price they ultimately pay for a house to a small fraction of
current prices. The dynamics could not be simpler: house prices (in
“real” dollars) will fall a long ways in most/all markets, while the
price of silver is headed to many multiples of the current price. With
both of these price-trends clearly telegraphed, there has rarely been such an obvious opportunity for a profitable arbitrage in all of history.
The
best way I can attempt to describe/define this opportunity would be to
provide an estimate of how much silver it will take to buy a secure,
comfortable home: 500 ounces. This is a figure which I have seen quoted
by more than one other writer, so I will presume they have looked at
some historical data which suggests such a price-relationship.
I made no attempt to verify this, for two obvious reasons: real estate markets have never
(collectively) been so over-supplied and over-priced in all of history.
Conversely, in relative terms silver has not been this scarce in
thousands of years. This means that as the “pendulum” swings back in
these markets that at some point there will be an opportunity for people
(in many parts of the world) to buy a house with less silver than at any other time in history.
Thus, when I use an estimate of 500 ounces of silver to buy a home I’m
not thinking of a “best-case scenario” (for silver-holders) but closer
to a worst-case scenario.
Read more: Buy A House With Silver
World Unprepared for Crisis
World Unprepared for Crisis
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