US Treasury Admits It Conducted A Circular Ponzi Scheme For Years
While one may wonder about the implications of the just announced "accelerated windown" of the GSEs, predicated in no small part by the surge in animosity between Tim Geithner and the FHFA's Ed DeMarco, there is one aspect of the announcement that is completely and utterly unambigious: as part of its justification to demand faster liquidation of Fannie and Freddie's "investment portfolio" Tim Geithner gave the following argument:Transfer one more conspiracy theory into the conspiracy fact bin.This will help achieve several important objectives, including... Ending the circular practice of the Treasury advancing funds to the GSEs simply to pay dividends back to Treasury
Gold Continues To Be Money: CME Europe Now Accepts Gold As Clearing Collateral
Over two years ago, the US Clearing house of the CME, the world's largest derivatives marketplace, had no choice but to allow gold as collateral. Why: because as we showed some days ago, while in Europe bank deposits are expansive, in the US, financial system funding relies primarily on mythical assets as liabilities, i.e., those that exist primarily due to faith in the system, something which has been in short supply, as a result of which the $15 trillion (down from a peak of $23 trillion) shadow banking system long used to fund regular operations, has been imploding. Couple that with a scarcity of other (re)pledgeable assets which in the US do not, unlike the UK, have an infinite rehypothecation chain, and one can see why back in October 2009 the CME had no choice but to accept gold as eligible collateral for clearing purposes. As of minutes ago, the European arm of CME Clearing has folded too, and has released a press release stating that it to0 "has extended the range of eligible collateral types to include gold bullion." Of course, this is the same gold bullion that Germany will be seeking to "repo" in exchange for sovereign bail outs as Europe's periphery continues to run out of endogenous money and has to increasingly rely on the benevolence of the Bundesbank. For now all we need to know is that another exchange just threw in the towel and admitted that contrary to Bernanke's stern position, gold is, indeed money.“Gold Ponzi Schemes” Revealed - Physical Gold Favored Over Derivatives
Gold continued gains on Friday receiving a boost from Angela Merkel’s comments saying she supported ‘Super’ Mario Draghi’s pledge “to do whatever it takes” to save the euro. While this sentiment lifted markets and some investors hope ECB action is sooner rather than later - it is also creates the risk of currency debasement and could lead to further falls in the euro. At the beginning of August, the European Central Bank said that it might buy Spanish bonds if the government first applied for the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) support. The ECB has said that specific committees within the bank would design the appropriate mechanisms for the bond purchases in the coming weeks, suggesting a possible green light within a few weeks.Crony Socialism Strikes Back: Geithner Retaliates Against DeMarco; Accelerates Wind Down Of GSE Treasury Backing
Two weeks ago we reported in Geithner To DeMarco: "I Do Not Believe [Un-Socialism] Is The Best Decision For The Country" that TurboTax Tim did not take lightly to FHFA head Ed DeMarco's snubbing of the worst treasury secretary ever, when DeMarco refused to comply with Tim Geithner's "proposal" for mortgage principal reduction in effect forcing responsible taxpayers to bail out irresponsible ones. Lots of media posturing and free-market bashing ensued. Today, Tim has once again taken the offensive, and is announcing plans that the Treasury is accelerating the winddown of its backing of Fannie and Freddie and that going forward instead of a 10% dividend, the Treasury will be entitled to a "full income sweep" of the GSEs on behalf of the US Treasury. One can only hope that the loan loss reserve reduction which was the sole source of Fannie and Freddie "profit" (see Bank of America) will continue. And since it won't, it is once again Tim Geithner who ends up with the short end of the stick in his idiotic attempt to escalate a matter which is far beyond his meager comprehension skills. And here is the kicker: "The agreements require an accelerated reduction of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s investment portfolios. Those portfolios will now be wound down at an annual rate of 15 percent – an increase from the 10 percent annual reduction required in the previous agreements. As a result of this change, the GSEs’ investment portfolios must be reduced to the $250 billion target set in the previous agreements four years earlier than previously scheduled." Oops MBS market, unless of course there is someone who will miraculous step up and buy the "excess investment portfolio"... who could that be... who could that be? Ah yes: Giethner just greenlighted the MBS purchases (sorry MBS twist - no cookie for you) portfion of QE3. And finally, following today's unambiguous renationalization of the GSEs, does this mean that US debt is now $16+6 trillion or over $22 trillion courtesy of the GSEs which are now on the US balance sheet?European Equities And VIX End Week In World Of Their Own
It's like Deja-Vu all over again. The last two days effluence exuberance in European stocks - most specifically Italian and Spanish broad indices - is extremely different from the lack-luster moves in corporate, financial, and sovereign credit markets. Yes, we know short-sale bans; we know fast-money; we know liquidity; but it is beginning to become a little farcical that equities are doing what they do with no follow-through from the actual underlying markets that 'should' benefit the most from whatever it is that the equity markets are rallying for. EURUSD ends the week perfectly unchanged from last Friday. Spain and Italy 10Y end the week down 60bps and 25bps respectively (but the gains were fading fast today - even as stocks accelerated). Europe's VIX collapsed 1.7 vols to around 21% today after being steady all week (as US VIX drops below 14%).The 'Beautiful' Deleveraging
Bridgewater's Ray Dalio is quoted in a recent Barron’s interview, describing the current phase of the U.S. deleveraging experience as “beautiful”. He goes on to explain the three options for reducing debt: austerity, restructuring and printing money. “A beautiful deleveraging balances the three options. In other words, there is a certain amount of austerity, there is a certain amount of debt restructuring, and there is a certain amount of printing of money. When done in the right mix, it isn’t dramatic. It doesn’t produce too much deflation or too much depression. There is slow growth, but it is positive slow growth. At the same time, ratios of debt-to-incomes go down. That’s a beautiful deleveraging.” That sounds pretty good and makes sense. Or does it?
Mailbox - Resurgence of Gold Driven By Financial Self-Preservation
Eric De Groot at Eric De Groot - 1 minute ago
I doubt gold will be used in settlement of public trade, but it’s certainly
a possibly for international trade. Gold's resurgence is motivated by
financial self-preservation. While centralized governments have tightened
their grip on the private economy through the implementation draconian
regulations and capital controls to ‘regain’ control, they have been
unsuccessful in stopping the...
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If The S&P 500 Drops 150 Points, We Will Have QE 3 & QE4
Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 33 minutes ago
I think the market is going to break out of this range. My guess would be
on the downside and not on the upside because the market is already
overbought here so that`s where I stand.
Now, how low will we go?
I think if the market drops 150 points on the S&P 500 Index we will have QE
3 and QE 4. - *in CNBC Fast Money*
*
*Related: SPDR SP 500 ETF (NYSE:SPY)
*Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions
of the stock market and futures markets around the world.*
Cost of College Degree Significantly Outpace Earnings And Soon Domestic Earning Potential
Eric De Groot at Eric De Groot - 43 minutes ago
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Current Employment
Statistics (CE), Average hourly earnings have increased from $5.66/hr to
$19.77/hr from 1978 to 2012. The 3.5 fold increase in hourly
earnings doesn't even come close to matching the 12 fold increase in the
cost of a college degree over the same period. This harsh reality marred
by wasteful spending at...
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content, and more! ]]
Printing Money Is An Absurd Idea
Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 1 hour ago
It’s an absurd idea. Printing money has never solved anyone’s problems.
Maybe sometimes in the short term printing money has alleviated the
situation, but anybody who has studied history or economics knows that
printing money in the longer term doesn’t work. Maybe this time it’s
different, but I doubt it. - *in The Fiscal Times*
*Jim Rogers is an author, financial commentator and successful
international investor. He has been frequently featured in Time, The New
York Times, Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Financial Times and is a regular guest on Bloomberg an... more »
Paulson Steps Up Gold Bet to 44% of Firm’s Equity Assets
Eric De Groot at Eric De Groot - 4 hours ago
Paulson who made billions shorting sub prime credit markets in 2007
continues to add to his massive gold position in 2012. Headline: Paulson
Steps Up Gold Bet to 44% of Firm’s Equity Assets Billionaire John Paulson
raised his stake in an exchange-traded fund tracking the price of gold
while selling other stocks during the second quarter, leaving his $21
billion hedge fund with more...
[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other
content, and more! ]]The Perils Of Overconfidence
We all make mistakes. In the investment world, some mistakes arise from having imperfect information, some from not anticipating the future correctly and some from sloppy analytics. Sloppy analytics includes everything from outright mathematical errors or misinterpretations, to poor assumptions, to overfocusing on unimportant variables or underfocusing on important ones. Analytics is the most critical and controllable part of the investment process, but even if done flawlessly does not ensure a favorable outcome by any means because the views/ behaviors/incentives of other investors – and indeed, the investment environment itself – change continually in ways that can’t be anticipated. But there is one more common mistake that is a consistent source of perplexity for active investors. Over the years, my experience has been that those who lose money more often (and in greater amounts) than they should, often do so because of overconfidence. Overconfidence can lead to the conviction that one is only buying investments that will be highly profitable and one is only selling investments that no longer have significant upside potential. This can lead to a lack of diversification and a heavy concentration of money in a single investment or asset class. Overconfidence, however, also leads to overtrading.Peter Misek Heart AAPL
The reason the market is up today? Jefferies' Peter Misek hikes his price target on Apple from $800 tio $900 (the same AAPL which is now supposed to grow almost exclusively in China, and where as Apple Insider just reported "China's second-largest carrier may end contract sales of Apple's iPhone"). Yes, middle market, $100-$200MM high yield bond issuer Jefferies has an equity research group. And yes, after working at JPmorgan, Scotia, Orion, Alpcap, and Canaccord in the past decade, Misek finally has found a place he can call home (for more than 2 years), or at least until the next bonus renegotiation-cum-upgrade option time. And yes, Jefferies actually is moving the volumeless market for the first and only time ever courtesy of 1.000 implied correlation between the NASDAPPLEURUSD. Which is great. Maybe Misek will be right here.,, Unlike his calls on DragonWave for example, where he was buying all the way from $7 until $2, in the interim moving his Price Target from $9.00 to $3.50 to $10.00 to $3.00. Peter likes even numbers. He keeps it simple, except for his $699 PT on AAPL back in March- why $699? "It's one iPad." Sometimes he likes it complicated.New York Luxury Housing Bubble On Steroids: 15 CPW Flipping Returns 192% In 5 Years
"It's defining a new category in real estate" is how the ultra-luxury apartment business is seen in New York. Goldman's Lloyd Blankfein and his buddies (including Sting) at 15 Central Park West are set to double their money as Bloomberg reports four condos in the Richie-Rich style extravaganza of a building have hit the market at asking prices at an average 192% over what owners paid in 2007 and 2008. The most expensive (a five-bedroom 35th floor pied-a-terre), topping Oaktree's Howard Mark's previous $52.5mm record purchase at 740 Park, is priced at a stunning $95mm. Testing the glass ceiling of a $100mm apartment is nothing though - as just like the rest of the nation's apparent house price recovery 'tight supply is supporting the current spate of eye-popping asking prices' which obviously will mean an influx of 'very expensive' inventory hitting the market in the coming years. For $95mm we wondered exactly what the apartment comes with? Perhaps $90mm of gold bars on the coffee-table? Perhaps Hugh Verrier and his wife Celia sum up the largesse perfectly: "we just thought of it as a living space". Indeed, Hugh, indeed.Economic Outlook Drops To Lowest Of The Year As Inflation Expectations Surge
University of Michigan Consumer Confidence came modestly higher than expected and limped higher off the lowest levels of the year. However, aside from this apparently positive event (accoding to some media pundits), there are two worrying things shifting rapidly. Consumer outlook for the economy (as opposed to current conditions) dropped to their lowest of the year with the largest 3-month drop in 11 months (so much for hope?); and inflation expectations soared by the most in 17 months.The Only 'Un-Manipulated' Chart Of The Real Un-Recovery You'll Ever Need
Probably no other commodity is tied to global growth, especially EM and China growth, than the key steel-making ingredient - Iron Ore. The iron ore price continues to plunge and it would appear that very few are focused on it. Critically, this is the one commodity that is not a futures contract, cannot be manipulated by trading desks or by levered hedge funds. Despite all the euphoria about risk assets and commodities - and the central bank front-running - Iron Ore prices continue to sink lower and lower...Spanish Bad Loans Soar By Most In 3 Years As Bond Issuance Set To Surge
The absence of any ket EMU events combined with a relatively muted news flow on the debt crisis amid the summer vacations/doldrums and a major lack of bond supply from the periphery until the end of August has created a favorable environment for peripheral debt. Draghi's August 2nd comments drove risk-on and as UBS notes, this amplified the usual thin liquidity and light volumes. However, all these fun and games are about to stop as September has myriad events slated that are likely to have significant impacts on investors' demand for peripheral paper. Spain, in particular, after seeing its stock and bond markets surging euphorically, is about to suffer a double-whammy. Gross issuance for the rest of the year is estimated at EUR8bn per month (and could rise to EUR13bn per month) implying EUR4-6bn per auction twice a month - keeping bonds back under pressure as supply approaches. As if that was not enough, Delinquencies on Spanish bank loans just soared to new all-time highs, rising by the most in over three years and accelerating. So, after a calm summer vacation, Spain (optics aside) is bad and about to get much worse.Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: August 17
Peripheral stock indices continued to outperform today, as market participants reacted to yet another reiteration of support for ECB’s pledge to do all necessary to defend the Eurozone. As a result, banks in Europe are trading up with decent gains, with health care sector in the red given its traditional appeal as a safe-haven investment. German DAX continues to consolidate above the key 7000 mark, being driven higher by Daimler and Deutsche Bank. Looking at other asset classes, there is visible outperformance in the short-end of the curve, with the in-focus Spanish 2s tighter by around 20bps mark. The ongoing speculation of an intervention in the bond market also weighed on the German Bund, which underperformed its US counterpart. USTs come off overnight highs to trade little changed, with the move attributed to deal related selling. In the FX market, the EUR continued to re-price risks surrounding what is inevitable an unlikely scenario of a Eurozone break up. To the upside, resistance levels are seen at the 55DMA line at 1.2395 and then at 1.2400, which is also an intraday option expiry for the session.Short-Term ECB Dollar FX Swaps With Fed Soar To Highest Since December 2009
While Europe is once again experiencing one of its brief, manic episodes of inexplicable euphoria sending all risk assets in the continent higher while everyone is still on vacation (and ahead of a surge in Spanish bond issuance in September, which only spikes even more in 2013 - more shortly), its banks have quietly run out of dollars again. Certainly, looking at the now irrelevant metric known as Libor which indicates precisely nothing of significance, and merely allows banks to feel good about themselves, and which has been declining, one could imagine that banks have zero problems finding unsecured follar funding. One would also be absolutely wrong because as the most recent ECB and Fed data confirm, 7-day dollar swaps between the ECB and New York Fed - the only real sign of dollar funding scarcity - has risen to $9.3 billion in the current week, the highest since December 9, 2009. And with 10 banks bidding at the last USD operation, one can be sure that at least 10 European banks are suddenly hoping that the bout of euphoria continues for at least 2 more weeks so that the executives of these 10 dollar impaired banks can continues their vacation in peace, until the eye of the European hurricane passes starting September 1.Frontrunning: August 17
- 'Pussy Riot' band members found guilty (Al Jazeera)
- Merkel Says Germany Backs Draghi’s ECB Aid Conditionality (Bloomberg)
- Now, the reverse psychology: Hilsenrath: Fed 'Hawks' Weigh In Against More Action (WSJ)
- London Firings Seen Surging As Finance Firms Add NY Jobs (Bloomberg)
- Facebook Second-Worst IPO Performer After Share Lock-Up (Bloomberg)
- Kocherlakota Says FOMC Goes Too Far With 2014 Rate Pledge (Bloomberg)
- China Said to Order Action by Banks as Developer Loans Sour (Bloomberg)
- Australian Treasury Dismisses AUD Intervention Calls (Dow Jones)
- Brevan Howard Loses Third Founder As Rokos Said To Leave (Bloomberg)
- Japan eyes end to decades long deflation (Reuters)... for 30 years now
- Ex-Morgan Stanley Executive Gets Nine Months in China Case (Bloomberg)
Today’s Items:
The cat is now out of the bag, the US
Dollar will soon be history. China is recasting all of their gold
reserves into small one kilo bars in order to issue a new ‘gold backed’
global currency. With trade agreements with Russia, Japan, Chile,
Brazil, India and Iran, the writing is clearly written on the wall. And
you can forget about those gold ETF’s because there is no where enough
physical gold backing them up.
Now in what may be the greatest economic
“mea culpa” in history, the media is having to admit that the Iceland
was right when they told the bankers to go to hell when faced with the
possibility of bailing them out with taxpayer money. Officials at the
IMF, to cover their backside, are using the phrases like “surprisingly
strong recovery” when describing Iceland. Since this is the case,
imposed austerity has been nothing less than a deliberate attempt to
destroy European economies.
To help prevent layoffs, at least until
after the November election, the Labor Department is going to bribe
states to keep their state employees. These grants, work-sharing
programs and other schemes are designed to hide the true U.S. economic
situation; however, this only puts off the consequences of out of
control government spending and bad fiscal policies.
Next…
40 Points That Prove That Obama And Romney Are Essentially The Same
http://endoftheamericandream.com
40 Points That Prove That Obama And Romney Are Essentially The Same
http://endoftheamericandream.com
Here are a few…
1. Both supported TARP
2. Neither supports balancing the federal budget
3. Both support the Federal Reserve
4. Both support NDAA
5. Both support the TSA
6. Both support illegal immigration
7. Both support gun control
1. Both supported TARP
2. Neither supports balancing the federal budget
3. Both support the Federal Reserve
4. Both support NDAA
5. Both support the TSA
6. Both support illegal immigration
7. Both support gun control
Stephen Leeb, Chairman of Leeb Capital
Management, believes there is a coming move in gold to $12,000 an ounce.
In addition, John Paulson and George Soros have just increased their
paper gold holdings. Gold, between 1976 to 1980, went from roughly
$100 to $800 an ounce. If this eight factor increase holds true again,
then gold could go from $1600 to over $12,000 an ounce. Question is,
would people sell their gold at that price for paper considering the
economic situation with the dollar?
At an average price of $3.09 a pound, beef
has hit a record high in the US. Prior to June, the average cost of
100% ground beef in the United States had never topped $3.00. If this
keeps up, there are going to be more vegetarians.
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