Because Wall Street is generally a young man’s game, and as I said before, young men generally don’t learn anything from history until it happens to them.
Author: admin
the MR. X INTERVIEWS Volume 1 by Luke Gromen (pg. 19)
To oversimplify, the petrodollar system meant that the Americans got 10-15 percent of the world’s oil for free, every single day, and in return, the Emerging Markets got US production capabilities, access to US consumer markets (into which EMs indirectly supplied the lending capital), and a great big pile of US Treasury bonds.
the MR. X INTERVIEWS Volume 1 by Luke Gromen (pg. 11)
Look at this article: In 2015, the NY COMEX gold exchange settled less than fifty tons of physical gold all year. In contrast, on average the Shanghai Gold Exchange settled over fifty tons of physical gold every single week of 2015. If you want physical gold, which exchange is more credible?
the MR. X INTERVIEWS Volume 1 by Luke Gromen (pg. 5)
Perhaps the most recent one came at the end of 2015, when your US Congress repealed the forty-year-old US crude oil export ban.
Tell me, why would the US ever export crude oil for dollars when from 1973-2014, the US could simply print dollars for ever-growing amounts of imported oil? That makes no sense using “the old lens.”
the MR. X INTERVIEWS Volume 1 by Luke Gromen (pg. 1)
Somebody once said, “Events can go from impossible to inevitable without ever stopping at improbable.”
Get Ready To RUMBLE
In my last piece, I wrote that the fall downtrend was coming. I took the liberty of not forecasting a specific time. I am now going to make a call that the turn will come any given day.
To my fascination, it is looking like bond yields could top out on today (November 7) just as they did on November 7 of last year.
11/7/18 – The US Treasury 30 Year Yield topped out at about 3.46% and began descent
11/7/19 – The US Treasury 30 Year Yield is at the top of channel resistance formed by last year’s move. The yield is currently 2.42%
What does this mean?
Think about stocks and bonds as competing for capital against each other. If bond yields rise then they can steal capital from stocks.
After bond yields peaked last year, stocks went on to fall. I marked 11/7/18 on the SPX chart.
Another way to think about this phenomenon of rising yields causing danger for stocks is from an economic standpoint. Companies need growth in order to afford their debt. Some GDP forecasts for Q4 are coming in as low as 1%. As growth slows, it is possible that companies can no longer afford prior amounts of debt service costs.
I would also like to touch on an outlook for gold. Gold competes with bond yields in the same way that stocks do. If yields rise, then bonds become more attractive relative to gold. Since I believe that the stock market will be under pressure due to bond yields, I think that the probability of a FED December cut will begin to rise as stock market pressure rears its head. Currently, a December cut is only priced in at 5.2%, which means markets believe that we will have smooth sailing into year end. If the FED language/market action changes the probability of a December cut to the upside, then bond yields should fall and gold should rise.
When the FED or other central banks ease, the concept of a “reflation trade” comes into play. Let’s examine if other markets are front-running the forecast that I am laying out. Good places to look are commodities and emerging markets. The reason is that FED easing is an opening of the dollar liquidity gates, which means that theoretically the dollar should fall, and assets that are inversely correlated to the dollar should rise. The Thomson Reuters/CoreCommodity CRB Index and the EEM have recently broken out.
I have a few other things to highlight. I have previously explained how the USD/Yuan cross-rate is a proxy for trade war risk. In my opinion, we are at a point of maximum complacency with the recent trade narrative and chart to confirm. This means that should things turn sour in the stock market, Trump likely won’t be able to use more good trade news to jawbone the market higher.
Regarding complacency, we are also at a place of extreme risk per VIX contracts. The VIX is the “Fear Index.” When it is low, the market is complacent. When speculators go short VIX contracts, they believe it will go lower. Times of extreme lopsidedness in this market have not preceded good results for stock market investors.
My last note is that things can speed up should the market turn. The market has had a series of gap ups (the elevator looking things on the chart). Markets do not like gaps. Markets like to fill the gaps. To fill the gaps we would need to go down, and these elevators could speed up the process.
The Next Leg in Gold Possibly Confirmed
The Fed has recently been engaging in a “temporary” Repo program.
Very few can explain the details in full of why this is going on, but what must be known is that this is abnormal and would not occur under the best of conditions. The likely cause of this response is underlying liquidity stress for banks. Below, is some context of how this issue has progressed.
It should be visible that the size of these arguably emergency measures is increasing.
Calling these measures QE or not is irrelevant at this point. What must be known is the FED’s balance sheet is expanding again.
Below is a picture of global central bank balance sheets and gold price rising in tandem. This suggests a correlation. The gold price in $USD appears to be especially correlated with the FED balance sheet.
Since the start of this Repo program the FED’s balance sheet has begun expanding again per the chart below.
Traders have begun to understand what this all means. Per the technicals of the gold price and the GDX (gold miners), it appears that traders have decided that the FED balance sheet will continue to expand for some time and this will be bullish for gold and especially bullish for the GDX.
The breakouts are fresh so the next couple days will be important. Expect a retest of the breakout line and then hopefully follow through with the FED meeting at the end of this month.
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre (pg. 272)
The nature of the game as it is played is such that the public should realise that the truth cannot be told by the few who know.
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre (pg. 260)
The speculator’s deadly enemies are: Ignorance, greed, fear and hope.
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre (pg. 249)
As I told you before, there had been all sorts of rumours about my stock-market winnings. I suppose that helped, for nothing succeeds like success.