Archive - Dec 2013
December 1st
3 Times As Many Americans Supported King George During the Revolutionary War than Support Our OWN Congress Today
Submitted by George Washington on 12/02/2013 01:02 -0500Congress Is Less Popular than Zombies, Witches, Dog Poop, Potholes, Toenail Fungus, Hemorrhoids, Cockroaches, Lice, Root Canals, Colonoscopies, Traffic Jams, Used Car Salesmen, Genghis Khan, Communism, North Korea, BP during the Gulf Oil Spill, Nixon During Watergate or King George During the American Revolution
Supply and Demand 1 December
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 12/02/2013 01:00 -0500
At times silver metal is being dumped in quantity in the spot market, and at other times paper silver is being bought aggressively in the futures market.
December 1st
The Other Great Rotation - From Hope To Change
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 21:59 -0500
"Peak Hope"...?
Central Banker Admits Faith In "Monetary Policy 'Safeguard'" Leads To "Even Less Stable World"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 21:22 -0500
While the idea of the interventionist suppression of short-term 'normal' volatility leading to extreme volatility scenarios is not new, hearing it explained so transparently by a current (and practicing) central banker is still somewhat shocking. As Buba's Jens Weidmann recent speech at Harvard attests, "The idea of monetary policy safeguarding stability on multiple fronts is alluring. But by giving in to that allure, we would likely end up in a world even less stable than before."
Jeff Bezos Unveils Amazon PrimeAir - Drone Delivery
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 20:43 -0500
While the fundamentals continue to deteriorate, we are sure the idea of drone-based delivery (which fits with the 7500 drones the FAA expects within the next few years) will add a few multiple points to Amazon's share price valuation. On a side note, with increasing awareness of the government's surveillance, what better way for the NSA to keep an eye on everyone up close and personal (and to get an occasional invoice by the company that has made burning cash from operations into an art form).
Ukraine On The Edge: The 7 Minute Video Summary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 20:15 -0500
The following seven minutes of mayhem look eerily reminiscent of the violent pre-ambles to the middle-east's recent coups or non-coups. As anti-government protesters demonstrated against the shunning of a European trade agreement (President Yanukovych - "I will not allow any serious economic losses and decline of living standards"); the clashes became ever more violent as the police cracked down. Following heavyweight boxing champion (and opposition leader) Vitali Klitschko's call for a new government - "our main task is Yanukovych’s resignation. But the first step is the resignation of Azarov’s government" - the clashes left at least 265 people injured. The crackdown followed Interior Minister comments that they "won’t allow Ukraine to become another Libya or Tunisia, where uprisings toppled governments in recent years." Of course, the main difference is the Ukraine is now squarely under Putin's sphere of influence.
UK Royal Mint Working On Plans To Issue Gold-Backed Physical Bitcoins
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 19:38 -0500
The implicit, and ever more explicit, institutional acceptance of the dominant cryptocurrency Bitcoin (we say dominant because as we pointed out last week, there has been an unprecedented spike of digital currencies one can pick and choose from) continues when following the surge in vendors willing to transact in BTC over Thanksgiving, the latest news comes from the birthplace of the modern central bank, the UK, where we learn that none other than the UK Royal Mint has been working on plans since this summer to issue physical Bitcoins in collaboration with the Channel Island of Alderney. But where the story gets downright surreal is that as the FT reports, the same symbolic Bitcoin token issued by the Royal Mint "would have a gold content – a figure of £500-worth has been proposed – so that holders could conceivably melt and sell the metal if the exchange value of the currency were to collapse." In brief: a perfect, and utterly incomprehensible, fusion of (opposing) hard, soft and digital currencies all rolled into one...
CNN Tests "Fixed" Obamacare Website And... It Crashes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 18:04 -0500If CNN was doing its best this morning to prove that the second coming of healthcare.gov is fixed, it... failed.
Why It's Going To Be A Whole Lot Worse Than In The 1930s
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 17:33 -0500
As Mike Maloney forecast in the mid-2000s, the roller-coaster ride continues in world markets and economies. His - so far - spot on projection that "first the threat of deflation (1), followed by a helicopter drop (2), followed by big reflation (3), followed by a real deflation (4), and then followed by hyperinflation (5)," appears to be rotating from stage 3 to stage 4 (as we noted here). However, as Maloney explains in this brief clip, while we have seen great deflations before, in the '30s one-third of the monetary base was backed by gold, now we virtually nothing as "people do not understand the scale of the emergency that's going on right now."
Two-Thirds Of Americans Can't Be Trusted
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 16:28 -0500
Only one-third of Americans say their fellow countrymen can be trusted according to a recent AP-GfK poll, down from over half 40 years ago. Americans are suspicious of each other in everyday encounters and who can blame them with the government appearing to bless any and all surveillance and intervention in the interests of the status quo. "I'm leery of everybody," warns one respondent, and as AP reports, this is a potential problem for economic growth as "social trust" brings good things. A society where it's easier to compromise or make a deal; where people are willing to work with those who are different from them for the common good, appears to promote economic growth. Distrust, on the other hand, seems to encourage corruption and there's no easy fix.
Bitcoin Plunges Into Bear Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 15:29 -0500
UPDATE: BTC has rallied 26% off its lows in the last 55 minutes
From it's gold-matching highs at $1242 on Thursday night, the price of Bitcoin has collapsed over $400 (32%) to $840 on heavy volume. Of course, this is only a one-week low for the exuberant digital currency but still a significant plunge (as its smaller brethren Litecoin has collapsed 51% from its highs). Interestingly, this drops the price of Bitcoin in USD below the 'arb'-based price of Bitcoin in China ($965). It seems, all coincidence aside, that the BIS infamous plunge-protection-team has been re-trained...
Ron "Austrian" Paul Vs. Paul "Keynesian" Krugman - You Decide
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 14:25 -0500
The concept of the business cycle and its un-natural intervention-inspired boom-bust process is at the core of the following three minutes of dueling quotes from two of the most infamous public proponents of change (Ron Paul) - "Printing money is not an answer... Like all artificially-created bubbles, the boom... cannot last forever"; and the status quo (Paul Krugman) - "Cut interest rates a couple of percentage points, provide plenty of liquidity, and call me in the morning." You decide who "was" right, and who "will be" right again...
Macro Considerations
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/01/2013 14:23 -0500Overview of the week's economic and poltiical calendar in the context of the investment climate.
Black Friday Sales Tumble 13% On Thanksgiving Thursday Opening Scramble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2013 13:20 -0500If somehow the scramble to open stores earlier and earlier on Thanksgiving day, until such time as the very Thanksgiving dinner had to be interrupted early for the annual rush out to the (un)friendly neighborhood Thug-Mart (Toys'R'Us opened at a ridiculous 5pm on Thanksgiving day) and punching people in the face just to get that 42 inch, 2010-model Plasma TV for $99, was supposed to boost overall sales instead of merely pulling them forward (see cash for clunkers), it didn't work. According to ShopperTrak, total Black Friday traffic plunged 11% and total sales fell 13.2%, the second consecutive year of declines following last year's 1.8%. The reason, as largely expected, is that a substantial portion of Friday shopping was pulled back to Thursday: as ShopperTrak founder Bill Martin said, "if retailers continue to promote Thanksgiving as the start of the holiday buying season, he thinks the holiday will eventually surpass Black Friday in sales. "We're just taking Black Friday sales and spreading them across a larger number of days," Martin said."






