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    01/11/2016 - 08:59
    Many price-battered precious metals investors may currently be sitting on some quantity of capital that they plan to convert into gold and silver, but they are wondering when “the best time” is to do...

Archive - Dec 2012 - Blog entry

December 13th

Bruce Krasting's picture

Going Geriatricidal





Who knows? I might even become an EE'er. This joke is on me.

 

RickAckerman's picture

Fed Losing Its Grip on Our Expectations





The institutional crazies, village idiots and knee-jerk opportunists who bought shares yesterday following a Fed announcement of yet more monetization seem not to have been paying attention, at least initially, to the nasty sell-off in T-Bonds.  Well before yesterday, any sentient being would have surmised that easing’s impact on the economy had reached the point of diminishing returns. With administered rates pegged at zero and mortgage loans near historical lows, how much more boost are we to expect from yet another gaseous effusion of bank-system credit? 

 

AVFMS's picture

13 Dec 2012 – “ When It's Sleepy Time Down South ” (Louis Armstrong, 1931)





Markets getting back to some normality with the Periphery still recovering, although less today after the auctions, Bunds 5 wider on the week, Italy 10, but Spain 7 tighter across the curve from last Friday. Equities and Risk oblivious to that anyway and synching with the US. Getting difficult to find something crisp out there with reduced news flow and volatility. Excitement to be found in the US on FC developments, now that Greece, Spain and Italy are seemingly off the table and that the FED has moved to QE4.

"When It's Sleepy Time Down South" (Bunds 1,35% +1; Spain 5,38% +4; Stoxx 2622 -0,2%; EUR 1,308 +40)

 

williambanzai7's picture

QE BaSiC PRoCeSSeS: THe RoLE oF "PRiMaRY DeaLeRs"





We are sorry to interupt regularly scheduled Banzai7 Holiday Programming with this consummate farce...

 

Marc To Market's picture

Foreign Exchange Frustrates





The US dollar saw its post-FOMC losses extended only against the euro as the perhaps the passable success of the Greek bond buy-back and bank supervision deal lent support to the single currency.  

 

Yet, even it succumbed to selling pressure in the European morning and returned to pre-FOMC levels near $1.3040.  Against most of the other majors, the dollar has been confined to yesterday's ranges.  This is somewhat reminiscent of the price action after QE3+ was announced on Sept 13, with the dollar bottoming either that day or the following day. 

Of course, we recognize that monetary policy is one of the factors the influence foreign exchange prices.  There are factors as well.  It seems that most investors and observers look at the same variables in their formal or informal models of currency determination, but differ on the coefficients, or weights that are given to the variables, which seem to change over time. 

 

smartknowledgeu's picture

Why the Gold Standard Can Return the World to Global Economic Prosperity





The most commonly forwarded arguments against the implementation of a true 100% gold-backed sound money system can easily be disproven and thoroughly debunked with a small dose of history and another dose of logic.

 

CalibratedConfidence's picture

Margin Debt Continues To Climb





Borrowed money keeping stocks afloat

 

December 12th

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

And That's Checkmate Bernanke





Regardless of the reasons, Ben’s got a major problem on his hands. That problem is the fact that Treasuries are on the verge of breaking their upward sloping trendline. If Treasuries begin to collapse at a time when the Fed is buying up over 70% of debt issuance, then the Great Treasury Bubble is finally about the burst:

 

George Washington's picture

It’s Not the Mainstream Media ... It’s the OLD News





Average Fox News Viewer is 65 … Other Corporate News Networks Aren’t Far Behind

 

williambanzai7's picture

JiNGLe BeN WiTH LyRiCS...





Altogether now...

 

Marc To Market's picture

Sweden's Riksbank to Increase Reserves





The accumulation of reserves is primarily limited to developing countries.  There are two notable exceptions among the high income countries. Japan, which is traditionally willing to intervene in the foreign exchange market to curb the yen's strength.  The last intervention took place in Oct-Nov 2011, when the BOJ bought over $100 bln.  

 

The other exception is the Switzerland, where the SNB has capped the franc against the euro, leading to something on the magnitude of tripling their reserve holdings.  

 

The announcement that Sweden's Riksbank will boost its reserves drew our attention.  The Riksbank currently holds about $40 bln worth of currency reserves.  It will boost it by about 37% or around $15 bln (SEK100 bln).  The reasons behind its decision is interesting and reflective of more modern thinking about currency reserves. 

 

Marc To Market's picture

Dollar and Yen Remain Soft





The US dollar and yen remain soft.  The news stream has encouraged the so-called risk-on trade.  The Greek debt buyback appears to have gone well enough that it will get dollop of aid.  Spain reportedly received 40 bln euros of bank aid.  There seems to be a potential compromise banking supervision in Europe.  On top of that, of course, the market expects the Federal Reserve to announce an expansion of its quantitative easing later today and keep the door open to further steps if necessary. 

 

The dollar made new eight month highs against the yen, just shy of the JPY83 level.  These dollar gains ahead of the FOMC meeting underscores one of our interpretative points that the old drivers of dollar-yen, like interest rate differentials and general risk appetite, have broken down, trumped by Mr Abe and his aggressive monetary and fiscal rhetoric.

 

GoldCore's picture

Silver Rally Due - Seasonally Strong Mid December To End of April





Gold and silver are up 9.3% and 19% respectively so far this year – thereby outperforming many asset classes again in 2012.

In time, 2012 may be seen as a year of correction and consolidation for the precious metals after the sharp gains and record nominal highs seen in 2011.

 

 

December 11th

ilene's picture

Sorry Protesters: Your Jobs Are Being Sent To China And They Aren't Coming Back





There is a one way conveyor belt taking businesses, jobs and money out of this country. 

 
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!