Futures market
Corrective Forces to Continue to Dominate in the FX Market
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/10/2013 06:05 -0500Short-term, dollar risks still appear on the downside, but this appears largely corrective in nature. Medium-term, a higher dollar still appears to be the most likely scenario.
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Gold And The Endgame: Inflationary Deflation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/27/2013 16:48 -0500- Backwardation
- Bank of England
- BRICs
- Central Banks
- China
- Counterparties
- default
- Federal Reserve
- Futures market
- Kondratieff Wave
- Lehman
- OTC
- OTC Derivatives
- Purchasing Power
- recovery
- Repo Market
- Reserve Currency
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Shadow Banking
- System Open Market Account
- Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee
- Tyler Durden
Excessive monetary stimulus and low interest rates create financial bubbles. This is the biggest debt bubble in history. It is a potent deflationary force and central banks are forced into deploying increasingly aggressive (offsetting) inflationary forces. The avoidance of a typical deflationary resolution to this economic long (Kondratieff) wave is pushing the existing monetary system beyond the point of no return. The purchasing power of the developed world’s currencies will have to bear the brunt of the “adjustment”. Preparations for this by the BRICS nations, led by China, are advancing rapidly. The end game is an inflationary/currency crisis, dislocation across credit and derivative markets, and the transition to a new monetary system. A new “basket” currency is likely to replace the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. The “Inflationary Deflation” paradox refers to the coming rise in the price of almost everything in conventional money and simultaneous fall in terms of gold.
President Obama Could Give Middle Class a Bailout with SPR Release
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/20/2013 10:42 -0500We bail everybody else out in this country, why not middle-class Americans via an SPR Release to counter high prices at the pump?
Eric Sprott Asks "Do Western Central Banks Have Any Gold Left?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2013 18:25 -0500
Recent dramatic declines in gold prices and strong redemptions from physical ETFs (such as the GLD) have been interpreted by the financial press as indicating the end of the gold bull market. Conversely, our analysis of the supply and demand dynamics underlying the gold market does not support this interpretation. As we have shown in previous articles, the past decade has seen a large discrepancy between the available gold supply and sales. Many recent events suggest that the Central Banks are getting close to the end of their supplies and that the physical market for gold is becoming increasingly tight. The recent sell-off was all orchestrated to increase supply and tame demand. We believe that central planners are now running out of options to suppress the gold price. After taking a pause, the secular gold bull market is set to continue.
Eric Sprott On Central Banks, Bullion Banks and the Physical Gold Market Conundrum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/17/2013 20:53 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Bank Run
- Barclays
- Belgium
- Central Banks
- Deutsche Bank
- Eric Sprott
- Estonia
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Finland
- France
- Futures market
- Germany
- Gold Spot
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- International Monetary Fund
- Ireland
- Italy
- LIBOR
- Netherlands
- Portugal
- Slovakia
- Switzerland
- Testimony
- Too Big To Fail
- World Gold Council
The recent decline in gold prices and the drain from physical ETFs have been interpreted by the media as signaling the end of the gold bull market. However, our analysis of the supply and demand dynamics underlying the gold market does not support this thesis. In our view, the bullion banks’ fractional gold deposit system is testing its limits. Too much paper gold exists for the amount of physical gold available. Demand from emerging markets, who do not settle for paper gold, has perturbed the status quo. Thus, our recommendation to investors is the following: empty unallocated gold accounts and redeem your gold in physical form (while you still can).
Oil in Tankers to Manipulate Prices?
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/14/2013 16:25 -0500The last two weeks oil inventories fell by a record 20 million barrels, this event has never happened in 30 years of historical data. Something just doesn`t add up here...
The Bernanke Conundrum
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/13/2013 18:28 -0500The catch 22 is that the Fed cannot exit now without markets and asset classes free-falling with markets at hundred year highs!
Gasoline Futures Market Rises 45 Cents in 10 Days
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/12/2013 20:51 -0500Gasoline RBOB price moves are ridiculous. RBOB closes Friday above 40 cents from the price on July 1st without any major news like 5 refiners exploding, or a major hurricane...
A Historic Inversion: Gold GOFO Rates Turn Negative For The First Time Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/08/2013 20:15 -0500
Today, something happened that has not happened since the Lehman collapse: the 1 Month Gold Forward Offered (GOFO) rate turned negative, from 0.015% to -0.065%, for the first time in nearly 5 years, or technically since just after the Lehman bankruptcy precipitated AIG bailout in November 2011. And if one looks at the 3 Month GOFO, which also turned shockingly negative overnight from 0.05% to -0.03%, one has to go back all the way to the 1999 Washington Agreement on gold, to find the last time that particular GOFO rate was negative.
Dollar Rides High
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/06/2013 06:48 -0500Brief discussion of the price action that is lifting the dollar at expense of nearly every other currency.
Guest Post: Gold's Under-Valuation Is Extreme
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/03/2013 18:29 -0500
The price of gold fell last week to the $1,200 level. The lemming sentiment in capital markets is uniformly bearish, yet every price-drop brings forth hungry buyers for physical gold from all over the world. Even hard-bitten gold bugs in the West are shaken and frightened to call a bottom, yet it is these conditions that accompany a selling climax. This article concludes there is a high possibility that gold will go sharply higher from here. There are three loose ends to consider: valuation, economic and market fundamentals.
The Great Comex Paper Gold Dump: Online Real-Time Physical Gold Price Datasource
Submitted by Gordon_Gekko on 06/27/2013 22:54 -0500With the Comex futures prices becoming increasingly irrelevant, a Physical Gold price datasource for buyers of physical Gold
Guest Post: The Federal Reserve - A Study In Fraud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/25/2013 13:01 -0500
The modern-day role of the Fed is to distort these prices, effectively to disrupt the economy’s guidance system. The purpose is to fool you into making improper decisions. This deception threatens social harmony and individual well-being. Distorting prices, especially systematically, is the equivalent of drugging a person and then having him make major life or financial decisions. Drugs and price distortions have the same effect on decision-making - the mind is unable to properly receive and process information. The Fed’s behavior of distorting prices is deliberate dishonesty calculated for government advantage. The policy is designed to deceive others to behave in a manner which is ultimately harmful to these individuals. It is outright fraud! A government that can only survive via fraud has reached the desperate stage. It can create great harm in its death throes but its survival is unlikely.
Here Is What's Going On In China: The Bronze Swan Redux
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/20/2013 10:15 -0500
A month ago, when stock markets around the globe were hitting all time highs, we wrote "The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?" which as so often happens, many read, but few appreciated for what it truly was - the end of a major shadow leverage conduit (one involving unlimited rehypothecation at that),and the collapse of a core source of shadow liquidity. One month later, China's "Lehman event" is on the verge of appearing, and with Overnight repo rates hitting 25% last night, coupled with rumors of bank bailouts rampant, it very well already may have but don't expect the secretive Chinese politburo and PBOC to disclose it any time soon. So now that the market has finally once again caught up with reality, for the benefit of all those who missed it the first time, here is, once again, a look at the arrival of China's Bronze Swan.
Gold, Silver, Equities, Bonds Plunge On Fed Noise And China Debt Crisis Risk
Submitted by GoldCore on 06/20/2013 09:19 -0500Bonds, shares plus gold and silver fell sharply around the world this morning after the U.S. Federal Reserve again suggested an end to their easy money policies. Data also showed China's economy slowing down amid growing concerns that a credit crunch in China is worsening.






