Bear Market
Frontrunning: May 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2013 06:24 -0500- Apple
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bear Market
- Blackrock
- Bond
- Cenveo
- Chesapeake Energy
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- David Einhorn
- Department of Justice
- Deutsche Bank
- Enron
- European Union
- Evercore
- Greenlight
- High Yield
- Merrill
- News Corp
- Private Equity
- Reuters
- SAC
- Saudi Arabia
- Six Flags
- Transocean
- Visteon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Einhorn's advice to investors: don't take my advice (Reuters)
- Next: floating dead vegetables: Chinese inflation rises on soaring vegetable prices (FT)
- The scramble for the bottom dollar is on: McDonald's, Wendy's Battle for Value-Centric Customers (WSJ)
- Cheaper iPhone coming after all: Apple supplier Pegatron boosts China workforce by 40 percent in second quarter (Reuters)
- House set to pass tactical Republican debt bill (Reuters)
- Underwriting bonanza: Goldman Said to Earn $500 Million Arranging Malaysia Bond (BBG)
- G7 finance chiefs to discuss bank reform push (Reuters)
- Big Banks Push Back Against Tighter Rules (WSJ)
- University endowments trim holdings in US Treasuries (FT)
- Ex-Pakistan PM's son abducted as Taliban threaten poll (Reuters)
- China Dowry Filled With Gold Signals Gains for Jewelers (BBG)
- As discussed here over a year ago: China inflation data shows central bank policy dilemma (Reuters)
Stanley Druckenmiller: "Bernanke Running The Most Inappropriate Monetary Policy In History"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/08/2013 13:46 -0500
When three hedge fund titans all explain in words so simple a financial media channel morning show host can grasp that there is nothing behind this rally but smoke, mirrors, and a bearded academic, it seems more than a few people start to pay attention. Following Paul Singer and Kyle Bass, Stanley Druckenmiller "loves the market short-term, but hates it long-term," since Bernanke is "running the most inappropriate monetary policy in history." He warns, for it is a warning, that "markets will melt up," until the Fed is forced to tighten. He recommends shorting the AUD, and sees the commodity super-cycle as over, because, "supply-demand... is deadly." He also likes Google but not "tech companies that engage in financial engineering under advice of hedge fund managers."
A. Gary Shilling - Six Realities In An Age Of Deleveraging
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2013 20:50 -0500
A. Gary Shilling's discussion of how to invest during a deleveraging cycle is a very necessary antidote to the ecstacy and euphoria that surrounds the nominal surges in risk-assets around the world sponsored by central banking largesse. Shilling ties six fundamental realities together: Private Sector Deleveraging And Government Policy Responses, Rising Protectionism, the Grand Disconnect Between Markets And Economy, a Zeal For Yield, the End Of Export Driven Economies, and why Equities Are Vulnerable. The risk on trade is alive and well - but will not last forever. We are still within a secular bear market that begin in 2000 with P/E ratios still contained within a declining trend. Despite media commentary to the contrary - this time is likely not different.
Wall Street Is A Rentier Rip-Off: Index Funds Beat 99.6% Of Managers Over Ten Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2013 10:29 -0500
It may seem uncharitable to note that only 0.4% - that's 4/10th of 1% - of mutual fund managers outperform a plain-vanilla S&P 500 index fund over 10 years, but that is being generous: by other measures, it's an infinitesimal 1/10th of 1%. So what do we get for investing our capital in mutual funds and hedge funds? The warm and fuzzy feeling that we've contributed the liquidity needed to grease a monumental skimming operation. Ten out of 10,000 is simply signal noise; in effect, nobody beats an index fund. The entire financial management industry is a rentier arrangement: they skim immense profits and return no productive yield at all.
Gold's Bear Market
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 04/29/2013 09:03 -0500What used to be no longer exists. This is what happens when markets change regimes.
Guest Post: Physical Gold Vs Paper Gold: Waiting For The Dam To Break
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2013 12:14 -0500
The recent slide in the gold price has generated substantial demand for bullion that will likely bring forward a financial and systemic disaster for both central and bullion banks that has been brewing for a long time. To understand why, we must examine their role and motivations in precious metals markets and assess current ownership of physical gold, while putting investor emotion into its proper context. The time when central banks will be unable to continue to manage bullion markets by intervention has probably been brought closer. They will face having to rescue the bullion banks from the crisis of rising gold and silver prices by other means, if only to maintain confidence in paper currencies. This will likely develop into another financial crisis at the worst possible moment, when central banks are already being forced to flood markets with paper currency to keep interest rates down, banks solvent, and to finance governments’ day-to-day spending. History might judge April 2013 as the month when through precipitate action in bullion markets Western central banks and the banking community finally began to lose control over all financial markets.
Gold Prices and Resource Stocks: Only the Price Has Changed
Submitted by Sprott Group on 04/24/2013 10:42 -0500“This isn’t the end of the world,” says Rick Rule. “This is a normal – and ultimately healthy – cyclical decline in a longer term bull market. This is a sale.” None of the macroeconomic, geopolitical, or global demographic conditions pointing to a long term increase in gold and commodity prices are any different today than before the metal’s price began a multi-day slide last week.
Gold Bear Market or Physical Gold Discount Sale??
Submitted by Sprott Group on 04/19/2013 12:34 -0500Back in 1980, just as the gold price blasted upwards past $800/oz, buyers reportedly lined up in droves at various bullion dealers to participate in the rally. Investment analyst Jay Taylor writes, “I remember 1980… there was panic buying of gold by people in the streets of New York City. They were lined up around the block to buy gold and Krugerrands at that time.” That flurry of buying ended up representing a classic top. As gold failed to move higher, the speculative frenzy soon reversed into a despondency that dragged gold into a twenty year bear cycle. For those investors who bought at the top, it was a hard lesson learned.
Buy PHYSICAL Gold. NOW: The Discount of a Lifetime: Or Why You Must Abandon the Fake Paper Gold Market
Submitted by Gordon_Gekko on 04/17/2013 06:00 -0500- Bear Market
- Bond
- Central Banks
- CPI
- Dennis Gartman
- ETC
- Fail
- Futures market
- Global Economy
- Goldbugs
- Gordon Gekko
- headlines
- Institutional Investors
- John Maynard Keynes
- Krugman
- Market Manipulation
- Maynard Keynes
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Money Supply
- New York Times
- None
- North Korea
- Paul Krugman
- Purchasing Power
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Reality
- Stop Trading
- Too Big To Fail
- Unemployment
It's time to go in for the kill. Buy as much physical Gold as you can.
Guest Post: A Couple of Things You Should Know About The Stock Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2013 12:18 -0500
The problem with cutting the links between risk and consequence and the real economy and the stock market is that a market deprived of feedback from reality is prone to disorderly disruption. Why is this so? Participants make decisions based on the information made available to them. If the information from the real world is suppressed or limited, then the decisions made by participants will necessarily be misinformed, i.e. wrong. If feedback from the real world is suppressed, then decisions will necessarily be bad. The only choice for participants who have lost faith in central planning's promise of permanently higher markets will be to abandon the manipulated markets entirely.
Japan's Full Frontal: Charting Abenomics So Far
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2013 15:41 -0500Curious how Abenomics is progressing six months after its announcement? These charts courtesy of Diapason should provide a convenient status update.
Gold: A Great Buying Opportunity Approaches
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 04/13/2013 11:00 -0500Gold may decline further to US$1,300-1,400/oz, but that will set up a significant buying opportunity.
First Bitcoin, Now Gold: All Alternative Currencies Must Be Crushed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2013 09:53 -0500
Gold prices just entered a bear market. Down 21% from their mid-2011 highs. Today's drop is the largest since 2/29/12 - LTRO2 and takes the price of the barbarous relic back to July 2011 lows. Silver is also seeing its biggest down-day since LTRO2 as it tests 2012 lows. Must. Destroy. All alternative currencies.
European Financials Drop To 7-Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2013 10:46 -0500
European bank stocks are officially in bear market territory, now down over 22% from their highs with today's drop closing the index at seven month lows. Financial stocks have played catch down to credit's early warning weakness but still have more room to run. The correlation between financials and sovereigns has been notably broken down in the last few weeks - as it seems an external funding source has saved European sovereign debt (perhaps one that just wants to get away from its vicious cycle-like devaluation and diversify into anything non-JPY-denominated). On the day, Portugal blew wider at the open (+22bps) only to be magnificently bid back to unchanged by the invisible hand. Spain and Italy drifted slightly tighter on the day. Stocks were similarly low range today. Swiss 2Y closed at 3-month lows as EURUSD retraced back from its highs to close practically unchanged from Friday at 1.3000.
Uninsured Deposits Could Be Used In Future Bank Failures Says Influential CEO Of Italy's Largest Bank
Submitted by GoldCore on 04/05/2013 09:02 -0500The CEO of Unicredit Federico Ghizzoni said yesterday that uninsured deposits could be used In future bank failures. He said that the savings which are not guaranteed by any protection or insurance could be used in the future to contribute to the rescue of banks who fail and that uninsured deposits could be used in future bank failures provided global policy makers agree on a common approach.








