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Richard Russell: A thoroughly ugly close. Dow and Transports down a rare triple digits on both. Market drastically oversold — and what? No sign of a rally.  Down volume was 90% of up + down volume, making this an incredible 9 consecutive 90% panic down-days since mid-February. Something ugly is definitely brewing on Wall Street.

December gold closed up 22.80 to a record 1644.50. GDX, GDXJ and GDM were all higher boding well for the lagging gold mining shares.

It will be both remarkable and ominous if the stock market doesn’t put in a rally tomorrow. Question — Are we moving into “Great Recession” number 2? Market acts like it.

Red Alert

by Tov Hazel

The equity markets ‘shit the bed’ today. US investors got tattooed for $2 trillion of market cap. And this was supposed to be a good day. Talk about, “Sell on the news.”

I don’t think the Deciders really give a damn about stocks. It must ‘smart’ a bit to see the results of the day, but there is not much they can do about market positioning. The gold price was another slap in the face. Most folks in the country don’t really give a damn about gold, so neither do the deciders.

There are three things on the plate this afternoon which are much more important than stocks and PMs. I see them as being (I) the Yen, (II) the Swiss Franc and (the mother of them all) (III) Liquidity. I’ll take these three in order.

For argument sake we are at record lows in the USDYEN. The last time we saw this was in March after the earthquake. In response to that market instability the key central banks intervened in the market to weaken the Yen. IT’S UNLIKELY THAT WILL BE REPEATED.
Yes, I would expect the BOJ to step in one evening soon and push the Yen crosses around for a few hours. IT WILL NOT WORK IF JAPAN INTERVENES ALONE. Its quite possible that the BOJ action (when it comes) will have the reverse (and perverse) consequence of attracting additional dollar sellers.
Japan is already (functionally) in a recession. The move in the currency is adding to the deflation. It is happening very fast. Without global cooperation there is not a damn thing the Japanese can do about it (possibly buy a week or two at best).
The Swiss are in a similar position. Their currency is at record levels against both the Euro and the dollar. Who is bitching about this? Answer: Everyone.

The Bankers
The tourist industry
The watch industry
The agriculture industry
The Bankers
The Farmers
The merchants
(people cross the border buy goods 20% cheaper)
The pharmaceutical industry
The manufacturing industry
The Farmers
The Bankers
….read much more HERE including Charts

 

China: Danger, Red Dragon! DANGER

Michael: You’ve written a report called China: Danger, Red Dragon! DANGER.  China’s growth and India’s growth and prosperity has driven the commodity boom which is what’s rescued Canada, especially Western Canada to this point. Can you give us a minute nut shell on what worries you about China?

Jack: What scares us so much about China is going to rip up through the entire global economy. The nut shell is linkages; China is still extremely dependent on external demand, and in fact what they’re doing internally to prop up their GDP continues to destroy internal demand on a relative basis. 70% of their GDP is now driven by internal investment and speculation in the property markets. Of the various major industries there is too much over supply. We’re seeing major speculation in copper by companies that have nothing to do with copper. Major speculation in the housing market by companies that have nothing to do with real estate or real estate development.

So they’re reaching that stage internally where they’ve created a major investment problem. The GDP numbers in the US, Canada, the UK and the Euro zones are sinking, going down hill. So the demand from outside that China was so highly dependent on is going away. Now internal investment is so close to the saturation point,  internal demand will not be able to sustain Chinese growth to any significant degree. So they have to make a transition and there’s a lot of powerful interests that don’t want to make a transition to a more domestic oriented economy because they love it the way it is. The current system has created many billionaires and though there’s many Chinese policy makers that know they need to make this transition,  knowing and doing it as we just talked about with the US debt situation, are two different things. We think that because the industrial countries around the world don’t have any bullets left to stimulate we’re seeing China extremely exposed and we think there’s going to be a major growth accident there. (continued below)

China: Danger, Red Dragon! DANGER!

Until now this special report could only be had by paying $19.95 or by becoming one of our Global Investor subscribers. But we are giving it to you for FREE! Click HERE to get the report

Michael: Black Swan Trading slogan is ‘Be prepared’.  If these problems to continue and maybe worsen in the States and  Europe and the dramatic impact these Western problems will have on China. Will we be seeing interruptions in the commodity cycle? What are you advising individual investors to be doing?

Jack: It’s a very tough problem and I think that’s why you’re seeing gold catch this major bid. Interestingly too with all the chaos going on in the US you’re also seeing US bonds just soared yesterday as it seems for lack of other alternatives the US market is still the place to be. I say that because what’s happening in Asia,. The fact that there is no external demand that’s supporting them at the moment, they are very worried about that so they don’t want to see the US dollar fall  to zero because then it puts pressure for then competitively and pushes up their relative currency values. So I think you’re going to see Asia being majorly supportive of the US dollar. I’m not saying the US dollar doesn’t possibly go to new lows but I’m saying I don’t see a disaster scenario there because Asia is in such a pickle. They will continue to buy treasuries I think, and continue to support the dollar from that stand point so to me the US treasury market still looks like the place to be. Even when they’re actually down to a double ‘A’, it’s really the only game in town.  You don’t want to go to Europe given the situation and you just can’t hide anywhere else so…

Michael: Jack, its an interesting weekend in the States given that they’ve created a political dead line of August 2nd which is Tuesday of course to try and raise their debt ceiling.

Jack: Yes, you’ve hit it pretty well,  it’s quite a mess. My perspective on this goes along the same line as yours. I think this is the time, there’s no better time, to make some serious changes in the direction of government spending and to me if that requires them to fall so be it. They really need to just start eliminating sections of the federal government in order to ever cover the main mandates that they’ve made into the future.

Michael: By the nature of politics when you’re trying to solicit support from varying special interests or groups of people the greater good rarely comes into it. Greece is on the precipice of bankruptcy, the same in Portugal, Ireland and soon Spain and Italy. Now the US is Centre stage, and both Republicans and the Democrats are offering plans that are going to raise the debt ceiling as well as the overall debt. They seem to be  just refusing to address the problem. Do you think there’s any hope for any meaningful kind of change?

Jack: I’ll be extremely disappointed I’m sure because you have nailed it.  Both Republicans and Democrats have so many different interest groups that they are tied to. It’s really sad to watch but  they know spending is power and to them that’s sort of the bottom line.

Michael: The European debt crisis is temporarily on the back banner but it is going to rise to the fore front much very soon. I saw that with Spain this week when on wednesday Standard & Poor’s revised its outlook on the Kingdom of Spain to negative from stable

Jack: I think the European crisis is far from over. The core issue in these periphery countries is how do they create wealth  to a degree that they can pay back any of the debt when the problem is they can’t create wealth in this system when they have to compete against Germany. So they’re throwing more and more good money after bad and the dirty little secret is that they’re just trying to protect the banks. The banks have huge exposure not only to the periphery countries in Europe but also to the emerging market countries in central Europe that were formerly Russian satellites, so the contagion problem to me and it’s going to rear its ugly head again. We see Cypress in trouble now and we see the interests rates blowing out in Italy and Spain. If everything was hunky dory we wouldn’t interest rates rising to record highs in Spain and Italy.

Michael: This is one of the real keys that people have to understand is that you’ve always got to put your money somewhere. There’s only three really major currencies in the World, the US dollar, the Euro and the Yen. So it’s the case of whose the best looking of ugly sisters. Japan’s got dramatic problems especially demographically, you’ve got Europe which we’ve just described and you’ve got the US. So I guess what the out look is on the very short term is they’re all ugly but the US is less ugly.

Jack: I’m not saying that the dollar looks that great to tell you the truth I mean it got only a little bid yesterday even when the biding went up in US treasuries. The Swiss Franc is doing well and that’s the safe haven whose not part of the European Union. Even despite of the troubles in Japan, the Yen is also acting as a safe haven again for the major Japanese institutions coming home and hiding in there. So you do have some other avenues outside the US dollar, the Swiss Franc as I said and Japanese Yen seems to be playing those roles. I was using the Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar as a hiding place but if China breaks those two currencies would get hit very, very hard whereas Swiss and Japanese Yen would not.

Michael: Do you think that gold is being traded as an alternative currency?

Jack: Yes I think there’s no doubt about that. Gold is soaring against all the major currencies.

Michael: Are all of the currencies are going to blow up at some point?

Jack: Yes I think that’s absolutely right. I think you can garner that from Gold’s movement.

Michael: What do you see for the Canadian dollar?

Jack: I was really surprised by the Canadian GDP report on friday which showed GDP falling .03 % in May against forecasts of a rise of .01%. You have to look at Canada really as kind of a safe haven for North American money from a currency standpoint so I think we’ll find out very soon whether they’re going to look right past that GDP report and the Canadian dollar will move higher, more again as a  safe haven just to get out of the US . If that’s the case and we make a new high in here,  the Canadian dollar will probably test those old highs we made a couple of years back. But the Canadian dollar is technically very, very overbought.

Michael: Well, in summary you’re just saying the debt ceiling issue is irrelevant. Even if they find some sort of short term solution, the problem is they borrowed more money than they’re ever paying back and they have unfunded liabilities that are not going to be met. That’s the problem and they’re certainly not showing any signs of being willing to address that.

Jack: You’re exactly right and that’s why it’s so interesting. The situation now is the US winning by default, doing much better than they should from an asset stand point. But once China gets through this period that we’ve talked about,  a danger period probably over the next year or two, and they make that transition and are a less reliant on outside demand, the whole game changes. Then the US is going to then look like a very ugly sister relative to the potential in Asia if china gets through this without some political upheaval. So, that clock is ticking too, a whole potential change in the global macro environment. If the US does not get its house in order and continues to depend on the fact that it has the world reserve currency, if the game changes that’s where the real damage will come big time for the US dollar.

BlackSwan

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China: Danger, Red Dragon! DANGER!

Until now this special report could only be had by paying $19.95 or by becoming one of our Global Investor subscribers. But we are giving it to you for FREE! Click on the banner below or HERE to get the report

findoutprepare

China is Staring down a major contraction. They’re trying their best to prevent it. But their best won’t be enough. A hard landing is coming. The coming implosion of Chinese economic growth will exacerbate investor fears and shake markets.


People buying gold at $252 in 1999 were paying the lowest real price for gold in a century. They were investors. People buying silver at $4 in late 2001 were buying at the lowest real price in 5000 years. They were investors. You can almost never get hurt buying at record lows when the price of a commodity is below the cost of production.

Speculators on the other hand get smacked on a real regular basis. They depend on more and more people coming into the market. They are speculating on future prices. Regardless of what you think about the future of the US dollar, $1637 gold isn’t a record low and you are not an investor by buying at that price. You are a speculator only.

…read the whole very interesting article HERE

 

Stock Market Trouble & Gold $1,880

The Stock Market & How should investors react to the debt deal

“If the markets don’t rally, it will be a very bearish indication,” says Richard Russell, a longtime market technician who writes the Dow Theory newsletters. “The real horror would be if the debt limit is solved and the market continues to go down.”

….read more HERE

Gold $1,880

As the gold price doggedly trades above $1,600, the Godfather of stock market newsletter writers, Richard Russell, recently wrote that he’s targeting $1,880 for the king of currencies, gold.

“There isn’t much clear and defined in this market except for gold,” stated Russell, the author of The Dow Theory Letters.   “How much of this is based on the Washington shenanigans I don’t know, but once the debt boost is solved the test will be whether gold tends to hold its gains.  By the way, the P&F [Point & Figure] chart shows a price objective of 1,880.”

Gold

….read more HERE

The Bottom Line

The Bottom Line
Technicals, fundamentals and seasonal influences point to another volatile week in equity markets around the world. Preferred strategy is to continue to hold sectors that benefit from favourable seasonal influences (gold, gold equities, biotech, fertilizers) and to continue to hold a “healthy” position in cash equivalents.

Gold gained $28.80 U.S. per ounce (1.80%) last week to another all time high, but slipped $8.80 yesterday. Short term momentum indicators are overbought, but have yet to show signs of peaking. Strength of gold equities and related ETFs turned negative relative to gold last week. However, the gold equity/gold ratio turned positive yesterday, a mildly encouraging sign.

silver

Silver slipped $0.21 per ounce (0.52%) last week and eased another $0.58 yesterday. Short term momentum indicators are overbought, but have yet to show signs of peaking. Strength relative to gold is neutral, but is showing early signs of turning positive.

Gold

 

…. be sure to check out the other 48 Charts including Seasonal Charts Don posted this morning August 2nd HERE

 

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