Timing & trends

What Is The Next Big Move In The Markets ?

Markets typically move in waves. For secular investors, the long waves with a duration of 6 months to 6 years are important. However, the 3 to 6 months waves convey information about the secular strength, and that is why we focus on the multi-month trends.

We believe that markets today are preparing for new trends. We rely on intermarket chart analysis to assess the highest probability moves, because intermarket dynamics sow the seeds for market specific trends.

Consider the key stock markets in the world. In the first chart set we look at the U.S. stock market (with the S&P 500 as proxy for U.S. stocks), European stocks (the Euro Stoxx 600 as proxy for Europe), emerging market stocks and China. The trending moves (up or down) are highlighted with a blue frame. We will discuss the green ovals later.

Stocks in the U.S. trended in 2013 and 2014. Since December last year, however, U.S. stocks have moved sideways. Stocks in Europe had a strong trend higher when QE was announced by the ECB but that rally stalled in April. Emerging markets saw a strong move lower in Q2 2013 and a sharp rally mid-2014. Overall, however, emerging markets are going nowhere. China is clearly the market with the strongest current trend. The rally has been ongoing for 9 months.

stock markets 2013 June 2015 590

Commodities show a totally different picture. We have selected the key segments, softs (cotton, coffee, sugar, etc), 

…..read more HERE

King-World-News-INCREDIBLE-NEW-BREAKTHROUGH-IN-SILVER-This-Will-Change-The-World-1728x800 cJohn Embry:  “Just when you think things in the gold and silver space can’t get any more ridiculous, they do.  Last week’s Commitment of Traders Report, which came out on Friday, showed a massive change in positions in both gold and silver….

….continue reading the John Embry interview HERE…

The Most Important “Known Unknown” in All of Finance

DRE-Bill-BonnerToday, the most important “known unknown” in all of finance – something so powerful it could change the character of the entire global economy.

But first, a short trip to Paris…

On the walls of the chapel at the French military school are rich paintings… including a couple of 18th-century masterpieces by French painter Louis-Michel van Loo.

The one behind the altar is of Saint Louis, dying from dysentery in the 13th century. There he is in his splendid blue robe… with the fleur-de-lis on it… receiving extreme unction from a priest.

Saint Louis (aka King Louis IX) died in Tunis, North Africa, on the Eighth Crusade; what he was doing there is not clear. But at least he went in person. And he died in the campaign.

Everything has a price tag. The previous crusade – which he had undertaken 20 years earlier – had been a disaster, too.

He took his army to Egypt to do battle with the Hafsid Muslim dynasty.

There, in the heat of the Nile River Valley, his soldiers must have made quite a picture – with an English contingent, led by William of Salisbury, and the Knights Templar with their banners and tunics.

Everything seemed to be going so well… until…

We’ll come back to that.

God’s Fool

We were sitting in the chapel, attending mass on Sunday. The priest offered his sermon.

We couldn’t tell if it was dull or just pointless. But our eyes wandered to the paintings on the wall… and our mind wandered to thoughts of war.

This – the chapel at the École Militaire – was the sacred heart of France’s military tradition.

This week marks the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, a French defeat.

Since then, French military successes have been few. But before Wellington and Blücher hammered Napoleon at Waterloo, the French had won far more battles than Americans have ever fought.

French history is littered with bodies – cut, pierced, blown to bits.

The French, like the British and the Americans, celebrate their fallen heroes and pretend that their wars served a worthy purpose.

And who knows… Wars may look foolish – in retrospect. But man is God’s fool. And all His works demand our solemn curiosity.

And so, with a mixture of respect, shame, and embarrassment, this week, we turn to Mars – the god of war.

When Bonds Turn, So Will the World

But first, let us take up our usual post – where we keep an eye on markets and economies, in the hopes of seeing what mischief is afoot.

Friday, the Dow fell 140 points – or about 0.8%. Given the 108% rise over the last six years, that’s hardly significant.

But the bond market may be a different story… It’s looking more vulnerable. After 33 years of trending down, yields may have finally switched directions.

For example, the yield on the 10-year French sovereign bond quadrupled in the last two months. At 1.2%, it’s still microscopic. And neither the significance nor the permanence of this move is known. But it’s still worth taking note.

By the way, the direction of travel of bond yields – which reflects expectations of where interest rates are headed – is probably the most important “known unknown” in the financial world. Central banks influence, but cannot control, interest rates.

Knowing what Fed chief Janet Yellen wants to happen is not the same as knowing what will happen.

People are not usually prepared to lend money for nothing. Sooner or later, we expect they will want a decent return on their investment.

When they do, the world will change. Asset prices have floated higher and higher on the flood of credit over the last 33 years. When the tide ebbs, assets will fall. And the character of the economy will change.

And that change could be shockingly quick and staggeringly large. The bond market is huge. But just a few players – today, mainly central banks – dominate it.

Read more > One of the early warning signs will be a “run” on paper dollars

For example, government-sponsored agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac backed 60% of U.S. mortgages between 2008 and 2013. And large chunks of U.S. debt are held by just a few players – such as the Fed, China, and Japan.

The feds have convened a meeting of major banks and bond investors this Wednesday. They are worried about what would happen in a crisis.

There could be many bonds on offer, for example, but no bidders. Bond prices would crash – provoking an even more sensational disaster.

The Battle of Al Mansurah

But now let’s return to the poor Christians… sweating in the hot Egyptian sun… seven and a half centuries ago.

They were there to sort out the Middle East and wrest control of the area from the locals – much like U.S. troops in Iraq and elsewhere.

At first, the crusaders’ campaign went well. The Muslims fled, leaving a crucial bridge over the Nile intact.

The crusaders crossed the river, led by Saint Louis and Robert of Artois. Then the town of Al Mansurah was open to them.

Thinking the defenders had run off, the Christians entered the gate. They soon discovered that they had been led into a trap. From all sides, the Muslims attacked. Robert of Artois was killed. So was William of Salisbury. The Knights Templar were almost wiped out. Only five escaped alive.

The Christians retreated as best they could. They dug a ditch to protect their camp. The sun beat down. Supplies of food and water ran short, as the Muslims blocked the crusaders’ ships from reinforcing their compatriots. Famine and disease settled into the camp like swamp gas.

Finally, a deal was struck. Louis was taken into captivity by Muslim forces, along with about 12,000 of his troops. They were freed when France paid a ransom. The price tag: a sum equal to about a third of France’s annual tax revenues.

Louis agreed not to go crusading again. But he learned nothing from the adventure. Twenty years later, he was once again sunning himself in North Africa, waiting to die.

Regards,

Signature

Bill
Paris, France

 

Further Reading: More than 286,000 people have already checked out Bill’s newest video presentation. Click here now to watch it, so you won’t be caught off guard when the violent monetary shock hits.

Screen Shot 2015-06-15 at 8.04.33 AMIt’s surprisingly transfixing watching robots – great, lumbering, 7ft-tall humanoids – trying to walk and use power tools and drive a car. But it’s not the only spectator sport on hand at the DARPA Robotic Challenge.

There’s also spot-the-billionaire.

The first one I clock is Larry Page, co-founder of Google, who walks right in front of me leading his young son by the hand.

“Larry!” I say, but then hesitate. I’m not sure how this question will end. “Is Google planning to build a race of superbots that will take over the earth?” is perhaps too bold an opener. “Could I just … ?” I say but he simply smiles and walks away.

Given that Google bought multiple AI and robotics companies 18 months ago on a secret shopping…..

…..continue reading HERE

 

Three New Obama Wars

obama-flagThe three new Obama wars that could have a big impact on investment markets in the weeks ahead.

The president announced his first new war nine months ago.

He officially announced the second just last week.

And the third, still being fought mostly in the background, could burst into the headlines at almost any time.

Each of these is creating uncertainty, confusion and fear globally, driving massive amounts of flight capital to safe havens, leading to unprecedented dangers — and opportunities — for investors.

New Obama War #1
U.S. Bombs Syria

On Sept. 10, the president launched an aggressive campaign of airstrikes on the Islamic State in Syria (as well as

neighboring Iraq).

 

The danger: It would play right into the hands of Syrian President Assad, who has used Russian-made planes to bomb his own people for four long years … who’s responsible for up to 200,000 deaths in the Syrian civil war … and who has dispersed millions more overseas. That’s what I warned about nine months ago. And that’s precisely what’s happened.

The second danger: Without boots on the ground, it would ultimately fail — just as we’ve begun to see in recent weeks.

New Obama War #2
U.S. vs. Islamic State in Iraq

This war became official just last Wednesday when the president revealed that he’s going to crawl back into Iraq with another 450 U.S. troops on the ground.

Then, the very next day, White House officials hinted about the real possibility of establishing a limited number of U.S. army bases in the thick of Iraqi battlefields.

You may think this is the same old Iraq War drama, Take 2. But as I’ll explain in a moment, it’s not. It’s a brand new war.

You might also think the immediate impact of America’s return to Iraq might be the subject of heated debate.

But the fact is everyone — including the president himself — admits that it’s an “incomplete strategy,” a token gesture, and, in effect, an exercise in futility.

Nor do you have to be a master military strategist to understand why. Join me on a quick trip through recent history and you’ll see exactly what I mean …

Iraq, mid-2000s. Tens of thousands of U.S. troops battle a relatively weak, splintered al-Qaeda in Iraq. The enemy holds no territory, has virtually no weapons, no money and little popular support. Yet, the U.S. is still unable to stop the nation from crumbling into civil war.

January, 2007. Almost 132,000 U.S. troops are on the ground in Iraq. But it’s still not enough to stop the country from coming unglued. So the decision is made to begin a great troop surge.

September, 2007. The troop surge hits its peak at 168,000. Sunni tribes join the battle against al-Qaeda and other extremists. The country is finally stabilized.

Now, fast-forward to today, and brace yourself for some very shocking facts:

Fact #1. Even after the deployment the president just announced yesterday, the U.S. will still have only 3,550 troops on the ground in Iraq — only half in a training role, none in a combat role. Back in 2007, the U.S. had nearly 50 times that many.

Fact #2. The enemy, previously made up of terrorist cells, is now a terrorist nation. It is hundreds of times stronger — in terms of combatants, weapons, funding, territory, organization and tacit popular acceptance or support.

Fact #3. No one — in the Iraqi government, among the various militias, or even with the allied air forces on thousands of bombing missions — has been able to stop the enemy’s advance.

Fact #4. The fall of Baghdad to the Islamic State is no less likely today than the fall of Saigon to the Vietcong and North Vietnamese regulars 40 years ago. Today, Saigon is Ho Chi Minh City. I dare not imagine what the future name of Baghdad might be.

Fact #5. The expansion of the Islamic State is already destabilizing the region and much of the world in unpredictable ways. America’s action — or lack of action — could set off a chain of events that disrupts, or even destroys, regimes from Asia to Europe.

New Obama War #3
Future War in Pakistan

Strangely, Pakistan has not been prominent on the radar screens of investors or news commentators. Yet, it embodies the largest, most populous — and potentially most explosive — mix of forces of any country on the planet.

In terms of land mass, it’s larger than Japan and Germany combined.

Its population is 44 million more than all of Russia’s, 64 million more than Japan’s and nearly triple that of France.

Its northwest region has been a safe haven for terrorists for 14 years.

And its nuclear weapons are a prime target for all three of the most dangerous groups in the world — the Taliban, al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.

The big threats:

Looming chaos …

The real possibility that this country will become a failed state …

And the inevitable next consequence — a free-for-all zone for extremists groups.

Why?

First, internal chaos. The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) puts it this way: “Pakistan’s social coherence is challenged by a number of trends and serious crises, including economic stagnation, an energy crisis, youth unemployment, ethnic and sectarian tensions, political violence, and natural disaster risks.”

Second, unemployment. In a recent survey, a whopping 75% of Pakistani households with family members that signed up to join militant groups said they did so because they were out of work.

Third, an acute and chronic energy crisis. In most communities, the government is not even able to consistently provide basic services like electricity. This alone has shaved billions off of GDP, creating more unemployment, more radicalism and more violence.

Fourth, proximity to the Afghan war. Decades of conflict in neighboring Afghanistan have helped funnel weapons and trained fighters into the country, while wealthy donors from Persian Gulf states have funded extremist groups and hard-line Islamists in every corner of the country.

pakistanFifth, the rise of terrorist militants,mounting up to 2,000 attacks a year against religious groups, moderates, democrats and anyone exhibiting modern values.

Sixth, the politics of violence and coercion, especially in the country’s financial capital, Karachi.

Seventh, a major nuclear arsenal.Pakistan has more nuclear bombs than the UK, Israel or India. Only Russia, the U.S., China and France have stockpiled a larger number.

When and how will Obama get the U.S. involved?

He already has! Pakistan has been the theater for the Administration’s single largest drone war in the world — and will continue to be.

All with no plan to disengage, no talk of force withdrawals. Quite to the contrary, this behind-the-scenes, “quiet” war is showing every sign of blowing up.

There are more attacks by extremists groups in Pakistan than virtually any other nation outside of Syria and Iraq.

But as we’ve seen in both of those countries …

Widespread terrorism is the obvious precursor of civil war …

Civil war would threaten Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal …

And the threat to the nuclear arsenal would be an open invite for direct foreign intervention, especially by the U.S. and its allies.

These three new Obama wars can only mean that trillions of dollars in wealth will seek safety here in the United States.

Good luck and God bless!

Martin

 

About Martin D. Weiss PH.D

Dr. Weiss founded Weiss Research in 1971 and has dedicated the past 40 years to helping millions of average investors find truly safe havens and investments. He is president of Weiss Ratings, the nation’s leading independent rating agency accepting no fees from rated companies. And he is the chairman of the Sound Dollar Committee, originally founded by his father in 1959 to help President Dwight D. Eisenhower balance the federal budget. His last three books have all been New York Times Bestsellers and his most recent title is The Ultimate Money Guide for Bubbles, Busts, Recesssion and Depression.

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