Currency

Black swans are circling

180730184-resize-380x300The central bank driver world macro structure is in full can-kicking mode. The fuels that have built up are almost too numerous to mention, though some issues continue to be recycled as if they were needed to explain the latest potential spark.

The New Boss Same as the Old Boss

Janet Yellen was on tap this week to lead her first official open market committee meeting as Fed Chairwoman. The perception of Fed confidence is crucial at this time in particular. In light of the recent policy tapering and the recent volatility in the emerging markets, her script will be watched carefully by all.

In terms of emerging or developing markets, the volatility has been intense, to say the very least. Argentina has defaulted once again on its sovereign obligations, devalued its currency, and caused a painful split between the official and street value of its currency.

For precious metals investors, the lesson from the Argentinian currency discrepancy foreshadows the likely future of precious metals valuation as the physical or street value divorces from the official paper price.

Middle Eastern Europa

We have also seen massive undertakings in Forex, most notably the shock overnight in the revaluing of the Turkish Lira. While the Lira may be a small market relative to the U.S. dollar, it lies central, almost as a mini reserve active in the Middle East and, of course, immediately adjacent to Europe.

Not to mention the recent recommendation out of the Bundesbank that European peripheral sovereigns should be expected to bail in themselves on the backs of its citizens. The Cyprus bail in template is being applied in lieu of the politically unacceptable austerity tourniquet.

In the U.S.

The debt ceiling redux is back and will once again pit U.S. policy makers up against the Federal Reserve. Although the two entities are connected politically, they must maintain the appearance that they are not. We should look for jawboning from the Fed, which in turn could offer some support to gauging confidence for the new Fed Chair.

….read page 2 HERE

Canada Ivey PMI January 56.8 vs 51.0 expected

  • Canada’s Ivey PMI jumped to 53.6 points in January, from 40.2 points in December, according to data released today by the Richard Ivey School of Business. 

    Ivey PMI s.a. grew to 56.8 points in January, from 46.3 points the previous month and above expectations of a rise to 51.0.Prior reading was 46.3

A rare slice of good news for the loonie. USD/CAD down a dozen pips on the headline.

Vancouver Speech – Observations of a Trader

QUESTION: Mr. Armstrong; Your lecture at Vancouver was simply amazing. Inside of 15 minutes you tore the entire world economy apart and exposed the fallacy that we are taught and I am an economics major. Everyone was talking about what you had to say going out the door. You previously said that rising unemployment can take place with expanding domestic economic conditions. This seems to be taking place. Can you elaborate a bit more on this keen observation?

Thank you so much for being the beacon of light in an economic storm.

ER

ANSWER: Thank you very much. In all reality, these are the observations of a trader – not an academic. I never cared about theory, just figuring out what made the markets tick. I appreciate that those who change any established field always come from the outside in. I suppose I just have to get use to this impact of simply observing how to trade.

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We are in a convergence of two creative-destructive events. The first is the shift fromPUBLIC to PRIVATE. Municipal governments are collapsing everywhere – including Europe. I have noted that during the Great Depression they even were forced to issue their own money. Therefore, we will continually see the rise in unemployment from the collapse in the public sector. These people have kept expanding their little empires ignoring the fact that their funding means taking more and more disposable income from the citizen. They then promised themselves exceptional benefits. Teachers in New Jersey were given 100% lifetime health benefits upon retirement. Nobody ever bothered to ask where is the money coming from?  This is creative-destruction – the readjustment of reality. The municipal governments are collapsing everywhere and they CANNOT print money, so this isDEFLATIONARY and not HYPERINFLATION nonsense. Therefore, we are creating a new readjusted would from the old – creative-destruction.

The second creative destruction trend is the INTERNET. This is the same as the invention of the combustion engine that eliminated the bulk of jobs in agriculture, capped the expansion of the railroad era, and enabled the growth of the suburbs. The INTERNET has been displacing jobs from small stores to publishing. Book publishers are becoming obsolete for their biggest strength use to be distribution. Today, their biggest customer is Amazon.  Newspapers are also dying and as the older generation dies out, so will newspapers. Magazines and newspapers will be replaced online. This is reducing jobs on a grand scale. The invention of the railroad wiped out local business and brought in competition. They created the mail-order business and the world was changed. The automobile did the same to the railroads. Now the INTERNET is wiping out local business bringing in competition.  This is simply the cycle of how the economy expands.

Our own business began sending reports by telex. The cost would rise to $50 each and thus the communications costs for our services would be $250,000 annually in early 1980s. Then FAX came and reduced that cost t $3. Now the INTERNET and emails reduced that delivery cost to ZERO and the vast majority of people can read this when only the largest institutions could afford it in the early 1980s. This is the advancement of technology through creative-destruction.

The skill set changes. Students had better learn how to program today for that is how to read and write in the future. This is the force of creative-destruction that the economy seems to go through every 51.6 years to varying degrees, It is why you can have rising unemployment, yet expanding domestic economic activity and it gets very confusing if you are married to the old linear way of thinking.

So unemployment rose as ALWAYS after Xmas because retailers do about 40% of their business during the last quarter and hire help for that reason temporarily. What should we be so stunned at this trend? The other trend nobody is talking about is the avoiding of benefits. Obamacare will limit the growth of business and the Democrats are too stupid or ignorant to even understand the concept. For Obama is doing the very same thing himself. The Post Office is hiring part-time people because they do not get the benefits and pensions. Government itself is contributing to these numbers as people are shifting from full-time to part-time.

….read Martin’s: Ukraine – Becoming the Real Focal Point

TORONTO (Reuters) – Canadian National Railway Co reached a deal on Wednesday to avert a strike by conductors and yard workers after the Conservative government said it would use back-to-work legislation to keep the country’s biggest railway operating.

The Teamsters Canada Rail Conference gave notice earlier in the day that it intended to strike as soon as Saturday after members voted against a tentative agreement with Canada’s biggest rail operator.

A new three-year agreement is a modification of the tentative pact reached in October, union general chairman Roland Hackl said.

“I’m glad there’s not going to be a strike,” he said, shortly after the deal was reached. He said no details would be released until the deal is ratified.

A work stoppage by about 3,000 conductors, train and yard workers would have disrupted a vast cross-country network that ships goods ranging from lumber and crude oil to grains and automobiles.

Kellie Leitch, the country’s labor minister, had said at a press conference in Ottawa that the government was preparing back-to-work legislation to “protect Canada’s economy and Canadian grain farmers.”

The Conservatives, led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, have been quick to intervene in recent years to avoid major labor disruptions. In 2012, it legislated striking workers back to work at both CN rival Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) and Air Canada.

The swift government response came after the union told Reuters that CN said in a morning meeting it was “done negotiating” and workers must choose between an existing labor deal and walking off the job.  

….read page 2 HERE

Applications for U.S. unemployment benefits fell for the first time in three weeks as employers retained workers to meet demand.

Jobless claims dropped by 20,000 to 331,000 in the period ended Feb. 1, the Labor Department reported today in Washington. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a decrease to 335,000.

The decline in dismissals shows employers are confident demand for goods and services will hold up at the same time fiscal restraints ease. A pickup in the pace of hiring and wage growth would help fuel bigger gains in theconsumer spending that accounts for almost 70 percent of the economy.

…full article HERE

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