With continued chaos around the world and uncertainty in global markets, today KWN is publishing an incredibly powerful piece that was written by a 60-year market veteran. The Godfather of newsletter writers, Richard Russell, discusses gold, major markets, and warns that the average person is terrified and depressed as the US collapses.
Gold & Precious Metals
As stocks returned a whopping 30% in 2013, there have been growing concerns about a stock market bubble. Especially considering that the rally supported by only meager earnings growth.
While many have made comprehensive arguments showing why stocks are not in a bubble, Marc Faber, author of “The Gloom Boom And Doom Report,” continues to argue that we’re in a bubble that’ll pop as we head for a financial crisis.
In an interview with Bloomberg TV, he says we are in a “gigantic financial asset bubble.” He also thinks the bubble could burst at any moment.
“I think we are in a gigantic financial asset bubble. But it is interesting that that despite of all the money printing, bond yields didn’t go down. They bottomed out on July 25, 2012 at 1.43% on the 10-years. We went to over 3.0%. We’re now at 2.85% or something thereabout. But we’re up substantially. Now, this hasn’t had an impact on stocks yet. In fact, it pushed money into the stock market out of the bond market. But if the 10-years goes to say 3.5% to 4.0%, then the 30-year goes to close to 5.0%, the mortgage rates go to 6.0%. That will hit the economy very hard.”
“[The bubble] could burst before. It could burst any day. I think we are very stretched. Sentiment figures are very, very bullish. Everybody’s bullish. The reality is they’re very bullish because they think the economy will accelerate on the upside. But my view is very different. The global economy is slowing down, because the global economy’s largely emerging economies nowadays, and there’s no growth in exports in emerging economies, there’s no growth, in the local economies. So, I feel that the valuations are high, the corporate profits have been boosted largely because of the falling interest rates.”
This is not a totally new call. Faber has repeatedly said that we’re headed for a 1987-type sell-off.
Faber also said Facebook is a fad and that lower interest rates are punishing savers. Here’s the entire transcript from Bloomberg TV:
…..continue reading the topics below all on one page HERE
Faber on the Fed and how far the ‘rubber band can be stretched’:
On whether the Fed is creating a two-class system:
On how to help the people on the lower end of the economic spectrum:
On whether the government is spending too much money:
On bitcoin:
On interest rates:
On his view of overvalued stocks, including Facebook:
On overall market valuation concerns:
…..again read them all HERE
The S&P 500 futures have rallied back 29 points from the big sell off on Friday to be green on the year at 1838.25. The next target will be the All Time High made at the end of last year at 1846.50.
Drew Zimmerman
Investment & Commodities/Futures Advisor
604-664-2842 – Direct
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800 810 7022 – Toll Free
We introduced the first chartbook from Incrementum Liechtenstein in the fall of last year. It showed the debt bear market in 50 amazing charts. In their second chartbook, Ronald Stoeferle and Mark Valek from Incrementum Liechtenstein analyzed in great detail the raging war between inflation and deflation, as well as gold’s role in it.
The authors introduce the term “monetary tectonics” as a metaphor for this war. Similar to tectonic plates under a volcano, monetary inflation and deflation is currently working against each other:
- Monetary inflation is the result of a parabolically rising monetary base M0 driven by the central bank monetary easing policy.
- Monetary deflation is the result of shrinking monetary aggregates M2 and M3 because of credit deleveraging.
The following chart clearly shows that 2013 was a pivot year in which the monetary base M0 grew exponentially while net M2 (expressed on the chart line as M2 minus M0) declined significantly.

The chartbook shows several trend which confirm the deflationary monetary pressure:
- Total credit market debt as a % of US GDP has been shrinking since 2007 (“debt deleveraging”).
- US bank credit of all commercial banks is stagnating (close to negative growth), similar to the period 2007/2008. See first chart below.
- Money supply growth in the US and the Eurozone is trending lower. See second chart below.
- Personal consumption expenditures are exhibiting disinflation .
- The gold/silver-Ratio is declining. Gold tends to outperform silver during disinflationary and/or deflationary periods.
- The gold to Treasury ratio is declining. See third chart below.
- The Continuous Commodity Index (CCI) has been in a steep decline since the fall of 2011.
….continue reading and viewing more of these incredible charts HERE
Russell: “As the year 2013 came to a close, the weekly Investor’s Intelligence survey of investment newsletters recorded the most lopsided ratio of bulls to bears — more than four to one in favor of bulls — since 1987. At the same time, the National Association of Investment Managers showed one of the most bullish readings since the survey began in 2006. Of course, these are both fodder for contrary opinion.
Growth in the third quarter reached an annual rate of 4.1%, but much of that growth came from inventory building. Analysts are anxiously awaiting the end of January, since what happens in January often signals what may happen the rest of the year.
Remember that years ending in 4 tend to be poor years for the market. Meanwhile, the Fed has lopped off ten billion per month of its generous stimulation efforts. Every down January since 1950 has been followed by a bear market, a 10% correction or a flat market. So any way you look at it, January is an important month, and we can all hope that it ends up as a month that closes higher (although, as it stands, it has many hurdles to overcome, since its first week has been discouraging).
….continue reading this powerful piece HERE





