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Strategies & Market Trends : Buy and Sell Signals, and Other Market Perspectives -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Justinfo who wrote (64200)9/21/2014 10:37:45 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Justinfo

  Respond to of 218726
 
I agree, but my wild hunch is lower than where we are this evening, I think "the big one" could begin this evening, Fall officially began at 10.29 PM EST this evening...

GZ



To: Justinfo who wrote (64200)9/22/2014 5:29:08 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Fintas
Justinfo
Seismo

  Respond to of 218726
 
Two months ago, none other than Janet Yellen warned that a bubble is forming in some equity sectors, namely biotechs and social media when the Fed said that "valuation metrics in some sectors do appear substantially stretched—particularly those for smaller firms in the social media and biotechnology industries, despite a notable downturn in equity prices for such firms early in the year."

The warning was ignored, and as a result both biotechs and social/tech stocks have soared to fresh post dot com, if not record, highs.

Then, a week ago, the central banks' central bank, BIS, warned again of unprecedented complacency when it said there was "low volatility everywhere", and once again reprised its warning from the summer of 2013, that there is a asset bubble, and that it is central banks policies themselves that are responsible for this.

This warning too was ignored, although one wonders why: while there is no doubt that it is the central banks that are reflating the bubble to end all bubbles, it is not as if the BIS' Board of Directors is unaware of the BIS' own warnings.

Then earlier last week, the very organization that is in charge of globalization and perpetuating the status quo, the IMF said "that excessive risk taking may be building up, which could sharply reverse in the run-up to U.S. rate hikes or should geopolitical events trigger higher risk aversion."

Nobody even pretended to pay attention, even as the Financial Stability Board came out with a statement the very same day also warning that investors are becoming complacent about risks in financial markets.

Finally on Friday, none other than the Fed itself in the fact of Dallas Fed president Dick Fisher, admitted that " the Fed has levitated markets."

The result? Stocks soared to records highs as Alibaba's IPO priced, soared over 30%, and briefly was more valuable than Walmart, before settling at a much more reasonable 30x forward EBITDA multiple.

So with everyone ignoring any warning that there is froth, bubbles, or outright irrational exuberance in the market, uttered by the very people who are in charge of creating these bubbles in the first place, we found it rather amusing that the 20 most developed nations in the world, which met yesterday in Cairns, Australia, decided to be the latest to issue yet another hollow warning, which obviously will fall on deaf algorithmic ears, when a memo issued by the Group of 20 finance chiefs and central bankers "said low interest rates are contributing to a potential increase in financial market risk, as major policy makers rely on monetary stimulus to bolster growth."

We are mindful of the potential for a build-up of excessive risk in financial markets, particularly in an environment of low interest rates and low asset price volatility,” the G-20 officials said in a communique released in Cairns, Australia. “We welcome the stronger economic conditions in some key economies, although growth in the global economy is uneven.”

In other words, the G-20 is warning that the credit bubble that has kep the world afloat is about to explode, even as its impact on the global economy, by kicking the can on the day of inevitable reckoning, is the weakest since the Lehman failure.

Bottom line: monetary policy, which has done nothing but push risky asset values to record, all time high levels, has failed to stimulate the global economy into the much needed "take off velocity" necessary for the virtuous cycle that is critical for central planning to be able to pull away from micromanaging capital markets around the globe. In fact, quite the opposite. And this time around, after 6 years of consecutive failures, even the G-20 itself is realizing the time to make hard decisions has come.

And since the only thing more incompetent than a central banker are the bought and paid for corrupt corporate muppets also known as "politicians", the time to secure seat belts appears to have finally arrived.

Finally, one wonders: just what needs to happen for any of these warnings to be finally not ignored by the market: should the alphabet soup of enabling "warners" listed above, the Fed, BIS, IMF, FSB, etc, have to start speaking in binary for the algos to understand the message?

zerohedge.com

GZ