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Strategies & Market Trends : US Inflation and What To Do About It -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rarebird who wrote (1259)12/11/2019 10:48:54 AM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 1504
 
"Cowards die many times before their death, the valiant only die once."

LOL. I like that. So true. I've lived a balls to the wall kind of life too, but it seems you've had some life threatening challenges to deal with and dealt with them successfully! Good on you! Also good to be hedged in gold and silver mining stocks. I'm thinking about going there as well. But I move slowly on decisions, as you know. I stick mostly to macro themes, which right now is the markets are totally fixed and it can't last forever. Since I don't know when it will break, I don't want to be in it. I've squeezed great returns out of bonds over the last two years, but I don't think that is repeatable over the next year. So not sure what to do right now, especially since the Fed is about to go all in on QE, right after they realize the "not QE" simply won't fix the repo markets, which are starved for cash. Eventually, the Fed will have to buy duration, which will make it real QE. Rates are already negative on an after-inflation basis. So maybe gold and gold mining stocks are good here. It's not a bad thought. Will stock levitate on the back of QE? Probably. It's a good bet. But they'll levitate into the teeth of declining earnings. How long can that last?

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Why "This Sucker Is Going Down"

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Once the contagion starts spreading, loose money won't put the fires out.

As the nation's political and economic leaders struggled to contain the 2008 financial meltdown, President George W. Bush famously summed the situation up: "If money doesn't loosen up, this sucker will go down."

Eleven years into the loose money recovery, this sucker is finally going down for reasons that have little to do with tight money and everything to do with the inconvenient fact that none of the structural problems have been addressed, much less actually fixed.

We live in a bizarre world dominated by magical-thinking, a world in which the Federal Reserve creating more dollars out of thin air is supposedly the solution to everything, while all the knotty structural problems--unsupportable pensions and entitlements, unsustainable dependence on debt to fund everything from infrastructure to a new iPhone, a sickcare system that is bankrupting the nation, a higher education system that is looting an entire generation for diplomas with marginal market value, a runaway National Security State that burns trillions on unwinnable wars and lies about it--are left untouched because they're, well, difficult, and it's so much easier to say that looser money will solve everything.

Alas, loose money has created a new set of metastasizing problems that will bring this sucker down: widening wealth-income inequality, the only possible result of our system of creating and distributing new money to banks, financiers and corporations; soaring systemic leverage that few see, much less understand; and perhaps most perverse, yet equally unnoticed, loose money has widened the gap between the real economy and the top layer of arcane finance to the point there is literally no connection at all.

The happy story about debt-dependent capitalism is that thriving companies borrow money from our wunnerful banks to invest in new factories, research, software development, etc., hiring millions of top-notch people--top-notch!--at generous salaries to boost productivity and make the entire nation wealthier.

Alas, it's all a fraud. What actually happens is banks "invest" the new money in faster High Frequency Trading (HFT) computers so they can skim even more profit from the rigged "markets." Productivity increase: zero. Social benefits: zero. Economic benefits to the nation at large: zero.

Virtually all the loose money created by the Fed is socially useless financial activity, enriching the few at the top of the wealth-power pyramid who own the financial machinery of repo's, derivatives, FX swaps, leverage, and all the other tricks of the financial trade that has completely disconnected from the real-world economy.

The conventional media constantly hypes the fantasy that trade deals matter, holiday sales matter, employment numbers matter--none of that matters. The big money is made by gaming the financial system, buying regulatory approval, i.e. legalized looting, funneling a few measly millions to craven politicos who have zero understanding of how the nation's financial system actually works, and then running a monstrous skimming operation behind the complexity thickets of "modern" finance, which all boil down to the same toxic concoction that's destroyed economies throughout history:
  • The unlimited greed of those at the top.
  • No real oversight or limits on financial gaming of the system.
  • Abundant central-bank loose money to fund speculative activity in rigged markets.
  • 100% socially useless financial activity.
  • No limits on leverage, so every $1 of financial legerdemain can spawn a $100 dollar bet.
  • Total dependence on debt to fund the government, consumer spending, corporate buy-backs-- everything.
This sucker is going down, and sooner than we think. The Fed can create trillions out of thin air and give it to banks, financiers and corporations, but they can't force them to actually invest in the nation's real economy or even buy the assets the Fed so desperately wants them to buy, i.e. stocks.

The banks and financiers have used the Fed's trillions to enrich themselves for eleven years, and nothing will stop their legalized looting except a collapse of the entire machine. The great karmic irony is they've rigged and gamed the system so rapaciously, absolutely confident there's no end to the loose money, that they've overlooked the increasing fragility of the entire system they've ruthlessly exploited.

Once the contagion starts spreading, loose money won't put the fires out. The idols and false gods (The Fed et al.) will fail most spectacularly, and the karmic fury will not abate until the every last skim and every last con has been consumed.



* * *



To: Rarebird who wrote (1259)12/12/2019 7:26:47 PM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 1504
 
"Massive... Huge... Largest Ever": Fed Will Flood Market With Gargantuan $500 Billion In Liquidity To Avoid Year-End Repo Crisis

In previewing today's Fed statement regarding repurchase operations, on Tuesday Curvature Securities repo expert Scott Skyrm said that he expects the Fed to announce a $50 billion (at least) term operation for Monday December 23 (double the current term ops) and a $50 billion (at least) term operation for Monday, December 30. This prediction was in response to Zoltan Pozsar's warning that reserve levels are too low and the result would be a market crash that could spark QE4.

Well, moments ago the NY Fed did publish it latest weekly " Statement Regarding Repurchase Operations" as expected laying out the Fed's expected repo operations for the period December 13 - January 14... and it blew Skyrm's expectations out of the water

According to the statement, the NY Fed will continue to offer two-week term repo operations twice per week, four of which span year end. In addition, the Desk will also offer another longer-maturity term repo operation that spans year end. The amount offered in this operation will be at least $50 billion, just as Skyrm expected.

But there was more. Much more.

In addition, to prevent a cascading year-end liquidity squeeze, Fed overnight repo operations will continue to be held each day, and just to be safe, the Fed will go to town by substantially expanding their size: On December 31, 2019 and January 2, 2020, the overnight repo offering will increase to at least $150 billion to cover the "turn" in a flood of overnight liquidity. In addition, on December 30, 2019, the Desk will offer a $75 billion repo that settles on December 31, 2019 and matures on January 2, 2020.

And just in case that's not enough, the NY Fed's markets desk also added that it "intends to adjust the timing and amounts of repo operations as needed to mitigate the risk of money market pressures that could adversely affect policy implementation, consistent with the directive from the FOMC."

What the Fed means is that in addition to expanding the sizes of its "turn" overnight repos to $150 billion, the Fed will conduct a total of nine term repos covering the year-end turn from Dec 16 to Jan 14, 8 of which will amount to $35BN and the first will be $50BN, for a total injection of a whopping $365 billion in the coming month.

And visually:



In other words, instead of QE4 the Fed will flood the repo market with a firehose of liquidity.

Here is how Curvature's Skyrm summarized this:

One word: "Massive". A few more words: The largest series of RP operations ever! The Fed announced it's RP operations schedule for the next few weeks and it's huge! Here are my calculations:
  • There are two existing $25 billion term operations over the Turn already in the market totaling $50 billion
  • The Fed committed to at least a $150 billion overnight operation on year-end
  • A REG-start year-end operation on the day before year-end of $75 billion
  • Between now and year-end a total of 6 term RP operations totaling $225 billion
  • All total, I count the Fed committed to pump $500 billion in the Repo market over year-end. Naturally, the Turn (12/31-1/2) rallied a bit today. Trading from 4.25% yesterday to 3.80% today
There's more: add in the incremental liquidity from the expanded overnight repo of about $50 billion and another $60 billion in T-Bill purchases, and the Fed will inject a total of just shy of $500 billion in the next 30 days!

This also means that by Jan 14, the Fed's balance sheet would have grown by a cumulative $365BN in "temporary" repos, and together with the expanded overnight repos, and the $60BN in monthly TBill purchases, and by mid-January, the Fed's balance sheet, currently at $4.066 trillion, will surpass its all time high of $4.5 trillion!



The question then is whether this will be sufficient to refute the repo Doomsday predicted by Pozsar, one which was supposed to launch QE4, or will the Fed's gargantuan liquidity injection still not be enough and lead to a collapse in the repo market. We will find out in the next three weeks.



To: Rarebird who wrote (1259)12/21/2019 9:52:11 AM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 1504
 
I made 5% in my money market fund over the last 1 year. That is unprecedented and is due to the Fed's actions in the repo market. My guess is the Fed's QE has reached the event horizon, where it becomes self-fulfilling. What I mean by this is the Fed has lost control. Now, they have no choice but to continually expand their balance sheet to sop up collateral from the Repo, Treasury, and eventually the Corporate bond markets. Liquidity will continue to vanish into the black hole of US and Basel regulatory insanity, as well into the repudiation of US debt by Russia, China, and other countries, as well as into the repudiation of the use of the USD to settle trade agreements. We may actually never see hyperinflation in the statistics, because they've bastardized the statistics into meaninglessness, ignoring all the actual services and goods that real humans buy in their annual basket of purchases, like health care, education, and energy. Those expenses evidently are not worth tracking in core inflation to the Fed's way of thinking, which means, they don't understand why the 99% are crying "Uncle" on the inflation front. So they see no inflation and they want to ignore any sign of it, so they can continue to have plausible deniability as they massively expand their balance sheet, because they know if they don't, the whole financial system will seize and markets will crash like in 1929 and 2000 and 2009. Why they won't let that happen is because they have become a Communist politburo that believes central planning is better than capitalism, which is like ignoring the laws of mathematics. The problem with the Fed's actions is that they are tackling an exponential function with a linear response. It's getting away from them and there's nothing they can do.

Real estate and stocks tell the story most clearly. They are levitating while fundamentals crumble. The disconnect is jarring, but everyone ignores it as they play the greater fool theory to its limits. Will Powell have the guts to be a another Volcker? Not likely, at least not until after Nov 2020. Then after that, he may pull back and break the buck. By then the stock markets could be another 10-20% higher. We're in the final melt up. Enjoy it while it lasts. I'm still on the sidelines, earning my paultry 5% from cash and 2-3 year duration bonds and marveling at those crazy returns in a relatively safe space. At some point, cash will have a negative return, at which point gold and silver will be the place to be. I estimate the buy time for that will be shortly after the next election, when stocks have reached their zenith and gold/silver have been squashed like a bug. Then the melt up will implode and bonds and money markets will likely provide no safety either as the Fed's QE tools and interest rate decreases fail to work anymore. The only safe place then will be gold and silver and probably oil.

Good luck over the next year. Play your cards tight with stops to preserve your monumental gains!