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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/22/2021 7:33:08 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217835
 
He notes ...

ask-socrates.com

Blog



The first #1 Batman Comic Book in mint condition just sold for $2.2 million. I reported previously that a gold aureus of Brutus which advertised that he assassinated Julius Caesar on the Ides of March (ED MAR) which had been estimated at $500,000, sold for about $4.3 million. The record prices continue even in more common ancient coins. The Athenian Owls we were selling for $1,000, are bringing $2,000-$2,750. Collectibles are simply exploding in price as I have never seen.



Perhaps the collectible market is becoming the new diamond whereby you can certainly take some collectibles when you travel internationally and the customs agents wouldn't know? Or perhaps they are a leading indicator as to the future and what is on the horizon?



In all my studies, the critical factor has never been the quantity of money. That is always what people point to with hindsight. It is the crack in CONFIDENCE that starts the process and then as governments are confronted by capital fleeing, that is when the debasement begins.



The Roman Empire saw its Monetary Crisis unfold as the silver coinage was debased to virtually no silver in just 8.6 years following the capture of Emperor Valerian I by the Persians. This mural still stands showing him kneeling before the king. This was the first Emperor to have ever been captured in battle.



We can see how the Roman Monetary System simply collapsed in a waterfall fashion once Valerian was capture in 260AD. Two things took place. First, the Romans saw themselves as vulnerable and began to hoard their cash. Secondly, other barbarian tribes in the north saw what the Persians did and they too saw this as their opportunity to invade.



If we look at the 51.6-year wave from this time period, the separatist movements began in 261AD, Pague ravaged the empire on the Pi cycle. in 251AD, the Roman Emperor Decius was killed in battle. Then in 260AD, the emperor Valerian I was captured by the Persians. His son, Gallienus, was then defeated in battle in 268AD as the monetary system collapsed and he was then assassinated and succeeded by Claudius II who then died of Plague which continued in 270AD. The debasement continued and by 270AD and he was succeeded by Aurelianwho then attacked the mint in Rome for its corruption in the debasement of the coinage.

In that case, the Pi Cycle marked both the start of a Plague and the Separatist movement. Septimia Zenobia (271-272AD) split off the eastern part of the Roman Empire in 271AD.

It appears that the election of Biden is indeed the crack in confidence we have been waiting for. The markets will reveal their true vote perhaps in February/March. By rejoining the UN, he attempts to push through this Build Back Better will not go down so well. This will be the rise of a third party for even the country-club Republicans like McConnel are the swamp creatures who never really supported Trump behind the curtain. Perhaps a third party will at last help to drain the swamp.

As one reader noted from my comment on the open blog:

COMMENT: Martin,
I appreciated reading your post about Dick Armey who as you noted retired in January 2003 at age 63. Do you know who else was born in 1940? Nancy Pelosi. She's four months older than Armey, yet whereas he retired after serving his country, she is still in office 18 years later. How vile are these people who refuse to allow others their turn to lead. Sadly, we have a system where the honorable people move on when the time is right and the dishonorable never give up their grasp of power.

SMD



To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/22/2021 8:13:33 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217835
 
Re <<Keeps us on our toes>>

I do not like being a part of any crowd, and am feeling crowded.

zerohedge.com

BE AN OPTIONS MANIAC

BY THE MARKET EAR

FRIDAY, JAN 22, 2021 - 14:22


Source: GS

We saw options trading become the hottest thing in trading in 2020 and the trend continues. The crowd has gone from trading stocks to trading options, in size. As Chris Cole of Artemis pointed out in 2020, "the stock market has become the derivative of the options market".

Everybody is all in trading options, but few understand what they actually trade, at least not all the retail punters (and actually not many portfolio managers have a clue abut options trading) . People that have never traded a "real" vol book write about gamma, vanna, charm and other exotic greeks, but you need to have experienced exploding gamma risks etc in order to truly understand how options work. Have you ever been long downside puts that were "booked" at zero (no delta), and then suddenly the stock profits warns and tanks 20/30%, or worse, short downside and the company profit warns on expiration day? That is "practical" experience from gamma holes and much more.

The technological development has made options trading accessible to everyone, and Fed's actions spilled over to the bubble that has fed over to all these new retail options punters. There is absolutely nothing wrong with options (we at TME have traded them for 2-3 decades), but nobody has seen the explosion of options trading like we have seen over the past year, and it ain't stopping.

Below are the top three charts showing current options mania;

1, total options volume surging and single name calls over puts at multi decade highs,

[url=][/url]

Source; JPM



2, not only do people love calls and hate puts, but as we showed yesterday, selling naked puts seems in fashion

[url=][/url]

Source; Spotgamma



3, the "dispersion " of options volumes across single stock and index level

[url=][/url]

Source; GS



4, ..and finally flows matter more than fundamentals...

[url=][/url]

Source; Artemis Capital Management



(For educational purposes grab Natenberg's classical book on options trading, and for the more complex stuff read Taleb's "Dynamic hedging").



To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/22/2021 8:16:28 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217835
 
Dunno ... crowded

zerohedge.com

TESLA - ARE YOU ROLLING OVER?

BY THE MARKET EAR

FRIDAY, JAN 22, 2021 - 11:40


Source: Refinitiv

Source: Refinitiv

Source: JPM

Many have tried shorting it, but very few have made any money shorting Tesla. It is a beast, but just as we saw recently, massive cult assets, such as bitcoin, can suddenly turn lower in a violent fashion. We know of many Tesla shorts, that have shorted and shorted it stubbornly over the years, and all failed. Even the biggest Tesla bear we know gave up recently. We ask ourselves if the simple logic of the madness of crowds could be a catalyst itself when it comes to Tesla? It was only 1 month ago passive institutions bought the stock for the SPX inclusion at 690 (note the volume print). Seeing the stock at 690 soon would be considered a crash, that is how extreme Tesla is. Fibonacci has the first level right at the 690 level, which would be the 50 day moving average as time "catches up". Second chart is the Tesla vs BTC chart in case you missed it over past days. Third chart shows JPM latest earnings volatility map. tesla earnings vol is cheap compared to historic levels...



To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/22/2021 8:21:14 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217835
 
Not feeling as crowded as earlier, because I sell calls and am agnostic on puts except for gold-related puts

zerohedge.com
Brace For The "Gamma Unclenching" As Put-Sellers & Call-Buyers Spark Extreme Greeks

BY TYLER DURDEN

FRIDAY, JAN 22, 2021 - 9:20

Futures have pulled back overnight ahead of what Nomura's Charlie McElligott warns is an abnormally large weekly expiry (esp as we rallied into these upside strikes with some violence in just a few days), with 30% of the overall $Gamma in SPX / SPY consolidated options set to roll-off.

[url=][/url]

Specifically, SpotGamma points out that there was large “straddle” type volume at 3850 yesterday wherein ~40k each of puts and calls traded at that strike. That seems to have essentially filled in that 3850 level overhead which places the market in a “trough” between the large 3800 large gamma level and the 3850 Call Wall. To this trough idea we note the largest Combo strike is 3832, suggesting this is a sticky area today.

[url=][/url]

The gamma flip levels continue to slide up, with 3800 marking the transition from positive to negative gamma. There remains little in the way of large net put positions until the 3700 level. The large risk we see here is some type of event that elicits put buying and draws rapid dealer delta hedging (ie shorting futures).

As a result of all this excess, Nomura's analysis of Nasdaq / QQQ options shows that we have pivoted back towards extreme $Gamma at 96.8%ile and $Delta at 98.0%ile (both since ’13), as traders use options to play for the Secular Growth / Tech recovery after its recent “rotation purge,” on expectations of an “everything up” trade boosted by Rates pausing further selloff / bear-steepening.

[url=][/url]

What is even more ominous, as SpotGamma points out is that investors have turned to put options as a way to generate income. Strategically this can be a great strategy, but what does it mean when the MAJORITY of put options are SOLD instead of BOUGHT? In other words: the majority of traders are now using put options as income as opposed to insurance.

[url=][/url]

The circled areas in the chart above highlight the other times this has happened in the last ~2 years. Specifically this chart measures the amount of an option type that was bought to open against the number that were sold to open. Therefore because the gold line is below zero we know that traders are selling puts to open MORE than buying them to open.

This implies that traders have little fear about a decline in markets, as selling a put option exposes a trader to large losses if the market declines. We think this is an indication of overconfidence, and exuberance in markets.

Checking these periods against a chart of SPY, we can see that the forward returns can be quite ominous.

[url=][/url]

Specifically, Nomura warns that after settlement, spot Equities could certainly “move” into new ranges post the “Gamma unclenching” in the absence of Dealer hedging flows as well as the absence of the corporate buyback stabilizer during EPS.



To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/22/2021 9:52:27 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217835
 
liking this listen on osmosis background right now ...

LISTEN NOW >




To: carranza2 who wrote (167438)1/23/2021 5:44:51 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217835
 
Last I checked we might still all be living on the same 3D world enabled by the same reserve currency

If so, even as we exited bitgold, we might lateral shift to truegold

For the talk of the town is sounding familiar to all who read the script as described in Fiat something something in France. The people are crying, and crying out for more, and in response, for any politician to stand and try to forestall, by and by made redundant.

Unclear to me what signal we are supposed to waitfor before going all-in.

How many ways are there to hedge total apocalyptic destruction of everything we know, all that we saved from knowing enough, and all that we need for later?

In the coming week I hope to receive my napoleon-era French gold coins. Mr Napoleon refused to print money, and so had to search for gold to enable growth of economy. He might have gone overreach a bit. Had ‘they’ gone de-napoleonisation w/r to enablers and facilitators, would have been a bad scene, and ... unthinkable.

Very extremely and crazy exciting, to be able to live history, that which may or might not matter, to the math-challenged.
nytimes.com

Put the Money Printer on Autopilot

If a Biden relief package isn’t open-ended, and tied to a full recovery, America is doomed to repeat last-minute partisan fights over aid.

Jan. 21, 2021

By Claudia Sahm

Ms. Sahm, a contributing opinion writer, and the author of the “Sahm Rule,” an early recession signal, was a section chief in the division of consumer and community affairs at the Federal Reserve.


Narvikk/E+, via Getty Images

On Tuesday, the Senate confirmation hearing for Janet Yellen, President Biden’s nominee to be the next Treasury secretary, turned into a de facto hearing on the president’s economic relief plan. While Ms. Yellen, a former Federal Reserve chair, is expected to be confirmed, the fate of the Biden plan is up in the air and became the focus of senators’ back and forth.

Democrats generally cheered Mr. Biden’s proposed $1.9 trillion package, while Republicans peppered Ms. Yellen with questions about whether that level of spending might be overkill. The price tag is indeed big — as it should be. This moment of crisis demands it.

But members of Congress should carefully consider the necessary levels of spending, particularly amid so much uncertainty.

Many lawmakers seem to be asking, “How much is enough?” while “When have we done enough?” is the better question. When those 10 million jobs still missing are back, when the half of families who have lost income from work are made whole and when those who had to leave their jobs because of extra parenting burdens begin to return — that’s when relief should turn off.

Rather than setting an arbitrary expiration date and banking on yet another 11th-hour scramble for more relief, Congress could base its policy on how people and businesses are doing, not on the passage of time. In policy circles, such tools are known as “automatic stabilizers.” They’re quite simple: If the economy comes roaring back, then the stabilizers put in place turn off; if it takes longer to recover, they stay on.

A broad cross-section of research shows that auto stabilizers will help us do enough without doing too much.

Putting policy on autopilot is not new. For the U.S. government, it began in 1935 when, with the guidance of Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, our first female cabinet secretary, the Roosevelt administration introduced unemployment insurance as part of the New Deal. Employers pay into the system, so that laid-off workers can receive benefits. More workers are laid off in recessions, so more money is spent on benefits. Then in expansions, much less is spent.

Food stamps and progressive income taxes are also, in their own ways, automatic stabilizers.

Another great advantage to automatic stabilizers is that Congress can bump up the generosity of their benefits in bad times. Currently, 16 millionpeople are receiving some form of jobless benefits — more than seven times the number of recipients a year ago.

In light of the pandemic, it was both humane and economically astute when, this past March, Congress made jobless benefits more generousthrough the CARES Act: The $600 a week federal supplement to state unemployment checks; the expanded eligibility for benefits; the increased number of weeks the unemployed could get support; the $1,200 direct checks to the vast majority of adults. It was all a strong start.

Then, political will eroded. The extra $600 expired on July 31, leaving millions with much less to make ends meet. In the meantime, a zombie debate over whether to renew that extra money — along with a bucket of other crucial economic benefits — dragged on for months.

Only over the holidays, once the remaining relief in the CARES Act was expiring, did Congress and the Trump administration act, approving a new $900 billion package. Now, the unemployed get an extra $300 a week and the long-term unemployed and those not normally eligible for benefits are covered, but only through early spring. Meanwhile, the eviction moratoriumwas only extended one month and extra food stamps only until June.

President Biden’s current plan calls for a $400-per-week federal unemployment supplement through September. But his pledge to “work with Congress on ways to automatically adjust the length and amount of relief depending on health and economic conditions” suggests he and his team are open to tweaks.

Ron Wyden, the incoming chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, who will play a significant role in shaping any bill, used his time during Ms. Yellen’s confirmation hearing to highlight his bolder proposal to put federal unemployment benefits on autopilot, then phase it out gradually as the unemployment rate falls.

Representatives Don Beyer and Derek Kilmer and Senators Jack Reed and Michael Bennet, all Democrats, have designed similar plans. In fact, many of the strongest supporters of automatic stabilizers since the beginning of the pandemic have been moderate Democrats in the House.

Each of these plans is evidence-based and deserves to be closely considered. Policy experts like me have worked with several Congress members and their staffs for over a year on how to do this right: what economic indicators to use (whether the unemployment rate, work force participation or inflation), when to start and when to phase out the extra support.

The surest sign that automatic stabilizers stand a fighting chance of being included in the stimulus is that Ms. Yellen may be on board, too. She endorsed using automatic triggers this summer, explaining her reasoning that struggling Americans “need relief and support for as long as the job market remains weak.”

In early 2019, based on research and my experience working at the Fed amid the Great Recession, I argued in a chapter of the policy volume “ Recession Ready” that we should make direct payments to people automatic in recessions — starting as soon as the unemployment rate begins to rise in a way that we know a recession has arrived and continuing until unemployment comes back down.

We should send more direct checks to all families except high-income households now and be ready to repeat some level of them on a monthly or quarterly basis until the crisis is over.

If another relief package fails to provide households and businesses consistent, predictable support soon, we’ll be doomed to repeat the inefficient, cruel and unorganized cycle of last-minute partisan fights over aid.

Americans deserve more relief; they deserve the peace of mind of knowing that relief will continue as long as they need it.

Claudia Sahm, a contributing opinion writer, and the author of the “Sahm Rule,” an early recession signal, was a section chief in the division of consumer and community affairs at the Federal Reserve.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

Sent from my iPad