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


To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 9:59:10 AM
From: carranza23 Recommendations

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gg cox
maceng2
marcher

  Respond to of 217852
 
Musical interlude: Son de La Negra, Mexico’s no. 2 national anthem.

Spoiler: Performed by neat, antiseptic Japanese mariachi band, and doing a fine job of it.

It’s indeed a wondrous world.

youtube.com

But, unfortunately, can’t compare to the masters, Vargas de Tecalitlan.

youtube.com

More musical fun

youtube.com



To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 8:47:07 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217852
 
Re <<I wonder if there is a relationship between the taking down of gold and the consideration of the highly inflationary spending bill presently before Congress?>>

The coconut would accuse us of tin-foil-hat-ism

I am guessing that gold-down is transitory, and a mere blip on the journey to damooon, but requires a good cratering elsewhere(s) that wobbles misplaced faith in governments, ala Martin Armstrong

In the meantime, inflation, transitory as a tsunami, is doing the predictable in India

bloomberg.com

‘Transitory’ Inflation Reaches Tipping Point for India Companies
Malavika Kaur Makol
11 August 2021, 05:00 GMT+8

Indian companies are running out of room to absorb rising raw material costs, which could force the central bank to unwind stimulus faster-than-expected and threaten a stock market rally that has earned billions for investors.

Companies from the Indian unit of Unilever Plc to Tata Motors Ltd., the owner of the iconic Jaguar Land Rover, are increasingly complaining about pricier inputs and are frustrated at not being able to fully pass on costs to consumers reeling from the pandemic-induced economic shock. But it is only a matter of time before the pass- through happens, warn economists.

“Firms are yet to pass on the increase in underlying input costs due to weak demand,” said Sameer Narang, chief economist at Bank of Baroda in Mumbai. “This will change as growth and consumer confidence revives.”

That recovery in consumer optimism may be just around the corner, according to a survey by the Reserve Bank of India. While households were downbeat about the current economic conditions, they are hopeful about the year ahead prospects, the RBI said.

Any increase in prices could end up fanning inflation further and complicating the central bank’s efforts to support the economy. While Governor Shaktikanta Das has so far maintained that the inflation hump is “transitory,” the RBI this month for the first time since October last year saw consensus elude it on the need to keep interest rates lower for longer to ensure a durable economic recovery.

With inflation already hovering above the RBI’s upper tolerance limit of 6% for the past two months, one of the rate setters, Jayanth Rama Varma, expressed “reservations” about continuing with the accommodative policy stance, Das told reporters Friday. The RBI separately raised its inflation forecast for the fiscal year ending March to 5.7% from 5.1% previously, even as Das underlined the effect of higher global commodity prices, broken supply chains and steep local fuel taxes on price-growth.



Data due Thursday will probably show consumer prices rose 5.7% last month, cooling from near 6.3% in June. Wholesale prices -- scheduled for release on Monday -- are likely to show factory-gate inflation at double digits for a fourth straight month.

For now, the RBI has kept funding conditions benign, driving a rally in the stock markets. Individual investors by the millions were drawn to stock trading as they chased yields amid inflation and low rates denting returns from traditional sources such as bank deposits. About 14 million first-time electronic trading accounts were opened in the fiscal year ended March 2021, according to India’s market regulator.

Protecting Margins
For companies too, it’s a fight to protect margins -- a crucial ingredient to delivering higher shareholder value. Firms across the manufacturing and services spectrum are grappling with rising input costs for months now, purchasing managers’ surveys show, trying hard to strike a balance between sluggish consumer demand and the need for higher sales and profits.

It is a fight that doesn’t appear to go away in a hurry, especially for manufacturing firms who have had to deal with higher prices of commodities and fuel costs for months on end. For the bulk of the previous financial year, most Indian companies resorted to cost cutting to boost profits, according to a study on corporate performance by the RBI.

“In terms of commodity inflation, I think this is something, which we keep on fighting,” said Girish Wagh, executive director at Tata Motors.

While its a tough balancing act, companies are mindful that something will have to give in eventually. In this case, it could mean higher prices being passed to consumers gradually as a recovery gets stronger in Asia’s third-largest economy.

“If commodity inflation remains, of course, we will have to keep working as we are doing already very hard on our savings agenda, but equally, lead price increases,” said Ritesh Tiwari, chief financial officer at Hindustan Unilever Ltd. These increases will be “required to protect the business model,” he said.

Others aren’t sure if steep price increases are the right way forward. Dabur India Ltd., one of HUL’s competitors, doesn’t favor that route.

“You’re caught between a rock and a hard place,” Dabur’s Chief Executive Officer Mohit Malhotra said, instead opting for calibrated increases. “At one end there is demand, which is not very, very resilient and there is inflation hitting us. So we don’t want to price out ourselves as far as the consumer is concerned.”

Return to Normal
While the global debate between whether price pressures are “transitory” or not is still raging, in India, economists are certain that inflation is here to stay. Not surprisingly, bond and swap investors are pricing in chances of a faster-than-expected normalization of monetary policy by the RBI.

“We must differentiate between transitory inflation in developed economies and in India,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economic adviser at the State Bank of India.

“Developed economies had not seen inflation at more than 2% even after incessant quantitative easing. In India, inflation is now running close to 6% for the last one year and almost all inflation prints, headline, core, rural and urban are converging at 6% or upwards implying inflation numbers may not be transitory.”

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To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 8:51:09 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217852
 
Speaking of Martin, sounding more dire ...

Blog

Biden has warned that a major cyberattack on the United States could lead to an actual “shooting war.” He said:

"I think it's more than likely we're going to end up, if we end up in a war -- a real shooting war with a major power -- it's going to be as a consequence of a cyberbreach of great consequence. And it's increasing exponentially, the capabilities," Biden said in a speech to the U.S. intelligence community on July 27.



Kerry has come out and confirmed the Biden is 100% on board with Schwab's Great Reset and the US/Schwab plan 2030.



Part of that agenda is to transfer the power of the United States to the UN - the Soros part of the dream. When Biden was in the October 20th, 2020 debate, he said he would rejoin the Paris Accord and force China to comply (see the end of the debate).

In truth, all of this talk about a cyberattack is a ploy for the excuse of war. To create the Great Reset, they MUST control the entire world. These puppet-masters think with US power, they can intimidate both Russia and China into complying with the Paris Accord and to vaccinate everyone with Gates' special potion #9.



To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 8:52:51 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

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dvdw©

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Martin says

Blog

Last week was a Directional Change and indeed it also produced an outside reversal to the upside. It still appears choppy going into the end of the month. Volatility should rise beginning this coming week and Monday the 9th is a strong target. The big volatility still appears to be the last week of August as we go into Labor Day. As I have pointed out, if we cling to the traditional decline during September and October, then this should prove to be a low and we can rally thereafter. If the market breaks out into a high in October, then we should expect a potential decline into the 1st quarter.

What we must understand is the ONLY way to approach this market is from the international perspective. Iran is disrupting tankers in the Gulf and geopolitical conflicts have their favorite month to start even wars centers around August. World War I technically began July 28th, 1914 whereas World War II technically began September 1st, 1939. The Gulf of Tonkin incident was also in early August 1964. Even Napoleon invaded Russia on June 24th, 1812. The other period for conflict tends to be March.

Then there is the economic crisis brewing in Europe. They are simply trying to deliberately crush their economy BECAUSE they can never return to normal. The negative interest rates have destroyed the EU's ability to borrow so they can only now print unrestrained to maintain political power. This provides and underlying support for the dollar for as stated on the general blog, the president of the US cannot shut down the entire economy.



We still see August as a Panic Cycle which warns that it can exceed the previous monthly high and penetrate its low, or move sharply in one direction. Note we also have Directional Changes here in August and then against in October. If we get a high and then a drop into October, that might scare everyone but we should but that low.



Turni8ng to the Quarterly Level, we also see Empirical targets here in the 3rd and 4th quarters with volatility in 2022. Look at the next election. That will be a major target with exceptionally high volatility. With Panic Cycles in our Political Models for 2022 and 2024, we see that the Quarterly Array is showing similar targets. Clearly, governments have abused this COVID Scam for political reasons that have NOTHING to do with health. The danger we have is that our models on the disease were targeting 2022 anyhow before all this nonsense began. This may simply be a variant that emerges for that is what viruses do - they evolve to defeat vaccines.



When we look at the Dow for technical resistance overhead, the Friday close of 35,208.51 leaves us looking at resistance forming at 35154.22 and 35,810.84 with the key target being 36,196.16 which would have to be exceeded to imply a real strong breakout to the upside.



When we look at the Quarterly level, the real important resistance stands at 36,332.80 and support begins at 33,870.80. It is unlikely that the Dow would exceed this level at this time where our original target for a possible high was 37,000-40,000. So we are getting close. Our minimum target for a possible high in 2021 was 35,237. By 2022 that would move up to 37,635 and in 2023 that would be 40,040 and finally reaching 42,430 in 2024. Looking out into 2032, that is where this minimum target would be 61,000.

34,714.33Now we need to hold last week's low of 34,714.33 to suggest the rally will continue. A break of that level and a close below it would be a TECHNICAL warning that a decline into October is entirely within reason.



When we turn to our Birfurcation Models, we can see we end up with a Strange Attractor starting the very week of 8/30. This is a warning that indeed something is brewing. The stochastic model is crawling in the overbought position while both our Energy Model and Internal Volatility Models are pointing to a rise in volatility just around the bend.

36,196.16 - 36,332.80Be mindful here. Only exceeding this target area both intraday and on a Weeklyclosing basis would hint that we are dealing with a Panic to the Upside set in motion by an economic apocalypse in Europe or geopolitical crisis that also can send capital fleeing to the USA as was the case in World War I and II.



To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 8:55:17 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
maceng2

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Martin saying ...

ask-socrates.com

Blog





There tends to be a seasonal pattern that emerges concerning investment cycles. Traditionally, you get the summer highs followed by a crash into the seasonal Oct/Nov low. As long as that Panic low holds, then the market will run off to new highs once more. However, when the Oct/Nov period produces a high, then that is far more serious and a decline thereafter typically follows into often the first quarter of the following year.

The 1998 Panic bottomed in 8 weeks from the highest weekly closing. Both the 1929 and 1987 waves of panic took also 8 weeks. During 1987 and 1998, those lows during the Panic held. In 1929, that initial panic low was broken, and thereafter the Great Depression was indicated as the market spiraled down into 1932.



Of course, there were external events. In the case of 1987, the dollar was crashing, and that caused foreign investors to sell as rumors circulated that the dollar would fall another 40% thanks to the G5. That was the first time domestic analysis was forced to look beyond the shores for a cause and effect. It took a lot of arguing to convince the Brady Commission that the cause was the government itself forming the G5 (now G20). My greatest accomplishment was to get the conclusion of the Brady Commission to avoid regulating the US market and simply said in their report that they thought currency has something to do with it.



In the case of the 1998 Long-Term Capital Management Crisis, there too the source of the crisis was Russia. The "club" was all trading Russian debt because they assumed the IMF would bail them out. That did not happen and what emerged was an international LIQUIDITY CRISIS for they could not sell the Russian debt for everyone was on the same side. They had to start selling assets in all other markets to raise money to cover losses on their Russian Debt. Hence, all the world markets were going nuts. With the drop in the dollar, this time US assets were bought up by foreign investment and the pattern you see in the Dow was a brief correction.

Therefore, as we now approach this Dark Period where the elite have been carrying out an elaborate hoax with this COVID scam (see Obama's Party with no masks, see also photos Obama without a mask) and the media constantly engaging in physiological terrorism over a disease that is no worse than the flu for 99.4% and the majority of doctors just follow orders from above without questioning anything,

We clearly now have the hypocrisy of the vaccine for the vaccinated are told to wear masks, social distance, and they can still both spread the virus as well as get it. In New York, you can't go out to dinner without vaccination or go to Broadway. Now we have companies saying you are fired unless you get the vaccine when there is OBVIOUSLY no difference. The bottom line is simple:

THIS PANDEMIC WILL NEVER END FOR VACCINES DO NOT PREVENT COVID

And because they so terrorized people with COVID and there is great concern rising over how to name the variants, it is proposed to name them after constellations rather than using Greek letters or the name of the country of origin. Meanwhile, many have started naming COVID the " CCP Virus" implying this came from the Chinese government. In retaliation, China is now saying the COVID was released in China by the US military.



So the bottom line is rather clear. Europe is using COVID to crush its people into submission for the launch of the Great Reset because moving to negative interest rates in 2014 failed to stimulate the economy and in the process terminated its ability to fund spending by borrowing money. Pension funds are insolvent and this will go down in history as one of the greatest mismanagement in history by the government. They are now trying to move to the Great Reset exploiting this virus to achieve a new form of a government ending democracy forever.



Politically, Europe is different from the United States. There, a head of state can control the entire country. In the USA, the president has no such power to shut down the entire nation. As this becomes clear with east passing week, the risk of capital flight to the dollar still remains in the wings and that can still confuse the gold bugs who continue to preach the dollar must crumble to ash.



To: carranza2 who wrote (176070)8/10/2021 8:56:47 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217852
 
Martin's read