There has been much confusion, at time quite angry, how in the aftermath of the Soros-funded Panama Papers revelations few, if any, prominent U.S. name emerged as a result of the biggest offshore tax leak in history. Now, thanks to McClatchy more U.S. names are finally being revealed and it will probably come as little surprise that many of the newly revealed names have connection to both Bill and Hillary Clinton. Connections to Bill and Hillary Clinton As McClatchy writes, donors to...
Read More »Emerging Markets: Preview of the Week Ahead
EM ended last week on a firm note. Given the absence of any Fed-specific risks or any major US data releases, that firmness could carry over into this week. The failure to reach an agreement in Doha by oil producers is weighing on some countries through lower oil prices, but the global liquidity story ultimately remains risk-supportive for the time being. China data last week was also helpful for market sentiment. Specific country risk remains in play. The Brazil impeachment process...
Read More »Cultural Marxism and the Birth of Modern Thought-Crime
What the Establishment Wants, the Establishment Gets If a person has no philosophical thoughts, certain questions will never cross his mind. As a young man, there were many issues and ideas that never concerned me as they do today. There is one question, however, which has intrigued me for the longest time, and it still fascinates me as intensely as it did back then: Does spirit precede matter or is it the other way around? In other words, does human consciousness create what we perceive...
Read More »11 on the Nutty Scale – Banks are Paying Interest to Mortgage Borrowers
Wicked Don Giovanni GUALFIN, Argentina – Tuesday evening, we went to the main opera house in Buenos Aires, the Teatro Colón, to see Mozart’s Don Giovanni. On our way over, our taxi driver told us that Luciano Pavarotti rated it as the second best opera house in the world (after La Scala in Milan). The Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires. Sorry, chaps, only second best. Still, that makes it the best this side of the great pond. Photo credit: Arnaldo Colombaroli Your editor’s wife has a tendency...
Read More »Monetary Metals Report: Gold – Silver Opposites
What Differentiates Gold from Silver? Well that was an interesting week. Gold went down over thirty bucks and silver went up over thirty cents. How much longer can this silver rally continue in the face of gold’s non-participation? Will speculators really be comfortable bidding silver up to $20 while gold sits at $1200? Do the fundamentals support a higher silver price? Gold, active June futures contract over the past week – click to enlarge. How is silver different from gold? Aside...
Read More »FX Daily, April 18: Doha Failure Sets Tone
Oil producers failed to reach an agreement yesterday at the meeting in Doha. That is the main spur to today’s activity. It is not that the outcome was a surprise. One newswire poll found around half of the respondents thought an agreement was elusive. Although not oil experts by any stretch, we too thought political considerations made it unlikely that Saudi Arabia would be willing to sacrifice market share to its rival Iran. We also understood why Iran could not accept a freeze on...
Read More »Beware of Particularly Challenging Week Ahead
It is never easy, but the week ahead may be particularly difficult for market participants. It will first have to respond to weekend developments. First, the front page of the NY Times on Saturday was a report that the Saudi Arabia warned the US if a bill making its way through Congress that would allow it (Saudi Arabia) to be held responsible in American court for the terrorist strike on 9/1, the sheikdom would forced to sell its Treasury holdings, and other US assets, which otherwise...
Read More »Weekly Speculative Positions: Yen Speculators Continue to Press
Speculators were undeterred by the threat of BOJ intervention. In the CFTC reporting period ending April 12, speculators boosted their net and gross long yen positions to new record highs. The bulls added 2k contracts to their gross long position to give them 100.1k yen futures contracts. The bulls, who had tried picking a bottom over the past two reporting periods, gave up and reduced their gross short position by 4.1k contracts to 33.9k. The resulted in a 6k increase in the net long...
Read More »FX Weekly: The Dollar’s Technical Condition Remains Vulnerable
The US dollar turned in a mixed performance last week, which given the softer than expected inflation, retail sales data, and industrial output figures, coupled with the poor technical backdrop, could be a signal that its decline in recent months has run its course. The dollar-bloc continued its advance, led by the Australian dollar’s nearly 2% gain. Higher commodity prices (the sixth weekly advance for the CRB Index in the last eight week) may have helped. The persistent strength...
Read More »Double Whammy Economics
Consumer Ambivalence Photo credit: Pixelrobot What’s up with U.S. consumers? They seem to have come to their senses at the worst possible time. They can no longer be counted on to push economic growth up and to the right. Specifically, they’re not spending money on stuff.A little public service on etymology: “Double whammy” was reportedly first used in a 1941 Oakland Tribune article related to boxing. It means a devastating blow, setback or catastrophe. In today’s economy, it often...
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