It’s early Saturday morning, and I have compiled nine pages of
“horrible headline” in the past 48 hours alone; which I must condense, to
summarize this week’s collapse of global trade, economic data, and financial
markets – notwithstanding Thursdays half-hearted, pathetically obvious
attempt to “slow the tsunami” via PPT-stock goosing and Cartel Precious Metal
attacks. Which I can easily accomplish with four simple words; i.e,
“well, Janet…we’re waiting.” For the “Yellen Reversal”, that is – that
I predicted 15 months ago, when the Fed pretended to end QE.
And by pretend, I mean that the Fed’s balance sheet has not shrunk
one iota since said “end of QE,” and who knows what it looks like when
considering “off balance sheet” monetization of hundreds of billions of
Chinese Treasury bond sales. Just as last month’s quarter-point “rate
hike” been observed in actual money markets. Nor, for that
matter, has the historic, catastrophic “oil and export price collapse” turned
out to be as “transitory” as the Fed anticipated – in frankly, the worst
economic prediction in recorded history. Which, I might add, they still
maintained four weeks ago – in the very same policy statement in which
they “raised rates!”
And by “Yellen
Reversal,” I mean the pre-ordained reversal of this three-year
“QE-ending”, “rate-hiking” propaganda stunt – supported by unprecedented money
printing (much of it, “off balance sheet”); falsified economic data; and
market manipulation. Which inevitably, will be forced to be
renounced by collapsing economic activity and financial markets – at which
point, Whirlybird Janet will only admit the recovery that never was is
officially dead (blaming it on “outside unpredictable factors”), but take
interest rates negative, and launch the largest QE round yet.
And by the way – do you know what else I published in October 2014 – when
said “transitory” oil price decline had only reached $81/barrel – compared to
$29/barrel today; whilst the CRB Commodity and Baltic Dry indices were still
270 and 1,100, respectively, versus 159 and 373 today? Yep, “crashing
oil prices portend unspeakable horrors“. Which as it turns out, may
one day be viewed as the understatement of the century, given how rapidly
global trade has since collapsed; geopolitical stability devolved; financial
stress expanded; stock, bond, and commodity markets imploded; and fiat
currencies disintegrated, as the “final currency
war” I predicted three years ago has gone “thermonuclear.” And heck, the
“Big One” – I.e., the “financial crisis to end all financial crises” – hasn’t
even arrived yet!
Regarding the utter collapse of commodity markets in the past 48 hours –
catalyzing similar implosions of equity, high-yield bond, and currency markets
from East to West – the principal catalyst was the imminence of the
long-awaited removal of sanctions on Iran, which went into effect today
despite a series of troubling geopolitical events that had investors,
corporations, and sovereign nations the world round hoping – or better put, praying
– they might be delayed. In other words, a veritable tsunami of oil
will start hitting global markets this weekend – in a market where oil is already
at 12-year nominal lows; and in real terms, turn-of-the-century
levels. Let alone, amidst price discounting that has taken actual
sale prices still lower.
As for other markets, essentially all global equity markets have
not only plunged below August’s “Black Friday” lows, but high-yield – i.e, junk
– credit has fallen to 2009 levels; and commodities, in many cases, to at
least 1970s levels. Led by, I might add, base metals like
copper, aluminum, lead, and zinc – which continue to freefall, whilst the monetary
metals gold and silver have been the only assets to rise. Except,
of course, Treasury bonds, which are not only discounting the end of rate
hikes, but the prospect of the “Yellen Reversal.”
As for currencies, EGAD! I mean, we’re talking about the
total annihilation of entire countries – from the four corners of the
planet. I don’t need to tell you what’s going on in “commodity
currencies” like the Rand, Real, Ruble, Peso, and countless others – in
nearly all cases, at all-time lows; and in some cases, way below previous
lows. However, you’d probably be surprised to hear that the British
Pound is plunging, too – in my view, due to rising expectations that a
“BrExit” vote in the coming 12-18 months will result in the UK’s total
isolation from the European Union. I mean, the Pound is within 3% of
its all-time low against the dollar – a low, I might add, that was barely
touched for a few days at the height of the early 2009 financial
crisis. And this, in a nation that, unequivocally, had one of the
world’s highest costs of living before the pound started
plunging! For that matter, I won’t even discuss the supposedly
“rock-solid” Hong Kong Dollar, which had its biggest plunge ever this
week, amidst speculation that the 33-year peg with the U.S. dollar will be
imminently broken. Which, I might add, is exactly what occurred in
Saudi Arabia as well – where the Riyal’s geopolitically pivotal “petrodollar
peg,” too, is on the verge of extinction.
To that end, the only currencies not currently collapsing against
the dollar, ironically, are the Euro and Yen – in both cases, demonstrating exactly
why aggressive currency debauchery does NOT work. As clearly, no two
Central banks have tried harder, and more blatantly, to destroy their
currencies. And yet, with the European Union on the precipice of
political, economic, and social, collapse; and Japan, economically,
demographically, and environmentally sinking into the sea, they still can’t
push their currencies down further! Heck, in perhaps the most ominous
quote of the year – which of course, was picked up nowhere but Zero Hedge –
the Head of the Bank of Japan, yesterday, said further Japanese QE
might “threaten the bank’s finances.”
DID YOU HEAR THAT, READERS? Now that the BOJ has essentially bought
up nearly every Japanese stock, government bond, and who knows what else, it
literally has ran out of monetary “ammunition.” Not to mention, ran up
the highest debt/GDP ratio in global history. To wit, the Japanese
economy is collapsing; the Nikkei is imploding; and there’s NOTHING LEFT TO
BUY! Thus, the aforementioned, geopolitically ominous statement –
which, in essence, was a not-so-veiled plea to the Fed to re-take the
global QE reins.
Mirrored, I might add, by the White House itself; which, in nearly
unprecedented fashion, held an impromptu press conference yesterday
morning – in which Press Secretary Josh Earnest (the perfect name for
such a sycophantic position) read a statement of how the President is
concerned about falling stock prices, and the Treasury “monitoring” their
impact on the U.S. economy. Oh, and did I mention that, at practically
the exact same time, none other than New York Fed President Bill
Dudley said “if the economy weakens further, we would consider negative
rates.” Seriously, folks – I’m not making this up!
As for economic data, my god! It’s no wonder the Atlanta Fed waited
until yesterday’s market close to update its 4Q GDP “growth” estimate to a
mere 0.6% – as in the prior 48 hours, the following, hideously ugly data points
were released; in each case, “unexpectedly” worse than anticipated.
- Surging jobless claims
- A 1.1% plunge in December export prices, versus
“estimates” of a 0.5% decline
- The Empire State Manufacturing Index imploded from
December’s -4.6 to a whopping -19.4 in January
- Retail Sales were “unexpectedly” down 0.1% in December –
both including and excluding auto sales and gasoline – following an
equally “unexpected” downward revision of November’s data
- The PPI “unexpectedly” declined by twice as much as anticipated
- December industrial production experienced its biggest
plunge since 2008, whilst capacity utilization imploded. Plus,
November’s data was revised sharply downward as well.
- Business inventories unexpectedly declined, yet the
inventory-to-sales ratio still remained at its highest level
since 2008
- U.S. freight volumes had their first year-over-year
decline in three years
- U.S. automaker credit risk surged to two year highs
- Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest private employer,
announced it will lay off 16,000 workers – mere weeks after raising the
minimum wage, and forecasting that 2016 revenues would be no higher than
2015
All this, whilst all imaginable Precious Metals-related developments were
wildly bullish – from being the only asset class, other than QE-anticipating
Treasury bonds, to rise; to the publication of potentially dramatic 2016
silver production decline estimates from Silver Standard, Yamana, and Coeur
D’Alene (to that end, get ready for Miles Franklin’s “2016 Silver Outlook
Webinar” on January 27th); to the strongest
first-two-weeks-of-the-year Silver Eagle sales in U.S. Mint history.
Throw in news that final 2015 Shanghai Exchange gold withdrawals, at 2,596
tonnes, were nearly as much as the entirety of global production, and you can
see why Precious Metals fundamentals represent the polar opposite of
all other “commodities” – as discussed in Thursday’s MUST HEAR Audioblog, “Commodity
life and death – a tale of two markets.” Which, I might add, was
posted just before the world’s largest miner, BHP Billiton, announced a $7
billion write-off of its U.S. shale oil assets – which, by the way, most
analysts believe to be woefully too little. And if you think its energy-related
write-offs are big, just wait until it – and the entire mining industry –
start announcing write-downs of reserves, resources, and existing mining
developments and operations in the coming weeks. Particularly copper,
lead, and zinc mines – where roughly 55% of the world’s silver emanates from.
Oh well, that’s enough for today – as my mother’s in from New York, for
Sylvie’s fourth birthday party this afternoon. However, let’s just
suffice to say that a mere four weeks after the Fed supposedly “raised
rates,” the world has been dramatically turned on its head – to the point
that the billions of people (particularly, Precious Metals holders)
are starting to look with piercing, accusing eyes towards the world’s
“printer-in-chief” simultaneously, saying “well Janet…we’re waiting!”