"As a technician, I feel that there are few analysts that offer value for me, but you do. Your work on Gold ratios has helped my analysis greatly." --Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT (The Daily Gold) 4.9.10

Friday, June 29, 2012

Ag CoT

Look at the silver CoT graph, will ya...

#194 is going to be a really fun newsletter to write.  The first one even resembling fun in a few weeks.  Finally we've got the goons (US and their Euro goon counterparts) behind us and it looks like the analysis is (finally) being confirmed and finally knows what the #%@$! it is doing in the immediate term as well as the intermediate term.

Have a nice weekend.















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Uncle Buck loses the neckline

USD is losing its IHS neckline today (here's USD fund UUP).  So tell me, does this mean that copper is going to hold its neckline after all and oil is bottoming?  What about the whole broad asset sphere that we have expected to continue to rise?  You mean all this policy maker b/s was just messing with the charts?  Is that it?  If this stays beneath the neckline, silver out performs gold and junk and emerging market bonds remain in 'risk on' mode, dat would appear to be da case.











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Hawk to Dove, Trio of Fed Officials Says No to QE3

This was just forwarded to me and it looks like one of those articles that can be parsed and marked up with wise guy comments...

Hawk to Dove, Trio of Fed Officials Says No to QE3

A trio of Fed officials — San Francisco Fed President John Williams, Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart and Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser — spoke with unaccustomed unity in Santa Barbara on Thursday, summarily rejecting further easing unless the economy takes a turn for the worse.

The unity was all the more striking because the three represented the full policy spectrum at the Fed, from the dovish Williams, considered to be among the most employment-focused of Fed policymakers, to Plosser, one of the Fed's most hawkish members.

How quaint; hawk, moderate dove and dovish dove all come out with a unified message: No QE3.  Translation:  We have been scripted to feed you this pap (insert Outer Limits intro here... do not attempt to adjust the picture, we are controlling transmission...)

"Our policy is correctly calibrated," he said. "I'm not in favor of going to QE3 right now."

"I would not find QE3 a good policy choice," Plosser said, adding that a crisis in Europe or a sharp drop in inflation could trigger a change in his view, but that neither event is in his forecast.

"I'm in line with that," said Lockhart, who is considered a moderate dove. More easing is "a real option, but an option to be held in reserve for more serious circumstances than we now face," he said.

Reminds me of another classic old TV show, the 3 Stooges.

The Fed has kept interest rates near zero for more than three years, and has bought $2.3 trillion in long-term securities in an unprecedented drive to spur growth and revive the economy after the worst recession in decades. The bond purchases drew criticism from politicians at home and abroad that the policies could kindle inflation.

Resulting in a really self-conscious Fed.  The people got what they wanted, a Federal Reserve that does not promote inflation.  QE3 is only likely to come when the people demand the Fed push the other side of its supposed 'dual mandate' and inflate the hell out of this thing the next time it implodes (post-election?).

Yet the recovery, especially in jobs, has been slow and economic growth has been erratic, leading the central bank to say it expects to keep rates "exceptionally low" at least through late 2014.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has kept the door open to more asset purchases, but has made it clear he does not want inflation, now near its 2-percent target, to rise much more.

Good on you Ben.  Now get the fuck off the yield curve and let's see how austere you really are with respect to inflation.   We cannot believe anything you say as long as you do not have the courage to stop painting the macro and let it show its true signals. 

The article goes on with 3 eggheads wrangling about jobs and I lost interest after that.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Gold's 'real' price

Whether you measure it in units of oil or industrial metals, gold's real price (RPG) is elevated both on the long term trend and since bottoming out earlier this year.  This is what happens during a cycle of economic contraction.  The gold-oil ratio (GOR) is a very important component of the RPG as pertains to gold mining operations.

NFTRH used a chart similar to this to ID what could be an oncoming short term rough patch for gold sector fundamentals, for the Q4, '11 reporting season.  Lo and behold we now hear all about how these operations just cannot keep their costs from creeping upward.



Well, after bottoming out in Q1, '12 the GOR went nowhere for a few months and turned up during the quarter we are completing this week.  One wonders what might show up in the upcoming reporting season.

With this sector, there are dangers from boneheaded management to unsafe political climates.  So the risks are always there.  But for the short term, the oil 'input cost' is not one of them.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Oh Canada... again

When last we looked at Canadian Markets in May, it was brutal.  Today it is even more so.  The TSX-V (AKA the wild west of Canadian speculation) continues to burrow beneath the neckline.

I am inclined to believe signals in copper and the big TSX over the 'V' as far as macro signals go, but at the least this chart says continue to beware of speculative hole diggers (incl. gold diggers) who are not well funded and in possession of actual documented resources.

Meanwhile, copper's H&S and so many other macro items remain to be resolved.













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'Tepid' demand for 5 year notes...

What, the Fed's not on the bid?  I believe they only favor down to 6 year notes.  Are 5's due for sanitization on the short end?

Treasurys turn down after auction

What we do know is that the 2's are squarely in the line of fire of Op/Twist...

"On Tuesday, the Treasury’s auction of 2-year notes also drew lukewarm demand, which analysts said could be attributable to the Federal Reserve’s expectations for low interest rates through 2014. That’s caused investors to be more willing to shift into longer maturities to pick up a little more yield."

Who are these analysts anyway?  Lobotomy patients?  Robots?  That is one of the silliest paragraphs I have ever seen.

I bitched and moaned enough about T bond manip last week that even I don't want to hear me going on about it any more.  It is what it is and we will move forward with it factored in.

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US Oil Fund updated

USO needs to make this short term positive divergence count and turn up now for a counter trend rally.  It's hard to believe that the peak oil and gas prices hysteria was still bullhorning as recently as last month.













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Rise, Platform, Blow Off, Correction: Au is Fine

Many chart geeks - myself included - are managing the 1520 to 1530 area as important support for gold, which it is if the 'price' of gold is what matters.  And with legions of individuals and funds holding GLD or other forms of paper gold, I suppose it is important.  They are hoping for their paper to be marked up after all, with the idea of making 'price' gains in line with the value associated at any given time with the actual monetary metal.

In addition to visual support levels, there are trend lines and moving averages in play as well and this chart has nothing to do with any of these.  In fact, it has not so much to do with technical analysis as it has to do with perspective; a sort of cartoon version of the last several years of agony and ecstasy that has been the gold bug experience.



Exactly one year ago NFTRH was managing a 1.5 year MACD pattern that I was then calling a "platform".  I did not so much see its ongoing coiling, sideways action as a negative divergence to the consistently rising gold price but rather, as a potential spring board to something potentially dynamic.  BOING... enter the acute phase of the Euro blow up.

On the price chart itself, gold burst upward off of a platform of a different kind.  The yellow shaded oval areas attempt to show how gold has tended to rise, consolidate (platforms) and then burst upward into terminal bull momentum.  Then?... Well, we are currently in a 'then' right now.  Don't over analyze it.  We are in a correction that is the logical result of a blow off.

What else is in play in this summer of discontent?  There is existential damage and plugging of the dykes in Europe, grinding economic deceleration and stagnating money supplies in the US, commodities on the verge of giving in to deflation and silver, copper and crude oil at 'do or die' support with regard to their ability to lead a would-be asset market rally.  Assets of all kinds are deeply over sold and the monetary asset, gold is over sold (especially by MACD) in a steady, healthy looking way similar to 2008.

But we are in complicated times with different dynamics than in 2008, with a US Fed ever more sensitive about growing perceptions that it exists for one main reason; to inflate and bail out asset owners and forever dilute the value of the people's paper money.  A sensitive Fed can be a dangerous Fed to asset owners.  Yet, markets could be due for a continuation of an over sold bounce at the least and indeed, several commodities are showing signs of bottoming

Steve Saville makes an excellent point that "it's risky to anticipate QE" (top item:  http://www.biiwii.com/analysis.htm) and yet markets may continue to follow gold stocks (HUI/GDM led the May decline and then bottomed and turned up first) through a consolidation of an initial burst upward in the would-be summer rally.  There are several bullish divergences against the bear case in the short term (notably in junk and global bonds).  But the bear is in force as the dominant big picture theme, make no mistake about it.  Deflation is after all, always a threat to unwind the system.

On the short term, support parameters are clear and market players should be following them.  My lean is toward continued broad rally activity off the May lows after the current micro term consolidation finishes up.  But this could change with the turn of a couple strategic indicators.

Back on the barbarous relic, tuning out the Euro and US QE noise, the 'Fed twists/manipulates the yield curve noise' (all too much of which was generated by yours truly), the silver, copper and oil at 'do or die' support noise, we are left with a chart of gold - the monetary asset that is an anchor in the mud in a sea of noise.  Gold has done great work over the last year in draining out the momentum fueled 'knee jerks' and is now under pressure of yield curve manipulation (err, management) and an economy that is not yet bad enough to pull the policy out of officials.

Rise, platform, blow off, correction... nothing has changed.  Gold is in a bull market because the system has not yet changed the way it does its business of routinely substituting debt for actual productive endeavor.  Policy makers play it coy and gold corrects.  It's just a barometer after all.  In the stock world, the producers of this barometer actually benefit from a deflationary backdrop that sees their unique counter cyclical fundamentals come to the forefront.

Rambling post ends now.  Sign up for the free eLetter to receive pitch-free, spam-free analysis snippets right in your inbox. 


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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Agro & Cows making a move

Another NFTRH chart that has been on radar for several weeks.  DBA, individual Agro's and Livestock have been candidates for bottoming.  This week they are even more so.




















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Cu Updated

Do you think this is important support for Doctor Copper?  Me too.











Edit (1:47) Weekly chart for commenter MTG that we have been using in NFTRH showing potential (not actual until a break of the neckline) massive H&S.  Needless to say, this had better not be an actual H&S or else the deflationary implication is profound and the target is just above the lows of Armageddon '08.













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Monday, June 25, 2012

Frontier Emerging Markets fund FFD

Looking pretty stable indeed.  That is what we call a tight flag on this weekly chart.  If the world were ending one might think this Frontier Markets fund would not be in a tight bull flag.

This is a low volume fund, do not trade it.  I am just trying to make a technical point.  Fundamentally, my friend Jonathan's Frontier markets appear to be doing just fine as the developed world wigs out.













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US Oil Fund 60 min. chart

Run Forrest, Run!

Russell 2000 Updated

The R2k Small Caps broke the neckline to a topping pattern, declined, formed a little bottoming pattern, popped and then failed the neckline again.

What is interesting is that the bear neckline to the topping pattern is also the would-be bull neckline to the little bottoming pattern and is nicely illustrated by the EMA's 50 and 200. 

What is also interesting is that R2k has already failed these EMA's (exponential moving averages) that I usually look at but is at support defined by the SMA 200 (simple) that many chart watchers look at.  There is also a visual cluster of support at current levels and the green line is a tolerance for right minded bulls.













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Sunday, June 24, 2012

NFTRH193 Out Now

As the page 1 screenshot implies, NFTRH193 keeps the dialogue going about how manipulation is going mainstream.
  • Fact... FOMC states it will buy long term bonds and sell short term ones
  • Fact... This puts downward pressure on the yield curve
  • Fact... Gold tends to stay in line with the yield curve (per the charts, which are historical fact)
  • Fact... This represents indirect manipulation and control of a monetary metal that indicates a system in trouble when it rises
  • Opinion... This is being done in preparation for dealing with things that are decidedly not under control and the manipulative effects are likely to have an expiration date
  • Fact... We will deal with the situation on its own terms because the market - manip'd or not - is greater than you or me

NFTRH193 out now...














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Friday, June 22, 2012

Emerging Market 'Income' hanging tough

The Templeton Emerging Market bond fund TEI thus far does not think the world is ending.  This is currently a member of the NFTRH Model portfolio (not a reco now, it was bought much lower).  Should we be looking outside the US for signs of market leadership, ala 2009?  All I can continue to state is that it is going to be an interesting summer. 

Interesting can be bullish or really bearish.  One hard lean the wrong way and... week to week my friends. 













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S&P 500 Updated

SPX needs to hold the current support zone or the index is probably going to the originally favored downside target 1200 later in the summer.  These volatile markets - complete with meddling policy makers - are tough to get a sensible read on.  Risk management is job #1.













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JNK-LQD remains at a support zone

In the previous post we talk about two indicators of liquidity suckage (USD and GSR) showing strength and in this post we have an indicator of 'risk on/off' and liquidity (JNK-LQD) maintaining a support zone, though not yet rising and holding above the confirming EMA 200. 

This chart was originally sent to eLetter and premium subscribers a couple days ago.  I don't attempt to predict the future but I sure as hell do attempt to be on the spot with early indicators ASAP.  Right now we have indicators in conflict with each other.  That will not persist.










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USD back above the neckline

But more important than that, the gold-silver ratio may be removing what had been a negative divergence to Uncle Buck.  We went over the details in an update to subscribers yesterday.













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GLD filling a gap today...

Yesterday was not all bad...

My 5th grader's softball team won the Majors league championship last night.  Watching this group of kids come together over the course of a season, have a ton of fun and yet remain focused on a goal was just awesome to watch, and participate in.  I helped coach, but the head coach had a perfect focus on a balance between real fundamentals and having fun.  Boy did they have fun.  My daughter Sofi is nuts about softball now, just like her older sister.

We found ourselves down to only one pitcher at mid season and Sofi, who had only just started pitching clinics over the winter stepped in and was a revelation.  A little peanut who throws strikes!  The girls hung tough and beat some really good teams to carry home the hardware.

It shows what hard work can do; and they really did work hard to be the best.  Congratulations Gladiators!

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Mr. Market to Ben Bernanke

Mr. Market:  "I am not happy with you Ben."

Ben Bernanke:  "Look, what did you expect from me?  Romney's out there on the campaign trail saying hands off the QE and the dumbasses out there in the public are all over it.  How does anyone expect me to get 'er done with those people still hung up on inflation?"

MM:  "They won't be if I renew my swan dive."

BB:  "Well, that would be an effective plan now wouldn't it?"

MM:  "Look, I am not screwing around.  The economic data all around me is eroding.  I know you've got a problem with that bunch of weirdos over in the gold sector calling for your head but as I said, I am not screwing around sir."

BB:  "I just want to test those whackos a little bit more.  I have heard of a malcontented blogger who actually thinks the counter cycle is good for gold stocks.  We'll see how right he is when the Bugs start to puke again."

MM:  "Okay, but I reiterate good sir that I am in a tenuous position.  Everybody knows that Twist b/s is not doing anything other than punishing the gold bugs."

BB:  "Yeh, but ain't it grand?"

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Let's Twist Again

The previous post of the same title was put up by a bemused blogger to express the idea that the big brains on the FOMC must think we are a bunch of drooling idiots, we Americans... and we global financial market participants.  Similar sentiments have been expressed on this blog in the past with my personal favorite nugget from popular culture era gone by:













"There is nothing wrong with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission [the T bond market]. If we wish to make it louder [appear as if there is little or no inflationary policy], we will bring up the volume [short term yield]. If we wish to make it softer [appear as if we are doing all we can do to inflate], we will tune it to a whisper [buy bonds across all durations and asset classes]. We will control the horizontal. We will control the vertical [mostly the vertical]. We can roll the image [yield curve], make it flutter. We can change the focus [of conventional trend following market participants] to a soft blur or sharpen it to crystal clarity. For the next hour [duration of the lifespan of the current system], sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear. We repeat: there is nothing wrong with your television set [remotely managed bond market]. You are about to participate in a great adventure. You are about to experience the awe and mystery which reaches from the inner mind to — The Outer Limits.  [That is all, calmly go about your business and we will take care of everything]"













Above is a log scale (I normally use linear scale charts for their more literal view) chart of the 30 year yield vs. T bill 'yields' (so to speak).  Due to extreme volatility, a linear chart obscures the message that the most extreme yield curve (until they introduce 50 and 100 year Treasury bonds perhaps?) remains elevated even after it was pressured downward after last year's kickoff to the euro crisis.

The point of yield curve analysis is to show that when long term yields are rising strongly relative to short term ones, the system is indicated to be under stress and under inflationary pressure all at once.  In this scenario, economies are decelerating, policy is accommodative and inflation fears are rising.


But what does Operation Twist do?  It seeks to negate the natural forces (and thus the signals we derive) of the T bond market in favor of painting a handy picture.  As for gold, the monetary barometer to systemic and inflationary pressure, it has - since the acute phase of the credit bubble implosion began in 2007 - tended to follow the spread between 30 year bonds and 2 year bonds.

How convenient; the Fed now states it will continue through year end to buy long term bonds and sell equal amounts of short term bonds.  A nice, quaint and sanitized way of going about interest rate manipulation that seeks to bail out and fund the areas of the economy (housing, mortgages, etc.) that experienced the most egregious abuses while pretending that all bonds are equal and selling short term (excluding 'Fed funds' of course, the inflationary ZIRP) notes to sanitize the process. 

A potentially positive side effect for the manipulators will kick in if gold continues to dutifully follow the curve in the chart above; assuming of course that the Fed is able to control the bond market completely.  The curve is after all, still elevated and a candidate to turn back up from near current levels, regardless of who is attempting to control the transmission.

Yet as I type this post, gold is getting hammered in pre-market.  I often write that this is war if you are a precious metals player; and in this war you fight it on the terms of powerful people with clearly defined agendas.  So manage risk and be aware of what is in play.  The time will come for manipulations and half measures to be cast aside and you need to remain whole in order to survive and then benefit from the process.  That is exactly what NFTRH is doing week to week.  Markets need to be managed on their own terms, especially since those terms are so routinely influenced by policy makers.

Post Script:  The market just opened and it is a disgusting display indeed with the gold sector doing exactly what yesterday's policy release and the charts above said it 'should' do.  We have parameters for short term risk management and we have intermediate term plans, always subject to revision.  It's the only way to go about markets that are so routinely managed as they are these days.

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Let's Twist Again...

Hey America, shut off your brains and let's Twist again like we did last summer!



Okay, done with this idiocy for today.  Later.

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Fed to manipulate interest rates (and gold?) through year end

Fed extends Operation Twist through year end

Much much more to come on this, but as far as I know, this blog and its resident newsletter have been among the few drawing the correlation between Twist's manipulation of interest rates and its effect on gold.

Today gold is duly declining in the face of the manipulators but the gold stocks have reversed higher.  Weird, but maybe not so weird.  There are themes in play and I simply cannot wait to start working them.

This is what we fight and scrap for people.

Below the manipulators explain how they intend to sanitize very unnatural dealings and make it all look normal here in Wonderland:

Release Date: June 20, 2012

For immediate release

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in April suggests that the economy has been expanding moderately this year. However, growth in employment has slowed in recent months, and the unemployment rate remains elevated. Business fixed investment has continued to advance. Household spending appears to be rising at a somewhat slower pace than earlier in the year. Despite some signs of improvement, the housing sector remains depressed. Inflation has declined, mainly reflecting lower prices of crude oil and gasoline, and longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee expects economic growth to remain moderate over coming quarters and then to pick up very gradually. Consequently, the Committee anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only slowly toward levels that it judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Furthermore, strains in global financial markets continue to pose significant downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee anticipates that inflation over the medium term will run at or below the rate that it judges most consistent with its dual mandate.

To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee expects to maintain a highly accommodative stance for monetary policy. In particular, the Committee decided today to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that economic conditions--including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through late 2014.

The Committee also decided to continue through the end of the year its program to extend the average maturity of its holdings of securities. Specifically, the Committee intends to purchase Treasury securities with remaining maturities of 6 years to 30 years at the current pace and to sell or redeem an equal amount of Treasury securities with remaining maturities of approximately 3 years or less. This continuation of the maturity extension program should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative. The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities. The Committee is prepared to take further action as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustained improvement in labor market conditions in a context of price stability.

Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Dennis P. Lockhart; Sandra Pianalto; Jerome H. Powell; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Jeremy C. Stein; Daniel K. Tarullo; John C. Williams; and Janet L. Yellen. Voting against the action was Jeffrey M. Lacker, who opposed continuation of the maturity extension program.

Statement Regarding Continuation of the Maturity Extension Program
Leaving the Board

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REE Haw!

If anybody knows what is causing this I'd surely love to hear.  My two new REE holdings are popping nicely.

The NFTRH Model Portfolio introduced itself with a Rare Earth fund, since replaced with two individual picks Molycorp (MCP, avg cost 20.11, +10.9%) and Rare Element Resources (REE, avg cost 4.18, +16.7%) and I would be more than pleased to see an upward revision of this former darling of a sector that was beaten down after the big pump into 2011 wore off.  It could prove to have been an excellent bottom feeder buy.

Also, the Lithium fund in the portfolio continues upward as well.  I cannot wait to get the FOMC out of the way so that the analysis can level out and stop having to account for wild cards.  These strategic commodities could have a good run if things stay on track.

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SLW vs. SLV, a leading indicator

SLW-SLV began downward leadership in in 2007, culminating in the massive drainage of Armageddon '08.  It then led the massive rally we dubbed Hope '09, which was pumped by QE in 2010 into last spring's commodity market top and oncoming euro crisis grind for global stock markets.

While it is entirely possible (I happen to reserve a place of respect for the d boys' case) that a deflationary backdrop will persist longer term, if there is to be a counter trend pump (i2k12 or inflationary 2012) this ratio will indicate it.

SLW-SLV has made good on an initial move, rising above the green dotted weekly EMA 25 after a bullish MACD divergence.  If the early signal on MACD continues on to be a confirmed weekly up-trigger, we will have our i2k12 party.  In fact, if the POTUS wins reelection, we will call it the i2k12 Party instead of the Democrat party.

There are many other indicators to watch (and refine), and watch them NFTRH shall going forward.  For now, let's get the interest rate manipulators at the FOMC over with so we can put them in the books along with the Greek elections.  Data points are more trustworthy when they are plotted against a less dynamic (e.g. emotional) backdrop.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

New NFTRH model portfolio (4 holdings)

This is not a toot the horn type of post because the new model portfolio's performance has as much to do with timing as my would-be genius ability to pick stocks.  I just happened to be in a position to put a real-world model portfolio to work in the newsletter at a particularly good time to be buying.

I am probably known as a gold bug or what have you, and indeed the portfolio is balanced by gold.  But the holdings in this portfolio are meant to be part of a diversified mix in alignment with whatever my view happens to be on an intermediate (read: less frequent trading) basis.

The chart shows a few items I felt were due for an extended swing trade and these were first presented in NFTRH a couple weeks ago in #190.  Emerging Markets, Emerging global income (w/ dividend), Lithium and the premier silver royalty stock, SLW.  The portfolio also holds my two favorite gold explorers, crude oil, a couple REE stocks and another global income fund, all bought on recent downside excess along with a tactical actively managed global fund and the Permanent Portfolio fund 'for all seasons'.

The portfolio will maintain a strict risk management regimen at all times, but not in trading the short term swings.  If I believe the intermediate is still on coarse, I'll try to keep this portfolio intact and on course to provide capital appreciation and income in sensible areas and manage risk and re-balance as needed within that context.  A nice, diversified group is the ideal.

This adds a tier of quality to the NFTRH service that previously only included a non diversified 'speculation' portfolio, which is my actual IRA.  Now I can feel better about going into more detail on what I believe is a more sensible take on how one market manager is deploying (and preserving) funds in my regular brokerage account.

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Gold Weekly Chart

It's a consolidation/correction in Au.  Nothing more, nothing less. 

The consolidation is not indicated to be over until gold at least gets above the two moving averages noted at the blue arrow.  MACD is still bear, RSI is at resistance but the weekly AROON trend has sneakily gone up.

The Fed is meeting and some people are expecting a big announcement.  Gold says 'don't hold your breath'.  We'll find out shortly.  If the stock market is rallying on QE expectations, I think it could cool off a bit if FOMC does not come with the goods.


















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So tell me again how bearish things are?

The Cube is breaking above the neckline to its little bullish pattern.  Target is noted, conveniently at a resistance area.  As I have been noting, it could be a very interesting summer.



















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Monday, June 18, 2012

Obsession With Central Bank Action is Unhealthy, But Typical

The great question revolving around Greece is now answered.  It remained unanswered when the opening segment of NFTRH192 was written.  Here is how one writer was trying to deal with these and other questions over the weekend:

Obsession With Central Bank Action is Unhealthy, But Typical

“We’re seeing some positive sentiment return on account of a few things: the prospect of coordinated intervention in the event of a sloppy Greek election, or outright victory of an anti austerity party,” such as Syriza, said Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. –MarketWatch

NFTRH has been managing what I believe could be a pivot to a coming intermediate bullish phase in the broad markets. For several weeks now my response to the Ticker Sense sentiment poll has been ‘Bullish’ http://is.gd/IX10GL. This has been largely due to markets’ [previous] proximity to important support, pervasively bearish sentiment, an over bought/over owned US dollar and the ‘Sitting Democrat’ election year cycle.

A potential ‘QE’ component is part of the analysis because as I have taken pains to illustrate, a deflationary environment has reset the entire casino from its former ‘inflation expectations’ stance of a year ago to one that is on pins and needles about Greece, Spain and Europe in general, as the US economy continues to steadily grind out signs of economic deceleration and China’s growth has slowed from unsustainable hyper levels.

There was going to be no overt Central Bank action amid a rising prices/costs backdrop and ‘off with their (the inflators’) heads!’ sentiment among the public. Against the current backdrop, there could be. But again, a watched QE pot may not boil on demand.

So let’s try to break down the scenarios that could be in play as markets open on Monday, after the Greek election has come and gone.

Scenario 1: Pro-Austerity, Pro-Euro Forces Win, Order Maintained

Is it possible that markets could react negatively to this news? Have they really been rallying on the prospect of an asymmetrical disaster and inflationary response? It is likely that policy makers, especially in the US, would stand down in the very short-term on this news and the market would be left on its own.

Rather than the thrills and spills of cataclysm and official response, we would be left with an economy that is grinding and decelerating (Empire Manufacturing was the headline disappointment last week), but all would appear ‘normal’ (whatever that word means in levered up modern markets) at least.

The Fed meets on June 19-20 and I think it would be foolish for a writer to try to pick apart all the different moving parts that are in play and come up with some kind of a forecast. But if Scenario 1 carries the day we are back to the normal plan, which sees the inflators being ‘drawn out’ of hiding by economic events that steadily continue toward our ‘economic contraction’ scenario that comes against a backdrop of inflation fears being little more than a distant memory.

This is the favored scenario for the ongoing analysis that sees general gold mining fundamentals marching higher in the form of rising gold-commodities ratios (‘real’ price of gold or RPG) as the economy continues to contract. If the gold mining sector gets hit as QE cultists abandon ship, this could present another buying opportunity for one of the few sectors that benefit fundamentally from the counter cycle.

Scenario 2: Anti-Austerity Forces Win, Greece to [Renege] on Obligations and Leave the European Union

Asymmetry would immediately come to the fore, with emotions running high and all eyes on Spain, Italy and any other ‘next dominoes’ that could tumble. Words like contagion and crisis would go global and go into hyper drive. All of this would be against a backdrop of already slowing economic activity. Policy makers would be compelled to act.

There is no telling what could happen to gold in this scenario. Gold is simply a much hyped, much obsessed upon anchor to monetary sense; to simplicity, as opposed to the violently thrashing thing that Keynesian geniuses have created for us over the many fiat decades of credit and debt creation.

Would Ben Bernanke be fiddling around with yield curve manipulation (Operation Twist) in this scenario or would he go full steroidal with massive purchases of long-term Treasury bonds without the sneaky window dressing of selling short-term ones? If the mission is ‘increase money supply in a compelling manner for all the world to see’, he will be a man and tell the world “I am Ben Bernanke and I am here to inflate, as has been my Raison d'être since I first made headlines in my speech entitled Deflation: Making Sure “It” Doesn’t Happen Here http://is.gd/q2NIub.”

The US Fed would also have the cover of being ‘coordinated’ with other global inflators and acting for the good of all against the contagion in Europe.

What’s It All Mean? 

If I knew, I would not be writing you today because my riches and power would be beyond imagination. Instead, we are stuck in a failing system, you and I. The system is broken and is run by people who make it more broken with every policy response.

Inflation has been the problem since gold was finally and completely sent to the wilderness in the early 70’s. It is just that the degrading process takes longer to play out than the 70’s gold bugs (and possibly even the current era’s newly minted gold bugs) might have ever dreamed possible.

In short, whether the world blows up on Monday or order is maintained, the system is suffering from the leverage of credit/debt-based policy that came before. Personally, I vote for stability and maintenance of the illusion for now. I vote for Greek Austerity and continued market management along the current course.

So the balance of #192 is going to proceed as if some sort of order will be maintained since I think it would be foolish to try to quantify the tiger by the tail that would be the alternative. That wildcard must be considered an asterisk (emphasis on the last 4 letters of that word) on the analysis this week.  Sign up for the free - and spam free - eLetter.

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Ag gravating question of the day...

Post Greece, back to our regularly scheduled programming...

This was my preferred outcome to the Greek election because I prefer austerity to deadbeat reneging, but more so because now the analysis can remain on track without the extreme uproar that renewed euro panic and policy response would have prompted.

For now - until the next leak springs in the euro (or US, or China or...) dyke - we can go back to managing decelerating US and global economies, an over bought deflation case and US policy makers, who happen to be meeting tomorrow and Wednesday, playing it coy with regard to the 'will they or won't they?' question on inflationary policy in this presidential election year.

Gold may have launched to who knows where if the euro had begun falling apart.  I for one am glad it did not.  The case for gold mining is on track fundamentally although as NFTRH192 pointed out, there remain open questions on the near term technicals.

So as the title says, back to our regularly scheduled programming and glad of it!

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Sunday, June 17, 2012

NFTRH192 Out Now

Actually 192 came out early this morning and like perhaps you, is held somewhat in suspense by the Greek election situation.  Not trying to out think itself, NFTRH simply did its job this weekend over 23 pages and eagerly awaits a time - coming imminently - when it can go back to qualifying and quantifying things in a normal manner in this abnormal financial system in which we operate.

NFTRH192 out now.














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Friday, June 15, 2012

Bond auctions & TLT

This week's US Treasury bond auctions have resulted in a little bounce for TLT.  I believe this thing is making a top off of over bought conditions.  I also believe the deflation story may be topping out.  But in the very short term people could pile drive back into the long bond depending upon what kind of dynamics come out of the Greek vote.  Maybe a double top coming on the long bond?
















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Thursday, June 14, 2012

EWI Free Week - Get It

It costs nothing to get free premium analysis on US stocks via Elliott Wave International from June 14-21.  Costs nothing and there is no spam or nagging from EWI.

Oh and we have Greece on tap and a world full of casino patrons hopped up on deflation fears.  So why not get updated directly from d Boy Central over the next week.  This will be intensive, with lots of intra day analysis.

I for one am looking forward to it.  My name is Gary, my website is an EWI affiliate and I approved this message.  ;-)



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Anthony Robbins Bullish on Gold!

And if you think this is bullish, think again.

Anthony Robbins Bullish on Gold

I remember sometime after the great financial crisis of 2007-2009 had finally become obvious to Joe Public, America's #1 self-promoter came out with his schtick about the dangers of debt and some self-help babble about how to protect yourself.

Well, I am bullish on gold too, but that would be in spite of Mr. Robbins' promotion.  It is stuff like this that really gives me pause.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

A Byproduct of the Twist? Gold Manipulation

As the world awaits the Greek election, there was news today right here in Wonderland:

Treasurys rise after record-setting auction

Our great nation is selling more bonds (AKA debt) this week to keep itself afloat.  Guess what?  Demand was strong for 10 year notes.

Next up, 30 year debt will be peddled on Thursday.  With the Fed on the bid, either in action or in implied waiting, one might expect that to be another bumper day.

"On Tuesday, the government garnered weak demand at its sale of 3-year notes.  That could have been due to expectations for more Twist from the Fed, which may entail selling that maturity. That logic would also have lent support for the 10-year auction, and presumably the long bond sale in the coming session."

The indisputable message of this chart is that gold generally goes in alignment with the 30 year/2 year yield spread.  













What a world; all a great and powerful man with a big brain has to do is cannibalize the unproductive legacy debt of the nation, eating what suits him (long term bonds) and serving what doesn't to others (short term bonds) in hopes that they eat the stuff.  They are hopped up on deflation fear after all.  They'll eat anything that is 'risk off' after all.

Point is, we have been following the correlation between gold and the 30-2 spread for many weeks now in NFTRH.  The gold correction out of the hysterical phase of the euro crisis was very normal and indeed, expected.  But the normal correction was then aided and abetted by the Fed's stated intention of Twisting (AKA 'sanitizing*') its monetization of Treasury debt.

Really, how long can they keep it up?  The fact is that whether they Twist again or go for the good old fashioned straight on monetization, we are off the charts and officials are just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic as far as inflation is concerned.  They have been, are and will likely continue to ram inflation into the pipeline through whatever means suits the agenda in the best way.

It will be interesting to see if gold obediently maintains the correlation.  When the Twist manipulation scheme was originally cooked up and served in September, all the over bought metal needed was a shove in a southerly direction to get it to go with the program.  Now, after what would qualify as a healthy intermediate correction, doing the Twist may not work as well.  

Several points of analysis point toward this being a pivotal and very interesting summer; and not in a bearish way either.  Real inflators may yet stand up and be counted instead of hiding behind intricate schemes and half measures.  Watch the gold sector for clues coming out of what could be a volatile June.  Sign up for the free - and spam free - eLetter.

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*This sanitization gives the appearance of accommodative policy and subdued inflation all at once.

Au-SPX ratio updated

Charlie Munger scoffed at gold and pumped stocks after the Handle to the Cup had registered point 5.  'Buy US stocks, sell gold!' was the advice of certain trend followers who like to look smart in the media.  Meanwhile, the relic simply continues to consolidate above support.  Which way will it go from here? 

Risk vs. reward is not in favor of Charlie and his sycophantic herd.











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SLW-RGLD on bullish divergence

I no longer own RGLD as the profit taking urge was too great and RGLD, while a quality entity, is not gold after all.  Nor is SLW silver, but I continue to hold it as it is (IMO) the highest quality entity in the silver sector, short of silver itself.

The SLW-RGLD ratio is flashing a bullish divergence from deeply over sold.  This is important to we gold bug types, but also whether they know it or not, to global market casino patrons.  If divergence morphs to price action in the next month or two it would fit very well with NFTRH's current theme.















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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Updating the GOR

We looked at the Gold-Oil Ratio (GOR) among other elements of the RPG (gold's 'real' price) in this post from May.  Today we update the GOR by daily chart and see a target up higher for this 'over bought' ratio. 

This is important to the gold mining fundamental picture and as it rises, so too do the implied sector fundamentals for the people that dig the monetary anchor out of the ground.
















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Monday, June 11, 2012

Attn: NFTRH Subscribers

An email update just went out with a 60 minute chart of the HUI that is in confluence with the weekly chart shown in NFTRH191. 

The parameters are clear as to whether or not a retest of the May lows will be on tap.



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Don't personalize the markets

A few articles I have written lately have elicited some responses that have been less than complimentary.  This generally comes with the 'public writer' territory, but negative feedback seems to come more intensely when the market is at critical junctures where its fortunes are potentially near a point of change.

It goes both ways as I routinely hear from bulls, bears and even gold bugs when I write something that looks "dumb" because it is out of alignment with a current trend, but is actually looking for the 'pivot' to a new trend. 

"Gary = Dumb Investor" (just one succinct comment among several unflattering ones on Seeking Alpha in response to this article)

Negative comments came from people bearish the market despite the fact that the article speculated that the S&P 500 could have lower to go before finding a sustainable bottom and noted the risks involved as usual with a market dependent on inflationary policy.

The comments had the feel of people defending their positions by intellectualizing the various components of the macro market backdrop.  Leaving emotional internet jousting aside for a moment, when people defend something it means they are being defensive; and when they are being defensive it means they are potentially vulnerable.

In the markets weakness is the kiss of death.  But what is strength?  Is strength found in the gold bug who knows he is right and holds his gold stocks 'long and strong' through the 50% swings in an ongoing battle against the forces of evil?  Or is strength perhaps found in ongoing risk vs. reward analysis despite one's particular big picture orientation?

Is strength found within the perma bear who knows the system is cooked and is committed to remain in alignment with that outlook?  The 401k investor who lets his professional manager 'set it and forget it'?

My big picture view is bearish given the irreconcilable leverage the current system depends upon.  But there is nothing 'perma' about the current system.  Strength is found in the ability to know who you are and what you believe, but also to cross-reference yourself against the macro backdrop at any given time.

There are too many tools and indicators involved in the process to list here but speaking personally, the fact is that despite my intense alarm about the rot in the financial system in the first half of the last decade, the system has lurched, wheezed and churned forward dependent on powerful policy makers who do little more than sweep the moral hazards under the rug and pay the whole bloated mess forward.

And so here we are; at a potential pivot point.  The US dollar is over owned by people righteously convinced that the system is in big trouble and asset markets are at risk.  Well yes, they have been at risk for years now, which is why the folks at Policy Central stand ready to do all they can to inflate, only to promote another blown gasket down the road.

So when I write something like this The Last Bear Just Locked the Bunker Door and a commenter writes "you seem to sneer at the idea that catastrophic risk is real" I comment back as follows:

"I started my website in 2004 because of catastrophic risk you note. I am not intending to [sneer] at it. EVER. What I am doing is noting the cycles that play out over the years within this risk environment.

As an example, had I acted on my alarm in 2004 I'd have not only missed many subsequent profit opp's, but I'd have likely sat 100% in US dollars (I always keep a significant level there BTW) and fallen behind by leaps and bounds.

What I mean by the Age of Inflation onDemand is that we have an ongoing 'continuum' of deflationary pressure (I use the monthly TYX or USB chart to illustrate) that is routinely met by inflationary policy. This policy is always doomed to fail, but it has thus far reliably produced 'swings'.

I also believe there is going to be a 'final deflation', which would end the system.

Does this sound like [sneering]?"


I am a bear and have been a bear since the day I became a public writer because I realize the system, in a word, sucks; and it is getting worse.  I find it difficult however, to write what I feel I have to write and not piss off some people at certain points.  That is what operating in a levered up system is all about; awaiting opportunity to capitalize on dynamic trends that routinely and sometimes violently ping from one extreme to the other.

At every pivot point there are people really committed to the existing (and mature) trend.  As long as we ping along over the years within a system that refuses to die, the intermediate swings will be the play... from bull to bear to bull to bear... until one day, the thing just wheezes and does not pass Go or collect $200.

That is why the ultimate analysis calls for owning (outright) things of value, being de-leveraged from an overly leveraged system and managing your pych profile every step of the way.  This is not your grandfather's stock market.  This is not a drill.

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

NFTRH191 Out Now

As the screenshot of page 1 indicates, more definition is being added to the weekly highlight of my regular brokerage account, which is changing labels from 'Capital Preservation' to 'Model' portfolio. 

This is done in an effort to give readers a view of what one little market participant is doing with a 'sensible' group of holdings (incl. cash) against any given macro market backdrop.  Performance of individual positions will be tracked from inception until closing of the trade. 

The general intent is to hold a diversified group of positions for intermediate swings as opposed to the more frequent trading that occurs in the non-diversified speculative portfolio.

Meanwhile, NFTRH191 continues on with a macro theme that involves inflation expectations (or more accurately, lack thereof), an election year and policy makers sensitive about not being perceived as chronic inflators. 

There is lots of other good stuff in there too, like a spotlight on a highly strategic sector that has been hammered down with the general commodity sector.

NFTRH191 out now.

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Saturday, June 9, 2012

HUI working out so far per NFTRH email updates last week...

Here is the chart sent as part of an email update to NFTRH subscribers on Monday highlighting parameters for Huey to see an over bought reaction:














After the reaction had dutifully presented itself the same chart was marked up with a logical support zone on Thursday:














Now on Saturday morning, here is the current specimen.  So far, so good:














This is not meant as a smarmy, self-congratulatory post because there are sure to be challenges directly ahead and anybody can cherry pick short time periods when they look good.  But this post is meant to illustrate that with the NFTRH service I knock myself out trying to keep relevant information front and center for my customers.

This weekend NFTRH191 is going to dig deeper into other aspects of the global asset world and now that I will have more time available to be a 100% market-focused, a new portfolio is going to be set up that seeks to model in a more diversified way than the 'Speculation' portfolio, which is often non-diversified and focused on individual themes; like that of the recent gold sector opportunity for instance.  These are both my real (not theoretical) world portfolios.

An article I wrote recently was mocked for its bullish tone over at that bastion of trend following, Seeking Alpha.  That is the surety that trend followers have.  In this case, people convinced (evidently by weeks of bearish activity) that the market was going down further (SPX can still ding 1200 before the Fed meets on the 20th, though I now have my doubts) did not want to hear reasons why they could be wrong. 

Bears can be just as stubborn as bulls at times of potential trend change.  It's what makes a market.  And for the balance of 2012, I think this market has a chance to be pretty actionable.

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Friday, June 8, 2012

The Last Bear Just Locked the Bunker Door

My wife forwarded this (A Terrifying Vision of the End Game) to me last week.  It has gone viral after all (which is the only reason a finance-o-phobe like my wife - and like most normal people outside of geeks like you and me - would have seen it).  It comes courtesy of Business Insider, which saw fit to pump the bear case at the exact moment that fear could not get any more palpable in US and global stocks markets.

Now Zero Hedge is apparently still hung up on it.  I generally like ZH and marvel at the shear volume of information that these guys churn out; but come on guys, enough already.  Raoul Paul (a hedge fund manager no less; oooohhhhh) thinks the system is going to end and a new one will rise from its ashes.  Wow, ya think?

Here is what I think; I think the American Association of Individual Investors puked in May and remains resistant to a rally right up to this minute.  I had been looking for potential on the S&P 500 down to 1200 or so, but news items like the now viral End Game report, sentiment data and some technicals shaping up across many markets make me wonder if the top of the 1260 to 1200 target was all we will get.

AAII sentiment courtesy Sentimentrader.com
















Regardless, I am expecting generally bullish themes for much of the balance of 2012.  If I am wrong, then I am wrong.  The system is after all, going to end sometime because it has been choked with unsustainable inputs from meddling and egomaniacal monetary autocrats most intensely since the age of Inflation onDemand took hold in 2001 when a brand new bouncing baby credit bubble began to take shape.











The credit bubble was the funding mechanism of the mortgage and housing bubbles and Wall Street's 'leveraged products' bubble.  These of course already wrecked the system.  But now the bubble has morphed and embedded itself into US Treasury bonds.  And what a bubble this is!

With seemingly limitless power to fund itself, the US can now leverage a critically over bought T bond and relatively strong US dollar to fund operations for a limited time period, like say into the election?  It is the age of Inflation onDemand and the T bond says there is demand for inflation; whether this demand was cooked up by official Treasury yield 'operations' or not.

The bear phase in the markets has done its job.  Business Insider has done its job.  Zero Hedge is making sure that the last doomsday survivor is tucked away safe and sound in his bunker and all is aligned for some unexpected outcomes over the intermediate term.

Long term?  Yeh, the system is going to end.

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