Financial topics

Investments, gold, currencies, surviving after a financial meltdown
richard5za
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Joined: Sun Sep 21, 2008 10:29 am
Location: South Africa

Re: Financial topics

Post by richard5za »

Higgenbotham wrote:Silver is now setting up for a potential plunge (as is gold).
I am a "new boy on the block" when it comes to silver. I am very happy with my silver profits so maybe I'll sell in a day or two.

Gold and gold miners is another matter. I know these.

Gold must be in need of a correction, but I am seeing gold above $ 2500 / onnce and perhpas even at $ 5000 / ounce before the bubble bursts.

Going short on silver or gold is braver than me. I buy long without leverage and have stop losses in place
Richard
Higgenbotham
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Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2008 11:28 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by Higgenbotham »

richard5za wrote:Gold and gold miners is another matter. I know these.

Gold must be in need of a correction, but I am seeing gold above $ 2500 / onnce and perhaps even at $ 5000 / ounce before the bubble bursts.
Richard
Silver bottomed 6-10 years before gold - 1991/1993 versus 1999/2001 - so it's very possible gold could see years of upside even if it turns out silver made a multi year high in late April. I would not short gold and I certainly would not short gold miners as their costs are dropping at the same time gold is rising.

I will use leverage and probably use cash settled contracts to be safe. Reason for using leverage is to tie as little money up in the brokerage as possible. Reason for using cash settled contracts is to make sure I don't have to deliver in the event of exchange closure (not likely but who knows what can happen). Initially, I may take a position of about 20% of net worth and then add if the market collapses. Being a silver bull for a long time I don't care for the trade emotionally, but can't deny what the facts are. The performance of silver has been terrible these past 4 months and the chart looks sick. But that could all change in the blink of an eye and all speculation is extremely risky, even for those of us who have long and deep experience with the markets. The best way to live a life is to work and have a safe savings vehicle but the world has been stripped of this right and every saver is now a gambler by definition. It's a terrible way to live for all but the very best gamblers or the very highest wage earners.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.
Higgenbotham
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Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2008 11:28 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by Higgenbotham »

The black flash mobs are a tough discussion. I like to characterize it using facts. The facts are what they are. I can't know the intentions and don't want to try to think I know.

Saying it's not about race isn't meaningful to me. Saying it is about race is only meaningful to the extent of the facts. The all black mobs are attacking whites. That's it.

As for my experience, I witnessed a mob/riot involving 300 blacks as it was sort of breaking up and drove through the mob without incident. Some of the people were known to me. I would not have driven through it or even through that neighborhood if that had not been the case. That was 20 years ago. These are different times.

On another similar subject, I used to work in a place where supervisors would form mob like groups for the purpose of harrassing and intimidating staff persons. Invariably, the reaction of the staff person was to ask, "Why are they doing this to me?" I never asked that question. As one former supervisor said to me, "Their technique was effective in getting most people to emote and ask why they were doing it. You never asked why. When you were in your cage and they were poking you with their stick, your response was to break the stick off and shove it up their ass." I told him, that's right, why they were doing it was irrelevant; the only thing that was relevant to me was the fact that they were doing it.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.
MnMark
Posts: 20
Joined: Sun Sep 21, 2008 4:52 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by MnMark »

richard5za wrote:
vincecate wrote:However, every central bank everywhere knows how to make a fiat currency weaker, just print a bunch of money and buy any crap until prices go up and the currency gets weaker. They could buy up bonds, other currencies, toxic assets, rice, used cars, whatever, and it would work.
Yes, but consider this possibility: I suspect that sooner or later the European crisis is going to "pop" the sovereign debt bubble, at first in Europe and then globally. The banking system becomes dysfunctional, and 'hundreds of Trillions' of derivatives stop functioning. World trade becomes hobbled; business everywhere beomes hobbled and lays off massive numbers of employees. Its beyond the control of government. It was the brakes on world trade that made the 1930's so very deflaionery; same is posible here in a different way.

I think defalion also needs to be measured in real terms. If I have 30% deflation is real terms but simply the currency has been manipulated to that it looks inflationery, it remains a deflationery problem at its core. The Fed can create money but it cannot make that into the commerce that oils the economy. Currency manipulation, especially be the world largest economy will create an immediate reaction probably along the lines of currency wars.

My example above may be extreme but it is possible.
I am not an expert in finance or these matters of international financial organizations and how they interoperate. But the argument that a deflationary failure of the system could get beyond the ability for the government to print money to try to address it does not seem reasonable to me because it takes so very little for the government to take action.

Suppose Goldman Sachs sees that its various financial chickens are about to come home to roost, to the tune of $5 trillion dollars. If nothing is done, they will go bankrupt/insolvent and their millions of customers will lose their money and the owners of GS will lose their money and so on. The CEO of Goldman calls the Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Fed, and says "sorry to say this, but we go bankrupt tomorrow unless we get help. It will bring everything down." "How much do you need to get through this?" "We need $5 trillion." Of course the Treasury politically can't just give them $5 trillion but what we've seen since the 2008 crisis is that when it comes to this kind of thing, where there's a will there's a way. The Fed buys the bad GS debt in a secret deal, or it does something with reserves, or it gets the IMF to lend money, or whatever. By whatever means, the money appears and is provided. Or, the rules about what has to be reported are suspended so GS's bad debts are hidden. Whatever it takes. It can be pulled together in a day or two because all it takes is some phone calls among some top-level people and then some pressing of keyboard keys on some keyboard to magically create $5 trillion out of thin air. All with the best intentions of course of saving the financial system and the intention that it will be paid back later.

If they had to come up with some actual gold or other item of value (like they would have had to in the 1930s) they could not do it. No way could they keep up with the tumbling dominos. But the amount of money needed now is immaterial because any amount, literally any amount, can be created. The only thing needed is a cover story for presenting it to the public. And the public can't follow this stuff anyway.

I think what the politicians learned from the reaction to 2008 is that the public doesn't want any more big TARP things passed by Congress, because they think it's bailing out the rich (they ignore that it also bails out their much smaller pension plans, retirement accounts, etc). So Bernanke just uses some creative language to call it something else. In 2008 he was willing to (as I understand it) actually break the law and use printed Fed money to buy asset classes that the Fed is prohibited by law from buying.

So I just don't see a scenario where the government presses can't keep up with any amount of deflationary collapse. For the most part they are dealing with a few dozen or so major, centralized corporate and government entities like the central banks, the major commerical banks, etc. They all know one another. They can make a phone call anytime things get real hot and they will get as many bilions or trillions as they need.

Especially after watching how they did exactly this in 2008, why would you think they can't do it again? There's just not enough complication or required time involved to make it unfeasible.


Just to totally beat it into the ground, the choice facing the Treasury, the Fed, and Congress in the face of major deflationary collapse is this:

(1) Stand by while pretty much everyone loses all of their savings, their homes, and their jobs - including these powerful people and their friends. Ruin your chances for re-election because you "did nothing" to stop it from happening.

or

(2) Do some backroom dealings, use some loopholes, some secrecy, and press the 0 key on the keyboard as many times as necessary to bring into existence the Federal Reserve notes to put the problem off into the future and buy you some time.

I just don't see any chance they would do (1). And if they did, and they let the deflationary collapse happen, the next Congress and President to be elected would be so left-wing, so dedicated to socialism and government giveaways, that the same money creation and spending would happen anyway, just delayed by a year or two. It will happen because we the people want them to print and protect us from the immediate crushing pain of deflation.
Higgenbotham
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Re: Financial topics

Post by Higgenbotham »

MnMark wrote:Especially after watching how they did exactly this in 2008, why would you think they can't do it again? There's just not enough complication or required time involved to make it unfeasible.
This is pretty much why I told Lily around March of this year that I thought we were still mostly Third Turning. I think we flipped to mostly Fourth Turning in late April/early May. The "solution" in 2008 and 2009 was a Third Turning "solution" that had been implemented in similar form all the way back to 1987 when Greenspan took over and the PPT was formed. Kick the can, in other words. "Business as usual" has been one of my pet phrases - and this Third Turning has been one of the most skilled looting expeditions the world has ever seen, more skilled than Atilla the Hun, Ghenghis Kahn, John Law, and Lenin/Stalin all rolled into one.

Mark says in essence that a trend in force stays in force until proven otherwise.
John says if something can't go on forever, it won't.
Both are true. The dividing line is between the Third and Fourth Turnings. Do they really exist? I believe so. "Step Function Change" or discontinuity is a key concept.

The debate here has been unwavering for over a year. By mistake I started reading a thread from August 2010 and the exact same thread could have been written this month. The nearly 500 pages in this thread and the inflation thread are a great compilation and pretty much have every argument known to man.

The economic, social, and political change since April has been subtle but I think significant. All these things are related.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g17/Current/

Confidence is lacking for sure in the press. Digest the number before bombs away on shorting
since it is always discipline over conviction. I opened a position and will add more over time.
This underpinning will consider fixed contracts on decadal committmants. The earth will exist
and the sun will come up.
We discussed in the forums in 2009 on vanilla investor attitudes. My thought is there is a % frozen in
there tracks. I had a discussion with just such a investor and I would firmly reference it as shell shock.
They are not moving with the general herd mechanism we are subject to trending. When I get some
time I will forward some key points we posited then. It applies. I suggest a drifting setiment.
Select position on fundamentals. Congress told the banks to write loans good or bad. Lets not forget that.
Last edited by aedens on Mon Aug 22, 2011 7:03 pm, edited 2 times in total.
jdcpapa
Posts: 191
Joined: Sat Aug 08, 2009 7:38 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by jdcpapa »

MnMark wrote:Just to totally beat it into the ground, the choice facing the Treasury, the Fed, and Congress in the face of major deflationary collapse is this:

(1) Stand by while pretty much everyone loses all of their savings, their homes, and their jobs - including these powerful people and their friends. Ruin your chances for re-election because you "did nothing" to stop it from happening.

or

(2) Do some backroom dealings, use some loopholes, some secrecy, and press the 0 key on the keyboard as many times as necessary to bring into existence the Federal Reserve notes to put the problem off into the future and buy you some time.

I just don't see any chance they would do (1). And if they did, and they let the deflationary collapse happen, the next Congress and President to be elected would be so left-wing, so dedicated to socialism and government giveaways, that the same money creation and spending would happen anyway, just delayed by a year or two. It will happen because we the people want them to print and protect us from the immediate crushing pain of deflation.
I have a friend who claims to be "connected" with the inner deaings of the those in the know. He said something that jolted me: "What would happen if because of martial law elections were not held?"
Higgenbotham
Posts: 7990
Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2008 11:28 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by Higgenbotham »

aedens wrote:http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g17/Current/

Digest the number before bombs away on shorting since it is always discipline over conviction.
I have no conviction on short silver but the charts are what they are and the non dollar denominated ratios and divergences are the tell. Always take your best signals and sometimes you just get lucky.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloward%E2 ... n_strategy
This has not been abandoned and people wonder how these pushers are voted in? These idiots would walk over million's of corpses to there
agenda as History points out over and over again. Cheerfull, Village and usefull idiots abound top to bottom. If people doubt this consider the lost capital
since we have located the papers in the forums to capital issues here in context to this topic as early as 1965. Links are provided also in the forums to civil literacy and educational standards "agenda" enabled to decline in this society alone. GD covers this topical discussion on decadal dilution processes. Senaca knew this also as so goes the morals so goes the nation.

jdcpapa » Mon Aug 22, 2011 5:46 pm
I just don't see any chance they would do (1). And if they did, and they let the deflationary collapse happen, the next Congress and President to be elected would be so left-wing, so dedicated to socialism and government giveaways, that the same money creation and spending would happen anyway, just delayed by a year or two. It will happen because we the people want them to print and protect us from the immediate crushing pain of deflation.[/quote]

I have a friend who claims to be "connected" with the inner deaings of the those in the know. He said something that jolted me: "What would happen if because of martial law elections were not held?"[/quote]
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

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