Porter Stansberry Reveals the Greatest Threat to the U.S. Economy and One Easy Way to Protect Yourself

Source: Karen Roche of The Gold Report (7/3/13)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/15420

America is staring down a fiscal catastrophe, says Porter Stansberry, the outspoken investment analyst who has coined the phrase “the end of America.” Americans are living beyond their means, he says, and the global economy is tired of holding our debt. Nothing short of economic disaster will befall us. But amid such grim predictions, in this interview with The Gold Report, Stansberry takes a moment to praise the enduring value of timeless investments, such as farmland and. . .Krispy Kreme. Stansberry shares his thoughts on everything from the Federal Reserve to Hong Kong.

The Gold Report: When we spoke in December, you said that the tax base will expand and people shouldn’t fear going over the cliff—they should fear not going over the cliff. Clearly, we went over the cliff. Were you surprised at the lack of public reaction to the sequestration and the enthusiasm the market has had since then?

Porter Stansberry: No, I thought the press about the so-called fiscal cliff was nonsense and that the amount of reductions in government spending wouldn’t make any difference. I wasn’t worried the fiscal cliff would have any material impact on the financial markets. I was worried that the fiscal deficit problems would get worse if we didn’t expand the tax base. But at the end of the day, it’s a wash because spending will continue to go up and there is no way we can finance it with taxes.

TGR: You’ve written about what you call “the end of America.” This describes a shift of direct exchange treatments, caused by the debasement of the U.S. dollar through quantitative easing (QE), that will result in the dollar no longer being the world’s reserve currency. Many other countries, notably Japan, have recently been doing aggressive QE. Has that impacted the effects of QE in the U.S.?

PS: I would rather answer the question this way: Everyone else’s sovereign debt is priced off of the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield. Demand for U.S. government paper will, sooner or later, collapse when creditors around the world realize that the U.S. government is bankrupt. When that moment of realization comes, our bond market will collapse.

I wrote a piece for the S&A Digest on May 10 when the junk bond market average yield went below 5%. I said that this is as far as the Federal Reserve can press down interest rates. There is no way you can make money in junk bonds when your average yield is below 5%. I said get the heck out of bonds.

That happened to be the same moment when the market for Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) also began to collapse. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. JGBs fell because the Japanese government said it was going to print unlimited amounts of new yen and manipulate its markets overtly.

That is the same thing that has been happening in America for the last four years.

We supposedly live in a free country—but try giving up your passport and leaving. We supposedly have free-market capitalism—but what happens to the entire world’s markets when Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks? What he says drives all of the world’s stock markets, bond markets and currency markets.

I do not think we have free-market capitalism when one man’s opinion determines the outcome of every market in the world.

I believe the most important impact of quantitative easing will be the loss of prestige and power for the world’s central banks. I believe, sooner or later, the negative consequences of manipulating prices and debasing our currencies will overwhelm the near-term bubbles they have created.

In Japan, investors are abandoning the sovereign debt market in a wholesale way. I believe that is what triggered the run we have seen out of U.S. Treasuries, too. Investors suddenly realized that these markets can still crash. . .and if the currency falls far enough, the central bank cannot act. I believe both market moves were inevitable and were caused by the previous bubbles in those markets that were engineered by the central banks.

TGR: Bernanke signaled that there could be a potential scaling back on QE and that the market is going down based on that. Does that mean the Fed’s decisions have been buoying the market?

PS: The recent activity in the markets is the natural reaction to a manipulated market. All of the previous central bank buying means that market participants do not know what the actual value of the bonds really is. We do not want to find out the hard way.

Also, who is going to buy when the Fed starts selling? It has $3 trillion ($3T) worth of assets. As people around the world begin to flee from sovereign debt, there is going to be a bear market in U.S Treasury bonds. We have not seen a crisis where people flee out of Treasury bonds in a very long time, but we are at that point because the Fed’s printing of dollars to manipulate the Treasury rate destroys the credibility of the entire paper sovereign system.

TGR: Where will that money go?

PS: It can go into 30-day Treasury bills (T-bills), which is a great place to hide. It can go into real estate, timber, euros. It can go into Chinese yuan or Hong Kong dollars. The latter is an interesting trade because Hong Kong dollars are pegged to the U.S. dollar. You could have short-term Hong Kong dollars that would give you an upside as people flee into the dollar, and you have the option of turning it into Chinese yuan someday. If the dollar collapses, there is no doubt the Hong Kong monetary authority would stop following the dollar and start following the yuan.

TGR: How bad does it have to get before the Hong Kong dollar converts to the yuan?

PS: Hong Kong works on the basis of a currency board. For every Hong Kong dollar in circulation, there has to be a matching dollar in the Treasury. It’s not mismanaged. It doesn’t have to break the tie to the dollar—it can keep it as long as it wants.

In the short term, the U.S. dollar is going to be very strong because people are going to move out of bonds and into T-bills. Investors are thinking: I do not want to hold Japanese government bonds anymore, and I do not want to hold Japanese government debt. I don’t want to hold U.S. government bonds, and I don’t want to hold euro bonds. What do I hold instead? The most liquid thing in the world: a U.S. Treasury bill.

But it could be a crisis if the Treasury crash turns into a real panic and you see the 10-year yield quickly go to 4.5%, 5%, 6% or 7%. If that happens, the Fed is going to open the floodgates. Screw the long-term consequences. It’s going to manipulate the rate back down. At that point, the dollar would crater. Buying Hong Kong bills instead of Treasury bills is an interesting way to hedge against the risk of the Fed being more active rather than less active.

If the Fed sacrifices the U.S. dollar completely, we are going to have a 30% devaluation overnight, and the Hong Kong authorities will finally break the tie to the dollar. The Hong Kong dollar will have a new basket of currencies to base our currency on, or it will go to the yuan.

TGR: It has come out that Bernanke is leaving. How do you think the announcement of the new chair will affect Fed policies?

PS: It doesn’t make any difference who is in the Fed chair because Fed policy is driven by the realities of the U.S. debt crisis. With the U.S. economy $60T in debt, the Fed cannot impose a significant real rate of interest on the U.S. obligations or insist on a hard dollar. We just can’t afford it.

TGR: What advice do you have for the new Fed chair? Don’t take the job?

PS: Nobody would want to follow my advice. The Fed is emblematic of a dramatic change in American society. We are so addicted to living beyond our means that when we hear someone say we shouldn’t be borrowing so much money, it sounds like gibberish.

If you look at the promises the federal government has made with Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid—the current value of those promises is $124T. It is unreasonable to make these promises. It’s insane. If you took the collective value of every privately owned asset in the country, it comes to $99T. The government has not only promised more money than it’s ever going to have, it has promised more money than we all collectively have. Or consider this nonsense: Americans hold $1T in student loans! Are you kidding me? Does it make sense to anybody to spend $75,000 to become a dental hygienist? It has become the Fed’s job to make this huge lie—the idea that we can borrow and spend our way to prosperity—the truth.

If I were Fed chairman, I would go in my first day and say we’re going to have a real rate of interest that’s equal to at least 3%. And we’re going to do that because we want to reward people for saving. We want to have a hard currency, and everything else in the economy is going to revolve around that. That is how you reward productivity, saving and capital investment—the things that actually create wealth.

TGR: Which concerns you more—the fact that the U.S. is quickly losing its status as the world’s reserve currency or this unfunded liability?

PS: Losing our status as the world’s reserve currency is the greatest threat to our economy. It is one thing to decide for ourselves that we are not going to live a lie anymore and we are not going to live beyond our means. We could curtail our spending slowly and make sensible changes to the tax system, broadening the base, flattening the rates and getting rid of complexity. Most importantly, we could reform our entitlement programs and, in 20 or 30 years, we could end up with a healthy currency and a solvent government again.

On the other hand, if we continue down the path we are on now, the sheriff is going to show up at our house. He will say, sorry, but your creditors do not trust you anymore and they are foreclosing. At that point, they will just start taking collateral back—exchanging the trillions of dollars outstanding into hard assets in a rush. Just look at what is happening in Japan and then realize that almost 95% of their government obligations are held domestically. If creditors lose faith in the U.S. in the same way, the result will be much worse because foreign investors hold so much of our debt.

TGR: What does that mean for the average citizen?

PS: If the dollar loses its standing as the world’s reserve currency, the value of the average citizen’s savings and wages will disappear. Power bills and gas bills will go up. Doctor bills will go up, as will airline tickets, college, education, private school for kids. Yes, that has already happened quite a bit since the early 1970s, and it is going to get a lot worse. When you look around and wonder why things are not working the way they should, it is because the price system is so heavily manipulated.

TGR: Last November you were buying a lot of real estate. Are you still buying?

PS: I still am buying real estate. I’m closing on another big farm in about 10 days. I don’t want to buy stocks. They’re too expensive. I definitely don’t want to buy bonds. They’re an absolute wealth trap. I don’t want to invest any more in my own business because I’m worried about the effects of this economic uncertainty. So what do I do? I hide the money in real estate. I buy an agricultural property. If agricultural prices go up, and I believe they must, eventually, as the dollar falls, the farm becomes more profitable. Wealthy people have sheltered their assets against inflation in farmland and timberland for all of recorded history.

TGR: But don’t the underlying assets lose value if the dollars back out of the Treasury?

PS: No, they don’t. I’ve been recommending that people buy farmland for four or five years. As the 10-year yield has gone down, the yield on farm properties has also gone down. The price of farm properties has skyrocketed. In many places, you will see these prices correct—a lot—because there will be yield contraction on farmland. But, on the other hand, where you have bought property at a good price, you will not get hurt because eventually inflation will generate additional revenue for you from the farm.

What you do not want in this environment is a fixed coupon. You don’t want to buy something like a Treasury bond, which is denominated in dollars, and the coupon is paid in dollars. You are going to lose to inflation and you are going to lose as yields go higher and the value of your bond goes down. Income from a farm, on the other hand, is tied to the price of a commodity, so at least you are protected from inflation. For me it is still the least bad option.

TGR: And all the commodity prices will go up in this situation?

PS: If I am right about a run on the dollar, absolutely. The timing of the next commodity rally is, of course, uncertain. But it is also inevitable. In any case, I would much rather have a farm than a Treasury bond. I know a farm can feed me and my family.

TGR: Last December you were excited about the idea of exporting natural gas. Ernest Moniz, the new federal energy secretary, recently promised that liquefied natural gas (LNG) court decisions will be made this year. Do you think that he will come through, and if so, what will be the impact of those decisions?

PS: I don’t know the guy, so I can’t speculate on whether or not he will live up to his promise. But they have granted one more license—to a privately held company that is exporting LNG out of the Sabine Pass, near where Cheniere Energy Inc. (LNG:NYSE) is doing the same.

I’m certain that LNG exports from America are going to soar. We are the Saudi Arabia of natural gas. We have more natural gas production, more natural gas storage, more natural gas pipelines than anybody else in the world. We are going to turn that into a dynamic and fantastic competitive advantage for our country. All we have to do is get the scumbag politicians out of the way. And, fortunately, they can be bought.

TGR: Until that happens, is LNG a viable investment strategy?

PS: I am more bullish on natural gas today than I have ever been in my life. I think you’re going to see a huge bull move in these stocks as their earnings ratchet higher and the market suddenly realizes that natural gas is at $3.50 per thousand cubic feet ($3.50/Mcf) rather than $2/Mcf. I am talking about producers in the natural gas space—Devon Energy Corp. (DVN:NYSE), Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK:NYSE) and others like them.

TGR: I’m going to read the first sentence from an article you published in the S&A Digest: “What if there was a secret way of looking at the stock market and individual companies that allowed you to see the real value of everything regardless of the price?” What you go on to describe sounds like value investing. Is it?

PS: The question of whether you call yourself a value investor or a growth investor is less important than whether or not you look at a business’ likely earnings capacity and buy it based on a conservative estimation of that number. My experience with individual investors is that they know absolutely nothing about accounting or finance. They have no capacity to be buying individual stocks, and yet they still do. I’m challenging my readers to learn these simple tools so they can better understand our newsletters and be better investors.

On our radio site, Stansberry Radio, we have a videoup in which I just go through the numbers. I don’t tell you what the companies are, but looking at the numbers I can tell you what kind of businesses they are in terms of quality, growth and valuation. It really becomes clear when I tell you what the companies are: the Hershey Company (HSY:NYSE), a super high-quality business, and U.S. Steel (X:NYSE), a super low-quality business.

TGR: Does it make a difference what state the market is in when you are looking at a business’ core values? If you find a company that has real underlying value, do you buy it and hold it?

PS: Here’s an example. I really want to buy Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (KKD:NYSE) for my own account. It’s a legendary brand that has all the attributes of a capital-efficient business. People love their doughnuts.

They’re a fantastic little treat. If anyone is ever feeling down or sick, bring them a box of Krispy Kreme doughnuts; it’s way better than giving flowers. I can understand this business, and I know it will always be profitable. Last year, it had gross profits of $78 million ($78M). It distributed $20M of that to its shareholders. That’s a pretty good rate of capital efficiency. It bought back $20 billion in stock on $78M and net sales. It is expanding all over the world, and I have no doubt it is going to continue to grow.

About a decade ago, Krispy Kreme almost went bankrupt because of accounting fraud—the management stuffed the sales channel and badly botched a massive expansion. But it is a great brand, so it survived. In the last year the stock has gone from $7 or $8/share to $16 or $17/share, and quite frankly, I missed the turnaround. I wanted to buy the stock, but I didn’t want to get involved until the management was replaced. But I lost track of the story. I’m hoping that the turmoil in the bond markets will drive securities prices down and that this stock, which is now trading at 50 times earnings, will come down to a level where I’m comfortable buying it.

Turmoil and fear always provide opportunities to buy great assets. Will my grandkids eat Krispy Kreme doughnuts? I think so. Will a 100-acre farm be here in 100 years? I’m pretty sure it will be. So, you have got to remember to use this crisis to pick up great assets on the cheap.

TGR: It sounds as if you should do your homework now and buy selectively on dips and pullbacks. You don’t want to be caught flat-footed.

PS: I try to, but it is hard to get organized enough to really take advantage. I have been waiting for five or six years to buy Krispy Kreme and I botched it, just because I was not watching the turnaround closely enough. Warren Buffett has this idea to have a 20-hole dance card for investing. In your lifetime, you would only be allowed to buy 20 stocks. Pick 20 great companies and follow those 20 stocks your whole life. Buy them when they are really cheap. I bet if you actually did that, you would be very successful. Look at Buffett and Geico, for example. He had been buying that single stock for decades before he finally took it private.

TGR: You’ve encouraged people to hold a large allocation of gold, some of it as a hedge against the dollar collapsing. Have people missed that window of hedging?

PS: No. We have consistently recommended that people buy physical gold. Gold is the only universally accepted financial asset that is no one else’s corresponding liability. That is gold’s only purpose. It doesn’t have value as an industrial metal. You don’t buy gold because of supply and demand. You buy it as a hedge against the failure of financial institutions, whether it’s the dollar failing or JPMorgan or your credit union down the street failing.

TGR: What should be the allocation of gold in a good-sized portfolio?

PS: Assuming that price is irrelevant, I would like to see a cash and gold component of around 30%. I would have 30-day Treasury bills and gold bullion.

TGR: Where does real estate fit into that?

PS: In a balanced portfolio, something like 10%. I don’t normally associate real estate with my investment portfolio. When I think of an investment portfolio, I think of things that are liquid that you trade, and I don’t usually put real estate in that category.

TGR: What else are you looking forward to in investment ideas?

PS: Let me just say that today it seems as if everything is going great, the economy is getting better and everything is wonderful. But I think we’re at the most dangerous point in the last 50 or 100 years in our country. We have tons of unsustainable policies, and we are racing toward a cliff. Not a stupid, phony, press-driven fiscal cliff but a real cliff. This cliff involves people around the world no longer being interested in holding our debt. People don’t realize that there is no material difference between what has gone on in Greece and Spain and what’s happening now in Japan and what is happening with us. We’re just the largest kid on the block, but we’re not in any better shape.

TGR: In fact, we have more to lose in one sense because we are the reserve currency. If that goes away, we miss a leveraged advantage.

PS: China is angling to become our competitor as the world’s reserve currency. It is buying up as much gold as it possibly can to have a firm foundation for its currency. Over the next several years that will come to fruition. In fact, here’s a stunner for you: Within the next 12 to 24 months, I think the yuan will open on the capital account, which means free trading around the world. I don’t think anybody expects that.

TGR: Will that be the first domino in the U.S. dollar’s retreat from reserve currency? Does this need to happen for the U.S. dollar to be removed as the reserve currency?

PS: Before the euro, the U.S. dollar made up about 80% of all bank reserves around the world. That fell to 62% with the advent of the euro. I think the yuan will take us to below 50%. In that case, we will no longer have claim to the world reserve currency. This is happening in lots of ways already: China has set up bilateral trade agreements with a dozen of the largest Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. It has the banks in those countries set up to do capital account yuan trading, and the banks have bought lots of yuan so they can hold the inventory and make the trades. That’s gone on with Australia, France, Britain, Russia, Japan and all the Latin American countries. They are positioned to go ahead and push the button and make that policy change at any time.

That would be an enormous change and would allow banks from all over the world to sell their dollars and buy yuan. That would be very bad for our country because it would push up interest rates on all of our bonds and weaken the value of our currency tremendously.

TGR: I assume that means the price of goods goes up for the average consumer.

PS: Yes, especially imported goods. But one positive would be that our current account and trade deficits would regain some balance because we wouldn’t be able to afford to buy so much from overseas.

It would make a dramatic difference in our standard of living. In the most important way, it would greatly increase the cost to borrow. That’s a big problem for our economy because as you know, just about everything in our life is based on debt.

TGR: Your insights, once again, are always intriguing and insightful. I really appreciate it.

Porter Stansberry founded Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, a private publishing company based in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1999. His monthly newsletter, Stansberry’s Investment Advisory, deals with safe-value investments poised to give subscribers years of exceptional returns. Stansberry oversees a staff of investment analysts whose expertise ranges from value investing to insider trading to short selling. Together, Stansberry and his research team do exhaustive amounts of real-world independent research. They’ve visited more than 200 companies in order to find the best low-risk investments. Prior to launching Stansberry & Associates Research, Stansberry was the first American editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the oldest English-language financial newsletter.

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DISCLOSURE:

1) Karen Roche conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Reportas an employee. She or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold Report: None. Chesapeake Energy Corp. is a sponsor of The Energy Report. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Porter Stansberry: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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BOE holds rate, QE, rise in bond yields weighs on outlook

By www.CentralBankNews.info     The Bank of England (BOE) maintained its Bank Rate at 0.5 percent and its target for asset purchases at 375 billion pounds, as expected, but added the recent rise in market interest rates would have a negative impact on its outlook for economic growth and inflation, and it did not consider the implied rise in its policy rate to be warranted by economic developments.

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USDJPY remains in uptrend from 93.79

USDJPY remains in uptrend from 93.79, the fall from 100.85 could be treated as consolidation of the uptrend. Support is now located at the lower line of the price channel on 4-hour chart, as long as the channel support holds, the uptrend could be expected to resume, and one more rise to 102.00 area is still possible after consolidation. On the downside, a clear break below the channel support will suggest that the upward movement from 93,79 had completed at 100.85 already, then the following downward movement could bring price back to 95.00 – 96.00 area.

usdjpy

Daily Forex Analysis

S+P 500 Downtrend Looms? Counting Down The Days…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Down 100, up 100, down 100. I’m starting to get a bit of whiplash watching the ASX 200 move around these days.

Last week I said that the current rally was nothing more than a short squeeze which will end up stalling and eventually turning back to the downside.

I said that the S+P 500 would probably top out between 1,620-1,640 with an outside chance of hitting 1,660 before rolling over again. This week the high in the S+P 500 has been 1,626 and we have seen a couple of rejections from that level over the last couple of nights.

Whether or not that level proves to be the top in this move remains to be seen of course, but it does feel like we are getting close to seeing a resumption of the downtrend…

The chart below is a 60 minute intra-day chart of the emini S+P 500 futures contract.

S+P 500 Futures Intraday Chart


Source: CQG Trader

You can see that prices have struggled to get above the point of control of the current distribution at 1,617. We’ve already seen prices move to the level 0.618 below the current range down at 1,559 so we know the market is weak.

You will often see a retest of the point of control before prices turn back down again and fail completely outside of the distribution. So the intraday charts are stacking up nicely, which suggests we may be getting close to a top in this short squeeze.

Another thing I like to look at is whether or not past short squeezes can give us any hints.

I went back over the past four years of data and looked at how long the short squeezes usually last during an intermediate downtrend. My definition of an intermediate downtrend is when the 10 day moving average is below the 35 day moving average.

I was quite surprised by my findings.

Over that time there were 17 short squeezes during an intermediate downtrend that ended up falling over and leading to lower prices.

The average length of time for all of the short squeezes was 5.7 days and the most surprising thing of all was that of the 17 rallies 12 of them lasted between 5-7 days. So 70% of short squeezes will last between five to seven days in an intermediate downtrend. Amazing.

The other thing of note was that none of them lasted longer than 10 days. So if the rally lasts longer than 10 days we could start to become more suspicious of the intermediate downtrend.

The rally from the lows at 1,560 in the S+P 500 has lasted seven days, so it’s now starting to get pretty long in the tooth if this current intermediate downtrend is going to be maintained.

European Unrest Back in the News

News out of Portugal last night has reignited fears over Europe, so perhaps that will be the catalyst to get things moving on the downside again.

Portuguese bond yields spiked to 8% after two ministers quit, signalling that the government will struggle to implement further budget cuts as its bailout program enters its final 12 months.

The Financial Times reported that the Prime Minister of Portugal ‘has pledged to stay in office and seek to establish a stable government despite the resignation of two key ministers and the threatened break-up of his ruling coalition.

Spanish and Italian bonds sold off in sympathy with Portuguese debt and their respective stock markets also took a beating.

One of the interesting things I noted last night was that as the smelly stuff was hitting the fan, gold and silver caught a very strong bid. It felt like a return of the good old days when people turned to the precious metals as a safe haven.

We may still see some downside volatility in gold but we’re getting close to a bottom as far as I’m concerned. The 50% retracement of the whole bull market rally sits at about US$1,100, so I wouldn’t be surprised if we did end up testing that level, but you would be backing the truck up there.

The most interesting chart of them all though is the weekly chart of the S+P 500:

S+P 500 Weekly Chart

There will only be once in my lifetime where I will see a multi-decade triple top form.

You saw what happened the last time the S+P 500 had a false break of its all-time high back in 2007. That was the beginning of the crash. This time around the stock market has been pumped back up to all-time highs with funny money from the US Federal Reserve, and Bernanke has just hinted that he’s waking up to the fact that his actions are creating more harm than good.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that the false break of the highs from 2007 could lead to a similar fate for the S+P 500.

My current targets on the S+P 500 are to the 35 week-50 week moving average zone (around 1,500 points), but when I look at that weekly chart I can see things going a lot lower than that if the music stops.

Murray Dawes+
Editor, Slipstream Trader



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The Big Banks On Trial Again

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You want to know why the entire global financial system almost collapsed in 2008?

There seems to be a simple answer. Not encouraging, but simple: The European Commission is exploring the possibility that there was a conspiracy among 13 of the world’s major banks that colluded to keep the entire house of cards a secret.

In a press release Monday the European Commission announced it sent a ‘statement of objections’ to Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAC), Barclays (BARC), Bear Stearns , BNP Paribas (BNP), Citigroup (C), Credit Suisse (CS), Deutsche Bank (DB), Goldman Sachs (GS), HSBC (HBC), JP Morgan (JPM), Morgan Stanley (MS), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), UBS (UBS) as well as the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) and data service provider Markit.

This statement of objections is a formal step in EU investigations that charges the banks, the dealers’ association, and the swaps pricing agent and index controller of ‘colluding to prevent exchanges from entering the credit derivatives business between 2006 and 2009.

The companies are then expected to answer the charges.

If, after the parties have exercised their rights of defence, the Commission concludes that there is sufficient evidence of an infringement, it can issue a decision prohibiting the conduct and impose a fine of up to 10% of a company’s annual worldwide turnover.’

Part of the antitrust behaviour of the accused, besides controlling pricing of derivatives to their exclusive benefit, would likely address their complicity in veiling the entire market to deflect fears of counterparty exposure, concentration of risks and leverage in the financial system.

Behind the Veil: Where the Elite Meet

The ISDA, the trade and lobbying group for users of over-the-Counter (OTC) derivatives that was named as a colluding partner, said last August that after eliminating more than $200 trillion in notional value of interest rate and credit-default swaps by cancelling offsetting trades, on an adjusted basis interest rate swaps totalled $262 trillion.

According to the ISDA’s website it has 840 members. There are 196 ‘primary members’ that include all the big banks in the statement of objections and most of the world’s trading banks.

Associate members include banks, corporations and some of the most powerful law firms around the world. Among them: Washington power lobbying firm Patton Boggs LLP, bank and securities law firms Davis Polk & Wardwell, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and Weil Gotshal & Manges.

The ISDA’s ‘subscriber members’ include the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie Mae), New York Life Insurance Company, Intel Corporation (INTC), the Bank of England, Luxembourg and GMAC Inc. are all subscriber members.

Markit, according to its website, ‘is a private company headquartered in London. The company is owned by employees, private investors, private equity investors and numerous buy-side and sell-side financial institutions.

But Markit wants to change that. The company, which competes with Bloomberg and Thomson Reuters Corp, has been planning a public offering to raise $1 billion.

Outrage Upon Outrage

A Reuters story on June 25 quoted a source saying, ‘A registration statement for the deal could be filed with U.S. regulators during the fourth quarter of this year, although timing is still in flux and could change depending on market conditions.

The story names Goldman Sachs as the lead coordinator for the deal, but points out Markit’s other large stakeholders, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America Merrill Lynch want to be lead syndicate partners.

An IPO may be a long way off if Markit, in large part owned by the big banks who also are all primary members of the ISDA, are all accused of antitrust violations and face potential multi-billion dollar fines.

In addition to its current woes, Markit would have to disclose that back in July 2009 the Justice Department’s antitrust division had sent civil notices to banks that own Markit to find out if they had unfair access to price information.

Justice, or Just Cold Comfort?

A July 14, 2009 New York Times Dealbook post pointed to William Cohan, a former investment banker and financial crisis commentator, who said any potential investigation into Markit and its owners was overdue.

The fact that they control Markit and it provides information about the prices of credit default swaps and they’ve benefited from this for many years without any challenge or investigation was outrageous,‘ he was quoted as saying by Bloomberg News.

To date, nothing has come out of the Justice Department’s investigation.

Yet again, the world’s biggest banks, those principally responsible for driving the global financial system off a cliff, are being exposed for what they’ve done and how they did it. That’s the bad news – for them.

The good news – for them – is they still have the earnings power to pay whatever fines are levied against them and that no one at the top of any of these criminal enterprises has gone to jail.

Shah Gilani
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

This article first appeared in US Money Morning on 3 July, 2013

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From the Archives…

Why Your Financial Advisor Won’t Like This Investment Advice…
28-06-2013 –  Kris Sayce

Is This Your Last Chance to Sell Before the Stock Market Sinks?
27-06-2013 – Murray Dawes

Is This the Ultimate Contrarian Opportunity…Or a Death Wish?
26-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

How Central Bank Zombies Control the Stock Market
25-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

Why The ‘Asia-Zone’ Crisis Makes Australian Stocks a Buy…
24-06-2013 – Kris Sayce

Central Bank News Link List – Jul 3, 2013: Fed ready for September taper after shocking market, Meyer says

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Sizemore Insights 2013-07-03 13:39:16

By The Sizemore Letter

Uh oh…more bad political news out of Europe.  Portugal’s government is at risk of falling, as two key ministers resigned in protest over the EU’s mandated austerity policies.  This follows a massive protest in Greece after budget cuts forced the government to shut down the bloated state broadcaster (and fire all of its employees) and the conviction and sentencing of Silvio Berlusconi on sex and abuse of power charges.

Is it time to start worrying about Europe again?

No, or at least not yet.

The Portugal developments are a little worrying but not exactly unexpected.  This is politics, and if the Portuguese believe they get a better deal by challenging their creditors by taking this to the brink, then that is exactly what they will do.  Spain and Ireland are also negotiating a retroactive bank bailout that would shift the debts taken on to the EU’s bank bailout mechanism and off of Ireland and Spain’s governments.  Negotiations are still dragging on…and I don’t expect a definitive conclusion this year.

All of that is fine and good, but surely there will come a point to panic, right?

Figure 1: Italy 10-Year Yield

Figure 1: Italy 10-Year Yield

Spain

Figure 2: Spain 10-Year Yield

Maybe.  And that is why I am watching Spain and Italy’s 10-year bond yields (Figures 1 and 2).

Spanish and Italian bond yields have been trending downward for the past year.  If you might recall, ECB President Mario Draghi make his now infamous “do whatever it takes” comments almost exactly a year ago, and they had the desired effect.  Except for a brief blip in February, yields have falling almost continuously.

This, until now.  Starting in May, Italian and Spanish bond yields have started to creep up again.  Spain’s 10-year yield briefly popped over the psychologically important 5% mark last month, and Italy’s came close.

Is this cause for concern?

At first glance, I would say yes.  But let’s keep it context.  Virtually all yields everywhere in the world rose in May and June over fears that the Fed would be tapering its quantitative easing programs.  But once the dust settled, it became obvious very quickly that the bond market had jumped the gun.  The tapering—if it happens—is still 6-12 months away.  And even when it does come, it is not likely to be as harsh as the bond bears fear.

That’s nice.  But what does it mean for Spain and Italy, and when do we panic?

This will be the signal for me: if yields in the U.S. and Germany continue to drift lower, but Italian and Spanish yields rise, that would be a divergence that got my attention.  It wouldn’t mean that a crisis was imminent, but it would mean that the bond market had lost confidence in the Eurozone again and that Draghi’s “whatever it takes” is simply not enough.

I don’t see that happening, and I am viewing any dips in the prices of European stocks as buying opportunities.

But if I’m wrong—and Spanish and Italian yields shoot above 5% again—it will be time to take a little risk off the table and get at least partially defensive.

Uganda holds rate to boost growth, higher inflation risks

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Uganda’s central bank held its central bank rate (CBR) rate steady at 11.0 percent, saying it was maintaining a neutral policy stance to support private sector credit growth without jeopardizing its inflation objective.
    The Bank of Uganda (BOU), which cut its rate by 100 basis points last month, said the macroeconomic outlook was largely unchanged from last month “with the exception that we believe that the balance of risks to the inflation forecast have shifted slightly upward, mainly due to the threat posed to food prices by drought.”
    Uganda’s headline and core inflation rates eased to 3.4 percent and 5.5 percent, respectively, in May from 3.7 and 5.6 percent, and the BOU expects inflation to rise slightly over the next two to three months but then decline towards the bank’s target of 5.0 percent by June 2014.
    “However, the adverse weather conditions currently being experiences in most parts of the country could push-up prices in the near term and this poses an upward risk to the inflation forecast,” it said in a statement from July 2.

    Output from Uganda’s economy is forecast to increase to 6 percent in the 2013/14 financial year, which began July 1, from a preliminary estimate of 5.1 percent in 2012/13. In May the BOU had forecast 2013/14 growth of 6-7 percent.
    But the BOU said the pick-up in real economic growth is unlikely to pose a risk to inflation as output is still below potential growth rate of about 7 percent.
   
    www.CentralBankNews.info

Why You Still Shouldn’t Listen to “Gold Bugs”

By Investment U

Many gold bugs are pounding the table for investors to buy gold – now that it’s dropped to roughly $1,200 – and sell stocks.

Don’t listen to them. Not because gold won’t rally from here or stocks won’t sell off – or both. But because – unbeknownst to many of their listeners – this is what they always say. Gold bugs don’t offer an investment analysis. They offer a world view that changes over the decades about as much as the constellation Orion.

The economy may expand or contract. The dollar may rise or fall. Governments may fail. Currencies may collapse. But one thing is constant: their advice. Sell paper assets and buy gold.

To their credit, they said this in 1999 when gold slid to a 20-year low of $257.60 an ounce and stocks were about to enter their worst decade in modern times. But to their shame, they were still saying it a few years ago when gold was peaking at $1,900 and stocks were a screaming buy.

If you love broken clocks, you have to love gold bugs. Both are lovely antiques.

But what if they’re right this time? What if we’re headed into an inflationary spiral?

Not likely. Why? Well, for one thing, look at the price of Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS). They have swooned in recent months. Or look at the price of gold. In the second quarter, it posted its largest quarterly decline since the start of modern gold trading. Gold fell 23% in the period to close at $1,223.80 a troy ounce.

If the trend is your friend, look out below.

But the truth is gold isn’t such a hot inflation hedge, anyway. It hit a high of $875 an ounce in January 1980. And even though we experienced double-digit inflation that year, it lost a third of its value by Dec. 31. And it kept dropping for almost 20 years.

Gold bugs who purchased gold at the high 33.5 years ago still haven’t broken even in inflation-adjusted terms. Heck, they still hadn’t even broken even when gold peaked above $1,900. If that’s an inflation hedge, I’m Woodrow Wilson.

But just wait, the gold bugs insist. “We’ll be vindicated in the long run.” This is when I’m reminded of the one thing John Maynard Keynes said that I actually agree with: In the long run, we’re all dead.

A 50-year old who bought gold at the peak in 1980 is now 83 years old. I’m guessing he wishes he had done something smarter with his money, like invest it in common stocks, a genuine inflation hedge.

Gold hasn’t just badly underperformed stocks and bonds over the last 30+ years. It has badly underperformed stocks and bonds for the last 200+ years.

The long run can be very long indeed.

Am I suggesting you shouldn’t own gold? Absolutely not. Gold is an excellent portfolio diversifier and – occasionally – an explosive mover. Blue chip gold equities, in particular, have only underperformed the S&P 500 by about one half of one percent annually.

However, if you’re one of those investors who has 30%… 50%… or more of his portfolio in gold, you’re really rolling the dice.

And probably listening to the wrong source.

Good investing,

Alex

Article By Investment U

Original Article: Why You Still Shouldn’t Listen to “Gold Bugs”