Oracle of Omaha Moodily Silent

Our Billionaire In Omaha, the virtuous Warren, who wisheth us all to pay our taxes with the same glee as he doth, hath not spoken? Wherefore?

Wherefore is he moody? Or, it  Moody’s? 

Wherefore art Warren’s fingers to be found in so many pies? Including AIG and its corrupt dealings with General Re…..and Goldman, of which we need say no more…..and now Moody’s?

Tell us it ain’t so!

Excerpt from the International Herald Tribune piece on Buffet’s ties with Moody’s:

“Berkshire owns a stake of roughly 20 percent in the Moody’s Corporation, parent of one of the three rating agencies that grade debt issued by corporations and banks looking to raise money. In recent months, Moody’s Investors Service and its rivals, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings, have featured in virtually every account of the What Went Wrong horror story that is the financial crisis………

…Moody’s rated Lehman Brothers’ debt A2, putting it squarely in the investment-grade range, days before the company filed for bankruptcy. And Moody’s gave the senior unsecured debt of the American International Group, the insurance behemoth, an Aa3 rating — which is even stronger than A2 — the week before the government had to step in and take over the company in September as part of what has become a $170 billion bailout.

Mr. Buffett, 78, one of the world’s richest men, is known for piquant and unsparing criticism of his own performance, as well as the institutional flaws of Wall Street. But on the subject of the conflict of interest built into the rating agencies’ business model, Mr. Buffett has been uncharacteristically silent — even though that conflict is especially glaring in his case because one of the companies that Moody’s rates is Berkshire. (Its Aaa rating, for the record, is the same as the one from Standard & Poor’s. Fitch downgraded Berkshire for the first time last week.)”

UN Panel Recommends Ditching Dollar

From Reuters:

“Currency specialist Avinash Persaud, a member of the panel of experts, told a Reuters Funds Summit in Luxembourg that the proposal was to create something like the old Ecu, or European currency unit, that was a hard-traded, weighted basket.

Persaud, chairman of consultants Intelligence Capital and a former currency chief at JPMorgan, said the recommendation would be one of a number delivered to the United Nations on March 25 by the U.N. Commission of Experts on International Financial Reform.”

[my emphasis]

Comment:

OK, that’s why we’ve seen such a slide. Yesterday’s bombshell followed by this…and, you have to admit, the dollar has had a long run up.

Notice how Persaud phrases the request (it’s later in the piece).  It goes something like – the US is sick of all this foreign savings that’s making us run deficits…or to quote him:  “Today the Americans complain that when the world wants to save, it means a deficit.”

Meanwhile, I am berating myself for again trying to squeeze the last drop out of a trade. I did move a bit into Aussie and NZ last week but I really didn’t see that FOMC announcement coming.

I can’t believe that Bernanke would be so gung-ho. I thought he’d at least make some nod to prudence. But I guess that announcement on Sunday was his preparation of the public. Also, an important item missed me. Which was declining Chinese exports, to the US and in general.

But in my defense, I still think that was an incredible, historic  move on Bernanke’s part.

Which just shows you that in trading you shouldn’t be predicting, you should be preparing.

Sigh.

Meanwhile, I still think we’ve been subjected to a propaganda drama the past few weeks (aren’t we always?) – mainly to take our eye off the ball. And having that suspicion, I’ll hunt around to figure out what this was all about

Here’s Kathy Lien on some advantages of a weak dollar

  “McDonald’s is not the only company to warn about weaker earnings due to foreign currency fluctuations. This morning, United Technologies announced plans to lay off 11,600 workers as a rising dollar and deteriorating economic conditions force the company to cut back. Last week, Burger King Corp and Estee Lauder also announced that their profits dropped as international sales translated into fewer dollars.$3.60….. A strong dollar also negatively impacts U.S. companies selling products abroad because it reduces their competitiveness…..

As for merger and acquisitions, a strong dollar reduces the cost for U.S. companies to takeover foreign companies but increases the cost of foreign companies buying U.S. companies. The reason why we consider it a disadvantage at this time is because M&A flow could go a long way in supporting the U.S. stock market, which even with today’s rally is down almost 25 percent year to date.”

OK, Lila here again.

What if this dollar take-down was intended? Why do I say this?

1. The report about declining bond purchases from China came out on Monday only this past week. But I think they must have had it for some time. There’ s been incessant posturing and tough talk toward China in a rather coordinated way.

2. Unemployment is rising rapidly and businesses are shrinking.

Here’s the Bureau of Labor Statistics  report of March 19

“Unemployment rates were higher in January than a year earlier in 371 of 371 metro areas and unchanged in 1 area. 14 areas recorded jobless rates of at least 15.0 percent today. Fourteen areas recorded jobless rates of at least 15.0 percent, while 23 areas registered rates below 5.0 percent. The national unemployment rate in January was 8.5 percent, not seasonally adjusted, up from 5.4 percent a year earlier.”

3. The only way to get foreigners to pump money into the economy is to encourage them to buy US assets and businesses (that’s what this is for).

4. It offsets all the criminal rot in the financial sector which turns off foreign investors..

So – was this another shot fired in the currency wars? I suspect something like that.

Given all that, the dollar really didn’t do that badly.  (I told you I’m a contrarian)

Ever since that slide to 71 or so, I’ve gotten a stomach of cast iron. So what if  this was the dollar index’s biggest one-day drop in 20 years? It’s been around twice as long.  What the Benny-Bama team has been sticking to the markets is the worst in our history.

Helicopter Ben Drops A Money Bomb

 Peter Grant notes that the currency markets were taken by surprise and anticipates global debt monetization and currency depreciation (expected but not so soon and so fast):

“The Fed did indeed announce that it would seek to buy up to an additional $750 bln in MBS, bringing the total projected purchases of such assets up to $1.25 trl. They also announced that they would buy up to an additional $100 bln in agency debt, bringing that total up to $200 bln. On top of all that, the FOMC decided that late next week the Fed would begin purchasing up to $300 bln in longer-term Treasuries, with emphasis on the 2 to 10-year segment of the yield curve. Purchases will be conducted by primary dealers two to three times per week through competitive auctions….”

Karl Denninger warns that the bond market will sell into the purchase:

The BOE executed their first “QE” operation today.The “bid to cover” was an astonishing 7.35 This means that for every bond purchased 7.35 were tendered, or made available by willing sellers……the BOE now has seen exactly what happens when you promise as a government to overpay for something – everyone hits your bid immediately!”

Meanwhile, Boris Schlossberg notes that the bond market here has so far accepted the stunning move with yields on the 10 year bond falling by 50 basis points in 24 hours, while the dollar  collapsed across the board. He explains Bernanke’s decision as reflecting the fact that foreign capital flows are going to be hard to sustain (i.e. the Chinese aren’t going to be buying treasuries for much longer).

John Maynard Keynes: A General Theory of Lying, Swindling, and Hustling

Some revealing excerpts from Keynes, the Man,” by Murray Rothbard (thanks to the Mises site), which describes the intellectual roots of Keynes’ discounting of empirical evidence or principle. Perhaps this explains Paul Krugman.

DISREGARDED EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE

To destroy any possibility of applying general rules to particular cases, Keynes’s Treatise [On Probability] championed the classical a priori theory of probability, where probability fractions are deduced purely by logic and have nothing to do with empirical reality. Skidelsky makes the point well: Keynes’s argument, then, can be interpreted as an attempt to free the individual to pursue the good…by means of egotistic actions, since he is not required to have certain knowledge of the probable consequences of his actions in order to act rationally. It is part, in other words, of his continuing campaign against Christian morality..

By limiting the possibility of certain knowledge Keynes increased the scope for intuitive judgment.

Suffice it to say that Keynes’s a priori theory was demolished by Richard von Mises (1951) in his 1920s work, Probability, Statistics, and Truth. Mises demonstrated that the probability fraction can be meaningfully used only when it embodies an empirically derived law of entities which are homogeneous, random, and indefinitely repeatable. This means, of course, that probability theory can only be applied to events which, in human life, are confined to those like the lottery or the roulette wheel. Incidentally, Richard von Mises’s probability theory was adopted by his brother Ludwig, although they agreed on little else

VENERATED EXPEDIENCE AND ELITES

“What Keynes took from Burke is revealing……There is, first, Burke’s militant opposition to general principles in politics and, in particular, his championing of expediency against abstract natural rights. Secondly, Keynes agreed strongly with Burke’s high time preference, his downgrading of the uncertain future versus the existing present….. ……..

Thirdly, Keynes admired Burke’s appreciation of the “organic” ruling elite of Great Britain. There were differences over policy, of course, but Keynes joined Burke in hailing the system of aristocratic rule as sound, so long as governing
personnel were chosen from the existing organic elite…..

************

LIED AND MISUSED STATISTICS

….Indeed Keynes displayed a positive taste for lying in politics. He habitually made up statistics to suit his political proposals,
and he would agitate for world monetary inflation with exaggerated hyperbole while maintaining that “words ought to be a little wild—the assault of thoughts upon the unthinking.” But, revealingly enough, once he achieved power, Keynes
admitted that such hyperbole would have to be dropped: “When the seats of power and authority have been attained, there should be no more poetic license”

*************

ARROGANT,  BOMBASTIC  AND IRRESPONSIBILE

One striking illustration of Maynard Keynes’s unjustified arrogance and intellectual irresponsibility was his reaction to Ludwig von Mises’s brilliant and pioneering Treatise on Money and Credit, published in German in 1912. …The book, he wrote condescendingly, had “considerable merit” and was “enlightened,” and its author was definitely “widely read,” but Keynes expressed his disappointment that the book was neither “constructive” nor “original” (Keynes 1914). This brusque reaction managed to kill any interest in Mises’s book in Great Britain, and Money and Credit remained untranslated for two fateful decades. The peculiar point about Keynes’s review is that Mises’s book was highly constructive and systematic, as well as remarkably original. How could Keynes not have seen that? This puzzle was cleared up a decade and a half when, in a footnote to his own Treatise on Money, Keynes impishly admitted that “in German, I can only clearly understand what I already know—so that new ideas are apt to be veiled from me by the difficulties of the language”…

********

CORRUPT IN PUBLIC OFFICE

In the fall of 905, he wrote to Strachey: “I find economics increasingly satisfactory, and I think I am rather good at it. I want to manage a railroad or organize a Trust or at least swindle the investing public”

Keynes, in fact, had recently embarked on his lifelong career as investor and speculator. Yet Harrod was constrained to deny vigorously that Keynes had begun speculating before 1919. Asserting that Keynes had “no capital” before then, Harrod explained the reason for his insistence in a book review six years after the publication of his biography: “It is important that this should be clearly understood, since there were many ill- wishers . . . who asserted that he took advantage of inside information when in the Treasury (1915–June 1919) in order to carry out successful speculations”. In a letter to Clive Bell, author of the book under review and an old Bloomsburyite and friend of Keynes, Harrod pressed the point further: “The point is important because of the beastly stories, which are very widespread . . . about his having made money dishonorably by taking advantage of his Treasury position.”

Despite Harrod’s insistence to the contrary, however, Keynes had indeed set up his own “special fund” and had begun to make investments by July 1905. By 1914, Keynes was speculating heavily in the stock market and, by 1920, had accumulated £16,000, which would amount to about $200,000 at today’s prices…..

*************

INDIFFERENT TO IMPERIAL EXPLOITATION

Maynard,” Skidelsky points out, “always saw the Raj from Whitehall; he never considered the human and moral implications of imperial rule or whether the British were exploiting the Indians.” In the grand imperialist tradition of the Mills and Thomas Macaulay in nineteenth-century England, moreover, he never felt the need to travel to India, to learn Indian languages, or to read any books on the area except as they dealt with finance. Keynes praised the Indian standard [Lila: a gold exchange rather than a gold standard] as allowing a far greater “elasticity” (a code word for monetary inflation) of money in response to demand. Moreover, he specifically hailed the report of a U.S. government commission in 1903 advocating a gold-exchange standard in China and other Third World silver countries—a drive by progressive economists and politicians to bring such nations into a U.S. dominated and managed gold-dollar bloc

*****************

MANIPULATED, SLANDERED, AND HARASSED COLLEAGUES

But Keynes used tactics in the selling of The General Theory other than reliance on his charisma and on systematic deception. He curried favor with his students by praising them extravagantly, and he set them deliberately against non-Keynesians on the Cambridge faculty by ridiculing his colleagues in front of these students and by encouraging them to harass his faculty colleagues. For example, Keynes incited his students with particular viciousness against Dennis Robertson,his former close friend. As Keynes knew all too well, Robertson was painfully and extraordinarily shy, even to the point of communicating with his faithful longtime secretary, whose office was next to his own, only by written memoranda. Robertson’s lectures were completely written out in advance, and because of his shyness he refused to answer any questions or engage in any discussion with either his students or his colleagues. And so it was a particularly diabolic torture for Keynes’s radical disciples, led by Joan Robinson and Richard Kahn, to have baited and taunted Robertson, harassing him with spiteful questions and challenging him to debate……

[Note: I’ve created subtitles, omitted citations and cut out intervening passages for the sake of clarity].

Comment:

Keynes was one of Time Magazine’s top 100 Men in 1999. They claimed he was the man who saved capitalism. And yet, from his writing, it’s clear that Keynes was clueless about the dynamism of genuine free enterprise. His vision is static, rigid, almost feudal. He divides the world into 4 classes:  the consumer (driven mechanically by consumption, as though he had no free will); the evil saver (who embodies all the despised middle-class  and Christian virtues of hard work, thrift, foresight*) whom he conflates with the rentier class; the admirable but boisterous entrepreneurs, also driven to and fro by swings in moods; and at the top, the only really virtuous and reasonable class – the intelligentsia, which rules through intellect, the philosopher-kings – of which he, of course, was one.  This is a feudal and essentially medieval viewpoint, for surely one of the great achievements of  modernity was to understand that money indeed has a rightful price – the interest rate, which is the price of time and deferred gratification.  Keynes instead clung to an ossified pre-modern collectivist mind set. He’s the very antithesis of progressive thinking and yet he is a hero to progressives.

*Protestant Christian virtues, I should add.

Market Meltdown Books and St. Timothy

Chris Droker has a list of bust books:

 

Panic

 

Meltdown

 

Mr. Market Miscalculates

 

Financial Shock: A 360 Degree Look at the Subprime Market Implosion

 

Empire of Debt: the Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis

 

The New Economic Disorder

 

Plunder and Blunder

 

Bailout

 

The Origins of Financial Crises

 

The Gods that Failed: How Blind Faith in Markets Has Cost Us Our Future

 

The Coming Economic Collapse

 

The Coming Generational Storm

 

The Return of Depression Economics

 

Agenda for a New Economy: Why Wall Street Can’t Be Fixed and How to Replace It

 

Guide to the End of Wall Street As We Know It

Comment

Interesting.

“Mobs, Messiahs and Markets” – (Bonner & Rajiva, 2007) –  which actually gets it right about empire, debt, the housing and credit bubble, the war/propaganda, and was spot on in timing, and won a major business award, is not around.

I wonder why that is.

“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine…”  (2 Timothy 4:3)

Maybe that line from the Gospel has some sense to it.

But it’s how state propaganda works. Propaganda is not simply what government does to us. In fact, that’s the most obvious part of it. The really interesting part of propaganda is what people do to themselves.

“They will not endure…”

You have to know how to endure what you hear…not run away from what’s emotionally disturbing..or cognitively dissonant.

Growth is not a linear and time-bound development. You don’t grow just because the minutes pass.

Pasternak said something similar: To live your life is not as simple as to cross the street (I may not have got that quite right. It’s in one of Yuri Zhivago’s poems).

When I read this in school I thought it was trivial. It took me a couple of decades to figure out how profound it was. In fact it ought to replace e pluribus unum – a motto we don’t need nearly as much.

Gold Above 940

Wow. Bernanke opens his mouth and the dollar sinks to 84.5.

Can’t he read a RED STOP sign?

And this weird thing here: I saw a  piece on bond yields and when I looked it up on yahoo, it’d been removed.

/cnnm/090318/031809_credit_market.html http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_bs262

Here’s  the URL for the original site:

CMWire – The Capital Markets Newswire

But when I looked through Capital Markets wire just now I couldn’t find it.

Here’s a copy of  the google search result for the piece:

Mar 18, 2009 Yields plummeted by the widest margin since 1987. 14:41 AIG chief asks execs to return bonuses» CNN.com. AIG chief Edward Liddy told lawmakers ….. (

Corrects the headline to reflect that Treasury yields plunged).
cmwire.com/ – 39 minutes ago – Similar pages

(http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=yields+plunge+1987+cnn&btnG=Google+Search&aq=f&oq=)

Update:

OK – I found the piece. It’s by Deborah Levine and I found it at Market Watch.

I think the original wire report on CMWire and Yahoo might have been taken off to make the headline look less alarming, so that the reference to 1987 didn’t spook stock investors – the media’s target patsies.

You can see that the article now reads – “Treasury prices soared Wednesday, sending yields plummeting….”

The powers that be want to keep the poor Dow’s chin up at least for today before the big bad short sellers come out in droves…

“Treasury prices soared Wednesday, sending yields plummeting by the largest amount since 1987 after the Federal Reserve surprised bond investors by saying it would buy $300 billion in longer-term Treasury securities over the next six months.”

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/treasurys-soar-after-fed-says/story.aspx?guid={7DB91E8A-FD87-4BD4-9296-3C6EA402C920}&tool=1&dist=bigcharts&

Meanwhile here are the details at Bloomberg  on the FOMC decision:

” This Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee of the United States’ Federal Reserve made a unanimous decision to keep the Fed Funds rate unchanged at the 0.25% to 0% range. The rate decision was not a surprise for a good number of investors since the Federal Reserve stated clearly on its last FOMC statement that “economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for some time”. Even so, today’s FOMC statement sounded a bit more dovish than expected, not reflecting the positive performance of the U.S. stock, bond and credit markets over the last two weeks. The Federal Reserve said “it sees some risk that inflation could persist for a time below rates that best foster economic growth and price stability in the longer term”. In addition,  “to help improve conditions in private credit markets, the Committee decided to purchase up to $300 billion of longer-term Treasury securities over the next six months.” So once gain, the Fed said it will employ all available tools to promote the resumption of sustainable economic growth and this makes us believe that the Fed will continue to purchase large quantities of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities to provide support to the mortgage and housing markets. In other words, the Fed will use quantitative easing. Currency traders reacted very negatively to the FOMC statement driving the U.S. dollar lower against the world’s most heavily traded currencies.”

 Comment:

What are they doing? Blowing smoke in everyone’s eyes pretending they see deflation in store in order to throw everyone off the inflationary scent?  Hoping meanwhile that gold doesn’t pop up too much and give the game away before they finish the next mighty round of mortgage hot potato? (Most plausible scenario).

Or, are they really terrified of having so destroyed the capital base of the economy that they think something, anything (maybe another financial instrument’s been discovered we haven’t heard about)  has to be done. And since all they have is a printing press., well why not use it? Off with the heads of the middle class, the thrifty, the savers, those who have no debt, the creditors!  (Also plausible, though probably only if combined with the theory above).

There’s a third option, but I’ll explore that in another post.

And why is Bill Gross pumping this whole business to the public?

“You want to continue to buy what the government will buy,” Pimco’s Bill Gross told CNBC.

From now on, it will be Pimpco to me. Sorry.

Gold Below 885

Gold has gone sharply down below 900.  Already I feel better, although it puts my SLV nibble in the red.

I held off buying because I thought GLD showed more strengths on its down side moves – but recently I was just wondering if I was wrong after all and whether it was making a solid base at around 900-920.  Good thing I held off. That plunge down was sharp and shows that the corrective thrust is stronger than the upthrust still.

The propaganda effort on behalf of the fiat money regime started up last week and this latest onslaught by General Bernanke has the market up and  sentiment more optimistic.  So some faithless money is finding its way back into equities.

Global Super-Currency To Flood the World

Edmund Conway

The Telegraph, London

Monday, March 16, 2009

The International Monetary Fund is poised to embark on what analysts have described as “global quantitative easing” by printing billions of dollars worth of a global “super-currency” in an unprecedented new effort to address the economic crisis.

Alistair Darling and senior figures in the US Treasury have been encouraging the fund to issue hundreds of billions of dollars worth of so-called Special Drawing Rights in the coming months as part of its campaign to prevent the recession from turning into a global depression.

Should the move, which is up for discussion by the summit of G20 finance ministers this weekend, be adopted, it will represent a global equivalent of the Bank of England’s plan to pump extra cash into the UK economy.

However, economists warned that the scheme could cause a major swell of inflation around the world as the newly-created money filters through the system. The idea has been suggested by a number of key figures, including billionaire investor George Soros and US Treasury adviser Ted Truman.

Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the IMF, said: “The principle behind it is that everyone would get bonus dollars and instead of the Federal Reserve having to print them, everyone gets them.

“The objective is to create a windfall of cash. However, if everybody goes out and spends the money it could be very inflationary.”

Comment:

The Gold Anti Trust Action Committee (GATA) (which has this article on their website) has been one of the first groups to allege manipulation of the gold price. They’ve launched a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) inquiry into the actual quantity of gold reserves held by the US, and they allege that it’s likely to be half the official amount because of secret sales, leases, and other arrangements promising it out.  Rising gold prices indicate an erosion in savings, so a stifled gold price is part of government “propaganda” to keep people from figuring out that they’re losing their savings.

I also found an excellent piece by Antal Fekete on their site. Fekete, a renowned Hungarian mathematician, critiques a recent article by NY Times columnist and rock-star Keynesian, Paul Krugman, in which Krugman blames Asians for the financial crisis. The article,   “Revenge of the Glut,” claims that Asian savings caused excess spending and debt. Fekete correctly calls this a piece of nonsense.

Instead, he points out something I haven’t seen any other writer talk about – the fact that while low interest rates are a good thing for business, falling interest rates aren’t. What falling rates do is make the cost of old loans more burdensome. A falling interest rate environment raises the cost of debt liquidation and thus erodes  capital. Eventually it eats up the entire capital base of firms and banks, which is why we are seeing an across the board collapse of banks and auto companies.

Low interest rates thus feed the derivative bubble which in turn drives the interest rate lower and lower.  Ultimately the savings and capital of the whole economy are destroyed. That’s what we are living through.

I’m actually working on a piece myself on Krugman’s article and how it ties in with the propaganda of the last two weeks.

I hope to have it ready tomorrow. Meanwhile, here’s a great line from the Fekete article for you to think about:

That’s the nature of the so-called Keynesian revolution. It is not a branch of economic  science; it is a branch of Leninism, a blend of collectivist ideology reinforced with unmatched expertise on conspiracy, street fighting and barricades.

Robert Pirsig On Platypi (Updated)

“Early zoologists classified as mammals those that suckle their young and as reptiles those that lay eggs. Then a duck-billed platypus was discovered in Australia….

The platypus isn’t doing anything paradoxical at all. It isn’t having any problems. Platypi have been laying eggs and suckling their young for millions of years before there were any zoologists to come along and declare it illegal…

Quality is in the same situation as that platypus.

Because they can’t classify it the experts have claimed there is something wrong with it….

Should reality be something that only a handful of the world’s most advanced physicists understand? ”

That’s Robert Pirsig in “Lila,”

Update: I thought I should add this to make it clear what Pirsig was trying to do. It’s from an Amazon reviewer, Ralph Blumenau, who, from his profile is a retired teacher (his students were lucky – the review is spot on).

“He had felt that the two modes of western thinking, the classical and the romantic, were both unsatisfactory. The romantic, which will not come to grips with the underlying meaning of phenomena, is basically superficial. The classical mode, with its analytical procedures, often destroys what it investigates. The romantic mode stresses the subjective impact on the observer; the classical stresses the objective nature of the things observed. Both are part of what, in Lila, Phaedrus calls the subject-object metaphysic; and the concept that the world can be understood in terms simply of subject and object has been deeply embedded in western thought ever since classical Greek philosophy. However, the pre-classical Greeks, through their concept of arete, held out the possibility of a richer understanding. Phaedrus translates arete as “Quality” (and sometimes as “Value”), and it is by Quality that the conclusions reached by the classical or the romantic processes need to be judged.”

Revisiting the Financial Media, March 2007

“The DJIA numbers, which is what most people mean when they talk about the market being up or down, are seriously misleading because they don’t represent the whole market — only a handful of very highly capitalized, very unrepresentative stocks.

 

It’s the DJIA that has been hitting new highs since 2006 — to cheerleading and pom-poms from the press. But a lesser-known index, the Standard & Poor 500 (S&P500) shows what’s going on much better. A 10-year chart of the S&P 500 shows that it’s not hitting any new highs but is actually buckling as it struggles to regain its 2000 heights. In the process, it seems to have formed the two ominous peaks that symbolize what is known as a Double Top to stock traders. A Double Top is a classic signal of a potentially drastic reversal in the offing. And as if to underline where things could be heading in a hurry, Goldman Sachs bank, the fountainhead of financial speculation in the economy (Goldman’s former boss, Hank Paulson was hired as Treasury Secretary), has taken a wallop too. Goldman, note, is heavily invested in China and in the US housing market.

 

Moral of the Story: Anyone with their pension funds or children’s college money riding on this market shouldn’t bank on living too happily ever after….”

 

That’s from  a piece I wrote in March 2007:  “Fairy-tales from Grimm that just got Grimmer”

Two years….and how much has changed.