Gold at (1:30 am est) $1235.10 DOWN $2.50
silver at $17.72: UP 4 cents
Access market prices:
Gold: $1229.25
Silver: $17.66
THE DAILY GOLD FIX REPORT FROM SHANGHAI AND LONDON
.
The Shanghai fix is at 10:15 pm est last night and 2:15 am est early this morning
The fix for London is at 5:30 am est (first fix) and 10 am est (second fix)
Thus Shanghai’s second fix corresponds to 195 minutes before London’s first fix.
And now the fix recordings:
Shanghai FIRST morning fix Feb 9/17 (10:15 pm est last night): $ 1251.40
NY ACCESS PRICE: $1241.60 (AT THE EXACT SAME TIME)/premium $9.80
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Shanghai SECOND afternoon fix: 2: 15 am est (second fix/early morning):$ 1251.13
NY ACCESS PRICE: $1239.80 (AT THE EXACT SAME TIME/2:15 am)
SPREAD/ 2ND FIX TODAY!!: $11.33
China rejects NY pricing of gold as a fraud/arbitrage will now commence fully
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
London FIRST Fix: Feb9/2017: 5:30 am est: $1241.75 (NY: same time: $1242.00 (5:30AM)
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
London Second fix Feb 9.2017: 10 am est: $1242.10 (NY same time: $1242.00 (10 AM)
It seems that Shanghai pricing is higher than the other two , (NY and London). The spread has been occurring on a regular basis and thus I expect to see arbitrage happening as investors buy the lower priced NY gold and sell to China at the higher price. This should drain the comex.
Also why would mining companies hand in their gold to the comex and receive constantly lower prices. They would be open to lawsuits if they knowingly continue to supply the comex despite the fact that they could be receiving higher prices in Shanghai.
end
For comex gold:
FEBRUARY/
NOTICES FILINGS FOR FEBRUARY CONTRACT MONTH: 0 NOTICE(S) FOR nil OZ. TOTAL NOTICES SO FAR: 5119 FOR 511,900 OZ (15.922 TONNES)
For silver:
For silver: FEBRUARY
0 NOTICES FILED FOR nil OZ/
TOTAL NO OF NOTICES FILED: 147 FOR 735,000 OZ
Let us have a look at the data for today
.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In silver, the total open interest FELL by 21556 contracts DOWN to 191,380 with respect to YESTERDAY’S TRADING. In ounces, the OI is still represented by just less THAN 1 BILLION oz i.e. .957 BILLION TO BE EXACT or 137% of annual global silver production (ex Russia & ex China).
FOR THE NEW FRONT FEBRUARY MONTH: 0 NOTICE(S) FOR NIL OZ
In gold, the total comex gold ROSE BY 8,528 contracts WITH THE RISE IN THE PRICE GOLD ($3.40 with YESTERDAY’S trading ).The total gold OI stands at 424,071 contracts
we had 0 notice(s) filed upon for nil oz of gold.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
With respect to our two criminal funds, the GLD and the SLV:
GLD:
We had no changes in tonnes of gold at the GLD
Inventory rests tonight: 832.58 tonnes
.
SLV
we had no changes in silver into the SLV
THE SLV Inventory rests at: 334.713 million oz
end
.
First, here is an outline of what will be discussed tonight:
1. Today, we had the open interest in silver FALL by 2,556 contracts DOWN to 191,380 AS SILVER WAS DOWN 5 CENTS with YESTERDAY’S trading. The gold open interest ROSE by 8,528 contracts UP to 424,071 WITH THE RISE IN THE PRICE OF GOLD OF $3.40 (YESTERDAY’S TRADING)
(report Harvey
.
2.a) The Shanghai and London gold fix report
(Harvey)
2 b) Gold/silver trading overnight Europe, Goldcore
(Mark O’Byrne/zerohedge
and in NY: Bloomberg
3. ASIAN AFFAIRS
i)Late WEDNESDAY night/THURSDAY morning: Shanghai closed UP 16.19 POINTS OR .51%/ /Hang Sang CLOSED UP 40.01 POINTS OR .17% . The Nikkei closed DOWN 99.93 POINTS OR 0.53% /Australia’s all ordinaires CLOSED UP 0.25%/Chinese yuan (ONSHORE) closed UP at 6.8662/Oil ROSE to 52.75 dollars per barrel for WTI and 55.50 for Brent. Stocks in Europe ALL IN THE GREEN. Offshore yuan trades 6.8487 yuan to the dollar vs 6.8725 for onshore yuan.THE SPREAD BETWEEN ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE NARROWS QUITE A BIT AS DOLLARS ARE ATTEMPTING TO LEAVE CHINA’S SHORES. ONSHORE YUAN STRONGER AS IS OFFSHORE YUAN COUPLED WITH THE STRONGER DOLLAR
REPORT ON JAPAN SOUTH KOREA NORTH KOREA AND CHINA
3a)THAILAND/SOUTH KOREA
b) REPORT ON JAPAN
none today
c) REPORT ON CHINA
i)The following is very important. We have been reporting that China is in a “tightening mode” as they are concerned with inflation. They have drained 715 billion yuan form circulation without a corresponding reverse repo. It sure looks serious enough and this could have devastating effects on the world’s global economy
( zero hedge)
ii)Chinese leader Xi Jinping sends a letter to Trump seeking a “constructive relationship
( zero hedge)
iii)Bitcoin plunges in value after Chinese exchanges suspend withdrawals. Of course gold is the beneficiary
( zero hedge)
iv)Here is more proof that China is tightening and is also very scared on inflaton:
4. EUROPEAN AFFAIRS
i)GREECE/TRUMP’S EU AMBASSADOR
Trumps new ambassador Ted Malloch lays it out perfectly as he states that Greece is likely to severe ties with Germany and exit the Euro
( zero hedge)
ii)The yield curve in Greece totally inverts with the 10 yr bond yield at 7.85% and the 2 yr at 10% signifying a huge potential for a GREXIT. It seems that we have 2 parties that cannot agree on what to do with respect to Greece; the IMF who wants to cut Greece’s debt but Germany says no. the IMF states that Greece cannot live with their huge debt and cannot have a primary surplus of 3.5% in perpetuity. If the IMF is not part of the Troika is bailing out Greece, then Germany will bail which will make the GREXIT a certainty and bring chaos to the monetary EU
( zero hedge)
5. RUSSIAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN AFFAIRS
i)IRAN
It sure looks like Iran is not scared from Trump’s scare tactics
( zero hedge)
iiRussia
Russian airstrike accidentally kills 3 Turkish soldiers stationed in Syria with un co- ordinated attacks
(courtesy zero hedge)
iii)Israel
This does not look good. Seven rockets were fired from ISIS and 4 from Egypt’s side trying to hit the holiday capital of Israel Eilat. Three were intercepted by the Dome and the 4th landed harmless in no man’s land. Also one mortar landed in the Golan Heights. Israel will respond in kind
Israel/Jerusalem Post
6.GLOBAL ISSUES
i)Deutsche bank/China/World growth
The real reason for the growth in the world was due to stimulation of the Chinese economy in 2016-2017. As we have pointed out to you, China is now undergoing a tightening and this will have a devastating effect on world growth
( zero hedge)
ii)The Central Bank of Mexico raises its interest rate by 50 basis points as expected which causes the Mexican Peso to rise
( zero hedge)
7. OIL ISSUES
none today
8. EMERGING MARKETS
Anarchy in the northern city of Espirito Santo Brazil as the police went on strike demanding a doubling of their pay. The police earn 800 dollars equiv per month.
So far the count is over 100 dead.
( zero hedge)
9. PHYSICAL MARKETS
i)Gold trading today:
Absolute crooks: the bankers supplied 11.1 tonnes of paper gold short to knock the price down by 5.00 dollars.
(courtesy Dave Kranzler/IRD)
ii)An excellent commentary from Eric Sprott today. He is watching the gold ETF’s from China. This instrument is real physical metal and it has been rising daily. If 10 tonnes of gold is added by Chinese investors per day on a 250 day year, 2500 tonnes of gold will be accumulated which is over 100% of annual global supply (ex China ex Russia)
( Eric Sprott/Kingworlds/gata)
iii)I brought this story to you yesterday but I am repeating it today because of its significance. Eric Sprott above also commented on it:
( Bloomberg/GATA)
iv)As I have pointed out to you each month on the FRBNY gold report, I speculated correctly that the Germany has repatriated all of its 300 tonnes of gold that it has earmarked to be repatriated, 3 yrs ahead of schedule. Germany still need 111 tonnes of gold to come across the pond from the Bank of France. It’s goal is to have 50% on German soil and 50% in NY
( zero hedge)
10.USA STORIES
i a)Early trading today:
Algos gone wild with Trump announcement on taxes and subsidies to the airlines to compete with foreign airlines;
( zero hedge)
1b)The border tax war is on as we highlighted to you over these past several weeks:
(courtesy zero hedge)
ii)Initial jobless claims plunge to 44 year lows despite continuing claims rising. Of course the big question is what happens next.
( zero hedge)
iii)The Senate confirms Attorney General Jeff Sessions. The fun will now begin
iv)Trump not to be happy with the “disheartening Gorsuch story”. He then accuses democratic Senator Blumenthal of lying( zero hedge)
v)This is going to be costly; the top USA commander in Afghanistan wants a 2 to 3 thousand troops to break the stalemate over there:
( zero hedge)
vi)the following is an important commentary from David Stockman as he outlines that Trump will have no chance to pass his budget in the House/senate this year.
a must read…
( David Stockman/DailyReckoning/ContraCorner)
Let us head over to the comex:
The total gold comex open interest ROSE BY 8,528 CONTRACTS UP to an OI level of 424,071 WITH THE RISE IN THE PRICE OF GOLD ( $3.40 with YESTERDAY’S trading). We are now in the contract month of FEBRUARY and it is one of the better delivery months of the year. In this next big active delivery month of February we had a LOSS of 62 contracts DOWN to 1387. We had 3 notices served upon yesterday and therefore we LOST 59 contracts or an additional 5900 oz will NOT stand for delivery and these were cash settled for a fiat bonus. The next non active contract month of March saw it’s OI fall by 49 contracts lowering to 2079.The next big active month is April and here the OI ROSE by 6072 contracts UP to 288,888.
We had 0 notice(s) filed upon today for NIL oz
And now for the wild silver comex results. Total silver OI FELL by 2556 contracts FROM 193,936 DOWN TO 191,380 as the price of silver FELL IN PRICE TO THE TUNE OF 5 CENTS with respect to YESTERDAY’S trading. We are moving further from the all time record high for silver open interest set on Wednesday August 3/2016: (224,540).
The active month of February saw the OI RISE by 13 contract(s) UP TO 179. We had 1 notice(s) served upon yesterday so we GAINED 14 CONTRACTS or an additional 70,000 oz will stand.
The next big active delivery month is March and here the OI decrease by 6576 contracts down to 113,427 contracts. For comparison purposes last year on the same date only 98,584 contracts were standing.
We had 0 notice(s) filed for NIL oz for the FEBRUARY contract.
VOLUMES: for the gold comex
Today the estimated volume was 233,192 contracts which is good.
Yesterday’s confirmed volume was 233,777 contracts which is good
volumes on gold are getting higher!
| Gold | Ounces |
| Withdrawals from Dealers Inventory in oz | nil |
| Withdrawals from Customer Inventory in oz |
362.09 OZ
incl
5 kilobars
Delaware
Manfra
|
| Deposits to the Dealer Inventory in oz | nil oz
|
| Deposits to the Customer Inventory, in oz |
48,225.000 oz
Scotia
JPMorgan
1500 kilobars
|
| No of oz served (contracts) today |
0 notice(s)
NIL oz
|
| No of oz to be served (notices) |
1387 contracts
138,700 oz
|
| Total monthly oz gold served (contracts) so far this month |
5119 notices
511,900 oz
15.922 tonnes
|
| Total accumulative withdrawals of gold from the Dealers inventory this month | NIL oz |
| Total accumulative withdrawal of gold from the Customer inventory this month | 121,574.9 oz |
Today, 0 notice(s) were issued from JPMorgan dealer account and 0 notices were issued from their client or customer account. The total of all issuance by all participants equates to 0 contract(s) of which 0 notices were stopped (received) by jPMorgan dealer and 0 notice(s) was (were) stopped/ Received) by jPMorgan customer account.
March 2016: 2.311 tonnes (March is a non delivery month)
| Silver | Ounces |
| Withdrawals from Dealers Inventory | nil |
| Withdrawals from Customer Inventory |
nil 0z
|
| Deposits to the Dealer Inventory |
nil oz
|
| Deposits to the Customer Inventory |
1,189,997.730 oz
HSBC
Delaware
Scotia
|
| No of oz served today (contracts) |
0 CONTRACT(S)
(NIL OZ)
|
| No of oz to be served (notices) |
179 contracts
(895,000 oz)
|
| Total monthly oz silver served (contracts) | 147 contracts (735,000 oz) |
| Total accumulative withdrawal of silver from the Dealers inventory this month | NIL oz |
| Total accumulative withdrawal of silver from the Customer inventory this month | 4,852,502.9 oz |
end
And now the Gold inventory at the GLD
feb 9/no changes at the GLD/Inventory rests at 832.58 tonnes
Feb 8/another “deposit” of 5.63 tonnes of gold into the GLD/The addition is a paper addition/total inventory: 832.58 tonnes
Feb 7/another huge fake deposit of 8.30 tonnes of gold into the GLD/the addition is a paper addition and no doubt not physical/ total inventory: 826.95 tonnes
FEB 6/a huge deposit of 7.43 tonnes of gold into the GLD/Inventory rests at 818.65 tonnes
FEB 3/no change in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 811.22 tonnes
Feb 2/another huge deposit of 1.48 tonnes/inventory rests at 811.22 tonnes
Feb 1/a huge “deposit” of 10.67 tonnes of gold into the GLD/Inventory rests at 809.74 tonnes. this should stop GLD from sending gold to Shanghai.
JAN 31/no change in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 799.07 tonnes
jan 30/no change in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 799.07 tonnes
Jan 27/no changes at the GLD/Inventory rests at 799.07 tonnes
Jan 26/no changes at the GLD/Inventory rests at 799.07 tonnes/
jan 25/another exactly the same withdrawal as yesterday: 50.4 tonnes and again this was used in the whacking of gold today/inventory rests at 799.07 tonnes
jan 24/a huge withdrawal of 5.04 tonnes and probably this was used today in the whacking of gold/inventory rests at 804.11 tonnes
Jan 23/a big change/this time a deposit of 1.19 tonnes of gold into the GLD/inventory rests at 809.15 tonnes. The drainage of gold from the GLD to Shanghai has now stopped!
Jan 20/no changes in gold inventory a the GLD/Inventory rests at 807.96 tonnes
Jan 19/no changes in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 807.96 tonnes
Jan 18/no changes in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 807.96 tonnes
Jan 17/17/a deposit of 2.96 tonnes of gold/inventory at the GLD rests at 807.96 tonnes. I guess there is no more gold inventory to sent to C+Shanghai
Jan 13/17/there were no changes in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 805.00 tonnes
Jan 12/2017/no change in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 805.00 tonnes
Jan 11/no change in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 805.00 tonnes
JAN 10/no changes in gold inventory at the GLD/Inventory rests at 805.00 tonnes
JAN 9/A WITHDRAWAL OF 8.87 TONNES OF GOLD FROM THE GLD/INVENTORY RESTS AT 805.00 TONNES
end
NPV for Sprott and Central Fund of Canada
end
Major gold/silver trading/commentaries for THURSDAY
GOLDCORE/BLOG/MARK O’BYRNE
Give Gift of Real Gold This Valentines Day
Gift of Real Gold – Give It This Valentines Day
For the love of gold
(Don’t) put a ring on it
Is gold jewellery going out of fashion?
You’ll never get what you paid for it
Devaluation: Synthetic diamonds, 3D Printing and Rise of the machines
Buy gold – No one has cracked alchemy
Give the gift of real gold – They will thank you for it
The first line of one of the oldest known Valentine’s reads
Je suis desja d’amour tanné or I am already sick of love
The lines were written in the 15th century by Charles, Duke of Orleans to his wife from the Tower of London and tragically the duchess died before the poem could reach her.
It is a funny line to start with in a love poem, but one that perhaps many of us can relate to at this time of year.
Everywhere we look there is a sea of red. Hearts and apparent expressions of love adorn shop windows, supermarket shelves and adverts on the television. The marketeers tug at our heart strings. It can all get a bit much for even the most romantic amongst us.
They say you can’t put a price on love, but at this time of year many have a darn good go at it. It’s February which means Valentine’s Day is here and we are guilt tripped into either feeling awful that we are single or that we don’t know what to buy the person we love.
A whopping 80% of Americans who are dating, engaged, or married celebrate Valentine’s Day, according to time.com. And like, I suspect, their European counterparts, they go all out when it comes to celebrating.
According to the U.S. National Retail Federation, spending this Valentine’s is estimated to fall this year, estimated to be down to $18.2 billion from $19.7 billion. 2016 was a 10-year high, whilst this year is expected to be a 3-year low. The average spend on Valentine’s in the United States in 2016 was $196 by men and $100 by women.

It isn’t so surprising when you look at the climb in prices, year on year. If you want to see a real example of inflation, look no further than the By My Valentine Index created by bankrate.com. It shows that this year the cost of buying a basket of Valentine’s gifts will cost you $580.98. The price has climbed significantly from the 2016 Index of $512.02.
So it is not surprising that less of us are spending this year, but a three year low is quite a drop. So what happened? Are we not feeling the love, or are the harsh facts of reality setting in?
Times are tough both politically and financially and lovers are perhaps realising there’s no money to waste and instead things of real meaning and value should be bought – like unforgettable holidays, precious hours with loved ones and beautiful memories.
(Don’t) put a ring on it
What if you’re reading this and thinking that you’re way ahead of us and already planning on buying precious metals for your loved one and have a nice ring or necklace in mind. To that I would say not so fast, jewellery, or jewelry for our American friends, is not the answer here.
Fundivo.com estimates that $19.7 billion was spent by Americans on Valentine’s Day last year, $4.5 billion of this was on jewellery, the most spend in any category. (Somewhat depressingly $681 million was spent on Valentines for pets).
According to entrepreneur.com, 50% of proposals happen on Valentine’s Day. Which, to be honest, seems to be a bit of a cop out. There are 365 days in which to surprise your loved one and you pick the one day of the year that it is most likely to happen. But I digress.
You may be thinking that compared to other items in the Valentine’s basket, jewellery is a win-win. Not only will your loved one be delighted but you will also have made a wise-investment. Especially compared to something like chocolate … given cocoa prices are down on last year.
Chocolate gets eaten and when its gone, its gone. You can’t eat gold as Nouriel Roubini used to tweet a bit. Forgetting you can use gold to buy water, food, a shop, animals or indeed your own farm to produce food.
As much as it breaks my heart to write this (and hope that my significant other isn’t reading) jewellery is actually not a great investment. I would argue that you would be far better investing your money into physical gold than a trinket that happens to be made from it.
My reasons for this are three-fold. First demand for gold jewellery is declining, second the jewellery industry is under threat and thirdly and perhaps most importantly the resale value of jewellery is always appalling … unless you own some famous beheaded Queen’s wedding ring.
Is gold jewellery going out of fashion?
First of all there is the demand factor, demand for jewellery whether as a gift or an investment is down across the globe.
In a year when gold investment was at a four-year high, gold jewellery sales fell to a seven-year low in 2016, to just 2,041.6t according to recent WGC data, a fall of 15% worldwide. Whilst the final quarter of the year saw 26% growth in the sector, thanks to the sharp fall in the gold price.
But in the West demand for jewellery did not perform so well, writes the WGC:
“The mild upward trend in US jewellery consumption came to an end in 2016: demand slipped 1% to 118.3t on weakness in the second half of the year…Q4 and full-year demand in Europe followed similar patterns: France and the UK underperformed broad stability elsewhere. In France, 2016 jewellery demand softened by 4% as consumer confidence was undermined by security concerns and increasingly divergent domestic politics. In the UK, the tentative gains made since 2012 came to a halt. Post-Brexit uncertainty and pessimism affected consumers; Q4 demand fell 5% to 12.2t, leading to a 3% drop in annual demand to 25.2t.”
Consumers globally are waking up to the rip off that is jewelry. They are becoming more sophisticated and “moving up the value chain” and opting to buy gold coins and bars rather than trinkets and bangles. This is especially the case in India, China and Asia.
You’ll never get what you paid for it
It is estimated that the markup on a diamond wedding and engagement ring is between 300% and 1000%, with a tendency towards the lower end of the scale. The chances of us seeing this back are unlikely in the extreme as a buyer will only take into account the components of the jewellery rather than the purchase price.
We talk about gold as a form of insurance. During times of inflation, and especially hyperinflation you will be looking for the financial insurance to protect your wealth. In both economic and political times of difficulty, gold is the best form of financial defence. Making an investment in jewellery is a false economy given you won’t see a financial return and there is no protection from economic dislocations as it is not liquid and there is no liquid market to sell jewellery at a fair and transparent market price.
The price we put on jewellery is not just based on the original price that we paid for it, but also the sentimental price. This is unfortunately not appreciated by the buyer should you ever come to resell it.
And, let’s be honest you are going to be far more willing to sell your gold coins and bars than the engagement ring that is valuable only to you and your family.
Unlike jewellery, the value of bullion is not subject to personal tastes. And unlike with gold, there is no unified market price for diamonds.
It is also notoriously hard to resell a diamond, Edward Jay Epstein described in 1982, “To make a profit, investors must at some time find buyers who are willing to pay more for their diamonds than they did. Here, however, investors face the same problem as those attempting to sell their jewelry: there is no unified market in which to sell diamonds. Although dealers will quote the prices at which they are willing to sell investment-grade diamonds, they seldom give a set price at which they are willing to buy diamonds of the same grade.”
Just to put into perspective, one ring, on average will cost $5,200, the same amount it would cost you to buy just over 4 oz (according to prices on the 9th February). A troy ounce is around 31g. There is approximately 5g of gold in an engagement ring. So for the same amount of money you could buy 130g of gold.
Gold, in contrast to gold jewellery has held it’s value throughout history. Yes, the price has changed, but the value has remained constant.
Devaluation: Synthetic diamonds and Rise of the machines
But the issue with jewellery is not just about resale value or buying trends. The fact is, the jewellery sector as we know it is under threat.
Even though the technology for synthetic diamonds was first patented in the 1950s (by Lockheed Martin) it is only in recent years that it has become sophisticated enough to play a major role in the jewellery market. Synthetic diamonds are chemically and physically the same as natural diamonds. It is near impossible for experts to tell the difference given they are the same composite.
It is estimated that in 10-15 years time lab-grown diamonds will be a real threat to the mined diamond industry. They are currently 20 – 30% cheaper than mined (or natural) diamonds. For example, a 0.50 carat can range from $500 to $2,500, while a 1.00ct from $2,000- $8,000.
Between 2016 – 2018 mined diamonds are expected to see a shortfall in supply versus demand. With this in mind we can expect to see the discount increase upwards to 45% on synthetic diamonds. Imagine the difference in a decade’s time when the technology is even more refined.
Currently purists try to dismiss the potential market size of synthetic diamonds arguing that it’s more romantic to have a diamond that took millions of years to form. I would contend a diamond is a diamond and if one has been grown especially for you then that’s really romantic. And sensible.
Granted, it is unlikely that we are going to see auction houses putting synthetic diamonds up for bids, but how many of us were intending on buying diamonds that would end up in such a place anyway? When it comes to a bar of gold there is no stress in worrying about what the market looks like in terms of fashions, technology and perceived value.
It isn’t just lab-grown diamonds that are threatening the huge industry, 3D printing also poses a threat.
By 2020 3D printing in jewellery markets is expected to $11 billion by 2020, this poses a threat to artisan jewellers and the value of pieces produced by the big name jewellers found on Bond Street and Mayfair.
There is no longer a need to spend a small fortune on a sparkly number, when a machine is able to mould and design the perfect item at a fraction of the cost.
So when it comes to the jewellery industry we can no longer reassure ourselves that what we buy will hold its value at a time when technology is usurping one of the few things that gave it any value – being carefully crafted and handmade.
Buy gold – No one has cracked alchemy
At the time writing one of life’s biggest mysteries still remains – how can man make gold?
The fact is, we still can’t. Gold cannot be created with technology. Diamonds, yes. Chocolates, yes. A nice meal, certainly. Jewellery, just get yourself a printer. But gold remains one of the last mysteries yet to be solved by humans.
Gold can be improved to suit its purpose through technology (to make gold solar panels, gold leaf etc) but gold is gold and very little can be done to affect its value, as history has shown.
Unlike other components of jewellery, gold has remained a safe haven for thousands of years. It has repeatedly shown its value and worth through countless financial and geopolitical crises.
What better expression of love than to give actual gold – something that has stood the test of time, weathered all problems and continues to be desired around the world?
We’re not saying that you shouldn’t treat the one you love this Valentine’s Day, or in fact any day (why the excuse?) and you should buy an engagement ring for your big day.
But, when it comes to making the decision of a life time we argue your wealth is better placed is something simple and time-tested such as a bar or coin of pure gold.
If you are planning to give your loved one something golden this Valentine’s day, consider giving them the gift of real gold with GoldSaver. That way they own real, pure 24 carat gold bullion in an extremely safe way.
Saving is never as sexy as splurging on shiny things but delayed gratification is important and by saving in gold now your better-half will be able to afford many more luxuries – whether they be nice meals, great holidays or perhaps some 3D printed shiny trinkets in the coming years.
Oscar Wilde wrote
“I have the simplest tastes. I am always satisfied with the best. And sometimes, only the best will do – it’s that simple.”
Gold really is that simple and it really is the best.
What more could your loved one ask for this Valentine’s Day?
Give The Gift of Real Gold This Valentines Day With GoldSaver
Gold trading today:
Absolute crooks: the bankers supplied 11.1 tonnes of paper gold short to knock the price down by 5.00 dollars.
(courtesy Dave Kranzler/IRD)
11.1 Tonnes Of Paper Gold Dumped In Sixty Seconds
Central banks stand ready to lease gold in increasing quantities should the price rise. – Alan Greenspan, 1998 in Congressional testimony on OTC derivatives
Gold has been in a steady uptrend since December 18th, bottoming at $1131 after a four and half month price correction. Firmly back over the 50 dma, the price momentum appears to be a threat to the “bullion” banks who suppress the price of gold in the paper derivatives market on behalf of the western Central Banks and, ultimately, the BIS.
The banks must feel threatened by the recent activity in both physical and paper gold trading. This morning the price of gold was attacked in the Comex paper market after St. Louis Fed-head, James Bullard, delivered remarks about interest rate policy that should have propelled the price of gold higher: “We think the low-safe-real-rate regime is unlikely to change in the near term. This means the policy rate can also remain relatively low over the forecast horizon” (link).
Instead, the Comex was bombed with paper:
At 9:54 a.m. EST, 3,927 April gold futures contract (paper gold) was dropped on the Comex. Prior to this, the the average number of contracts per minute since the Comex had opened was under 500 contracts. This is 11.1 tonnes of paper gold which hit the Comex trading floor and electronic trading system in a 60 second window. It represents approximately 30% of the total amount of gold the Comex vault operators are reporting to be available for delivery under Comex contracts – dumped in paper form in 1 minute.
This reeks of fear. The western Central Banks have grossly underestimated the eastern hemisphere’s appetite for physically deliverable gold. Despite an attempt by the BIS to mute India’s demand by restricting the availability of cash in India’s banking system, India’s current demand is robust and will likely increase as Indian’s now have cause to fear the Indian Government’s war on cash.
In addition, China’s demand for gold seems to be accelerating. Based on Swiss export numbers, 158 tonnes of gold was shipped to China in December. Far higher than the numbers presented by “official” organizations tracking gold flows. Current premiums to the global market price of gold on the Shanghai Gold Exchange are running in the low teens. So far this week well over 100 tonnes of gold have been delivered onto the SGE. Except for the PBoC, all gold distributed inside China must first pass through the SGE.
The western Central Banks will have a problem if the price of gold begins to take-off, as they will lose control of their ability to control the price using derivatives. Perhaps in addition to the standard price containment operation on the Comex this morning, the attack on the price of gold in the paper market was in response to Eric Sprott’s comments on King World News yesterday:
“There’s no doubt about it if they (investors) keep coming in and buying that kind of tonnage. At some point they will look inside at what little gold is left in the Western vaults and say, ‘No mas. We can’t keep doing this at the rate that they are buying tonnage because we will run out of gold.’ And if they see that they are going to run out of gold in a year or so, when do they raise the white flag? I have told you many times that the Western central banks have been making up for the imbalance in term of supply and demand by dishoarding their gold hoard surreptitiously”
.end
An excellent commentary from Eric Sprott today. He is watching the gold ETF’s from China. This instrument is real physical metal and it has been rising daily. If 10 tonnes of gold is added by Chinese investors per day on a 250 day year, 2500 tonnes of gold will be accumulated which is over 100% of annual global supply (ex China ex Russia)
(courtesy Eric Sprott/Kingworlds)
‘The whole world is buying gold here,’ Eric Sprott tells King World News
Submitted by cpowell on Wed, 2017-02-08 19:54. Section: Daily Dispatches
2:55p ET Wednesday, Februqry 8, 2017
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
Mining entrepreneur and investment house founder Eric Sprott tells King World News today that “the whole world is buying gold here.” Sprott adds that he suspects that Western central banks for years have been inducing the Indian government to undertake measures to restrain gold demand in that country. The interview is excerpted at KWN here:
http://kingworldnews.com/billionaire-eric-sprott-says-western-central-ba…
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
CPowell@GATA.org
END
I brought this story to you yesterday but I am repeating it today because of its significance. Eric Sprott above also commented on it:
(courtesy Bloomberg)
Druckenmiller buys gold after reversing November stance
Submitted by cpowell on Wed, 2017-02-08 20:02. Section: Daily Dispatches
By Katherine Burton and Katia Porzecanski
Bloomberg News
Wednesday, Febrary 8, 2017
Stan Druckenmiller, the billionaire investor with one of the best long-term track records in money management, said he bought gold in late December and January, reversing the sale he made after the U.S. presidential election.
“I wanted to own some currency and no country wants its currency to strengthen,” Druckenmiller said Tuesday in an interview. “Gold was down a lot, so I bought it.”
Druckenmiller, who had held a gold position going into the November election, sold it on Election Night, explaining in a CNBC interview that he was optimistic that President Donald Trump’s administration would bring deregulation and “serious” tax reform that spurs growth. Those benefits, he said, were expected to outweigh concerns about more protectionist trade policies. “All the reasons I owned it for the last couple of years seem to be ending,” he said at the time.
… For the remainder of the report:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-02-08/druckenmiller-bought-…
END
As I have pointed out to you each month on the FRBNY gold report, I speculated correctly that the Germany has repatriated all of its 300 tonnes of gold that it has earmarked to be repatriated, 3 yrs ahead of schedule. Germany still need 111 tonnes of gold to come across the pond from the Bank of France. It’s goal is to have 50% on German soil and 50% in NY
(courtesy zero hedge)
Bundesbank Has Completed Gold Repatriation From New York Fed, Three Years Ahead Of Schedule
In January of 2016, the Bundesbank announced that three years after commencing the transfer of some of its offshore-held gold from vaults located at the Banque de France in Paris and the NY Fed in New York, it had repatriated a total of 366.3 tonnes, bringing the German central bank’s gold reserves held in Frankfurt to 1,402 tonnes, or 41.5% of Germany’s total gold of 3,381 tonnes, for the first time greater than the 1.347 thousand tonnes located at the New York Fed, which as of January 27, 2016 held 39.9% of Germany’s official gold.
“With approximately 1,403 tonnes of gold, Frankfurt has been our largest storage location, ahead of New York, since the end of last year,” said Carl-Ludwig Thiele, Member of the Executive Board of the Deutsche Bundesbank. “The transfers are proceeding smoothly. We have succeeded in once again significantly increasing the transport volume compared with 2014. This means that operations are running very much according to schedule,” added Thiele last January.
As a reminder, according to its gold storage plan, unveiled in January 2013, the Bundesbank would store half of Germany’s gold reserves in its own vaults in Frankfurt am Main by 2020 which would necessitate a transfer to Frankfurt of 300 tonnes of gold from New York and all 374 tonnes of gold from Paris.It also meant that as of January, another 111 tonnes of gold from the NY Fed and 196.4 tonnes of gold from Paris remained to be transferred.
The “politically correct” motives for the transfer, as well as the logistics and the mechanics behind it were explained in a March 2015 video released by the Bundesbank…
… the real reasons, however, is that following several reports on this website which cast doubts on Germany’s gold holdings, in late 2012 the German Court of Auditors demanded that the Bundesbank undertake an audit of its gold reserves. Specifically, the court wanted to ensure that the nearly 3400 tons of gold, of which more than 2,000 tonnes held offshore, is in fact in existence – ‘because stocks have never been checked for authenticity and weight’. The move to repatriate was only accelerate following rumors that much of the offshore-held gold might have been “rehypothecated”, and not be there anymore, that it might have been melted down, leased, or sold.
Ironically, at the time, Bundesbank Board member Carl-Ludwig Thiele told the Handelsblatt that these moves were a “trust-building” measure, and he tried vigorously to put the rumors about the missing gold to rest. Of course, repatriating your gold from foreign central banks is precisely the opposite of a “demonstration of confidence.”
What made matters worse is that at the end of 2013, the Bundesbank announced it had managed to repatriate only 37 tonnes of the total 700 scheduled for redemption, further spooking the local population and suggesting that conspiracy theories that the gold was missing were in fact accurate.
As a result, following blowback from both the media and the public, the Bundesbank accelerated its activity, and repatriated 120 tonnes in 2014 and another 210 in 2015, implying that the Bundesbank’s faith in its foreign central bank peers had declined in inverse proportion to the following accelerated redemption schedule as of January 2016.
* * *
Then, in an update last December, Germany’s Bild reported that in 2016 the Bundesbank has repatriated “more of its gold than planned”, as it moves toward relocating half of the world’s second-largest reserve at home. “We brought back significantly more gold to Germany in 2016 again than initially planned. By now, almost half of the gold reserves are in Germany,” Buba president Jens Weidmann told the German publication. According to Bild, around 1,600 tonnes of Germany’s gold reserves are now in the country, a figure set to rise to 1,700 tonnes by 2020. This, according to our recent calculations, meant that the Bundesbank repatriated roughly 200 tonnes of gold in 2016, comparable to the 210 tonnes its brought back to Frankfurt in 2015, and the total held domestically amounts to 1,600 tonnes at the end of 2016.
Fast forward to today, in a press release, the Bundesbank provided an official update of its gold holdings, and our analysis was accurate: the German central bank said it had “successfully continued its transfers of gold last year”, and in 2016, more than 216 tonnes of gold were transferred to Frankfurt am Main from storage locations abroad: 111 tonnes from New York and 105 tonnes from Paris.
This would make 2016 the year of fastest gold repatriation, with the 216 tons of gold transfered, higher than the previous record of 210 in 2015. Altogether, the Bundesbank, has now transfered a total of 583 tonnes, or 86% of the 674 tonnes planned in total.
Most importantly, as of December 31, the Bundesbank has now completed all of its scheduled gold withdrawals from the NY Fed, having repatriated a total of 300 tonnes, some 3 years ahead of schedule.
“The transfer of gold from New York was completed successfully last year,” said Carl-Ludwig Thiele, Member of the Bundesbank’s Executive Board. “The transfers were carried out without any disruptions or irregularities. The gold storage plan for New York, which envisaged the transfer of 300 tonnes of gold from New York to Frankfurt, was fully realised in 2016,” Mr Thiele stated.
The Bundesbank also said the repatriation of gold reserves back home was “considerably ahead of the origianal schedule” and as Thiele added “We will be able to complete the transfer of gold from Paris this year too.” Which considering there is only 91t of gold left in Paris, or less than Germany withdrew in 2015 and 2016, should be relatively easy.
In summary, as of the end of 2016, the Bundesbank had 47.9% of its gold in Frankfurt – just 2.1% shy of the the planned 50% – 36.6% at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 12.8% at the Bank of England in London, and 2.7% at the Banque de France in Paris.
Why this unexpected scramble to repatraite so much gold 3 years ahead of the 2020 stated schedule, remains a mystery.
end
Your early THURSDAY morning currency, Asian stock market results, important USA/Asian currency crosses, gold/silver pricing overnight along with the price of oil Major stories overnight
1 Chinese yuan vs USA dollar/yuan STRONGER AT 6.8662(SMALL REVALUATION NORTHBOUND /OFFSHORE YUAN NARROWS TO 6.8487 / Shanghai bourse UP 16.19 POINTS OR .51% / HANG SANG CLOSED UP 40.01 POINTS OR .17%
2. Nikkei closed DOWN 99.93 POINTS OR 0.53% /USA: YEN RISES TO 112.29
3. Europe stocks opened ALL IN THE GREEN ( /USA dollar index RISES TO 100.29/Euro DOWN to 1.0685
3b Japan 10 year bond yield: RISES TO +.099%/ !!!!(Japan buying 100% of bond issuance)/Japanese yen vs usa cross now at 112.29/ THIS IS TROUBLESOME AS BANK OF JAPAN IS RUNNING OUT OF BONDS TO BUY./JAPAN 10 YR YIELD FINALLY IN THE POSITIVE/BANK OF JAPAN LOSING CONTROL OF THEIR YIELD CURVE AS THEY PURCHASE ALL BONDS TO GET TO ZERO RATE!!
3c Nikkei now JUST BELOW 17,000
3d USA/Yen rate now well below the important 120 barrier this morning
3e WTI:: 52751 and Brent: 55.50
3f Gold UP/Yen DOWN
3g Japan is to buy the equivalent of 108 billion uSA dollars worth of bond per month or $1.3 trillion. Japan’s GDP equals 5 trillion usa./“HELICOPTER MONEY” OFF THE TABLE FOR NOW /REVERSE OPERATION TWIST ON THE BONDS: PURCHASE OF LONG BONDS AND SELLING THE SHORT END
Japan to buy 100% of all new Japanese debt and by 2018 they will have 25% of all Japanese debt. Fifty percent of Japanese budget financed with debt.
3h Oil UP for WTI and UP for Brent this morning
3i European bond buying continues to push yields lower on all fronts in the EMU. German 10yr bund RISES TO +.302%/Italian 10 yr bond yield DOWN to 2.202%
3j Greek 10 year bond yield RISES to : 7.85%
3k Gold at $1239.90/silver $17.77(8:15 am est) SILVER BELOW RESISTANCE AT $18.50
3l USA vs Russian rouble; (Russian rouble UP 31/100 in roubles/dollar) 58.87-
3m oil into the 52 dollar handle for WTI and 55 handle for Brent/
3n Higher foreign deposits out of China sees huge risk of outflows and a currency depreciation (already upon us). This can spell financial disaster for the rest of the world/China forced to do QE!! as it lowers its yuan value to the dollar/GOT SMALL REVALUATION NORTHBOUND from POBC.
JAPAN ON JAN 29.2016 INITIATES NIRP. THIS MORNING THEY SIGNAL THEY MAY END NIRP. TODAY THE USA/YEN TRADES TO 112.29 DESTROYING JAPANESE CITIZENS WITH HIGHER FOOD INFLATION
30 SNB (Swiss National Bank) still intervening again in the markets driving down the SF. It is not working: USA/SF this morning 0.9988 as the Swiss Franc is still rising against most currencies. Euro vs SF is 1.0663 well above the floor set by the Swiss Finance Minister. Thomas Jordan, chief of the Swiss National Bank continues to purchase euros trying to lower value of the Swiss Franc.
3p BRITAIN VOTES AFFIRMATIVE BREXIT/LOWER PARLIAMENT APPROVES BREXIT COMMENCEMENT
3r the 10 Year German bund now POSITIVE territory with the 10 year RISES to +.302%
3s The Greece ELA NOW at 71.4 billion euros,AND NOW THE ECB WILL ACCEPT GREEK BONDS (WHAT A DISASTER)
The bank withdrawals were causing massive hardship to the Greek bank. the Greek referendum voted overwhelming “NO”. Next step for Greece will be the recapitalization of the banks and that will be difficult.
4. USA 10 year treasury bond at 2.352% early this morning. Thirty year rate at 2.979% /POLICY ERROR)GETTING DANGEROUSLY HIGH
5. Details Ransquawk, Bloomberg, Deutsche bank/Jim Reid.
(courtesy Jim Reid/Bloomberg/Deutsche bank/zero hedge)
Asian Stocks Hit 18 Month High; Europe, US Futures Bounce As Dollar Rises
Asian stocks hit their highest level in 18 months, with positive momentum lifting European shares which were helped by Societe Generale earnings. Yields fell on some of the euro zone’s battered low-rated bonds as investors put aside the political risks that have dominated markets this week. After trading flat, S&P futures bounced as US traders walked boosted by a spike in the USDJPY, ahead of earnings reports from Coca-Cola, Reynolds American, CVS Health, Nvidia and Twitter.
Rising oil prices pushed energy company shares higher in Europe on a busy day of corporate earnings while Asian stocks hit their highest in one and a half years. “The stabilization of the oil price after its recent wobbles, together with solid earnings, for example, Soc Gen today, is driving the positive sentiment,” said Andy Sullivan, portfolio manager with GL Asset Management UK in London.
The Euro STOXX 600 index rose 0.4 percent. Bank shares also rose after French lender Societe Generale reported lower fourth-quarter net income that nonetheless beat analysts forecasts. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.3 percent to their highest since July 2015 with Hong Kong, Taiwan and China among the region’s best performing markets. Japanese shares, however, fell 0.5 percent, hit by earlier yen strength the day before Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe meets U.S. President Donald Trump.
“We have some relief with investors shrugging off some of their concerns with a feeling that things went too far, too fast,” said Martin Van Vliet, senior rates strategist at ING.
With much attention recently on global rates, yields on Spanish and Italian 10-year government bonds fell. Earlier this week, concern over the impact of elections this year in countries including France and Germany saw investors sell bonds of lower-rated euro zone countries. Spanish 10-year yields fell 4 basis points to 1.66 percent while Italian equivalents fell 3 bps to 2.2 percent. French yields dipped 1 bps to 1.01 percent. The premium investors demand to hold French rather than German debt hit its highest in four years on Wednesday, three months before the final round of a presidential election expected to include far-right, anti-euro candidate Marine Le Pen. Yields on German 10-year bonds, seen as among the world’s safest assets, rose 0.5 bps to 0.31 percent.
In addition to political worries, bond investors are contemplating the impact of the ECB eventually winding down its bond-buying stimulus scheme, which has driven down borrowing costs in the bloc for the past two years. ECB President Mario Draghi and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, bidding for re-election later this year, meet on Thursday. A number of German officials have called on the ECB to unwind its monetary stimulus.
The euro steadied just below $1.07 after falling on Wednesday to a two-week low of $1.0640. The yen fell 0.3 percent to 112.39 per dollar, having earlier traded as strong as 111.70. The dollar index was unchanged.
In the US, 10Y yields fell to their lowest since mid-January on Wednesday as investors re-assess how many interest rate rises can be expected from the Federal Reserve and look for clarity over whether Trump will make good on his campaign pledges for tax cuts and infrastructure spending. Ten-year Treasuries yielded 2.36% in European trade on Thursday, up 1.2 bps.
Oil prices rose after an unexpected draw down in U.S. gasoline inventories. Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 51 cents a barrel, or 0.9 percent, to $55.63. In a sign that political risks are still on the radar, gold held close to three-month highs touched on Wednesday. Spot gold rose 0.1 percent to $1,243 an ounce, compared with from Wednesday’s high of $1,244.67.
Bulletin Headline Summary from RanSquawk
- Major European indices trade positively this morning and general sentiment leans toward risk on
- The USD continues to trade in limbo, and while traders continue to look across the spectrum of major counterparts, we see there is reluctance to reinstate the US reflation trade, with USD/JPY notably restricted
- Highlights include Initial Jobless Claims, Speakers include: BoE Govenor Carney, Feds Evans, and Feds Bullard
Market Snapshot
- S&P 500 futures up 0.2% to 2,295
- Brent Futures up 0.9% to $55.62/bbl
- Gold spot up 0.1% to $1,243.30
- U.S. Dollar Index down 0.2% to 100.12
- STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3% to 364.95
- German 10Y yield rose 1.2 bps to 0.308%
- Euro up 0.07% to 1.0705 per US$
- Brent Futures up 0.9% to $55.62/bbl
- Italian 10Y yield fell 12.1 bps to 2.246%
- Spanish 10Y yield fell 6.7 bps to 1.629%
- MXAP down 0.2% to 143.03
- MXAPJ up 0.4% to 459.43
- Nikkei down 0.5% to 18,907.67
- Topix down 0.7% to 1,513.55
- Hang Seng Index up 0.2% to 23,525.14
- Shanghai Composite up 0.5% to 3,183.18
- Sensex up 0.1% to 28,330.91
- Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.2% to 5,664.62
- Kospi up 0.04% to 2,065.88
Top BBG News
- Anthem Inc.’s $48 billion deal to buy Cigna Corp. was blocked by a federal judge, putting an end to the second of two massive mergers that would have reshaped the U.S. health-care landscape
- Deutsche Bank AG is shutting down its U.S. swaps-clearing business as part of an overhaul of its investment bank to improve profitability, according to a person briefed on the decision
- The Senate confirmed one of its own, Jeff Sessions, as attorney general after more than a day of contentious debate that took an unusual turn when Republicans silenced Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren
- President Donald Trump is injecting himself into the daily business of U.S. companies to an unprecedented extent, spurring investors and executives to weigh their exposure to his wrath when making decisions
- SoftBank Group Corp. is aiming to close the first round of investment in its planned $100 billion technology fund by the end of this month, giving Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son an enormous war chest to go on the hunt for deals, according to people familiar with the matter
- Boeing Co. is the front-runner as Singapore Airlines Ltd. closes in on an order for at least 35 wide-body aircraft amid a battle with Chinese and Middle Eastern carriers, people familiar with the matter said
- The global oil market’s march to equilibrium won’t be deterred by the increasing volume of crude being poured into U.S. storage tanks, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
Asia equity markets continued its recent choppy trade following a mixed lead from the US where stocks closed mostly higher, although the DJIA underperformed amid weakness in financials. ASX 200 (+0.2%) pared opening losses and finished marginally higher as gains in defensive stocks overshadowed weakness in mining names, while Nikkei 225 (-0.5%) was dampened by recent JPY strength although the index finished off worse levels alongside a recovery in USD/JPY. Chinese markets ignored the absence of a PBoC’s liquidity injection for the 5th consecutive day as Shanghai Comp. (+0.5%) and Hang Seng (+0.1%) traded positive with the latter led by financials and gambling names. 10yr JGBs were uneventful with prices relatively flat throughout the session, while today’s 30yr JGB auction failed to inspire as b/c, prices and the tail-in price deteriorated from the prior month. PBoC refrained from open markets operations for the 5th consecutive day due to high liquidity conditions, which brings the total amount of funds drained so far this week to CNY 715bn.
Top Asia News
- Nissan Operating Profit Falls 15% on Rise in U.S. Incentives
- Philippines Holds Benchmark Rate as Inflation Pressure Mounts
- China Car Sales Decline 9.8% After Tax Increase, Lunar New Year
- China H Shares Rally to 14-Month High as Autos, Financials Climb
- Banks in Some Chinese Cities Said to Increase Mortgage Rates
- MTN Close to Buying Stake in Iranian State Internet Provider
- India’s Jan. Passenger Vehicle Sales Rise 14.4% to 265,320 Units
In Europe this morning, major indices trade positively and general sentiment leans toward risk on. In terms of sectors, healthcare is the best performing up 1.1% with materials retracing some of yesterday’s gains. Energy names started off on the front foot after Total posted a strong set of results better than those seen by BP earlier on in the week and in the financial sector Commerzbank also reported well but subsequently shares have fallen and are now trading lower by around 3%. In Fixed income markets, UST are in demand due to geopolitical risks hitting the belly with 5YR yield eyeing 180bps and 10 YR yield struggling around 235bps. German paper still in demand due to the internal EU demand away from periphery. Interestingly the GE/FR spread has tightened to 66bps a move of 14bps over the last two day. In terms of this morning’s Gilt auction, the line provided a solid bid/cover and smaller tail than previous, although failed to sway Gilts.
Top European News
- SocGen Posts Net That Tops Estimates, Plans Car-Leasing IPO
- Mediobanca Rises After Second-Quarter Profit Almost Doubles
- MiFID II Market-Rule Overhaul Faces Crucial Parliament Vote
- HSBC Said to Seek Wealth Management Asset Acquisitions This Year
- Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Fined by U.K. for Failing to Be Open
- Draghi Meets Merkel as Populist Concerns Trump ECB Criticism
In currencies, the USD continues to trade in limbo, and while traders continue to look across the spectrum of major counterparts, we see there is reluctance to reinstate the US reflation trade, with USDJPY notably restricted. As such, geopolitical risk dominates, and the lead (risk on) trade maintains a tight range below 112.50. EURUSD has also managed to brush off the EU wide political risks weighing on the single unit. This comes with the Bund spreads (with France) narrowing, but through 1.0700, we are seeing plenty of supply coming in with initial resistance at 1.0715-20 holding. The big move in Asia was NZD on the back of the exchange rate related comments from the central bank, but after a series of losses which saw 0.7200 eventually taken out, we have seen some moderation since as the USD continues to flounder. Comments from RBA gov Lowe was a little more non committal on the AUD exchange rate, saying it is hard to say whether the AUD is overvalued or not, and this gave the spot rate some support and saw a modest, but tentative move higher through 0.7650. Some modest outperformance in GBP, as EURGBP is pressed back down to 0.8500, and given the above flow, Cable through 1.2550. Resistance in the latter seen ahead of 1.2600, allies with real money and tech based demand in the cross rate below the above mentioned figure level.
In commodities, oil rose 1.2 percent to $52.94 per barrel. The global oil market’s march to equilibrium won’t be deterred by the increasing volume of crude being poured into U.S. storage tanks, according to Goldman Sachs. Copper three-month forwards fell 0.4 percent. The metal jumped 1.7 percent Wednesday after workers at the biggest mine in Chile vowed to strike. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. forecast what would be the first deficit of the metal since 2011. Gold was flat at $1,241.93 an ounce, after touching the highest level since November on Wednesday. Oil prices are back to the fore as the significant rise in inventory (Cushing) caused a moderate sell off in WTI in relative terms, with the latest rise potentially signalling the longer term impacts of the OPEC agreements on supply made last year. WTI tested towards USD53.00 earlier today, but this just puts us back into the middle of the near term range. Natural Gas higher though due to US seasonal factors. Elsewhere, base and precious metals all modestly higher in response to USD caution.
Looking at the day ahead, the calendar continues to remain fairly sparse for the most part today. The highlight this morning in Europe is likely to be the December trade data in Germany, where exports declined by -3.3%, well below the -1.10% expected (down from +3.9%) while over in the US the only data of note is the latest weekly initial jobless claims reading and the December wholesale trade and inventories report. Away from the data we are due to hear from the Fed’s Bullard and the Fed’s Evans. BoE Governor Carney is also scheduled to speak in London this evening at 6.30pm GMT. Finally on the earnings front we’ve got 27 S&P 500 companies due to report including Coca-Cola and CVS Health Corp.
US Event Calendar
- 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, est. 249,000, prior 246,000; Continuing Claims, est. 2.06m, prior 2.06m
- 9:05am: Fed’s Bullard Speaks in St. Louis
9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, prior 46.6 - 10am: Wholesale Trade Sales MoM, prior 0.4%; Wholesale Inventories MoM, est. 1.0%, prior 1.0%
- 10am: Freddie Mac mortgage rates
- 10:30am: EIA natural-gas storage change
- 12pm: Monthly World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates
- 1:10pm: Fed’s Evans Speaks on Economy and Policy in Chicago
DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
Yesterday saw a big rally in global bonds especially in the European periphery and France. Indeed 10y OAT’s finished the day 10.8bps lower in yield at 0.998%, the strongest day in fact since September 2015. In the periphery we also saw yields in Italy (-11.7bps), Spain (-7.2bps) and Portugal (-12.8bps) finish sharply lower while 10y Bunds (-5.5bps) – while underperforming – closed below 0.300% for the first time since January 10th. That meant the OAT-Bund spread eased back to 71bps from the recent 77bps wide mark. The rally really kicked into the gear straight from the open and steadily continued over much of the session. While much of the suggestion was that it was just an unwinding of some of the recent selloff, boosted also by strong auction demand in Germany and Portugal, there was a story also doing the rounds on Bloomberg concerning an internal ECB meeting in which Draghi supposedly said that he sees the ECB maintaining an accommodative policy until the end of his mandate in 2019. Given the imminent taper is a big part of the recent sovereign underperformance then one can see why markets responded to this.
The positive momentum for bonds kicked on into the US session too and we saw 10y Treasury yields end the day 5.7bps lower at 2.336%, despite a temporary move higher following a soft 10y auction which seemed to be overshadowed by comments from Larry Fink after he said that there’s a rising chance of 10y yields going back below 2% given that fiscal stimulus policies won’t be in place until 2018. Yesterday’s closing level means Treasury yields are nearly 13bps lower this week alone and are only just above the YTD low made intraday on the 17th January of 2.306%. Yields have also fallen for 4 days in a row now which is the longest run since June last year.
So while it was a busy day for bonds, it was once again another indifferent session for risk assets. In Europe the Stoxx 600 edged up +0.33%, meaning it is pretty much back to flat for the week, while European Banks (-0.77%) lagged with the move lower for bond yields. Meanwhile at the closing bell last night the S&P 500 finished +0.07%. Incredibly that’s yet another day where the index has moved up or down by less than 0.10%, taking the tally to 7 in the last 10 sessions. That isn’t the only remarkable stat however. Yesterday’s move means the index has now gone 82 sessions without falling more than 1% which is the longest streak since 2006. In addition, the index has now also gone 37 days in a row with an intraday range of less than 1% – the longest run that we can find. Needless to say then that equity vol stayed low again yesterday with the VIX at 11.45 (versus the 10.58 low at the end of January) and the VSTOXX at 16.83 (versus the recent low of 14.60). It was a similar story in credit too with the iTraxx Main just 0.5bps tighter despite the big moves in bonds, while CDX IG finished just over 1bp wider.
This morning in Asia we’ve seen a continuation of the bond rally for the most part. The most notable have been the moves for 10y yields in Australia (-5.6bps) and New Zealand (-9.5bps) with the latter outperforming after the RBNZ left rates on hold and the associated statement said that monetary policy would remain accommodative for some time. JGB’s are little changed but we’ve also seen yields fall in Hong Kong (-3.7bps), South Korea (-2.5pbs) and Singapore (-2.5bps). The Greenback is little changed as we go to print, as is Gold and Oil, while it’s been another fairly uninspiring session for risk assets. The Nikkei (-0.28%) and ASX (-0.11%) are a shade lower while the Hang Seng (+0.39%), Shanghai Comp (+0.37%) and Kospi (+0.20%) are up.
Truth be told there really wasn’t a great deal more that was interesting yesterday. Last night we got confirmation that MP’s in the House of Commons had voted overwhelmingly in favour of a draft law to trigger Article 50 by 494 votes to 122. The legislation now moves on to the House of Lords for further scrutiny with the FT highlighting that the peers are under big pressure to approve without any amendments.
Staying in Europe, yesterday we also got another political poll out of France, which largely confirmed some of the recent trends. The Elabe poll for BFMTV showed Le Pen coming out on top in the first round at 25.5-26% versus 22-23.5% for Macron, 17-18% for Fillon and 15-15.5% for Hamon. A second round vote between Le Pen and Macron had Macron coming out on top at 63% to 37% and a vote between Le Pen and Fillon showed the latter coming out on top at 56% to 44%.
Looking at the day ahead, the calendar continues to remain fairly sparse for the most part today. The highlight this morning in Europe is likely to be the December trade data in Germany while over in the US this afternoon the only data of note is the latest weekly initial jobless claims reading and the December wholesale trade and inventories report. Away from the data we are due to hear from the Fed’s Bullard at 2.05pm GMT and then the Fed’s Evans at 6.10pm GMT. BoE Governor Carney is also scheduled to speak in London this evening at 6.30pm GMT. Finally on the earnings front we’ve got 27 S&P 500 companies due to report including Coca-Cola and CVS Health Corp.
end
i)Late WEDNESDAY night/THURSDAY morning: Shanghai closed UP 16.19 POINTS OR .51%/ /Hang Sang CLOSED UP 40.01 POINTS OR .17% . The Nikkei closed DOWN 99.93 POINTS OR 0.53% /Australia’s all ordinaires CLOSED UP 0.25%/Chinese yuan (ONSHORE) closed UP at 6.8662/Oil ROSE to 52.75 dollars per barrel for WTI and 55.50 for Brent. Stocks in Europe ALL IN THE GREEN. Offshore yuan trades 6.8487 yuan to the dollar vs 6.8725 for onshore yuan.THE SPREAD BETWEEN ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE NARROWS QUITE A BIT AS DOLLARS ARE ATTEMPTING TO LEAVE CHINA’S SHORES. ONSHORE YUAN STRONGER AS IS OFFSHORE YUAN COUPLED WITH THE STRONGER DOLLAR
3a)THAILAND/SOUTH KOREA/:
END
b) REPORT ON JAPAN
c) REPORT ON CHINA
The following is very important. We have been reporting that China is in a “tightening mode” as they are concerned with inflation. They have drained 715 billion yuan form circulation without a corresponding reverse repo. It sure looks serious enough and this could have devastating effects on the world’s global economy
(courtesy zero hedge)
China Drains CNY715 Billion In Liquidity After Fifth Day Without Reverse Repo
What a difference three weeks makes. On January 18, heading into the Lunar New Year holidays, we reported that the PBOC had injected a record 1.04 trillion yuan into the liquidity-starved banking system in an attempt to avoid a liquidity crunch as telegraphed just days prior by dramatic surge in short-term repo rates.
Since then, however, between the end of the holidays, and the stated Chinese intention to tighten the monetary system, things have changed drastically.
First of all, last Friday, China announced an unexpected tightening of policy when it raised rates on 7, 14 and 28-day reverse repos by 10bps to 2.35%, 2.50% and 2.65% respectively. That was first increase in the 28-day contracts since 2015 and since 2013 for the other two tenors. As this was the first working day following the New Year holiday in China, it was a decent “statement of intent” by the PBoC.
At the same time, as we explained on Sunday, in a parallel tightening eipsode, the PBOC also increased Standing Lending Facility rates on overnight/7-day/1-month tenors by 35bp/10bp/10bp (to 3.10%/3.35%/3.7%), sending Chinese government bond futures sliding as fears rose that China is actually serious about tightening this time.
Then on Thursday morning, an article in China’s Securities Journal said that China may keep tightening monetary policy this year amid pressure from yuan rate stabilization, financial de-leveraging, curbs on real estate and faster inflation. In other words, China may have reached the phase where it admits it has a problem, and is ready to do something about it. What was notable is that the article hinted that while even more could be done, the economic basis and inflation situation don’t yet support China entering interest rate hike cycle.
Translation: if inflation picks up more from here, the PBOC will use the shotgun approach and hike rates. For now however, the piece concluded that the central bank is focusing more on price tools, which means “an increase in open market rates may be considered guidance.”
And sure enough, 20 days after the PBOC had injected a record CNY1+ trillion in liquidity, it is now draining it just as fast, and as the PBOC just reported, the Central Bank did not conduct any Reverse Repo open market operations for the fifth consecutive trading day “in order to maintain a stable level of liquidity in the interbank market”, the PBOC said in a statement on its website.
With CNY150 billion of reverse repos maturing today, the PBOC’s lack of action had the effect of draining CNY150 billion from the market today.
The PBOC also added that “while the central bank has started to gradually drain liquidity from the interbank market after the end of the Chinese New Year holiday, liquidity is still at an adequate level” repeating the explanation it used in the past three days.
According to Market News, the market sees the lack of open market operations as a clear signal of tighter monetary policy. Furthermore, the consecutive stops of OMOs show PBOC’s bias for a prudent tilted to neutral monetary policy in a bid to prevent risks and reduce leverage ratio, said Ming Ming, chief analyst with CITIC Securities in a research note.
In total, the PBOC has drained a total of CNY715 billion in liquidity so far this week, primarily as a result of maturing reverse repos which the central bank refuses to roll over. A total of CNY80 billion in reverse repos will mature later this week and the market will be watching the PBOC’s response closely. Should it perceive that the PBOC has withdrawn too much liquidity, another liquidity tantrum is inevitable.
end
Chinese leader Xi Jinping sends a letter to Trump seeking a “constructive relationship
(courtesy zero hedge)
Trump “Breaks Ice” With China’s Xi, Sends Thank You Letter Seeking “Constructive Relationship”
After a fiery start to his foreign policy overtures, Trump is gradually normalizing his approach to international diplomacy.
On the same day as relations with Mexico appeared to return to normal, following reports of an upcoming meeting between Rex Tillerson and his Mexican counterpart, and days ahead of the much anticipated summit with Japan’s PM Abe, Trump “broke the ice” with Chinese President Xi Jinping in a letter that marked the US president’s first direct communication with the Chinese leader since he took office, in which he said he looked forward to working with him to develop relations.
Trump thanked Xi for a congratulatory letter and wished the Chinese people a happy Year of the Rooster, according to White House spokesman Sean Spicer. “President Trump stated that he looks forward to working with President Xi to develop a constructive relationship that benefits both the United States and China,” Spicer said in a statement Wednesday night.
Still, while Trump has had phone calls with Vladimir Putin, Enrique Pena Nieto and Recep Tayyip Erdogan since he took office, some perceived the mere letter as a modest snub to the president of the world’s second biggest economy. Trump and Xi have yet to speak directly since Trump took office on Jan. 20, although they did talk soon after Trump won the U.S. presidential election in November.
Trump, who has spoken with more than a dozen heads of state since taking office, is scheduled to speak on Thursday with the leaders of Afghanistan, Qatar, Kuwait and Iraq.
China Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang responded in his daily briefing by saying “we highly appreciate President Trump’s holiday greetings to President Xi Jinping and the Chinese people.” Asked whether it was a snub that Trump had held calls with many other world leaders as president, but not Xi, Lu said: “This kind of remark is meaningless.”
He reiterated that China and the U.S. had maintained “close communication” since Trump took office and that cooperation was the “only correct choice”. “China is willing to work with the United States in adhering to the principles of non-confrontation, mutual respect and mutual benefit to promote cooperation, control disputes, and on a healthy and stable foundation, promote greater development in China-U.S. ties,” Lu said.
Diplomatic sources in Beijing say China has been nervous about Xi being left humiliated in the event a call with Trump goes wrong and the details are leaked to the U.S. media.
“That is the last thing China wants,” a source familiar with China’s thinking on relations with the United States told Reuters. “It would be incredibly embarrassing for President Xi and for Chinese people, who value the concept of face.” A senior non-U.S. Western diplomat said China was unlikely to be in a rush to set up such a call. “These things need to happen in a very controlled environment for China, and China can’t guarantee that with the unpredictable Trump,” the diplomat said.
“Trump also seems too distracted with other issues at the moment to give too much attention to China.”
As Bloomberg adds, :prior U.S. leaders have not always rushed to chat on the phone with their Chinese counterparts, even though Jiang Zemin’s visit to America in October 1997 led to an agreement on a hotline. Former President George W. Bush waited until July of his first term to speak with Jiang. By contrast, Barack Obama called Hu Jintao 11 days after his inauguration in 2009.”
Xi has reached out to Trump three times since his election win, including two congratulatory messages. They had a phone conversation on Nov. 14 in which Xi said cooperation was “the only correct choice” for ties. “It’s better than nothing, but it’s only a very small gesture,” said Shi Yinhong, a foreign affairs adviser to China’s cabinet and director of the Center on American Studies at Renmin University in Beijing, referring to Trump’s note. “Trump’s China policy hasn’t taken a clear shape yet, although all the signs so far point to a combative approach.”
China has repeatedly said it has smooth contacts with the Trump team. The Foreign Ministry in Beijing said last week the two countries were remaining “in close touch”. That contact has been led by China’s top diplomat, State Councillor Yang Jiechi, who outranks the foreign minister. Yang told Michael Flynn, Trump’s National Security Advisor, last week that China hopes it can work with the United States to manage and control disputes and sensitive problems.
The source familiar with China’s thinking said Trump’s administration was “very clear” about China’s position on Taiwan. Trump has yet to mention Taiwan since he took office.
Chinese state media has wondered whether Trump has a China policy at all. On Thursday, the widely read Global Times tabloid, published by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, noted that Trump had not immediately confronted China as had been expected because he had realized upsetting Beijing would backfire badly.
“He has probably realized that real tough action against China would result in a complex chain reaction, even beyond his control,” the paper said in an editorial.
In a sign that Trump is gradually learning conventional diplomacy, Wang Yiwei, a professor of international relations at Beijing’s elite Renmin University, said the letter suggested the new U.S. administration wanted to signal the importance it attached to the U.S.-China relationship without risking being confronted on specific issues. “Trump has sent many messages that makes the world confused, like on the South China Sea and ‘One China’ policy, so if he makes a phone call President Xi will ask ‘what do you mean?’,” Wang said. “He wants to avoid this so he just sends a letter for the first step.”
It is the next steps, however, that worry China.
Beijing has sought both official and informal channels to boost communication with the new administration. Trump’s daughter Ivanka was invited to a Chinese lunar new year event on Feb. 1 in the embassy in Washington, and a White House official said Ambassador Cui Tiankai and Jared Kushner, Ivanka’s husband and a presidential adviser, have an ongoing dialogue. “The most worrying aspect about the new presidency is his temperament, not his policy,” said Wang Fan, director of China Foreign Affairs University’s Institute of International Relations. “We’re worried he’d go to the extreme.”
END
Bitcoin plunges in value after Chinese exchanges suspend withdrawals. Of course gold is the beneficiary
(courtesy zero hedge)
Bitcoin Plunges After Chinese Exchanges Suspend Bitcoin Withdrawals
Yesterday’s ominous closed-door meetings between the PBOC and bitcoin exchanges, appears to have had a dramatic effect, and as at least two Chinese bitcoin exchanges, Huobi and OKCoin, reported moments ago, all bitcoin withdrawals are now effectively suspended.
The result on bitcoin price was immediate and dramatic with bitcoin traded in China tumbling 7%.
This is the third major plunge driven by PBOC words (or deeds) pushing the dollar price of Bitcoin back below $1000
Here is the statement issued by Huobi, which we assume will be cross-posted by all other Chinese bitcoin marketplaces, in what appears to be the final crackdown phase by the Chinese central bank on local bitcoin traders (google translated).:
respected user:
According to regulatory authorities, “Bitcoin trading platform shall not violate national anti-money laundering, foreign exchange management and payment and settlement and other financial laws and regulations” requirements, the network will be strictly in accordance with relevant laws and regulations, combined with industry experience, the industry counterparts bit Money laundering regulations, a comprehensive upgrade platform for anti-money laundering system to effectively prevent and combat the use of Bitcoin for money laundering, exchange, pyramid schemes and other illegal activities. In order to avoid possible illegal transactions that may continue before the system upgrade is complete, the Company decides:
1) immediately from the moment, the fire network to suspend a comprehensive bit of cash and cash Lait cash business;
2) RMB cash withdrawal and other operations are not affected;
3) The implementation of the system immediately after the completion of recovery Bitcoin, Laite coin currency services, industry-standard development and implementation time is expected to 1 month, may also be substantially ahead of the development process.
We apologize for the inconvenience, thank you for your understanding and support of the fire!
Chinese Banks Begin To Raise Mortgage Rates
Raising rates on reverse repos, hiking the cost it charges on its Medium-Term Loan Facility and Standing Lending Facility, five consecutive day without a reverse repo liquidity injection (or rather a CNY715 billion liquidity drain), and now in the latest indication of overall tightening of monetary conditions, China has started to hike mortgage rates.
According to press reports, some bank branches in Beijing, Guangzhou and Chongqing have raised mortgage rates for first-home buyers recently. The China Securities Journal confirms as much, reporting that China’s banks in some big cities have started to lower discounts on lending rates for fist-time home buyers, joining recent steps to curb financial risks stemming loose credit conditions.
Following up on the Chinese report, Reuters notes that since the start of 2017, banks in Beijing have started discounting mortgage rates as much as 10 percent off the official benchmark rate, reducing from as much as 15 percent previously, CSJ said on its website. The current one-year benchmark lending rate set by the People’s Bank of China is at 4.35 percent, the lending rate for loans up to five years is at 4.75 percent and loans longer than 5 years is at 4.9 percent.
Few lenders in Beijing and Shanghai still offer mortgage rate discounts more than 10 percent off the benchmark, the Chinese paper said. “There are indications that the financial environment for the property market will no longer be loose in 2017,” it said.
In the southern city of Guangzhou, for example, the Postal Savings Bank, Industrial Bank and Rural Commercial Bank have also adjusted discounts on mortgage rates to as much as 10% off the benchmark rate from as much as 15%, the paper said.
Confirming the tightening move, banks in Guangzhou have been told by regulators to tighten screws on mortgage lending in light of a ramp up in new loans in January, the paper said.
The crackdown on mortgage lending comes as Chinese banks may have doled out 2.3 trillion yuan ($334.88 billion) in new loans in January, the second highest monthly tally ever and building off last year’s record lending, according to a Reuters poll. If confirmed, it will suggest that while the PBOC is taking away liquidity with one hand, it is generously adding it with the other. Alternatively, it could simply be a calendar effect as Chinese banks usually “front load” loans at the start of year in order to maintain their market shares.
The central bank hopes higher funding costs could help contain credit growth amid fears of asset bubbles and financial risks, analysts say.
As reported last month, the Chinese housing market finally hit an inflection point in December when it recorded the first slowdown in home price growth after 19 consecutive months of constant acceleration

However, as the chart above shows, if Beijing is indeed intent on normalizing the local housing bubble, there is a long way down from here. The upcoming landing (whether soft or hard) in the housing market as the third consecutive bubble in under a decade pops, is why Deutsche Bank earlier speculated that the global economy is about to suffer a downward inflection point, as the global growth dynamo, China, suddenly goes into reverse.

end
4. EUROPEAN AFFAIRS
GREECE/TRUMP’S EU AMBASSADOR
Trumps new ambassador Ted Malloch lays it out perfectly as he states that Greece is likely to severe ties with Germany and exit the Euro
(courtesy zero hedge)
Trump’s EU Ambassador Says Greece Likely To “Sever Ties With Germany & Exit The Euro”
Amid a more prolonged economic doldrums than The Great Depression, Greece is heading towards its 4th bailout/deal with creditors. Adding to Grexit fears (voiced by many in and out of Greece), Ted Malloch, President Trump’s proposed US ambassador to the EU, casts doubt on survival of eurozone and says Athens should return to drachma.
As we noted previously, for the umpteenth time, the IMF has warned that Greece cannot meet fiscal targets set by its creditors. And once again, the IMF insists that it will not be a part of the “Troika” unless the goals on Greece are realistic. History suggests the IMF will cave in to Germany and agree to some half-baked plan (make that 1/8th baked plan) that will supposedly put Greece back on track. Such nonsense has been going on for years. Mercy, Please!
[It’s worse than the Great Depression…]
A view President Trump’s proposed ambassador to EU holds…
Days after being accused of “outrageous malevolence” towards the EU for publicly declaring that it “needs a little taming”, The Guardian reports that Trump’s nominee, Ted Malloch, said on Wednesday that the euro currency area in its present form was unlikely to last longer than 18 months.
“Whether the eurozone survives I think is very much a question that is on the agenda,” he told Greek Skai TV’s late-night chat show Istories. “We have had the exit of the UK, there are elections in other European countries, so I think it is something that will be determined over the course of the next year, year-and-a half.
“Why is Greece again on the brink? It seems like a deja vu, will it ever end? I think this time I would have to say that the odds are higher that Greece itself will break out of the euro.”
The stridently Brexit-supporting businessman, who has yet to be confirmed as the US president’s EU ambassador, said he wholeheartedly agreed with Trump’s tweet from 2012 saying Greece should return to the drachma, its former currency.
Greece should get out of the euro & go back to their own currency–they are just wasting time.
“I personally think [Trump] was right. I would also say that this probably should have been instigated four years ago, and probably it would have been easier or simpler to do,” Malloch said in the interview with the show’s chief anchor, Alexis Papahelas.
Malloch said: “I have travelled to Greece, met lots of Greek people, I have academic friends in Greece and they say that these austerity plans are really deeply hurting the Greek people, and that the situation is simply unsustainable. So you might have to ask the question if what comes next could possibly be worse than what’s happening now.”
The biggest unknown was not a euro exit, but the chaos it would likely engender as Greece moved to a new currency, he said.
“If the [IMF] will not participate in a new bailout that does not include substantial debt relief, and that’s what they are saying, then that, more or less, ensures a collision course with eurozone creditors,” Malloch added, saying it was imperative that EU member states forgave a substantial part of Greece’s mountainous public debt.
“Now we all know that primarily [puts pressure on] Germany, which remains opposed to any such actions, so I think it suggests that Greece might have to sever ties and do Grexit and exit the euro,” he said.
‘
end
The yield curve in Greece totally inverts with the 10 yr bond yield at 7.85% and the 2 yr at 10% signifying a huge potential for a GREXIT. It seems that we have 2 parties that cannot agree on what to do with respect to Greece; the IMF who wants to cut Greece’s debt but Germany says no. the IMF states that Greece cannot live with their huge debt and cannot have a primary surplus of 3.5% in perpetuity. If the IMF is not part of the Troika is bailing out Greece, then Germany will bail which will make the GREXIT a certainty and bring chaos to the monetary EU
(courtesy zero hedge)
Grexit Fears Loom As Greek Yield Curve Crushed To Brexit Extremes
Slowly but surely the “whatever-it-takes”-protected markets are waking up to the latest round of Grexit fear as Troika disagreements are once again pitting ongoing greater depression economics against drachmatization for the desperate Greeks. The Greek yield curve has inverted dramatically,
with 2Y yields topping 10% as risk is worse since Brexit…
Bailout #4? Or unilateral haircuts for the ECB?
end
5. RUSSIAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN AFFAIRS
Israel
This does not look good. Seven rockets were fired from ISIS and 4 from Egypt’s side trying to hit the holiday capital of Israel, Eilat. Three were intercepted by the Dome and the 4th landed harmless in no man’s land. Also one mortar landed in the Golan Heights. Israel will respond in kind
Israel/Jerusalem Post
ISIS REPORTEDLY RESPONSIBLE FOR ROCKETS FIRED FROM EGYPT INTO EILAT
BYJPOST.COM STAFF
IRAN
It sure looks like Iran is not scared from Trump’s scare tactics
(courtesy zero hedge)
Iran Launches Another Ballistic Missile
So much for hope that Iran was prepared to de-escalate military tensions with the US.
As we reported yesterday, when we asked rhetorically “did Trump scare Iran“, according to satellite photos obtained by Fox, Iran had pulled a missile from a launchpad, despite prepping it previously for launch, in a sign perhaps that Tehran was willing to make the first step in de-escalating tensions with Trump.
Alas, that was not the case, and as Fox News reports moments ago, citing a US official, Iran has launches another missile from launchpad where it conducted ballistic missile test last month.
NEWS ALERT: U.S. Official: Iran launches another missile from launchpad where it conducted ballistic missle test last month. #SpecialReport
According to Fox, the Semnan launch pad was the same as the one where recent satellite photos showed Iran had placed a Safir rocket poised to put a satellite into space before it was taken off the launcher. The reason Iran scrubbed the previous launch is not yet known. The missile used in Wednesday’s launch was a short-range Mersad surface-to-air missile, which impacted 35 miles away, according to a U.S. official.
This latest test comes less than a week after the U.S. placed new sanctions on Iran. There’s been a flurry of activity at the Semnan launch pad, located about 140 miles east of Tehran, in recent weeks, officials have told Fox News.
* * *
While we are merely speculating, the launch may be in response to last night’s report from Reuters that President Trump’s administration was considering potentially designating Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization, according to U.S. officials familiar with the matter. According to officials, such a proposal, which if implemented would add to measures the United States has already imposed on individuals and entities linked to the IRGC.

Members of the Iranian revolutionary guard march during a parade
The IRGC is by far Iran’s most powerful security entity, which also has control over large stakes in Iran’s economy and huge influence in its political system. To be sure, Reuters admits that it had not seen a copy of the proposal, which could come in the form of an executive order directing the State Department to consider designating the IRGC as a terrorist group. It is unclear whether Trump would sign such an order.
The Revolutionary Guards answer to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose power far surpasses that of Rouhani.
Naming Iran’s single most powerful military and political institution as a terrorist group could have potentially destabilizing effects, including further inflaming regional conflicts in which the United States and regional arch-rivals blame Iran for interference. Iran denies those allegations. It would also likely complicate the U.S. fight against Islamic State in Iraq, where Shi’ite militias backed by Iran and advised by IRGC fighters are battling the Sunni jihadist group.
According to Reuters, some of Trump’s more hawkish advisors in the White House have been urging him to increase sanctions on Iran since his administration began to take shape. After tightening sanctions against Iran last week in response to a ballistic missile test, White House officials said the measures were an “initial” step.
The United States has already blacklisted dozens of entities and people for affiliations with the IRGC. In 2007, the U.S. Treasury designated the IRGC’s Quds Force, its elite unit in charge of its operations abroad, “for its support of terrorism,” and has said it is Iran’s “primary arm for executing its policy of supporting terrorist and insurgent groups.”
A designation of the entire IRGC as a terrorist group would potentially have much broader implications, including for the 2015 nuclear deal negotiated between Iran and the United States and other major world powers. Sanctioning the IRGC could also backfire in different ways, this official warned, as it could strengthen the hardliners and undercut more moderate leaders such as Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, and encourage Iranian-backed forces in Iraq and Syria to curtail any action against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq and perhaps even sponsor actions against U.S.-backed or even American forces battling Islamic State in Iraq.
“The Iranians will not take any U.S. action lying down,” said the official. “They may not act quickly or in the open, but there is a danger of an escalating conflict.”
end
Russia/Turkey/Syria
Russian airstrike accidentally kills 3 Turkish soldiers stationed in Syria with un co- ordinated attacks
(courtesy zero hedge)
Russian Airstrike Accidentally Kills Three Turkish Soldiers In Syria
A Russian airstrike accidentally killed three Turkish soldiers and wounded 11 others during an operation against the Islamic State in northern Syria on Thursday morning, Turkey’s military said in a statement and Moscow confirmed.
Whether indeed “accidental”, or payback for the downing of a Russian jet over the Turkish-Syrian border in late 201 is unclear, but according to the Russian military, Russian President Vladimir Putin called Turkish counterpart Tayyip Erdogan and expressed sorrow and condolences for the accidental killing.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Russia and Turkey will jointly investigate the deadly incident. The Kremlin spokesman told Sputnik that Putin told Erdogan that Turkish soldiers had died as a result of non-coordination of coordinates during Russian military jets’ strikes in Syria. The Russian and Turkish presidents held a phone conversation earlier on Thursday. Putin expressed condolences to Erdogan over the deaths of Turkish soldiers near Syria’s al-Bab, the Kremlin said earlier. They also agreed to expand military coordination during the operation against militants from Daesh and other extremist groups in Syria.
The Russian Defense Ministry has also confirmed the unintentional strike, killing Turkish servicemen in Syria. The ministry said that Russian bombers had been on a mission to destroy Daesh terrorists’ positions near al-Bab, where Turkish soldiers had been accidentally bombed. “Russian bombers have been carrying out a combat mission destroying Daesh positions in al-Bab area. The chiefs of the [Russian and Turkish] general staffs agreed to closer coordinate joint actions and exchange information about the situation on the ground.”
Chief of the Russian General Staff General Valery Gerasimov held telephone talks with his Turkish counterpart, during which the issues of the fight against international terrorist groups in Syria and the situation in the northeast of the province of Aleppo were discussed.
“Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation Army General Valery Gerasimov expressed condolences to [Turkish] General Hulusi Akar in connection with the death of three Turkish soldiers operating in the area of ??the city of al-Bab as a result of unintentional strike by a Russian aircraft.”
6.GLOBAL ISSUES
GLOBAL GROWTH CONCERNS WITH CHINA TIGHTENING
The real reason for the growth in the world was due to stimulation of the Chinese economy in 2016-2017. As we have pointed out to you, China is now undergoing a tightening and this will have a devastating effect on world growth
(courtesy zero hedge)
Forget Trump: The Reason For The Economic Boom Is Totally Different, And Deutsche Says It Is About To End
Remember the G-20 “Shanghai Accord” from February 2016, a meeting where the world’s political and financial elites were rumored to sit down and unveil a plan how to boost the global economy? Well, according to a new research note out from Deutsche Bank, it was this event – together with the unprecedented credit expansion out of China that immediately followed – that catalyzed the ongoing global economic rebound, a recovery which has had nothing to do with confidence in Donald Trump policies.
And, according to Deutsche analysts, it is time to get worried again because if China was indeed the catalyst for the global growth impulse into the end of 2016, and early 2017, then that impulse is about to roll over, as the Chinese-led growth is coming to an end as the following analysis suggests.
Here is why DB’s Oliver Harvey is increasingly betting that the period of smooth economic calm is coming to an end, and why he believes it is time to start getting long FX vol.
One puzzle this year has been divergence between global political uncertainty and vol.

Structural shifts in US policy, from trade to Asia to the country’s strategic relationship with the EU, offer lots of potential for major FX moves (not to mention the European political calendar, Chinese outflows and Brexit negotiations). Yet the three month vol premium remains negative for almost every major FX pair. Longer dated vol, while in many cases higher, isn’t historically that elevated either.
The reason is booming global growth, with data surprises and many PMIs at multi-year highs. Our colleague’s previous research found the most robust driver of FX vol to be growth measures including US industrial production and world commodity prices. The question for markets then is if, or when, growth rolls over.
On that front attention has focused on President Trump, but developments on the other side of the world may prove more important. At the beginning of 2016, China embarked on its latest fiscal stimulus funded from local government land sales and a booming property market. The Chinese business cycle troughed shortly thereafter and has accelerated rapidly since.

Germany’s China-sensitive economy bottomed almost in sync, and exports to the east have now reached multi-year highs (chart 3). The US and the rest of the G7 followed with around a six-month lag. The most important reason for the current feel-good factor may be Chinese policy decisions from 12 months ago, not hopes for the US policy mix.
That makes last week’s softer-than-expected official and Caixin PMIs a concern. Land sales, which have led ‘live’ indicators of Chinese growth such as railway freight volumes by around 6 months, have already tailed off significantly.

Chinese policy has also become increasingly boxed in by the need to prevent persistent FX outflows, which explains a large tightening in monetary policy over recent weeks. Today’s reserve numbers show that despite such attention from the authorities, outflows remain robust in January.
* * *
DB’s punchline:“If China starts to slow again, the current risk-friendly environment has a short sell-by-date, particularly given rising oil prices and our view that any Trump stimulus will take at least a few quarters to work its way into US growth.”
DB may be right, but judging by the new all time highs across all indices as of this moment on the back of comments from, well… Trump, while the global economy may be about to roll over, equities are clearly driven far more by Trump than any worries about what Beijing may or may not be doing.
END
The Central Bank of Mexico raises its interest rate by 50 basis points as expected which causes the Mexican Peso to rise
(courtesy zero hedge)
Peso Jumps After Banxico Hikes Rates 50bps (As Expected)
The Central Bank of Mexico hiked rates 50bps to 6.25% (as expected) and sent the peso rallying modestly. As Bloomberg notes, Banxico appears more concerned at inflationary pressures than growth slowdown.
- Banxico to Closely Watch Mid, Long-Term CPI Expectations
- Banxico to Watch Potential FX Pass-Through to CPI
- Banxico to Continue Watching Policy Posture vs U.S. Fed
- Banxico to Closely Monitor Gasoline Prices
The peso is rallying modestly

7. OIL ISSUES
8. EMERGING MARKETS
Anarchy in the northern city of Espirito Santo Brazil as the police went on strike demanding a doubling of their pay. The police earn 800 dollars equiv per month.
So far the count is over 100 dead.
(courtesy zero hedge)
Over 100 Dead Amid Violence, Looting As Brazil Police Strike Sparks Chaos, Anarchy
In a tragic development one would expect to see play out in its economically devastated northern neighbor, Venezuela, more than 100 people have been reported killed in violence and looting during a six-day strike by police in the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo, resulting in public chaos and anarchy, with schools and businesses closed and public transportation frozen.

Police officers patrol the perimeter at the scene of a fatal shooting in Vila Velha, Espirito Santo, Brazil
In a scene out of a MadMax prequel, the Brazilian army mobilized airborne troops and armored vehicles on Thursday to reinforce the roughly 1,200 soldiers and federal police trying to contain the chaos in the coastal state north of Rio de Janeiro. Most of the violence was centered in the state capital Vitoria, a wealthy port city ringed by golden beaches and filled with mining and petroleum companies.
With the country’s economy continuing to crater as a result of record unemployment, soaring inflation, leading to a record high murder rate in the tourism capital Rio, police in Espirito Santo are demanding a pay rise amid an economic downturn that has hammered public finances in Brazil, with many states struggling to ensure even basic health, education and security services.

Police officers patrol the perimeter at the scene of a fatal shooting in Vila Velha, Espirito Santo
As a Reuters report recounts, soldiers patrolled abandoned streets in downtown Vitoria, stopping and frisking the occasional pedestrian against shuttered store fronts. State officials said they needed hundreds more federal troops and members of an elite federal police force to help establish order and make up for the absence of some 1,800 state police who normally patrol Vitoria’s metropolitan area.

Policemen carry a body at the Institute of Forensic Science in Vitoria, Espirito Santo
Meanwhile, the army said what it always says when it intervenes in a domestic disturbance: it’s only temporary. “The Army’s involvement in Espirito Santo is temporary. It is here to make government negotiations possible and bring peace to the population. We are not going to replace the police,” General Eduardo Villas Boas said on Twitter.

Army soldiers patrol the streets of Vila Velha, Espirito Santo, Brazil February 9, 2017.
According to Reuters, the state government has not released an official number for killings since police started striking on Saturday for better pay, but a spokeswoman for the union representing police said it had registered 101 homicides. That would be more than six times the state’s average homicide rate during the same period last year. The Globo TV network, citing security officials, reported that 200 cars were stolen in Vitoria on a single day, ten times the daily average for the whole state. The state’s retail association said businesses have lost 90 million reais ($28.87 million) since police walked off the job.

Army soldiers patrol the streets of Vila Velha, Espirito Santo, Brazil
Echoing the post-apocalyptic scenes in Venezuela, where stores in the Brazilian state did open their doors, they were swarmed by shoppers stocking up as if preparing for a natural disaster.
“Good thing the supermarket opened because I have two young children at home and the food is running out,” said salesman Vitor Paulo, weighted down with shopping bags. “It’s like we’re hostages in our own homes. We’re scared to go out.”
Representatives of the striking police, including some of the officers’ wives, met with state officials on Wednesday to demand that salaries be doubled for every category of officer.

Policemen carry a body at the Institute of Forensic Science in Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Brazil
The union said they have not received a raise in four years. Monthly pay for an officer starts at 2,643 reais ($848), according to Corporal Thiago Bicalho, a spokesman for striking police. “We are going to analyze the offer and see what we can do in reality to advance this situation,” said Julio Pompeu, director of the state’s human rights secretariat, who is helping the government negotiate with police.
There is hope that normalcy will return: the two sides are scheduled to meet again on Thursday.
END
Your early morning currency/gold and silver pricing/Asian and European bourse movements/ and interest rate settings THURSDAY morning 7:00 am
Euro/USA 1.0685 DOWN .0005/REACTING TO + huge Deutsche bank problems + USA election:/TRUMP WINS THE ELECTION/USA READY TO GO ON A SPENDING BINGE WITH THE TRUMP VICTORY/ITALIAN REFERENDUM DEFEAT/AND NOW ECB TAPERING BOND PURCHASES/USA RISING RATE/EUROPE BOURSES ALL IN THE GREEN
USA/JAPAN YEN 112.29 UP 0.333(Abe’s new negative interest rate (NIRP), a total DISASTER/SIGNALS U TURN WITH INCREASED NEGATIVITY IN NIRP/JAPAN OUT OF WEAPONS TO FIGHT ECONOMIC DISASTER/KURODA: HELICOPTER MONEY ON THE TABLE AND DECISION ON SEPT 21 DISAPPOINTS WITH STIMULUS/OPERATION REVERSE TWIST
GBP/USA 1.2562 UP .0040 (Brexit by March 201/UK government loses case/parliament must vote/PRIME MINISTER MAY DECIDES ON A HARD BREXIT/LOWER HOUSE PASSES BILL TO BEGIN THE BREXIT PROCESS)
USA/CAN 1.3117 DOWN .0029 (CANADA WORRIED ABOUT TRADE WITH THE USA WITH TRUMP ELECTION/ITALIAN EXIT AND GREXIT FROM EU)
Early THIS THURSDAY morning in Europe, the Euro FELL by 5 basis points, trading now WELL ABOVE the important 1.08 level FALLING to 1.0685; Europe is still reacting to Gr Britain HARD BREXIT,deflation, announcements of massive stimulation (QE), a proxy middle east war, and the ramifications of a default at the Austrian Hypo bank, an imminent default of Greece, Glencore, Nysmark and the Ukraine, along with rising peripheral bond yield further stimulation as the EU is moving more into NIRP, and now the Italian referendum defeat AND NOW THE ECB TAPERING OF ITS PURCHASES/ THE USA’S NON tightening by FAILING TO RAISE THEIR INTEREST RATE AND NOW THE HUGE PROBLEMS FACING TOO BIG TO FAIL DEUTSCHE BANK + THE ELECTION OF TRUMP IN THE USA+ AND MONTE DEI PASCHI NATIONALIZATION / Last night the Shanghai composite CLOSED UP 16.19 POINTS OR 0.51% / Hang Sang CLOSED UP 40.01 POINTS OR .17% /AUSTRALIA CLOSED UP 0.25% / EUROPEAN BOURSES ALL THE GREEN (EXCEPT LONDON)
We are seeing that the 3 major global carry trades are being unwound. The BIGGY is the first one;
1. the total dollar global short is 9 trillion USA and as such we are now witnessing a sea of red blood on the streets as derivatives blow up with the massive rise in the rise in the dollar against all paper currencies and especially with the fall of the yuan carry trade. The emerging market which house close to 50% of the 9 trillion dollar short is feeling the massive pain as their debt is quite unmanageable.
2, the Nikkei average vs gold carry trade ( NIKKEI blowing up and the yen carry trade HAS BLOWN up/and now NIRP)
3. Short Swiss franc/long assets blew up ( Eastern European housing/Nikkei etc.
These massive carry trades are terribly offside as they are being unwound. It is causing global deflation ( we are at debt saturation already) as the world reacts to lack of demand and a scarcity of debt collateral. Bourses around the globe are reacting in kind to these events as well as the potential for a GREXIT>
The NIKKEI: this THURSDAY morning CLOSED DOWN 99.93 POINTS OR 0.53%
Trading from Europe and Asia:
1. Europe stocks ALL IN THE GREEN
2/ CHINESE BOURSES / : Hang Sang CLOSED UP 40.01 POINTS OR .17% / SHANGHAI CLOSED UP 16.19 OR 0.51%Australia BOURSE CLOSED UP 0.25% /Nikkei (Japan)CLOSED DOWN 99.93 POINTS OR 0.53% / INDIA’S SENSEX IN THE GREEN
Gold very early morning trading: $1239.60
silver:$17.77
Early THURSDAY morning USA 10 year bond yield: 2.352% !!! UP 1 IN POINTS from WEDNESDAY night in basis points and it is trading JUST BELOW resistance at 2.27-2.32%. THE RISE IN YIELD WITH THIS SPEED IS FRIGHTENING
The 30 yr bond yield 2.979, UP 3 IN BASIS POINTS from THURSDAY night.
USA dollar index early THURSDAY morning: 100.29 UP 12 CENT(S) from WEDNESDAY’s close.
This ends early morning numbers THURSDAY MORNING
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And now your closing THURSDAY NUMBERS
Portuguese 10 year bond yield: 4.051% DOWN 6 in basis point yield from WEDNESDAY
JAPANESE BOND YIELD: +.099% UP 1/10 in basis point yield from WEDNESDAY/JAPAN losing control of its yield curve
SPANISH 10 YR BOND YIELD:1.625% DOWN 8 IN basis point yield from WEDNESDAY (this is totally nuts!!/
ITALIAN 10 YR BOND YIELD: 2.173 DOWN 7 POINTS in basis point yield from WEDNESDAY
the Italian 10 yr bond yield is trading 54 points HIGHER than Spain.
GERMAN 10 YR BOND YIELD: +.312% UP 5 IN BASIS POINTS ON THE DAY
END
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IMPORTANT CURRENCY CLOSES FOR THURSDAY
Closing currency crosses for THURSDAY night/USA DOLLAR INDEX/USA 10 YR BOND YIELD/1:00 PM
Euro/USA 1.0701 UP .0023 (Euro UP 23 basis points/ represents to DRAGHI A COMPLETE POLICY FAILURE/
USA/Japan: 111.73 DOWN: 0.644(Yen UP 64 basis points/
Great Britain/USA 1.2529 UP 0.0025( POUND UP 34 basis points)
USA/Canada 1.3152 DOWN 0.0039(Canadian dollar UP 39 basis points AS OIL ROSE TO $52.32
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This afternoon, the Euro was DOWN by 29 basis points to trade at 1.0662
The Yen FELL to 113.12 for a LOSS of 115 Basis points as NIRP is STILL a big failure for the Japanese central bank/HELICOPTER MONEY IS NOW DELAYED/BANK OF JAPAN NOW WORRIED AS AS THEY ARE RUNNING OUT OF BONDS TO BUY AS BOND YIELDS RISE /OPERATION REVERSE TWIST ANNOUNCED SEPT 21.2016
The POUND FELL 3 basis points, trading at 1.2520/
The Canadian dollar ROSE by 24 basis points to 1.3121, WITH WTI OIL RISING TO : $53.05
Your closing 10 yr USA bond yield UP 6 IN basis points from WEDNESDAY at 2.384% //trading well ABOVE the resistance level of 2.27-2.32%) very problematic USA 30 yr bond yield: 3.01 UP 6 in basis points on the day /
Your closing USA dollar index, 100.57 UP 31 CENT(S) ON THE DAY/1.00 PM
Your closing bourses for Europe and the Dow along with the USA dollar index closing and interest rates for THURSDAY: 1:00 PM EST
London: CLOSED UP 40.68 OR 0.57%
German Dax :CLOSED UP 99.48 POINTS OR 0.86%
Paris Cac CLOSED UP 59.64 OR 1.25%
Spain IBEX CLOSED UP 108.70 POINTS OR 1.17%
Italian MIB: CLOSED UP 175.66 POINTS OR 0.94%
The Dow closed UP 118.06 OR 0.59%
NASDAQ WAS closed UP 32.73 POINTS OR 0.58% 4.00 PM EST
WTI Oil price; 53.05 at 1:00 pm;
Brent Oil: 55.59 1:00 EST
USA /RUSSIAN ROUBLE CROSS: 58.87 UP 31/100 ROUBLES/DOLLAR
TODAY THE GERMAN YIELD RISES TO +0.312% FOR THE 10 YR BOND 1:30 EST
END
This ends the stock indices, oil price, currency crosses and interest rate closes for today
Closing Price for Oil, 5 pm/and 10 year USA interest rate:
WTI CRUDE OIL PRICE 5 PM:$53.14
BRENT: $55.68
USA 10 YR BOND YIELD: 2.397% (ANYTHING HIGHER THAN 2.70% BLOWS UP THE GLOBE)
USA 30 YR BOND YIELD: 3.009%
EURO/USA DOLLAR CROSS: 1.0656 down .0034
USA/JAPANESE YEN:113.25 up 1.289
USA DOLLAR INDEX: 100.66 up 49 cents ( HUGE resistance at 101.80)
The British pound at 5 pm: Great Britain Pound/USA: 1.2496 : down 27 BASIS POINTS.
German 10 yr bond yield at 5 pm: +.312%
END
And now your more important USA stories which will influence the price of gold/silver
TRADING IN GRAPH FORM
Stocks Soar To Record Highs As Trump Drops The ‘T’ Word, Sparks Biggest Short-Squeeze Since Election
What a difference a word makes…
Can you spot the moment when President Trump said the word “tax”…
Record highs for The Dow, S&P, and Nasdaq.
Of course it’s all just another bigly short squeeze…Today saw “Most Shorted” stocks soar 2.5% – the biggest squeeze since the election
VIX crushed back to a 10 handle sending Dow above 20,200…
Small Caps were ripped back into the green for the week…
Banks and Energy stocks tore higher – after being the biggest losers…
Bonds sold off today (after 3 days of strength)…
30Y bounced back above 3.00%
The yield curve steepened modestly…
The USD Index bounced led by Yen weakness…
USD gains impacted PMs today – gold and silver lower – but crude rallied in risk on mode. PMs remain post-payrolls winners…
Finally, Soft Data and The Dow remain convinced of how awesome everything is while Hard Data and Bonds are not at all…
end
Early trading today:
Algos gone wild with Trump announcement on taxes and subsidies to the airlines to compete with foreign airlines;
(courtesy zero hedge)
Trump Says He Will Announce “Something Phenomenal On Taxes In Next 2-3 Weeks” – Market Turmoils
After a few hours of relative calm, President Trump has injected some renewed chaos into capital markets this mornings after comments that he will release “something phenomenal on taxes in the next 2-3 weeks” among other things…
- “We are going to be announcing something over the next two or three weeks that will be phenomenal in terms of tax,” President Trump says in meeting with airline CEOs.
- “You’ve done an amazing job. I know you’re under pressure from a lot of foreign elements”
- “We want to take care of you”
- “We want the traveling public to have” the best “customer service”
- “We have obsolete airports and train systems and bad roads”
- Says regulations will be rolled back
And the reaction is clear…
USD spiked, bonds dumped, and gold dropped…

And USDJPY and Stocks are soaring… USDJPY mahcines tagged 113.00 perfectly
Algos gone wild.
And then the President addressed the Airline CEOs in the room…
- “You’ve done an amazing job. I know you’re under pressure from a lot of foreign elements”
- “We want to take care of you”
- “We want the traveling public to have” the best “customer service”
- “We have obsolete airports and train systems and bad roads”
- Says regulations will be rolled back
And some more snippets:
“What can we do to make your airlines better, to make your bottomlines better?” President Trump asks airline CEOs in White House meeting. “You’ve got a lot of competition”; “a lot of that competition is subsidized by governments, big league”; ‘‘I heard that from the minute I got elected”
Trump says air-traffic control system is “totally out of whack” and “its way over budget”; ‘‘It’s already outdated”.
He asks Southwest CEO Gary Kelly, “Why did they allow the government to put in the wrong system?” Kelly responds, “We want to get the government out of the air traffic control sytem”
Trump also says in meeting that head of FAA should be a pilot
Says “I don’t like aviation fees and taxes, I’ll be honest with you” and “raising fees will just hurt you”
And the punchline from Trump: “don’t worry about the money. I’ll be able to get the money”
At that point, reporters were escorted from the room as the meeting continued, although the message was clear: Washington subsidies are coming.
And the reaction is clear…
end
The border tax war is on as we highlighted to you over these past several weeks:
(courtesy zero hedge)
The Senate War Against Border Tax Begins
One week ago, we wrote that “Two Wars Are About To Break Out Over Border Adjustment Tax“: one of which would include a group of opposing Republican Senators (and their lobbyists), and US retailers and importers, and a second which would be waged between the US and all of its major trading partners.
Today, the war against BAT fired its first salvo, when the previously profiled Senator David Perdue of Georgia, former CEO of discount retailer Dollar General, emerged as the top Republican critic of the House GOP plan to adjust business taxes at the border, threatening the divisive proposal’s legislative prospects. Unlike other members of the upper chamber, Perdue has harshly criticized the tax idea in the press and actively tried to sway his colleagues against it.
In a letter issued on Wednesday, Perdue wrote that “this 20-percent tax on all imports is regressive, hammers consumers, and shuts down economic growth.”
Perdue said he supports three of the major ideas in the House Republicans’ plan: simplifying the individual tax code, lowering the corporate tax rate and making it easier for companies to bring foreign earnings back to the U.S. But he said that the border-adjustment tax would raise consumer prices.
“This would hammer consumer confidence and lower overall demand, thus putting a downward pressure on jobs,” he said.
In addition to his letter, Perdue also spoke with Yahoo Finance, and called the border-adjustment feature of the House GOP plan “a regressive tax. It hammers low-income and middle-income people. It doesn’t foster growth.”
As detailed on various previously occasions, the border-adjustment proposal would exempt exports from the corporate tax in addition to taxing imports. Supporters of the proposal argue that it would remove incentives for companies to move job overseas. They also argue that it will not hurt prices because the U.S. dollar would strengthen.
Perdue warned that even if the currency adjusts, “we end up with more losers than winners.” He said that a currency adjustment would lower the value of U.S. investors’ foreign investments. “American seniors will see their retirement savings evaporate at the same time their living costs increase,” he said.
A recent analysis by JPM calculated the specific industries that would see the most adverse exposure from a BAT.
Should a Border Adjustment Tax not lead to an offsetting surge in the dollar as some expect will happen, retailers will get crushed.
It is not surprising that a former Dollar General CEO would be concerned.
Perdue is not the only Republican lawmaker who has expressed concerns about the border-adjustment proposal. As we noted last week, Senator Mike Lee of Utah told Koch network donors: “This ends up becoming a VAT-like substance and I think it would end up having a lot of the negative characteristics of both a VAT and a tariff … I really don’t like it.” Additionally, Senator John Cornyn of Texas is known to be concerned about border adjustment’s effect on gasoline prices. Last week he tweeted: “Many unanswered questions about proposed “border adjustment” tax.”
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), the former House Freedom Caucus chairman, told Bloomberg yesterday that he has concerns about border adjustment as well.
House Republicans have proposed taxing imports as part of a broader corporate rate-cutting reform that would tax goods based on where they are sold. Under the plan, companies would no longer be allowed to deduct the cost of imported goods and services, but would no longer pay any taxes on revenues from exports. In today’s system, U.S. companies are taxed on all profits, whether they are earned in the U.S. or abroad. Republicans say the change would encourage more manufacturing within the U.S., and discourage companies from moving production overseas.
A major motivation for including the border adjustment feature in the plan is that it would raise over $1 trillion over 10 years, allowing Republicans to cut tax rates further without adding to deficits.
Perdue, however, rejected the tax as a pay-for for tax rate cuts on Thursday, calling it a “tax grab.”
While it is unclear yet if the BAT will or will not be included in the final GOP tax package (according to Goldman it has virtually no chance of passing), over the past two days retailer stocks have surged on hopes this provision will be struck down shortly, even if it means that the amount of tax cuts will be less than expected.
Perdue’s full letter is below (link).
end
Initial jobless claims plunge to 44 year lows despite continuing claims rising. Of course the big question is what happens next.
(courtesy zero hedge)
Initial Jobless Claims Plunge To 44 Year Lows
While continuing claims continue to rise post-election…
Initial jobless claims have collapsed back to with 1k of the lowest levels since 1973.
- *U.S. JOBLESS CLAIMS FALL 12,000 TO 234,000; EST. 249,000
While everything is awesome with this print, one wonders what happens next?
Which is more likely – higher or lower from here?
end
Senate Confirms Jeff Sessions As U.S. Attorney General In 52-47 Vote
The Senate has voted to confirm Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) as attorney general in a 52-47 vote that went along party lines, following days of rigorous discussion and capping a vicious debate that left Democrats and Republicans seething, and Elizabeth Warren barred from speaking.
Sen. Joe Manchin was the only Democrat to break party rank and vote to back Sessions. Independent Senators Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont voted alongside 45 Democrats in opposition to the nominee.
The fight over Sessions’ nomination infamously escalated last night, when Sen. Elizabeth Warren read a letter that Coretta Scott King had written in 1986 that accused Sessions, a U.S. attorney at the time, of using the power of his office to prevent blacks from voting. As we reported last night, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell objected to Warren’s speech, saying she had impugned another member of the Senate. Then, in a 49-43 vote, the Senate agreed, blocking Warren from speaking on the Senate floor on Wednesday.
Angry Democrats accused McConnell of silencing a woman on the floor, and Warren went on a media blitz against the Republican senators and Sessions. The tensions were on full display during the debate over Sessions’s nomination. “We all know our colleague from Alabama. He’s honest,” McConnell said. “He’s fair. He’s been a friend to many of us, on both sides of the aisle.”
Democrats defended their criticism of Sessions’s record on issues of race and civil rights. “When we make a big issue of the position of Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions on the Voting Rights Act, it’s with good cause. It is historically an issue which has haunted the United States since the Civil War,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) — the No. 2 Senate Democrat — said ahead of the vote.
“Senator Sessions is not a man apart from this agenda. He is not independent of [Trump’s] agenda,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee.
Republicans meanwhile decried the Democratic tactics, arguing they were going to new lows to smear Sessions. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) — a long-serving Senate traditionalist — said Democrats are treating Sessions like a “terrible person,” urging his colleagues on Tuesday night to think of Sessions’s wife.
As The Hill points out, the fiery words in the last days of the debate over Sessions were somewhat surprising.
While the issue of race had always hung over the debate, Sessions is well-liked personally by many senators. That made the stinging words all the more noteworthy — and raises questions about the ability of lawmakers to work together going forward.
Sessions will now take over the Justice Department’s defense of Trump’s controversial order barring people from seven mostly Muslim countries from entering the United States. A former aide to Sessions was instrumental in the order’s writing, and Democrats argued the Alabama senator would not be a firm defender of an independent Justice Department.
end
Trump not to be happy with the “disheartening Gorsuch story”. He then accuses democratic Senator Blumenthal of lying
(courtesy zero hedge)
Trump Slams “Disheartening” Gorsuch Story, Accuses Sen. Blumenthal Of Lying
With the allegedly confirmed statement from Trump’s Supreme Court pick, Neil Gorsuch, who reportedly told Senator Richard Blumenthal that he found Trump’s judge commentary “disheartening”and “demoralizing”, dominating the overnight news cycle, in his first tweet of the day, President Trump contradicted a spokesman for his Supreme Court nominee, in a tweet blasting Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal, who told reporters last night that Judge Neil Gorsuch called Trump’s tweets attacking federal judges “demoralizing.”
“Sen.Richard Blumenthal, who never fought in Vietnam when he said for years he had (major lie),now misrepresents what Judge Gorsuch told him?” the president tweeted Thursday morning.
Sen.Richard Blumenthal, who never fought in Vietnam when he said for years he had (major lie),now misrepresents what Judge Gorsuch told him?
As reported overnight, Blumenthal said Wednesday that Gorsuch allegedly called Trump’s tweets attacking federal judges “disheartening” and “demoralizing.” In a later statement, Blumenthal urged Gorsuch to make his concerns public.
“Behind closed doors, Judge Gorsuch expressed disappointment with President Trump’s attacks on the judiciary, but a Supreme Court Justice must prove that he has the courage and independence to stand up to a President in public,” Blumenthal said. “I asked Judge Gorsuch to make that statement publicly, and he declined.”
Later, a spokesman for Gorsuch confirmed to CNN that the judge used the terms “disheartening” and “demoralizing” to describe Trump’s tweets during his meeting with the Blumenthal.
The statement was in connection to Trump’s ongoing feud with the judges who have rejected Trump’s immigration executive order. On Saturday, Trump ripped “so-called judge” James Robart who halted his travel ban, saying the ruling was “ridiculous and will be overturned.”
Later in the week, the president also went after the panel of federal judges weighing the Department of Justice’s appeal to restore the travel ban. “I don’t want to call a court biased, so I won’t call it biased,” Trump said at a gathering of the Major Cities Chiefs Association in Washington. “Courts seem to be so political and it would be so great for our justice system if they could read a statement and do what’s right.”
The Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit is expected to rule on the government’s request to overturn the Temporary Restraining Order today or tomorrow.
Gorsuch has yet to make a public statement on his opinion of the ongoing Presidential feud with the abovementioned judges.
end
This is going to be costly; the top USA commander in Afghanistan wants a 2 to 3 thousand troops to break the stalemate over there:
(courtesy zero hedge)
Top US Commander In Afghanistan: “I Am Short A Few Thousand Troops”
The next “surge” is imminent.
The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Army General John Nicholson, said on Thursday he is short “several thousand” troops in order to break a stalemate in a war with Taliban insurgents, signaling the matter may soon be put before President Donald Trump.
“I have adequate resourcing in my counterterrorism mission. In my train, advise and assist mission, however, we have a shortfall of a few thousand,” Nicholson, who leads U.S. and international forces in Afghanistan, told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Nicholson’s testimony before the committee is the first since President Trump’s inauguration, providing much needed color into how the new commander in chief might handle a war that received little attention on the campaign trail. At this moment there are about 8,400 U.S. troops in Afghanistan tasked with training, advising and assisting Afghan forces in their fight against the Taliban and conducting counterterrorism missions against groups such as al Qaeda. About 7,000 are dedicated to the NATO mission. In addition to the U.S. troops, there are about 6,400 NATO troops in the country.
The number of U.S. troops is down from 9,800 last year. As The Hill writes, former President Obama had initially planned to draw down that number to 5,500, but decided instead to set the troop numbers at 8,400.
So why the need for more troops? Nicholson described the situation in Afghanistan as a “stalemate,” adding that the only the way to break the stalemate is to increase the offensive capability of the Afghan forces. As a result, Nicholson asked Congress to invest more in the Afghan air force, though he didn’t offer a dollar figure on how that investment should cost.
“This investment which we are requesting the Afghan air force will help them, as you mentioned, to take over responsibility for their own close air support,” he said. “And even more importantly, this then will to an offensive capability that allows them to overmatch the Taliban or any other group on the battlefield anywhere around the country.”
This was music to the ears of perpetual warhawk John McCain, the chairman of the committee and a critic of the Obama administration’s troops levels, who said he hopes the new administration take the “opportunity” to increase the troop commitment and give commanders more flexibility.
“This new administration has the opportunity to turn the page,” he said, and finally give our commanders the resources and authorities they need to seize the initiative and force the enemy to react, instead of the other way around.”
McCain’s endorsement of Nicholson’s request may be a problem: on Thursday morning Trump revived his feud with McCain, tweeting that the Arizona senator “doesn’t know how to win anymore” and shouldn’t have called a U.S. raid in Yemen a failure.
“Sen. McCain should not be talking about the success or failure of a mission to the media. Only emboldens the enemy! He’s been losing so long he doesn’t know how to win anymore,” Trump wrote in a series of tweets Thursday morning. “Just look at the mess our country is in – bogged down in conflict all over the place. Our hero Ryan died on a winning mission ( according to General Mattis), not a ‘failure.’ Time for the U.S. to get smart and start winning again!”
end
the following is an important commentary from David Stockman as he outlines that Trump will have no chance to pass his budget in the House/senate this year.
a must read…
(courtesy David Stockman/DailyReckoning/ContraCorner)
The Crash Will Be Violent
[Ed. Note: To see exactly what this former Reagan insider has to say about Trump and specifically what he believes must be done, David Stockman is sending out a copy of his book Trumped! A Nation on the Brink of Ruin… And How to Bring It Back out to any American willing to listen. To learn how to get your free copy CLICK HERE.]
It is almost impossible to overstate the level of unhinged mania in the stock market, but still the robo-machines and knucklehead day traders just can’t seem to let go.
They are essentially 12-year-olds on a bicycle defiantly screaming, look ma — no hands and a blindfold, too!
Worse still, these daredevils have been indulged by the Fed and other central banks so long that they surely have come to believe flying blind is completely safe. After all, we can count at least 60 “dips” since March 2009 that resolved to the upside over and again.
Altogether the S&P 500 now stands at 3.4X its post-crisis low, having generated an 18% annual return (including dividends) for nearly eight years running.
To be sure, in an honest free market that very fact would be a flashing red light, warning that exceptionally high gains over an extended period necessitate a regression to the mean in the period ahead.
But we have a central bank medicated market, not a free or honest one, so at the end of the day fundamentals don’t count. Instead, on the margin the stock market is driven by momentum, central bank liquidity and trader presumption that it will never be withdrawn.
The reflexive dip buyers have ratcheted the market higher 45% without any plausible or sustainable case for it. Economic growth rates are deflating, productivity has slumped and corporate earnings have been sinking for nearly eight quarters.
Even the central banks themselves concede interest rates are intended to eventually normalize. Their radical experiment in zero interest rates (ZIRP) and bond yield repression of the last nine years was designed to force interest rates temporarily to unnatural lows in order to jump start the economy.
The implied channel of monetary policy transmission, therefore, would have been a temporary spurt of GDP expansion (back to the “potential” GDP path) and earnings growth. That didn’t happen, of course, because quantitative easing (QE) stimulus never got outside the canyons of Wall Street. It did nothing for main street.
In so doing, the Fed has destroyed honest price discovery, and therefore the market has no braking or correction mechanism. It will drift higher on pure buy-the-dips momentum until it hits a sharp object.
Stated differently, this is the most dangerous market mutation to have ever been confected by state policy.
It has destroyed two-way trade, short-sellers and the other mechanisms of free market discipline. What is left is robo-machines that all buy the dips together, but will also sell the coming crash just as quickly.
So never mind the fact that the ostensible reason for the post-election Sucker’s Rally — the mythical Trump Stimulus — has already bitten the dust on Capitol Hill.
According to Speaker Ryan, they are not going to even take up tax reform until they dispose of the GOP’s Obamacare “repeal and replace” pledge, but even Trump now says that may take until next year.
Likewise, any corporate tax reform that does happen will be done on a roughly deficit neutral basis, meaning that the average effective corporate tax rate is not going to change much at all.
That is to say, the effective rate today is about 23% overall and 15% for profitable big cap S&P 500 companies. A deficit neutral reform will leave the average effective rate where it is, even if the statutory rate is reduced to around 20%.
Therefore, there will be no growth coming from corporate tax reform.
And don’t take my word for it. Here is what one of the most outspoken fiscal responsibility champions in the House GOP had to say:
“You’re not going to be able to grow your way out of this one. It’s too big,” says Rep. Tom Cole (R., Okla.). He expresses worry about relying on rosy growth projections, through the use of so-called dynamic scoring, to assume tax cuts would stimulate the economy to materially offset upfront revenue losses. “I worry we’re so in love with dynamic scoring, and it never works out the way the tax gurus tell us it’s going to.”
Moreover, there is not a chance that a significant infrastructure stimulus will pass, either. That’s because a meaningful slice of GOP conservatives in both houses are properly against it and Trump has no chance of forming a coalition with Democrat spenders.
That’s because co-President Steve Bannon does not understand that the White House’s bombastic anti-immigrant campaign is toxic on the Democratic side of the aisle. After all, the Democrats have become the “sanctuary party” of contemporary politics, meaning the two sides will not be joining hands any time soon.
What will be coming soon, however, is the mother of all debt ceiling crises — an eruption of beltway dysfunction that will finally demolish the notion that Trump is good for the economy and the stock market.
The debt ceiling holiday ends on March 15, and it appears that the rudderless Treasury Department — Mnuchin has not yet been approved as Treasury Secretary and there are no Trump deputies, either — may be engaging in a bit of sabotage. That is, the cash balance has run down from a peak of about $450 billion to just $304 billion as of last Friday.
Unless reversed soon, this means that the Treasury will run out of cash by perhaps July 4th rather than Labor Day. After that, all hell will break loose.
Washington has been obviously dysfunctional for years, but the virtue of the Great Disrupter is that his tweets, tangents, inconsistencies and unpredictabilities guarantee that the system will soon shut down entirely.
Consequently, the first half of the year will be consumed in nasty partisan battles over cabinet appointments, the Gorsuch nomination, interminable maneuvers over the travel ban and follow-on measures of extreme vetting and the Obamacare repeal/replace battle.
Then, the second half of 2017 will degenerate into a non-stop battle over raising the debt ceiling and continuing resolutions for fiscal year (FY) 2018 which begins October 1. That will mean, in turn, that there is no budget resolution embodying the Trump/GOP fiscal agenda, and therefore no basis for filibuster-proof “reconciliation instructions” on the tax cut.
This latter point, in fact, needs special emphasis. The frail GOP majorities now extant will be too battered and fractured by the interim battles to coalesce around a ten-year budget resolution that embodies the $10 trillion of incremental deficits already built into the CBO baseline — plus trillions more for defense, veterans, border control, the Mexican Wall, an infrastructure bonanza and big tax cuts, too.
It will never happen. There is not remotely a GOP majority for such a resolution.
But without an FY 2018 budget resolution, inertia and the K-Street lobbies will rule. Without a 51-vote majority rule in the Senate, a material, deficit-neutral cut in the corporate tax rate would be absolutely impossible to pass. Yet that’s exactly what the casino is currently pricing-in.
In short, it is only a matter of time before the robo-machines start re-programming themselves for the fact that the Great Trump Stimulus has gone missing.
When that happens, the stock market will not be a pretty sight.The S&P 500 has now reached the highest ratio to worker earnings in recorded history. It will descend into a bidless free fall when eight years of buying the dip finally unwinds.
But here’s the thing…
The historic mission of the Whirling Dervish in the Oval Office is to bring the “big fat ugly bubble” that has resulted from 30 years of exploding debt and rampant money printing to a thundering halt.
That much the Donald will certainly accomplish.
Regards,
David Stockman
for The Daily Reckoning/the ContraCorner












































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