Re: Brace for a 'perfect storm' in gold
metalman starts this off with:
Originally Posted by metalman View Post
ej made the argument to buy gold in 2001... warned us about the housing bubble in 2002... credit risk posed by the housing bubble in 2006... came up with the idea of peak cheap oil & the sovereign debt risk pco poses years ago...
he said peak cheap oil = more government debt... for food stamps & other govt subsidies for growing ranks of poor folks... recession stimulus... etc.
got my bias as an ituliper oldtimer... i'll put my faith in the guy with the track record & $$$ where his mouth is vs the new guys on the block like martenson. /metalman
dunno about you, but thats precisely the layout for why i'm parting with 300/year of MY money (and dumped my subscripts to the wsj) - to be here - and one of the best things about this forum is the willingness of the members to call out/take-on The Boss and question his version of the facts (which appear unassailable) - its even more enlightening to see the jousting tween the members (nero3 & c1ue for instance) when either they dont seem to get what EJ means or jump to the wrong conclusions?
seems to me trying to 'crystal ball' the S&P500 (or nasdaq) is a fools errand with all the bernankebux distorting the piss out of everything - why i'm still 90% cash (and sweatin) as eye try to come up with a plan - tho my cash position is barely enuf to payoff my mortgage and cover living exp for a year or so, and so i really dont have that much to _gamble_ with in the markets (and how anybody could call this an 'investors market' is beyond my little lektrician brain...) - but my basic premise is to 'keep my powder dry' for either the ultimate bottom (in context of 2011 forward) in the PM's/miners or simply have enuf cash to get into a new line of work/biz, as i'm simply getting to old to crawl around in the bilge anymore... ;)
seems to me he got that one right, albeit a bit early (see below), as in how does one predict/time whats happnin when they flood the markets with _trillions_ in 'funny money' ? (other than buy real stuff vs paper 'assets')
and after reading nearly every phreakin word all you guys have typed (never mind the rest of the apocalyp$e universe/blogosphere) the past few years, i'd say The Boss = The Best of em all....
seems like it, at least for china - see below - the question then becomes: is this 'good news' for The US, in the 'shorter term' merely because their sitch looks worse (in the medium term) then ours does due to 'monetary imbalances'
and...
has all the 'easy money' been made, so the oligarchs are in the process of cashing out? (cuz most of em are getting ready to get out/retire, so why would they care anymore??? - i mean, when guys like stockman are saying it, whats a 50something to think?)
and then theres this:
Inflation News Hammers Chinese Stocks
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...946388550.html
By ALEX FRANGOS And ESTHER FUNG
Chinese investors sure don't like too-strong economic growth.
Stocks in mainland China dove nearly 3% Thursday after Beijing announced the economy accelerated in the fourth quarter. Investors worried that strong growth would exacerbate inflation, and prompt new tightening measures that would be unfavorable for stocks.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell 2.9% to 2677.65, near a four-month low and down 4.6% so far this year. The latest decline leaves China's stocks in solid "bear" territory, down 23% since the post-crisis high in August 2009. Over the same period, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index has risen 27.5%.
The better-than-expected numbers, which include growth in gross domestic product of 9.8% for the fourth quarter and 10.3% for all of 2010, contrast sharply with weakness in the developed world. But they also mean the world's second-largest economy is overheating.
Inflation came in at 4.6% in December compared with a year earlier, higher than the government would prefer, as food prices rose. Excluding food prices, inflation accelerated from the month before.
"Inflation is the major cue for investors," says Oscar Leung, senior investment manager for ING Investment Management in Hong Kong. A turnaround in the market won't come, he says, until we see "more concrete signals of the peaking of inflation," especially for food and commodity prices.
Mainland Chinese stocks, which foreign investors are mostly banned from trading, were the first to rebound after the financial crisis. After bottoming out in October 2008. Chinese markets rose quickly through the first half of 2009 as the government implemented a massive stimulus program, much of which was delivered through permissive bank lending.
The market peaked in August 2009, the same time that investors in China sensed the government would begin to pull back on the lending spree. Since then, China has implemented a slew of anti-inflation measures, including seven increases to reserve requirements for banks, which govern the amount of money banks have to keep aside relative to their loans.
Other actions include restrictions on real-estate borrowing; a 3.7% appreciation in the Chinese currency against the dollar; tightening of some capital inflows and loosening of capital outflows; price controls on food; and two interest- rate increases.
Thursday's economic news raised expectations for more tightening than previously thought.
"Given this stronger-than-expected inflation trend, we see a growing likelihood of more aggressive policy responses," says Jun Ma, China chief economist for Deutsche Bank in Hong Kong. He figures the government will be under pressure to extend price controls to energy products and raw materials.
Fears of price controls pushed shares of coal miners lower Thursday. Earlier expectations that coal would be scarcer due to floods in Australia failed to boost coal prices, Shanghai Securities analyst Peng Yunliang said. Shanxi Xishan Coal & Electricity Power ended 5.5% lower at 25.10 yuan after rising 6.5% in the previous 12 sessions, and China Shenhua Energy fell 3.9% to 23.15 yuan, after rising 0.4% during the same period.
Property developers, who bear the brunt of the tighter bank-l lending environment, fell as well. China Vanke, the country's largest property developer by market share, fell 4.7% to 8.14 yuan, and Poly Real Estate Group declined 6.3% to 13.03 yuan.
Valuations for Chinese companies are relatively attractive, at roughly 12 times 2011 forecast earnings. But investors seem unwilling to commit until the inflation warning sirens stop blaring.
"You can't wait for the inflation to come down to below 4%," says ING's Mr. Leung. "Once we see commodity, energy and food prices peak out, then the market correction will stabilize, and then probably we can start to think about some quality stocks to accumulate."
Write to Alex Frangos at alex.frangos@wsj.com
metalman starts this off with:
Originally Posted by metalman View Post
ej made the argument to buy gold in 2001... warned us about the housing bubble in 2002... credit risk posed by the housing bubble in 2006... came up with the idea of peak cheap oil & the sovereign debt risk pco poses years ago...
he said peak cheap oil = more government debt... for food stamps & other govt subsidies for growing ranks of poor folks... recession stimulus... etc.
got my bias as an ituliper oldtimer... i'll put my faith in the guy with the track record & $$$ where his mouth is vs the new guys on the block like martenson. /metalman
Originally posted by vinoveri
View Post
Originally posted by vinoveri
View Post
Originally posted by vinoveri
View Post
and after reading nearly every phreakin word all you guys have typed (never mind the rest of the apocalyp$e universe/blogosphere) the past few years, i'd say The Boss = The Best of em all....
Originally posted by vinoveri
View Post
and...
has all the 'easy money' been made, so the oligarchs are in the process of cashing out? (cuz most of em are getting ready to get out/retire, so why would they care anymore??? - i mean, when guys like stockman are saying it, whats a 50something to think?)
Originally posted by vinoveri
View Post
- JANUARY 20, 2011, 9:53 A.M. ET
Inflation News Hammers Chinese Stocks
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...946388550.html
By ALEX FRANGOS And ESTHER FUNG
Chinese investors sure don't like too-strong economic growth.
Stocks in mainland China dove nearly 3% Thursday after Beijing announced the economy accelerated in the fourth quarter. Investors worried that strong growth would exacerbate inflation, and prompt new tightening measures that would be unfavorable for stocks.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell 2.9% to 2677.65, near a four-month low and down 4.6% so far this year. The latest decline leaves China's stocks in solid "bear" territory, down 23% since the post-crisis high in August 2009. Over the same period, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index has risen 27.5%.
The better-than-expected numbers, which include growth in gross domestic product of 9.8% for the fourth quarter and 10.3% for all of 2010, contrast sharply with weakness in the developed world. But they also mean the world's second-largest economy is overheating.
Inflation came in at 4.6% in December compared with a year earlier, higher than the government would prefer, as food prices rose. Excluding food prices, inflation accelerated from the month before.
"Inflation is the major cue for investors," says Oscar Leung, senior investment manager for ING Investment Management in Hong Kong. A turnaround in the market won't come, he says, until we see "more concrete signals of the peaking of inflation," especially for food and commodity prices.
Mainland Chinese stocks, which foreign investors are mostly banned from trading, were the first to rebound after the financial crisis. After bottoming out in October 2008. Chinese markets rose quickly through the first half of 2009 as the government implemented a massive stimulus program, much of which was delivered through permissive bank lending.
The market peaked in August 2009, the same time that investors in China sensed the government would begin to pull back on the lending spree. Since then, China has implemented a slew of anti-inflation measures, including seven increases to reserve requirements for banks, which govern the amount of money banks have to keep aside relative to their loans.
Other actions include restrictions on real-estate borrowing; a 3.7% appreciation in the Chinese currency against the dollar; tightening of some capital inflows and loosening of capital outflows; price controls on food; and two interest- rate increases.
Thursday's economic news raised expectations for more tightening than previously thought.
"Given this stronger-than-expected inflation trend, we see a growing likelihood of more aggressive policy responses," says Jun Ma, China chief economist for Deutsche Bank in Hong Kong. He figures the government will be under pressure to extend price controls to energy products and raw materials.
Fears of price controls pushed shares of coal miners lower Thursday. Earlier expectations that coal would be scarcer due to floods in Australia failed to boost coal prices, Shanghai Securities analyst Peng Yunliang said. Shanxi Xishan Coal & Electricity Power ended 5.5% lower at 25.10 yuan after rising 6.5% in the previous 12 sessions, and China Shenhua Energy fell 3.9% to 23.15 yuan, after rising 0.4% during the same period.
Property developers, who bear the brunt of the tighter bank-l lending environment, fell as well. China Vanke, the country's largest property developer by market share, fell 4.7% to 8.14 yuan, and Poly Real Estate Group declined 6.3% to 13.03 yuan.
Valuations for Chinese companies are relatively attractive, at roughly 12 times 2011 forecast earnings. But investors seem unwilling to commit until the inflation warning sirens stop blaring.
"You can't wait for the inflation to come down to below 4%," says ING's Mr. Leung. "Once we see commodity, energy and food prices peak out, then the market correction will stabilize, and then probably we can start to think about some quality stocks to accumulate."
Write to Alex Frangos at alex.frangos@wsj.com
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