Goldman Sachs Buys Gold; Tells Public to Sell

"Gold declined sharply in early April. That’s when Goldman Sachs issued a “sell” signal Then Goldman began quietly to buy shares of GLD, the ETF for gold. It now owns 3.7 million shares. It looked like a great call. The rubes who believed the report shorted gold. They made money. Briefly. Gold continued downward, bottoming at $1192 in on June 28. Meanwhile, Goldman was buying gold all the way down. Now gold is around $1400, and Goldman is sitting on a pile of shares of GLD, bought at rock-bottom prices. Watch what they do, not what they say." Continue reading

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Blackstone rental bonds revive fears of mortgage-backed crisis

"The private-equity firm Blackstone and Deutsche Bank are considering selling the first bonds backed by home-rental payments. The new security shows Wall Street financial engineering, blamed for deepening the financial crisis, has become more creative. Blackstone is among the firms that have spent billions buying homes out of foreclosure, helping to bolster demand and strengthen the US housing market, the WSJ reports. The private-equity giant has spent $5.5bn buying more than 30,000 houses to rent out. It is now working with Deutsche Bank to create securities tied to about 1,500 of the properties to form a rental bond deal worth up to $275 million." Continue reading

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Upside-Down Economic Reporting: Higher Oil Prices Are Good.

"I see. A war looms. Oil will rise in price. The world will pay more to oil-exporting national governments. This is proof of good times ahead. The rising trade deficit (an excess of imports) is good because it will lead to more exports. 'At the same time, a strengthening U.S. expansion is helping companies in the European Union and China boost sales, which will stabilize global growth and, in turn, improve prospects for American exports.' I see. Rising imports mean rising exports. Later. One of these days. Real Soon Now. And so it goes. Economic education marches forward." Continue reading

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A Regional FED President Says the FED Is Not Inflating Enough.

"This statement was Big News. It was such Big News that the Wall Street Journal ran a story on it. Why? Because when a regional Federal Reserve Bank president says the obvious is Big News, it means that he is opposed to tapering. It means that he thinks the counterfeiting of a trillion dollars of digital money a year is for wimps. What should the rate of counterfeiting be? He did not say. They never say. Their lips are sealed. This is what is known at the Federal Reserve as transparency. Opaqueness is when an official says something incoherent, which everyone in the media knows is incoherent, and they dutifully report as meaningful." Continue reading

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Detroit Stopped Issuing Death Certificates After It Ran Out Of Paper

"The city of Detroit was temporarily unable to issue death certificates in July because it had run out of the special embossed paper on which the certificates are printed -- and it didn't have any money left to buy more. After the city declared bankruptcy on July 18, its vendor for embossed death certificate paper demanded to be paid in cash, not credit. The city's funeral directors received this text message from Michigan Select Funeral Directors Association president Wallace Williams in late July, according to the Detroit News: 'FYI, city of Detroit can’t process death certificates because they have no paper and don’t have money to buy any.'" Continue reading

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The FEDsters Are Multimillionaires

"The senior officers of the Board of Governors are rich. So are some of the regional FED bank presidents. One of them is worth $50 million. Another owns 7,000 acres of land. He even owns gold. The FED is politically untouchable. Congress will not let the Government Accountability Office audit it. We hear of the need for more equality. The FED could use some. We hear of the need for transparency. Why doesn’t this include an audit? All the chatter inside the Washington Beltway about the role of democracy is great stuff for pulling the wool over the eyes of the voters. The cartel known as the state-licensed banking system has an enforcer. The FED is the enforcer." Continue reading

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The Fed Can’t Stop Printing Money … or Else

"Several surveys have shown that most people believe they have above-average driving skills. In fact, 93% of student drivers think their driving skills are above average. The law of averages tells us that this can’t possibly be true. It reminds me of that survey that said 84% of Frenchmen think that they are above-average lovers. Wishful thinking. Such high self-regard with respect to personal competence is known as 'overconfidence bias.' People tend to overestimate or exaggerate their abilities. This bias is inherent in all of us. But it reaches an especially high level of intensity in one central banker." Continue reading

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Jack Lew: Debt Ceiling Drama To Return in October

"Oh, debt ceiling battles… what wonderful political theater you are. The next battle is coming this fall, although no one seems quite sure when. Regardless, it will have an impact on markets, as before, and could send gold shooting skyward. Both parties are expected to dig their trenches even deeper this time… making the fireworks even more explosive than usual. Since the gridlock in Congress seems unlikely to change, expect this to become a new annual national pastime… something like D.C.’s version of the Super Bowl. Get out your popcorn… and don’t forget to keep an eye on gold prices. Remember this chart." Continue reading

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Bloody Scenes from the Next Episode of Economic Crisis

"Stand by for round two of the global economic crisis, coming soon to a screen near you. It’s going to be as bloody and chaotic as the scenes on your TV from Cairo and Damascus. Yet, as ever, the chorus on Wall Street manages to keep a straight face and sing the same tune while robbing investors blind. Just listen to them on Bloomberg or CNBC and you would think the Fed has this all under control and the U.S. economy is recovering. Now, admittedly, economists are all facing the wrong way too. There is hardly a man or woman willing to stick their neck out and say the inflation-distorted figures that purport to show a recovery are turning in the opposite direction." Continue reading

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Near the Debt Ceiling, No One Can Hear You Scream

"Let’s put these clues together. We have another fiscal crisis imminent with a looming debt ceiling drama. We have a Federal Reserve that is already doing a huge and unsustainable amount of 'stimulus' buying. And we have an economy far weaker than it’s been in more than a decade despite the bluster over GDP. The bigger concern is that the market doesn’t have any of this priced in at all. It’s true that August was the worst month for stocks since May 2012. Yet the market fell just 3.1% and is only 4.5% off its all-time high. That’s barely a scratch." Continue reading

Continue ReadingNear the Debt Ceiling, No One Can Hear You Scream