Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Showdown Looms.



Baltic Dry Index. 1313 -04   Brent Crude 78.41

LIR Gold Target in 2019: $30,000.  Revised due to QE programs.

Why did I take up stealing? To live better, to own things I couldn't afford, to acquire this good taste that you now enjoy and which I should be very reluctant to give up.

OPEC, with apologies to Cary Grant. To Catch A Thief.

As of this morning, it looks like Asia and much of dying Europe is about to get oil tax relief from OPEC. The suicidal Europeans, as usual, will squander the relief by a lunatic sanctions fight with Russia over a futile attempt at saving something for Uncle Scam in the Ukraine following his botched Kiev coup in February. The Asians will seize the OPEC tax relief with both hands. America’s frackers say lower oil prices don’t matter to them, “they’re insulated” since “a shift away from industries like steelmaking and into services such as health care has helped make the economy less reliant than ever on oil and natural gas, according to government data compiled since 1950.”

It’s madness of course. Lower oil prices at the least means lower profitability and less ability to service the massive fracking debts. At the worst it’s a return to an old fashioned oil bust. Since everyone says that they are going to carry on producing no matter what the price, I suspect that we are heading for $50 oil in short order, possibly as soon as Friday. “Houston we have a problem.”  It’s enough to make a Texan oil fracker choke on his Thanksgiving Turkey. And let’s not mention Brazil, Venezuela, or Nigeria, where the Naira has just gone into freefall.

Faced with the choice between changing one's mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof.

John Kenneth Galbraith

U.S. Crude Tumbles to Four-Year Low Before OPEC Meeting

Nov 25, 2014 10:04 PM GMT
West Texas Intermediate crude fell to the lowest level in more than four years after nations supplying a third of the world’s oil failed to pledge output cuts before this week’s OPEC meeting.

Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Mexico and Russia said they plan to start quarterly monitoring of oil prices. Today’s talks in Vienna didn’t result in any joint commitment to reduce supplies, said Igor Sechin, who runs Russian state oil producer OAO Rosneft.

“Even those four countries are not agreeing to any kind of cut, and the last thing the Saudis want is to be the ones doing all the cutting,” said Tariq Zahir, a New York-based commodity fund manager at Tyche Capital Advisors. “You have to get an above 2-million-barrel cut from OPEC to stabilize the market.”

WTI for January delivery fell $1.69, or 2.2 percent, to $74.09 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest settlement since September 2010. The volume of all futures was 21 percent below the 100-day average.
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Oil Volatility Here to Stay Regardless of OPEC Decision

Nov 26, 2014 5:00 AM GMT
Whatever the outcome of tomorrow’s OPEC meeting, options traders are betting on oil-price swings.

That’s because the decision from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries isn’t likely to make much difference. Slowing global demand and a U.S. shale-drilling boom has created a glut that won’t fade any time soon, said Torbjoern Kjus of DNB ASA in Norway.

Half of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect a cut in production at the meeting in Vienna tomorrow; the rest don’t see a deviation from OPEC’s 30 million barrel-a-day target. Yet an index tracking expectations for moves in oil prices reached the highest ever versus a gauge that measures volatility in equities, according to Bloomberg data going back to May 2007.

“We are still talking about a market that is 2-million barrels-a-day oversupplied in the first half of next year,” said Kjus, a senior oil market analyst at DNB. “Even if OPEC delivers on net production cuts, we don’t think that will be enough. We are not talking enough to turn this market around.”
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Oil Bust of 1986 Reminds U.S. Drillers of Price War Risks

Nov 26, 2014 3:36 AM GMT
The last time that U.S. oil drillers got caught up in a price war orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, it ended badly for the Americans.

In 1986, the Saudis opened the spigot and sparked a four-month, 67 percent plunge that left oil just above $10 a barrel. The U.S. industry collapsed, triggering almost a quarter-century of production declines, and the Saudis regained their leading role in the world’s oil market.

So while no one expects the Saudis to ramp up output now like they did then and U.S. shale oil companies are pledging to keep drilling regardless, the memory of that bust looms large for American industry executives on the eve of OPEC’s meeting tomorrow. As the Saudis gather with officials from the 11 other OPEC nations in Vienna, analysts are split on whether the group will cut output to lift prices or leave production unchanged to fight for market share with shale drillers.

“1986 was the big price collapse and the industry did not see it coming,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research in Wakefield, Massachusetts, who has covered the oil sector for 37 years. “It put a lot of them out of business. You just don’t forget it. It’s part of the cultural memory.”

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, responsible for about 40 percent of the world’s output, pumped 31 million barrels a day in October, exceeding its official target of 30 million.
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Drill On: U.S. Mantra as OPEC Power Wanes in the Face of Shale

Nov 26, 2014 12:00 AM GMT
No matter what OPEC countries decide tomorrow about cutting oil output, U.S. producers already know what they’re going to do: drill on.

As Saudi Arabia and its 11 fellow members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries meet for what’s viewed as the cartel’s most important conclave since 2008’s worldwide financial crisis, the U.S. has the most to gain and the least to lose.

For the oil industry, a significant production cut by OPEC would lift prices and profits across the board and help finance further U.S. energy innovation. And while a weaker response -- or no move -- would put more pressure on energy companies, the industry is increasingly insulated by burgeoning North American output.

“The U.S. oil industry is going to continue on its growth track whether OPEC comes out with a cutback or not,” Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of Englewood, Colorado-based consultant IHS Inc. and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Quest. “As oil prices go down, the U.S. industry is going up the learning curve and is better capable of coping with lower prices than it would have been two or three years ago.”

The swagger of U.S. producers in the face of plunging oil prices shows the confidence they’ve gained from upending OPEC’s six decades of market dominance with technology that wrings oil from dense rock for prices as low as $40 a barrel. The shale boom has placed the U.S. oil industry in its strongest position since OPEC began flexing its pricing power in the early 1970s.

----Beyond the ability of producers to remain profitable at lower prices, the broader U.S. economy is even less susceptible to whatever course OPEC might take. A shift away from industries like steelmaking and into services such as health care has helped make the economy less reliant than ever on oil and natural gas, according to government data compiled since 1950.
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Nigeria devalues naira and raises rates after oil price slide

25 November 2014Last updated at 17:28
Nigeria has devalued the naira, saying a drop in oil prices had made it hard to defend its currency.

The country's bank central bank also raised interest rates from 12% to 13% in a bid to stem foreign reserve loses.

Nigeria has spent billions of dollars defending the naira using "dwindling foreign reserves", the bank's governor said.

Falling oil prices also affected the Angolan kwanza, which hit a record low against the dollar on Tuesday.

The bank's governor Godwin Emefiele said: "Falling oil prices have consistently reduced the accretion to external reserves, thus constraining the ability of the bank to continually defend the naira and sustain the stability of the naira exchange rate."

The bank moved the target band of the currency to 160-176 naira to the US dollar, compared with 150-160 naira previously.

It also raised interest rates by 100 basis points.

Nigeria, which has one of the biggest economies in Africa, and is one of the continent's leading energy producers, has spent billions of dollars in the past year shoring up the naira, Mr Emefiele said.

Foreign reserves stood at around $37bn (£23.5bn), down over 18% from a year ago.

----Meanwhile, Angola's kwanza traded traded as low as 100.895 against the dollar before recovering some ground to 100.700 on Tuesday.

Angola is Africa's biggest oil producer after Nigeria.

TAG Oil hits oil, gas-bearing sands in Taranaki basin

 11/25/2014
The Cheal-E-JV-6 step-out well operated by Tag Oil Ltd., Vancouver, BC, intersected more than 9 m of net oil and gas-bearing sands in the Mt. Messenger formation, satisfying the well’s main objective.

The well, part of New Zealand’s onshore Taranaki basin, was drilled to a total depth of 1,939 m. TAG holds 70% interest.

Cheal-E6 is being completed as a potential oil well with production testing to begin this week and, if economic, will be immediately commercialized through the company’s wholly owned production infrastructure, TAG says.

Because of the “excellent performance and continued encouraging results of the Cheal-E site area,” TAG says it will now proceed to drill the Cheal-E7 step-out well, of which the company holds 100% interest. The company in October 2013 began production-testing the Cheal E-1 and E-2 wells

“It is difficult not to marvel at the imagination which was implicit in this gargantuan insanity. If there must be madness something may be said for having it on a heroic scale."

John Kenneth Galbraith.

At the Comex silver depositories Tuesday final figures were: Registered 64.28 Moz, Eligible 112.65 Moz, Total 176.93 Moz.   

Crooks and Scoundrels Corner

The bent, the seriously bent, and the totally doubled over.

Today, more on our new lawless age. Welcome to the new rigged American casino, operated by the New York franchise of America’s talking chair.

“The Germans [your nation here] outside looked from America to Russia, and from Russia to America, and from America to Russia again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.”

With apologies to George Orwell and Animal Farm.

Two mini–flash crashes rock stock market Tuesday

Published: Nov 25, 2014 6:09 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — In two separate instances Tuesday, stocks plummeted sharply for a brief period before returning to normal.

At around roughly 10:18 a.m. Eastern, 88 stocks fell or rose by 1% or more. Eric Hunsader, founder of Nanex LLC, pointed out the changes on his Twitter feed.

Hunsader said in an interview that the stocks that rose were being added to the MSCI index, and the ones that fell were being taken off that market index.

”It could be someone they had their own basket, and they were all interested in getting it all done and didn’t care about the price,” he said.

But the market saw another mini–flash crash at around 2:45 p.m. Eastern, when roughly 40 stocks moved abruptly for roughly a second.

Hunsader also noted that the stock of Medivation Inc. MDVN, +0.43%   plunged twice in the same day.

American Spring Night 2: Coast-To-Coast Protests, "We Have Every Right To Destroy A System That Seeks To Destroy Us"

With countrywide protests having occured across the nation all day, and more planned into the dark of the night, many cities are gearing up for another evening of fear and emotion. For now, the main trouble spots appear to be NYC (Lincoln Tunnel blocked, pepper spray used, multiple protests arounds Union and Times Square), Minneapolis (car ploughs down protesters, violence escalating), Cincinnati (main highway shut down) and Ferguson (2,200 National Guard deployed, multiple protests, multiple arrests). St. Louis just postponed the Thanksgiving Day parade, Los Angeles marches blocked Figueroa, Chicago protest blocked Michigan Avenue, and Oakland (I-580 and I-980 blocked)

President Obama's earlier comments translated appeared to sound like, 'I condemn the violence but totally understand it' and Al Sharpton's earlier analogies to a fight did not help. It appears the American Spring is spreading and while color may have been the catalyst, it appears youth is the dividing point.
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"Those entrapped by the herd instinct are drowned in the deluges of history. But there are always the few who observe, reason, and take precautions, and thus escape the flood. For these few gold has been the asset of last resort."

Antony C. Sutton

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished October.

DJIA: +137 Down. NASDAQ: +275 Down. SP500: +210 Down.  

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

An OPEC Oil Cut?



Baltic Dry Index. 1317 -07   Brent Crude 79.61

LIR Gold Target in 2019: $30,000.  Revised due to QE programs.

"Gold bears the confidence of the world's millions, who value it far above the promises of politicians, far above the unbacked paper issued by governments as money substitutes. It has been that way through all recorded history. There is no reason to believe it will lose the confidence of people in the future."

Oakley R. Bramble

Is OPEC going to cut its production target on Thursday. The Bloomberg article below suggests that they might. Without a cut, some experts are suggesting that the price of Brent crude might fall below $60, with the oil bust lasting into 2017. But even if they cut production, will they actually follow through, or will most just cheat in the expectation that America will just use any price increase as an opportunity to flood their domestic market with yet more “fracked” tight oil? My guess is that OPEC won’t cut, but I don’t have a position in crude oil. While Americans celebrate Thanksgiving on Thursday, half a world away in the EUSSR, at OPEC everyone is trying to figure out how to steal Saudi Arabia’s lunch. I doubt that the Saudis will let them. If I’m right and oil is about to enter a new oil war, the plunge may be fast and deep on the days when Americans are celebrating and famously shopping for foreign made tat.

Below, a good trading case for fully paid up put options or for the more timid, the case for synthetic double options.

OPEC Said to Consider Sparing Three Nations From Oil Cuts

Nov 25, 2014 4:00 AM GMT
OPEC is considering exemptions for three nations from any potential oil-production cuts, two people with knowledge of the proposal said. Saudi Arabia’s oil minister said he doesn’t anticipate a difficult meeting when the group meets on Nov. 27 to decide its response to slumping crude.

Iraq, Iran and Libya wouldn’t have to reduce supplies should the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agree to cut output at its gathering in Vienna, according to the people, who asked not to be identified in line with their national policies. Ali Al-Naimi, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, told reporters in the Austrian capital yesterday that it’s not the first time the oil market has been oversupplied.

Crude prices plunged into a bear market this year amid the highest U.S. oil production in more than three decades and speculation that Saudi Arabia wouldn’t cut output in response to a surplus. Oil-market analysts are perfectly divided on whether OPEC will cut output when it meets, or leave it unchanged.

“It makes sense that these three countries shouldn’t have to make further cuts” because they are already pumping less than they’re able to, Abhishek Deshpande, oil markets analyst at London-based Natixis, said by phone yesterday. Saudi Arabia would probably want assurances from Iran, Iraq and Libya that they won’t increase output, he said.
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Oil Seen Dropping Another $30 by ICAP on Commodity, Dollar Cycle

Nov 24, 2014 4:45 PM GMT
New York-traded crude oil will probably drop another $30 in the next two years as long-term cycles in commodities and currencies converge, no matter what happens at this week’s OPEC meeting and Iran nuclear talks, according to brokerage United-ICAP.

West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark, has collapsed five times since the contract’s introduction in 1983, said Walter Zimmerman, chief technical strategist for United-ICAP in Jersey City, New Jersey.

The plunges in 1986, 1991, 1998, 2001 and 2008 coincided with an OPEC price war, recessions and financial crises, and were also tied to cycles in commodities or the dollar, said Zimmerman, who was calling for a drop in oil prices as early as April. “This time we have both.”

“Crude is heading lower, with the high $40s or low $50s being touched by 2017,” Zimmerman said. The long-term cycle points to the dollar moving higher and the euro declining into 2016, while commodities move lower through 2016 and 2017, he said.

The average drop during the previous five major declines was about 62 percent, according to Zimmerman.
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Oil at $75 Won’t Shut in Much U.S. Shale, Dow’s Liveris Says

Nov 24, 2014 10:24 AM GMT
Oil at $75 a barrel won’t affect U.S. output from shale much because investments in wells and production have already been made, said Andrew Liveris, chairman and chief executive officer of Dow Chemical Co. (DOW)

Some U.S. shale producers are already hurt by the drop in oil prices, though Dow, based in Midland, Michigan, sells enough different products that it can withstand lower crude, Liveris, the head of the largest U.S. chemical maker, said at a conference in Dubai.

Chemical companies such as Dow use oil products and natural gas to make finished goods, which they sell at prices linked to crude.

“They’re not shutting in because that’s all ’sunk costs,’” he said of U.S. shale producers. “So you’re not going to get a lot of producers stopping at 75-buck oil.”
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Russia Hasn’t Decided to Cut Oil Output in Preparation for OPEC

Nov 24, 2014 5:25 PM GMT
Russia’s energy minister said his country hasn’t decided to cut oil production as he prepares to meet with OPEC ministers to discuss the crude market.

Russia is already helping to balance the oil market by keeping output steady, Alexander Novak said today in an interview with state TV channel Rossiya 24. There’s only a small chance the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will agree to reduce output at a meeting this week, he said.

“We are not Saudi Arabia, which has the ability to reduce production quickly, ramp up quickly,” Novak said. It’s open question whether an agreement would affect prices, he said.

His comments run counter to a report in Kommersant newspaper today that Russia may cut production by 300,000 barrels a day next year to support OPEC reductions of more than 1 million barrels. The group is considering action to boost prices after oil plunged more than $30 a barrel since July.

----“Russia will produce as much oil as it can, any cuts are possible only because of natural reasons, not on purpose to influence the market,” said Alexander Kornilov, an Alfa Bank energy analyst in Moscow. “Any statement beyond this is bravado.”
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"The history of paper money is an account of abuse, mismanagement, and financial disaster."

Richard M. Ebeling

At the Comex silver depositories Monday final figures were: Registered 64.90 Moz, Eligible 112.45 Moz, Total 177.35 Moz.   

Crooks and Scoundrels Corner

The bent, the seriously bent, and the totally doubled over.

In the currency wars to the basement, it’s about to become a take no prisoners war. Stay long physical precious metals. Fiat currency anarchy is at hand. Under the Bilderberger unloved euro, the EUSSR has crashed and burned. Now Germany is about to get the bill from the Goldmanite led ECB.

“The problem with fiat money is that it rewards the minority that can handle money, but fools the generation that has worked and saved money.”

“Adam Smith” aka George Goodman.

Zhou’s PBOC Past Shows Multiple Moves as More Cuts Seen: Economy

Nov 25, 2014 12:30 AM GMT
In his 12 years as People’s Bank of China Governor, Zhou Xiaochuan has never stopped at a single shift to benchmark interest rates once prompted into action.

Zhou, who took office in 2002 when Alan Greenspan was still chairman of the Federal Reserve, has overseen two tightening and two easing cycles for a total of 22 moves to the one-year lending rate and 20 to the one-year deposit rate. Simple math suggests his latest cut is unlikely to be a one-off.

By joining Mario Draghi and Haruhiko Kuroda in the global stimulus camp, Zhou signaled deeper concern over China’s outlook and recognition that targeted measures alone weren’t going to be enough to revive growth. A Bloomberg survey conducted late Nov. 21 through yesterday showed economists forecast further monetary loosening by the middle of next year.
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German bond yields to trump Japan as ECB battles deflation

"Be very bullish. The huge elephant in the room is ready to roar again," RBS advises clients

German bond yields are to fall below Japanese levels and plumb depths never seen before in history as Europe becomes the epicentre of global deflationary forces, according to new forecast from the Royal Bank of Scotland.

“We are seeing `Japanification’ setting in across Europe,” said Andrew Roberts, the bank’s credit strategist. “We expect 10-year Bund yields to cross the 10-year Japanese government bond and we are amply positioned for such an outcome.”

Mr Roberts said it is a “weighty win-win” situation for investors. If the European Central Bank launches full-blown quantitative easing, it will almost certainly have to buy large amounts of German Bunds, and these are becoming scarce.  

“Net supply in Germany is zero since they are in budget surplus this year and next, and they have written a balanced-budget amendment into their constitution. There are simply fewer and fewer Bunds to buy, and everybody wants them,” he said.

It is assumed that if the ECB buys sovereign bonds, it will have to buy them evenly in accordance with its capital “key”. This implies that 28pc would have to be German debt.

Yet if the ECB fails to deliver on hints that it will expand its balance sheet by €1 trillion, the damage would be so enormous that Europe would be sucked into a depressionary vortex, according to the bank. Bund yields would fall for different reasons, as debt markets began to reflect a Japanese-style deflation trap.
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"Gold would have value if for no other reason than that it enables a citizen to fashion his financial escape from the state."

William F. Rickenbacker 

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished October.

DJIA: +137 Down. NASDAQ: +275 Down. SP500: +210 Down.  

Monday, 24 November 2014

China Panics.



Baltic Dry Index. 1324 -08   Brent Crude 80.81

LIR Gold Target in 2019: $30,000.  Revised due to QE programs.

“There are some bored foreigners, with full stomachs, who have nothing better to do than point fingers at us [China]. First, China doesn’t export revolution; second, China doesn’t export hunger and poverty; third, China doesn’t come and cause you headaches, what more is there to be said?”

President Xi Jinping

Just how bad is the real picture in China? Downright awful judging by Friday’s panic at the People’s Bank of China. The sages at the PBOC must think that China’s economy has tipped from massive Wobble to Crash. If they’re right in that assessment, a deluge of massive mal-investment is about to hit the global economy.

PBOC Bounce Seen Short Lived as History Defies Bulls

Nov 24, 2014 4:26 AM GMT
China’s benchmark stock index rose to a three-year high after the central bank’s surprise interest rate cut late last week. Recent history suggests the gains won’t last long.

While the Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) climbed 2 percent today, six of the past seven cuts to interest rates and reserve requirements have been followed by declines in stock prices over the next two months. The last time the PBOC lowered lending and deposit rates, in July 2012, the benchmark index fell 7.4 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The rate cut, announced after the close of regular trading in China on Nov. 21, underlines concern that a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy is deepening. Factory production rose 7.7 percent in October from a year earlier, the second-weakest pace since 2009, while retail sales missed economists’ forecasts. China’s economy expanded 7.3 percent in the three months ended September and it’s projected to grow this year at the slowest pace since 1990 amid weakness in the property market and manufacturing.
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China blinks as economic downturn deepens

"China is not safe until they put the credit genie back in the bottle but that is going to be very difficult to do,” warns UBS

China has abandoned its policy of monetary tightening, cutting interest rates for the first time in over two years to head off a corporate crunch and mounting dangers of deflation.

The move set off an instant spike in the price of crude oil and other key commodities as traders bet on a fundamental pivot by the Chinese authorities and a return to the bad old ways of credit-driven growth.

The People’s Bank of China caught markets off guard, cutting the benchmark lending rate by 40 basis points to 5.6pc and the deposit rate by 25 basis points to 2.75pc. It also liberalised bank rates in a free market tilt.

“Every time the economy slows, they blink,” said Patrick Chovanec from Silvercrest Asset Management. 
“The danger is that they will keeping trying to shore up a growth model that is past its sell-by date.”

The central bank denied that it is changing tack, insisting that the cuts target a specific problem of high-financing costs for firms. “It does not signal that the direction of policy has changed. There is no need for strong stimulus," it said in a rare statement.

Tao Wang from UBS said falling inflation has caused the real cost of borrowing for average companies to rise from zero to 5.5pc since 2011, a drastic form of passive tightening. The interest burden for non-financial companies has jumped from 7.5pc to 15pc of GDP over the same period.

Yet the rate cuts are a clear shift in policy from the piecemeal liquidity injections of recent weeks, a sign that Beijing is alarmed by the depth of the economic slowdown.

----“They are acting under duress,” said George Magnus from UBS. “There has been a hefty decline in new housing starts. I don’t think these rate cuts are going to stop the secular downswing in the economy, whatever the Pavlovian reaction of the markets. China is not safe until they put the credit genie back in the bottle but that is going to be very difficult to do.”

----Mr Chovanec said China is so addicted to credit that it needs loan growth near 20pc to keep the game going. “Credit growth has fallen to 13pc and that is so tight for China it is strangling them. They are getting less GDP bump out of more and more credit, and that tells you loss-making assets are being rolled over. Nothing but creative accounting will stop non-performing loans from rising,” he said.
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We close with more on our new lawless bankster age.

“Call it the Goldman Sachs test. If this is something Goldman would do to its clients, don't do it."

Felix Salmon.

Goldman Sachs told banker who raised Libya concerns: Don't get involved

Email exchange seen by Telegraph show how Goldman reprimanded junior banker, as stage set for latest round in legal battle

Bosses at Goldman Sachs castigated a junior employee for questioning a trade the bank conducted on behalf of Libya’s sovereign wealth fund, warning him that it was not his business to get involved.

According to documents seen by The Telegraph, Youssef Kabbaj, the senior Goldman banker who led the bank’s relationship with the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) during the Gaddafi years, told the employee: “This is very serious… Do not ever call [the] LIA without me… to discuss transactions”.

The banker, who had enjoyed a relationship with the Libyans, was sharply reprimanded after relaying LIA concerns about a foreign exchange trade, referring to it as “scary”. Mr Kabbaj, the head of Goldman’s North Africa office at the time, told the individual: “Do not speak with my clients without me on the line… Especially this one as you don’t know all the background.”

The revelation comes ahead of the latest episode in the legal battle between Goldman and the LIA over claims the bank hoodwinked officials at the $60bn fund into agreeing to transactions they did not understand.
Goldman denies that the LIA officials were financially illiterate, and is countersuing.

A hearing will be held tomorrow in London to determine terms for the upcoming trial, in which the LIA is seeking damages for the $1bn it lost on equity derivative transactions in 2008. When the stock market took a turn for the worse in the weeks after the trade, almost the entire value of the trades was lost.

The LIA, attempting to rebuild itself after Gaddafi’s fall in 2011, claims Goldman made more than $300m of profits from the deal.

The junior banker has since been identified as Jaber Jabbour, a Syrian who left Goldman several months after the LIA and the bank fell out. “Decisions around individual departures are predicated on a number of factors, which can include individual performance as well as anticipated business needs,” a person briefed on his departure said.

The email that sparked the criticism from Mr Kabbaj, and the FX trade it refers to, is not disputed in the London court case, but has been reviewed by America’s Securities and Exchange Commission as part of an investigation into Goldman’s ties with the LIA.

In the email, Mr Jabbour, seen as a talented banker at Goldman’s London office, relayed comments from Mohammed Layas, the head of the LIA at the time, saying he “didn’t open a casino”.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/11247025/Goldman-Sachs-told-banker-who-raised-Libya-concerns-Dont-get-involved.html

 "Finance is the art of passing customer segregated funds from hypothecation to hypothecation until it finally disappears."

With apologies to Robert W. Sarnoff

At the Comex silver depositories Friday final figures were: Registered 64.90 Moz, Eligible 112.74 Moz, Total 177.64 Moz.   

Crooks and Scoundrels Corner

The bent, the seriously bent, and the totally doubled over.

The usual suspects today. The money printing madman at the central banks. Stay long fully paid up gold and silver against the inevitable day that paper money returns to intrinsic value. We have reached the outer limits of the Great Nixonian Error of fiat money.

"When paper money systems begin to crack at the seams, the run to gold could be explosive."

Harry Brown

S&P 500 Climbs to Record as Europe, China Fuel Optimism

By Joseph Ciolli Nov 21, 2014 9:41 PM GMT
U.S. stock benchmarks climbed to records, giving the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index a fifth weekly gain, as optimism in the global economy grew after central banks in China and Europe signaled additional stimulus measures.

Materials companies in the S&P 500 rose the most this month to a two-month high, and industrial shares increased to a record amid speculation the increased accommodation will spur global economic growth.
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Sell, Sell, Sell…….The Central Bank Madmen Are Raging

by David Stockman • November 21, 2014
The global financial system has come unglued. Everywhere the real world evidence points to cooling growth, faltering investment, slowing trade, vast excess industrial capacity, peak private debt, public fiscal exhaustion, currency wars, intensified politico-military conflict and an unprecedented disconnect between debt-saturated real economies and irrationally exuberant financial markets.

Yet overnight two central banks promised what amounts to more monetary heroin and, presto, the S&P 500 index jerked up to 2070. That is, the robo-traders inflated the PE multiple for S&P’s basket of US-based global companies to a nose bleed 20X their reported LTM earnings.

And those earnings surely embody a high water mark in a world where Japan is going down for the count, China’s house of cards is truly collapsing, Europe is plunging into a triple dip and Wall Street’s spurious claim that 3% “escape velocity” has finally arrived in the US is soon to be discredited for the 5th year running. So it goes without saying that if “price discovery” actually existed in the Wall Street casino, the capitalization rate on these blatantly engineered earnings (i.e. inflated EPS owing to massive buybacks) would be decidedly less exuberant.

In truth, nothing has changed about the precarious state of the world since yesterday. Except….. except the Great Bloviator at the ECB made another fatuous and undeliverable promise—- this time that he would do whatever he “must to raise inflation and inflation expectations as fast as possible”; and, at nearly the same hour, the desperate comrades in Beijing administered another sharp poke in the eye to China’s savers by lowering the deposit rate to by 25 bps to 2.75%.

Let’s see. Can it possibly be true that European growth is faltering because it does not have enough inflation? Or that China’s fantastic borrowing and building boom is cooling rapidly because the People Bank of China (PBOC) has been too stingy?

The answer is not on your life, of course.

----Likewise, last night”s signal from China was a warning to take cover, not to get all giddy in the casino. The People’s Printing Press of China has been on a rampage for this entire century, and has expanded its balance sheet by an incredible 9X since the year 2000.

Now, even the hapless masters of red capitalism taking shelter in Beijing recognize that this colossal money printing spree has fueled fantastic levels of over-building, over-investment and mind-boggling real estate speculation throughout the land.

The fact that—despite their better judgment—-they have had to once again open the monetary spigot is evidence that China’s addiction to the printing press is terminal, and that a hard landing is only a matter of time. No one told the algos that, either.

The real downward trajectory in China is tracked by the canary in the iron ore pit. Like almost everything else, China’s iron and steel industry is massively overbuilt. It has 1.1 billion tons of capacity but in the order of 600 million tons of sustainable “sell-through” demand. That is, need for steel for use in consumer products and capital replacement, not the current one-time construction binge.

Stated differently, China’s excess steel capacity is greater than the combined output of the US, Japan and the EC combined. Accordingly, when its real estate and construction bubble finally collapses, the world market will be inundated with cheap steel and every manner of goods made from it, including automobiles. During the current year alone, China will export more steel than the US industry will produce, and it is just getting started on the greatest “dumping” campaign the world has ever seen.

In short, there is a tidal wave of industrial deflation coming down the pike—- owing to two decades of world-wide central bank financial repression that has fueled vast malinvestments in mining, manufacturing, transportation and trade. That, in turn, will trigger a monetary race to the bottom by the central banks—a race that is already underway owing to Japan’s Halloween Massacre of the yen. Soon the rest of East Asia—and especially China— will have to join the exchange rate plunge or find their export based economies hitting the shoals.
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"With the exception only of the period of the gold standard, practically all governments of history have used their exclusive power to issue money to defraud and plunder the people."

F. A. von Hayek

The monthly Coppock Indicators finished October.

DJIA: +137 Down. NASDAQ: +275 Down. SP500: +210 Down.