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Damned Rookie Mistake (Have a Nugget Anyway)

Nuggetear

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Aw geez, I just had an extremely clever and full of info blog post to make up for my long absence.  In it, I went over the weather conundrum, my summer exploits, the state of our miserable economy as guided by the clown show in Washington, etc. etc.

But like a dumbass, when I went to insert my graphic, I inadvertently went “away” from the site and lost the whole fucking caboose.  Goshdamnitalltohell. Fuck me.

My apologies, I’ll try to summarize.

One, I’ve been buying NUGT for five weeks to various painful degrees of success.

Two, the 120-month exponential moving average on the dollar ($USD for you Stockcharts buds) was breached for the first time in a decade in late 2002, leading to our glorious metals revolution.  Since then, the dollar has bumped but not pierced that line on a monthly basis FOUR TIMES since that initial drop, all of those time led to sad days upon the ascending attempt (the saddest effort ending the first time in February of 2009) and happy, glorious days upon the subsequent failures (remember March 2009 friends?), at least for we PM fans.

Three, the last attempt lasted THREE PLUS MONTHS, from March to June.  We are now enjoying another rapid descent.  If we turn back up again here, on the dollar, I can probably tell you the PM bull is dead.  If not, we are headed to Nirvana once again, sans the blown out brains of the lead singer, etc.

Here’s the thing, don’t buy NUGT tomorrow, as it will probably pull back on a test of $1350.  However, if we breach that level like “butter” with no pullback, be prepared to get aggressive.  In the meantime, we might get a present from SLW‘s “miss” tonight.  AG, EXK and SLW are nascent monsters once again.

All that said, you should also have TBT, as the bonds are beginning their own slow motion train wreck, courtesy of the Bernanke-Obama Hubris Nexus.

Be well.  I appreciate you all.

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SKIFFLES For Zuul

Zuul

There is no Bernank, Only Zuul

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I don’t have a lot of time this morning, so I’m just going to feature the chart I put together last night.   As you know, I’m increasingly bearish here, and more so on the financial sector than any other, primarily because they are — like our internal deficit and debt problems — another can that has been kicked down the road.

Back in 2008, when the world was melting into a hardened polystyrene ball thanks to the implosion of the easy money real estate bubble, banks were allowed to escape (some just barely) thanks to the ministrations of the Fisc and the Fed via TARP and other more nefarious and clandestine sources.   Worse, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the twin dogs of Zuul the Destroyer, were allowed to remain in their positions of power “for the good of the market.”

In other words, little was done in regard to true reform save “shoring up” for “the good of the industry and the economy.”    Bad mortage loans are still on many books, and real estate prices have been frozen in a glacial slide to the sea, rather than being allowed to correct in a more natural — if radical — manner.

Ironically, it is not those mortgage time bombs which will kill the banks in the immediate term, as the “propping up” methodologies of Congress, The POTUS and the Fed are actually hurting the taxpayer while assisting lame banks.  No, it will be the regulatory overkill administered in the fecal kludge which is Dodd-Frank Reform Bill, also known as “the second 2,000+ page bill that no one read before voting through.”

To give the Congresscritter some defense however, we can’t blame them for the criminal act of not reading the bill, since there were hundreds of pages of regulations YET TO BE WRITTEN found within its pages.  In my opinion, this is the far more egregious and unconstitutional sin.   In the case of signing a law that carried unknown legislative directives in it, Congress is yielding it’s power to an unelected alphabet soup of Federal financial bureaucracy.

Banks are just now beginning to “implement” some of the new regs.  You are already familiar with the loss of revenue due to debit card restrictions, but there are other capital and revenue limiting aspects which will also affect banks both large and small.

Ultimately, this will likely lead to another round of consolidation,which is what the cronies in Congress would like, as they loathe competition and it’s messy donation collection implications.   Until then, banks will be a mess, and I would steer well clear of them.   If you are adventurous like me, you might even take an interest in their downfall:


As you know, I added to my SKiFfles the other day, along with a position in TZA and more TBT (which remains a hair shirt).   What you don’t know, unless you are a member of The PPT was that I also loaded up on EXK, GDXJ and AG calls yesterday afternoon.

Yet another reason to look into a subscription for The PPT as soon as possible.  My best to you all.

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Crap! The Yankees Lost

WTF?  When we come back in a big way, we’re supposed to win the whole damn thing.

I don’t want to talk about it.

Okay, I will say one thing:  I wish I didn’t like Big Paps as much as I do.  It’s those damn ESPN commercials.

(I apologize to our foreign readers, but every now and then we’re going to talk sports and politics here.)

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I edged more to the Dark Side this day.   I added to my TBT horde… what can I say?  It’s like my own personal hair shirt.  It helps me with personal penance and such.   Reminds me of back in the day, when I was buying gold at under $300 an ounce and my dear departed Dad was laughing at me at every family gathering and occasional phone call.  Sometimes stubbornness pays off, no?

I also added to my Skiffles (SKF) horde.   I am now at about 40% of my intended position in that security.   I am not even close to the point of no return.

Lastly, I went to the Emperor Palpatine himself and bought some TZA from him today.  At the close.  It was a lot.  I don’t even want to tell you about it.  The lightning scars will likely remain for some time.

I didn’t touch anything in silver and gold.  I’m waiting to see if we’re getting some “handles” here, on what some are calling “triple top breakdowns” and what I like to call “cups w. handles.”   GDX is looking extremely appetizing here, but I will wait for it to break above that $63 range… and then I’ll probably go with GDXJ for the leverage.

Stay on your toes, and God Bless.

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Out of the Woods?

Upstate MI

(Some of You May Recognize where I was this Weekend…)
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All is well at last, the Kabuki Theater entertainment has ended and we can all expect bright sunshine and free cherry-bomb popsicles for the remainder of the summer!

Or not?

It’s hard for me to see this as anything but a temporary positive, as it looks to be another boot of the increasingly cumbersome can “down the road,” once again.    Some of you may have noted that the plan calls for some $2.2 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade.  That may sound like a lot, but one must look at the way Washington politicians (and their scoring body, the Congressional Budget Office [“CBO”] ) define “cuts” before we can analyze that number.   Unlike you and me, who “cut” our own budgets by reducing spending, Washington defines a “reduction in the planned growth of spending” as a “cut.”  What does that mean in practical terms?

Let me give you an example to illustrate:

Some of you may recall my comment the other day on Fly’s blog that if Washington decided today to merely freeze current spending at 2011 budget levels over the next ten years, that would be defined by the CBO as a $9.9 Trillion “cut” in spending over that period.  Why?  Because the CBO looks at current Congressional spending plans like a layman might a five or ten year lease rate– they build regular increases into spending over the specified period.   In other words, the thought that a budget might NOT increase is almost unheard of in Washington.

In fact, it’s so unheard of, that the very “cuts” they are bandying about today are merely decreases in spending growth, not real “cuts” at all.  And since we can’t even afford spending at current levels, this means the “deal” brokered today over much jawboning and posturing doesn’t mean “jack all” with regard to actual deficit reduction, and it means absolutely squatola with regard to the overall burgeoning debt position of the United States Government.

Today, Congress is patting itself on the back for putting a finger in the dike like the famous Dutch boy of legend, but they are ignoring the gaping chasm appearing in the seawall 50 meters to the right.

Combine these last weeks’ complete waste of time in addressing the ongoing debt problems with the continuing reality of the Obama Recession, neatly laid out by the U.S. Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis (“BEA”) just last Friday in a report stating that last quarter’s anemic annualized GDP growth rates of 1.92% had to be revised to an even more atrocious 0.36% annualized rate, and I’d say that we are deep in the crapper here, folks.

Leave the ongoing unemployment woes aside, the fact is that we were able to escape the consequences of our debt profligacy in the past by growing our way out of the problem.   As the above paragraph states, that ain’t happening here.  What’s more, if the Obama Administration continues with it’s plans to foist  Obamacare on lower value-added employee bases (read: “unskilled work forces”) and also continues with it’s heavy handed regulatory and “green” initiatives, unemployment is going to get worse before it gets better.

With these set of parameters, what choice, really, does Bernanke have, but to whip the printing presses into a frenzy to stave off Depression Era deflation?  And for how much longer does that strategy work in conjunction with our hemorrhaging debt problem?

When does the child (likely a Chinese child) finally cry out: “Look! The Emperor is not wearing any clothes?”

Let’s see what happens tomorrow, but I continue to like TBT, unless some madness grips the bond markets.  Gold and silver may take a hit here, on the “all is well” euphoria, and maybe even in the double whammy when everything starts selling off later tomorrow or this week.  I actually bot some NUGT and DGP on Friday, thinking the veil will be dropped a little bit on the Emperor when this deal gets done.   If I’m wrong, I’ll dump that extra, post-haste.

Oh, and I’m keeping GSVC, because the Fly is never wrong over the long term.

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That Certainly Could Have Been It

 Missed the Train?

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For now, at least.    It looks the dollar has bottomed for now, and as a result, I will likely be dumping the rest of my AGQ tomorrow.  I will also continue to sell down my overweight positions in EXK, SLW and yes, GSS (which I am overweight for stupid reasons).  Some ANV will go, as well as some IAG and EGO too.  Not a tonne, but I will be raising cashe (sic) munny (sic).

I will also likely sell some other things tomorrow which look overbought despite their not being in the precious metal category.  I shall tell the good gentlepeople of The PPT about that before I make those moves known here in Pikerdome.

What won’t I be selling?   That I will let you know… lucky dogges.   I will not be selling any UPS.

I will not be selling any UL.

I will not be selling any MON.

And I will NOT be selling any TBT.    In fact, I may even add to the latter.

Best to you all, and Merry Kwaanza, Fonzies.

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Dispatches from the Road

 hobo

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I’m on the road and the wi-fi is weak in this hotel room.  Therefore this will be tres brief.

Frankly, I dunno if it’s time to start climbing back into PM’s with a passion, but my guts says there’s one more shake here before we’re ready to reset.  If I’m wrong, we should know by the dollar’s return to the downtrend relatively quickly.

In the meantime, let’s not forget about our old friend, Mr. Egregious Interest Rates.  I like TBT here as a hedge against Bernankianism, even though it looks like we’re due a bit of a pullback in the next few days.

What’s lucky for us, is we are approaching resistance here, and after a pullback, the buy point should be rather obvious:

A break of that line, or a retest, should be a safe entry on what should become a long term hold for you.

Ciao.

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