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Long(er) Silver – Bought AGQ

Okay, I had to step in to the silver market today, taking a leveraged ETF play with AGQ.

I’ve owned silver, more or less continuously, since 2009 – in the physical form.

But every now and again I also leverage up the play with moves in the financial products. Now is just one such time.

Silver is a component of my 9th floor. I’ve used it in the limestone stucca that adorns my walls. I used it in the mortar to build the very foundation of the room itself. It’s a staple, because it is so undervalued, I can off the back of my hand say “silver is undervalued” at any time of the day, and probably be right.

I got into AGQ for $41.77. This is just for a trade.

The Fed is printing another trillion dollars, and the debt crises of the world are nowhere near the halfway mark yet.

Mull that over, why don’t you…

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Let’s Have A Candid Discussion

You think this makes sense do you? US markets are ramping to levels not seen since the last, great bull market. The debt of countries like Italy (where ex-president and child rapist Berlusconi is threatening to splinter the votes to ungovernable ends) and Spain (where a quarter of the youth are disaffected, unable to start their lives and about one tenth of the land mass is preparing for secession) are trading for yields that are really, reasonable. Oil is spiking towards the $100 mark – meanwhile Europe remains marred in recession and Germany just joined them. Oil stockpiles are increasing.

Precious metals are collapsing in price and the Fed is printing $80 billion a month.

In short, my dear reader, you are out of your minds.

But that is all right. You see, I foresaw your absurdity – your complete mental breakdown – months ago. I prepared for this. I realized, “this makes no sense”, and because it made no sense, I knew you would act this way. How else would the crazy behave in a crazy world?

So I did the opposite of what makes sense. And I did it first, before you.

Now, let’s chat about the euro. The $EURUSD is completely deranged. If it were a person, it would be a homeless man who found a tattered tuxedo, and is presently running around, hiding in steam vents in the middle of the street in Detroit. But, by some divine joke, this homeless man has been mistaken for a titan of industry, and is currently invited to all the high social class dinners.

“Aaaaahahghgh”, he gurgles in reply to requests for his opinion on gun control.

“EEEEAAAA”, he says when asked for advice on pre-tax 401K versus Roth.

And then he proceeds to eat his napkin with an olive fork.

Now let’s chat about oil. Oil is going way lower. The US economic numbers and forecasts are, again, way off, again. This is really not very funny anymore. How ten thousand economists can blow this year after year, never bothering to even pretend to learn from their mistakes the year prior…they should all be fired and stripped of their degrees. Pathetic…

Plus, Europe remains in a spiral. Germany, the heart of the EU, has finally entered recession this year. Question: knowing German culture, do you think that will make them more or less willing to work with their fellow member states?

Wait, don’t answer that. I’ll answer it for you. “It will make them less likely to work with their peers.”

Very good me, have a reward.

Why thank you.

German’s are going to increasingly view the rest of Europe as a useless bundle. If German wellbeing takes a hit, they’re culturally predisposed to blaming Italy or Spain or France for dragging them down with their wild schemes and self-centered demands. If Germany was reluctant to sit by and watch Draghi open the ECB doors to distressed banks before, wait until their worst prejudices are confirmed. Free money was supposed to help Europe, remember? Germany goes into recession and they’ll make sure the Bundesbank does everything within its power to hamper the rest of the EU at every turn.

Now let’s chat about housing. Housing prices are going higher, but that’s not going to help you sell that third, four bedroom house you’ve been desperately clinging to, praying for a buyer. Your retirement plans are shot, pal. Prices are going higher, but sales volumes are staying depressed. The housing recovery, like most luxuries, is reserved for the rich.

Now let’s chat about bonds. Safe haven bonds have got one major push left in them. I don’t expect the US 10 year to clear 2%. Meanwhile, bonds of Italy, Spain, Greece, etc are WAY too high. They are going to be taken out back to the woodshed before summer.

After that, I’m going to reinvestigate building a short position in American treasuries. We’re one major push in commodity prices from the Fed being strung up without any options for recourse. Because they’ve decided to load up on assets yielding 2%, they really don’t have much in the way of choices for controlling the money supply, unless they want to jack up the discount rate and watch the banks crash screaming back into bankruptcy. The economy is going to become increasingly wild, like a Stallion that got away from the Spanish.

For the moment, bet on the Fed and bet on higher prices. But always remember, in the back of your mind, that trouble cannot be vanished with the wave of a wand. Problems will always materialize in some way, and if not addressed, the consequences of those deviations can build to tremendous proportions.

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Raised Cash To 20%

Bernanke tricked me, plain and simple. I made the wrong move on the back of QE3.

Licking my wounds.

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Be In Awe

The QE3 sniffles have been cured, by a double dosage of money lozenges administered straight down this markets throat.

Like it or not; we are going higher.

Yields on EU debt continue to act favorably. The highest risers today were the safehaven countries. The continents’ red-headed step children have better yields by the day.

That won’t last. But for the moment I don’t care.

Because Ben is dropping another $600 Billion into the economy in the short span of one year.

Why should I worry about there being no buyers tomorrow, when someone is ready to buy the store out today?

Meanwhile, I find myself very long with only a trace cash position just north of 10% – holding AEC, CLP, CCJ, BAS and silver.

In other words, tonight I discover myself home at a reasonable hour; finally having escaped the pile of work that has chained me to my desk for two weeks now. It is only a slight reprieve, however. The eye of the storm is overhead, giving me a lull to prepare for the next deleterious wave.

Having just had a small refection, I will withdraw now to spend the evening with the lady, who I have, sadly, been unattentive to of late.

Good night, friends, and peace for you.

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Not All Commodities Are Created Equal

Despite the looming $600 billion plus pump from Uncle Benjamin, that does not imply that all things are necessarily a “thought free” buy. Very specifically, I would still avoid natural gas here, and by extension coal.

I was thinking about this the other day, wondering if some of my about-to-be-deployed 25% cash position should be flung into old Jake Gint favorite NRP. It’s a coal royalty partnership that dishes out 10% annually. Pretty sweet…

But the answer I came to is, “no”.

Natural gas is experiencing pricing issues because of storage space problems. If you don’t have space for extra gas, you don’t have space to fill by bidding gas up in price. If you can’t bid gas up in price, then the only bid for higher prices is coming from things like UNG that have limited ability to impact final sold prices.

Which in my eyes means that natural gas could still crater into Christmas on the backs of a very mild winter and overproduction.

If natural gas should lose the bid, energy companies are going to have a field day – we’re talking the-greatest-fucking-Christmas-season-ever, kind of time, as they meet their quotients on ever cheaper fuel.

And by extension, coal would continue to be mutilated without exception as plants continue to convert to natural gas generators.

Thus, even though QE3 is the greatest announcement ever if you just want to buy shit and check your brain at the door, I could see lots of people taking a stick in the eye by jumping the gun and buying into some select commodities. I’m not short these commodities, mind you; just tastefully ignoring them.

The play on QE3 is most definitely found in the precious metals. Even some of the manufacturing metals could be risky as I do not foresee QE3 doing much to help real demand for goods – look what happened to Europe’s manufacturing sector after the LTRO’s and ESM/EFSF were put into effect. It would suck to be long steel only to see the sector shed 30% more of gross demand from here.

No, no, stick to silver and gold. And be prepared mentally for the day when shorting oil and the other manufacturing commodities is the right move (but not yet).

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