Asset protection

Fed: Pathetic

“The Dow, S&P and Nasdaq have made record highs. More importantly, the Transports have as well.

Does this define a new bull market?”

The following is part of Pivotal Events that was published for our subscribers December 8, 2016.

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Perspective

The intriguing headline is about the central banker observing that the market is on the “cusp” of a rise in interest rates. Following the exceptional technical excesses clocked in June, long rates have been rising. Also since then, short rates such as Libor have also been increasing.

Perhaps, the official is indicating that the Fed has no alternative but to follow the increase in market rates with an increase in the administered rate. No surprises, as typically the Fed follows the market by many months. Also, most government institutions will be hostile to Trump. The Fed could raise rates to “get even”.

Too many commentators out there still believe that the market rise is discounting the Fed change. Pathetic. It’s been forcing the Fed’s hand.

When the market reversed, we did not bother to provide a rational. Rates would just go up. In retrospect, it’s been associated with a turn to positive attitudes. Which in turn includes the electoral win by the popular uprising. A distinctly pro-business administration is a big positive.

As we have been noting, this is early in another Great Reformation which will reform yet another tedious experiment in unlimited government.

Very good stuff, but how much is in the market?

Mister Technical can advise us.

Stock Markets

The Dow, S&P and Nasdaq have made record highs. More importantly, the Transports have as well.

Does this define a new bull market?

New bull markets are called at the bottom. In January, our call was for a rally, particularly for the resource sectors. The big “Rotation” made outstanding gains into mid-year. After a correction and pause into late October, which seemed appropriate, the stock market exploded. Election results have been assisted by curve-steepening, which since July has been good for the banks. After a brief pause, spread narrowing has continued, contributing very much to the party.

In looking at the broad market, the NYA is approaching the high reached in 2015, which is a test of the big Rounded Top.

In calling the election result, we have been impressed with the buying in anticipation of the remarkable reformation that has only just started. Financial markets are moving much faster than the actual reformation, which is and will be seriously fought by the establishment.

The win by the establishment would have been the next step towards a one-party system, including a state-run media and judiciary. The Left thought it was as good as won and is furious with the loss. Like rust, socialism never sleeps.

With the election result, we acknowledged the positives and advised we would let the technicals guide us. We had thought that whatever was declining would clear in November. This week the rise is becoming impetuous.

The TRAN has generated strong Upside Exhaustions plus a Sequential Sell and is eligible for a good correction. Banks (BKX) have accomplished similar excess.

However, the sharp rallies in KOL, marijuana stocks and base metals were impetuous enough to suggest another “silly season”. The will to speculate is very much in play. This week’s update on the Fear & Greed Index is important. Anything in the 75 to 80 level indicates a top, and it has jumped to 84.

A correction is possible and could start within a few weeks.

What does this do to the Dow Theory, which worked so well for us last year?

Precious Metals

There seems to be two problems out there.

The theory that the Fed can depreciate the dollar at will has not been working. The gold bug theory that this would drive gold to $10000 has not been working either.

We will stay with our methodical approach, which is that the 2007 blowout was a classic bubble. This was confirmed by the most severe contraction since the 1930s. In which case, the increase in gold’s real price would drive a bull market for the precious metals sector. This has been one of the features of previous post-bubble contractions back to the 1720 example.

The first post-bubble bull market for the sector ran until 2011, when the play became the most overbought since the blow-off in 1980.

The second bull market began last January and became overbought enough in July to call for a significant correction.

The next phase of the cyclical bull market could start soon. Gold stocks relative to the bullion price continue to improve.

Last week, we noted that this ratio would have to get above the 50-Day ma. With this, one could begin to accumulate the sector.

That was at 163, but the moving average is declining and is at 160. The ratio is acting well and up to 157.

We are almost there.

….also: Trump Rally and Irrelevant Dow Theory; what’s next Stock Market Crash


Listen to the Bob Hoye Podcast every Friday afternoon at TalkDigitalNetwork.com

 

The 3 Most Interesting Articles Of The Week

161211-011. I Hope You’ve Been Paying Attention?

– Dallas has blocked withdrawals from the police and firefighters pension fund.
 
– The Italian government is scrambling to prevent the world’s oldest bank – Monte Paschi – from going down.
 
– 446,000 people in the States joined the ranks of the permanently unemployed in November alone pushing the total number to an all time high 95.1 million. 
 
– Meanwhile global stocks markets have added over $1 trillion dollars since Donald Trump’s election.

…read more HERE

2. The Cycle of Assassination & War Bottomed in 2014

There is an 11-year average cycle for attempts to assassinate the president. Here is the list below:…..read more HERE

3. The Trump Rally Will Morph

The presidential transition brings new surprises almost every day. Last week Donald Trump’s spokesman revealed, via an offhand comment, that President-Elect Trump had sold all his publicly traded stocks back in June. That’s months before he won the election and faced conflict-of-interest questions……

continue reading HERE

Year-End Tax Planning Tips

incometax

As 2016 draws to a close, now is a good time to plan ahead to take advantage of tax savings, particularly as tax rates increased this year across the country. In addition to maximizing your RRSP and TFSA contributions and realizing any capital losses, make sure that any payments that may be eligible for tax deductions or credits are made ahead of the deadline.

Here are some key CRA dates for consideration:

Payments due by December 31, 2016:

• Investment counsel fees, interest and other investment expenses

• Medical expenses

• Child and spousal support payments

• Charitable donations

• Deductible legal fees

• Interest on student loans

• Contributions to your RRSP if you turned 71 on or before    December 31, 2016

You also have until December 31, 2016, to:

• Rebalance corporate class mutual funds tax-free

• Benefit from tax-loss selling

• Delay RRSP withdrawals under the Home Buyers Plan or Lifelong Learning Plan (until January 1, 2017)

• Make TFSA contributions as well as any necessary withdrawals

• Make RESP contributions to qualify for CESG

• Convert your RRSP to a RRIF if you turned 71 in 2016

• Benefit from the Children’s Fitness and Arts Credit

Payments due by January 30, 2017:

• Interest owed on spousal loans

Payments due by March 1, 2017:

• Contributions to your own RRSP or a spousal RRSP

• Contributions to federal or provincial labour-sponsored venture capital corporations

• RRSP repayments under a Home Buyers’ Plan or a Lifelong Learning Plan

 

Philip G. Kuzyk FCSI, CIM

Portfolio Manager, Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management

609 Granville Street, Suite 2200, Vancouver BC V7Y 1H2

T: 604.699.0869 | F: 604.643.1802 | TF: 888.589.9591

E: philip.kuzyk@canaccord.com |www.canaccordgenuity.com

“Dash-For-Trash” At Its Most Extreme Since DotCom Peak…

The Trump rally’s animal spirits might be jumping the shark. The massive outperformance of the ‘riskiest’ high-volatility stocks over ‘stodgy’ low-volatility in the last few weeks…

20161216 beta1 0

….continue reading HERE

…related by Lance Roberts:

Technically Speaking: Bullish Or Bearish? What The Charts Say

Bursting Bond Bubble Greatest Risk To Secular Bull Market

market-breadth

Bullish Outlook

Dave Nicoski is optimistically predisposed to the health of the economy as stocks, the US dollar, interest rates, and oil rise together. He correlates this phenomenon to a “post-World War 2” era when “markets reversed and broke out to new highs right around the ’45-46 period.”

On risk, Dave says the US economy is “truly into a bond bubble,” with “1.7 trillion dollars wiped out of the market” since elections. Equities probably have “advanced to a level in many of those areas in terms of when the rubber meets the road on infrastructure spending,” setting up opportunities for pullbacks in those areas.

….read more HERE

…also from Martin Armstrong:

The Cycle of Assassination & War Bottomed in 2014