Timing & trends

Rogue Price Spikes Can Make You Money

Stocks are taking a breather today from the recent rally off our cycle lows and support level. As explained and shown in this morning’s video we are expecting stocks to stall out over the next 5 days and become choppy.

Any weakness in stocks means money will flow into metals and that is what happened on Thursday afternoon.

I did stumble onto the pre-market chart of GLD today only to notice a pre-market spike just like what we have been seeing in the SPY ETF for the broad market.

Take a look at the chart below of GLD (Gold Price)…

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Watch Video On Price Spikes For SP500/DOW/NASDAQ/RUT 2K


More Charts & Video Examples to Learn

I have shared this trading tip and strategy many times in the past but here are some recent examples where it happened a couple weeks ago repeatedly with the SPY ETF: Click Here

I found another video I did in 2014 showing this same strategy in the COW ETF fast FORWARD to 7:05 minute in video to see these great examples: Click Here

Who Is Investing In Education Technology? – Part 2

zuckerbergIt’s hard to think of an area of human endeavor or interaction that technology has not made more agile or efficient. From Uber to Netflix to Airbnb, each disruption has shown us that no industry is off-limits and that things shouldn’t be taken for granted just because “that’s the way it’s always been done”.

The result, arguably, has been a healthier marketplace with more choice and better products for customers. In education, the rapid growth of EdTech has shown that we’re now experiencing a similar convergence of dynamics that spells out a huge technology-driven paradigm shift.

Prominent EdTech investor Tory Patterson said in the Wall Street Journal that start-ups in this field have a huge chance to unseat incumbents due to the introduction of broadband Internet, mobile and social technology in schools. After shaking up the English language learning textbook publishing market in China, we’re now looking to change the way English language learning is taught in educational instiutions and corporations in Latin America.

The Stories and the Money That Tells Them (Investing for the Future)

Stories about the future of education and EdTech are often crafted by those investing in those very futures. These stories are repeated and amplified by those same people and help to shape the industry as we know it.

So it should come as no surprise that we at Lingo Media see EdTech as the way of the future and a disruptive force that will revolutionize the English language learning industry. That said, there are a number of leaders both in the world of politics and business that are very interested in this space:

The Obama administration recently renewed its calls for further investment in EdTech. In the administration’s new Strategy for American Innovation, published in October 2015, the President singled out EdTech as one of the critical areas that will be key for ensuring “that the United States remains an innovation superpower.” Most notably, the paper spotlights the “modest impact” technology has had so far on student outcomes compared with the “transformative” impact technology has had in most other aspects of Americans’ lives. Whereas in other sectors, R&D expenditures are as high as 20% of revenues, in education that figure is less than 0.2%, the paper asserted. Part of that has to do with the nature of the education market with “with more than 13,500 school districts, lengthy adoption cycles and modest per-pupil expenditures on software.” And that “limits the willingness of companies to invest in R&D and rigorous evaluation for educational software and next generation learning environments.”

The Gates Foundation has spent billions and billions of dollars driving various education initiatives. In October 2015, Bill Gates gave what Education Week observed was “his first major speech on education in seven years,” and indicated his foundation would “double down” on teacher preparation and common academic standards.

After the birth of his daughter this past fall, Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan wrote her a letter (and posted it on Facebook) discussing how they will donate the majority of their Facebook wealth to charity. Among the projects that the new Zuckerberg Chan Initiative will fund include “personalized learning”. Zuckerberg’s interest in such a thing is no doubt connected to investments that he’s already made – in the private school AltSchool, for example. And in September, Facebook announced that it had been working on building software for the Summit charter school chain.

Joining Gates and Zuckerberg in venture philanthropy is Laurene Powell Jobs, Steve Jobs’ widow. Her organization, the Emerson Collective, announced a campaign – XQ: The Super School Project – to get folks to “rethink high school.” The Emerson Collective also invested in AltSchool and Udacity last year.

Marc Boxser, Global Director for Strategic Initiatives at GEMS, points out that the recently announced sustainable development goals illustrate how many global education challenges still remain unmet. “Around 250 million children of primary school age cannot read or write, and at current rates of progress, it will take until 2072 to eradicate youth illiteracy”. The growth of EdTech, he explains, is the key to solving this problem. No matter the application, technology provides the greatest opportunity to make major gains in education outcomes.

So it’s no wonder that EdTech has gone from being somewhat unappreciated to a real contender for being the center of attention when it comes to technology growth and investment. 

Who’s Buying into the EdTech Growth Surge

2015 was actually a record-setting year for EdTech investment if you look at the total dollar figures. Investment analyst firm CB Insights noted, “the period from 2010 to 2014 saw more than a 503% growth in investment dollars.”

Here’s a list of the 20 biggest financing deals of 2015 according to Hack Education:

  1. Social Finance ($1 billion)
  2. Earnest ($275 million)
  3. HotChalk ($230 million)
  4. Social Finance ($200 million)
  5. TutorGroup ($200 million)
  6. Lynda.com ($186 million)
  7. Hujang.com ($157 million)
  8. Udacity ($105 million)
  9. 17zuoye and AltSchool (tied with $100 million each)
  10. Xioazhan Jiaoyu ($84 million)
  11. General Assembly ($70 million)
  12. Udemy ($65 million)
  13. Yuantiku ($60 million)
  14. Civitas Learning ($60 million)
  15. NetDragon Education ($52.5 million)
  16. Genshuixue and Varsity Tutors (tied with $50 million each)
  17. Coursera ($49.5 million)
  18. Knewton ($47.25 million)
  19. Ortbotix and Duolingo (tied with $45 million each)
  20. littleBits ($44.2 million)

There were plenty of predictions last year that all this investment would result in exits – that is, IPOs, mergers, and acquisitions – that would “defy historical trends.” The education sector is “hot” for these sorts of deals and the strong investor interest in the sector is predicted to continue. 

The big one: LinkedIn’s acquisition of Lynda.com for $1.5 billion.

A few comments on this list of acquisitions:

  • Private equity firms love buying EdTech companies. Perhaps because the average investor in the market is rather unfamiliar and unaware of them.
  • The most active investors in EdTech were: NewSchools Venture Fund, 500 Startups, Learn Capital, LearnLaunchX, Kapor Capital, GSV Capital, TechStars, Andreessen Horowitz, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Deborah Quazzo. Click here to see the list of the most active EdTech investors since 2009.

Investors, big and small, recognize the opportunities for growth in the EdTech space. It’s really more a matter of when, not if, digital disruption will firmly entrench itself in classrooms.

Please visit us on our website at www.lingomedia.com to learn even more about investing in EdTech. Lingo Media is Changing the Way the World Learns English. Don’t be left behind with this opportunity and be sure to stay tuned to the third and last installment of this mini-series – How EdTech Companies Have Performed?

The ban on cash is coming. Soon.

UnknownThis is starting to become very concerning. 

The momentum to “ban cash”, and in particular high denomination notes like the 500 euro and $100 bills, is seriously picking up steam. 

On Monday the European Central Bank President emphatically disclosed that he is strongly considering phasing out the 500 euro note. 

Yesterday, former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers published an op-ed in the Washington Post about getting rid of the $100 bill. 

Prominent economists and banks have joined the refrain and called for an end to cash in recent months. 

The reasoning is almost always the same: cash is something that only criminals, terrorists, and tax cheats use. 

In his op-ed, Summers refers to a new Harvard research paper entitled: “Making it Harder for the Bad Guys: The Case for Eliminating High Denomination Notes”. 

That title pretty much sums up the conventional thinking. And the paper goes on to propose abolishing, among others, 500 euro and $100 bills. 

The authors claim that “without being able to use high denomination notes, those engaged in illicit activities – the ‘bad guys’ of our title – would face higher costs and greater risks of detection. Eliminating high denomination notes would disrupt their ‘business models’.” 

Personally I find this comical. 

I can just imagine a bunch of bureaucrats and policy wonks sitting in a room pretending to know anything about criminal activity. 

It’s total nonsense. As long as there has been human civilization there has been crime. Crime pre-dates cash. And it will exist long after they attempt to ban it. 

Perhaps even more hilarious is that many of these bankrupt governments have become so desperate for economic growth that they now count illegal drug activity and prostitution in their GDP calculations, both of which are typically transacted in cash. 

So, ironically, by banning cash these governments will end up reducing their own GDP figures. 

What’s really behind this? Why is there such a big movement to ban something that is used for felonious purposes by just a fraction of a percent of the population? 

Cash, it turns out, is the Achilles’ Heel of the financial system. 

Central banks around the world have kept interest rates at near-zero levels for nearly eight years now. 

And despite having created massive bubbles and enabled extraordinary amounts of debt, their policies aren’t working. 

Especially in Europe, the hope of stoking economic growth (and even the sickening goal of inflation) has failed. 

So naturally, since what they’ve been trying hasn’t worked, their response is to continue trying the same thing… and more of it. 

Interest rates across the European continent are now negative. 

Japanese interest rates are now negative. 

And even in the United States, the Federal Reserve has acknowledged that negative interest rates are being considered. 

They have no other choice; raising rates will bankrupt the governments they support and derail any fledgling economic growth. 

Look at how low interest rates are in the US– and yet 4th quarter GDP practically ground to a halt. They simply cannot afford to raise rates. 

As global economic weakness continues to play out, central banks will have no other option but to take interest rates even further into negative territory. 

That said, negative interest rates will be the destruction of the financial system.

Because sooner or later, if banks have to pay negative wholesale interest rates to each other and to the central bank, then eventually they’ll have to pass those negative rates on to their customers. 

Many banks have already started doing this, especially on larger depositors. 

We’ve seen this in Europe where some banks charge their customers negative interest to save money, and in some extraordinary circumstances, pay other customers to borrow money. 

It’s total madness. 

There’s a certain point, however, when interest rates become so negative that no rational person would hold money in the banking system. 

Eventually people will realize that they’re better off withdrawing their money and holding physical cash. 

Sure, cash doesn’t pay any interest. But it doesn’t cost any either. 

If you have a $200,000 in your savings account at negative 1%, you’d have to pay the bank $2,000 each year. 

Clearly it would make more sense to buy a safe and hold most of that money in cash. 

Problem is, the banks don’t have the money. 

For starters, there’s literally not enough cash in the entire financial system to pay out more than a fraction of all bank deposits. 

More importantly, banks (especially in the US and Europe) are extremely illiquid. 

They invest the vast majority of your deposit in illiquid loans or securities of dubious long-term value, whatever the latest stupid investment fad happens to be. 

And many banks have been engaging in a substantial balance sheet shift, rotating bonds from what’s called “Available for Sale” to “Hold to Maturity”. 

This is an accounting trick used to hide losses in their bond portfolios. But it also means they have less liquidity available to support bank customer withdrawal requests. 

The natural side effect of negative interest rates is pushing people to hold money outside of the banking system. 

Yet it’s clear that a surge of withdrawal requests would bring down that system.

Banks don’t want that to happen. Governments don’t want that to happen. 

But since central banks have no other choice than to continue imposing negative interest rates, the only logical option is to ban cash and force consumers to hold their money within the banking system. 

Make no mistake, this is absolutely a form of capital controls. And it’s coming soon to a banking system near you. 
 

Until tomorrow, 

Simon Black

Founder, SovereignMan.com

PS. Clearly a trend with this much momentum requires some deliberate and measured action if you don’t want your savings trapped. 

Pundits Claim Europe, Japan Looking Better. What Are They Smoking?

Some analysts seem to think there’s an inflation scare in the air. That Europe’s economy is looking a tad better and so is Japan’s.

Therefore, they claim, the dollar is going to continue to fall while the euro and yen rally, hence, setting off inflation in the U.S. as a result of a falling dollar.

But the fact of the matter is that nothing could be further from the truth! Let’s take a closer look at their argument to see how ridiculous it is. It’s also a good lesson on how pointless it is to use fundamentals to make forecasts.

I ask you, where is the improvement in Europe’s economy? 

Fact: The region’s economy grew by 0.3% in the last quarter of 2015. Meager at best.

Fact: Stock market losses in the euro region have left the Stoxx Europe 600 Index down 9.9% this year, its worst start since 2008.

Fact: Dismal bank earnings have pushed the cost of insuring the financial credit risk of European banks and insurers to the highest levels in more than two years. 

Fact: Europe is stuck in a nightmarish depression of no economic growth in the strongest European economies and sinking growth in the weakest. 

Fact: Prices are falling throughout the euro region. Unemployment is hovering at record highs. Debt-to-GDP levels are going virtually straight up. 

Then there’s the Syrian refugee crisis that is wreaking havoc on government budgets everywhere in Europe and causing even further unrest among citizens who are already having a tough economic time. 

Furthermore, Europe’s leaders are still committed to even more austerity, sacrificing the jobs and livelihoods of tens of millions of people!

Anyone with a clue of what’s going on in Europe would recognize that Europe is still headed down the tubes, and with it the euro. Its recent rally being nothing more than a bounce, with a still huge letdown coming, and soon.

Screen Shot 2016-02-17 at 8.17.01 AMNow, let’s look at Japan.

Fact: For the third quarter of 2015, Japan’s economy shrank by 0.4% versus expectations of a quarterly contraction of 0.3%.

Fact: On an annualized basis, the economy contracted 1.4% in 2015!

Fact: Weaker domestic demand, together with slower investment in housing, contributed to the disappointing numbers. Private consumption plunged 0.8%, a huge drop.

Japan’s economy is picking up? Based on what? I don’t see it. Wrongly, pundits are taking the recent strength in Japan’s currency as a sign investors are willing to own the Japanese economy and hence even Japanese stocks.

But that’s a recipe for financial disaster. Savvy money will soon realize that the yen has nowhere to go but down as the Bank of Japan puts the pedal to the metal with more yen printing. 

Contrast Europe and Japan with the United States …

A. The U.S. economy, growing modestly as it is, is still the strongest of the developed nations, much stronger than Europe’s or Japan’s economy.

B. The U.S. economy has the deepest, most liquid capital markets on the planet, making them the easiest place to invest and with the most opportunities. 

C. U.S. markets remain the last bastion of capitalism in the world, and certainly in the Western world.

Bottom line: Arguments that Europe and Japan are recovering are complete nonsense and based on fundamentals that are full of holes. Anyone with half a brain can see through such arguments.

In addition, …

FIRST, the euro’s bounce is near ending, and a renewed downtrend is about to take root. 

SECOND, conversely, the dollar’s recent pullback is near ending, and a new leg up is about to begin. 

THIRD, inflation is nowhere to be seen in Europe, Asia, Latin America, or even in the U.S.

So then, you ask, why the huge rally in gold? I warned you it was coming. I have also warned you all along that gold’s next rally would coincide more with the breakdown and collapse of Western economies than anything else, especially inflation. 

And so it is. Gold is rallying with no inflation in sight. And instead, with collapsing economies all around it. 

Gold has now taken out a weekly buy signal at $1,187.50 — the first step in confirming a new bull market in precious metals.

Best wishes, as always …

Larry

P.S. As the Dow doubles, some stocks will see explosive gains of 300%, 400%, 500% and more. To help you get ready to take full advantage of the bull market of a lifetime, I want to send you a complete Dow 31,000 Preparedness Kit — five distinct free reports! The first free report spells out step-by-step what you must do now to position yourself for amazing profits (and protection) over the next two years. Click here to download now!

 

Seasonal gold correction on the way

Not much has changed since our gold correction commentary post on the 10th (here) except that gold had spiked up to $1263 on Thursday after global equities weakness and continued fears about European banks.

The fib retracements have stayed pretty much the same except now moving up a bit. For the most part, our analysis has not changed as we still anticipate a move lower from the seasonal February high into a seasonal low (March-April) of between $1130-$1150.

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…..read more HERE