Timing & trends

Is this Complacency? Chart of the Week

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The S&P 500 made a new all-time high on February 18, 2015 closing over 2,100 for the first time. The NASDAQ also made new highs. The Dow Jones Industrials (DJI) and the Dow Jones Transportation (DJT) did not join the party.  Maybe they will later. 

Since the lows of March 2009, the S&P 500 and the US stock markets have been in a relentless rise to higher prices. Three rounds of QE, operation twist and an extended period of record low interest rates can do that for markets. The slope of the rise is not dissimilar to the bubble stock market rise of 1994-2000. That one also rose to record heights on a sea of low interest rates and liquidity even though interest rates were higher than seen today. There was also no QE during that period but there was a rapidly expanding money supply. 

 

The 1994-2000 market rose 250%. By comparison the current market is only up 215% to date. The 1994-2000 market was interrupted by a 22% correction in 1998. The current market was interrupted by a just under 22% correction in 2011. The 1998 correction came later in the six-year bull while the 2011 correction came early in the current six-year bull. Neither bull market qualifies as the greatest six-year bull market ever. The 1923-1929 bull gained 344% (DJI) while the 1990-1998 bull (DJI) was up 295% (DJI). I chose the 1994-2000 bull that included the 1998 correction as its slope is more similar to the current bull then the 1990-1998 bull was. The 1994 correction was quite shallow. 

The Forecast 2015 (Technical Scoop – January 8, 2015) noted that years ending in 5 have a strong record of being up years. As well, 2015 is a pre-election year and the stock markets are normally quite strong in pre-election years. Forecast 2015 noted there was potential for a blow-off but if it occurred it most likely would happen in the first quarter of the year. Could the breakout on the charts for the S&P 500 this past week be the start of a blow-off? It’s possible. The projected objective is up towards 2,100. 

It should be noted that the S&P 500 is not the only stock market that has been on a tear since the lows of the 2008 financial crash. European and Asian stock markets have also been rising. Despite all of the problems in Europe, the German DAX, the Paris CAC and London FTSE have all recently made new all-time highs. The Tokyo Nikkei Dow just made new highs although that index remains down over 50% from its all-time highs seen in 1990. The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSEC) recently made new highs as well. 

So how can it be that when the Euro zone for the most part is in recession or at best tepid growth, Japan has been in a recession and China has been slowing down and even the US’s economic performance has been tepid at best that stock markets continue to make new highs? All countries have followed a mostly similar blue print in an attempt to bring their economies out of the recession that came because of the 2008 financial crash. Abnormally low interest rates coupled with QE have for the most part done the job.

But there has been a problem with this. Consumers for the most part were already tapped out. In the US mortgage loans have actually declined since 2009 with the major debt growth coming from government. Banks tightened their lending requirements and the result was that fewer qualified for loans. The result has been that instead of the funds from QE finding their way into the economy it has instead been used by the financial institutions for speculation in the stock market or purchasing foreign debt. Since the financial crash of 2008, global debt has soared by $57 trillion. While much of it has been government debt, consumers and corporations have played a significant role as well particularly in China. Global debt to GDP has soared to 286% from 246% in 2000. 

Much has been made about all the jobs created since the financial crash of 2008 and the recession that followed. While the numbers suggest that there has been job growth the number of people working part-time has grown. The number of part-time workers has soared in the US since the 2008 financial crash and recession even though it is down from the peak seen in 2010. The data is, however, a hodge podge because it defines part-time workers as those who do not work 35 hours per week. If one holds two or three part-time jobs they could in theory be over 35 hours per week and therefore be considered full-time employees. In Canada, for example it is estimated that upwards of 1/3 of workers are holding down part-time jobs. Irrespective given that median incomes in both Canada and the US has barely budged in years it suggests that many are in low wage jobs with most likely little or no benefits. 

In the US, the participation rate has fallen over the past several years. A falling participation rate helps to lower the headline unemployment rate. In the US, the headline unemployment rate (U3) is reported as 5.7% but when one takes into consideration part-time workers seeking full-time work and the long-term unemployed under one year the unemployment rate leaps to 11.3% (U6). That is a number that is more reflective of the real situation in the economy. Prior to the financial crash of 2008 and recession, this number rarely exceeded 9%. It topped out at over 17% in 2010. 

John Williams of Shadow Stats www.shadowstats.com has one more unemployment number. The Shadow Stats unemployment rate takes into consideration the U6 number plus discouraged workers unemployed beyond one year that were defined away as not a part of the labour force in the 1990’s under the Clinton administration. Currently that number stands at 23.2%. It has actually gone up even as U3 and U6 have declined. The US labour force is actually smaller today than it was in 2000 (148 million vs. 153 million) even as the US population has grown from 280 million to 320 million. 

A huge question mark hangs over Greece and its future in the EU and use of the Euro. Germany has rejected Greece’s request for extensions. What the next step is here is anyone’s guess. While many are trying to prepare for the possibility of the “Grexit” no one knows for sure how messy things might become. There remains fears of contagion in the Euro zone with Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland all of who are also under severe austerity with high unemployment and social unrest. 

There has also been a series of competitive devaluations. Switzerland has already moved to negative interest rates and the Scandinavian countries have now joined them. Competitive currency devaluations are a form of the “beggar thy neighbour” policies of the 1930’s that contributed considerably to the Great Depression. 

High unsustainable debt levels, threat of the “Grexit”, tepid growth in the western economies, competitive currency devaluations, a slowing China and of course one cannot ignore the ongoing war in the Mid-East and Ukraine despite the Minsk accords that have for the moment put the Ukraine war on the sidelines. Yet the stock markets keep going higher. The bulls call it “climbing the wall of worry”. The bears say that when the breakdown comes it could be swift. Stock market sentiment remains at or near record territory. The Investor’s Business Daily Advisor’s Survey is currently over 80%. It has been bouncing back and forth roughly between 70% and 80% since 2013. This suggests a market that is seeing high complacency. 

The S&P 500 has been in a rising bull channel since 2009. The top of the channel is currently just over 2,200. The bottom of the channel is currently just under 1,950. A blow-off could take the S&P 500 to the top of the channel. But if the bottom of the channel were to breakdown investors could quickly be consumed by a breakdown not dissimilar to either 2000-2002 or 2007-2009 or even 1923-1929. After a six year bull market, odds are the stock markets are getting closer to the breakdown stage even if the blow-off is seen first.

TECHNICAL SCOOP

CHART OF THE WEEK

Charts and commentary by David Chapman

26 Wellington Street East, Suite 900, Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1S2 

Phone (416) 604-0533 or (toll free) 1-866-269-7773 , fax (416) 604-0557

david@davidchapman.com

dchapman@mgisecurities.com

www.davidchapman.com 

Gold: New Paradigm

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Stock Markets

The last headline about “trajectory” prompts the vision of parabolic blow-offs. In this market this would definitely include loans bundled up to finance not just new cars on the “never-never” but also second-hand cars. Of course, the latter would not include good old “beaters” that always trade for cash or a couple of six packs.

In the magnificent bull market that completed in 2007, the outstanding frenzy was in new and second-hand houses.

Despite the obvious superiority of the focus of that mania it succumbed to the usual changes in the credit markets.

General weakness into January was prompted by the initial panic in crude oil, which low was likely to be found in January. This was based upon previous crashes for crude that ran for some 6 to 7 months. January was Month 7, when the decline might have maxed out. Easing of the pressures since has popped a rally in Junk, and this is correcting spread widening.

Which is helping stock markets.

In weaker currencies, it is the adjustment in intrinsic value. In the US it is the world playing the dollar and rising P/E multiples.

How much help?

The following chart revisits NYSE margin debt and the S&P. Analyst Doug Short has updated his very good graphics. The pattern is that the amount of margin enthusiastically surges to a high and some time later the S&P peaks.

In this presentation the plot is of the differences between positive and negative credit balances. This reached the extreme in January 2000 and the highest Monthly Close in the S&P was set in August of that fateful year. The lead was 7 months.

In 2007, the extreme in employed (negative) credit was reached in June 2007 and the S&P high was set in October. The lead was 4 months.

This time around, the credit extreme was reached in July and on the Monthly basis the high for the S&P was set at 2094 in December. The lead counts out to 5 months, which number is becoming interesting.

Doug Short (www.dshort.com) deflates the series by the CPI and the S&P’s mighty effort has martched but not exceeded the peak reached in 2000. Deflated margin reached $380 billion then, and is at $410 billion on the December posting.

Stockwise, the Fed is not getting the “bang for the buck” that it got in 2000. Wonder if this relates to the old saw about it taking ever-increasing issuance of debt to get a unit of GDP growth.

Worth adding is that since 2011, it seems that even an infinite credit expansion would not have been unable to ramp up many commodity prices.

The truth of the matter, is that the success of speculative policy by the FMOC ultimately rests upon speculators in the private sector. And it is worth repeating that it’s the people around the world that decide which asset is to be ramped up. On the latter, the individual speculator has never had such encouragement from the establishment. It reminds of the Barrett-Jackson car auctions. Mainly American “collector” cars are dramatically presented and B-J has representatives (in nice blazers) standing in front of bidders and cheerleading them to keep raising their bids.

Not dignified – quite like central bankers Draghi and Yellen.

It is a privilege to be in the markets during such an extraordinary segment of financial history.

And just where is this history heading?

At some time, into the greatest mark down of wealth in history, which has always been consequent to massive inflation of credit.

In the meantime, the stock market continues to work on the big Rounding Top. Buyer excitement has registered sentiment and momentum numbers only seen at cyclical peaks. This marked the Enthusiasm phase, which has been followed by Divergence and Volatility. The sequence eventually discovers Resolution.

That will start when the NYSE Comp (NYA) decisively takes out some key markers. It has been trading either side of the 50-Week ma, which had provided key support since 2012. Staying under for a few weeks would show change.

Such a change would likely be associated with disappointment in earnings and/or in having to fix yet another problem de jour.

Change is what the establishment is trying to prevent.

NYSE: Leverage

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  • The highlight of this graphic is that impetuous expansion of margin spikes well before the senior indexes do.
  • The extension of trend in the stock market is impressive.
  • It reminds of the Wile Coyote cartoons.

 

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Cartoonist Chuck Jones created the coyote and his biography notes that when “Wile”discovered gravity, he always plunged for 18 film frames.

Credit Markets

A little old-fashioned stuff going on recently. This business cycle is maturing and over the past few weeks long rates are increasing as junk rates decline. The long bond got overdone with the plunge in crude oil and – drum roll – Draghi’s announcement about actually buying Eurobonds. Junk rallied out of a Springboard Buy, and on a flight to risk.

Car sales and Consumer Confidence numbers have been soaring and Obama’s Gallup Approval reached 50 percent (highest since May 2013) at the end of January. Not to overlook an unbelievably good unemployment number at 5.6%.

How long will the confidence remain so lofty?

The bond future reached an exceptional high at 152 at the end of January. It also reached exceptional technical readings. Early in January we began the theme about an important “Ending Action”. Subsequent Chartworks outlined what was needed for an important top.

In two steps the future has declined to 146.46, takes out the 50-Day ma.

This represents serious technical damage, but it is temporarily oversold. A bounce seems likely.

Over in Europe, the bond-buying mania became very excited; on the expectation of the ECB finally figuring out how to implement the plan. Our question has been about just how much of this has been discounted by the market.

That’s on the overall market and we have been watching for a growing awareness that risk can’t be limited to just Russia, or more recently Greece.

Russian Ten-Year yields have been rising since 2013, due to self-inflicted problems. However, we can now consider that the rise since the low in February 2014 has been a leading event. That low was 9.85% and the high in January due to crude oil concerns was 14.39%.

The Greek yield set its serene low in August at 5.56% and its panic high at 11.31% at the first of the month.

It was a long time from Greece’s August low to the low for Spanish yields in January. This has reversed trend and charts follow. The same pattern holds for England, Italy and Portugal.

The German yield continues its decline to 0.317% earlier today. This in no way can be considered “reaching for yield”. Positioning must be mainly by highly speculative accounts. Should the trend continue to zero (0), would the note become currency?

We a watching to see if the trend change extends in the other issues. Perhaps after the Bond Future has a brief bounce.

The US Treasury curve corrected in January and flattening has resumed. The boom can run for some 12 to 16 months against a flattening curve. The “low” was in late November, which makes March the 14th month on the count.

Commodities

Crude oil continues to work on the “Paradigm Shift”. This would be due to the usual post-bubble pressures on most commodities and in crude’s case, the lead provided by a similar “Shift” for natural gas prices.

On timing, once the price cracked we noted that severe bears for crude ran for 6 to 7 months. That counted out to January when we noted that a “pause” was possible. The low was 53.58 in late January.

There has been some wild swings within a possible period of stability. Also noted was that after a crash, it can take a number of months to set the base from which an intermediate rally would follow. The big swings could be due to aggressive traders expecting a “V” bottom when Mother Nature has something else in mind.

With this, natural gas has plunged to new lows for the move. The last high was 6.49 in February last year. This was driven by last winter’s unusually low temps. With a modest El Nino, this winter in North America is not as severe.

Natgas is somewhat oversold and could recover with crude.

Stable to rising energy prices would be a positive for junk bonds, other commodities as well as for the overall stock market.

Precious Metals

There seems to be a few Paradigms in the air these days.

Crude oil is working on one kind and gold is working one of different nature.

Both have 300 years of precedent, so there are no surprises.

They are opposite and this is important. During booms orthodox investments in stocks, junk and commodities go up and the real price, or purchasing power of gold goes down. This is within the pattern of booms and busts going back to the first financial mania – the South Sea Bubble of 1720.

It is a consistent record with gold’s real price generally declining during a long expansion and declining distinctively during a financial bubble. Then it turns up, starting a cyclical bull market against the initial post-bubble collapse.

One proxy for gold’s real price is our Gold/Commodities Index (GCI), which set a key low in May 2007 and in turning up signaled the beginning of the financial collapse that was “discovered” in early 2008.

Going the other way, the GCI set its cyclical high in February 2009 and in turning down signaled the end of that collapse.

This bottomed in June and is on a cyclical bull market that is signaling the eventual end of the first orthodox boom out of 2009. Gold’s real price will continue to rise and will eventually prompt a cyclical bull market in most gold shares.

In November we were not looking for a “V” bottom. We were looking for a “precarious” bottoming process with some guidelines. This would have gold shares beginning to outperform the bullion price and silver outperforming gold.

This has been working out and while the advice has been to accumulate on weakness, we are not fully invested.

Greece: Ten-Year

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  • Upon the inspiration of “all can be made well”, the low yield was set in August at 5.57%.
  • The key breakout to increasing rates occurred at 6.75% at the end of September.
  • The initial panic drove the yield to 11.72% at the end of January.
  • Russian notes have led the action. The key breakout was at 9.85% in February 2014. The initial panic high was 14.39% in January.

 

Spanish Ten-Year

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  • The low yield was set at 1.40% on January 26th.
  • The key breakout was rising through 1.47% on February 2nd.
  • Rising above 1.71% will extend the trend.

 

Fed Funds Rate

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  • There has not been a decline like this since the early 1930s.
  • As Aristotle observed: “like events have like causes”.
  • There are now “veterans” in the markets that have never experienced a meaningful increase in the administered rate.
  • That would hold for some central bank staffers as well.

 

Zero Hedge Finds an Amusement

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Link to Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com: http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2015/02/a-privilege-to-witness-our-financial-times/

 

SWOT Analysis: China is Effectively Consuming all of the World’s New Mined Gold Supply

Strengths

 

  • The market for gold coins and bars in Europe is now twice as large as that of the United States, and similarly on par with those of China and India. In addition, the India Trade Ministry is said to be seeking to cut the gold import tax from 10 percent to 2 percent.
  • With new global mined gold supply averaging around 258 tonnes per month, and with 255 tonnes of gold withdrawals from the Shanghai Gold Exchange in January, China is effectively consuming all of the world’s new mined supply.
  • In 2014 governments added 477.2 metric tonnes to their reserves, the second-biggest increase in 50 years and 17 percent more than the previous year. Furthermore, central banks have added to gold reserves for the past five years, representing a reversal from two decades of selling. For investors considering adding bullion to their portfolio, gold just triggered this long-term buy signal (only the fourth one to show up in the past 10 years as illustrated by the technical chart shown below). The prior signals have come in 2005, 2007 and 2009, and each time gold rallied thereafter.

 

 

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Weaknesses

 

  • Gold traders are bearish for the first time in three months on concerns about a stronger dollar and weakening demand from China’s slowing economy.
  • Two people remained missing after Mexican police freed 10 others who were kidnapped last Friday. The incident happened in the same southern region where the disappearance and murder of 43 students in September ignited protests throughout the country. One of the people missing is a worker from Torex Gold Resources. B2Gold Corp announced the overnight shooting death on Wednesday of two security guards at the Masbate Gold Mine operating in the Philippines.
  • Greece’s new left-wing government announced it will legally oppose a Canadian-run gold mine in northern Greece belonging to Eldorado Gold Corp. on the grounds of worker protections.

 

Opportunities

 

  • The merger and acquisition (M&A) space seems to be heating up in the gold mining industry. Tahoe Resources announced on Monday it will acquire Rio Alto Mining for $1.1 billion. Mark Bristow, CEO of Randgold Resources, said the company has been “flat-out besieged with offers to buy assets.” Acacia Mining said it’s looking to do a transformational deal this year. Lastly, AngloGold Ashanti’s CEO said he is looking to sell assets or form joint ventures to reduce debt.
  • There is growing consensus in the market that an unspoken currency war has broken out. This is a result of many countries facing zero interest rates and binding fiscal constraints. With such constraints, the only policy tool at their disposal to stimulate growth is targeting a weaker exchange rate. While a weak currency might provide a short-term boost to the countries engaging in currency devaluation, the fact that so many countries are concurrently engaging in these tactics will likely mean we may end up with higher foreign-exchange volatility. In such a scenario, gold is increasingly looked upon as the currency of choice.

 

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  • U.S. retail sales tumbled 0.8 percent in January despite the “great” jobs report and sharply lower gasoline prices. Furthermore, U.S. corporate profits and sales are crumbling with companies in sectors such as technology, telecommunications, consumer discretionary and staples all seeing sharp earnings per share (EPS) slowdowns as a result of the strong dollar. Lastly, Credit Suisse recommended underweighting U.S. equities as they have slipped on both economic and earnings-momentum scorecards. A weakening of the U.S. market would provide a catalyst for gold.

 

Threats

 

  • In its 2015 outlook report, JPMorgan Chase said that a strengthening U.S. dollar, weaker energy prices and low inflation will dampen gold demand.
  • President Zuma of South Africa announced in his State of the Nation address that foreign nationals will be barred from owning land in the country, only allowing them to enter into long-term lease contracts. Furthermore, last month Zuma referred the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act Amendment Bill back to parliament for reconsideration.
  • South Africa’s mining industry remains a highly complex space where aligning competing interests has proved difficult. Mining companies, labor and government seem to have very different opinions on how things should be done, leading to instability. Justin Froneman, director of equity research at Credit Suisse, said that international investors want active leadership at both the corporate and country level in order to reduce uncertainty.

 

http://usfunds.com/

Jim Rogers on Opportunities in Russia and Other Hated Markets

Nick Giambruno: Welcome, Jim. As you know, Doug Casey and I travel the world surveying crisis markets, and we always like to get your take on things. Today I want to talk to you about Russia, which is a very hated market right now. What are your thoughts on Russia in general and on Russian stocks in particular?

UnknownJim Rogers: Well, I’m optimistic about the future of Russia. I was optimistic before this war started in Ukraine, which was instigated by the US, of course. But in any case, I bought more Russia during the Crimea incident, and I’m looking to buy still more.

Unfortunately, what’s happening is certainly not good for the United States. It’s driving Russia and Asia together, which means we’re going to suffer in the long run—the US and Europe. Another of the big four Chinese banks opened a branch in Moscow recently. The Iranians are getting closer to the Russians. The Russians recently finished a railroad into North Korea down to the Port Rason, which is the northernmost ice-free port in Asia. The Russians have put a lot of money into the Trans-Siberian railroad to update it and upgrade it, all of which goes right by China.

Usually, people who do a lot of business together wind up doing other things together, such as fighting wars, but this isn’t any kind of immediate development. I don’t think the Russians, the Chinese, and the Iranians are about to invade America.

Nick: So because of these economic ties to Asia, the Russians are not as dependent on the West. Is that why you’re optimistic about Russia?

Jim: I first went to the Soviet Union in 1966, and I came away very pessimistic. And I was pessimistic for the next 47 years, because I didn’t see how it could possibly work.

But then I started noticing, a year or two ago, that now everybody hates Russia—the market is not at all interesting to anybody anymore.

You may remember in the 1990s, and even the first decade of this century, everybody was enthusiastic about Russia. Lots of people had periodic bouts of huge enthusiasm. I was short the ruble in 1998, but other than that, I had never invested in Russia, certainly not on the long side. But a year or two ago I started noticing that things are changing in Russia… something is going on in the Kremlin. They understand they can’t just shoot people, confiscate people’s assets. They have to play by the rules if they want to develop their economy.

Now Russia has a convertible currency—and most countries don’t have convertible currencies, but the Russians do. They have fairly large foreign currency reserves and are building up more assets. Having driven across Russia a couple of times, I know they have vast natural resources. And now that the Trans-Siberian Railway has been rebuilt, it’s a huge asset as well.

So I see all these things. I knew the market was depressed, knew nobody liked it, so I started looking for and finding a few investments in Russia.

Nick: Yeah, that definitely seems to make sense when you look at the sentiment and long-term fundamentals. So where do you see the conflict with Ukraine and the tensions with the West going?

Jim: Well, the tensions are going to continue to grow, at least as long as you have the same bureaucrats in Washington. You know, they all have a professional stake in making sure that things don’t calm down in the former Soviet Union—so I don’t see things getting better any time soon.

I do notice that some companies and even countries have started pulling back from the sanctions. Many companies and people are starting to say, “Wait a minute, what is all this about?”

People are starting to reexamine the propaganda that comes out of Washington. Even the Germans are starting to reassess the situation. I suspect that things will cool off eventually, because the US doesn’t have much support and they’ve got plenty of other wars they want to fight or are keen to get started.

So Russia will become more and more dominant in Ukraine. The east is more or less Russian. Crimea was always Russian until Khrushchev got drunk one night and gave it away. So I suspect you will see more and more disintegration of Ukraine, which by the way is good for Ukraine and good for the world.

We don’t complain when the Scots have an election as to whether they want to leave the UK or not. People in Spain want to leave. We say we’re in favor of self-determination. We let Czechoslovakia break up, Yugoslavia break up, Ethiopia break up. These things are usually good. Many borders that exist are historic anomalies, and they should break up. Just because something happened after the First World War or Second World War and some bureaucrats drew a border doesn’t mean it’s logical or should survive.

So I suspect you will see more of eastern Ukraine becoming more and more Russian. I don’t see America going to war, I certainly don’t see Europe going to war over Ukraine, and so America will just sort of slowly slide away and have to admit another miscalculation.

Nick: I agree. Would you also say that Europe’s dependence on Russia for energy limits how far the sanctions can go? There’s been speculation that the Europeans are going to cut Russia out of the SWIFT system, like they did with Iran.

Jim: Well, anything can happen. I noticed SWIFT’s reaction when America tried to force them to do that: they were not very happy at all.

I’m an American citizen like you, and unfortunately the bigger picture is forcing the Russians, the Chinese, and others to accelerate in finding an alternative. That is not good for the US.

The Americans have a monopoly, because everyone who uses dollars has to get them cleared through New York. People were already starting to worry in the past few years about the American dominance of the system and its ability to just close everything down.

So now the Russians and Chinese and others are accelerating their efforts to find an alternative to SWIFT and to the American dollar and the dominance of the US financial system.

As I said earlier, none of this is good for the US. We think we’re hurting the Russians. We are actually hurting ourselves very badly in the long term.

Nick: I think one area where you can really see this is that the US essentially kicked Russia out of Visa and MasterCard. And what did Russia do? They turned to China UnionPay, which is China’s payment processor.

Jim: We could go on and on. There are things that have happened, and everything is underway now because Putin has told everybody, “Okay, we’ve got to reexamine our whole way of life that has evolved since the Berlin Wall fell,” and that’s one of the things. By the way, the Chinese love all of this. It’s certainly good for China. It’s not good for the US in the end, but it’s great for China and some Asian countries, such as Iran.

Nothing we have done has been good for America since this whole thing started—nothing. Everything we’ve done has been good for the Chinese.

Nick: So why are they doing it?

Jim: You know as well as I do: these are bureaucrats who shouldn’t be there in the first place. Power corrupts, and it has.

You look at the beginning of the First World War, the Emperor, who was 85 years old at the time, made nine demands on the Serbians. Serbia met eight of his demands. For whatever reason they couldn’t meet the ninth. And so they said, “Okay, that’s it… war.” And then everybody was at war.

The bureaucrats everywhere piled in with great enthusiasm—great headlines about how the war will be over by Christmas. By the way, whenever wars start, the headlines always say the war will be over by Christmas, at least in Christian nations. But six months after that war started, everybody looked around and said, “What the hell are we doing?” This is madness. Millions of people are being killed. Billions of dollars are being lost. This is not good for anybody. And why did it start? Nobody could even tell you why it started, but unfortunately it went on for four years with massive amounts of destruction, all because a few bureaucrats and an old man couldn’t get their acts together. None of that was necessary. Nearly all wars start like that.

If you examine the beginning of any war, years later you ask, “How did it happen? Why did it happen?” And usually there’s not much explanation. The winners write history, so the winners always have a good explanation, but more objective people are usually confused.

Nick: Excellent points that you make, Jim. I want to shift gears a little bit. I know you’re a fan of agriculture, and parts of Russia and Ukraine are among the most fertile regions in the world. Investing there is a nice way to get into agriculture and also Russia at the same time. What do you think about companies and stocks that own and operate farmland in that region?

Jim: Well, historically you’re right. Ukraine was one of the major breadbaskets of the world, and some of those vast Russian lands were great breadbaskets at times in history. Communism can and does ruin everything it touches. It ruined Soviet agriculture, but many of those places have great potential and will revive.

I haven’t actually gone and examined the soil myself to see that it’s still fertile, but I assume it is because you see the production numbers. That part of the world should be and will be great agricultural producers again. It’s just a question of when and who.

By the way, I have recently become a director of a large Russian phosphorous/fertilizer company, partly for the reasons you’re discussing.

(Editor’s Note: We recently discussed how investors can access agricultural investment opportunities in Russia. There’s an accessible stock that makes it easy to do just that. For all the details, you may want to check out Crisis Speculator.)

Nick: We were talking about Russia and Iran. I’ve had the chance to travel to Iran. It has a remarkably vibrant stock market, all things considered. It’s not heavily dependent on natural resources. They have consumer goods companies, tech companies, and so forth.

Do you see the potential for Iran to open up anytime soon, maybe a Nixon-goes-to-China moment?

Jim: I bought Iranian shares in 1993, and over the next few years it went up something like 47 times, so it was an astonishing success. I got a lot of my money out, but some of it is still trapped there. I don’t know if I could ever find it, but I took so much out it didn’t really matter.

Yes, I know that there’s an interesting market there. I know there’s a vibrant society there. I know huge numbers of Iranians who are under 30, and they want to live a different life. It is changing slowly, but it’s in the process.

Part of it, of course, is because the West has characterized them as demons and evil, which makes it harder. I was never very keen on things like that. Throughout history and in my own experience, engagement is usually a better way to change things than ignoring people and forcing them to close in and get bitter about the outside world.

So I don’t particularly approve of our approach or anybody’s approach to Iran. I certainly don’t approve of old man Khamenei’s approach to Iran either. There were mistakes made in the early days on both sides. But that’s all changing now. I see great opportunities in Iran. If they don’t open to the West, they’re going to open to Asia and to Russia.

There are fabulous opportunities in Iran, with over 70 million people, vast assets, lots of entrepreneur-type people, smart people, and educated people. Iran is Persia. Persia was one of the great nations of world history for many centuries.

So it’s not as though they were a bunch of backward people sitting over there who can’t read or find other people on the map. Persia has enormous potential, and they will develop it again.

Nick: I completely agree, and we’re looking at Iran closely, too. If the West doesn’t open up to Iran, it’s going to lose out to the Chinese and the Russians, who are going to gobble up that opportunity and really eat the Americans’ lunch.

Of course with the sanctions, it’s pretty much illegal for Americans to invest in Iran right now.

Jim: That wasn’t always the case. Years ago, if the investment was less than a certain amount of money, and some other things, there were no problems. I don’t know the details of the current law.

Nick: It’s difficult to keep up with, because the story is constantly changing.

Jim: Well, that’s the brilliance of bureaucrats; they always have something to do. It gives them ongoing job security.

Nick: Exactly.

Nick: Another place we have on our list is Kurdistan.

Jim: The Kurds have been a pretty powerful group of people for a long time. I hope they can pull it together. An independent Kurdistan would be good for Turkey and good for everybody else. Unfortunately, again, you have all these bureaucrats who don’t like change.

I’ve certainly got it on my radar, and maybe I’ll bump into you in Iran, or Russia, or Kurdistan, or who knows where.

Nick: Sounds good Jim, we’ll be in touch.

Editor’s Note: This was an excerpt from Crisis Speculator, which uncovers the deep-value investment opportunities waiting behind the news that frightens others away.

 

The article was originally published at internationalman.com.

Crash and Burn Phase for Governments …

LarryEdelsonLet me cut right to the chase: This year, the global financial markets … entire economies … and even political systems and philosophies — will spiral out of control.

We will hit the back wall of the financial hurricane that started in 2008. And we will also be hit by another ramping up of the related war cycles.

It won’t be pretty. It will affect everything you do. Everything you own. Every investment you make. Your lifestyle. Your children and grandchildren’s future.

No, I am not being an alarmist or screaming fire in a packed theater. I am merely telling it like it is, for if you understand the forces that are now converging upon the world, you will see the same things coming that I do.

Just take a look around:

 

Financial markets are swinging wildly. Everything from stocks and bonds, to commodities are now on a roller coaster. Whenever that happens, it means something big is coming.

Big moves that could destroy your wealth in a heartbeat. Or, big moves that you can capitalize on. The choice is yours.

Entire economies are quaking. Europe is the worst of them. But there are problems in China (though they won’t derail China’s growth). There are problems in Australia, Canada, Great Britain. In Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Venezuela.

Screen Shot 2015-02-11 at 6.59.57 AMAnd then there’s Russia. An economy that most assuredly will crash and burn, but ironically, will give its leader, Vladimir Putin, all the more reason to point fingers, and his sheep, the Russian people, will back him all the way.

Even political systems are under stress. Third parties are rising in strength all over Europe. New Neo-Nazi groups. Separatist groups. Secession parties. Terrorist groups. Cultural clashes. And more.

All part and parcel of the rising war cycles that I’ve been warning you about, conditions that will not abate until at least the year 2020.

So why is all of this happening? Why will it get worse in the years ahead?

It’s actually very simple: You are witnessing the death of communism and Western-style socialism.

It is not the demise of capitalism, as so many think. It’s the opposite:

The death of big government. The death of the state taking care of you. The death of Keynesian economics.

The death of governments that are so indebted from fiscal mismanagement and making promises to you that they could never keep — that they are now waging financial repression against you …

While at the same time finding scapegoats in the form of other countries, other political systems and parties, to blame.

We are entering a crash and burn phase for government. Especially Western governments and their socialist and safety net experiments of the last several decades. Of their currency experiments, their trade wars, their inept policies, and more.

It will manifest itself mostly in the sovereign bond markets of Europe and the United States, where interest rates are so low that even our country’s founding fathers would be shocked.

And when it bursts later this year, it will usher in what my dear friend and mentor, Marty Armstrong, calls the “Sovereign Debt Big Bang.”

That’s when it will really start to come unglued. It’s when the sovereign bond markets of the United States, Europe, and Japan will begin to implode … and interest rates begin to rise … no matter what the central banks do.

It’s when the chickens will come home to roost, when the citizens of those countries … and investors everywhere … realize that the Emperors of those countries — their leaders and governments — really do have no clothes.

And then, nearly all markets will swing even more wildly than they are now.

I repeat: This is a year of danger. And unless you start preparing now, it will gut your wealth.

My best advice right now:

First, stay out of U.S., Japanese and European government debt. No matter what anyone tells you, sovereign debt markets are soon going to become the biggest disasters of all time.

Second, steer clear of the euro currency and the Japanese yen. Stay mostly in dollars. I know it seems illogical, but it isn’t. As Europe and Japan implode, and as the war cycles wreak havoc in almost every corner of the globe, more and more savvy money will flee to our shores and to the dollar — even as our bond markets tumble.

Third, build your own war chest, to go after the opportunities that are coming.

While this year will be the beginning of some of the biggest threats ever to your wealth …

It will also be the beginning of some of the biggest opportunities ever.

Stay safe and best wishes,

Larry

Larry Edelson, one of the world’s foremost experts on gold and precious metals, is the editor of Real Wealth Report, Power Portfolio and Gold and Silver Trader.

Larry has called the ups and downs in the gold market time and again. As a result, he is often called upon by the media for his investing views. Larry has been featured on Bloomberg, Reuters and CNBC as well as The New York Times and New York Sun.