Timing & trends
The Godfather of newsletter writers also warned his subscribers “… the world’s supply of silver has grown dangerously low.”
Russell also had some fascinating comments regarding gold, and stocks, including some great charts. Read his comments HERE
Legendary Dow theorist Richard Russell says investors should approach the latest dow theory buy signal with trepidation.
Read more HERE
To subscribe to Richard Russell’s Dow Theory Letters CLICK HERE.

As goes January … so goes the rest of the year.
February got off to a rough start, with markets taking a tumble yesterday on revamped concerns about the sovereign-debt crisis in the euro zone. But last month’s action is what smart investors should be focusing on right now.
In other words, what this past January showed us should weigh more heavily on the investment decisions we make throughout the rest of the year than a single day’s performance in February.
……read more HERE

However, we have to keep in mind that we just had one of the best January market performances in history, with the markets rising 12 out of the last 14 days. This could mean that near-term buying may soon be exhausted.
Let’s also consider some historical factors.
As I mentioned last week, the Dow Industrials has not performed this well since 1994. But that same best January in 1994 was followed by a nasty decline of 10% the month after.
Following an election year, the market has a tendency to go higher up until the beginning of February, From here, it historically takes a slight correction for about two months before going higher and peaking around May.
The goal of QE was to instill confidence in the market by inflating asset prices. The stock market is now back to near all-time highs and the price of assets around the world are near record bubble levels.
While the market is still giving investors jitters, it has shown tremendous strength from QE.
It may not feel like it for many Americans, but with the Dow breaching 14000, shareholders and investors have seemingly recovered more than $8 trillion in wealth lost during 2008.
The market cycle has forced those investors who lost their money in 2008 out of the market, but has brought in new money from new investors. It has created a wave of new millionaires and billionaires, with the population of millionaires in America now higher than in 2007.
According to the Federal Reserve, between 2007 and 2009, more than a third of the top one percent was replaced by new money.
And this new money is spending big time.
Prices for wine, fine art, collectibles, luxury cars, jewellery, and watches are all climbing far past their 2007 highs. Prices for exotic mansion homes are also soaring. And the wait-list for Ferraris and Lamborghinis are back to pre-crisis levels.
How can anyone say QE hasn’t worked?
It would seem everything is back on track and back to normal. Employment is slowly rising again, along with housing. The stock market is back to pre-2008 levels and investor sentiment is climbing higher. We have been on a major bull run since the 2008 crash.
That’s scary.
While QE most certainly has its positives, it also comes along with a lot of negative consequences.
(*the big difference between the Fed and other banks is that the Fed is the one bank that never gets audited.)
In short, every bank runs a Ponzi-like credit scheme. For example, when you go to the bank and deposit your money, the bank takes that money and lends it out to others willing to pay the price. The bank uses your money and receives interest from those who want to borrow it.
But your bank never holds the same amount of money that has been deposited there. In other words, it lends money out, even if the money isn’t there. As more deposits are made, more credit is created; thus forcing a leveraged multiplier of credit that is ever-increasing.
Everything has its cycle, including the banking system; including the Fed.
When a bank begins to lend money, interest rates are setequal to the amount of money in the system. But as more credit is created, and thus more money in the system, interest rates begin to drop and the borrowing begins to become more speculative as both borrowers and lenders take on more risk. Eventually, this process multiplies and gets to the point where additional credit is required just to cover the interest payments on the original loans.
Compare this to America’s current situation. Where do you think we are in the cycle of the banking system?
Is America able to pay off its debt without having to borrow? No.
Is America able to pay even the interest on its debt without borrowing money (ie. printing)? No.
What’s the eventual end result of the cycle? Accelerating inflation.
We are seeing the markets move up, but it hasn’t moved up because of productive innovation or real growth. It has moved up because of market speculation based on cheap credit and a growing money supply.
Investors and the CEOs of many junior companies can’t seem to understand why the bankers are not pouring money into small business development and transitioning them into the public markets. The answer is that the system is now dominated by leveraged speculation that hinders real growth.
All of the money being created is being fuelled more and more into the hands of creditors and market speculators, and less and less into the real growth of the economy. That is why we will likely continue to achieve even less economic growth in the coming years, despite what the stock market is telling us.
The current credit bubble in the US is now at $58 trillion and counting. The more money printed the less affect it has on the real world economy. Every dollar of new credit generates less and less dollars of real GDP. It now takes us $20 of new credit to generate $1 of real GDP; it took only $4 in the eighties.
There’s no turning now. That is why Bernanke just announced last week that he isn’t close to easing up on the $85 billion in monthly bond purchases, despite remarks earlier in the month that hinted he might.
Let’s get real. As I have mentioned time and time again, the printing cannot stop now; not until we see major growth in the economy or a major growth in inflation, neither of which seem within reach in the short term.
Obama and the Fed will do whatever they can to spur growth. This includes allowing the no-money down mortgages again; the same strategy that pushed many homeowners into foreclosure during the housing bust.
More credit will be forced into the economy through many different vehicles, leading a cycle that only ends with higher inflation in the long term.
In the last year, we have witnessed the US market, including the NASDAQ, DOW, and S&P 500, climb over 10%. Yet here we are with a much more stable monetary system, and our Canadian market remains subdued; climbing less than 2% over the last year and down nearly 2% over the last five. Meanwhile, in the last five years, the S&P is up over 13%, the Dow up 15%, and the NASDAQ up an astounding 38%.
I’ve always said the retail market and the media is often late to the party, and that is how we’ve been able to accurately forecast market events. But when it comes to timing, no one is later than the Canadian market.
So what do we do from here?
Again, I must stress that the market is fuelled by sentiment more than fundamentals. This is especially the case when it comes to our less liquid Canadian market. The fact that there are many Canadian companies trading at cash value says it all. We’ve done nothing for the last five years but watch the world markets climb.
We need a real spark to get the Canadian markets moving again, and I am not exactly sure where it will come from at this point.
However, from a historical timing perspective, now may be the time to get involved.
From now until the first week of March, the TSX has outperformed, on average over the last 20 years, the S&P 500 by about 2.5%. Not only is it RRSP and TFSA contribution time, the seasonality of the TSX-dominated sectors (financials, energy, and materials) generally do well around this time.
We’re already seeing the financial sector move up slowly, and energy has been climbing over the last 2 weeks (as predicted in Prepare for a Crisis two weeks ago). While the materials sector hasn’t produced results yet, we just saw the price of copper, nickel and zinc break above key resistance levels this week. While this hasn’t translated into stocks, we could see a little fuel into the sector over the next month.

If the market continues in this speculative manner, we may soon see PE (Price-to-Earnings) ratios that are too high relative to growth risks. That’s when credit will be used in exchange for real assets such as gold, silver and real estate. This won’t happen overnight, but it is already slowly happening; beginning with the wealthiest people in the world…
The idea is to turn paper into something tangible such as gold and other commodities; anything that can’t be created or reproduced as easily and as fast as credit and currency.
I will be pulling the triggers on some new investments soon.
Don’t forget to share your success with us by filling out our testimonials page!
Ivan Lo
Equedia Weekly
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Produced by McIver Wealth Management Consulting Group
Mark Jasayko, CFA,MBA, Portfolio Manager with McIver Wealth Management of Richardson GMP in Vancouver.

As GDP Drop Sees US Fed Press On with QE, Investors “In Great Danger” If They Don’t Own Gold Warns Faber
The PRICE of GOLD held onto most of yesterday’s $15 jump at $1676 per ounce Thursday morning in London, ticking back as Asian and European stock markets fell after Wednesday’s surprise drop in US economic output figures.
Silver also eased back, but held at 1-week highs above $32 per ounce after rising yesterday in gold’s “slipstream” as one bullion-bank analyst put it.
“This Friday’s [non-farm US payroll] report remains crucial,” says a note from Swiss bank UBS – currently encouraging its institutional clients to buy gold outright rather than as a credit-risk deposit.
“Some adjustments to [gold] positioning are likely to emerge” after Wednesday’s ‘no change’ decision from the US Federal Reserve on zero interest rates and quantitative easing.
“But overall, the gold market should resume subdued trading,” says UBS, “as is typical ahead of a key event” such as the monthly jobs report.
Russia’s foreign ministry meantime condemned a reported Israeli air-strike on a military research unit inside Syria, saying Thursday that – if confirmed – this “unprovoked attack [would] blatantly violate the UN Charter.”
Shares in Italy’s struggling Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena – founded in 1472 – steadied as the Italian central bank weighed MPS’s second bail-out request in four years after it hid losses of €500 million on a 2008 derivatives deal.
German banking giant Deutsche Bank lost €2.2bn ($3.0bn) for the last 3 months of 2012, it said today.
“A year ago, the mood in Europe was horrible and nobody could see how on earth stocks could go up,” says Gloom, Boom & Doom author and money-manager Marc Faber, who urged CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo to buy gold earlier this week.
“Now since May 2012, less than a year ago, Portugal, Spain, Italy, France, are up between 30 and 40% and Greece has doubled…!”
Factory-gate prices across France and Italy fell in December from November, new data showed today.
House prices in the year to October fell 2.5% across the 17-nation Eurozone, with Spain’s home-price drop accelerating to 15.2%.
“For the first time in four years,” Faber continued Wednesday, pointing to the US stock market, “since the lows in March 2009, I love this market. Because the higher it goes the more likely we will have a nice crash, a big time crash.
“You are in great danger if you don’t own any gold,” Faber had earlier told Bartiromo.
Near-term, reckons Deutsche Bank analyst Xiao Fu – and despite Wednesday’s $15 rise on poor US growth data and the Federal Reserve’s no-change decision on zero rates and QE – “Gold lacks a convincing catalyst near term to take it convincingly higher and instead remains susceptible to opportunistic selling.”
But “Any thought given to reining in some of the Fed’s buying power will now be shelved,” counters Ed Meir in his daily note for INTL FCStone.
“[Wednesday’s] GDP number clearly shows that the US economy is still far from capable to muster its own momentum without key fiscal and monetary stimulus.
“In the least, this should provide an element of support to the precious metals group, at least over the short term.”
After creating and spending first $1.4 trillion on mortgage and Treasury bonds in 2008, and then a further $600 of T-bonds starting in 2010, the US Fed will likely acquire a further $1.1 trillion of US government debt with its current program of quantitative easing, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts.
“Given the sluggish [US] economy,” says precious metals strategist Eugen Weinberg at Commerzbank, “it would be premature to discuss [the Fed] abandoning the quantitative easing programme.
“Despite the noticeably higher risk appetite displayed by market players of late, gold demand is thus unlikely to ebb away completely. On the contrary, high sales of US gold coins in January, and renewed inflows into the gold ETFs recently, point to relatively robust demand for gold.”
Over in India – most likely the world’s #2 gold consumer market in 2012 behind China – the economic affairs secretary contradicted the finance minister yesterday over plans to raise gold import duties again, in a bid to curb household appetite to buy gold, widely blamed for India’s yawning trade deficit.
Two days after Palaniappan Chidambaram told the Financial Times that New Delhi is considering “some other steps to moderate the import of gold” further, Arvind Mayaram told Reuters that “I don’t think there is any plan as of now.”
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Adrian Ash is head of research at BullionVault, the secure, low-cost gold and silver market for private investors online, where you can buy gold and silver in Zurich, Switzerland for just 0.5% commission.
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