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one of the weaknesses in my portfolio research and planningThe "female economy" is big and getting bigger.
Are you able to provide the source for that COT report format please Duc?
Thank you Duc.Morning Joe90,
So the report above is proprietary to All Star Charts. I'm not sure how they construct it.
However, this resource is far superior in my opinion:https://commitmentsoftraders.org/cot-charts/
jog on
duc
YCC?YCC coming to a town near you.
View attachment 200163
So Fed Balance sheet exploded higher as debt was used to finance the war effort.
View attachment 200162
Rates were capped at 2.5% for 10yrs.
View attachment 200161
Real rates were negative. This inflated away the debt.
Meanwhile stocks exceeded the inflation rate. This was at a time where the US was the manufacturing power globally. Much like China is today.
Which is why there is so much hoo hah about technology, chips, etc.
China dominates in the manufacture of widgets. China seeks to equal or exceed in the provision of technology also, which is currently pretty much the only thing that the US leads in.
The US for tax revenue collection needs the stock market to rise +/- 10% every year forever. Or at least until they inflate away the debt to something around 70% of GDP.
To stand still:
View attachment 200164
So 'Nominal' GDP includes the inflation rate.
So ABSOLUTELY will we get inflation. 100%. Because the only other option is that the US declares bankruptcy and defaults on the debt. I'll leave it to you to check when that level of NGDP was achieved in US history.
So UST and USD will lose a lot of value.
If you pick the right stocks, depending on what the inflation rate is, you could do well.
Gold will continue to outperform.
Which brings me to BTC.
I posted this without comment yesterday:
View attachment 200165
$187 Billion to $27 Trillion in 5yrs as transfer volume. So these things are pretty important/central to the ecosystem.
Stablecoins are the #6 holder of UST.
They don't disclose anything to regulators.
They claim a 100% correlation to the USD: ie. they won't break the buck.
In the US stock market buys and sells are facilitated through Market Makers. Big Banks that are heavily regulated. The ASX is buyer to seller.
So Stablecoins are akin somewhat it would seem to a market maker.
BTC values are therefore subject to the price that the MM decides. Only this MM is unregulated, opaque and possibly a criminal operation.
I suppose you could also transact peer-to-peer. I give you cash, you give me BTC but that could be clunky, somewhat akin to selling your house. The central idea of BTC is that it is fast, has no borders, blah, blah.
If however we move to YCC and call it 2.5%. Inflation moves to 8%. We have negative real rates. What happens to stablecoins who hold a truckload of UST paper? What happens to BTC?
So Stablecoins have refused to be audited. Yet US authorities have continued to allow them to operate. They are the #6 holder of UST.
Hmmmm.
The higher BTC trades, the more UST paper stablecoins buy.
Hmmm.
The whole meme around BTC and crypto is that you are just too dumb to understand it.
Hmmm.
Michael Saylor and MSTR were bankrupt for the second time. MSTR was a shitty company. Saylor gambled and went all-in on BTC. He is now a shameless apologist for BTC and implies that he was smart enough to understand the potential of BTC. Bull. He was bankrupt and had no choice other than to gamble everything or go bankrupt.
Hmmm.
MSTR is a textbook bootstrap operation. It now has a significant number of imitators, which of course increases the price of BTC. Part of the 'value' of BTC is actually the volatility, which is fading.
Hmmm.
Everything that the advocates of BTC have claimed to date...has not happened. LOL. What has happened is that as the price went higher, the narrative changed to explain the rise.
Hmmm.
Needless to say, I wouldn't give the steam off my piss for BTC.
jog on
duc
now it seems ( conveniently ) forgotten that the Fed was also buying a lot of 'mortgage-backed securities ' from distressed banks especially since 2022So following on from YCC
We had the downgrade of US debt last week. Prior to markets opening there was some concern as to whether or not this would be a market moving event.
We have this chap:
View attachment 200253
Hmm, some context:
View attachment 200252
So actually the downgrades came just before the BoJ launched into outright YCC.
The US Fed situation:
View attachment 200251
So we have had QT. from the Fed. It has necessitated some really hidden from view machinations every time there has been a liquidity crisis from the Treasury, but at least the 'data' suggests that the Fed have been reducing assets.
But
View attachment 200250
What if the downgrade is because the ratings agencies know that the Fed is about to scrap QT and return to QE or YCC?
Because this is what YCC means: the Fed buys every iota of debt issued by the govt. so as to not allow rates to rise above let's say 2.5%
Debt is again a certificate of confiscation. LOL.
jog on
duc
now it seems ( conveniently ) forgotten that the Fed was also buying a lot of 'mortgage-backed securities ' from distressed banks especially since 2022
is that asset decline simply these 'mortgage-backed securities being offloaded ( or allowed to mature )
it is entirely incorrect to believe all the Fed assets are US Treasuries ( of various duration )
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Despite Russia’s long-standing warnings that any interference with its trade through the Gulf of Finland would constitute an escalation justifying a military response, much of the Western media spun the story as Russia violating NATO airspace—as though this were not the response Estonia knowingly provoked. A few days after the incident, Russia sent another message:“A tense maritime incident unfolded today off the Estonian coast when Estonian naval forces attempted to detain the M/T JAGUAR, a crude oil tanker allegedly part of Russia’s shadow fleet. Estonian forces deployed a helicopter, patrol aircraft, and patrol boat to intercept the vessel, which apparently refused to comply with orders to halt or alter course.
The situation escalated when a Russian Su-35S fighter jet entered Estonian airspace over the Gulf of Finland in what appeared to be an attempt to deter Estonian forces.”
Margus Tsahkna, poker of bears | Getty“Russia detained a Greek-owned oil tanker on Sunday after it left an Estonian port in the Gulf of Finland, the Estonian Foreign Ministry said, adding it had alerted NATO allies to the incident.
The Liberia-flagged ship Green Admire was leaving Sillamae port using a designated navigation channel that crosses Russian territorial waters, the ministry said in a statement.
‘This is definitely connected to the fact that we have started to harass Russia's shadow fleet,’ Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna told Estonian broadcaster ERR.”
Fannie and Freddie being thrown into the public ( ownership ) ??Morning @divs4ever
Correct.
Which rather pre-empts my next post:
View attachment 200263View attachment 200262
Full:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...yed-move-to-privatize-fannie-freddie-wsj-says
View attachment 200264
- Over the last 12 years, FNM and FRE’s balance sheets have been whittled down to ~$300 billion, combined.
- Treasury and the FHFA would both need to agree to release FNM/FRE from conservatorship.
- FNM & FRE have ~$100B of retained earnings between the two of them; if they raised another $25-50 billion from the markets (or from private investors), they would essentially have ~$125-150B of equity capital in total.
- FHFA, their regulator, mandates a 3% capital ratio. Which would mean that $125-150B in equity capital could be levered up to 33x, creating total balance sheet capacity of up to $4-5 trillion, virtually overnight.
The powers that be are continually coming up with new ways (or old ways brought back) to create Balance Sheet to buy UST/MBS that are effectively QE/YCC.
Buying debt is a sure way to the poorhouse unless you are a specialist in this area buying distressed debt.
jog on
duc
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Energy prices are plunging, a boost for consumers and businesses alike — and a key White House talking point, too. Why it matters: Lower oil and gasoline prices could offset some of the consumer pain if prices on a slew of other goods go up as a result of the trade wars.
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The U.S. House of Representatives narrowly passed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” with a vote of 215-214. |
The bill extends the 2017 tax cuts, adds a slew of additional tax cuts (on tips, overtime pay, increase in standard deduction for seniors, etc.), and increases overall spending. |
If passed in its current form, that would mean two things: higher annual deficits than today and more government borrowing (the bill raises the national debt limit by $4 trillion). The CBO is projecting the bill would increase the budget deficit by $3.3 trillion over the next 10 years with higher deficits in the earlier years due to the front-loading of new tax cuts. |
Mr Saylor and MSTR
Still shilling BTC.
Some real issues here.
jog on
duc
I have to admit I’ve been thinking a lot about bonds lately. Like way more than usual. It’s because I think this is a critical time and place for treasuries. The 30-year US yield $TYX is backing off after testing its cycle highs. Meanwhile, the popular iShares long-term treasury fund $TLT is rebounding off a big shelf of support. If these key levels break— so TLT to the downside and TYX to the upside— we’re talking about major pattern resolutions. Major pattern resolutions tend to be followed by significant reaction legs. What I’m saying is bonds are at risk of tanking lower if this scenario were to play out. And have you noticed how stocks have felt about bond market volatility lately? I’ve overlaid ARKK with the inverted MOVE index to answer that question for you: |
Think of MOVE like the VIX for bonds. This relationship shows that when the bond market is calm and orderly, it’s good for speculative growth. On the other hand, when bonds are volatile, these stocks come under pressure. So the bottom line is bonds can’t break down here if these risky stocks are going to keep trending well. I have heavy exposure to this theme, which is why I’m so interested. We bought a handful of speculative growth calls last week and sold quick doubles in all of them already. If we’re going to get the kind of follow-through that can turn these positions into really big winners, we need the bond market to be on board. And for now, it is. After holding multi-year support, TLT is scooping and scoring back above a shelf of year-to-date lows. Here’s a look. |
And here it is overlaid with ARKK: |
These two lines have been diverging for too long already. I don’t think long-duration equities can withstand another ramp higher in the long end of the curve. It seems they’ve actually been pricing in the opposite direction for rates. And I think we gotta see it ASAP for these new leaders to keep leading. So, whether or not we keep leaning on this speculative tech theme in the future is going to have a lot to do with the action in the bond market. And I don’t think the ARKK-y stuff is alone when it comes to their interest rate sensitivity these days. There are other groups that would surely enjoy lower rates as well. I think biotechs, builders, and banks fall into the same category, to varying degrees. It’s always good to monitor your exposure to different intermarket trends. If you own a lot of these kinds of stocks, like I do, I think it’s important to pay attention to bonds. But if not, don’t worry. I’ll keep you updated. |
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