Enter your Email Address


Useful Links

Know What The Insiders Are Doing!
Stock Trading Software

More Links




[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Audit the Fed – Amendment to a $200 billion bill frightens currency traders!

Contrarian Profits (November 20th, 2009) Writes:

Chuck Butler, regular analyst at The Daily Reckoning, offers an analysis of why the ‘Audit the Fed’ amendment to a $200 billion deficit plan spooked the currencies markets this week.

Chuck Butler (The Daily Reckoning): As I checked the currencies throughout the day yesterday, I noticed that as the day went on, the non-dollar currencies were stronger, led by the Big Dog, euro (EUR)… But then late last night, and I mean late last night, I checked them, and those gains had been wiped out.

So, when I arrived here this morning, I had one thing on the top of my list of things to do, and that was to find out what happened… Come on, I said to myself, it had to be more than the “risk on, risk off” stuff that’s been hanging over the markets like the Sword of Damocles! But, when you

...

Bernanke Proposes New Oversight – Analyst Blog

Charles Rotblut (October 1st, 2009) Writes:
Speaking before the House Financial Services Committee, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed a new regulatory mechanism to monitor and respond to broad risks affecting the financial system. This would consist of a panel that would exist outside of the Fed, tapping resources from all agencies with current oversight over the financial system. The proposal is a move by Bernanke to thwart efforts to give the Fed more power. It also increases the potential penalties for taking excessive risk by imposing losses on shareholders and bondholders. Bernanke is bringing forth some good ideas. Particularly, his call for coordination across multiple agencies is something that should fortified by regulation. Clearly, the joint actions by the Fed and the Treasury Department have helped to prevent the current crisis from becoming worse. This said, turf wars in Washington may make accomplishing this goal difficult in the future. His proposal also ...

Bernanke Proposes New Oversight – Analyst Blog

Charles Rotblut (October 1st, 2009) Writes:
Speaking before the House Financial Services Committee, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed a new regulatory mechanism to monitor and respond to broad risks affecting the financial system. This would consist of a panel that would exist outside of the Fed, tapping resources from all agencies with current oversight over the financial system. The proposal is a move by Bernanke to thwart efforts to give the Fed more power. It also increases the potential penalties for taking excessive risk by imposing losses on shareholders and bondholders. Bernanke is bringing forth some good ideas. Particularly, his call for coordination across multiple agencies is something that should fortified by regulation. Clearly, the joint actions by the Fed and the Treasury Department have helped to prevent the current crisis from becoming worse. This said, turf wars in Washington may make accomplishing this goal difficult in the future. His proposal also ...

Ron Paul asks Fed about gold dealings

Prieur du Plessis (September 30th, 2009) Writes:

The following comments come from Chris Powell of Gold AntiTrust Action (GATA):

During last Friday’s hearing of the House Financial Services Committee on his legislation to audit the Federal Reserve System, US Rep. Ron Paul asked the Fed’s general counsel, Scott G. Alvarez, whether the Fed has ever been involved in the gold market. Four days earlier GATA had disclosed the Fed’s admission that it has records of its “gold swap arrangements” with “foreign banks” that it wants to conceal from the public. (Click here.)

Replying to Paul, Alvarez professed to have no expertise in the matter of intervention in the gold market but added that he could get Paul such information. Paul replied that one purpose of his audit legislation was to determine whether the US government was intervening in the gold market by using other governments as intermediaries.

That surely is

...

The Next Big-Gov Bailout

Contrarian Profits (September 22nd, 2009) Writes:

Looks like another government arm will soon be knocking on the Treasury’s door: “We are currently considering all options, including borrowing from the Treasury,” said FDIC chairwoman Sheila Bair. As we’ve forecast many times, the steady collapse of banks around the U.S. has put an irreparable dent in the FDIC deposit insurance fund.

Now likely less than $10 billion strong and with more bank failures sure to come, the FDIC faces two choices: Raise their taxes on banks to bolster the fund or tap the Treasury. Given the health of the U.S. banking system and the tendencies of our government over the last decade, you can probably guess which Bair will chose. Here’s another hint… Barney Frank, leader of the House Financial Services Committee, has already publicly opined on what Bair should do.

The FDIC has the authority to borrow as much as $500 billion through 2010.

“Stock market bulls aren’t concerned about

...

Patriot Day

Contrarian Profits (September 11th, 2009) Writes:

Currencies have strong rally!  Trade Deficit jumps 16.3% in July!  HR 1207 Gets a hearing!  Gold gets back to $1,000! And Now… Today’s Pfennig!

Good day… And a Happy Friday to one and all! Today is Patriot Day in the U.S. and a day that brings back memories of cowardly attacks on our country 8 years ago. I remember the shock and horror on everyone’s faces, and that image will remain with me to the grave. I also remember trying to write the Pfennig the “day after”… It just didn’t seem that important of a thing to do, but a reader told me that to keep things as “normal” as possible was the best thing I could do… So… I wrote…

OK… The currencies, and this time I mean the majority of them not just euro and yen, added to their gains this week VS the dollar yesterday… The Big Dog, euro, is once again

...

Four Ways to Profit if Bernanke’s ‘Exit Strategy’ Backfires

Jason Simpkins (July 24th, 2009) Writes:

[Editor's Note: If it's inflation you're worried about - and commodities you want to invest in - there's no better place to look than the Global Resource Alert trading service, which ferrets out companies poised to profit from the so-called “Secular Bull Market” in commodities. If you’re new to the commodities-investing arena, and are uncertain about the landscape – or even if you’re an “old hand” at natural-resource stocks, but want some insights into the new profit plays and new players – consider hiring a guide: Money Morning Contributing EditorPeter Krauth, a recognized expert in metals, mining and energy stocks, who is also the editor of the Global Resource Alert. A former portfolio advisor, Krauth continues to work out of resource-rich Canada, which keeps him close to most of the companies he researches. Against the growing global financial malaise, Krauth says that commodities are among …

Tags for this Post:
4Cast Ltd ., advisor, Alan Ruskin;, Bank, bank balance sheets, Bank of America Merrill Lynch;, Bank Of Canada, Bank Of Japan, bank reserves, Ben S, Ben S. Bernanke, bernanke, Canada, central bank, central bank leader, Chairman, China, Commercial Paper Funding Facility, Congress, editor, Energy Stocks, European Central Bank, Exit Strategy, Federal Open Market Committee, Federal Reserve System, foreign central banks, Global Resource Alert, House Financial Services Committee, international strategist, Market Commentary, Merrill Lynch, Michael Cloherty, mining, Money Morning Contributing Editor, New York, Oil, oil and gas prices, P GSCI Crude Oil Total Return Fund;, Peter Krauth, portfolio advisor, RBS Securities, Reuters, Rudy Narvas, senior analyst, Strategist, Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility;, the The Journal, Treasury, U .S. Federal Reserve;, United States, United States Gasoline Fund LP;, United States Oil Fund LP;, USD, Wall Street Journal

Reforming Financial Regulations – Analyst Blog

Dirk Van Dijk (July 22nd, 2009) Writes:
While most of the attention yesterday was focused on Ben Bernanke's testimony before the House Financial Services Committee (not much new came out in that one, Ben says the recovery will be anemic, inflation will not be a problem and the Fed has a plan to drain the liquidity before it causes problems), the same committee held another hearing in the afternoon focused on the reform of the financial regulatory structure. Among the witnesses were Alice Rivlin, the former #2 at the Fed in the 1990's, Mark Zandi of Moody's Economics and Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the IMF. Among the key points that came out of it were that there were 2 basic approaches to preventing the need for future bailouts. One focused on better regulation particularly of those who are too big to fail, and the other is to make sure that institutions don't ...

Bernanke Sticks to His Script

Contrarian Profits (July 22nd, 2009) Writes:

Bernanke sticks to the script…  Pound sterling comes under pressure…  China starts shopping for assets…  BRIC MarketSafe lights up the phones… And Now… Today’s Pfennig!

Good day… We had a very busy day on the desk yesterday, as our newest MarketSafe offering, based on the BRIC currencies, is making the phones ring off the hook. But while we were busy, the currency traders had another slow day as the dollar just drifted throughout the day. The return chart for the last 24 hours shows only one currency made more than a .5% move vs. the US$; and that was the South African Rand which increased .75%.

The markets were watching Ben Bernanke’s congressional testimony through most of the day, but those waiting for a surprise were disappointed. Bernanke stuck to the script which he had laid out the day before in the Wall Street Journal, and the members of the House Financial Services Committee couldn’t get

...
Tags for this Post:
Africa, America, America’s Wall Street, Australia, Beijing, ben bernanke, Brazil, BRL, Canada, central bank, Chairman, Chen Yuan, China, China Development Bank;, Congress, Congress’s Government Accountability Office, contrarian profits, Defense Secretary, DKK, Energy Resources, EUR, F22, F22 Raptor, Federal Reserve System, Frank Trotter, Fraser River Valley, Gbp, Gordon Brown, Gross Domestic Product, higher metal prices, HKD, House Financial Services Committee, HUF, INR, Jpy, Koruna, Latin America, Market Commentary, MarketSafe CD, Mike Meyer;, obama, Oil Prices, olympics, Peso, PLN;, premier, president, Prime Minister, Robert Gates, Samsung Maxima 22S QD Film Camera, San Diego, SEK, Senate, state-controlled media;, The Bank of Canada, The Macro Trader, the Olympic, The Wall Street Journal, United Kingdom, United States, Us Government, USD, VANCOUVER, Vancouver Island, Wall Street Journal, Wen Jiabao, ZAR

Bye-Bye Muni Bonds? “Muni-TARP” to Follow?

Richard Shaw (June 25th, 2009) Writes:

June 25 (Bloomberg) – “Barack Obama may be the worst thing that ever happened to tax-exempt bonds …. “

We certainly agree and see more trouble for tax-exemption down the road.

Obama Chief of Staff, Emanuel said, “A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.”, and the administration is taking that advice by sponsoring and subsidizing the issuance of fully taxable municipal bonds — “Build America Bonds” (the camel’s nose under the tent).

Presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt have tried to tax the interest payments from municipal bonds without success, but the debt crisis has provided Obama with a way.

Build America Bonds (we prefer “Obama Bonds”) pay 35% of the interest cost for fully taxable muni bonds.

Presumably the subsidy also improves the credit quality of the bonds by having a portion of the interest come from the US Treasury.

Example Bonds YTM Rate Comparison:

We based our credit quality argument on logic suggesting the

...

Newsletter

No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.