The idea is this is perhaps the crash which takes us to New World Order by the elites for the elites so really NIEO new international economic order. NWO would be by the people for the people, what will come out of this. or hey since we are post eschaton 2012 its probably going to be both. into special drawing rights (the new world currency and tyranny 101 etc etc all the conspiracy stuff.
Who owns the stock market? About half of all equity is owned by the richest 1 million or so families, and another 41% is owned by the rest of the top 10%. The bottom 90% of families own about 9% of outstanding shares.http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-dow-22000-is-not-good-news-for-most-americans-2017-08-02
Who owns the stock market? About half of all equity is owned by the richest 1 million or so families, and another 41% is owned by the rest of the top 10%. The bottom 90% of families own about 9% of outstanding shares.http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-dow-22000-is-not-good-news-for-most-americans-2017-08-02
Gold owes a lot of its success this year to negative real interest rates, something it didn’t have on its side in early 2015. As I’ve mentioned many times before, the metal has historically done well when real rates turned negative (because then you essentially end up paying the government to hold on to your money). To get the real rate, you subtract the consumer price index (CPI), or inflation, from the five-year Treasury yield. If it’s positive, investors will be more likely to put their money in Treasuries, and if it’s negative, they’ll seek out other stores of value—including gold.
In January 2015, the five-year Treasury yield averaged 1.37 percent, while inflation, less food and energy, posted a tepid 0.2 percent. This resulted in an overall real rate of 1.35 percent—a headwind for gold.
But here we are a year later, and real rates have gone subzero. With the five-year yield at 1.51 percent and inflation at a healthy 2.2 percent—its strongest reading since June 2012—real rates have dropped to negative 0.69 percent. This has helped make gold much more attractive to investors. For the month, as of February 24, the precious metal has risen nearly 10 percent.
http://www.valuewalk.com/2016/02/golden-cross-for-gold/
There’s another way of looking at inflation, though—the ShadowStats Alternate Consumer Inflation index. For years, economist John Williams’ site ShadowStats.com has reported actual, or “real,” economic data that often tell a very different story from the official government numbers.
Williams argues that at one time, the official CPI was useful in determining changes in consumer prices year-to-year. But government officials continued to tinker with their methodologies, in effect “moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living.”
Below you can see the actual inflation rate, according to ShadowStats, based on 1980 methodologies. Whereas the official CPI is 2.2 percent, “real” inflation is running closer to 9 percent, adding to gold’s allure.
Williams argues that at one time, the official CPI was useful in determining changes in consumer prices year-to-year. But government officials continued to tinker with their methodologies, in effect “moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living.”
Below you can see the actual inflation rate, according to ShadowStats, based on 1980 methodologies. Whereas the official CPI is 2.2 percent, “real” inflation is running closer to 9 percent, adding to gold’s allure.
does someone want to tell me why the TPP was such a bad thing if it was removal of tarrifs?
What is a 'Tariff'
A tax imposed on imported goods and services. Tariffs are used to restrict trade, as they increase the price of imported goods and services, making them more expensive to consumers. A specific tariff is levied as a fixed fee based on the type of item (e.g., $1,000 on any car). An ad-valorem tariff is levied based on the item’s value (e.g., 10% of the car’s value). Tariffs provide additional revenue for governments and domestic producers at the expense of consumers and foreign producers. They are one of several tools available to shape trade policy.
i heard someone say because it gives big corporations more power?
i havnt studied it and i dont watch tv. i was learning about how to cure myself silly me.
ohh yehp i get it now, tell me if i am wrong , but it means that the little guy is getting screwed because if they take away the set lowest price as in the example above $1000 say on a car, then the little guy is getting less than sort of what they set as minimum.. hmmm ?
The TPP and related deals take away jobs, product safety, and many of protections in place today. Corporations will be able to sue a country if protections for things such as toxic chemicals used or lead based paint type products are put into place. Corporations want no restrictions on what they sell.
What is a 'Tariff'
A tax imposed on imported goods and services. Tariffs are used to restrict trade, as they increase the price of imported goods and services, making them more expensive to consumers. A specific tariff is levied as a fixed fee based on the type of item (e.g., $1,000 on any car). An ad-valorem tariff is levied based on the item’s value (e.g., 10% of the car’s value). Tariffs provide additional revenue for governments and domestic producers at the expense of consumers and foreign producers. They are one of several tools available to shape trade policy.
i heard someone say because it gives big corporations more power?
i havnt studied it and i dont watch tv. i was learning about how to cure myself silly me.
ohh yehp i get it now, tell me if i am wrong , but it means that the little guy is getting screwed because if they take away the set lowest price as in the example above $1000 say on a car, then the little guy is getting less than sort of what they set as minimum.. hmmm ?
The TPP and related deals take away jobs, product safety, and many of protections in place today. Corporations will be able to sue a country if protections for things such as toxic chemicals used or lead based paint type products are put into place. Corporations want no restrictions on what they sell.
Golden Cross For GoldBy Frank Holmes on February 28, 2016 6:47 pm in Businessworld trade volumes grew only 2 percent in 2015, the slowest year since the financial crisis, according to a recent report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
The Case for $20,000 oz Gold - Debt Collapse - Mike Maloney - Silver & Gold
The Case for $20,000 oz Gold - Debt Collapse - Mike Maloney - Silver & Gold
Deflation fears are at an extreme level, says the global asset allocation team at Société Générale in a note Thursday. And there’s a twist.
“One key difference relative to last summer’s riskoff environment is that the recent deflation fear is a story in both emerging and developed countries,” they say.
SocGen uses a range of macroeconomic indicators to model the newsflow that’s pushing either the deflation or inflation story. Right now, oil has been dominating the latest moves. Here’s their chart: (chart above)
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/if-oil-doesnt-do-this-then-watch-for-a-fall-2016-03-03?dist=beforebell
“If you try to run the global system with the systemically important banks all in negative territory, I can guarantee you that something will break. The system is not built to operate at negative rates throughout the world.” — Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz, tells CNBC that sooner or later, negative interest rates are going to be a “major issue.”
an the bailouts began AGAIN! ..... this time unlike 2008.. the world is about $60 trillion in debt.
Saudi Arabia’s government privately begged international banks for a loan of $10 billion Wednesday.
http://dailycaller.com/2016/03/02/saudi-arabia-asks-banks-for-a-bailout-as-oil-prices-crash/
Oil, which accounts for 90 percent of the Saudi government’s revenues, is incredibly cheap right now, causing serious financial problems in Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom needs the price of oil to be at $106 a barrel, according to analysis by Bloomberg Business last year. The price of oil is hovering around $30 a barrel.
"i have been telling people for months already now, this is the great global depression and i think very possibly www3 arriving 2016.
gold has done the golden cross. and the death cross happened on all the financial markets months ago. you people are in dream land thats all that is keeping it afloat. "~benjamin couwenberg 03/03.2016 site creator www.consciousazine.com
“One key difference relative to last summer’s riskoff environment is that the recent deflation fear is a story in both emerging and developed countries,” they say.
SocGen uses a range of macroeconomic indicators to model the newsflow that’s pushing either the deflation or inflation story. Right now, oil has been dominating the latest moves. Here’s their chart: (chart above)
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/if-oil-doesnt-do-this-then-watch-for-a-fall-2016-03-03?dist=beforebell
“If you try to run the global system with the systemically important banks all in negative territory, I can guarantee you that something will break. The system is not built to operate at negative rates throughout the world.” — Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz, tells CNBC that sooner or later, negative interest rates are going to be a “major issue.”
an the bailouts began AGAIN! ..... this time unlike 2008.. the world is about $60 trillion in debt.
Saudi Arabia’s government privately begged international banks for a loan of $10 billion Wednesday.
http://dailycaller.com/2016/03/02/saudi-arabia-asks-banks-for-a-bailout-as-oil-prices-crash/
Oil, which accounts for 90 percent of the Saudi government’s revenues, is incredibly cheap right now, causing serious financial problems in Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom needs the price of oil to be at $106 a barrel, according to analysis by Bloomberg Business last year. The price of oil is hovering around $30 a barrel.
"i have been telling people for months already now, this is the great global depression and i think very possibly www3 arriving 2016.
gold has done the golden cross. and the death cross happened on all the financial markets months ago. you people are in dream land thats all that is keeping it afloat. "~benjamin couwenberg 03/03.2016 site creator www.consciousazine.com
“Underlying some of the turbulence of the past few months was a growing perception in financial markets that central banks might be running out of effective policy options,” said the Basel, Switzerland-based BIS, a consortium of central banks, in its quarterly report on financial markets.http://www.marketwatch.com/story/european-stocks-shoved-lower-as-ecb-caution-sets-in-2016-03-07
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-bull-market-gets-no-respect-2016-03-05?link=MW_popular
“I think the most outstanding feature of this bull market compared to history is that it is truly the definition of climbing a ‘wall of worry’,” Paulsen said. “It really is the Rodney Dangerfield of bull markets: It gets no respect.”
The market has had to contend with unemployment fears, debt ceiling and fiscal cliff fights, enormous bailouts of the financial and auto industries, constant fears of a collapse of the eurozone, slowing growth in China and emerging markets, along with fears of a collapse of the municipal bond market and a further collapse in the housing market.
“What allowed the 90s bull to last so long was a surge in productivity,” Paulsen said. “For this bull market to last, we need to have a pickup in productivity.”
Ben: usually the major cycle (besides elliot wave etc) is a 6-7 year cycle of uptrend or bull market before heading down into bear market..
“I think the most outstanding feature of this bull market compared to history is that it is truly the definition of climbing a ‘wall of worry’,” Paulsen said. “It really is the Rodney Dangerfield of bull markets: It gets no respect.”
The market has had to contend with unemployment fears, debt ceiling and fiscal cliff fights, enormous bailouts of the financial and auto industries, constant fears of a collapse of the eurozone, slowing growth in China and emerging markets, along with fears of a collapse of the municipal bond market and a further collapse in the housing market.
“What allowed the 90s bull to last so long was a surge in productivity,” Paulsen said. “For this bull market to last, we need to have a pickup in productivity.”
Ben: usually the major cycle (besides elliot wave etc) is a 6-7 year cycle of uptrend or bull market before heading down into bear market..
http://investmenttools.com/
futures/bdi_baltic_dry_index.htm
(Baltic dry index shows shipping freight rates world wide it is a key economic investigative tool and insight into global economy)
We can see gold hit its 45 degree (which is the strongest type of sustainable uptrend) angle uptrend, right as the world wide shipping flows of resources for things has plummeted. to its lowest level.. ever.. :) recently i wrote about www3 and the great global depression 2016.. just sayin. just sayin..
"House Ways & Means chairman Kevin Brady (R-TX) recently described his plan to cut Social Security by raising the retirement age to 70, a 21 percent across the board cut to benefits. " ~2016
and it will only get worse by the systems own flawed dynamics.. GROW A medicinal GARDEN.
BUILD ESCAPE VELOCITY FROM SYNTHETIC SOCIETIES MIASMA.
futures/bdi_baltic_dry_index.htm
(Baltic dry index shows shipping freight rates world wide it is a key economic investigative tool and insight into global economy)
We can see gold hit its 45 degree (which is the strongest type of sustainable uptrend) angle uptrend, right as the world wide shipping flows of resources for things has plummeted. to its lowest level.. ever.. :) recently i wrote about www3 and the great global depression 2016.. just sayin. just sayin..
"House Ways & Means chairman Kevin Brady (R-TX) recently described his plan to cut Social Security by raising the retirement age to 70, a 21 percent across the board cut to benefits. " ~2016
and it will only get worse by the systems own flawed dynamics.. GROW A medicinal GARDEN.
BUILD ESCAPE VELOCITY FROM SYNTHETIC SOCIETIES MIASMA.
22/02/2016 Essay Title: WWW3 and the Great Global Depression; apocalpyseRFIDeschaton is an adjacent essay to this - by benjamin couwenberg site creator www.consciousazine.com(breaking news page >http://www.consciousazine.com/breaking-news-page.html<):
ForeWord: alright i will release this all now weeks prior (even though if you have been paying attention all other markets and charts are completely at multi-decade lows and decimated, it appears the arrogant Americans on wall st are a bit slow to this..or.. perfectly orchestrated ;) (i choose option B):
The adoption of negative interest rates — initially launched in Europe in 2014 and now embraced in Japan — represents a major turning point for central banking. Previously, emphasis had been placed on boosting aggregate demand — primarily by lowering the cost of borrowing, but also by spurring wealth effects from appreciating financial assets.
But now, by imposing penalties on excess reserves left on deposit with central banks, negative interest rates drive stimulus through the supply side of the credit equation — in effect, urging banks to make new loans regardless of the demand for such funds.
This misses the essence of what is ailing a post-crisis world. As Nomura economist Richard Koo has argued about Japan, the focus should be on the demand side of crisis-battered economies, where growth is impaired by a debt-rejection syndrome that invariably takes hold in the aftermath of a “balance sheet recession.”
Such impairment is global in scope. It’s not just Japan, where the purportedly powerful impetus of Abenomics has failed to dislodge a struggling economy from 24 years of 0.8% inflation-adjusted growth in gross domestic product. It’s also the U.S., where consumer demand — the epicenter of America’s Great Recession — remains stuck in an eight-year quagmire of just 1.5% average real growth. Even worse is the eurozone, where real GDP growth has averaged just 0.1% over the 2008-2015 period.
All of this speaks to the impotence of central banks to jump-start aggregate demand in balance-sheet-constrained economies that have fallen into 1930s-style “liquidity traps.”
The shift to negative interest rates is all the more problematic. Given persistent sluggish aggregate demand worldwide, a new set of risks is introduced by penalizing banks for not making new loans. This is the functional equivalent of promoting another surge of “zombie lending”
~http://www.marketwatch.com/story/negative-interest-rates-set-stage-for-next-crisis-stephen-roach-says-2016-02-18
For example, a market low in 2016 would be less injurious than if the low is registered in 2017, because the longer the market experiences anxiety, the more pain there is to relieve. This fact was demonstrated in 1987 when the 35% decline was short-lived and rebuilt quicker. The decline starting in 2000 lasted into 2003 with intermittent attempts to stabilize being showered with selling panics. The demise in prices and time was longer than 1987, making bearish sentiment increase and stalling rallies.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-one-two-three-punch-could-drop-stocks-30-in-2016-2016-02-19
low oil will bankrupt the likes of saudi aurabia http://www.marketwatch.com/story/falling-oil-prices-will-bankrupt-the-likes-of-russia-saudi-arabia-2016-02-10?link=MW_popular
gold and silver up and other metals are right down. iron ore used to be 200 a tonne, now its $40 bucks.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBU01akf688 +
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbZJ948oCoc
celiante explains in details i dont need to excerpt from the coming collapse and why it is worse than the 1930's great global depression.
now, i will add that, when depressions hit, it is always unbeknownst to the masses of sheeple, just as the exact same way when the death cross happens on the stock market everybody ignores this MAJOR down trend turn signal, with excuse after excuse..
"by looking the dow jones chart of america, the major stock index watched by the world, the crash now happens in conjunction throughout march 2016 very heavy down trends will occur in conjunction with the middle eastern 350,000 troops 20,000 tank operation 'northern thunder' which may see a official www3 begin." ~benjamin couwenberg 22/02/2016
this is the new world currency that is being created for NWO
(NIEO)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_drawing_rights
notice the technical jargon to confuse you.
this crash the federal reserve can no bail out to the tune of ten trillion or everybody would wake up and see the joke of fractionalized banking; money out of debt.
the IMF will save the day as it is the only one left with a clean balance sheet. they will make inflation with this and you wont know where it is coming from.
random0: personal debt in china used to be 40billion 20 years ago, and now its 40 trillion, these numbers reflected everywhere! its just not sustainable and trillions has to be the end.
we never had a recovery,the only thing which recovered were equity markets, because of the quantitative easing.
*random1
for every dollar put into the economy out of debt. the economy grows so much, it used to be a lot more than it is now.
*random2
negative yeilds of government bonds-unprecedented never happened before! this means? you give them an amount of money, and they give you back less ten years later... hint.. they want to bail themselves out, not you. Hint, they dont know! what they are doing! 15 ? policies by the FED in the last 2 years ? means they dont know!
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/just-one-thing-can-cushion-investors-as-markets-hit-bottom-2016-02-11?dist=beforebell
its a mess at the start of this before it is even technically declared.
central bansk buying 600tonne of gold a year, and ramping up for 'diversification'.
China has bought at least 20% of the worlds gold, about 10 -15% of it in the last 4 years alone.
China is running dangerously low on foreign currency reserves...
the difference between ETF's for silver and gold and real silver and gold are huge, so the derivitives are shitting out. in other words, its coming to home.
Silever:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxLH24izKYM
the best distraction from bad policy is war. there will be no bids for junk bonds and gold will be in the headlines and silver has an elastic relationship to gold, it will be a flood to silver as the supply is much smaller.
Random3
there is deflation first, then central banks will move then the IMF will introduce new world currency and inflation will skyrocket in the order of 10% per month not annually! by 2025 as predicted by the MIT super computer.
MY ADVICE AS THE UN'S , GROW A SMALL SCALE ORGANIC GARDEN. guerilla grow everywhere!
then we are going into water wars, and it will be starvation literally in "5th,4th,3rd,2nd world countries"
Random4:
the reality is economic survelience new international economic order. survileance via economics, RFID tagging you so you cant buy food without a chip inserted under your skin. as the bible predicted 2000 years ago.
cashless society.
in 1980 gold was worthless, this tracks exactly opposite to equity markets; gold. we now face the largest GLOBAL depression ever seen. gold could go to way above 5000 per ounce. the dow to gold ratio is totally out of whack and right down. (same with silver) so this must correct, and when it corrects it will go over correction (up higher than the correction required)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj2s6vzErqY
case for 20,000ounce gold video.
(there are 6.6 bill people and only 2.2 billion ounces of gold and silver rarer, 14 people have to share the same ounce of silver(video is clearly older than the current 7.2 bil people, hence ratio worse now))
Random5: if you look on the LONG charts on finance.yahoo.com you can see 1995 suddenly the markets went up drastically with derivitive over use, and more and more steep up, this derivitives market is now coming to a crash, it is worth at least ten times more than the equity market of normal stocks. 1% drop in derivitives is like ten trillion on the stock market. - it is little i owe you's and these derivitives are now coming into the spotlight as bullshit. A dollar is a receipt check on these little i owe you's.
no moneyexist on the reserve bank balance sheets as our system is fractionalized banking- they say they have 100% yet only have 10%. money is created OUT OF DEBT> your sacred labour.. your agreement to be the slave.
it is a number supply, that is all. your sacred labour.
-you build this money just to pay it back in tax. and it works its way back in the imaginary cirlce. currency is printed into existence it is debt of the future. see the video for more detial.
we have to every month borrow mor einto existance or the whole thing collapses. guess where we are now? at the rediculous and obvious end.
the last time the currency cupply collapsed was the great depression of 1929, but now we have 7 billion people.
the death of money, means cashless society and RFID chipping you for economic surveliance.
news and reaction time is now crazy, dont forget the 2010 dow jones 10% daily drop due to a 'wrong extra 0 trade'.
as i write this markets are sliding the FTSE MIB 5% in todays session http://www.marketwatch.com/
to make money think about silver has more uses than gold. silver is even going into RFID chips...........................................
please view the video of the 350,000 troops, 20,000 tanks from multi-nations armoring themselves as part of operation 'northern thunder' to see why this may well be the official World War 3.
+The Saudis just made a shocking admission made in the international press. During an interview on RT Arabic, Dahham Al Anzi of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, discussed why the Arab world feel the need for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to be removed from power. He also reaffirmed the need for a ground invasion to accomplish that goal. (good video in this link)
http://right.is/politics/2016/02/video-saudi-arabia-says-they-are-invading-syria-they-have-a-nuke-53349.html
To conclude: possible cashless society onset, new world global currency excuse insertion, and or financial system recet and the event(high beam energy): also i was not putting forth an solution saying buy gold or silver, this is merely what those still playing that game.. are saying. here is what i say. "the no alternatives ' THE SYSTEM... "the idea of taxes should be everyone has to plant 1 food plant a day and contribute 1 good idea everyday and so on and so forth, then soon there wont be need for taxing"~benjamin couwenberg
References:
gerald celiante, james rickhard, mike maloney,
peter schiff, harry dent. channelers such as rysa5 from gold ring game and cobra on 'the event'. thanks to NWOreport.me for the video of the armament.
THIS POST OR ROUGHT DRAFT, CONNECTS TO THE rfid ESCHATON APOCALYPSE POST ON THE http://www.consciousazine.com/breaking-news-page.html
YOUKNOW.. JUST TO PROVE US VISIONARIES CAN SEE THIS STUFF COMING.....
ForeWord: alright i will release this all now weeks prior (even though if you have been paying attention all other markets and charts are completely at multi-decade lows and decimated, it appears the arrogant Americans on wall st are a bit slow to this..or.. perfectly orchestrated ;) (i choose option B):
The adoption of negative interest rates — initially launched in Europe in 2014 and now embraced in Japan — represents a major turning point for central banking. Previously, emphasis had been placed on boosting aggregate demand — primarily by lowering the cost of borrowing, but also by spurring wealth effects from appreciating financial assets.
But now, by imposing penalties on excess reserves left on deposit with central banks, negative interest rates drive stimulus through the supply side of the credit equation — in effect, urging banks to make new loans regardless of the demand for such funds.
This misses the essence of what is ailing a post-crisis world. As Nomura economist Richard Koo has argued about Japan, the focus should be on the demand side of crisis-battered economies, where growth is impaired by a debt-rejection syndrome that invariably takes hold in the aftermath of a “balance sheet recession.”
Such impairment is global in scope. It’s not just Japan, where the purportedly powerful impetus of Abenomics has failed to dislodge a struggling economy from 24 years of 0.8% inflation-adjusted growth in gross domestic product. It’s also the U.S., where consumer demand — the epicenter of America’s Great Recession — remains stuck in an eight-year quagmire of just 1.5% average real growth. Even worse is the eurozone, where real GDP growth has averaged just 0.1% over the 2008-2015 period.
All of this speaks to the impotence of central banks to jump-start aggregate demand in balance-sheet-constrained economies that have fallen into 1930s-style “liquidity traps.”
The shift to negative interest rates is all the more problematic. Given persistent sluggish aggregate demand worldwide, a new set of risks is introduced by penalizing banks for not making new loans. This is the functional equivalent of promoting another surge of “zombie lending”
~http://www.marketwatch.com/story/negative-interest-rates-set-stage-for-next-crisis-stephen-roach-says-2016-02-18
For example, a market low in 2016 would be less injurious than if the low is registered in 2017, because the longer the market experiences anxiety, the more pain there is to relieve. This fact was demonstrated in 1987 when the 35% decline was short-lived and rebuilt quicker. The decline starting in 2000 lasted into 2003 with intermittent attempts to stabilize being showered with selling panics. The demise in prices and time was longer than 1987, making bearish sentiment increase and stalling rallies.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-one-two-three-punch-could-drop-stocks-30-in-2016-2016-02-19
low oil will bankrupt the likes of saudi aurabia http://www.marketwatch.com/story/falling-oil-prices-will-bankrupt-the-likes-of-russia-saudi-arabia-2016-02-10?link=MW_popular
gold and silver up and other metals are right down. iron ore used to be 200 a tonne, now its $40 bucks.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBU01akf688 +
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbZJ948oCoc
celiante explains in details i dont need to excerpt from the coming collapse and why it is worse than the 1930's great global depression.
now, i will add that, when depressions hit, it is always unbeknownst to the masses of sheeple, just as the exact same way when the death cross happens on the stock market everybody ignores this MAJOR down trend turn signal, with excuse after excuse..
"by looking the dow jones chart of america, the major stock index watched by the world, the crash now happens in conjunction throughout march 2016 very heavy down trends will occur in conjunction with the middle eastern 350,000 troops 20,000 tank operation 'northern thunder' which may see a official www3 begin." ~benjamin couwenberg 22/02/2016
this is the new world currency that is being created for NWO
(NIEO)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_drawing_rights
notice the technical jargon to confuse you.
this crash the federal reserve can no bail out to the tune of ten trillion or everybody would wake up and see the joke of fractionalized banking; money out of debt.
the IMF will save the day as it is the only one left with a clean balance sheet. they will make inflation with this and you wont know where it is coming from.
random0: personal debt in china used to be 40billion 20 years ago, and now its 40 trillion, these numbers reflected everywhere! its just not sustainable and trillions has to be the end.
we never had a recovery,the only thing which recovered were equity markets, because of the quantitative easing.
*random1
for every dollar put into the economy out of debt. the economy grows so much, it used to be a lot more than it is now.
*random2
negative yeilds of government bonds-unprecedented never happened before! this means? you give them an amount of money, and they give you back less ten years later... hint.. they want to bail themselves out, not you. Hint, they dont know! what they are doing! 15 ? policies by the FED in the last 2 years ? means they dont know!
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/just-one-thing-can-cushion-investors-as-markets-hit-bottom-2016-02-11?dist=beforebell
its a mess at the start of this before it is even technically declared.
central bansk buying 600tonne of gold a year, and ramping up for 'diversification'.
China has bought at least 20% of the worlds gold, about 10 -15% of it in the last 4 years alone.
China is running dangerously low on foreign currency reserves...
the difference between ETF's for silver and gold and real silver and gold are huge, so the derivitives are shitting out. in other words, its coming to home.
Silever:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxLH24izKYM
the best distraction from bad policy is war. there will be no bids for junk bonds and gold will be in the headlines and silver has an elastic relationship to gold, it will be a flood to silver as the supply is much smaller.
Random3
there is deflation first, then central banks will move then the IMF will introduce new world currency and inflation will skyrocket in the order of 10% per month not annually! by 2025 as predicted by the MIT super computer.
MY ADVICE AS THE UN'S , GROW A SMALL SCALE ORGANIC GARDEN. guerilla grow everywhere!
then we are going into water wars, and it will be starvation literally in "5th,4th,3rd,2nd world countries"
Random4:
the reality is economic survelience new international economic order. survileance via economics, RFID tagging you so you cant buy food without a chip inserted under your skin. as the bible predicted 2000 years ago.
cashless society.
in 1980 gold was worthless, this tracks exactly opposite to equity markets; gold. we now face the largest GLOBAL depression ever seen. gold could go to way above 5000 per ounce. the dow to gold ratio is totally out of whack and right down. (same with silver) so this must correct, and when it corrects it will go over correction (up higher than the correction required)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj2s6vzErqY
case for 20,000ounce gold video.
(there are 6.6 bill people and only 2.2 billion ounces of gold and silver rarer, 14 people have to share the same ounce of silver(video is clearly older than the current 7.2 bil people, hence ratio worse now))
Random5: if you look on the LONG charts on finance.yahoo.com you can see 1995 suddenly the markets went up drastically with derivitive over use, and more and more steep up, this derivitives market is now coming to a crash, it is worth at least ten times more than the equity market of normal stocks. 1% drop in derivitives is like ten trillion on the stock market. - it is little i owe you's and these derivitives are now coming into the spotlight as bullshit. A dollar is a receipt check on these little i owe you's.
no moneyexist on the reserve bank balance sheets as our system is fractionalized banking- they say they have 100% yet only have 10%. money is created OUT OF DEBT> your sacred labour.. your agreement to be the slave.
it is a number supply, that is all. your sacred labour.
-you build this money just to pay it back in tax. and it works its way back in the imaginary cirlce. currency is printed into existence it is debt of the future. see the video for more detial.
we have to every month borrow mor einto existance or the whole thing collapses. guess where we are now? at the rediculous and obvious end.
the last time the currency cupply collapsed was the great depression of 1929, but now we have 7 billion people.
the death of money, means cashless society and RFID chipping you for economic surveliance.
news and reaction time is now crazy, dont forget the 2010 dow jones 10% daily drop due to a 'wrong extra 0 trade'.
as i write this markets are sliding the FTSE MIB 5% in todays session http://www.marketwatch.com/
to make money think about silver has more uses than gold. silver is even going into RFID chips...........................................
please view the video of the 350,000 troops, 20,000 tanks from multi-nations armoring themselves as part of operation 'northern thunder' to see why this may well be the official World War 3.
+The Saudis just made a shocking admission made in the international press. During an interview on RT Arabic, Dahham Al Anzi of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, discussed why the Arab world feel the need for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to be removed from power. He also reaffirmed the need for a ground invasion to accomplish that goal. (good video in this link)
http://right.is/politics/2016/02/video-saudi-arabia-says-they-are-invading-syria-they-have-a-nuke-53349.html
To conclude: possible cashless society onset, new world global currency excuse insertion, and or financial system recet and the event(high beam energy): also i was not putting forth an solution saying buy gold or silver, this is merely what those still playing that game.. are saying. here is what i say. "the no alternatives ' THE SYSTEM... "the idea of taxes should be everyone has to plant 1 food plant a day and contribute 1 good idea everyday and so on and so forth, then soon there wont be need for taxing"~benjamin couwenberg
References:
gerald celiante, james rickhard, mike maloney,
peter schiff, harry dent. channelers such as rysa5 from gold ring game and cobra on 'the event'. thanks to NWOreport.me for the video of the armament.
THIS POST OR ROUGHT DRAFT, CONNECTS TO THE rfid ESCHATON APOCALYPSE POST ON THE http://www.consciousazine.com/breaking-news-page.html
YOUKNOW.. JUST TO PROVE US VISIONARIES CAN SEE THIS STUFF COMING.....
INCOME GAP WIDENS. For 40 years Productivity surged, but income and wages remained stagnant for "most" (99%) Americans. The rich (1%) took all the expansion profits, their income up 240%, as the peoples' real wages (blue line) were flat. If the median household income had kept pace with the economy since 1970, it would now be nearly $92,000, not $50,000. Income repression is turning us into serfs in our 21st Century. And there is no help from our non-representative corporatized government.
"Give me control of a nations money supply, and I care not who makes it’s laws." - Mater Amschel Rothschild, founder of the Rothschild banking dynasty.
ref-MotherJones.com,http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/02/income-inequality-in-america-chart-graph
"Give me control of a nations money supply, and I care not who makes it’s laws." - Mater Amschel Rothschild, founder of the Rothschild banking dynasty.
ref-MotherJones.com,http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/02/income-inequality-in-america-chart-graph
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/indicator-has-a-big-warning-for-the-market-140916833.html
A little-known event in the CBOE Volatility Index (^VIX) may be flashing a warning sign that the market will see a big downside move this year.
To be sure, the VIX itself is a popular measure of expected volatility in the S&P 500 (^GSPC). Options and futures contracts against it vigorously trade hands every day.
And since the start of the year, the VIX has been elevated, something that happens when the market is worried. For most of 2016, it has been trading mostly above 20. That’s well above times of complacency, such as the period from mid-2012 to mid-2015, when the index was often found in a range between 11 and 20. The VIX’s counter-market tendencies lead some to call it the “Fear Index.”
Yet the VIX’s level in the spot market may not be the only indication of volatility in the months ahead, according to Russell Rhoads, director of education at the CBOE’s Options Institute.
His analysis shows that the term structure of the index’s traded futures contracts also gives clues about volatility in the upcoming year.
Recently, longer-dated VIX futures were trading at prices lower than near-dated contracts. This type of market is referred to as “backwardation” and happens often in some commodities markets. But that’s not usually the case with the VIX. Its futures usually see “contango,” where longer-dated contracts trade a premium to nearer-dated ones.
The index’s latest backwardation stint, ending on February 16, lasted 30 days. That’s the fourth-longest backwardation period on record for the VIX.
Based on Rhoads’ data, the S&P 500 sees a big move after the VIX goes back to contango from backwardation.
“Almost 90% of the time, the market has moved over 20% over the next year,” he said. “That's 20% higher or lower.”
A little-known event in the CBOE Volatility Index (^VIX) may be flashing a warning sign that the market will see a big downside move this year.
To be sure, the VIX itself is a popular measure of expected volatility in the S&P 500 (^GSPC). Options and futures contracts against it vigorously trade hands every day.
And since the start of the year, the VIX has been elevated, something that happens when the market is worried. For most of 2016, it has been trading mostly above 20. That’s well above times of complacency, such as the period from mid-2012 to mid-2015, when the index was often found in a range between 11 and 20. The VIX’s counter-market tendencies lead some to call it the “Fear Index.”
Yet the VIX’s level in the spot market may not be the only indication of volatility in the months ahead, according to Russell Rhoads, director of education at the CBOE’s Options Institute.
His analysis shows that the term structure of the index’s traded futures contracts also gives clues about volatility in the upcoming year.
Recently, longer-dated VIX futures were trading at prices lower than near-dated contracts. This type of market is referred to as “backwardation” and happens often in some commodities markets. But that’s not usually the case with the VIX. Its futures usually see “contango,” where longer-dated contracts trade a premium to nearer-dated ones.
The index’s latest backwardation stint, ending on February 16, lasted 30 days. That’s the fourth-longest backwardation period on record for the VIX.
Based on Rhoads’ data, the S&P 500 sees a big move after the VIX goes back to contango from backwardation.
“Almost 90% of the time, the market has moved over 20% over the next year,” he said. “That's 20% higher or lower.”
10 charts show why market may be ripe for a correction
By Sue ChangPublished: Aug 23, 2016 4:48 p.m. ET
Bank of America warns the market is too complacent about the Fed
Shutterstock
This market may be a bear in a bull costume.As the U.S. stock market rallies to fresh record highs every few days, most investors will be hard-pressed to find incentives to sell out of the market. Yet, Bank of America Merrill Lynch has decided to take on the role of Wall Street’s Debbie Downer, warning of an impending correction.
Savita Subramanian, equity and quantitative strategist at Bank of America, has been the consistent voice of caution this year even as the S&P 500 SPX, +0.20% is poised for a six-month winning streak — the longest since 2013. On Tuesday, she cited 10 reasons why she believes the market is ripe for a selloff, framing her bearish outlook in a series of charts.
1. Valuation: As of end of July, the S&P 500 was overvalued pretty much on all fronts, according to Subramanian. “U.S. stocks look expensive versus history on most metrics,” she said.
2. Positioning: A decline in short-interest-to-float ratio suggests that sentiment is increasingly bullish, which some view as a contrarian indicator.
3. Fiscal stimulus: Expectations of fiscal support for the economy is hovering at levels not seen since the height of the Great Recession, but Subramanian believes investors betting on additional fiscal stimulus will be disappointed.
4. Economic surprises: The incidences of economic data beating on the upside have started to wane, which is expected to drag on market sentiment
5. Corporates: Earnings are not expected to recover anytime soon, while sales growth remains subdued, slipping to a three-year low. Many analysts believe the stock market will not be able to sustain its upside momentum if earnings do not recover.
6. China: Concerns about the world’s second-largest economy have abated amid signs of stability, but the country’s manufacturing sector has started to contract again, prompting worries of further economic slowdown.
7. Leverage: Debt at S&P 500 companies is rising, while creditors have been tightening their lending standards for the fourth consecutive quarter.
8. Elections: Political uncertainties are expected to mount ahead of the November presidential election and dampen corporate investment, a key engine for economic growth.
9. The Federal Reserve: The market may not be reading the Fed accurately. “BofAML interest rate forecasts imply a far more aggressive pace of Fed tightening than is currently priced into the market,” said Subramanian. The CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which tracks Wall Street’s expectations for a Fed interest-rate hike, indicated that the market was pricing in a 24% probability of a rate increase in September, and a 44.1% probability in December.
Bank of America
10. September slump: History is working against the market. September is typically the weakest month of the year; since 1928, the S&P 500 has dropped in September 56% of the time. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/10-charts-show-why-market-may-be-ripe-for-a-correction-2016-08-23?link=MW_latest_news
By Sue ChangPublished: Aug 23, 2016 4:48 p.m. ET
Bank of America warns the market is too complacent about the Fed
Shutterstock
This market may be a bear in a bull costume.As the U.S. stock market rallies to fresh record highs every few days, most investors will be hard-pressed to find incentives to sell out of the market. Yet, Bank of America Merrill Lynch has decided to take on the role of Wall Street’s Debbie Downer, warning of an impending correction.
Savita Subramanian, equity and quantitative strategist at Bank of America, has been the consistent voice of caution this year even as the S&P 500 SPX, +0.20% is poised for a six-month winning streak — the longest since 2013. On Tuesday, she cited 10 reasons why she believes the market is ripe for a selloff, framing her bearish outlook in a series of charts.
1. Valuation: As of end of July, the S&P 500 was overvalued pretty much on all fronts, according to Subramanian. “U.S. stocks look expensive versus history on most metrics,” she said.
2. Positioning: A decline in short-interest-to-float ratio suggests that sentiment is increasingly bullish, which some view as a contrarian indicator.
3. Fiscal stimulus: Expectations of fiscal support for the economy is hovering at levels not seen since the height of the Great Recession, but Subramanian believes investors betting on additional fiscal stimulus will be disappointed.
4. Economic surprises: The incidences of economic data beating on the upside have started to wane, which is expected to drag on market sentiment
5. Corporates: Earnings are not expected to recover anytime soon, while sales growth remains subdued, slipping to a three-year low. Many analysts believe the stock market will not be able to sustain its upside momentum if earnings do not recover.
6. China: Concerns about the world’s second-largest economy have abated amid signs of stability, but the country’s manufacturing sector has started to contract again, prompting worries of further economic slowdown.
7. Leverage: Debt at S&P 500 companies is rising, while creditors have been tightening their lending standards for the fourth consecutive quarter.
8. Elections: Political uncertainties are expected to mount ahead of the November presidential election and dampen corporate investment, a key engine for economic growth.
9. The Federal Reserve: The market may not be reading the Fed accurately. “BofAML interest rate forecasts imply a far more aggressive pace of Fed tightening than is currently priced into the market,” said Subramanian. The CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which tracks Wall Street’s expectations for a Fed interest-rate hike, indicated that the market was pricing in a 24% probability of a rate increase in September, and a 44.1% probability in December.
Bank of America
10. September slump: History is working against the market. September is typically the weakest month of the year; since 1928, the S&P 500 has dropped in September 56% of the time. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/10-charts-show-why-market-may-be-ripe-for-a-correction-2016-08-23?link=MW_latest_news
The U.S. national debt is closing in on $20 trillion. That’s $20 thousand billion. Or $20 million million. If you stacked 20 trillion worth of thousand-dollar bills, it would supposedly reach something like 1,200 miles high. If you lived to be 80 years old, you’d have to spend about $700 million a day to run out of money.
Deutsche Bank’s annus horribilis is getting uglier.
Germany’s most prominent bank contributed to a selloff of global equity benchmarks, including the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.86% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.91% Monday, as investors fretted about a possible spillover from intensifying concerns that Deutsche Bank may need to raise fresh capital to cover a potential settlement.
The market reaction shows that investors remain sensitive to the “slightest sniff of a crisis in confidence,” said Kevin Kelly, chief investment officer at Recon Capital and manager of the firm’s DAX Germany ETF DAX, -1.79% in a phone interview.
Shares of Deutsche Bank DB, -7.06% DBK, -7.49% saw losses accelerate after a news report Friday that German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Deutsche Bank CEO John Cryan that she wouldn’t offer political assistance to the giant lender as it faces the prospect of a $14 billion fine from the U.S. Justice Department. Deutsche Bank has pushed back against the Justice Department’s proposal that it pay up to $14 billion to settle civil claims related to the bank’s sale of complex structured mortgage bonds during the height of the 2008-2009 financial crisis.
Deutsche Bank has said it has no intention of shelling out that much to settle the claims.
Citing unnamed government officials, Germany’s Focus magazine said Merkel wasn’t willing to offer help to Deutsche Bank because she was heading into an election year.
Although representatives for Merkel and Deutsche Bank denied the reports, the chatter has highlighted the fact that one of the world’s largest banks is being buffeted by a number of headwinds that could weigh on the European and U.S. economies, not least of all are fears about its ability to withstand problems. The bank has a little over $6 billion set aside for possible litigation expenses, according to recent regulatory filings as of June 30.
Wall Street has taken notice, as this tweet from prominent blogger and CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management, Joshua Brown, shows:
Frankfurt-traded shares of Deutsche Bank fell to their lowest level in decades on Monday, hitting €10.55, pushing its year-to-date loses to more than 50%.
Why is the market so worked about a German bank? For one, it is size. Deutsche Bank is the largest German lender and the fourth largest European bank by assets with $1.9 trillion as of 2015, behind Crédit Agricole, BNP Paribas and HSBC Holdings HSBC, -0.99% according to research form statista.com.
Deutsche Bank has been a problem child for Germany over the course of the past several years. Back in June, the International Monetary Fund described Deutsche Bank as the greatest risk to the global financial system. The following graphic from the IMF illustrates the firm’s interconnectedness among global systemically important banks, or GSIBs.
Source: IMF
Cryan, who was named co-CEO in July 2015, has become the face of the institution. He has been tasked with beefing up its thinning capital cushion to protect against unexpected losses, while shrinking the institution and reducing risks, even as some of its businesses aren’t performing up to snuff, both compared with its peers and compared with similar periods in prior years.
The latest talk of a possible sizable outlay of capital follows earlier rumors about the lender considering a merger with Germany’s second-largest bank, Commerbank AG.
A chunky payment to the Justice Department also may mean that other European institutions will be faced with larger-than-expected fines related to mortgage-bond sales, as the The Wall Street Journal reports. That includes Credit Suisse CS, -2.61% Barclays BCS, -1.70% and Royal Bank of Scotland RBS, -2.95% which haven’t yet paid the multibillion-dollar fines that U.S. banks have over the same issues.
Investors also worry that Deutsche Bank’s woes will translate into headwinds for the eurozone’s largest economy.
“If Deutsche has to raise cash, and if it has trouble doing so, credit conditions in Germany could tighten,” said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, in a note. “This is not what we might hope to see in a weak economy.”
Although it is hard to predict the outcome of Deutsche Bank’s struggles, some market participants see it as a big, fat headache for the market.
“It’s a slow moving train wreck” said Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst for The Lindsey Group, during an interview with CNBC Monday morning.
For now, some analysts are focusing on the €10 euro level in Frankfurt trading. A move into single digits “would take Deutsche Bank into the realms of penny stocks and could see its share offloaded en masse,” wrote Jasper Lawler, market analyst at London-based CMC Markets, in a note.
Kelly said that while he expects Deutsche Bank to eventually complete a deal that will shore up its balance sheet, investors will remain skittish meanwhile due to uncertainties over the bank’s derivative book and the potential for reverberations through the financial system. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/how-deutsche-bank-woes-are-stressing-out-the-us-stock-market-2016-09-26?link=MW_latest_news
Germany’s most prominent bank contributed to a selloff of global equity benchmarks, including the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.86% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.91% Monday, as investors fretted about a possible spillover from intensifying concerns that Deutsche Bank may need to raise fresh capital to cover a potential settlement.
The market reaction shows that investors remain sensitive to the “slightest sniff of a crisis in confidence,” said Kevin Kelly, chief investment officer at Recon Capital and manager of the firm’s DAX Germany ETF DAX, -1.79% in a phone interview.
Shares of Deutsche Bank DB, -7.06% DBK, -7.49% saw losses accelerate after a news report Friday that German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Deutsche Bank CEO John Cryan that she wouldn’t offer political assistance to the giant lender as it faces the prospect of a $14 billion fine from the U.S. Justice Department. Deutsche Bank has pushed back against the Justice Department’s proposal that it pay up to $14 billion to settle civil claims related to the bank’s sale of complex structured mortgage bonds during the height of the 2008-2009 financial crisis.
Deutsche Bank has said it has no intention of shelling out that much to settle the claims.
Citing unnamed government officials, Germany’s Focus magazine said Merkel wasn’t willing to offer help to Deutsche Bank because she was heading into an election year.
Although representatives for Merkel and Deutsche Bank denied the reports, the chatter has highlighted the fact that one of the world’s largest banks is being buffeted by a number of headwinds that could weigh on the European and U.S. economies, not least of all are fears about its ability to withstand problems. The bank has a little over $6 billion set aside for possible litigation expenses, according to recent regulatory filings as of June 30.
Wall Street has taken notice, as this tweet from prominent blogger and CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management, Joshua Brown, shows:
Frankfurt-traded shares of Deutsche Bank fell to their lowest level in decades on Monday, hitting €10.55, pushing its year-to-date loses to more than 50%.
Why is the market so worked about a German bank? For one, it is size. Deutsche Bank is the largest German lender and the fourth largest European bank by assets with $1.9 trillion as of 2015, behind Crédit Agricole, BNP Paribas and HSBC Holdings HSBC, -0.99% according to research form statista.com.
Deutsche Bank has been a problem child for Germany over the course of the past several years. Back in June, the International Monetary Fund described Deutsche Bank as the greatest risk to the global financial system. The following graphic from the IMF illustrates the firm’s interconnectedness among global systemically important banks, or GSIBs.
Source: IMF
Cryan, who was named co-CEO in July 2015, has become the face of the institution. He has been tasked with beefing up its thinning capital cushion to protect against unexpected losses, while shrinking the institution and reducing risks, even as some of its businesses aren’t performing up to snuff, both compared with its peers and compared with similar periods in prior years.
The latest talk of a possible sizable outlay of capital follows earlier rumors about the lender considering a merger with Germany’s second-largest bank, Commerbank AG.
A chunky payment to the Justice Department also may mean that other European institutions will be faced with larger-than-expected fines related to mortgage-bond sales, as the The Wall Street Journal reports. That includes Credit Suisse CS, -2.61% Barclays BCS, -1.70% and Royal Bank of Scotland RBS, -2.95% which haven’t yet paid the multibillion-dollar fines that U.S. banks have over the same issues.
Investors also worry that Deutsche Bank’s woes will translate into headwinds for the eurozone’s largest economy.
“If Deutsche has to raise cash, and if it has trouble doing so, credit conditions in Germany could tighten,” said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, in a note. “This is not what we might hope to see in a weak economy.”
Although it is hard to predict the outcome of Deutsche Bank’s struggles, some market participants see it as a big, fat headache for the market.
“It’s a slow moving train wreck” said Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst for The Lindsey Group, during an interview with CNBC Monday morning.
For now, some analysts are focusing on the €10 euro level in Frankfurt trading. A move into single digits “would take Deutsche Bank into the realms of penny stocks and could see its share offloaded en masse,” wrote Jasper Lawler, market analyst at London-based CMC Markets, in a note.
Kelly said that while he expects Deutsche Bank to eventually complete a deal that will shore up its balance sheet, investors will remain skittish meanwhile due to uncertainties over the bank’s derivative book and the potential for reverberations through the financial system. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/how-deutsche-bank-woes-are-stressing-out-the-us-stock-market-2016-09-26?link=MW_latest_news
Market technician J.C. Parets of the All Star Charts blog said on Tuesday that U.S. Treasurys represent “the most interesting trade in the world.” And by “most interesting,” he means there’s a setup for a reversal in yields that’s been a long time coming. (Bonds like gold are considered a safe play the opposite of equity stocks)