Slope of Hope Blog Posts

Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.

USD & Various Treasury Yields (by Gary Tanashian)

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Hey, happy new year all Slopers, and TK, a special happy new year to you!  I wish we had more honest and rational voices out there in the wilderness, which is exactly what Slope is in my limited but increasing experience.  Something I wrote this morning while pondering a trigger point in treasury rates:

What is the story here? 5, 10 and 30 year treasury yields are marching
in lock step saying these bonds' would-be buyers want greater
compensation if they are going to take on the debt of a society that
literally lives by inflation, and by debt. The yields are rising as if
to say "Look, we will keep the
illusion intact as long as you are willing to manufacture more debt to
sustain it, but we must be better compensated as the moral risks get
higher here in Full Hubris '10"
.

The key yield to watch
is of course the 3 month t-bill, which will tell the Fed what it is
going to do (you don't really believe these clowns are in control of
such things, as they pretend to make these decisions, do you?) and if
the T-bill tells the Fed that rates are going to rise, then we will
find out how sustainable the economic recovery is.

Usd

As an aside,
you may know that I have a position in the real world where my finger
is on the pulse of the US manufacturing economy. The better than
expected mid-west manufacturing activity is not a lie. There is
recovery, and I see it elsewhere as well. I'll talk about my vantage
point on the 'real' economy a bit more in NFTRH. 'THE' recovery is not in dispute and mine is surely no perma-bear, perma-Armageddon blog.

But
it is sustainability that is the question, and rising yields, if they
are not stopped at our 'line in the sand' of secular change, will
answer a lot of questions in that regard as we move forward. The dollar
has predictably been rescued from the abyss that the MSM were
trumpeting. Now there are actually strong dollar wise guys coming out
of the woodwork. Now things get interesting.

Are You Bullish? (by Gary Tanashian)

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If you are bullish now, but were not bullish last March, you are the
guy or girl in the room saying "who's the mark?" and may be in for a
rude surprise. If you were bullish at the March bottom, perhaps you
have got your stuff together and I am just a cranky contrarian jumping
the gun.

Every instinct I had in November '08 and March '09 told
me that deflationist and bearish were the wrong way to be. The current
situation with the long bond yield rising muddies up the waters today,
so until it is resolved, the commodity and inflation trade must be
considered ongoing… along with perhaps the stock market dragging its
tired ass higher as part of what is now becoming the anti-treasury
trade.

But any bull reading anything decent, reputable or sound
into any of this is just a slave to convention, and believe me, there
are many highly educated people in finance. That could prove to be
their undoing. Talk of risk premiums in bonds and the like is just so
much bromide now because we are off the charts, Treasury is talking
about somehow taking us further off the charts (despite the mini
rebellion in the t-bond) and stock market longs are populated by the
momentum herd, trend followers and increasingly, a weary public.

It
is funny; an early subscriber of NFTRH cancelled last summer as he had
come across some information that the markets were going to crash in
the Fall. It would be lights out so he no longer needed the newsletter.
I should have known right then and there that the rally would extend
longer than I thought likely. It is amazing how easily people fall for
bear fairy stories in the age of inflation policy a go-go, which works
constantly against the deflation/bear market argument.

Well
right now, it is bull fairy stories being constructed by the
troubadours on Wall Street and the massive and self-interested
financial services industry the world over, not to mention the
financial media that touts the agenda 24/7. The risk to the bullish
stance – at least for interim hard correction – remains untenable. Real
contrarians endure and await opportunity, whether it be next week or in the spring (repeat: I only need one or two good trades a year, I only need…)

Meanwhile, the
gold-silver ratio remains subdued but in bullish pretense. Dat be
bearish for everything else my friends, if it turns up. A rising GSR
would signal the draining of the swamp despite the best efforts of
policy on crack.

Gsr

$IRX Breaks Out (by Gary Tanashian)

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The counter-trend reset of human spirits has dragged on longer than
I thought likely. Much longer, actually. Perhaps I was a bit naive last
winter projecting a rally that might retrace 38% of the crash and last
a few short months.

But it is notable that I am now so bearish I
can taste it and it should also be notable that I was so bullish I
could taste it a year ago. The big question revolves not around some
blogger/newsletter writer. The big question is what was the mainstream
media doing when the turn toward bullishness came about?

Come on
now, I don't really need to address that again, right? The MSM scared
the hell out of the public and aided a grand theft of the public trust,
bolstering the coffers of a massive financial services apparatus that
now collects mega bonuses, touts equities and attempts to lure the
final holdouts – who capitulated in March – back into the water.

The
meat of the rally has however, been to the benefit of the corporate
welfare state, organized labor and the financial services industry,
which tells the public "move along,
nothing to see here… forget about what you saw behind the curtain
last year… and by the way, would you like to see some of our new
income products to help you make back your losses?"

The dollar is rising (as this blog has anticipated again and again, as did NFTRH
as part of an ongoing thesis), interest rates are rising on the long
end and now… may I present to you the yield on the 3 month t-bill?
The chart has finally made a move. As you know, I have dragged out a
chart of the $IRX quite often on FOMC day as the Fed pretended they had
a decision to make, all the while 0% t-bill rates told them there is no
decision. Well now, we have a change as the short end begins to respond
to the lack of confidence going on in the long end.

Irx

The MSM and
the troubadours on Wall Street spin this as positive. "THE" recovery is
in process and the Fed will raise rates sooner than the sponsors of the
euro-junk that ran with the anti-dollar inflation rally. It's all good.
A strong dollar, whodda thunk it could be good for the US recovery.
It's a solid one after all, right?

Well, it had better be. It
had better be real or else the spendaholic ways of the Obama
administration and the easy money policies of the Bernanke Fed are not
going to be able to come to the rescue. That is because the treasury
market is posturing through all maturity time frames as if it wants to
return sensible practices to a treasury market that tells the macro
inflators whether or not they can continue creating debt to spur
recovery.

I guess what I am saying is that if the bond market
does indeed signal recovery, the recovery is on its own. No more spoon
feeding of liquidity. So it will be interesting to watch. Gold has
taken the hit (again, as anticipated on this blog
and in NFTRH) and with strong support at around the $1000 level, it
will be an important sign post in determining the authenticity of what
the Wizard is asking you to believe.

The pablum quoted below
tells you that liquidity is flowing, "THE" recovery is in full swing
and oh yes, we will need more spending and stimulus. You can't have it
both ways. The stance here remains that the inflators need a downside
event or else the inflationary monster they created is going to
preclude their ability to continue manufacturing liquidity (treasury
rates rising). Now, I look at NFTRH's biggest picture chart of the
S&P 500 and that thing is bullish. So again, there will come a
point where I stand aside from the moderate bearish stance (as opposed
to my current full bearish personal sentiment).

But with Santa
in play, Wall Street on full tout and the utterly useless (to real
traders) MSM on the job, this mess is going to have to prove itself for
more than a couple pumpy weeks in January. Gold is taking an oh so
healthy correction, purging the momo's and players. When the correction
concludes, we will find out the nature of many things.

Right now, on with silly season!

From Reuters & Bloomberg this morning:

This fanned expectations that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates sooner than its counterparts in the euro zone and Japan,
sending the dollar higher and pushing U.S. Treasury yields to
four-month peaks. MSCI world equity index (.MIWD00000PUS) rose 0.3
percent, on track to scoring one of the biggest annual gains in the
past 20 years.
— Reuters

Congress
and the Obama administration are taking a bigger role in the rescue of
the economy from the Federal Reserve, shifting the strategy to stimulus
spending from central bank lending… "It may be tough for elected
officials to quit spending, prolonging the bailout and adding to the
federal budget deficit. “There’s a danger of getting addicted to fiscal
stimulus programs,” said David Wyss, chief economist with New
York-based Standard & Poor’s, in an interview. “The Fed can print
money. Government has to raise taxes or borrow more."
–Bloomberg

U.S.
consumer spending probably rose in November for the sixth time in seven
months as households took advantage of holiday discounting, economists
said before reports today. China’s growth may surge to as much as 12
percent next year, according to Citic Securities Co., the nation’s
biggest listed brokerage. Consumer confidence in Italy unexpectedly
rose in December to the highest in more than seven years after Europe’s
fourth-biggest economy emerged from a recession.

“The
path of least resistance will continue to be to the upside,” Robert
Doll, who helps oversee about $3.2 trillion as chief investment officer
for global equities at New York-based BlackRock Inc., said in a
Bloomberg Television interview. The economic recovery “means earnings
should be somewhat better and liquidity should still be plentiful.
That’s a recipe for equities moving higher,” Doll said.
–Bloomberg

30 Year Yield (by Gary Tanashian)

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Hi Slopers, it is silly season and the markets are levitating against my
short positions. The precious metals correction that NFTRH had
anticipated is well in progress. I remain long there. So, by extension
I must be pretty bummed out, yeh?

No freaking way. Momma always
told me to have patience… and a plan. I do, and if nothing else I
look on with a sort of comic bemusement (if that's possible) and await
resolution. Noise baby, noise.

Speaking of which, last year
during the deflation scare, somebody sent me a particularly good bit of
noise, the self-proclaimed "scariest gold chart in the world",
targeting gold at below 400. Now, it is easy to produce charts like
that during a deflation when there is little apparent chance of the
metal actually breaking to new highs, as it ultimately did a few months
later.

This is the kind crap that comes out and reinforces the
popular sentiment. Right now, that dynamic is going on in the markets
to the upside. Well, I will show you what I think is one of the
scariest charts in the world; the yield on Larry's 30 year bond.

Tyx

See
the baby inverted H&S (green) that has already broken the neck
line? That targets close to 5.2%. If that target comes to be, then we
will have broken the neck line on big bro (blue) and its target of
6.8%. How do you think such a rise is going to play with the macro
wizards and their ability to sell US debt around the world? At best, I
could envision a self-reinforcing buyer's strike on US treasuries as
would-be buyers await maximum yields for buying the debt of the
hopeless and chronic inflator. At best

Don’t Be Disappointed, Tim (by Gary)

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The euro is a non-confirmation of the bull rally.  And if this break (by weekly chart) in the gold-silver ratio (GSR) is real, then the pig is on borrowed time – literally.

Gsr

When gold rises against silver, it will do so along with a firming dollar and draining liquidity.  That would be the same liquidity that feeds the equity bull.

So, is this a breakout?  If the answer is affirmative, then the rally's days are numbered.  This does not mean things will grind to a halt next week, but the market is not going to continue to rise if the GSR does.

I am going to keep this brief, as I know some readers are bumming about the guest spots.  But I wanted to answer TK's post with a look at the GSR, which has not confirmed a breakout – yet.  —Gary