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"Trade War Truce Over Already?"
Dec 7, 2018 12:37:31   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 

"Trade War Truce Over Already?"
by Brian Maher

"Closed yesterday to sob for Bush, Wall Street reopened for business today. It should have stayed closed. The stock market resumed precisely where it left off Tuesday… when the Dow Jones plunged 799 miserable points. It opened today down another 400 or so - and kept going. Only a miraculous late rally reversed the 780-point spiral… and the index closed just 77 points in red. Both the S&P and Nasdaq followed the same track. The S&P only lost four points by the final bell, while the careening Nasdaq scratched out a 30-point gain. More on this “rally” tomorrow.

But this morning the wreckage was extending in all directions, to all points of the compass. Chinese stocks - down. Japanese stocks - down. European stocks - down. If it’s reasons you seek, you needn’t look far...

The trade war truce may be broken. Someone on the American side drilled a round into the enemy camp. The New York Times: "The risk that a trade war between China and the United States was entering a dangerous new phase sent global markets lower again on Thursday. The drop on Thursday followed the arrest of a prominent Chinese technology executive at the request of the United States, which appeared to dash hopes that a trade war cease-fire reached between the economic giants over the weekend would last."

Canadian authorities put the arm on a certain Meng Wanzhou as she was preparing to depart from Vancouver airport. Ms. Meng is the chief financial officer of Chinese technology behemoth Huawei, and daughter of its founder. No charges have been specified as yet. But she has allegedly acted contrary to the laws and interests of the United States.

Huawei is China’s largest telecommunications equipment manufacturer. American officials fear the Chinese government may be employing Huawei's networking technology to spy on American citizens and military personnel. In May the Pentagon banned the sale of Huawei-produced smartphones from its bases - these phones evidently being smarter than the Pentagon would prefer. The firm has also been under investigation for violating trade sanctions on the devil-state Iran.

Meng now faces extradition to the United States, where she would stand before the Eastern District of New York. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs has demanded her immediate release. Is the truce salvageable? “It is hard to overstate the symbolism and significance of this event,” says Karishma Vaswani, BBC Asia business correspondent.

Explains Ms. Vaswani: "Huawei is the crown jewel of Chinese tech and Ms. Meng is effectively its princess. Even though it's still not clear what the charges against her are... this is not simply a case about the arrest of one woman, or just one company. This arrest could materially damage the relationship between the U.S. and China at possibly one of the most sensitive times between the two countries in their long and torrid history. “The gloves are off,” she concludes. “Things have taken a dramatic turn for the worse.”

If we did not know any better, we might suspect treachery is afoot. The timing seems… suspicious. For months these questions have been raised. Are agents of the United States government actively undermining the cease-fire? But who? And for what purpose?

But let us return to our sober senses, put away our hat of tinfoil... and return to the topic under discussion. Now you have your reason for this morning’s fireworks. Despite today’s late rally, perhaps another will surface tomorrow. The stock market is a wreck of nerves these days… like a man walking point in a dark enemy jungle. A leaf rustles, a bird scatters, a lizard scurries - and he hits the deck.
How many times have stocks hit the deck since October? Single-day losses of 300, 500, 700 - 800 points - seem almost commonplace now. Have you noticed?

But let us take the wider view… Ned Davis Research sorts asset classes into eight separate piles. From domestic and international stocks, to bonds of all stripes, to commodities and many things else, it follows them all. Not one of these assets is on the track for a return of more than 5% this year, they claim. Not a one. Not since 1972 - 46 years ago - have these assets put in a year of such combined futility.

As Bloomberg fashions it: "Nothing’s working - not large- or small-cap stocks in the U.S., not international or emerging equities, not Treasuries, investment-grade bonds, commodities or real estate. Most of them are down, and the ones that are up are doing so by percentages in the low single digits."

Put away the trade war for the moment. Perhaps this chart supplies all the explanation we need:

Liquidity is going dry. As the chart reveals, the Federal Reserve is draining its balance sheet at a clip - a clip only scheduled to accelerate. The other major central banks are falling in behind it. There, the picture worth a thousand words. But for the Dow Jones, maybe a picture worth a thousand points - and probably much more."
- www.thedailyreckoning.com

What to expect?
A roller coaster ride: https://youtu.be/bT5o72_bZuo
And somewhere down the track, a massive brick wall...

Reply
Dec 7, 2018 12:48:29   #
woodguru
 
pafret wrote:

How many times have stocks hit the deck since October? Single-day losses of 300, 500, 700 - 800 points - seem almost commonplace now. Have you noticed?

As Bloomberg fashions it: "Nothing’s working - not large- or small-cap stocks in the U.S., not international or emerging equities, not Treasuries, investment-grade bonds, commodities or real estate. Most of them are down, and the ones that are up are doing so by percentages in the low single digits."

In Trump's voice Donald Trump is doing things Obama never came close to, losses are exceeding the pace with which record highs were being posted, in fact the biggest drop in one day posted after Donald Trump tweeted he is the Tariff Man...I am the greatest president in history

Reply
Dec 7, 2018 12:52:36   #
woodguru
 
pafret wrote:

Put away the trade war for the moment. Perhaps this chart supplies all the explanation we need:

Liquidity is going dry. As the chart reveals, the Federal Reserve is draining its balance sheet at a clip - a clip only scheduled to accelerate. The other major central banks are falling in behind it. There, the picture worth a thousand words. But for the Dow Jones, maybe a picture worth a thousand points - and probably much more."
br Put away the trade war for the moment. Perhaps... (show quote)


So Pafret, do you have any insights into where the Fed is offloading assets?

Reply
 
 
Dec 7, 2018 13:25:21   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 
woodguru wrote:
So Pafret, do you have any insights into where the Fed is offloading assets?


Not a clue, I am not an economist, financier or a market guru. I keep reading and posting articles like this in the hope that someday it will all make sense.

Reply
Dec 7, 2018 18:25:18   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
pafret wrote:

"Trade War Truce Over Already?"
by Brian Maher

"Closed yesterday to sob for Bush, Wall Street reopened for business today. It should have stayed closed. The stock market resumed precisely where it left off Tuesday… when the Dow Jones plunged 799 miserable points. It opened today down another 400 or so - and kept going. Only a miraculous late rally reversed the 780-point spiral… and the index closed just 77 points in red. Both the S&P and Nasdaq followed the same track. The S&P only lost four points by the final bell, while the careening Nasdaq scratched out a 30-point gain. More on this “rally” tomorrow.

But this morning the wreckage was extending in all directions, to all points of the compass. Chinese stocks - down. Japanese stocks - down. European stocks - down. If it’s reasons you seek, you needn’t look far...

The trade war truce may be broken. Someone on the American side drilled a round into the enemy camp. The New York Times: "The risk that a trade war between China and the United States was entering a dangerous new phase sent global markets lower again on Thursday. The drop on Thursday followed the arrest of a prominent Chinese technology executive at the request of the United States, which appeared to dash hopes that a trade war cease-fire reached between the economic giants over the weekend would last."

Canadian authorities put the arm on a certain Meng Wanzhou as she was preparing to depart from Vancouver airport. Ms. Meng is the chief financial officer of Chinese technology behemoth Huawei, and daughter of its founder. No charges have been specified as yet. But she has allegedly acted contrary to the laws and interests of the United States.

Huawei is China’s largest telecommunications equipment manufacturer. American officials fear the Chinese government may be employing Huawei's networking technology to spy on American citizens and military personnel. In May the Pentagon banned the sale of Huawei-produced smartphones from its bases - these phones evidently being smarter than the Pentagon would prefer. The firm has also been under investigation for violating trade sanctions on the devil-state Iran.

Meng now faces extradition to the United States, where she would stand before the Eastern District of New York. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs has demanded her immediate release. Is the truce salvageable? “It is hard to overstate the symbolism and significance of this event,” says Karishma Vaswani, BBC Asia business correspondent.

Explains Ms. Vaswani: "Huawei is the crown jewel of Chinese tech and Ms. Meng is effectively its princess. Even though it's still not clear what the charges against her are... this is not simply a case about the arrest of one woman, or just one company. This arrest could materially damage the relationship between the U.S. and China at possibly one of the most sensitive times between the two countries in their long and torrid history. “The gloves are off,” she concludes. “Things have taken a dramatic turn for the worse.”

If we did not know any better, we might suspect treachery is afoot. The timing seems… suspicious. For months these questions have been raised. Are agents of the United States government actively undermining the cease-fire? But who? And for what purpose?

But let us return to our sober senses, put away our hat of tinfoil... and return to the topic under discussion. Now you have your reason for this morning’s fireworks. Despite today’s late rally, perhaps another will surface tomorrow. The stock market is a wreck of nerves these days… like a man walking point in a dark enemy jungle. A leaf rustles, a bird scatters, a lizard scurries - and he hits the deck.
How many times have stocks hit the deck since October? Single-day losses of 300, 500, 700 - 800 points - seem almost commonplace now. Have you noticed?

But let us take the wider view… Ned Davis Research sorts asset classes into eight separate piles. From domestic and international stocks, to bonds of all stripes, to commodities and many things else, it follows them all. Not one of these assets is on the track for a return of more than 5% this year, they claim. Not a one. Not since 1972 - 46 years ago - have these assets put in a year of such combined futility.

As Bloomberg fashions it: "Nothing’s working - not large- or small-cap stocks in the U.S., not international or emerging equities, not Treasuries, investment-grade bonds, commodities or real estate. Most of them are down, and the ones that are up are doing so by percentages in the low single digits."

Put away the trade war for the moment. Perhaps this chart supplies all the explanation we need:

Liquidity is going dry. As the chart reveals, the Federal Reserve is draining its balance sheet at a clip - a clip only scheduled to accelerate. The other major central banks are falling in behind it. There, the picture worth a thousand words. But for the Dow Jones, maybe a picture worth a thousand points - and probably much more."
- www.thedailyreckoning.com

What to expect?
A roller coaster ride: https://youtu.be/bT5o72_bZuo
And somewhere down the track, a massive brick wall...
img https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Y-Aa_7NXNlM/XAn9UU... (show quote)


Maybe not. I know one thing...there are forces out there that would like to bust up any cooperation Trump might have with the Chinese.

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