by Phoenix Capital Research
The markets had a very weak session yesterday. With Bernanke’s final
stand in front of Congress out of the way, along with options expiration
and end of the quarter performance gaming, the bulls are running out of
excuses to gun the market higher.
This is evident in the action of the last three days. All three days
traders tried to push the market higher at the open. However, there was
no follow through and every time the market retracted the early gains.
As I’ve told subscribers of Private Wealth Advisory is not indicative of major buying power coming into the markets.
Yesterday we noted that the corrupt edifice that has sustained the
“recovery” is crumbling. A big part of this edifice is the Fed and its
role as regulator of monetary policy and the banking system.
The Fed publicly claims it wants to help the economy and Main Street.
However, as we are now discovering, the Fed is more than willing to
sacrifice the good of the people in order to prop up a few insolvent big
banks.
Bernanke and other Fed doves continue to proclaim that QE is
beneficial to the economy. However, we now know from the former head of
the BLS that the Fed’s claims of job growth are incredibly inaccurate
(real unemployment is over 10%) as well as its claims of low inflation
(real inflation is around 8%).
Higher costs and lower job growth. Neither of those is pro-recovery or pro-Main Street.
Moreover, we now find that Wall Street has been manipulating the
commodities market as well as the interest rate markets: both of which
have major impacts on average Americans.
If the Fed didn’t know about this, then how can anyone trust the Fed
to understand the financial system, let alone “save” it? And if the Fed did know
about this, then it’s proof positive that Bernanke is happy to turn a
blind eye to Wall Street’s pushing of commodity prices higher (hurting
Americans across the board).
I’ve long said that this entire recovery was a sham. Real employment
has yet to come back in any meaningful way. And the housing “recovery”
has been dominated by large financial institutions (ones with close ties
to the Fed) buying up tens of thousands of homes, pushing prices higher
to the point that once again Americans can’t afford them.
It’s just like 2007 all over again. Only this time around, we know
for a fact that the Fed hasn’t fixed things and has bankrupted itself
and the financial system pretending that it can.
This is not doom and gloom. This is a fact. The Fed has created an even bigger bubble than the 2007 one.
The time to prepare for this is not once the collapse begins, but
NOW, while stocks are still rallying. Stocks take their time moving up,
but when they crash it happens VERY quickly.
For more market insights and commentary, visit us at:
www.gainspainscapital.com
Best Regards
Graham Summers
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