NFTRH
Tune
Out the Noise and Get Safe
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com October
7, 2008
Congress
made official what was probably already in the bag from the
beginning in passing the pork filled bail out of those entities that
took on outrageous moral hazard at the expense of those who didn't.
But it is done and it was politically expedient, although not
to the tax paying public. Banks
and financial companies however, received the first installment on
what is a costly and ill-fated welfare package.
But
there is a bigger issue at play and that is panic.
This week we observed what could well have been official
panic at the highest levels of government and its finance
distribution arm, Wall Street.
In other words, it is very likely that they did not just run
a scam of the taxpayer to capitalize on or 'screw' the little guy.
They panicked because the system is falling apart and all
they know is the system. The system has created Washington’s ability to do business
with varied powerful interests and if the system crumbles, so too
does policy makers' ability to do ‘business’.
Why
do I think this tragic bill is born of genuine official panic?
Here are two charts that show just how bad things are
getting.

On a one minute chart of
the EFT proxies GLD for gold and UUP for the US Dollar, we note that
the rush toward liquidity was on again yesterday (10/3) and that
meant the continued scramble for Dollars (official money) and gold
(store of value trading as money) as the policy band aid failed to
inspire confidence. The
Dollar/gold correlation, while I don’t necessarily expect the two
to trade in tandem consistently, does illustrate that the Euro mania
was nothing more than just another hot game for hopped up players
like hedge funds and FOREX jocks.
The next macro chart is of real concern.

Above we see the 1 month
Libor chart as it correlates to the 3 month T-bill rate (IRX) since
the 2001 recession. What
is wrong with this picture? I
will tell you what is wrong with it; in previous cycles such as the
2001 recession, as the IRX has dropped to re-liquefy the system, the
LIBOR or London Interbank Offered Rate has dutifully risen, which
meant rates got more accommodative. Likewise, as the Fed underwent its most recent pretense
toward tightening, the LIBOR declined as it was ‘supposed’ to.
Even in the latest cycle LIBOR was in alignment as liquidity
was needed – until the chop and hard down of 2008 when it did not
respond favorably to the mechanics that would normally increase
liquidity. LIBOR went
the other way. The
Dollar and gold spend some time in alignment.
This is panic in a broken system.
Although I am a gold stock
trader and more recently, a gold stock investor (for better
and lately, worse), the purpose of this first segment of the
official commercial launch of Notes From the Rabbit Hole –
and let me insert a quick WELCOME and THANK YOU to subscribers –
is as the title states, to implore readers who have not yet done so
to get to safety first.
Investment and/or speculation can come after you have
buttoned down the basics. I
will define these basics as being in cash and the safest cash
alternatives - which you will see illustrated in the safety oriented
capital preservation/investment portfolio below - and for protection
against the global forces of inflation now being mainlined into the
system, gold. Although
I look forward to looking at other positive investment themes I
expect we will talk a lot about safety for the foreseeable future
because with the severe strain in global financial systems,
this is not going to be a quick one and done process.
Updated 10/7/08
Pre-market: Markets have become more deeply over sold across all time
frames amid pervasive fear and volatility.
A rally is likely soon.
But in my view, safety and risk management never go out of
style and can in fact provide a sound platform for investment and
speculation. ‘Safety
first!’
The above is an excerpt from
the most recent Notes
From the Rabbit Hole, a new weekly letter intended to provide a
balance between grounded, safety-oriented financial analysis and
positive investment themes.
Gary Tanashian
http://www.biiwii.com
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