T-Note Rally Predicts Even Harder Times Ahead

Our end-of-world date came a few days later than preacher Harold Camping’s, but it looks like we were both wrong.  Unlike Camping, we were not so much concerned with the wrath of God — which, one fervently hopes, has been amply vented by the spectacular irruption of natural disasters visited upon the planet and humankind lately. Rather, our chief worry concerned the potential top that we saw forming in the 10-Year T-Note.  Not exactly the Rapture, let alone Judgment Day, but perhaps troublesome enough to set the world’s financial system on course for its own day of reckoning. For if prices for Treasury paper are indeed topping, and yields therefore bottoming, then scores of millions of debtors are about to be squeezed to the brink of insolvency.

Perhaps we needn’t have worried. Yesterday, the June 10-Year T-Note futures finally hit the 123^21 rally target we’d proffered weeks ago by way of a Rick’s Picks trading “tout.” Then, in apparent defiance of natural law and the black artfulness of our proprietary Hidden Pivot analysis, they continued higher.  Not much higher, to be sure, but higher enuf to suggest that the preference of buyers for “safety” over risk is unlikely to abate over the near term.

Bailing Out of Short

Well in advance of this by-now fabulous surge in Ten-Year paper, we’d told subscribers to get short at the projected top, but with a very tight stop-loss of five ticks.  We reiterated this cautionary note in the chat room yesterday after a phone conversation we had with our friend Doug B, an occasional contributor to this site. Doug mentioned that the good folks who brought us QE1 and QE2 were contemplating something a little different for QE3 – i.e., a 1950s- style targeting of rates on the 10-Year Note. Presumably, this would be instead of trying to mop up growing quantities of debt elsewhere along the yield curve, or of trying to push administered rates lower than…zero.

It’s hard to predict what a further surge in the 10-Year Note will mean for the fragile ecology of the financial world, but it would seem to augur further delay in the collapse of  The System. A drift in yields down to 2.5% or so also suggests that investors think QE3 will be as big a bust as QE2 where resuscitating the economy is concerned. Whatever the case, we bailed out of our short-lived short in T-Notes five painless ticks above the entry price. Putting aside the Fed’s rumored intention of stabilizing the 10-Year above all, we remain bearish on the dollar. Yes, it has been sold almost to death and deserves a dead-cat bounce every now and then. But merely because “everyone” hates the dollar is not sufficient reason to believe it cannot continue lower.  Meanwhile, if the best argument dollar bulls can make depends on weakness in the euro, or in a flight to supposed “safety,” then we’ll continue to hoot the bulls from the sidelines.  If you don’t subscribe but would like to know what our new, surreal target is for the 10-Year Note, click here for a free trial subscription.

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  • Eric May 30, 2011, 4:20 am

    Say’s law

    https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Say%27s_law
    ——————————————————–
    lack of investment opportunities = cash hoarding

  • Rich May 28, 2011, 2:25 am

    UST Point & Figure targeting an unbelievable 168, with a yield of 2.5%.

    Flight out of illiquid insolvent long and short maturities to meet in the middle?

    Good news for mortgages, if banks/insurers will lend and people can qualify.

    Overall, indicative of Greater Depression, as Corporate Government confiscates what’s left of the economy with hikes “to tax the rich” toward 97% tax rates like FDR.

    Only, a lot more people and small businesses gross $200,000 today, while the rich have their offshore tax havens, tax credits and tax-free Foundations.

    Plus the flooded frozen radiated tornadoed growing season.

    Food riots may be coming to America with DBA targeting a double.

    Then pandemic from compromised immune systems?

    Still, the SPX, Gold, Oil and Silver PnFs target $1520, $1710, $113 and $49, if that’s any consolation…

  • C.C. May 28, 2011, 2:22 am

    Another slightly off-topic here – I hope Rick doesn’t mind, but there’s an excellent piece at goldseek today from Gordon T. Long. You guys may have already seen it. He does excellent work.

  • Signs of the End May 27, 2011, 6:18 pm

    Sadly Rick, the time of the wrath of God has not even begun yet but all signs are pointing to the fact that it will in the near future. What we have seen so far are warnings, shots across the bow, and nothing more. Rather than shout from the rooftops about elite policies that impoverish and kill billions through extreme poverty, hunger, starvation, wars, slavery and other evils, people worry about their portfolios and investments as if they will take it with them when they go. Because there is hardly anyone championing the cause of the poor, the widows and the fatherless, God Himself will take up their cause and He will destroy all that people hold dear in this world, in a word the Economy. From God’s perspective IT IS NOT THE ECONOMY STUPID!
    So when His wrath comes and all that foolish people hold dear is violently taken away from them, including many lives, they will blame God rather than looking in the mirror. Yet it is the average Joe who is responsible for all the evil in this world for he keeps silent about it, and he cheers on the GI Joes as they rape, pillage and kill across the globe! It is not Bernanke that will destroy the economy, it is God who will annihilate it, Bernanke and his ilk are mere puppets in God’s hands. The time now is to repent not to look for hidden pivots – we have been warned!

    • John Jay May 27, 2011, 10:39 pm

      I don’t know if it is the work of the Almighty or not, but recently our luck is getting worse.
      Katrina, BP Gulf oil spill (big sea life kill off is ongoing I’ve read), tornados, rain and melting snow pack floods, (still snowing at higher elevations out west), Texas drought. My, things are bad all over in the USA.

    • Carol May 28, 2011, 6:34 pm

      John Jay,

      It is not just in the US look around the world, Australia just had the largest flood in its history, US 500 year flood, 3 8.8-9.1 (Chile, New Zealand, Japan) in one year, tornados through out US, Volcanoes in Iceland stopping air traffic, asteroids hitting many areas and blowing up gas lines. The natural disasters go on and on and seem to be building

    • A. Rand Fan May 29, 2011, 1:20 am

      Carol, Whenever I hear of another natural disaster it is usually accompanied with “The worst since …”. So if and when the news includes “absolute worst” I’ll just chalk it up to Nature’s weather cycles.

  • John Jay May 27, 2011, 6:03 pm

    C.C.,
    We are a Police State now, no doubt about it.
    Amish dairy farmers, people selling rabbits, little old ladies, States that fight back, (AZ, TX) are targets.
    The policy is to create a constant state of fear that one might bring down government wrath on ones self.
    Mission accomplished.
    I would bet any attempt at a Constitutional Convention to revoke both the Commerce and Supremecy Clause
    would be declared terrorism at a time of war and meet government thugs to stop it in it’s tracks.
    Too late now to do anything but hunker down, lay low, and prepare as best you can.

    • Cam Fitzgerald May 28, 2011, 10:11 am

      Well, if it is not a police state yet it sure looks headed that way. So yes I would tend to agree. All the developments surrounding Homeland security, border and perimeter control, airport searches (TFSA), screenings at almost all transportation hubs etcetera…..all looks like a means to control the movements of people to me.

      Are there real terrorists out there? Sure, but using a hammer to kill a few gnats looks pretty crazy until you realize all the efforts are really about effecting control over domestic populations and not lunatics in Yemen or Pakistan.

      Hell, I am not even a conspiracy person but it is obvious to me. We are all losing rights every single day. We are all losing the freedom of true mobility. The clampdown and monitoring is coming from every sector imaginable all at once. You worry even though you have nothing to hide. It represents a loss of freedom and intrusions into private life. Just look at all the novel means used to monitor us lately…

      The tracking software your fancy phone uses, the device installed in the new vehicle you just bought, the addressing of your computer and the software snooping that takes place each day by both corporate and public interests. It just never ends anymore. But now it is getting more personal. Physical really. Look at airport security as one example. How long before you need to show ID to cross physical State and Provincial lines too?

      Or need ID before you get the right to change cities. They did it in the old Soviet Union (they being the authorities of course).

      I have long contended that the one last means that people have to retain some semblance of personal freedom would also be taken away eventually too.

      I am talking about cash of course and it does indeed represent a means for many to live under the radar and away from prying eyes, ears and noses. Cash makes you immune to intrusion in many respects.

      If you have it, you also have a freedom that those who live by credit alone cannot enjoy. Without cash though, absolutely everything will be tracked through electronic records.

      And it will be. Guaranteed.

  • C.C. May 27, 2011, 5:47 pm

    You want to know ‘where it’s all going’?

    When a 91 year old woman is ‘visited’ by no less than (12) fully armed (and ready to do a ‘Seal Team 6’ on her house and/or person), government Goons for selling asphyxiation kits (assisted suicide) to willing buyers, then you have a pretty good idea. Sorry if it sounds off-topic, or ‘out of left field’, but when you zoom in just a little, you begin to see how stories like this are keenly related to government corruption and graft at all levels.

    • VegasBob May 27, 2011, 5:59 pm

      Actually, I think the example you gave is one of the police state run amok.

      In many respects we have become like Nazi Germany. The missing link is that we haven’t yet started executing vast numbers of people like the Nazis did.

    • Steve May 27, 2011, 6:34 pm

      Tell the Mandan Nation, the Modoc, the Blackfeet, and Cheyenne that story. Opps, the Mandan were extripated from history. The Blackfeet traders of the Plains, opps; destroyed and decimated, read; Lewis and Clark. The Modoc, shoved out onto Modoc Point to freeze to death. Captain Jack – intentional smallpox. Whatcha got “Oil”, or “Land”? Who is next?

      Where does all current legislation, including Obama Care, come from ? Commerce Clause. Where else does legislation come from ? The Commander in Chief via executive Order, or via a.k.a. The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 – present (still executive branch Commander in Chief). The 14th amendment made all ‘persons’ equal corporately, and if one read the Supreme Court case from today – political action cannot be limited because the artificial and natural person are both creations of the state via the 14th amendment. (called the Erie Railroad Doctrine) Constitution, fat chance; one needs to make a 14th amendment civil rights claim which has legislative privileges something like constitutionally secured Endowments. The general voter population supports dirty government, with dirty elected officials, all playing in the dirt of inauthenticity and disingenuiness.

      The people are getting exactly what they asked for when they voted. Jack booted thugs – you voted for it. Fraud in accounting – you voted for it. Greed in the legislative body – you voted for it. Greed in the corporate world – you voted for it. Injustice in the courts – you voted for it. Government graft – its your government job in the dirt of mobocracy.

      Now, this is painful for me. Persons vote at the ballot box for mobocracy, and they also vote when they punch the tar baby of voluntary fiat use, fee simple deed, paying tribute, playing the commerce ponzy. When one works for a corrupted government – they are the problem, not any solution of any kind. Understand the following:
      Supreme Court for the untied States of America –

      Beneficiary (that is you using fiat etc.) cannot raise
      constitutional question against benefactor (that is
      government job, fiat, stock market, fee simple,
      unemployment, bailout, federal banking,) while
      in receipt of benefit. Ashwander v. Tenn Vly Auth
      Doctrine.

      This is what persons voted for. These are the benefits that persons refuse to remove themselves from thereby voting with action, instead of ballot. These are the realities of the tar baby of playing in the dirt with corrupt people playing corrupt games using fiat fraud and working for the Man. The Big Boyz laugh at the government worker who complains about government corruption. The Big Boyz laugh at the persons working fiat to get more numbers all the while complaining about corruption. Persons play in the dirt and cry about being dirty. There is an answer – its just that it would require real change instead of going home and counting the tally of fiat gained today.

  • Erin May 27, 2011, 5:28 pm

    This is something that many people do not understand about government pensions. I am not a fan of big government or government in itself because of the inefficiency of everything they do and it is sickening how much waste and outright abuse of taxpayer funds goes on but I have worked for the government since 1986. In or around 1984 (don’t know the exact date), the pension system changed from sers to fers for government workers. Our own contributions make up the bulk of our retirement now. And trust me…a very small percentage of people working for the government are putting away anywhere near enough to retire. The investment system for government funds is not set up to protect anyone from any sort of currency debasement (inflation). It is a very limited basket to put your own money and without moving in and out and knowing what you are doing, it is simply a system to keep cash in the government coffers. They just borrowed billions from our g-fund to pay bills again. People simply cannot save enough because of the destructive inflation that just keeps pounding the poor and middle class. People that were in the system known as sers before it changed in 1984 have the retirement that essentially keeps their pay steady in comparison to what they were making when they were working. Our system of fers is nothing compared to that…We receive a 1/3 of our salary after our 30 years is put in. Hardly anything to write home about and in no way will keep anyone solvent without other streams of incomes or investments. Factor in the Fed inflation on top of all that and people have no chance to continue there standard of living.

    Like you, I am financially smart and understand the currency debasement (inflation game) that has been going on for my whole lifetime and just continues to get worse. There is only one entity to blame for the destruction of this country…The Fed!

    There is nothing to argue here…Someone just needs to use common sense in this country. It is not that complicated. Politicians cannot make bad decisions and create a welfare state and spend and dish out grants and all the other subsidies without the Fed creating money out of thin air. No politician can give anything to anybody without the Fed. This is something that a 5th grader would understand. But all the genius economist all across the country can’t seem to get a handle on it. It truly is embarrassing! Ponzi scheme is the only true way to describe what they are doing. A never ending supply of new money coming in is needed to continue the scam.

    We will continue the same path until we have a change where it really matters. Ron Paul could possibly get the ball rolling but unless the Fed lets the markets fall and clear the debt it is truly difficult for the people in this nation to truly understand what is going on. Extend and pretend…On we go!!!

    • Steve May 27, 2011, 6:02 pm

      I whole heartedly disagree with the Fed being the problem. Someone voted. Someone got into office on that vote. And, Someone legislated.

      BUT YOU DID IT PEOPLE ! Don’t get mad at the Fed for doing what the mobocracy said to do when they voted.

    • Erin May 27, 2011, 7:07 pm

      Steve, I can’t remember the last time I voted for the Fed to print money. Tell me again where I voted and gave the officials the power to counterfeit our money?

      This is exactly the problem I am talking about…No elected official can use any money they do not have without the Fed. Why does the country not understand this?

    • A. Ran Fand May 27, 2011, 9:19 pm

      Steve, I beg to differ. Please watch this video and scroll the about 2:05 time “The Money Masters – How International Bankers Gained Control of America” http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-515319560256183936#
      “The bill was snuck through on December 22, 1913 after most Senators left town. The ones that weren’t there were declared to have voted for it.’
      Watching it completely is recommended.

    • Larry D May 27, 2011, 9:27 pm

      Steve is correct. You can argue the chicken and egg thing, but the Fed is under pressure to do the bidding of the Treasury and the politicos. It’s been that way since the neokeyns passed Humphrey-Hawkins.

    • Erin May 27, 2011, 9:41 pm

      Larry, You and steve can agree on the chicken and the egg thing but that does not fly…Money comes from the fed. Not the politicians. There is no debate about where the money comes from. They print it and the politicians distribute the money and if there is no money then there will be no distribution. Period!

    • Steve May 30, 2011, 8:52 pm

      Erin, everyone can use silver Specie Money. It is there, YOU JUST REFUSE to do what is moral.

  • John Jay May 27, 2011, 3:03 pm

    QE-2 at 600 billion was just a fraction of the Treasury paper the Fed has bought and is holding. The way they tell Congress to drop dead when asked about the numbers, who knows what the truth is.
    But for more and more Americans, it doesn’t matter anyway, the latest numbers I’ve seen said that 59% of the US population are getting some sort of government money. And about 50% of our population said that they could not handle an unexpected $2,000 expense, they cut it that close every month. I think we have gone past the point of no return. Too many people work for the government, get a government pension, Social Security, Medicare, government contracts, etc. People like us have become strange, Jeremiah Johnson types, living off in our own world, far removed from the uber wealthy and the broke MSM addicted masses. I’m doing fine, but looking back, I wish I had taken that job with the IRS right out of college so I could be in that government club. I sure did it the hard way!

    • Cam Fitzgerald May 28, 2011, 3:05 am

      Try not to have too many regrets or envy the masses too much. Just think it through for a moment John Jay.

      The majority already depend on the government in one way or another. It is much more than a nanny state now. The Government does not therefore depend on those it pays for it’s allegiance to a monthly check.

      This means that the final authority and power has shifted from the voters to those who actually have been voted into power and that spells the end of the ride for most.

      The day will come when elections might end too. Who will complain when they already depend completely upon those in power to keep the money flowing anyway?

      Not many.

      Can you appreciate that this is not in fact the goal of the development of a new form of fascism in America. By inches daily, by miles tomorrow. Our governments are the new corporation now. All for one and one for all.

      A land where almost 50 million already depend upon food stamps for essential sustenance, where millions more are granted perpetual unemployment benefits and millions upon millions more are dependent upon welfare or old age pensions and other forms of financial security?

      Who is secure then as all forms of measure melt away? Will we develop a two tiered society as a result? The haves and the others perhaps? Will anyone really fully participate anymore in the new dumbed down world of dependency, video games and free money?

      And who really works then anyway? And who will really gather the rewards in our future society where the majority stay home and just collect social benefits?

      I imagine you know already.

  • fallingman May 27, 2011, 12:24 pm

    Make it 3.

    It’s all so nauseating.

  • Erin May 27, 2011, 5:53 am

    John, Are you saying that the Fed is manipulating the markets to delay the day of reckoning? Well thank god there is at least two of us! I was beginning to wonder if I was the only one onto this ponzi scheme from the beginning.

    I get the feeling that Europe is very close to imploding again and disrupting the markets so they must be working extremely hard behind the scenes on damage control. Nothing new here thou…The bright side is that we are creeping ever so close to the proverbial coffin that the fed will be put in one day.

    That will be a sweet day and then, and only then will this great country begin to heal itself and be returned to the people where it belongs.

  • John Jay May 27, 2011, 1:11 am

    With the Fed, Wall Street, and all the Central Bankers around the globe on the same page as far as the Currency/Bond Ponzi scheme, all you can count on is, whatever directions Treasury bonds/Currencies are going is exactly where TPTB want them to go.
    Fundamentals and common sense have nothing to do with markets propelled by 24/7 sophisticated intervention. All the US Treasury durations are a looooong way from 100!