I wonder who else is expecting a run on Strategic Materials?
This is my short summary of the Current Data Points...
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http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2015/0...an-now-sleep-in-a-taxi-or-van-for-39-a-night/
http://www.alt-market.com/articles/2674-economic-crisis-goes-mainstream-what-happens-next
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The following comes from a Wall Street On Parade article that was posted on Tuesday entitled “
Keep Your Eye on Junk Bonds: They’re Starting to Behave Like ‘08“…
According to data from Bloomberg,
corporations have issued a stunning $9.3 trillion in bonds since the beginning of 2009. The major beneficiary of this debt binge has been the stock market rather than investment in modernizing the plant, equipment or new hires to make the company more competitive for the future. Bond proceeds frequently ended up buying back shares or boosting dividends, thus elevating the stock market on the back of heavier debt levels on corporate balance sheets.
Now, with commodity prices resuming their plunge and currency wars spreading, concerns of financial contagion are back in the markets and spreads on corporate bonds versus safer, more liquid instruments like U.S. Treasury notes,
are widening in a fashion similar to the warning signs heading into the 2008 crash. The $2.2 trillion junk bond market (high-yield) as well as the investment grade market have seen spreads widen as outflows from Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and bond funds pick up steam.
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The following comes
from Wolf Richter, and my jaw just about dropped to the floor when I first saw this…
This chart of yields at the riskiest end of the junk bond market – bonds rated CCC and below – shows what happened. These bonds have been selling off over the past 12 months, with exception of the sucker rally earlier this year, and
their yields more than doubled from less than 7.9% in June a year ago to 16.2% by Thursday evening. And Thursday was a massacre:
On Thursday, yields jumped 2.6 percentage points, from 13.58% to 16.18%, as these junk bonds plunged.
Those kinds of single-day vertigo-inducing sell-offs are rare in normal times, and there haven’t been any since the Financial Crisis.
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DoubleLine Capital’s co-founder Jeffrey Gundlach
agrees with me…
“
To raise interest rates when junk bonds are nearly at a four-year low is a bad idea,” Gundlach said in a telephone interview.
Gundlach, widely followed for his prescient investment calls, said if the Fed begins raising interest rates in September, “it opens the lid on Pandora’s Box of a tightening cycle.”
Gundlach said
the selling pressure in copper and commodity prices driven by worries over China’s growth outlook “should be a huge concern. It is the second-biggest economy in the world.”
Meanwhile, as Gundlach mentioned, the price of copper continues to plunge.
On Tuesday, it set
a brand new six year low. It is now the lowest that it has been since the days of the last financial crisis.
And as you can see from this excerpt from a recent
Investment Research Dynamics article, the price of copper started crashing
before the stock market crash of 2008…
I wanted to keep this simple and just look at what is considered perhaps the best barometer of global economic activity:
You’ll note that the price of copper is headed lower and is back to the price level where it was in the middle of 2008, right before the great financial collapse. You’ll note that $3.6 trillion in Federal Reserve money printing – on top of trillions in Bank of Japan, ECB and People’s Bank of China money printing –
has not been able to keep the price of copper from crashing again.
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The following comes from
the Telegraph…
World shipping has fallen into a deep slump over the late summer, dashing hopes of a quick recovery from the global trade recession earlier this year and heightening fears that the six-year economic expansion
may be on its last legs.
Freight rates for container shipping from Asia to Europe
fell by over 20pc in the second week of August, even though trade volumes should be picking up at this time of the year. The Shanghai Containerized Freight Index (SCFI) for routes to north European ports
crashed by 23pc in five trading days.
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The following comes from
Zero Hedge…
- The REAL problem for the financial system is the bond bubble. In 2008 when the crisis hit it was $80 trillion. It has since grown to over $100 trillion.
- The derivatives market that uses this bond bubble as collateral is over $555 trillion in size.
- Many of the large multinational corporations, sovereign governments, and even municipalities have used derivatives to fake earnings and hide debt. NO ONE knows to what degree this has been the case, but given that 20% of corporate CFOs have admitted to faking earnings in the past, it’s likely a significant amount.
- Corporations today are more leveraged than they were in 2007. As Stanley Druckenmiller noted recently, in 2007 corporate bonds were $3.5 trillion… today they are $7 trillion: an amount equal to nearly 50% of US GDP.
- The Central Banks are now all leveraged at levels greater than or equal to where Lehman Brothers was when it imploded. The Fed is leveraged at 78 to 1. The ECB is leveraged at over 26 to 1. Lehman Brothers was leveraged at 30 to 1.
- The Central Banks have no idea how to exit their strategies. Fed minutes released from 2009 show Janet Yellen was worried about how to exit when the Fed’s balance sheet was $1.3 trillion (back in 2009). Today it’s over $4.5 trillion.
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https://mises.org/library/keeping-bubble-boom-going
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...es-recede-euro-rises/articleshow/48561372.cms
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (
INDEXDJX:.DJI) tumbled 202.37 points, or 1.17 percent, to 17,146.36. The S&P 500 index (
INDEXSP:.INX) lost 22.07 points, or 1.06 percent, to 2,057.30. And the Nasdaq composite (
INDEXNASDAQ:.IXIC) dropped 72.56 points, or 1.44 percent, to 4,945.77.
For the year, the Dow has lost 679 points, or 3.8 percent and the S&P 500 has lost 4 points, or 0.17 percent. However, the Nasdaq has gained 204 points, or 4 percent.
Dow Jones Industrial Average (Closing) - 1 Year | FindTheData
U.S. oil prices extended losses Thursday, tumbling to six-year lows following an unexpected rise in crude stockpiles. West Texas Intermediate crude, the benchmark for U.S. oil prices, fell 0.07 percent to $40.77 per barrel for September delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On the London ICE Futures Exchange, Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil prices, fell 1 percent to $46.66.
WTI Crude Oil Spot Price | FindTheData
SOURCE: http://www.ibtimes.com/dow-jones-industrial-average-plunges-200-points-global-growth-fears-2061881
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As we can see from this short review of the data it is not looking that good in my opinion.
I have expected this for years now and I am expecting allot from from the Critical Materials.
This is a purging that is good for the worlds health in my opinion.
In my opinion the Price of SL Vein is going for a boom... Why do I think that ?
What do you think?
I think Veiners are in for a massive run from Flakers as well and the Disruption of Graphene will get going in not too long in my opinion.
MRL Corporation has allot of Forces pushing it Forwards.
For real Growth to come a niche needs the Tech Drivers particularly to be on fire to get the boom going...
In my opinion MRL Corporation needs to go slow and steady and continue with conservative targets while in other areas be very aggressive - Particularly attracting Capital.
Just like Value investors letting the market come to them - I think MRL Corporation needs to be the model company for the Fundamentals and Best Practices and let the World realize just how important Strategic Materials are and how they act as a safe haven and act like a currency that is reliable and in demand...
I don't know when but my prediction of the run on Strategic Materials is in part based on their Critical Importance - not just their Safe Haven Status.
Also I think it will not take much to set the price of SL Vein running...
Will MRL Corporation CR now aggressively ???
- Like MR Grigor said in his video at another Cap level the big players step in.
Also I am really interested in Dormant Mines and MRL Corporations proven track record so far in Sri Lanka.
MR Grigor is a great Partner Builder and there are allot of interest from China to England.
Who knows how long it will take or when but we can see the logic of this.
Kind Regards
DYOR !!!
To Err Is Human!!!!
Could be 100% Wrong!!!
Mistakes are Easy!!!