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Sometimes the simplest explanations are the ones that clearly and correctly assess the situation and cut through the fog a worrisome mind creates. Thank you Sir for grounding the focus here by reiterating what is laid out before us. Long COWI. Slow and steady wins the race.
Agreed. Picked up some more today on the dip. What a great opportunity here!
Here we go!!!!!!! Solid footing, laying the foundation, fully reporting now, elimination of massive debt..here we come cannabis industry!!!!! Finally this baby turns for real!!!!
You can always hit the ask brother!
1st ID 2HBCT 5/4 CAV - Scouts Out!
What dumping, lol...these are retail investors selling mostly, look at the random share amounts. There are no "chunks" being put out for the market to consume. Call it profit taking, panic selling, impatience, whatever, but this is not even remotely dumping, lol.
This is going higher, people took profits and scared some greedy people from losing their entire investment. When it swings quickly up, it going to swing quickly to the downside and bounce when it hits the floor the longs have laid.
Has been holding nicely in a good uptrend range recently!
Very encouraging that this is a legitimate and significant move up. Any positive news blows the top off of this!
AGTK=$$$$$$$$$$
Wtf is this, lol, seriously, and I bought at .0008, I'm just glad it wasn't a lot. I have tried not to be negative and keep my mouth shut hoping, but this is the most amateurish s$$t I have ever seen, lol. The value of the PR in regards to the effect on share price, has been completely devauled by these morons.
Not a good sign. Conduct your own DD. GLTA.
www.cnbc.com/2016/02/20/fannie-mae-at-risk-of-needing-a-bailout.html
Great read that I believe reflects the reality of the markets.
Reposted from: www.alt-market.com/articles/2810-markets-ignore-fundamentals-and-chase-headlines-because-they-are-dying
Author: Brandon Smith - Feb 17th, 2016.
________________________________________
Normalcy bias is a rather horrifying thing. It is so frightening because it is so final; much like death, there is simply no coming back. Rather than a physical death, normalcy bias represents the death of reason and simple observation. It is the death of the mind and cognitive thought instead of the death of the body.
Ever since the derivatives collapse of 2008 the public has been regaled with wondrous stories of recovery in the mainstream to the point that such fantasies have become the "new normal". These are grand tales of the daring heroics of central bankers who “saved us all” from impending collapse through gutsy monetary policy and no-holds-barred stimulus measures.
Alternative economists have not been so easy to dazzle. Most of us found that the recovery narrative lacked a certain something; namely hard data that took the wider picture into account. It seemed as though the mainstream media (MSM) as well as the establishment was attempting to cherry-pick certain numbers out of context while demanding we ignore all other factors as “unimportant.”
We just haven’t been buying into the magic show of the so called “professional economists” and the academics, and now that the real and very unstable fiscal reality of the world is bubbling to the surface, the general public will begin to see why we have been right all these years and the MSM has been utterly wrong.
Mainstream economists have done absolutely nothing in the way of investigative journalism and have instead joined a chorus cheerleading for the false narrative, singing a siren’s song of misinterpreted statistics and outright lies drawing the masses ever nearer to the deadly shoals of financial crisis.
Why do they do this? Are they part of some vast conspiracy to mislead the public?
Not necessarily. While central banks and governments have indeed been proven time and again to collude in efforts to cover up financial dangers, most economists in the media are simply greedy and ignorant. You have to remember, they have a considerable stake in this game.
Many mainstream economists tend to have sizable investment portfolios and they base their careers partly on the successes they garner in the annual profits they accumulate playing the equities roulette. They also have invested so much of their public image into their pro-market and recovery arguments that there is no going back. That is to say, they have a personal interest in using their positions in the media to engineer positive market psychology (if they are able) so that their portfolios remain profitable. Not to mention, their professional image is at stake if they ever acknowledge that they were wrong for so long about the underlying health of the real economy.
This atmosphere of deluded self interest also generates a cult-like collectivist attitude. There is a lot of mutual back scratching and mutual ego stroking in the MSM; a kind of inbred conduit of regurgitated arguments and unoriginal talking points, and people in the club rarely step out of line because they not only hurt their own investment future and career, they also hurt everyone in their professional circles. Meaning, no more cocktail party invitations to the Forbes rumpus room...
This is not to say that I am excusing their self interested lies and disinformation. I think that many of these people should be tarred and feathered in a public square for attempting to dissuade the public from preparing in a practical way for severe economic instability. I do not think they see themselves as being responsible to the people who actually take their nonsense seriously and their attitude needs adjustment. I am only explaining how it is possible for an entire profession of supposed “experts” to be so wrong so often. Mainstream financial analysts WANT to believe their own lies as much as many in the public want to believe them.
Like I said, normalcy bias is a rather horrifying thing.
One of the root pieces of disinformation in the mainstream that feeds all other lies is the disinformation surrounding falling global demand. MSM pundits cannot and will never fully admit to the cold hard reality of collapsing demand within the global economy. If they are forced to admit to falling demand, then the facade of a steady or recovering U.S. economy crumbles.
I covered the facts behind falling global demand for raw goods and consumer goods last year in part one of my six-part article series, 'One Last Look At The Real Economy Before It Implodes.' The hard evidence and numbers I presented have only become more important in recent months.
For example, U.S. inventories are building and freight shipments are declining in the U.S. as retailers cite falling demand for goods as the primary culprit. Official retail sales numbers for the holiday season of 2015 have come in flat. When one takes into account real inflation in prices, consumer sales are actually far in the negative. According to the more accurate methods the U.S. government used to use in their calculations of CPI in the 1980’s, we are looking at annual price inflation rate of around 7%. Price inflation does not necessarily equal improved sales.
Energy usage has been crushed since 2008. Despite a growing population and supposedly a growing economic system, oil consumption in 2014 according to the World Economic Forum dropped to levels not seen since 1997.
This is the exact opposite of what should be happening and it is the opposite of mainstream projections for oil consumption made back in 2003. This is why inventories and storage for oil across the globe are reaching capacity in a manner never seen before. American demand for oil is not growing exponentially as expected because Americans cannot afford to support such growth anymore. Falling energy demand at these extreme levels is an undeniable indicator of a failing economic system.
Of course, mainstream economists in their desperation to keep market psychology rolling forward and the equities casino producing profits seek to spin this problem as an “oversupply” issue rather than a demand issue. And this is where the disparity in their arguments begins to bleed through.
Here is the problem presented in the mainstream; what came first, the chicken or the egg? Did falling demand lead to oversupply and thus a fall in prices? Or, is demand remaining steady and is overproduction the cause of falling prices? Yes, let's confuse the issue instead of looking at the obvious.
As already linked above, it was falling demand which came first in 2008, and demand which continues to fall in relation to past trends. Have producers failed to reduce oil production to match falling demand? Yes. But this does not change the fact that oil demand today is well below levels needed to sustain the kind of economic growth markets have come to expect. Mainstream economists attempt to distract by hyper-focusing on supply, or twisting the discussion into an either/or scenario. Either it is a supply problem, or it is a demand problem, and they assert it is only a supply problem. This is not reality.
In fact, both can and often do exist at the same time, though one problem usually feeds the other. Falling demand does tend to result in oversupply in any particular sector of the economy. The bottom line, however, is that in our current crisis demand is the driving force and supply is a secondary issue. Supply is NOT the driving force behind the volatility in oil markets. Period.
This same chicken and egg distraction rears its ugly head in discussions on shipping markets as well.
The mainstream claim that the historic implosion of the Baltic Dry Index is nothing more than a problem of “too many ships” operating in the cargo market has been throttled, dissected and debunked so many times that you would think that it is surely dead. But the lie just will not die.
Mainstream propaganda houses like The Economist and Forbes continue to produce articles on a regular basis which deny the issue of falling demand for raw goods and claim that oversupply of vessels is the root cause of the BDI losing around 98 percent of its value since its highs in 2008.
I haven’t seen any of these articles offer actual stats or evidence to back their claims that oversupply of ships is the culprit and that demand is not a legitimate issue. But beyond that, why does the mainstream seem so hell bent on dismissing the BDI as a reliable economic indicator? Well, because shipping rates fall when demand falls, thus, when the BDI falls, it signals a lack of global demand. This is a fact they refuse to accept. When the BDI falls by 98 percent since the 2008 highs preceding the derivatives crisis, this signals a disaster in the making.
So, let’s stamp out the “too many ships came first” disinformation once and for all, shall we?
Shipping companies like Maersk Lines have already publicly admitted that falling global demand is the core problem behind falling rates and that supply is a secondary driver. They view the current financial crisis to be “worse than 2008”.
The fact that the largest shipping company in the world is warning of falling demand does not seem to be having any effect on the mainstream talking heads, though.
So, what do major shipping companies do when demand is falling and too many ships are operating on the market? Do they field those ships anyway and drive rates down even further? No, that makes no sense.
What companies do is either leave ships idle in port or scrap them. According to BIMCO (Baltic And International Maritime Council), 2015 was the busiest year since 2012 for the scrapping of older ships to make way for new arrivals. This process of scrapping ships or storing them idle destroys the argument that too many ships are driving falling rates in the BDI. In fact, as chief shipping analyst Peter Sand of BIMCO stated last year:
“The increase in Capesize scrapping comes at a much needed time for the market. Looking at the development so far this year the fleet growth has actually been negative, with a reduction of 0.8 %.”
I hope the garbage peddlers at Forbes and The Economist caught that — NEGATIVE growth of ship supply, not massive over-growth of ship supply. The scrapping increase was also across the board for other models of ships, not just the Capsize, and the increase of cargo capacity by new ships has been negligible. Yet, shipping rates continue to plummet to historical lows. Only falling demand, as Maersk Lines admits, explains the crash of the BDI in light of this information.
China in particular has been offering considerable incentives to those companies that do scrap older ships, to the point that some are even scrapping semi-new ships in order to cash in.
Now, this is not to say there is not an “oversupply” of ships. There are indeed many ships within cargo fleets that are not in operation. But again, this is because demand has declined so completely that even with increased scrapping and idling, shipping companies cannot keep up. Falling demand OCCURRED FIRST, and oversupply is nothing more than a symptom of this root problem.
So, mainstream hacks, can we please put the “too many ships” nonsense to rest and get on with a real discussion on obvious issues of demand? Stop focusing on the symptoms and examine the cause for once.
These are just a few of the hundreds of fundamental problems plaguing the global economy today, and they are all problems that the mainstream continues to ignore or dismiss out of hand. Which brings us to the now accelerating volatility in stock markets.
Stock markets are crashing, there is no other way to paint it. They are crashing incrementally, but crashing nonetheless. When you have violent swings in equities and commodities between 5 percent and 10 percent a day, then something is very wrong with your economy and has been wrong for some time. If global consumption and demand were really steady or growing, then you would not see the kind of systemic backlash in the financial system that we are now seeing. If companies listed on the Dow were making legitimate profits due to a healthy consumer base and enjoying solid expansion, stocks would not be increasingly volatile. If investors and mainstream analysts actually looked at the real numbers in demand (among other things), then the strange behavior in markets would be easy for them to understand. They will not look at such numbers until it is too late.
Instead, markets have chosen to chase headlines, and here is where the ugly circle of normalcy bias and cognitive dissonance completes itself. There are no positive indicators within the fundamentals today to energize market faith or market investment. So, investors and algorithmic trading computers track news headlines instead. The MSM hacks now have the power (along with central banks and governments) to create massive stock rallies with one or two carefully placed news tags, such as “Russia To Discuss Oil Production Cuts With OPEC.”
Market speculators and trading computers jump on these headlines without verifying if they are true. In most cases, they end up being false or just hearsay from an “unnamed source.” And so, the markets then crash further down into the abyss, waiting for the next headline to bolster activity even for a day.
The sad truth is, if any of these headlines turned out to be legitimate, their effect would still be meaningless in the long run as the overwhelming weight of the fundamentals continues to topple poorly placed optimism. Now that the investment world no longer has the certainty of central bank intervention as a useful tool, they don’t know if bad news is good news or if good news is bad news. The fact that the system is moving into a death spiral without the psychological crutch of central bank stimulus measures should tell you all you need to know about the supposed recovery since 2008.
No society wants to admit economic failure or economic sabotage, and this is why the con-game is able to continue in the face of so much concrete truth. Ultimately, the market trends and economic trends will flow into the negative. In the meantime, expect massive market rallies, rallies which will then disintegrate in a matter of days. And, whatever happens, never take what mainstream economists say very seriously. They have failed the public for long enough
Actually with what's happening in the markets overall, and I know the pinks don't tend to follow the trend, but being flat right now is encouraging, lol.
I wouldn't be surprised at all. But at that point I would think the government steps in and reorganizes the GSE's, passes off the losses to taxpayers, and renames them something else, lol.
Freddie Mac Lost $475 Million
The good thing about this is that it reflect bad bets on derivatives, most likely tied to the prices of real estate I would guess, it has very little to do with souring mortgages, does not bode well for Fannie and Freddie either way.
Real estate is decently prepared for any downturn in the equity markets this time around, IMO. But I'm just a guy with a laptop and a TV so...lol. GLTA.
www.cnbc.com/2016/01/20/these-are-classic-signs-of-a-bear-market.html
Classic signs of a bear market.
www.fibonacciqueen.com/public/Carolyn-Boroden-Featured-on-Jim-Cramers-Mad-Money-July-19-2015.cfm
Technicals showing huge downside risk. This selloff is not only based on self interested shorters and "emotional" lemmings. The longs seemed to be the lemmings here walking off the cliff, lol.
Don't get caught holding the bag. 6 to 18 months this retraces to .20 cents
Nobody's running away man. I sincerely hope myself and a lot of other people are wrong.
www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/davos/12108569/World-faces-wave-of-epic-debt-defaults-fears-central-bank-veteran.html
"Emerging markets were part of the solution after the Lehman crisis. Now they are part of the problem too," Mr White said.
Best of luck, honestly. I need to be wrong. It just feels like some twisted moral obligation to put this news out there. GLTA. Now I disappear, lol.
www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/davos/12108569/World-faces-wave-of-epic-debt-defaults-fears-central-bank-veteran.html
"Emerging markets were part of the solution after the Lehman crisis. Now they are part of the problem too," Mr White said.
philosophyofmetrics.com
This is the real problem facing the markets. Open your eyes. GLTA.
Disclosure: I am long SDOW.
www.cnbc.com/2015/09/03/stop-blaming-china-the-problem-is-bigger-than-that-stock-market-commentary.html
video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000485473
philosophyofmetrics.com
It has nothing to do with Oil and China. For those of you with eyes to see. It begins. It was always the elephant in the room. It amazes me the sheep mentality that is adopted either when market sentiment is bullish or bearish. Yes the uninformed investor sells in panic, but even the retail investor can discover the information institutional players base their decisions on. Go ahead and listen to old man Jack Bogle, who because he has been we'll respected over the years, when he's forced to pump equities out of fear the sky is falling in the hopes he could affect capital flight.
Open your eyes. GLTA.
www.cnbc.com/2015/09/03/stop-blaming-china-the-problem-is-bigger-than-that-stock-market-commentary.html
video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000485473
It has very little to with Oil and China. For those of you with eyes to see. Here comes the ride. GLTA.
Also true, lol!
They always say, "Stay the course," lol.
It never goes back to it's post recession highs IMO, I would bet it retraces it's recession lows within 6 to 18 mos, but I'm short the market on general. GLTA.
stockrunup.blogspot.com/2013/06/fmcc-my-pick-and-prediction-freddie-mac.html?m=1
I called the run on this zombie of a stock. I remember when everyone sweared this monster GSE was dead in the water. And when the gov started to get the bad loans off it's balance sheet and the money came in, people still scoffed. A lot of smart investors made a lot of money on this one. I believe this one never reaches it's post recession highs again and will probably retrace it recession lows within 6 to 18 mos. I'm short the market in general though for the near term. At least untill after the election and the glut in oil gets used up. GLTA.
stockrunup.blogspot.com/2013/06/fmcc-my-pick-and-prediction-freddie-mac.html?m=1
I called the run on this zombie of a stock when everyone was saying this monster GSE was dead in the water. It came back for a little while, but I believe between 6 and 18 mos is really the time these two retrace their housing collapse lows.
www.wallstreetcorner.com/new_lop.html
www.otcmarkets.com/stock/USMJ/news?id=122466 I'm sure most of you have seen this, but for those who haven't. It's not dead by any means imo. Being able to verify things would definitely help the pps here though.
People will always by marijuana, just like they will buy alcohol. Probably more so than alcohol when fully legalized at some point. And when there are market crashes, alcohol related stocks do fairly well. I'm suspecting this is a pretty recession/crash proof industry to be investing in, no matter what is going on in the markets, just a thought...and that's not taking into account how much room for expansion there is in this industry and with this company in particular. Good times ahead here.
I'm holding....and buying when I can. GLTA.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102369189
Legal Marijuana fastest growing industry of 2014....
I read that article too...sell the common buy the preferred...so the guy ho wrote it makes his money on the fall...lol.
You believe everything you read? Maybe the authors of those articles might be short the stock, hence the negative coverage. Really man. I mean don't let that be the basis for your argument, that's all I'm saying. GLTU, I'm on the opposite side of your play come monday.
You believe everything you read? Maybe the authors of those articles might be short the stock, hence the negative coverage. Really man. I mean don't let that be the basis for your argument, that's all I'm saying. GLTU, I'm on the opposite side of your play come monday.
I had like 5 heart attacks today, lol, I can never get used to corrections, even when they are to be expected especially after a climb like we had...something I found for the longs here...GL.
Quicken is buying collection rights on $34 billion of non-delinquent Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae mortgages. Quicken, which has a $90 billion mortgage servicing portfolio, said it would become a top-10 servicer after the purchase. The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter and is subject to approvals from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
See link below:
Quicken is buying collection rights on $34 billion of non-delinquent Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae mortgages.
1.23 last, up 13.89%, I love this thing...
We hit 1.16, 5% already, let's go baby...run, run run...
That report is worthless and isn't going to do anything, not after pay off promises and profit news, she's gonna continue running up, no matter the shady business...freddie and fannie always have and always will be shady business...as ong as they turn a profit and pay off the feds...she'll be at 50 bucks by the end of 2014. IMO.
I agree...she's nowhere near resistance, not this one, this is the anomaly...GL.