Relentless USD Rally Is Precious Metal Kryptonite

 | Apr 30, 2018 02:28AM ET

Precious metals expert Michael Ballanger discusses the U.S. dollar, the Fed, gold and silver.

When I was a young lad long before Atari video games and during the era of rotary telephones, hula hoops, and Red Ball Jets running shoes, I used to love to read Action Comics that featured the original "Superman" created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. All of the kids on the block used to idolize Superman but being the oddball that I was, I preferred the bald-headed character "Lex Luthor," whose lifelong ambition was to slay the superhero usually with fragments of "kryptonite" rock from Superman's native planet "Krypton" that exploded just after Superman was sent to earth in a capsule but which miraculously lands in a farmer's field. I can't begin to count the number of episodes where Luthor has Superman on the ground dangling a suspended chunk of glowing green rock in the S-Man's face rendering him not only no longer indestructible, but also powerless.

And just when I thought that silver was taking on some of the super powers of our famed hero, with favorable COT structure and oversold conditions from three weeks ago, a yield-driven rally in the dollar sent a signal to the rampaging algobots who have since seen fit to trash silver from $17.43 to $16.53 all within a eight-day time frame, taking the RSI from 68.35 to 45.50 while knifing down through the 200-, 100-, and 50-day moving averages. For those out there that have ever doubted that the markets have lost all semblance of reason, you are getting a lesson in lunacy with this dollar rally and that is why.

The 10-year treasury yield is up from around 1.30% in mid-2016 to the current 3.03% level here in April 2018 because a number of reasons, the first being that the Fed has engaged "quantitative tightening," whereby rates rise and its bloated balance sheet is allowed to "normalize" ("shrink"). The driver behind this, it would tell you, is that due to its masterful stewardship of the U.S. economy and its brilliant bailout of the banking system in 2009, the economy is now firing on all cylinders and labor markets are beginning to tighten. The Fed would have you believe that the low-inflation growth regime of 2009–2018 is going to be protected by way of a series of calculated rate hikes designed to keep the economy in "Goldilocks" mode, where economic activity is running at a "not too hot, not too cold" pace so beloved by the capital markets and stock buyers.

The reality is that with the amount of new credit created since the 2008 banking fraud financial crisis, the central planners haven't the foggiest notion of the ultimate outcome of what is surely the greatest debasement in the history of global currencies. Whenever I see Secretary of the Treasury ex-Goldmanite Steve Mnuchin or ECB chief ex-Goldmanite Mario Draghi or Bank of England head ex-Goldmanite Mark Carney all standing in front of a microphone and camera flapping their lips about the future course of "policy," I want to lob a large brick at the monitor because they want us all to be calm and continue buying stocks doing business as usual when in reality they are clueless. The globally coordinated onslaught of "quantitative easing" (money creation)—also known as "counterfeiting"—was nothing more than a monetary experiment and when the U.S. started buying toxic bonds off the banks in 2009, the ECB took one look at the rapidly recovering Dow Jones index and said "Oh, yeah? Well watch THIS!!!" and proceeded to double down. What followed was an orgy of financial gluttony the likes of which were not made truly clear until the Swiss National Bank decided to become one of the largest shareholders in Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL). The piece de resistance came when the PBOC joined the party and created the largest debt pool in the history of shadow banking and now, allegedly, it is all going to be "unwound"? Not bloody likely…

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