What The Markets Have In Common With The Film 'Casablanca'

 | Feb 19, 2018 01:47AM ET

Technical expert Michael Ballanger discusses current market fluctuations and the gold and silver markets.

As I watched Wednesday's CPI (inflation) number reported by the Commerce Department, I was immediately reminded of that classic scene from legendary WWII flick "Casablanca," where Claude Rains, playing police Captain Renault (PA:RENA), shuts down Humphrey Bogart's casino/nightclub with the immortal words, "I shocked—SHOCKED—to find out that gambling is going on in here!" The croupier hands him a wad of bills—"Your winnings, sir"—to which he says, "Oh thank you very much. Now everyone out of here!"

Well, I was shocked—SHOCKED, I tell you—to see that the U.S. inflation numbers came in a tad "hot." After all, the Fed has added some $5 trillion in additional "assets" to its balance sheet since 2008 and encouraged its foreign central bank cousins to do the same, which they have done with even greater enthusiasm. The movement toward serial currency-trashing has had us all awaiting the inevitable return of 1970s-style inflation, but thanks to the creative accounting and fictitious reporting, inflation is seen as "tame" by mostly everyone—but especially the financial media and "bond-badeers."

The U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio has been increasing every year since 1980 with only a brief respite during the tech boom of the late '90s, and that has been a global theme of commonality as fiscal recklessness became the clarion call for Baby Boomers the world over. Nearly 10 years of financial repression has finally lifted as bond yields are rising to levels never quite seen by the legions of Millennials now trading for their livelihoods.