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by David Collum

Every year, friend-of-the-site David Collum writes a detailed "Year in Review" synopsis full of keen perspective and plenty of wit. This year's is no exception. Moreover, he has graciously selected PeakProsperity.com as the site where it will be published in full. It's quite longer than our usual posts, but worth the time to read in full.

2013 Year in Review
by David Collum

Every year, friend-of-the-site David Collum writes a detailed "Year in Review" synopsis full of keen perspective and plenty of wit. This year's is no exception. Moreover, he has graciously selected PeakProsperity.com as the site where it will be published in full. It's quite longer than our usual posts, but worth the time to read in full.

by Chris Martenson

As expected, the “dance of the big, round number” is underway, with the Dow flirting with 12,000 all week, plunging under it, bounding over it, bouncing off of it, and then landing on it to end the week. My view is that a stock market rebound is likely over the next couple of weeks, but this view is based on charts and momentum and liquidity, not economic fundamentals, which are deteriorating.

The macro view here is that much of the value to be found and prices to be seen in various credit markets and the stock market is really just a reflection of the belief that the system will be bailed out. “Too big to fail” is now an operating maxim applied equally to the next Lehman wanna-be and Greece. All of the big players took appropriate notice of the actions of the monetary and fiscal authorities to prevent big institutions from suffering the fate of their poor risk management practices and investment decisions.

The faith that nobody (of any substance) will be allowed to fail is now a pronounced feature of our markets and partially explains the elevated prices we are currently seeing in nearly everything. Another major component of these elevated prices is the excessive liquidity that the Fed, ECB, BOE, and Japanese central bank continue add to the markets

However, we are now less than two weeks away from the end of the second round of quantitative easing (QE II), and everyone should be concerned with the impact that the loss of this liquidity will have on various markets. I think the early warning signs are already in place.

First, the fundamentals.

The Dance of the Big, Round Number
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

As expected, the “dance of the big, round number” is underway, with the Dow flirting with 12,000 all week, plunging under it, bounding over it, bouncing off of it, and then landing on it to end the week. My view is that a stock market rebound is likely over the next couple of weeks, but this view is based on charts and momentum and liquidity, not economic fundamentals, which are deteriorating.

The macro view here is that much of the value to be found and prices to be seen in various credit markets and the stock market is really just a reflection of the belief that the system will be bailed out. “Too big to fail” is now an operating maxim applied equally to the next Lehman wanna-be and Greece. All of the big players took appropriate notice of the actions of the monetary and fiscal authorities to prevent big institutions from suffering the fate of their poor risk management practices and investment decisions.

The faith that nobody (of any substance) will be allowed to fail is now a pronounced feature of our markets and partially explains the elevated prices we are currently seeing in nearly everything. Another major component of these elevated prices is the excessive liquidity that the Fed, ECB, BOE, and Japanese central bank continue add to the markets

However, we are now less than two weeks away from the end of the second round of quantitative easing (QE II), and everyone should be concerned with the impact that the loss of this liquidity will have on various markets. I think the early warning signs are already in place.

First, the fundamentals.

by Adam Taggart

"Straight Talk" features thinking from notable minds that the PeakProsperity.com audience has indicated it wants to learn more about. Readers submit the questions they want addressed and our guests take their best crack at answering. The comments and opinions expressed by our guests are their own.

This week's Straight Talk contributor is Catherine Austin Fitts: investment advisor and entrepreneur. She is the founder of Solari Investment Advisory Services, where she offers subscribers guidance for navigating the risks of the global financial system and the political economy. (FYI: Chris will be the guest on her weekly podcast, The Solari Report, on Feb 3). Her perspective on Wall Street and Capitol Hill are shaped by her past roles as Assistant Secretary of Housing under George H. W. Bush, and before that, as Managing Director and board member for the investment bank Dillon, Read & Co. 


1. Despite (or perhaps because of) your time as Assistant Secretary of Housing under Bush Sr., you are extremely critical of the government’s financial stewardship. What, if anything, changes with administrations and how much is institutionally baked into the cake?

The federal financial model is institutional, and its ultimate governance is outside of the government.

 

Straight Talk with Catherine Austin Fitts: We Are Victims of A Financial Coup D’Etat
by Adam Taggart

"Straight Talk" features thinking from notable minds that the PeakProsperity.com audience has indicated it wants to learn more about. Readers submit the questions they want addressed and our guests take their best crack at answering. The comments and opinions expressed by our guests are their own.

This week's Straight Talk contributor is Catherine Austin Fitts: investment advisor and entrepreneur. She is the founder of Solari Investment Advisory Services, where she offers subscribers guidance for navigating the risks of the global financial system and the political economy. (FYI: Chris will be the guest on her weekly podcast, The Solari Report, on Feb 3). Her perspective on Wall Street and Capitol Hill are shaped by her past roles as Assistant Secretary of Housing under George H. W. Bush, and before that, as Managing Director and board member for the investment bank Dillon, Read & Co. 


1. Despite (or perhaps because of) your time as Assistant Secretary of Housing under Bush Sr., you are extremely critical of the government’s financial stewardship. What, if anything, changes with administrations and how much is institutionally baked into the cake?

The federal financial model is institutional, and its ultimate governance is outside of the government.

 

by Chris Martenson
Tuesday, October 6, 2009

This week’s report is going to be largely free of data and news snippets and full of my opinions and broad strokes of logic.

As my long-time readers know, I consider my main occupations to be information scout, dot-connector, and analyst.  But as a side job, I also provide a decisive alternative to the mainstream economic propaganda machine, which is thoroughly dedicated to maintaining the status quo, regardless of cost.

I completely understand why our fiscal and monetary leaders would seek to hide the truth from us all.  We live in an economy that is based on growth and debt – which means it is a Ponzi scheme – and there’s nothing more important to such a system than faith and confidence.  So economic propaganda is not just a noxious by-product spewed from our economic tailpipe; it is viewed by those in power as a form of fuel, a necessity for our peculiar economic engine.  They may have a point.

For my new readers, I want to make it clear that I do not expect or wish you to believe me over anyone else.  Heck, trust neither me nor them, if that works for you; instead, trust yourself and your gut instinct about what is right.  I began trusting myself several years ago, and I am much better off as a consequence.

This week (ending 10/1/09), despite the massive run up in stock over the past few months, despite the outrageous amounts of bailout and stimulus money applied, despite every attempt to put a positive spin on things, jobs continued evaporating, auto sales slumped to multi-decade lows, bankruptcies soared 41% over the prior year, and tax receipts continued to slide.

States such as California are sliding into fiscal chaos, and some, like Michigan and Alabama, are already there.

We are about to enter another leg of the downturn, and this one will be even bumpier and more uncertain than the last. 

It’s Time To Prepare
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson
Tuesday, October 6, 2009

This week’s report is going to be largely free of data and news snippets and full of my opinions and broad strokes of logic.

As my long-time readers know, I consider my main occupations to be information scout, dot-connector, and analyst.  But as a side job, I also provide a decisive alternative to the mainstream economic propaganda machine, which is thoroughly dedicated to maintaining the status quo, regardless of cost.

I completely understand why our fiscal and monetary leaders would seek to hide the truth from us all.  We live in an economy that is based on growth and debt – which means it is a Ponzi scheme – and there’s nothing more important to such a system than faith and confidence.  So economic propaganda is not just a noxious by-product spewed from our economic tailpipe; it is viewed by those in power as a form of fuel, a necessity for our peculiar economic engine.  They may have a point.

For my new readers, I want to make it clear that I do not expect or wish you to believe me over anyone else.  Heck, trust neither me nor them, if that works for you; instead, trust yourself and your gut instinct about what is right.  I began trusting myself several years ago, and I am much better off as a consequence.

This week (ending 10/1/09), despite the massive run up in stock over the past few months, despite the outrageous amounts of bailout and stimulus money applied, despite every attempt to put a positive spin on things, jobs continued evaporating, auto sales slumped to multi-decade lows, bankruptcies soared 41% over the prior year, and tax receipts continued to slide.

States such as California are sliding into fiscal chaos, and some, like Michigan and Alabama, are already there.

We are about to enter another leg of the downturn, and this one will be even bumpier and more uncertain than the last. 

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