We put in a good citizen call to the SEC yesterday.

“There’s a massive scheme to manipulate stock prices,” we told the friendly agent.

“I have to tell you that your call is being monitored so that we can better serve the public,” he replied.

“Oh, don’t worry about that. The NSA is tapping our call anyway.”

“Are you talking about a specific stock?”

“Oh no… I’m talking about all of them.”

“You mean a Madoff-style scandal?”

“No… no… This is much, much bigger than the Madoff scandal. We’re talking major manipulation. Intentional. Knowledge aforethought. Pumping up all stock prices. Trillions of dollars.”

“Who is doing this?” the agent asked… a certain tone creeping into his voice. He was starting to suspect he had a lunatic on the line.

“The Fed, of course.”

“Uh… thank you…”

“You gotta go after those bastards…”

“Uh… yes… we’ll look into it…”

“Okay… thanks… I just thought you should know.”

Delusions Recovered

Wall Street shook the sleep from its head and rubbed its eyes yesterday morning. Investors shrugged off the bad news from Japan and Europe.

As for the bad news from the US itself… it hardly mattered. Yes, the economy was weaker than had been thought – with the worst jobs report in two years. No, there was not much good news coming from corporate earnings, either.

But, hey – asset values no longer depend on the performance of the Main Street economy. This is a manipulated market. The Dow rose more than 100 points, reversing a worrying trend.

Since the start of the year, US stocks have been selling off. But on Tuesday, investors found their footings… and recovered their delusions…

Yes! The only thing that matters is that the Fed is on the case. Stocks are being manipulated to the upside. Willfully. Knowingly. Intentionally.

Janet Yellen can talk about tapering QE. But she can’t do it. The economy needs more support from the Fed. But the Fed doesn’t put more money into ordinary household budgets. You can see that just by looking at jobs, wages, or consumer prices. The US CPI is barely going up at all.

That’s because the Fed’s intervention stays in the financial economy – where the EZ money and credit as a result of ZIRP and QE feeds directly into stock, bond and real estate markets.

Jimmying and Jiving

Look at a stock chart… identify the episodes of QE… and you will see that the Fed’s QE = US stock market gains. Liquidity mainly drives asset prices, not the real economy.

Asset prices do not reflect the genuine “facts on the ground” for businesses or consumers. They are jimmied and jived by the authorities.

Yesterday, we noted that stocks, bonds and real estate have added $21 trillion to the nation’s balance sheets since 2009. But at the rate the economy is adding real wealth, it will take 70 years to catch up with those asset prices. Stocks, bonds, and real estate are all counting on growth that will never happen. Or at least it won’t happen soon enough to justify such high prices.

What made stocks go up so much last year was that the Fed made a lot of liquidity available – while the federal government used less of it than it had the year before. This left a lot of excess liquidity wandering around looking for a home.

What did it find? Stocks and housing!

Most likely, this will continue. Stick with me now…

1) The feds think they can manage the economy

 

2) They see recessions and/or falling asset prices as problems to be fixed

 

3) They think they can prevent these things with more QE

On the evidence… they’re right!

Without Fed support, the economy would probably be in recession. US GDP went up about $350 billion last year. The Fed offset it with $1.2 trillion worth of QE. Even so, the economy only limps along. Without it, the economy slumps. The Fed can’t tolerate a slump. So, it has to continue with QE.

Meanwhile, the federal government is absorbing $400 billion less capital this year than last as a result of lower budget deficits. This leaves a lot of excess stray kittens in need of adoption. Who will take them in?

Stocks! Real estate! Yes, dear reader, we will most likely see more gains in 2014.

This is blatant manipulation of the markets. The Fed is open about it. Even proud of it.

C’mon, SEC, you put the petty, two-bit manipulators in jail. A few million here and there. BFD! How about the big boys? How about a trillion-dollar conspiracy to raise stock prices?

Arrest Janet Yellen! We want to see her do the perp walk.

Regards,

Bill


Market Insight:

Can US Stocks Survive the End of QE?
From the desk of Chris Hunter, Editor-in-Chief, Bonner & Partners

It certainly seems that QE is a wonderful tonic for US stocks.

You’ve no doubt seen this chart (or a version of it) before. But it bears repeating.

 

It looks at the performance of S&P 500, from March 2009, to March 2013, when the Fed was engaged in QE… and when it wasn’t.

Pay close attention to the gray areas on the chart. They represent times when the Fed wasn’t engaged in QE.

Notice a pattern?

We do.

The Fed may talk a good game on the “taper.” But our bet is that any real wind down of QE will have similar effects to those in the past.

Stocks will fall. Folks will panic. The Fed will ramp up QE again to keep the show on the road.

How long this will go on for is anyone’s guess. But we don’t see it ending well.