Three two three two three. Has a nice ring.
But is it enough to take away the sting,
Of yesterday’s late selloff?
As we watch this morning’s round mound of rebound.
Where is Sir Charles now?
If they can keep a lid on it here,…
Three two three two three. Has a nice ring.
But is it enough to take away the sting,
Of yesterday’s late selloff?
As we watch this morning’s round mound of rebound.
Where is Sir Charles now?
If they can keep a lid on it here,…
The 13-17 week cycle projection has risen to xxxx. That implies a long term high base breakout ahead. Shorter cycles are due for a breather…
Today is the day where Jerry and the Rate Makers aka the FOMC gang, threads the needle, and lets us know not only the new rules of the new game, but its name. One thing is for sure, the name will start with “Not.” Because if there’s one thing that the …
For the week ended March 20, there were 22 charts with multiple buy signals as of the last two trading days. There were 200 multiple…
The ES, 24 hour S&P futures have broken out again here in the pre market. They’re about 7 points above the peak set two days ago. OK, breakout is too strong a word, but the higher high confirms the uptrend and the validity of the conventional measu…
The Fed injected nearly $300 billion into the banking system last week. That put in place at least a temporary detour for stocks. That detour…
The ES 24 hour S&P futures sold off overnight, but US traders woke up this morning and bought the effin dip as usual. It remains to be seen if they’ll be sustained or punished when regular trading opens. The key area to watch for a rally signal wou…
The Fed is playing a new game. The problem is that nobody knows what the rules are, not even the Fed. In fact, nobody even…
A bank’s assets triple over a few years when interest rates are low. The bank invests those assets in long term, higher yielding municipal bonds with little credit risk. Inflation flares up and interest rates rise, reducing the value of the municipal bonds and funding dries up. Regulators become concerned that the failure of this […]
So, Washington will bail out wealthy depositors at SVB and Signature and deny the same treatment to depositors when more traditional banks begin to fail?