Membership

Are you well diversified? Is your savings all in USD or spread across multiple types of assets, but still based in USD? If it is, you are still not what we consider ultimately hedged, as in hedged into other nations currencies which are backed by their allocations, production, resources and politics. We believe the best way to be hedged to to be spread across the 8 most respected western currencies. Those being the Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, Euro dollar, Great British pound, Japanese yen, New Zealand dollar and United States dollar. Rotating among these with a slight edge producing a gain above equilibrium.

This strategy uses the same free floating cash approach as all large banks, but with the tactical advantage of intermittent currency exposure utilizing a probable edge.

Think of this system as exactly the same as holding cash in a bank account, but with the ability to use leverage, letting trades sit until hitting either a Target, Stop or direction reversed. This strategy is extremely diversified and as such, is not subject to over weighted moves due to all your cash being held in a single currency bank account.

The goal of the system is to minimize the volatility associated with a traditional cash bank account. Substituting single currency volatility and buying power decay, with account stability and growth.

There is no obligation and you can cancel the program at anytime.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

And they believe in Unicorns too




Should we be anticipating this major change predicted by so many with the looming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings that will be taking place this week?  The fear of the FED’s decision to raise rates has the market bouncing out of control.  We see much volatility on Wall Street, there is just no room for the FED to raise rates while the market is acting like it is.  We seem to be so influenced with even the threat of the FED’s decision to raise or not.  I get it, it is a big deal and some kind of change has to take place, I just do not think they really will raise those rates, if you look at the FED’s past history they do not really seem to have a clue what to do.
The FED thought adding a Zero Interest-Rate Policy (ZIRP) was going to be a “fix-all-solution” and became a major liquidity problem.  The FED thought that cheap money would entice big business to invest, thus strengthening growth with hope of refinancing and creating more fiat to spend or invest in the market, lifting asset prices knowing that only about half of Americans even hold mutual funds or stocks and wanted to follow in the footprints of the ever-emerging 1989 Japan.  We are now seeing how that worked out for Japan, and we should be taking notes.  The ZIRP has created a mass of bailouts and left people who had been saving their whole life with nothing, pensions and funds undervalued and many unable to even think about retirement.  This caused mass miscalculations of capital and distorted the market for so many.  The worst thing about it is that it gave the government lead way to borrow and spend in to the hundreds of trillions and produced a large amount of Quantitative Easing (QE).  This has been a conscious decision that the FED has made knowing what was to come, so what makes you think they will really raise rates and fully quit QE?
The FED will not raise those rates and so far, they have an excuse for everything.  They have blamed the financial crises, inflation, GDP growth, employment, then China then Europe, Wall Street, volatility, then wage growth or lack of.  Now they blame the fact that the dollar is too strong, energy too low, at one point they even blamed the weather.  It is ridiculous that we base our trading on their actions or lack there of, but we do, or should I say we base it more on the predictions of how the market can and will move.  All this meeting will really be about is who will have to clean up this awful mess they have created and maybe they will have a new bank welfare system that can assist in the clean up of all the miss-priced assets of high yield returns and piles of crap numbers and fake balance sheets.  The FED has a big hole to climb out of, and the boomers are not going to just stand by as the FED makes it impossible to gain, soon we will see the affects of them pulling their money out of the market and banks, to invest in precious metals and physical holdings a more grounded investment.  This causes major bubbles and we know what bubbles’ do, don’t we.  Soon we will see what real inflation looks like and real volatility.  For now with how things are going, they are not going to change too much and even if they did, it will not sway the strength of the USD anytime soon not with the holidays right around the corner and the skepticism of every other currency.