“Hope
Smiles from the threshold of the year to come,
Whispering 'it will be happier'...”
― Alfred Tennyson
Whispering 'it will be happier'...”
― Alfred Tennyson
New Years brings many emotions and
ideas among the masses. For some a new beginning, a start over, even hope. For others it is a great excuse and a safe
way to justify actions taken, or lack there of.
You will see a breakdown of ways the market will benefit and turn around
after the New Year. When it comes to financial New Year, only about 65 percent
of countries have the fiscal year (financial year) identical to the calendar
year. For the most part largely traded companies worldwide follow the calendar
year, with a few exceptions in the UK,
New Zealand, Australia, and Japan. For many countries there, fiscal year starts
in April or July, those and many markets will not see the volume like the U.S. will come
January first 2015. The U.S.
had the first quarterly report come out and the numbers are looking great. Of
course, they are positive that the second quarterly report will be even better.
With no talk of interest rates from the FED, at least for now, we see a bullish
market with all the holiday spending and anticipation in the “New Beginning”.
The National Association for
Business Economics estimate a 3.1 growth in the next year. This has not taken
place since 2005, since 2003 we had not seen economic growth like they reported,
with the 5 percent yearly rate up from July to September this year. However the faster the growth the faster the
FED will try to raise the interest rates that could mean more vested interest
from overseas. The accession of capital would increase the USD, causing other
countries to struggle destabilizing their currency, making it hard for the
entities to pay back the borrowed greenbacks.
This highlighting once again how disconnected and isolated the U.S. is from
the ebb and flow that other countries are going through. Consumers in the U.S.
drive growth, and favor the slow growth of other countries. The numbers being pumped out seem to be fuel
for investors to find a safe place in the USD.
With reports of the most jobs in fifteen years, saying America’s debt
has declined to the numbers of 2002, ect.
Yet I live in the U.S. and just do not see it, I see
unemployment everywhere and students with Master’s degrees unable to afford to
buy a house, car or even find a job. Now
all we will have to do, is let them brainwash us into believing that they do
have a plan to clean up our world, straighten out the economy, that it is not
all a ponzi scam to rig the markets, take our money and enable QE4
(Quantitative Easing, round/phase 4) as quietly as possible. While they convince us that of course, it has
nothing to do with oil, money, or power. They seem to leave information out
when reporting the statistics on economic growth, for instance how most of the
GDP growth in the third quarter was spent on Obama care, they love to leave
facts out.
How will the FED get away with more QE or a
raise in interest rates? For starters
they have to make the economy strong so QE4 is not an option or ineffective. The fear that the FED will lose control is
evident as well as manipulation of the “fundamentals” doing whatever it takes
to save the market and their own piles of cash.
Now the world is watching there circus mesmerized and disgusted by the
tergiversated attitude we see. While
they go on deceiving us, socializing the losses and privatizing profits, and
completely misrepresent there intentions.
It is time to show and prove, and so far we have seen first hand what QE
can accomplish.
They will have to straighten out Japan a little; because if Japan is the prime example for
success of the FEDs great plan. Japan was whom the U.S. was ensuing for years. Japan the archetype for the great USA. The FED may need to go back to the drawing
board, or The Doomsday Book, what ever works for them because Japans situation
is just a denouement of QE. We should
see the YEN getting stronger even though there own numbers have not been the
best, they did take a hard hit with that large increase in sales tax last
quarter. That raise took a hit on
consumer spending, and wedged them into the recession they are
experiencing. They are cleaning up the
mess and doing what it takes to stimulate growth by Japans CB buying up
financial assets and government bonds to advance inflation. Let us not be so naive the U.S. is heavily invested in Japan and many
of the counties that are suffering and we do have an amazing amount of power
with the reserve currency being USD and the petrodollar we will not let some
fall too hard. Fast growth may not always be the best, we need to stabilize and
adjust to the change, rapid rates sometimes cannot be controlled. The lower oil
prices benefit the U.S.
spending, creating a way for many people to save and invest in assets, or the
market. Lower oil prices really benefit Europe and Japan by expanding the economy
globally.