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	<title>Contrarian Stock Market Investing News - Featuring Bargain Stocks &#187; GM bankruptcy</title>
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		<title>Your Share of the Debt, GM Dies, Silver Still a Buy, A Pivot Point and More!</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/your-share-of-the-debt-gm-dies-silver-still-a-buy-a-pivot-point-and-more/17405</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2009 18:32:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ian Mathias</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Addison Wiggin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baby Boomers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dollar Crisis]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[GM bankruptcy]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Brother, can you spare half a million? Your family’s (new and improved) share of U.S. debt&#8230; GM officially kaput… the dirty details and a brief rant, below&#8230; Markets hit a critical “pivot point,” says Rob Parenteau&#8230; The one number from China that’s boosting stocks, commodities and currencies today&#8230; Plus, two good reasons to buy a precious metal… especially silver</p>
<p> <strong>Your family’s share of the government debt is now over half a million dollars.</strong> A record $546,668, to be exact.</p>
<p>That cheery Monday stat comes courtesy of a USA Today study, which claims that each American family’s share rose 12% in 2008. That’s $55,000 in new government debt last year for every U.S. household &#8212; thousands more than the median household annual income. Here’s&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Brother, can you spare half a million? Your family’s (new and improved) share of U.S. debt&#8230; GM officially kaput… the dirty details and a brief rant, below&#8230; Markets hit a critical “pivot point,” says Rob Parenteau&#8230; The one number from China that’s boosting stocks, commodities and currencies today&#8230; Plus, two good reasons to buy a precious metal… especially silver<span id="more-17405"></span></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z00_00.gif" alt="" /> <strong>Your family’s share of the government debt is now over half a million dollars.</strong> A record $546,668, to be exact.</p>
<p>That cheery Monday stat comes courtesy of a USA Today study, which claims that each American family’s share rose 12% in 2008. That’s $55,000 in new government debt last year for every U.S. household &#8212; thousands more than the median household annual income. Here’s how it breaks down:</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/TheAmericanDream.2.jpg" alt="" width="469" height="387" /></p>
<p>Last year’s spike is the biggest since the Medicare prescription drug benefit was added in 2003. According to the rag, the government garnered $6.8 trillion in “new obligations” in 2008, bringing the total U.S. tab to $63.8 trillion. Given our spending record so far in 2009, it’s safe to say your family’s burden is already much, much larger.</p>
<p>And you ain’t seen nothin’ yet… the Social Security program will grow by 1-2 million beneficiaries every year until 2032 as baby boomers retire. Medicare will add just as many each year starting in 2011, when that same demographic starts turning 65.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z00_31.gif" alt="" /> <strong>Unless the U.S. becomes a net saver, “another global financial crisis triggered by a dollar crisis could be inevitable,”</strong> forecast former Chinese central banker Yu Yongding over the weekend. (Oy… Beijing is 7,000 miles from Washington, and even they can see this coming.)</p>
<p>Yu’s comments were purposefully timed &#8212; U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner embarked on a sudden PR tour of China this weekend. His mission? Keep the cash flowing from America’s No. 1 creditor.</p>
<p>“No one is going to be more concerned about future deficits than we are,” said Geithner, whose government’s budget deficit will exceed $1.75 trillion this year. &#8220;As we recover from this unprecedented crisis, we will cut our fiscal deficit [and] we will eliminate the extraordinary government support that we have put in place to overcome the crisis.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the meantime, Geithner assured students at Peking University that China’s investments in U.S. paper are “very safe.”<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z00_52.gif" alt="" /> <strong>“I doubt the Chinese believed him,” </strong>says the man, the myth, the legend Chuck Butler. “Of course, I&#8217;m not a Chinese official, so I don&#8217;t really know what they are thinking. But I’ve watched them smile and tell former U.S. Treasury Secretary Paulson that they were going to allow greater currency flexibility, and after he would board his plane, it would business as usual&#8230; Same thing for Graham and Schumer, who thought their prestigious status as lawmakers would get them someplace with the Chinese.</p>
<p>”It all comes down to the fact that the U.S. needs China more than the other way around.”<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z01_08.gif" alt="" /> <strong>General Motors, once the backbone of U.S. manufacturing, is officially bankrupt. </strong>As you’ve no doubt heard, the company declared bankruptcy this morning. But since it’s 2009, lord knows it can’t be a run-of-the-mill insolvency. The Obama administration has its hands deep in this thing… here’s the fine print of the biggest industrial bankruptcy in U.S. history:</p>
<ul>
<li>Uncle Sam gets a 60% stake. The government will pump an additional $30 billion into GM (on top of the $20 billion already squandered). In exchange, the government will be the largest shareholder… leverage it will use to usher GM through bankruptcy and convert it to this “leaner, stronger company” we’ve been promised</li>
<li>Half of the UAW’s $20 billion health care fund will be converted to GM stock, which will give it a 17.5% stake in the company. 12-20 factories will be closed, at the cost of approximately 21,000 union workers. 40% of the 6,000 GM dealers will have to close, too</li>
<li>The Canadian government gets a 12% stake, given all GM’s design/manufacturing activity up north.</li>
<li>Bondholders were bought (bullied?) out. They’ll swap their $27.1 billion in unsecured debt for 10% of GM, with warrants to own 15% more. Surely, they learned from Chrysler’s bondholders, who were publicly vilified by President Obama for demanding what was lawfully theirs… so much for that hallmark of American capitalism</li>
<li>Current shareholders get nada. At least that rule of bankruptcy is still intact. If you were long GM, please consider letting someone else manage your money. Anyone.</li>
</ul>
<p><img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z01_46.gif" alt="" /> <strong> “GM Bankruptcy to Bring Taxpayer Ownership,” </strong>headlined Bloomberg this morning. Shame on them and the U.S. government for perpetuating this “taxpayer ownership” BS.</p>
<p>We must have been asleep when the “taxpayer” got any say in this one. GM is owned by wealthy politicians in Washington who, under threat of imprisonment, forced their constituents to finance the deal. Insinuating the public has any control is “Orwellian in the extreme” Addison suggested when we discussed the matter late Friday. Amen.</p>
<p>And let’s be really honest… taxes haven’t gone up to cover the GM bailout (or any credit crisis expense), but government borrowing certainly has. If any “taxpayers” truly own GM, their tax returns get mailed to Beijing or Tokyo.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z02_02.jpg" alt="" /> Sign of the times… <strong>GM and Citigroup are getting kicked off the Dow.</strong> Cisco and Travelers will replace them next Monday. Extra irony (and foreshadowing?) in this exchange, as Citi is the former owner of Travelers, which it spun off in 2002.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z02_11.gif" alt="" /> <strong> The market baked in GM’s insolvency a long time ago. </strong>In fact, the Dow’s off to the races this morning, even though one of its 30 components is rapidly approaching zero (the “beauty” of a weighted index). The big indexes rose 2% within the first 30 minutes of trading.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z02_15.gif" alt="" /> <strong> “We have reached a pivot point in financial markets,” </strong>forecasts Rob Parenteau, steward of the Richebacher Society.</p>
<p>“As we have documented in recent weeks, the list of U.S. macro series showing stable nominal levels over the past three-four months continues to increase. These include retail sales, new orders for durable goods and imports of materials and finished goods. That is not what usually happens in a debt-deflation dynamic, which cumulatively builds on itself. It appears the debt-deflation risk is being contained by extreme fiscal and monetary measures.</p>
<p>“Stability is better than free fall, but it is not the same as expansion, and we believe equity investors have shoved valuations high enough over the past three months that they now require signs of economic growth, not just stability, to carry equity indexes higher. We think the odds of them getting that could improve after we get past the auto production and dealer downshift later in the summer, but the rise in Treasury yields is becoming alarming.</p>
<p>“So from a strategic point of view, we believe equity investors want and need to see stronger economic and earnings results to drive indexes higher, while bond investors need just the opposite to calm Treasury yields down. In addition, through near-zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) and quantitative easing (QE) approaches, the Fed has been trying to push private investors into riskier asset classes while the Treasury&#8217;s debt issuance calendar implies they need private investors to prefer owning Treasury bonds, which are generally not the asset of choice in an economic recovery scenario.</p>
<p>“In other words, we have contradictory cross currents here. If the Fed doesn&#8217;t intervene to slow or halt the Treasury yield backup, there is a chance the stabilization in unit home sales will wither away. If the Fed does step up QE operations to halt the Treasury yield rise, professional investors taking the ‘green toilet paper’ view will continue to sell dollars and buy commodities. Down the line, that implies higher energy prices for consumers and higher input prices for manufacturers, neither of which we would consider growth-supportive developments.”</p>
<p>If you seek a better, richer life through macroeconomic awareness, you’ll be right at home in the Richebacher Society. Get in, <a href="https://www.web-purchases.com/RCH497ControlPromo/ERCHK477/landing.html">here</a>.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z03_02.gif" alt="" /> Like last week, <strong>materials and energy companies are leading the way today</strong>. The great global rebound argument is still hot, and this data point is keeping the commodity fire ablaze:<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z03_05.gif" alt="" /> <strong>China’s manufacturing sector expanded for the third month in a row in May</strong>, its government reports today. China’s purchasing managers index registered a score of 53.1 during the month, down just a bit from April but still above the expansion/contraction score of 50.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z03_14.gif" alt="" /> <strong>Oil’s up to a fresh seven-month high of $67 a barrel today</strong>, largely due to China’s PMI number.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z03_18.gif" alt="" /> <strong>The dollar is still falling,</strong> giving commodities an even bigger boost. The dollar index fell right through support at 80 on Friday and has plunged another point and a half since. It’s at 78.8 as we write, just off its 2009 low.</p>
<p>Thus, the cost of your European vacation has popped 7% since the start of May. The euro is up 9 cents over the last 30 days, to just under $1.42 as we write. The pound has followed suit, up 11 cents over the last month, to $1.62.</p>
<p>And could parity be around the corner for our neighbor to the north? The Canadian dollar is up to 92 cents today, its highest level since October 2008.<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z03_38.jpg" alt="" /> <strong>Gold continues to flourish, but silver has been the real precious metal story of late. </strong>The yellow metal is up about 9% over the last month, to roughly $980 today. Silver, on the other hand, shot up 29% in May, to $15.50 an ounce.</p>
<p>“In general,” says Byron King, “the precious metals are up because the big-spending politicians in Washington have no respect for the U.S. dollar. Break out the black crepe and armbands of mourning for the U.S. dollar.</p>
<p>“Specifically, silver has always been the &#8220;poor man&#8217;s gold.&#8221; Silver tends to lurk in the shadows of the price of gold, sort of a stepchild to the yellow metal.</p>
<p>“But on occasion, silver undergoes a slingshot effect. Between the basic industrial demand for electronics, plus jewelry demand (&#8217;cuz gold&#8217;s getting pricey!), and now the monetary pull&#8230; silver is accelerating in a price rise that is &#8212; believe it or not &#8212; leaving gold in the dust.</p>
<p>“Silver could break $20 sooner than we&#8217;ll see gold at $1,200, and the silver miners (my readers own several) will soar to new heights. Do you have your ticket for this ride? All aboard!!!”</p>
<p>Heh, get your ticket here: <a href="https://www.web-purchases.com/ESILaughedGold/EESIK605/landing.html">Byron’s latest special report on precious metals investing. </a><br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z04_00.gif" alt="" /> <strong>Silver may continue to outperform gold.</strong> If you’re a believer in historic ratios, silver still has room to rise in order to meet its average gold price ratio over the last decade.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/PreciousRatio.jpg" alt="" width="469" height="365" /></p>
<p>Either that, or gold’s price needs to fall. And in this environment, we’d sooner go long silver than short gold. Do you agree?<br />
<img src="http://www.ezimages.net/upload/5MIN/z04_16.jpg" alt="" /> <strong>“I&#8217;m a raving fan, but sometimes you guys get misled a bit,” </strong>writes a reader in response to <a href="http://www.agorafinancial.com/5min/end-of-the-recession-china-moly-declassified-treasury-ridiculousness-and-more/">Robert Gordon’s call</a> that the recession has bottomed.</p>
<p>“The so-called ‘ultimate indicator’ of recession ends of the four-week moving average of initial jobless claims is hardly as accurate as suggested. It is true that it does turn down typically, just as a recession ends from the retrospective declaration of that recession, but it is NOT true that every time the four-week moving average of initial jobless claims turns down during a recession, the recession ends.</p>
<p>“In the ’81-’82 recession, the indicator turned down from over 500k four times before a correct signal &#8212; in December ’81, February 82, May 82, June 82, and finally at the real ultimate peak in October 82. In the 1990 recession, it turned down in January of ’91, before its ultimate peak in April 1991.</p>
<p>“In the 2000 recession, it turned down in June 2001 from high levels, to give a false signal before peaking in October 2001, although many other recession indicators suggest that the recession went on for far longer than in the graphic you presented.</p>
<p>“Virtually every recession therefore has witnessed false signals of at least one and often many times before the ultimate peak in initial claims and before the later declared end of the recession. Why would this time be any different &#8212; particularly in view of the potential for auto mess to lead to accelerated claims?”</p>
<p><strong>The 5:</strong> We agree… guess we didn’t lay the skepticism on thick enough when <a href="http://www.agorafinancial.com/5min/end-of-the-recession-china-moly-declassified-treasury-ridiculousness-and-more/">we introduced the idea</a>. Glad to hear you’re a fan.</p>
<p>Source: <a rel="bookmark" href="http://www.agorafinancial.com/5min/your-share-of-the-debt-gm-dies-silver-still-a-buy-a-pivot-point-and-more/">Your Share of the Debt, GM Dies, Silver Still a Buy, A Pivot Point and More!</a></p>
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		<title>The Currency Rally Continues!</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/the-currency-rally-continues/17340</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2009 13:16:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chuck Butler</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US Dollar & Forex Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canadian Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chuck Butler]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Commodity Prices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[currency rally]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[euro]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Global Currencies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GM bankruptcy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gold Prices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver prices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swiss Francs]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Euro trades past 1.42&#8230;  Geithner make a promise to China&#8230;  Central Bank meetings this week&#8230;  Canada&#8217;s Fin Min, speaks&#8230;                                                     And Now&#8230; Today&#8217;s Pfennig!</p>
<p>Well, on Friday I left you with the story of a currency rally for the ages&#8230; And it didn&#8217;t let up there! Although the rest of the day on Friday the bias was to sell dollars, the real chunk of the dollar wasn&#8217;t taken until last night in Asia&#8230; Here&#8217;s the deal folks, and this won&#8217;t be the first time you&#8217;ve heard this from me either!</p>
<p>Fundamentals! The fundamentals are coming home to roost, and the rot on vine is being exposed&#8230; Just an example of what I&#8217;m talking about&#8230; G.M. will file for bankruptcy today&#8230; Soon, they will&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span id="Label1">Euro trades past 1.42&#8230;  Geithner make a promise to China&#8230;  Central Bank meetings this week&#8230;  Canada&#8217;s Fin Min, speaks&#8230;                                                     And Now&#8230; Today&#8217;s Pfennig!<span id="more-17340"></span></span><span id="Label1"></p>
<p>Well, on Friday I left you with the story of a currency rally for the ages&#8230; And it didn&#8217;t let up there! Although the rest of the day on Friday the bias was to sell dollars, the real chunk of the dollar wasn&#8217;t taken until last night in Asia&#8230; Here&#8217;s the deal folks, and this won&#8217;t be the first time you&#8217;ve heard this from me either!</p>
<p>Fundamentals! The fundamentals are coming home to roost, and the rot on vine is being exposed&#8230; Just an example of what I&#8217;m talking about&#8230; G.M. will file for bankruptcy today&#8230; Soon, they will become the new GM&#8230; And not Government Motors&#8230; (a reader gave me that line!)</p>
<p>But more importantly is simply the fact that the thing that drove up the dollar&#8217;s value beginning last July until March of this year, is simply Treasury buying&#8230; And now those Treasury purchases are showing HUGE losses for those holders that &#8220;thought&#8221; they were &#8220;safe&#8221;! And&#8230; As I kept telling you, once holders grew weary of paltry yields, or the losses, the reversal of those Treasury purchases would be as swift as the move to Treasuries last summer&#8230;</p>
<p>So&#8230; The move in the Big Dog, euro, overnight in Asia and now in the European session has produced yet another move through a line of resistance at 1.42&#8230; And we all know that when the Big Dog leaves the porch, all the other smaller dogs get to stretch their legs too&#8230; And so it is that Swiss francs are 94-cents, Aussie 81-cents, and so on&#8230;</p>
<p>And, as Hannibal Smith used to say&#8230; I Love It When A Plan Comes Together! Not that I&#8217;m cheering on the losses in Treasuries&#8230; I&#8217;m patting myself on the back for telling you over and over again that it would happen!</p>
<p>OK, so I see the our esteemed, diligent tax payer (NOT!), U.S. Treasury Sec. Geithner, was promising the Chinese that the U.S. &#8220;wants to shrink the budget deficit&#8221;&#8230; Hmmm&#8230; I doubt the Chinese believed him&#8230; Of course I&#8217;m not a Chinese official, so I don&#8217;t really know what they are thinking&#8230; But having watched them smile and tell former U.S. Treasury Sec. (Mr. Bailout) Paulson that they were going to allow greater currency flexibility, and after he would board his plane, it would business as usual&#8230; Same thing for Graham and Schumer who thought their prestigious status as lawmakers would get them some place with the Chinese&#8230;</p>
<p>It all comes down to the fact that the U.S. needs China, more than the other way around&#8230; Sure it would have been sweet for China if the previous boom went on forever and ever&#8230; But that&#8217;s not the way of the markets&#8230; Booms are followed by busts&#8230; And for all you youngsters out there, that didn&#8217;t believe this could really happen, even though you might have spent 5-minutes on it in college&#8230; Booms really are followed by busts&#8230; The secret to not having them end up like this one, is to not allow the Boom to get out of control&#8230; Irrational exuberance, eh Big Al? I&#8217;m choking on that, because he&#8217;s at the root of this problem!</p>
<p>And China? Well&#8230; As I boldly told you months ago, that the Chinese would be the first to come out of this economic malaise&#8230; The rest of the world has caught up and now the optimism for China is spreading&#8230; This is perception folks&#8230; And you are what you are perceived to be&#8230; And in China&#8217;s case, they are perceived to be an economy on the mend, which means their strong growth might return&#8230; Well, when China&#8217;s growth is strong, they have outrageous demands for commodities, raw materials, and the rest of the lot.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s manna from heaven for Australia&#8230; And to a lesser degree, New Zealand and Canada&#8230; But when commodities get to rising, all the commodity currencies get to rise, because, besides Canada, they have higher than the average bear interest rates&#8230; And yield demand becomes the pet rock of the 70&#8217;s, the cabbage patch doll of the 80&#8217;s, and the tickle me Elmo of the 90&#8217;s, everyone has just got to have it!</p>
<p>Aussie and kiwi currencies are approaching 8-month highs&#8230; The difference here is that 8-months ago, these two were on the slippery slope down, and now their on the escalator going higher, and higher&#8230;</p>
<p>And the euro&#8230; The Big Dog&#8217;s 3-month rally (recall I pointed out weeks ago that the turn happened around March 1st), is the steepest rally for a 3-month period in the last 7 years&#8230; The thing though that&#8217;s really stuck out for everyone to see, is how the move in the past week has been really swift, and the momentum seems to be picking up steam&#8230; I made a bold forecast to the people on the desk the other day&#8230; And NO I can&#8217;t share it with you, because that would be making a call on a currency, and the legal beagles won&#8217;t let me do that any more! Let&#8217;s just say the move to 1.42 and change is a move in the right direction!</p>
<p>And this rise in the euro, comes with the Eurozone economy in a recession&#8230; But for all those out there that think this &#8220;can&#8217;t happen&#8221;&#8230; There is precedence here&#8230; Back in 2002-2003, German, the Eurozone&#8217;s largest economy, was in a recession, and yet the euro posted large gains in those years of: 17.96% and 19.59% in those respective years&#8230; So there you go! And&#8230; As long as the euro is the &#8220;offset&#8221; currency to the dollar, it will retain this ability to gain in value even with the Eurozone&#8217;s economy in a recession&#8230; The other title, besides &#8220;offset currency to the dollar&#8221; that the euro has picked up, is the one people are using currently, calling the euro the &#8220;anti-dollar&#8221;&#8230;</p>
<p>We have several Central Bank meetings this week&#8230; The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), Bank of England (BOE), European Central Bank (ECB), and Bank of Canada (BOC) all meet this week to discuss rates&#8230; I read this note and found it to be funny&#8230; OK, the BOC is meeting this week&#8230; And when asked about the recent rise in the Canadian dollar / loonie, the Finance Minister, Mr. Flaherty had this to say&#8230; &#8220;We&#8217;re always concerned when there are fluctuations in the value of the Canadian dollar, and it has been relatively rapid in the past few weeks, and I know that the governor of the Bank of Canada is monitoring that as it&#8217;s his job.&#8221;</p>
<p>What&#8217;s so funny about that? Well&#8230; I find it funny when people in power give ultimatums to others, in &#8220;not so many words&#8221;&#8230; In this case, Flaherty is telling Mark Carney (the Gov. of the BOC) that he needs to do something to halt the loonie&#8217;s rise&#8230; Cut rates, would be his choice, but interest rates already near zero, I think he&#8217;s giving Carney the &#8220;high sign&#8221; to implement Quantitative Easing&#8230; As you can see what that&#8217;s done for the U.S. dollar!</p>
<p>The RBA is the only Central Bank that has &#8220;fat to cut&#8221;&#8230; It will be interesting to see if the RBA keeps their interest rate arrows in their quiver&#8230; I tend to believe they will hold on to them&#8230; But that&#8217;s just a hunch&#8230;</p>
<p>The data cupboard will get a real work-out this week beginning today with two of my faves&#8230; Personal Income and Spending. The Big Banana today is the ISM Index (manufacturing)&#8230; Given the rot on the Chicago ISM&#8217;s vine last week, one would think that the national (ISM) index would take a hit&#8230; But&#8230; I tend to think that the Chicago one was pushed lower by the goings on in Detroit, and that the national index will, while still being recessionary, be a bit stronger&#8230; And if it is stronger (42 is forecast VS 40 previously), I think the currencies will continue to take liberties with the dollar, as risk assets will ride on!</p>
<p>We end the week with the May Jobs Jamboree&#8230; After last month&#8217;s hefty addition to jobs by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), it will be interesting to see how the BLS monkeys with the May number&#8230; One thing all their playing around with the numbers can&#8217;t do is change the unemployment rate, which is expected to go to 9.2% in May&#8230;</p>
<p>I&#8217;m seeing what is probably profit taking as the NY trading desks come in and see the 1.42 handle in euros&#8230; The euro has backed off its level of 1.4235 from when I came in and turned on the screens&#8230; A couple of years ago, we had this game of give and take going on between the U.S. players and Asian players&#8230; Overnight, Asia would push the currencies higher and sell dollars, only to see that wiped out by the U.S. players&#8230; I sure hope we don&#8217;t see a return bout of that game of give and take&#8230; It sure gave me a rash watching that each day!</p>
<p>Well&#8230; Before I head to the Big Finish&#8230; Gold &amp; Silver have really jumped on the risk assets rally&#8217;s bandwagon. Gold is $985 this morning&#8230; A mere hop, skip and a jump from $1,000&#8230; You know, maybe we&#8217;ll get to talking about how buying Gold on the dips below $1,000, like I used to do with the dips below $900!</p>
<p>Currencies today 6/1/09: A$ .81, kiwi .6485, C$ .9230, euro 1.4215, sterling 1.6370, Swiss .94, rand 7.9660, krone 6.1880, SEK 7.4575, forint 197.40, zloty 3.1370, koruna 18.85, yen 94.80, sing 1.4370, HKD 7.7514, INR 46.96, China 6.8267, pesos 13.02, BRL 1.97, dollar index 78.79, Oil $67.85, Silver $15.90, and Gold&#8230; $985.35</p>
<p>That&#8217;s it for today&#8230; An absolutely fabulous day yesterday here in St. Louis, the sky was so blue, and the sun was warm! And I had the pleasure of cooking for a family birthday party for my darling daughter&#8217;s husband, Jerry&#8230; (he&#8217;ll get a big kick out of being mentioned!) My beloved Cardinals had a not-so-good trip to one of my fave cities, San Francisco this past weekend. The Stanley Cup Finals are going on, and the Basketball Finals will start this week&#8230; So It&#8217;s not like there&#8217;s nothing on TV to watch! HA! Come on&#8230; It&#8217;s gotta be better than watching a cable financial news station that I refuse to name! OK&#8230; Mike and Mary are here, so that means all good things must come to an end, and so I bid you farewell for today&#8230; I hope your Monday is absolutely Marvelous!<br />
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<p><a href="http://dailypfennig.com/currentIssue.aspx?date=6/1/2009"><span>Source: </span><span id="Label1">The Currency Rally Continues! </span></a></p>
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