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10 August 2008
Welcome to the Weekly Report. Last week, in the subscriber only edition we
looked to see if the roadmap I use had moved forward:
- "A recap of the scenario:
bubble, easy money, inflation in fiat money supply, inflation in commodities
and hard assets, inflation, fear of inflation, rising rates, YC inverting,
flattening, rising and inverting again, tightening, withdrawal of liquidity,
corrections, crashes, talk of stagflation, FEAR, withdrawal of speculative
funds, further corrections and crashes, demand collapse.......Deflation."
The evidence seemed to be pointing toward a move beyond "FEAR" and the beginning
of the withdrawal of speculative funds. This week certainly supported this
thought and I would like to share some charts that fly in the face of the events
that recently unfolded.

We have been watching the 30yr T-Bond yield closely over the past few weeks,
watching for an upside breakout. It looks like the breakout is failing which
then had me examining some charts with a bit more urgency, especially given
the geo-political events unfolding.
Markets are fickle at the best of times but to ignore the events in Georgia
and Ossetia, where Georgia went on the offensive against separatists now actively
supported by Russian troops, tanks and aircraft beggar's belief.For instance,
after reading the comment below what would you expect to happen to the price
of crude oil?
- "The Georgian foreign ministry in Tbilisi said the Black Sea port of Poti,
the site of a major oil shipment facility, had also been "devastated" by
a Russian air raid."

It's accelerating to the downside. I mean, its not as if the area isn't oil
associated:

The map is from 1998 (so this hasn't come as a surprise!) and in April 2006 NPR reported:
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"The tiny former Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan is on the verge of an oil
boom. This summer, a 1,000-mile pipeline is expected to begin pumping oil
from Azerbaijan's Caspian Sea coast, through neighboring Georgia, to a
Turkish port on the Mediterranean Sea.
Industry experts say this pipeline will allow Azerbaijan to eventually
quadruple its oil exports, but political opponents in Azerbaijan worry
that the oil money will help the government of the former Soviet republic
stifle pro-democracy efforts.
The $4 billion project is backed by the United States, in part because
it gets Caspian Sea oil wealth out to the international market, without
going through Azerbaijan's much larger neighbors, Russia and Iran."
This is not a fight in some dustbowl that no one is interested in, this is
has the ability to morph into an extremely serious situation that might end
up with the US and Russians throwing more than insults at each other.
You would have thought the stampede to hold gold would have been heard on
the Moon! So what did we get last week (hourly chart):

We tested the 848 area, massively important support. Major Powers could go
head to head, NATO involvement is not out of the question and gold drops??
This isn't bad news being painted as good, the usual market machinations. This
is a complete breakdown between risk protection and events and can only be
caused by something much, much larger. Are we seeing a re-allocation of resources,
a removal of leveraged speculation?

Above is a Dollar/Yen weekly chart, again something we have been watching
for sometime because of this (Dow weekly):

A significant move, a rebound by the dollar against the Yen has been in progress
since early March and it looks like a new wave of carry trades have
been placed in US stocks over the past month. Does this explain the attempted
rally by the Dow? Remember, we have support for the 30yr T-Bills too over a
similar 4 week period, hence the stalling and falling of yield.
Is this rotation of dollars out of commodities (too many falling charts to
publish here) and into cash, US Treasuries and large cap stocks confirmation
of last weeks thoughts? If it is then the amounts must be enormous to kill
off any effect that should have happened with the Georgia situation. Are we
seeing the Hedge Fund sector finally deciding to unwind as the rolling of debt
and the unavailability of leverage forces a withdrawal of speculative funds?
What we do know is that right now the money flows are so large that an Oil
War can be ignored. That tells me its time to be very cautious about investing
or trading and puts me on alert that something else; something that has a potentially
bigger impact may have started.
This article will be subscriber only until mid week.
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Mick P (Collection Agency)
About
Collection Agency
An Occasional Letter From The Collection Agency In association with Live
Charts UK.
For some years now I have written an ongoing letter, using macro-economics,
to try and peer into the economic future 6 to 18 months ahead. The letter was
posted on a financial bulletin board to allow others discuss its topic.The
letter contains no recommendations to buy or sell, indeed I leave that to all
the other letters out there and to the readers own judgement. The letter is
designed to make us all think about what may be coming, what macro trends are
occurring and how that will affect future trends and how those trends will
filter down to everyday life and help spot weak or strong areas to focus on
for trading or investing.
To contact Michael or discuss the letters topic E Mail mickp@livecharts.co.uk.
Copyright © 2006-2009 Mick P
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