Thursday, April 12, 2012

Bad News is Good

Charts: The S&P 500 smashed upward through its 50-day moving average. The 50-day line was the battleground technical indicator for this correction. If the index finds support there and/or trades above that line, then the correction is over.

Fundamentals: You, me and all equity investors hunger for QE like a wino craves alcohol. Yesterday the ECB hinted it was ready for QE2 and the Fed hinted it was ready for QE3. Today economic data came in weak, among other weak data points jobless claims ticked up. If the data is bad, then the winos (you and me) get a big fat bottle of Mad Dog 20/20. Yippee!

Long War: There is a good Yemeni Army (anti-jihadist) and a bad Yemeni Army (pro-jihadist). The two are somewhat separate but to a degree still intermingled. When the good Yemeni Army goes to battle with Al-Qaeda it finds military planes have been sabotaged by soldiers from within its own ranks. America and the CIA have been working heroically to hive off the bad from the good within the Yemeni Army. It seems to be working. Yemeni war planes are flying again and are taking out tanks that the bad Yemeni Army gave to Al-Qaeda. The weight of the renewed aerial assault is now taking its toil on the jihadis. CIA drones are active and working in concert with the good Yemenis.

The new leader of Mali says he will begin a war soon against AQIM and try to destroy the Kingdom of Al-Qaeda that has sprung up in his back yard. The rebel groups that worked with AQIM to seize half the country (an area bigger than France) have disavowed their jihadist partner and promised various levels of support or neutrality in the coming war. CIA fingerprints in all this are glaringly obvious. Why would rebel leaders sell out their partner AQIM? Clearly they are being threatened in a convincing manner.

The Syrian Army is honoring a UN ceasefire accord as talks begin with Iran and the US led group called 5 plus 1, so Iran is reining Assad in, at least for now. Ahmadinejad wants to play ball with 5 plus 1 and the Ayatollah does not. The Ayatollah is not necessarily more powerful than Ahmadinejad within Iran. The best way to gauge Ahmadinejad's strength is to listen to what he says when he is hauled in front of the Iranian Parliament. Last time this happened he mocked the members of Parliament for having fake college degrees (which I guess many of them have). Licking its wounds after this tongue lashing, Parliament passed a new law supposedly giving it the power to easily impeach the PM Ahmadinejad. If it tries and fails to impeach him, the Ayatollah is in big trouble. Have you noticed how assassination attempts from Mossad and CIA have stopped? The good guys are trying to help the PM.

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