Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Shaping the Battlefield in Washington DC

Charts: We are in the middle of a harsh correction and the S&P 500 has been punching down through support levels. 1340 is the March intraday low. If 1340 holds with strong support we might be okay. If the broad index plunges through 1340 in big volume with a bad advance/decline line, then it might get really hairy.

Fundamentals: Mark Twain said that history doesn't repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes. The past is a rough guide for the future. The Euro-zone crisis is just like the Asian Contagion of the late 1990s. Back then a sovereign debt crisis started on the periphery of Asia in Thailand. The crisis then moved into stronger Asian countries like South Korea. These two Asian countries are like Greece and France in the current crisis.

The IMF bailed out each new Asian country as the crisis spread domino fashion. The bail outs only made the crisis worse. Finally Russia was hit. After fumbling about Russia refused to be bailed out. This slammed global financial markets but it was the end game for the crisis and markets recovered in a few months. If Russia had been bailed out, then the crisis would have kept getting worse.

Greece is probably going to default on its debt and exit the Euro-zone, taking the path of Zimbabwe, printing money (after creating a new Greek drachma) to give salary increases to civil servants, lower state pension age requirements, etc. The resulting hyperinflation will be so disastrous that the other PIIGS will probably be scared straight. This could spell the end game of the current crisis.

Even if this rosy scenario plays out in the best possible manner, it will still be very rough for the stock market over the next few months. The wild card is, of course, the price of oil. If it drops far enough, we might catch a break because China could then loosen monetary policy and kick start global growth. So, as always, we only have one friend: the CIA.

Long War: The CIA is telling the whole world about the double agent it placed in AQAP who foiled an Al-Qaeda airliner bomb plot. It is practically shouting about this hugely successful mission, which also resulted in drone strikes in Yemen which killed top Al-Qaeda leaders. Congressional watchdog committees were not informed about this clandestine operation beforehand as required by law. Congress is complaining about being kept in the dark. The fight between the CIA and Congress is very public. The American public is not stupid and can see the wisdom of keeping the blabbermouth morons in Congress in the dark about future CIA clandestine operations.

Petraeus is kicking the Congressional watchdogs in the gut real hard, setting the stage for keeping them in the dark about all future operations. Slowly, bit by bit, the CIA is going rogue (a good thing).

Remember my blog about Petraeus reaching out and grabbing assets from Army Intelligence (DIA)? Along those same lines, new rules are being crafted for US Special Forces, giving Special Forces commanders greater operational freedom, taking them out of the control of the Joint Chiefs and the old guard at the Pentagon. This looks like another Petraeus asset grab. He is very grabby and likes to pull resources away from other parts of the US military/intelligence community, stuffing them into the CIA. You may have also read that the AQAP double agent was from Saudi Intelligence. It seems that Petraeus is expanding his power base into allied Islamic Intelligence Agencies.

Charts and fundamentals are very bad. The only thing standing in the way of Armageddon is the genius of the CIA Director. It is as if we are in an Indiana Jones movie where the hero is running across a collapsing rope bridge. Will he make it to the other side in time before the bridge collapses? Maybe. It depends on how brilliant Petraeus really is.

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