Charts: On Friday the S&P 500 closed exactly at its 50-day moving average. Since the correction started a couple weeks ago the broad index had been swinging rapidly over and under the 50-day line. By settling exactly on the battlefield number the charts were saying the next big move would be technically significant. Today we had a monster down day. The charts then are saying weakness breeds weakness and more loses are likely.
Fundamentals: Southern Europe is contracting faster than expected. The multi-trillion dollar bail-out funds owned by the EU and IMF are probably going to be tapped by Spain. The markets are beginning to fear that Germany won't allow another bail-out of a Periphery country. The markets are most likely wrong and Germany will allow Spain to get bailed-out, but not without a lot of kicking and screaming. Germany's kicking and screaming might be enough to cause global economic damage.
Long War: Egypt is saying it will break its fuel contract with Israel. Pipeline deliveries will shut down shortly. Jihadist bombers in the Sinai had over the past year shut down 50% of the pipelines leading from Egypt to Israel already. Whether the gas was flowing or not, breaking this contract is a big deal because this commercial contract is actually part of the Camp David Accords and forms the backbone of the peace treaty that ended the Arab-Israeli wars.
The above news item, on the surface, seems to be very bad news. And almost certainly the surface level analysis is right and this probably really is bad news. An alternate analysis occurs to me that would put it in a different light. Even though the alternative is probably wrong let me throw it out for grins.
We know from his public statements as a US Army general that CIA Director Petraeus is very hostile to Israel, more hardcore on this position than any other US general. It seems strange that the CIA is allowing terrorists in the Sinai in the first place. With its ability to marshal the resources of Egyptian intelligence it had always been able to clear the Sinai of anti-Israeli terrorists, until recently.
And the way the Egyptian gas contract was broken was strange. Egyptian gas company executives made the call, not anybody actually in the Egyptian government.
And then two months ago the Iranian government claims that it captured a large number of Israeli assassins, hinting that it was part of the ring of assassins who had killed so many Iranian nuclear scientists. And then the Iranians shut up publicly about their big haul, like they maybe actually had something and realized they needed to keep their mouths shut.
I keep getting this weird feeling that Petraeus is sticking it to Israel.
Monday, April 23, 2012
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