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AMT Top Ten Miscellaneous Wonders for the 12th of April 2024

AMT Top Ten Miscellaneous Wonders for the 12th of April 2024

10. Free Press: Brazil and the Lula de Silva government are cracking down on dissent in social media. ‘X’ – formerly Twitter – led by Elon Musk is fighting back and refusing to cooperate as Brazilian ‘leadership’ attempts to intimidate the ‘loyal opposition’ in the legislature.

9. GROOT: Nvidia is working on ‘humanoid’ robotics. Project GROOT was presented by Jensen Huang at the GTC Conference. The synergy between machine learning, semiconductors and robotics is an evolution taking place before our eyes. Tesla is involved in similar research as it works on Optimus.

8. Hot Chocolate: Speculation in Cocoa has brought the commodity above 10,400.00 USD per metric ton as of this writing. Questions about gravity and hypersonic speculative values are logical at this juncture.

7. Seclusion: Do humans still need each other? People are relying on their mobile devices for social interactions. Robotics with AI capabilities will make our existence potentially more lonely. Open source software DOBB-E will be part of this future as household chores are taken care of by ‘machines’.

6. Iran: Those with holiday excursion plans which include Teheran this weekend may need to check on ticket availability due to the possibility of flight cancellations.

5. Fed Liberty: President Joe Biden this week spoke about an interest rate cut coming from the Federal Reserve this year, yet Consumer Price Index statistics are demonstrating escalating expenses. Current U.S government leaders may want to spend less on ‘vote buying’ via student loan forgiveness and think about conservative fiscal practices. Why should Americans who choose not to attend universities pay for those who did via higher taxes? Are Fed and Treasury officials still independent?

4. Risk Averse: Gold is within sight of 2,400.00 USD this morning. In the meantime U.S bond yields have inverted completely except for the 30-Year issue. Financial institutions are showing nervous behavioral sentiment.

3. USD Centric: Forex has seen reactive trading this week as financial institutions begin to conclude the U.S Federal Reserve’s monetary policy ‘over time’ will remain disturbingly difficult and full of doublespeak.

2. Caution: Mixed results are flourishing in the major U.S stock indices as the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 touch late March values, and the Dow Jones 30 has returned to February levels. Higher than anticipated interest rates are causing turbulence.

1. Energy Illusions: As the prices of food, transportation and housing escalates isn’t it time governments start to question their ‘green’ policies which are making the costs of energy production more expensive? We all want a clean planet, but logical strategies must be applied to create efficient use of resources.

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U.S Fed will raise Interest Rates this Week Once Again

U.S Fed will raise Interest Rates this Week Once Again

September Federal Reserve Pronouncements on the Calendar

The U.S Federal Reserve will raise their Federal Funds Rate by another 0.75% this coming Wednesday the 21st of September. If they do not it would send a shock wave through the markets, inflation data via Core CPI statistics, which were published nearly ten days ago in the U.S cemented the hike to come.

The hike has already been factored into the global markets. Forex has essentially gone ballistic via a strong USD, the GBP/USD is shown below as an example. The British Pound is now touching lows it has not seen since 1985 against the USD. Speculators may be tempted to trade this week believing they are smarter than the ‘crowd’, and that may be the case – congratulations if you are one of the few, but this may simply be an outcome of luck too. Many retail investors and speculators have been mauled in the current trading environment.

GBP/USD 1 Year Chart showing new Lows

Investors are Struggling as Clarity is Sought

Indices are struggling, gold is sputtering, U.S Treasury bonds are inverted, cryptos are under scrutiny. The U.S Fed is between the proverbial rock and hard place. Economic conditions promise to stay stormy in the next month and a half too. U.S elections will have an affect on behavioral sentiment. Certainly the Fed’s outlook which will be delivered on the 21st of September will cause turbulence also. A long term view via dividends from the S&P 500 remains a benchmark for investors seeking returns. Short term traders on the other hand must fight through the ‘noise of the experts’.

  • The U.S Fed is nearly certain to raise their key interest rate by 0.75% this week.
  • The key clarity investment houses seek is outlook regarding potential interest rate hikes to come later this year and early in 2023.

Where have the Gurus Gone?

Many self proclaimed gurus who claimed enlightenment only a year and a half ago, and offered their ‘insights’ regarding investment promises to eagerly awaiting traders are now hiding in their safe places and eating their words. Very few assets have proven profitable in the past year. Many investors are not used to the idea of merely preserving money, they have worked on the premise of solid gains made with speculative decisions which have been carried upwards by positive sentiment. Dealing with actual bear markets has not been a shared experience for many in the world of investing the past 13 years and the fresh scars are visible.

The ability to make money in this environment is difficult. The inverted bond yields in the U.S are evidence that folks are putting their money into relatively short term assets and trying to secure some of their capital. Traders can certainly wager this coming week in a variety of ways, but short term positions need to be considered with the knowledge volatility will be part of the terrain. Risk management is essential.

U.S Federal Reserve is in a Difficult Position

The notion that the U.S Federal Reserve will not stop raising their interest rates after the September meeting pronouncements this Wednesday still needs to be digested in many investment spheres. A Fed Funds Rate later this week of 3.25% is almost a 100% certainty. Speculation about a borrowing rate at 4% later this year may be realistic. And the question about how long the ‘transient’ inflation remains – yes, please laugh out loud, is a tough consideration. The outlook remains chilling.

While higher fuel costs have simmered a bit and have come off their highs, energy remains problematic and is having an effect on the costs of logistics, food and manufacturing. Energy concerns will remain the devil within the details. Some may want to look at the ISM Manufacturing data from the States for clues, but its merits remain debated too.