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The European Union is a creation of global elitists, the Bilderberg et al,
in pursuit of their long-term goal of a world government.
Whether this is a good thing
or not depends in large part on whether
politicians in positions of great
power can be trusted to behave fairly and responsibly. In deciding if this is the case you have plenty of empirical evidence to assist you in making up your mind, based
on their activities and antics of the past several years and their consequences for the
global populace.
The core problem of the European Union, that has led to the major crisis that it now
faces is that it is, or has been up to now structurally dysfunctional. When the European Union was created the levels of integration and cooperation necessary to make it run smoothly
were simply not possible because the citizens and electorates of the individual
states within it refused to cede sufficient sovereignty to achieve this, and many politicians were similarly inclined - it would take a "back to the wall" steadily intensifying crisis such as we have seen over the past several years to make them yield.
Here we should note that many politicians in Europe are
as much in the dark as those they rule
with regard to the master plan of the elites, and they have dug their heels
in defending what they view as their national interest, a
prime example being Mrs Merkel of Germany - but the situation had
become so extreme that she and others like her have finally been forced to give significant ground.
The kind of crisis that we have witnessed in Greece over the past several years would be
unthinkable in the United States, which is, in comparison, truly united. Imagine say Alabama or
Kentucky going bankrupt -
would the rest of the
country just stand by and
watch and do nothing to assist? - of course not. This is
why Thursday night's agreements were such a watershed - they represent a giant stride towards true union in Europe which should prevent individual states being abandoned to their fate in the future.
Once you grasp what
is written in the paragraph above, and the markets certainly did yesterday, you will also
understand that the immediate fiscal crisis in
Europe is set to ease substantially, as the Union is now committed to step in to support bond markets
to keep interest rates under control. THAT is the reason markets rallied so strongly
yesterday and why the rally looks set to continue. Could
this have been anticipated
before last Thursday? - on the basis of precedent probably not, as there had been something like 18 European summits preceding this latest one which achieved little or nothing. The COTs and
sentiment, however, did
show extreme levels of pessimism that should have set more alarm bells ringing. We were of the view that the summit would probably achieve little and that we would see
one last plunge into a low that would
promote drastic action. Such did not prove to be the case. What we have repeatedly referred to as the
“discordant buffoons” in the recent past showed
a rare “cordancy” on Thursday night
– perhaps simply because they to get the whole thing over with and get to bed. What
about the fact that the debts and liabilities in Europe
will turn out to be far in excess of the woefully inadequate
€500bn war chest of
the European Stability Mechanism? - that is a problem which they will
attempt to solve by means the printing press, and when Europe gets printing in earnest, the US Fed is not going to be outdone.
Now we come to the practical matter of how significant this reversal is. The short answer is very significant,
as pressure will now come
off the European bond markets
- this is why the euro soared and the
dollar tanked yesterday. With a major fundamental roadblock suddenly removed, the current COT
structure in many markets
and the extremely negative
sentiment going into Thursday's momentous agreements have created the
conditions for a really powerful
rally.
Action is gold and silver was comparatively anemic given what happened to the dollar,
and to other commodities like copper and oil, but this is not considered to be a reason to doubt their upside
potential over the medium-term,
because the COT structure, particularly
for silver, and sentiment are at
levels that typically precede a powerful rally, and with the crisis in Europe now set to ease following Thursday's summit breakthrough, markets at last have a green
light to advance. This is
not to say that there isn't plenty
to worry about - there is, of course, but markets
looks set to climb the wall
of worry, the principal driver being
the easing of pressure on European
bond markets. The derivative
problem won't go away - it will
continue festering away
in the background until one day
it explodes and brings the whole system crashing down, but markets don't care about that, that's too far off.
Now let's
turn to the charts. On its 6-month chart we can see
that while gold certainly had a good day on Friday, its gains were relatively modest given the huge rallies in copper and oil, and the big plunge in the dollar. What can we infer
from this? - we can infer
that it is going to gain traction and rise a lot more, that's what. The big rallies in copper and oil point to
reflation, courtesy of forthcoming
largesse from Europe as it
tries to save itself.
 
The 3-year chart for gold reveals
that it now has the capacity to make great gains rising off the Triple Bottom of
the lows of last September,
December and the low of recent weeks. If last week's summit had produced little like its
predecessors, then gold would have crashed its lows and plunged, but the summit ended with a "sea change" as Angela Merkel
of Germany finally realized
that if Germany didn't concede it would
go down with the ship. Despite the significant gains
on Friday, we can see that we
now have an excellent risk/reward ratio for going long
gold here, as stops can be set beneath the lows of the Triple Bottom and
gold could make strong gains from here as Europe gets pumping.
 
Gold's COT structure shown
below is bullish, nowhere near as bullish as silver's, which is wildly bullish,
but solidly bullish nonetheless.
 
The dollar's plunge on
Friday signaled that it is "game
over" for this currency,
which has been feasting
on Europe's misfortunes
for many months - it had only
been going up because of
the euro's plight anyway, and now that the euro has been "saved"
it has lost its principal driver. The massive plunge
after a weak rally to approach the early June highs
that we can see on the 6-month chart for the dollar index shown
below is a sign that it
is reversing to the downside. We can expect it
to continue lower and this
will be a factor fuelling the rally in commodities and stocks. You might
well ask "If Europe is clearing the way to do a
massive Fed style QE, won't this
undermine the euro? - of course it
will, but this is a longer-term
consideration, shorter-term
it should rally having just been saved from oblivion, and we should remember
anyway that the Fed is not going to stand by and let Europe take
the "blue riband"
for QE away from it.
 
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