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10/13/2022

The dollar is hovering near 20-year highs ahead of tdoay's US CPI release, which the Federal Reserve may respond to with a fourth consecutive jumbo interest rate hike.

James Ashley, head of international market strategy at Goldman Sachs said on Bloomberg Television that "the Fed is not going to blink." Adding, "if they're going to make a mistake, they would far rather err on the side of being too hawkish."

The ever-rising interest rate is siphoning investors away from non-yielding gold.

Gold 4-Hour

The 4-hour pennant's downside breakout will signal a resumption of the selloff within the falling channel.

Here are the presumed drivers of the continuation pattern.

Short sellers are locking in profits after eight straight 4-hour session plunges. The preceding H&S top or reversal triangle—the difference is academic—triggered a selloff that caused bears' hearts to skip a beat. Sellers added to demand when covering shorts, while ongoing selling by either new or short sellers with stronger convictions keeps the price from rebounding. If supply continues once short sellers complete covering, gold will fall below the pattern. This downside breakout will signal interest to all—ex and current bears, wounded bulls, and undecided—order flows will push the price down another leg.

The preceding pattern developed at the falling channel's top, confirming its marked medium-term downtrend since the Mar. 7, $2,078.70 all-time high. Gold has been negatively correlated to rising yields, following the Fed's persistent tightening, to the detriment of fund managers, like Ark's Cathie Wood.

Target Measuring

Short sellers disrupted the short-term downtrend since the channel top, as they were catching their breath after the dizzying selloff. Now that they have regained composure, the downside pe*******on will reverse fear back to greed, pulling them back in. Therefore, the previous selloff statistically repeats itself.

The series of red candles began at the $1,722 high, ending $50 lower at $1,672. Therefore, traders expect another $50 fall from the pennant's breakout point, aiming at around $1,625, retesting a much larger potential bearish pattern.

Gold Weekly

Last month, gold fell below its 2021 lows, which were also the lows between the two record peaks of 2020 and this year. In other words, the yellow metal completed a massive double top.

Last week, the price rebounded above the neckline. However, as I outlined, the price failed to hold onto gains and is back down at the neckline levels.

Gold will reinforce the double-top outlook if the price falls below its Sept. 28, $1,618 low. Given that the pattern's height is $40, the breakout could test $1,300, as all the invested interest within the structure repeats itself with the previous floor turning into a ceiling. The length of time to achieve the double-top's target could be as little as six months, the length of time it took gold to fall each time it reached its record, and as long as two years, the time it took the pattern to develop.

Trading Strategies - Short

Conservative traders should wait for the price to close below the pennant's $1,667.90 low, which would include at least three 4-hour candles to remain below the pattern, then for a return move that retests its integrity.

Moderate traders would be content with a close below $1,670 and two 4-hour candles to remain below the range, then for a throwback for a closer entry, if not for trend confirmation.

Aggressive traders could short upon the first close below the pattern.

Aggressive Trade Sample

Entry: $1,672
Stop-Loss: $1,682
Risk: $10
Target: $1,632
Reward: $40
Risk-Reward Ratio: 1:4

Gold back at $1,700, first time since Sept. 14 after near 2% gain over five daysMonday’s rally in gold fired by poor US ...
10/04/2022

Gold back at $1,700, first time since Sept. 14 after near 2% gain over five days
Monday’s rally in gold fired by poor US factory activity
Gold bulls hope US data gets worse throwing Fed off jumbo-sized hikes
In a world where bad news will likely get you good news from the US Federal Reserve, gold bulls are probably hoping things get significantly uncomfortable in the United States—not on the inflation front but on the economy itself—that the central bank will be dissuaded from using jumbo-sized rate hikes to hammer markets.

The long-only crowd in bullion seemed as enthusiastic as investors in stocks to oil who celebrated on Monday a drop in the Institute of Supply Management's gauge of US factory activity that indicated a faltering economy. Stocks rose about 3%, crude oil jumped as much as 5% and gold rose almost 2%, returning to the key $1,700 per ounce region for the first time since Sept. 14.

The Fed’s potential to keep doing outsized rate hikes to fight inflation has been the main catalyst for the year-to-date plunge of 20%-30% in the Wall Street’s Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq indexes. Benchmark Brent oil is showing an annual gain of less than 15% now, from highs of around 50% in March. Gold, meanwhile, finished the third quarter down 7% after gaining 13% in the first-quarter.

Gold Daily

Charts by SKCharting.com

Investors are assessing the likelihood of the Fed imposing another 75 basis point (bp) rate hike—its fourth in a row—at its November policy meeting. The central bank’s so-called fed funds rate that determines the national lending rate is now in a 3.00%-3.25% range—a full 3 percentage points higher than where it began 2022. After November, officials have penciled in another increase in December—making that the final hike of the year, though by no means will it be the last in the Fed’s campaign as the central bank has eyes as well on hikes throughout 2023.

On Monday, as trading for October and the third quarter began, the Fed embarked on another noisy campaign of wanting to rein in inflation with tighter policy. The airwaves of the financial markets were chock-full of headlines on how price pressures were still too high and that rates needed to be “restrictive enough”—the new buzzword of Fed policy-makers—to balance things out.

If there’s one thing Fed folk have been good at the past year, it’s in talking the US economy towards a recession. For the record though, officials at the central bank keep denying that they want a recession, adding that the US economy is too strong to have a bad or prolonged downturn. True enough, the only reason the economy hasn’t bombed is because of a tough-as-nails job market that just refuses to give up.

But as the saying goes, “you reap what you sow”

On Friday, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said the central bank will not stop its rate hikes even in a recession. Inflation remains “very high” and could continue to shock as the Federal Reserve works on subduing the worst price pressures in four decades for Americans, Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard said Friday. “Monetary policy will need to be restrictive for some time to have confidence that inflation is moving back to target,” Brainard said.

Thus, it isn’t surprising that some data have started to give in to the Fed’s ministrations.

Monday’s ISM manufacturing data, for instance, showed a drop to 50.9 in September from August’s reading of 52.8. It was well below economists’ forecasts for a drop to 52.2. A reading above 50 in the ISM index indicates an expansion in manufacturing, which accounts for about 12% of the US economy.

Beyond the ISM data, investors will be looking closely at Friday’s US jobs report to assess how much impact the Fed’s rate hikes are having on the economy. Economists are expecting the US economy to have created 250,000 jobs last month, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 3.7% and wage growth staying elevated.

And despite the bravado of policy-makers like Mester—unwavering in their mission to bring inflation back to 2% a year from a current 8%, even if the economy goes to hell in a handbasket—the majority of Fed officials say data will determine the direction of policy.

That’s what’s feeding the hope of the long crowd in gold, oil and stocks now—that the data will get “progressively bad,” suppressing both the dollar and bonds yields and throwing the Fed off course from more 75-basis point—or, God forbid, full percentage point—increases from here.

Gold’s comeback rally since last week has been pinged on the weakness in the Dollar Index. Pitting the US currency against the euro and four other rivals, the index hit a more than a week low of 111.40, losing some 2.2% over a four-day span.

The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note, meanwhile, tumbled to a Sept. 22 low of 3.587%.

Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA, said:

“Investors are starting to doubt central banks globally will remain aggressive with fighting inflation as financial stability risks are growing.”

“It is premature to say that the Fed is almost done with [monetary policy] tightening, but it seems Wall Street is growing confident that they could be done in December”.

Sevens Report Research said in a Monday research note that “the fundamental backdrop is getting less bearish” for gold “as Treasury yields and the dollar may be approaching a peak.”

But it did caution that “if we do not see a peak in yields and the buck,” then investors should expect the precious metal to tumble to new lows.

Downside risks remain for gold as “major central banks are expected to continue raising interest rates aggressively to combat surging inflation,” ICICI Bank said in a separate outlook.

Data aside, where does gold stand technically in its bid to encroach further into $1,700-territory, even cross into $1,800?

Gold Weekly

In a blog that ran Monday, precious metals strategist James Stanley broke it down to two outlooks—one for the longer-term and another for the nearer one.

The longer-term perspective, he said, has “continued bearish scenarios, putting focus on the $1,567 level and perhaps more to the point, an area around $1,454 which is confluent with a batch of swing lows from November 2019 to March 2020 that aligns with the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the 2016-2020 major move.”

In the nearer-term, traders are “looking to sell resistance and buy support”, Stanley said, adding:

“Of course, there are breakout strategies that look to do the opposite—selling at prints of fresh lows or buying on pushes up to fresh highs. But, in gold of late, that breakout style has seemed especially perilous to my eyes during this recent downside run. So, patience is a priority for gold bears as the pullbacks can be especially brutal to sit through, such as we saw in the first two weeks of September when gold ran up to $1,746 after an earlier-month support test at the $1,700 psychological level.”

“There’s a short-term falling wedge in-play to start the week and this has leanings of a bull flag as well. This puts the focus on a push up to resistance levels around 1690 or perhaps even 1700. A move up to either of those resistance levels could potentially re-open the door for longer-term bears but, again, traders are going to want to read price action to get a feel that sellers may be using that bounce to position-in to longer-term trends.”

Gold Monthly

Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com, concurs with that, adding:

“At above $1,680, spot gold’s short-term price action remains bullish with a caveat, of course, that this strength should not be mistaken as an overall bullish trend.”

“The strong rebound which started from $1,615 low, indicates two things. First, there has been substantial buying from $1,615 lows.”

“Second, the bears have preferred to reposition their shorts to a higher resistance of $1,704-$1,712 for better risk-versus-reward management as broader targets on the downside $1,600 psychological handle and 50% Fibonacci level of $1,560 remain on the radar of bears. If the upside breaks above $1,712, the next resistance would be $1,735 and $1,758.”

Dixit said it was important to note that a strong consolidation and acceptance above $1,680 on the daily close can provide bulls with additional fuel for going that extra mile to the next decisive resistance zone of $1,750-$1,760.

“Failing this, prices can tumble back to $1,660-$1,640.”

Welcome to SKCharting. This site has been created with aim to provide basic as well as advanced level knowledge and training to beginners on Forex Trading.

Over 90% of Nasdaq 100 components are trading below their 200-day moving averageHistorically, such a setup has always yi...
09/28/2022

Over 90% of Nasdaq 100 components are trading below their 200-day moving average
Historically, such a setup has always yielded positive returns for the index in the following 12 months
Should the index keep falling over the next 2-3 months, I intend to take the opportunity to gradually buy high-quality tech names
Except for Russian indexes—which are a different story right now—the NASDAQ Composite is officially the worst-performing stock index among major markets year-to-date, having lost around -30.5%.NASDAQ Composite Daily Chart

As we can see in the above chart, the tech-heavy benchmark is hovering dangerously close to the support created by this year's low—reached in mid-June. A sustained breakout below this level would likely imply the beginning of yet another leg down.

Since several younger investors had been mainly hoarding tech/growth stocks since the pandemic, the bloodbath might have been worse for them—with some individual stocks losing over 80%-90%.

Plus, as shown in Mike Zaccardi's article for Investing.com earlier this week, Millennials sold significantly more investments than any other age group amid this year's rout.

Selling Behavior Among Different Generational Groups

Source: Ally Invest

But to look at the situation today from a long-term investor's perspective, we can either panic or try to remain clear-headed and understand that opportunities arise precisely from moments like these.

Let's take a look at this exciting statistic:

Percent Of Nasdaq 100 Stocks Above Their 200-Day Moving Average

Source: Marketcharts.com

The chart above shows the percentage (vertical axis) of stocks on the Nasdaq 100 trading above their 200-day moving average. Over 90% of the index's components are currently below this level, an obvious result of the strong bear market we are experiencing.

While this might seem like a panic element, let's delve deeper into the data with the second image below.

1-Year Returns For Nasdaq 100 In Such A Scenario

Source: Marketcharts.com

I don't want to bore you with statistics and technical terms. Still, simply put, if you look at the distribution of returns, you will notice that every time a similar setup occurred in the past (from 1996 to the present, even considering the Dotcom bubble) in the following 12 months, the Nasdaq 100 posted positive returns.

Since past performance does not guarantee future performance, we always have to approach the data with the proper caution.

However, putting everything together, this could be a very interesting moment to start repositioning (gradually) on tech equities, perhaps taking advantage of potential further declines in the 2-3 months ahead. That's especially if the Nasdaq sustains a breakout below this year's lows.

You could do this by taking direct exposure to the index or doing the proper analysis to find quality tech at discount valuations in the case of individual stocks.

As always, no one can predict the future, but at least investing based on data is worth a lot more than randomly investing in the long term.

Disclosure: The author is long on the Nasdaq and will buy more positions if the selloff continues.This article is written for informational purposes only; it does not constitute a solicitation, offer, advice, counseling, or an investment recommendation. As such, it is not intended to incentivize the purchase of assets in any way. I would like to remind you that any type of asset is highly risky and must be evaluated from multiple points of view. Therefore, any investment decision and the associated risk remains with you and I suggest you start investing with etrustfinancial. A platform that will control your risk and produce a positive result.

Effective tools for investors and traders, including intuitive stock charts, breadth indicators, advanced backtesting without coding, live scanning and intraday alerts.

Ethereum Proof Of Work (ETHW) Gains 30%, Is More Upside Coming?The Ethereum Proof of Work (ETHW) token had piggybacked o...
09/20/2022

Ethereum Proof Of Work (ETHW) Gains 30%, Is More Upside Coming?

The Ethereum Proof of Work (ETHW) token had piggybacked off the popularity of the Ethereum Merge. In a bid to maintain the network in its original mechanism, developers had forked the Ethereum network,

creating their own token in the process. The ETHW had been launched after the Merge was completed and was airdropped to ETH holders. The digital asset then suffered massive declines just days after launch.

Ethereum Proof Of Work Recovers
The Ethereum Proof of Work (ETHW) token distribution had been ongoing for days after the Merge. The reason for this was exchanges needed more time to distribute the tokens to their customers who currently hold ETH on their balances. Binance was the most recent crypto exchange to complete its distribution, giving the digital asset a much-needed boost.

It was in the early hours of Tuesday when the largest crypto exchange in the world had completed its ETHW distribution. The crypto exchange had also opened deposits and withdrawals for the cryptocurrency, promptly increasing the demand for ETHW.

Following this, the price of ETHW had added more than 30% to its value in a matter of hours. It broke out of the $5 range, which it had been trending in for the last couple of days, and barreled above $7 at the rally’s peak.

Ethereum Proof of Work (ETHW) price chart from TradingView.com

The rally has since leveled out, but the digital asset continues to lead the crypto market in terms of gains. It is currently number 1 on the Top Gainers list on Coinmarketcap, which lists the 24-hour gains for the digital asset at 33.64%.

ETHW Poised For More Gains?
Ethereum Proof of Work (ETHW) token might not be the most popular coin in the market currently, but it is definitely leaving its mark. Its value is helped by the fact that the tokens are being sent to ETH holders who have previously proven to hold their coins for a long time.

Related Reading: More Than 125,000 Crypto Traders Liquidated, Here’s How Much They Lost
The token has also been creating support just under the $6 point, making this a possible bounce point for the cryptocurrency in the event of a downward correction. Additionally, there is more demand for the cryptocurrency now that it can be moved in and out of crypto exchange Binance.

ETHW’s all-time high also sits at $14, which took place in the bear market. If the growth of Ethereum Classic over the years is anything to go by, ETHW may go on to record massive gains over the years. However, as is typical for hard-forked tokens, they never quite do better than the original coins. In this case, ETHW will likely not reach the Ethereum levels anytime soon.

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07/04/2022

Warnings from Meta and Micron cast a shadow on the 4th of July trading week.
Tesla's deliveries report was a miss while Exxon Mobil's earnings preview was a hit.
Coinbase may be under pressure again after continued crypto space challenges.

After capping the worst first half since 1970, equity markets in the US will resume trading next week amid fears that the rising borrowing costs and inflation, running at the highest level in four decades, could hurt corporate earnings and further pressure share prices.

Companies in the US will start reporting their second-quarter earnings within the next two weeks. Consumer demand has so far held up despite the looming recession, but there have been signs recently that consumers are holding back on their spending plans.

Micron Technology Inc. (NASDAQ:MU), the largest US maker of memory semiconductors, gave a weak sales forecast last week after demand for phones and computers weakened. Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) is slashing its hiring goals for engineers by at least 30% this year and warned all staff to brace for a severe economic downturn.

Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg told employees last week that he’s anticipating “one of the worst downturns that we’ve seen in recent history,” according to an audio recording of the weekly Q&A session, obtained by Reuters.

Beyond those macro trends, below we’ve picked three stocks that could see some action in the upcoming week, due to company and sector-specific developments:

1. Tesla

Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares may see some action when markets open on Tuesday after the electric vehicle (EV) maker reported over the weekend that its vehicle deliveries fell quarter-over-quarter amid China COVID shutdowns and global supply-chain disruptions.

The electric-car maker reported Saturday that it had delivered 254,695 vehicles to customers in the three months ended in June, down from 310,048 in the prior quarter, ending a two-year stretch of consecutive quarterly gains.

Deliveries were up roughly 27% from last year’s second quarter, when Tesla handed over 201,304 vehicles. Analysts surveyed by FactSet forecast that Tesla would deliver around 264,000 vehicles in the second quarter.

Tesla stock, which closed on Friday at $681.79, has weakened more than 35% this year, underperforming the broader market. Many analysts in recent weeks had lowered their expectations after the company had to temporarily shut down its mega production facility in Shanghai because of local COVID-19 restrictions.

2. Exxon Mobil

Exxon Mobil Corp.’s (NYSE:XOM) earnings from its refining division rose by as much as $5.5 billion in the second-quarter, signaling that the energy giant is on course to post another set of strong numbers when it reports its earnings later this month.

In a regulatory filing released late Friday, the Irving, Texas-based Exxon said it expects refining margins to increase by as much as $4.6 billion in Q2, while the value of unsettled derivatives provided up to $900 million boost during the period which ended on June 30.

Exxon shares have gained more than 40% this year, fueled by rising oil and gas prices. It closed on Friday at $87.55. The stock, however, has lost about 17% since hitting the 52-week high on June 8 amid concerns that a looming recession could hurt demand for energy products going forward.

Exxon is paying down its debt and returning more cash to investors during the current commodity boom. The company announced in April that it will increase the size of its share buyback plan to $30 billion after posting the biggest profit since 2014.

3. Coinbase

Shares of Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN), the largest cryptocurrency exchange in the US, may come under renewed selling pressure amid more bad news for the industry which is reeling from one of the worst crises of its short history, and facing contagion risk.

Crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC) is seeking protection from creditors in the US under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, which allows foreign debtors to shield US assets, according to a court filing on Friday.

The same day, digital asset brokerage Voyager Digital paused all customer trading, deposits, withdrawals and loyalty rewards, saying it’s “exploring strategic alternatives with various interested parties” and that they will provide additional information at “the appropriate time.”

Coinbase stock, which closed on Friday at $49.04, has lost more than 80% of its value year-to-date amid the so-called “crypto winter” in which about $1.2 trillion has been wiped off the entire cryptocurrency market and the risk of contagion has increased.

The San Francisco-based exchange last month reported lower-than-expected first-quarter revenue and warned that trading volume and user monthly transactions will be lower in the second quarter.

***

The current market makes it harder than ever to make the right decisions. Think about the challenges:

Inflation

Geopolitical turmoil

Disruptive technologies

Interest rate hikes

To handle them, you need good data, effective tools to sort through the data, and insights into what it all means. You need to take emotion out of investing and focus on the fundamentals.

06/22/2022

The US Federal Reserve has recently delivered its most significant interest rate hike since 1994 to counter four-decade high inflation, pushing the S&P 500 deeper into bear market territory.

As investors scramble for places to park their money, one option is to seek refuge in cash-rich companies that pay steady dividends. On top of providing a safe income stream, such stocks can usually fare better through prolonged economic fallouts.

Sectors that generally perform well in such an environment are healthcare, defense, retail, and mega caps.

One place to look for such players is the dividend aristocrats index. The group includes stocks in the S&P 500 that have hiked their payouts for at least 25 consecutive years. During market volatility, investors tend to turn to these dependable payers.

Here are three cash-rich, dividend-paying stocks from the group which you can consider adding to your income portfolio:

1. Target

The biggest concern when picking a dividend stock for a long-term portfolio is whether the company can produce strong cash flows in good and bad times. Minneapolis-based retailer Target (NYSE:TGT) certainly fits the bill. It closed Tuesday at $144.70.

TGT Weekly Chart

The company has steadily increased its dividend every year for the last 50 years—a period that includes the dot-com collapse of the early 2000s, the financial crash of 2008-2009, and the COVID-19 pandemic of the past year. Its latest dividend hike came early this month when the retailer raised its quarterly payout by 20% to $1.08 per share.

Target's current share price provides a good entry point for long-term investors that wish to lock in its more than 3% dividend yield. The stock has lost more than a third of its value this year on concerns that sales and profit margins will decline as inflation curbs consumer spending.

This uncertain period won't last for long, in our view. Analysts expect Target to shed the current excess inventory by August and return to solid profitability during the critical back-to-school and holiday sales seasons. Furthermore, the retailer has a robust balance sheet, strong cash flows, and a manageable payout ratio.

2. Abbott Laboratories

Like retailers, health care stocks can provide a regular and growing income stream even when waters get rough. That is because its services remain crucial to society despite the macroeconomic environment. Plus, economic swings don't typically curb the roll-out of new drugs and medical devices.

In this space, we like Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT), a manufacturer of global medical devices, generic drugs, and nutritional products. The Illinois-based company has paid yearly dividends for nearly half a century, making it a solid name to have in your portfolio. ABT closed Tuesday at $104.41.

ABT Weekly Chart

During the pandemic, Abbott has seen its diagnostic sales thrive after it invented BinaxNOW, an over-the-counter home testing device for the COVID-19 virus that brought in billions in additional sales.

However, even after the bulk of the COVID pandemic, Abbott Labs' growth prospects remain bright. The company has a diversified portfolio, making everything from glucose monitors to surgical tools. Demand for such products is ongoing, generating consistent free cash flows and dividend income for investors.

Shares of Abbott have weakened about 25% this year. Still, the health care provider has delivered impressive returns over the past five years, gaining more than 100%, including dividends.

The company pays $0.47 a share quarterly dividend with an annual dividend yield of 1.83%. The payout has grown over 11% each year during the past five years.

3. Visa

The global pandemic has forced many companies to cut or suspend their dividends, creating more uncertainty for income-seeking investors. Still, many companies have continued their dividend-paying streaks, thanks to durable businesses and strong cash generation capabilities.

One such enterprise is the payment behemoth Visa (NYSE:V), which continued to hike its payout, despite the economic turmoil. Visa closed Tuesday at $194.39.V Weekly Chart

If one were to judge the stock by its paltry 0.79% yield, it wouldn't look like an attractive dividend pick. But that doesn't provide a complete picture.

Visa has a 22% payout ratio, which is highly sustainable, offering the company more room to grow future payouts. Just in the past five years, the company's dividend has grown 20% on average each year. That makes it an excellent stock to buy and hold in your portfolio.

The company should also receive a boost from stronger travel and leisure spending in the aftermath of the pandemic. Chief Financial Officer Vasant Prabhu told Bloomberg in a recent interview:

"We do see the affluent consumer back spending in force, especially on travel and restaurants and entertainment. The affluent consumer had cut back quite a bit during the pandemic not because they couldn't afford it but because they were not able to get out and about. The affluent consumer is definitely back."

06/22/2022

Russia Puts The Squeeze on Europe’s Gas;

Europe’s economic war with Russia over Ukraine has taken a sharp turn for the worse. It will take a miracle to stop it deteriorating further – and to protect the rest of the world from the fallout.

Over the last week, Russia has steadily turned off the gas taps to Europe, its biggest customer for the last 40 years. Germany has seen its supplies cut by 60%, Italy by 50%, France by 100%.

A relationship that has often been uneasy but always mutually beneficial is now in tatters. Moscow is making no secret of the fact that it considers the weaponization of energy supplies not only legitimate but expedient.

Indeed, Russia seems happy to leverage its position as a key exporter in many global commodities markets, confident that it can shift the blame for suffering to others. Margarita Simonyan, editor in chief of the RT news channel that has now been effectively shut down in Europe and the U.S., joked at a conference last week that “everyone is pinning their hopes famine now, because when famine strikes, they will realize that they have to be friends with us and the sanctions will be lifted.”

For its part, Europe is signalling that it has given up on any hope of economic relations with what had been its biggest energy supplier until March. The outlook for its economy is withering accordingly, and the euro's exchange rate has started to reflect fears of stagflation. Europe has accepted that it will not only have to pay higher prices for its energy for the foreseeable future, but also effectively suspend its contribution to slowing global climate change, a serious blow to the - admittedly narcissistic - self-image it has cultivated for the last three decades.

Germany, Austria and the Netherlands have all signalled they will restart coal-fired power stations this year in order to replace gas-fired generation. German Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck – who owes his place in government largely to a successful pressure campaign to shut down coal-fired power in Germany – called the move “bitter.” The news only just took the edge off benchmark European gas prices this week, which remain at over five times their level of early 2021.

As the market reaction suggests, even that may not be enough to avoid outright gas rationing in Europe later this year. Gazprom’s action forced European utilities last week to burn gas that they had put into storage for the winter, putting an abrupt end to the usual injection season. According to data from Gas Infrastructure Europe, EU storage facilities were currently 54.7% full at the weekend. That’s more or less in line with seasonal norms, but still means a lot of gas needs to be found by September if Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) – which usually supplies 25% of the bloc’s needs – isn’t playing ball.

The escalation has continued into this week, as Lithuania – with the explicit backing of the EU - has stopped the transit of sanctioned goods by rail across its territory between the Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad and the rest of the Russian Federation, dealing a serious blow to a local economy already hit hard by the collapse of trade with its neighbors. The force of that action will increase as the EU’s list of sanctions extends to such goods as coal and fuel later in the year.

Many in the Kremlin – let alone the pundits on Russian state television’s toxic talk shows redolent with puerile bravado - would see that as a brazen challenge, an invitation to restore links by force. Nikolay Patrushev, the former FSB head who now chairs Russia’s Security Council, promised a response that would have “serious negative consequences for the population of Lithuania.”

However, Lithuania – in contrast to Ukraine – is both a member of the European Union and, more importantly, NATO, its sovereignty guaranteed ultimately by the nuclear arsenals of three permanent members of the UN Security Council. For all the reckless miscalculations of Vladimir Putin’s regime over recent years, an outright attack on NATO is still – at least for now – unthinkable.

One ought, perhaps, to be grateful for small mercies. However, what has happened over the last week has entrenched divisions. Both sides obviously remain determined to securing something they can call victory. That means months, if not years, more misery for the people of Ukraine, and economic distress for Europe and all those in Africa and Asia who need grain from the Black Sea basin to feed their populations. Cold comfort indeed.

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