Gold World News Flash |
- Gold’s Fundamental Role In The Financial System
- Contrarian Investors Take Note: Extreme Low of Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index Screams BUY! Here?s Why
- Gold Bearish Triangle Nearing Terminus
- 65 Year Old Video Says Gold Is ‘Good Money'
- “It’s Spreading”: US Census Reports Nearly 100 Million Poor in America; Worst Conditions in Fifty Years
- Andrew Hepburn: Market rigging by central banks is gaining respectability
- Embry expects gold shortage to manifest itself soon
- Silver Update 7/23/12 Loco London
- Gold Continues To Move Towards The Financial System
- Time To Get To Work
- Smashing The Can Instead Of Kicking It Down The Road
- 65 Year Old Video Says Gold Is 'Good Money'
- The Gold Price Closed Only $2.60 off it's High Never Stumbling Out of it's Triangle
- Financial Markets Forecasting is Looking Bleak
- Rising U.S. Dollar Forces Bernankeâs Hand
- U.S. Dollar Danger Threatens Gold as Euro Hits 2-Yr Low
- Spain the Latest Domino to Fall Into the Eurozone Bailouts?
- Euro Meltdown to Force Central Banks to Sell Gold
- Sigtarp: “Americans Should Lose Faith In Their Government ... Only With This Appropriate and Justified Rage Can We Hope
- Summer Shopping Opportunities for Mining Equities Abound: Rick Mills
- Embry - Expect Shortages Of Gold As Soon As Next Month
- Moody's Changes Aaa-Rated Germany, Netherlands, Luxembourg Outlook To Negative
- Gold Market Update - July 23, 2012
- Silver Market Update - July 23, 2012
- In The News Today
- Same Old Same Old As VIX Dips, EUR Rips, And Equities BTFDs
- Money Is Technology!
- Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - A War On Silver and Gold
- Gold Seeker Closing Report: Gold and Silver End Modestly Lower
Gold’s Fundamental Role In The Financial System Posted: 24 Jul 2012 01:05 AM PDT By Vin Maru It is currently estimated that the largest 110 central banks have 16% of their reserves as gold. Anyone who follows the gold market knows that many central banks have become net buyers of gold in the last few years, and the pace of accumulation seems to be growing. While central banks continue [...] |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 11:58 PM PDT *Some of the most rewarding set ups in investing come when extremes have been reached. Currently the Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index has dropped to 7.14% – an extreme reading, one rarely ever seen, and not since the panic drop in March of 2009. Following that signal, GDX rallied for the next 2½ years increasing over 4 times in value. As such,*a move up in the Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index from these historically low levels could signal another major move in gold mining stocks….[Let me explain further.] Words: 1078 So says Christopher Wallace in an article* originally posted on Seeking Alpha. [INDENT] Lorimer Wilson, editor of [B][COLOR=#0000ff]www.munKNEE.com (Your Key to Making Money!) and www.FinancialArticleSummariesToday.com (A site for sore eyes and inquisitive minds) has edited the article below for length and clarity see Editor's Note at the bottom of the page. This paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.[/C... |
Gold Bearish Triangle Nearing Terminus Posted: 23 Jul 2012 11:32 PM PDT courtesy of DailyFX.com July 23, 2012 02:36 PM Daily Bars Prepared by Jamie Saettele, CMT If a triangle is unfolding from the May low, then the range will tighten for perhaps another few weeks or more before the break. “Gold has oscillated on both sides on 1600 since May 2011. This length of consolidation will probably fuel an impressive break…eventually. The sideways trading from the May 2012 low is taking on the form of a head and shoulders continuation pattern (bearish) but a break below 1548 is needed to confirm. Exceeding 1641 would shift focus to 1671 (May high).” LEVELS: 1526 1548 1554 1600 1611 1625... |
65 Year Old Video Says Gold Is ‘Good Money' Posted: 23 Jul 2012 10:43 PM PDT [Ed. Note: Thanks to Tyler and the gang at Zero Hedge for pulling this SGTreport video from the archives and re-posting it on our favorite alt media financial web site.] from Zero Hedge: From spearheads to shells, this Government-issued 1947 film "Know Your Money" explains that "none of these met all the requirements of good money"… From such trying historical experience, Gold and Silver emerged as the most durable, most convenient, and most satisfactory money. Luckily, governments took over the management of good money and saved us all the bother of worrying about credibility… Watch and remember WHY we stack PHYSICAL precious metals. |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 10:30 PM PDT by Mac Slavo, SHTFPlan: It's bad out there. Really bad. As world leaders finally begin to admit that we are smack dab in the middle of another Great Depression and the economy stands at the cusp of another earth-shaking collapse of the financial system, the US census reports that nearly 100 million Americans are now classified as living in poverty or are considered "near poor." That's nearly 1/3 of our populace who are living in the worst economic conditions in nearly fifty years.
|
Andrew Hepburn: Market rigging by central banks is gaining respectability Posted: 23 Jul 2012 09:36 PM PDT 11:30p ET Monday, July 23, 2012 Dear Friend of GATA and Gold: Writing again for the Canadian magazine Macleans, sometime GATA researcher Andrew Hepburn argues that it wouldn't have been so odd for the Bank of England to intervene surreptitiously with the LIBOR interest rate reports of Barclays Bank, since central banks lately have been intervening, both openly and surreptitously, all over the place, and since academic rationales for more and more market rigging by central banks are gaining respectability. Hepburn's commentary is headlined "Why the Idea of the Bank of England Tampering with LIBOR Isn't as Crazy as You Think" and it's posted at Macleans here: http://www2.macleans.ca/2012/07/23/why-the-idea-of-the-bank-of-england-t... CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer ADVERTISEMENT Sona Discovers Potential High-Grade Gold Mineralization From a Company Press Release VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- With its latest surface diamond drilling program at its 100-percent-owned, formerly producing Blackdome gold mine in southern British Columbia, Sona Resources Corp. has discovered a potentially high-grade gold-mineralized area, with one hole intersecting 13.6 grams of gold in 1.5 meters of core drilling. "We intersected a promising new mineralized zone, and we feel optimistic about the assay results," says Sona's president and CEO, John P. Thompson. "We have undertaken an aggressive exploration program that has tested a number of target zones. Our discovery of this new gold-bearing structure is significant, and it represents a positive development for the company." Sona aims to bring its permitted Blackdome mill back into production over the next year and a half, at a rate of 200 tonnes per day, with feed from the formerly producing Blackdome mine and the nearby Elizabeth gold deposit property. A positive preliminary economic assessment by Micon International Ltd., based on a gold price of $950 per ounce over eight years, has estimated a cash cost of $208 per tonne milled, or $686 per gold ounce recovered. For the company's complete press release, please visit: http://www.sonaresources.com/_resources/news/SONA_NR18_2011-opt.pdf Join GATA here: Toronto Resource Investment Conference New Orleans Investment Conference * * * Support GATA by purchasing DVDs of our London conference in August 2011 or our Dawson City conference in August 2006: http://www.goldrush21.com/order.html Or by purchasing a colorful GATA T-shirt: Or a colorful poster of GATA's full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal on January 31, 2009: http://gata.org/node/wallstreetjournal Help keep GATA going GATA is a civil rights and educational organization based in the United States and tax-exempt under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Its e-mail dispatches are free, and you can subscribe at: To contribute to GATA, please visit: ADVERTISEMENT Prophecy Platinum Announces Wellgreen Preliminary Economic Assessment: Company Press Release VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Canada -- Prophecy Platinum Corp. (TSX-V: NKL, OTC-QX: PNIKF, Frankfurt: P94P) reports the results of an independent NI 43-101-compliant preliminary economic assessment for its fully owned Wellgreen nickel-copper-platinum group metals project in the Yukon Territory. The independent assessment, prepared by Tetra Tech, evaluated a base case of an open-pit mine (with a mining rate of 111,500 tonnes per day), an on-site concentrator (with a milling rate of 32,000 tonnes per day), and an initial capital cost of $863 million. The project is expected to produce (in concentrate) 1.959 billion pounds of nickel, 2.058 billion pounds of copper, and 7.119 million ounces of platinum, palladium, and gold during a mine life of 37 years with an average strip ratio of 2.57. The financial highlights of the preliminary economic assessment, shown in U.S. dollars, are as follows: Payback period: 3.55 years Prophecy Chairman John Lee says: "We are pleased with the preliminary economic assessment results. The numbers indicate that Wellgreen is one of most exciting mineral projects in the Yukon. The company is drilling to upgrade and expand the resource base. The infrastructure is excellent as the project is only 1,400 meters in altitude and 14 kilometers from the paved Alaska Highway, which leads to the Haines deep seaport. Discussions are under way with support from local stakeholders regarding permitting and logistics." For the complete press release, please visit: http://prophecyplat.com/news_2012_june18_prophecy_platinum_announces_res... |
Embry expects gold shortage to manifest itself soon Posted: 23 Jul 2012 09:27 PM PDT 11:25p ET Monday, July 23, 2012 Dear Friend of GATA and Gold: Sprott Asset Management's John Embry tells King World News he expects a shortage of gold to develop, perhaps as soon as next month, and overcome the manipulation of the futures markets and renew gold's ascent. An excerpt from the interview is posted at the King World News blog here: http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2012/7/23_Em... CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer ADVERTISEMENT Sona Discovers Potential High-Grade Gold Mineralization From a Company Press Release VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- With its latest surface diamond drilling program at its 100-percent-owned, formerly producing Blackdome gold mine in southern British Columbia, Sona Resources Corp. has discovered a potentially high-grade gold-mineralized area, with one hole intersecting 13.6 grams of gold in 1.5 meters of core drilling. "We intersected a promising new mineralized zone, and we feel optimistic about the assay results," says Sona's president and CEO, John P. Thompson. "We have undertaken an aggressive exploration program that has tested a number of target zones. Our discovery of this new gold-bearing structure is significant, and it represents a positive development for the company." Sona aims to bring its permitted Blackdome mill back into production over the next year and a half, at a rate of 200 tonnes per day, with feed from the formerly producing Blackdome mine and the nearby Elizabeth gold deposit property. A positive preliminary economic assessment by Micon International Ltd., based on a gold price of $950 per ounce over eight years, has estimated a cash cost of $208 per tonne milled, or $686 per gold ounce recovered. For the company's complete press release, please visit: http://www.sonaresources.com/_resources/news/SONA_NR18_2011-opt.pdf Join GATA here: Toronto Resource Investment Conference New Orleans Investment Conference * * * Support GATA by purchasing DVDs of our London conference in August 2011 or our Dawson City conference in August 2006: http://www.goldrush21.com/order.html Or by purchasing a colorful GATA T-shirt: Or a colorful poster of GATA's full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal on January 31, 2009: http://gata.org/node/wallstreetjournal Help keep GATA going GATA is a civil rights and educational organization based in the United States and tax-exempt under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Its e-mail dispatches are free, and you can subscribe at: To contribute to GATA, please visit: ADVERTISEMENT Prophecy Platinum Announces Wellgreen Preliminary Economic Assessment: Company Press Release VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Canada -- Prophecy Platinum Corp. (TSX-V: NKL, OTC-QX: PNIKF, Frankfurt: P94P) reports the results of an independent NI 43-101-compliant preliminary economic assessment for its fully owned Wellgreen nickel-copper-platinum group metals project in the Yukon Territory. The independent assessment, prepared by Tetra Tech, evaluated a base case of an open-pit mine (with a mining rate of 111,500 tonnes per day), an on-site concentrator (with a milling rate of 32,000 tonnes per day), and an initial capital cost of $863 million. The project is expected to produce (in concentrate) 1.959 billion pounds of nickel, 2.058 billion pounds of copper, and 7.119 million ounces of platinum, palladium, and gold during a mine life of 37 years with an average strip ratio of 2.57. The financial highlights of the preliminary economic assessment, shown in U.S. dollars, are as follows: Payback period: 3.55 years Prophecy Chairman John Lee says: "We are pleased with the preliminary economic assessment results. The numbers indicate that Wellgreen is one of most exciting mineral projects in the Yukon. The company is drilling to upgrade and expand the resource base. The infrastructure is excellent as the project is only 1,400 meters in altitude and 14 kilometers from the paved Alaska Highway, which leads to the Haines deep seaport. Discussions are under way with support from local stakeholders regarding permitting and logistics." For the complete press release, please visit: http://prophecyplat.com/news_2012_june18_prophecy_platinum_announces_res... |
Silver Update 7/23/12 Loco London Posted: 23 Jul 2012 09:11 PM PDT |
Gold Continues To Move Towards The Financial System Posted: 23 Jul 2012 08:51 PM PDT |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 06:51 PM PDT My Dear Friends, I am allowed to be tired at times so here are two briefs. Gold: All the funds required to meet state and federal insolvencies will be produced here and there. Since the insolvencies are coming fast, so is QE to infinity with lots of spin and MOPE. The price of gold Continue reading Time To Get To Work |
Smashing The Can Instead Of Kicking It Down The Road Posted: 23 Jul 2012 06:18 PM PDT Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com “No, absolutely not,” said European Central Bank President Mario Draghi when asked if the euro was in danger. “The euro is irreversible,” he added just as a whiff of panic began sweeping over the Eurozone. Everybody was supposed to enjoy their long vacation, and nothing important was supposed to happen. But, like a group of disruptive homeless guys, the ECB, the International Monetary Fund, and politicians have apparently gotten tired of kicking the Greek bailout can down the road, and they stomped on it instead. Last week it was the ECB; it announced that it would no longer accept Greek government bonds as collateral, thus cutting Greek banks off from ECB funding. They will now be dependent on Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) by the Bank of Greece, an unsustainable, risky measure. Over the weekend, word seeped out that the IMF, having lost patience with Greece’s stalled reform efforts, would be unwilling to contribute more funds to the bailout. A huge blow. Vigorous denial by the IMF? Nope. On Monday, it only said tepidly that it would be “supporting Greece in overcoming its economic difficulties.” Inspectors of the Troika—the EU, the ECB, and the IMF—are trundling into Athens today for meetings and inspections starting on Tuesday. Their final report will be the basis for the Troika’s decision in September to make the next bailout payment, or to let go. Politicians appear to be holding off on their final judgment until then. But they’re talking—and it doesn’t look good for Greece. Its demands to renegotiate the agreed-upon reform measures and then to delay their implementation has hit a wall of resistance. “We won’t agree to any substantive change of the agreements we made,” said German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle. Economics Minister Philipp Rösler was “more than skeptical” that Greece could work out its problems. But any decision would have to wait for the final Troika report. “If Greece cannot meet the stipulations, then there won’t be any more payments,” he said. Greece would have to default, which might encourage it to leave the Eurozone. But no big deal: “Greece’s exit has long ago lost its scariness,” he said. Giorgos Papakonstantinou, Greek Finance Minister from October 2009 until he was replaced by Evangelos Venizelos in June 2011, doubted the abilities of the Greek government to deal with the challenges and was “not optimistic“ that it could remain in power much longer. Even the Big Kahuna, who is on vacation, and who’d pushed for these serial bailouts though they put deep rifts into her coalition government, lost patience with Greece. It leaked out that Chancellor Angela Merkel considered it “unthinkable” for her to beg the Bundestag for a third bailout package. And a third bailout package would be required if Greece’s demands for watering down the reforms and for delaying their implementation were met—they’d raise the costs by an additional €30 to €50 billion. The next opportunity for Greece to default is August 20, when it has to pay the ECB €3.8 billion, which it doesn’t have. As Greece’s debt is now mostly held by public institutions, including the ECB, a default would cost taxpayers outside Greece dearly. Requests for emergency funding have fallen on deaf ears. So Greece could try to sell three- or six-month bills at astronomical rates, but most likely, the ECB will find a way to keep it afloat until a political decision has been made in September. With Spain under fire, and with Italy—and thus the Eurozone as a whole—at risk, the perception is growing that the Eurozone might be stronger if it scuttled its leakiest ship. The surprise factor has long been wrung out of the system. Markets are ready. After a bit of chaos, there might even be relief. And that perception, if it gains the upper hand, will seal Greece’s fate. Now the strategy is to prevent contagion. The temporary EFSF bailout fund is too small. What is needed is the larger firewall that the “permanent” ESM bailout fund will provide, once operational. Hence the enormous pressure on the German Constitutional Court to wrap up its review of the ESM and nod it through by September 12 [read.... Euro Desperation: German Justices already Buckled under Political Pressure]. By getting the Greek default over with, politicians and the Troika could focus on bailing out Spain. Unlike Greece, Spain is critical to the survival of the euro—and after Spain there is Italy, whose debt is huge, and even the ESM won’t be able to bail it out. All that remains is hope that contagion somehow stops before it gets to Italy. Hope, or a treaty change that would allow the ECB to buy sovereign bonds on a massive scale and bail out banks directly. The whole debt crisis would be over. To be replaced by a crisis of a different and more pernicious sort. Unlikely that the “northern” Eurozone countries would go for that. But, but, but.... There are opportunities in Europe: mining. Europeans have a long history of it, yet dealing with regulations and eco-friendly groups has driven countries to switch to importing resources. Now record joblessness has refocused political agendas because mines can employ a lot of people! For investors, that’s exciting news. Read... Profiting from Europe’s New Gold Rush. And here is yours truly in a conversation with Max Keiser on the Keiser Report, discussing bubbles, central banks, the Eurozone, NIRP, and “stupidity arbitrage” (video, aired over the weekend). |
65 Year Old Video Says Gold Is 'Good Money' Posted: 23 Jul 2012 06:01 PM PDT From spearheads to shells, this Government-issue 1947 "Know Your Money" clip explains that "none of these met all the requirements of good money". From such trying historical experience, Gold and Silver emerged as the most durable, most convenient, and most satisfactory money. Luckily, governments took over the management of good money and saved us all the bother of worrying about credibility...
(h/t Nihilarian) |
The Gold Price Closed Only $2.60 off it's High Never Stumbling Out of it's Triangle Posted: 23 Jul 2012 05:30 PM PDT Gold Price Close Today : 1577.10 Change : -5.40 or -0.34% Silver Price Close Today : 2701.9 Change : -26.0 or -0.95% Gold Silver Ratio Today : 58.370 Change : 0.358 or 0.62% Silver Gold Ratio Today : 0.01713 Change : -0.000106 or -0.61% Platinum Price Close Today : 1396.50 Change : -23.40 or -1.65% Palladium Price Close Today : 569.70 Change : -15.35 or -2.62% S&P 500 : 1,350.52 Change : -12.14 or -0.89% Dow In GOLD$ : $166.75 Change : $ (0.73) or -0.44% Dow in GOLD oz : 8.066 Change : -0.036 or -0.44% Dow in SILVER oz : 470.83 Change : 0.78 or 0.17% Dow Industrial : 12,721.46 Change : -101.11 or -0.79% US Dollar Index : 83.77 Change : 0.880 or 1.06% The GOLD PRICE took a left to the jaw, but came back pretty well (Am I saying the same thing those stock gurus are saying? Have I completely lost my mind? I probably have.) Low came at $1,563.61, high at $1,579.74, but gold closed only $2.60 off its high, ending at $1,577.10, down on the day $5.40. Today's low carried the GOLD PRICE all the way to the bottom boundary of that even-sided triangle we have been eternally watching, but it bounced clean back up to the middle of the range. Okay, Moneychanger, how is that different from what stocks did today? Plainly in this wise: Stocks dropped THROUGH their rising wedge's bottom boundary. True, they closed back up within the wedge, but only barely. Gold never stumbled out of its triangle. The SILVER PRICE repeated gold's performance, and I call both of those successful tests. Stocks didn't rank the same in my eyes. Hope I'm not just talking my position, in preparation for having my head handed to me on a platter. Silver's low came today at 2666 cents about 8:30 but it spent the next 3-1/2 hours climbing up to 2717c. Afterward it gave back a little, but only levelled off above 2700c. Comex silver lost 26 cents to end at 2701.9c. This sideways-to-lower times are about as comfortable as walking on sharp gravel barefooted. I know that, but it's summertime and the world's economies and fiat currencies are coming apart. You have to expect a little confusion under those circumstances. I am not worried, silver and gold will yet vindicate themselves, and I don't expect we will see lower prices that we have already seen this year. Keep your eyes on the horizon, not on the potholes. Nothing has changed. Silver and gold remain in a bull market. Just to set the record straight with all the possibilities and to de-calumniate the Nice Government Men from any of my wrongful accusations, it is certainly possible that those sudden spike-up/spike-down could be caused by hedge fund computerized program trading. They set the program to trade certain percentage moves, and if those occur, the computer automatically enters the trade. So it might not be NGM alone spiking the gold market. They may be getting help from computerized trading. Of course, that does NOT say they do not manipulate the gold market, as that manipulation is plainly attested by statute, statutory mandate, and policy. See the "Exchange Stabilization Fund" in the 1935 Gold Reserve Act. French and German stock markets dropped nearly 3% today on fresh (?stale) worries that Spain may need a bailout, which, of course, is impossible given its size. Ten year Spanish government bond yields hit 7.5% while Spain's stock market regulator banned all short selling for three months. Italy followed suit, but with a shorter ban. Fear slopped over into US stock markets, but most interesting was that the US treasury yields touched record lows. Hard to pick a top in that market, but sometime here US treasuries will either absorb all the money in the world, or their price will peak and they will drop (remember, bonds move opposite to their yields, so higher bonds mean lower yields). The gigantic belly laugh in all this, if you like Gallows Humor, is that the US dollar and yankee government debt are being called "safe havens." Safe from what? From default? Nope, that's happened several times in US history. From inflation? Not since 1913. I may be a natural born fool, but Thunderation! I ain't durned fool enough to believe a proposition THAT stupid. If you think the Dow down 0.79% (101.11 points) at 12,721.46, or the S&P down 0.89% (12.14 points) at 1,350.52 is bad, you should have seen them at the lows, down a meaty 2.8%. Those Nice Government Men must have had a brain-busting day, bringing the Dow back from 360 points down. Listen, there's more Looney-dom in the air. Commentators and gurus are bragging about how much the indices came back during the day. Folks, if you got to brag about something like that, you got nothing to brag about. Like one wino bragging to another that his rags are better than the other winos. These people must think we are REALLY dumb. US dollar index rose 88 basis points or 1.06% from Friday's close. High came at 83.99. However, 'tain't all it seems. On the long term chart that only took the US dollar to the top boundary of its trading range stretching back to the end of 2011. Yes, the dollar MIGHT break through that channel line and run for 90, but it hasn't done yet, and the rule says sell the top of the channel and buy the bottom. Personally, I can't imagine that international criminal Bloviating Ben Bernanke going home early tonight, not without calling his co-conspirators in the other central banks and making plans to keep the dollar from rising sunward and the euro from sinking earthward. In other words, tomorrow would be a good time for some announcements timed to knock the dollar in the head and boost the euro. Owch. Speaking of the euro, it lost another 0.33% today to end at ANOTHER new low, $1.2118. Yen actually poked it's little noggin through the downtrend line, and ended up 0.17% at 127.58c (Y78.38). Something about the terrible shooting in Aurora Colorado I just can't swallow. Almost always it comes out later in the small type that the shooter was on some anti-depressant, but this whole play, with the utterly unlikely shooter, looks like a genuine Manchurian Candidate operation. Argentum et aurum comparenda sunt -- -- Gold and silver must be bought. - Franklin Sanders, The Moneychanger The-MoneyChanger.com 1-888-218-9226 10:00am-5:00pm CST, Monday-Friday © 2012, The Moneychanger. May not be republished in any form, including electronically, without our express permission. To avoid confusion, please remember that the comments above have a very short time horizon. Always invest with the primary trend. Gold's primary trend is up, targeting at least $3,130.00; silver's primary is up targeting 16:1 gold/silver ratio or $195.66; stocks' primary trend is down, targeting Dow under 2,900 and worth only one ounce of gold; US$ or US$-denominated assets, primary trend down; real estate bubble has burst, primary trend down. WARNING AND DISCLAIMER. Be advised and warned: Do NOT use these commentaries to trade futures contracts. I don't intend them for that or write them with that short term trading outlook. I write them for long-term investors in physical metals. Take them as entertainment, but not as a timing service for futures. NOR do I recommend investing in gold or silver Exchange Trade Funds (ETFs). Those are NOT physical metal and I fear one day one or another may go up in smoke. Unless you can breathe smoke, stay away. Call me paranoid, but the surviving rabbit is wary of traps. NOR do I recommend trading futures options or other leveraged paper gold and silver products. These are not for the inexperienced. NOR do I recommend buying gold and silver on margin or with debt. What DO I recommend? Physical gold and silver coins and bars in your own hands. One final warning: NEVER insert a 747 Jumbo Jet up your nose. No, I don't. |
Financial Markets Forecasting is Looking Bleak Posted: 23 Jul 2012 05:08 PM PDT I hope you had a great summer weekend. This week could be a huge one for stocks and commodities. This morning the dollar index is taking another run at our weekly chart resistance level. If it can break out and start to rally this week then a possible 4-6 week sell off in stocks and commodities may be just starting. |
Rising U.S. Dollar Forces Bernankeâs Hand Posted: 23 Jul 2012 05:04 PM PDT Could it be that world governments and central banks are now taking drastic measures to re-inflate their economies because they don’t believe their own economic statistics? For example, China reported that GDP growth came in at 7.6% last quarter. That’s slower growth, but still not so bad. However, China’s electricity consumption has slowed much faster than growth in official GDP (electricity generation was unchanged in June from a year earlier at 393.4 billion kilowatt-hours), when they normally move in tandem. Turning to the U.S., the Labor Department announced last week that initial jobless claims fell 26k to 350k. Sounds great…but wait. Digging into the unadjusted data, there was actually an increase of 69,971 claims for the week—an increase of 19% from the week prior. Now that’s some seasonal adjustment! |
U.S. Dollar Danger Threatens Gold as Euro Hits 2-Yr Low Posted: 23 Jul 2012 04:59 PM PDT WHOLESALE gold bullion prices fell to $1569 an ounce during Monday morning's London trading – 0.9% off Friday's close – as stocks, commodities and the Euro also traded lower and US Treasuries gained, following news that two Spanish regions plan to ask for bailouts. Silver bullion fell to $26.88 an ounce – a 1.9% drop on where it ended Friday. |
Spain the Latest Domino to Fall Into the Eurozone Bailouts? Posted: 23 Jul 2012 04:44 PM PDT |
Euro Meltdown to Force Central Banks to Sell Gold Posted: 23 Jul 2012 04:39 PM PDT |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 04:23 PM PDT The Special Inspector General for Tarp Issues a Wakeup Call … Lambasts the Government and the BanksThe government’s special inspector general in charge of oversight of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (the “TARP” bank bailouts) – Neil M. Barofsky – wrote a stunning editorial for Bloomberg yesterday, concluding:
See this for background. This is not the statement of a raving blogger (although some of the best reporters write blogs) or a conspiracy theorist living in his mom’s basement (even though some conspiracies are real). This is the former government official who oversaw the bailouts.
|
Summer Shopping Opportunities for Mining Equities Abound: Rick Mills Posted: 23 Jul 2012 03:31 PM PDT The Gold Report: Prices of the mining equities were languishing when we spoke in January, particularly precious metals equities, and we've had little respite since then. But you foresee potential for a bullish resurgence in gold equities. What's your rationale behind that outlook? Rick Mills: I believe we're going to see higher levels of inflation. We're going through a deflationary bout now because most of the money issued by the Federal Reserve is actually parked at the Fed. It isn't out there being spent, so it's not causing inflation. It's basically just propping up the banks. When the banks start lending and when the money gets into circulation, we'll see increased levels of inflation and, of course, that will be good for gold. [INDENT] Related Articles: Derisking Gold Juniors, Step by Step: Rick Mills How to Minimize Risk and Increase Returns on Juniors: Joe Mazumdar Gold Producers in the Catbird Seat: Jay Taylor [/INDENT]TGR: Lack of access to capital for small business d... |
Embry - Expect Shortages Of Gold As Soon As Next Month Posted: 23 Jul 2012 03:10 PM PDT ![]() Embry, who is Chief Investment Strategist of the $10 billion strong Sprott Asset Management, also discussed Europe, but first, here is what Embry had to say about the drought and inflation: "I am very concerned about this drought that is happening, particularly in the United States. You look at a weather map in the Midwestern United States, the temperatures are just staggeringly hot and there's no moisture." This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Moody's Changes Aaa-Rated Germany, Netherlands, Luxembourg Outlook To Negative Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:57 PM PDT In a first for Moody's, the rating agency, traditionally about a month after Egan Jones (whose rationale and burdensharing text was virtually copied by Moody's: here and here), has decided to cut Europe's untouchable core, while still at Aaa, to Outlook negative, in the process implicitly downgrading Germany, Netherlands and Luxembourg, and putting them in line with Austria and France which have been on a negative outlook since February 13, 2012.The only good news goes to Finland, whose outlook is kept at stable for one simple reason: the country's attempts to collateralize its European bailout exposure, a move which will now be copied by all the suddenly more precarious core European countries. From the report: Moody's changes the outlook to negative on Germany, Netherlands, Luxembourg and affirms Finland's Aaa stable rating |
Gold Market Update - July 23, 2012 Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:56 PM PDT Clive Maund Most would be investors and speculators in the Precious Metals sector at this time look and behave like the raw recruits at the start of the film [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Officer_and_a_Gentleman"]An Officer and a Gentlemen[/ame] - listless and muttering pathetically "This might not be the bottom - it could go down again" - so listen up you 'orrible lot and pull yourselves together - by the time you are done reading this you are expected to have cleaned yourselves up, straightened yourselves out and be ready for action - and insubordination will not be tolerated. Now that I've got your attention we will start by looking at the 3-year chart for gold. On this chart we can see that following the peak attained last August, gold has been consolidating/reacting in some sort of triangular pattern. Some see this pattern as a bearish Descending Triangle and a top area. There are various reasons why this is not thought to be so. One is that there has been... |
Silver Market Update - July 23, 2012 Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:53 PM PDT Clive Maund Silver investors and speculators are amongst the manic-depressive you can possibly find in the investment world. When they are playing maximum credits on the slots and passing round boxes of cuban cigars and taking out massive loans to buy Ferraris and Lambos you know it's time to watch out. When they retreat into the shadows, only coming out to hurl themselves off bridges and other tall structures, mumbling about the "cartel" as they plummet earthwards, you know it's getting time to buy - and that is the situation we now find ourselves in. In this update we are going to examine evidence which suggests that, despite the fragile looking price pattern, silver is going to turn surprisingly strong in short order, or alternatively, if it does break down, it turns out to be a false move that is swiftly followed by a dramatic recovery. On its 3-year chart we can see that silver has been severely testing its key support at and above its September and December lows in ... |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:37 PM PDT Jim Sinclair's Commentary Why would that surprise anybody? In PFG Scandal, JPMorgan Chase Had Surprising Role: It Held Customer Accounts Posted: 07/12/2012 1:11 pm Updated: 07/12/2012 2:59 pm The investigation into the collapse of Iowa brokerage firm Peregrine Financial Group is notable for one name that has not yet turned up: JPMorgan Chase. JPMorgan, Continue reading In The News Today |
Same Old Same Old As VIX Dips, EUR Rips, And Equities BTFDs Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:33 PM PDT UPDATE: TXN misses and guides down:For the third quarter of 2012, TXN expects:
VIX opened north of 20%, traded to 20.49%, and then it was decided that this level of premium over a recent calm realized vol period is too much and the front-end of the volatility market was crushed over 2 vols lower. While VIX closed up 2.3vols at 18.6%, the sell-off into Europe's close recovered handsomely on low volume leak back up to VWAP (thanks to HYG and VXX's stability) and then an afternoon push to last Monday's close before giving most of the afternoon gains back in a few mins after the cash close. The EUR dip-and-rip, the stick-save in the S&P whenever it tumbles with any kind of velocity, the fearless selling of short-dated vol, juxtaposes the general state of safe-haven seeking in Treasuries (and Swiss/German bonds) as the entire TSY curve saw record closing low yields amid a 3bps flattening at the long-end. Equity volume was meh, average trade size was meh - though as cash closed near day-session highs we saw heavy blocks selling, and ES traded between its 61.8% and 50% retracements of the March-to-June swoon. Broad risk assets did not play along with stocks this afternoon (though equities and gold recoupled) and neither did TRIN which remained very flat all day. The USD ended stronger by 0.2% (in line with EUR weakness) but SEK was the day's best major performer as AUD lagged (down 1% against the USD today). Volatility pulled plenty cheap to equities once again which remain notably more sanguine than credit and TSYs but the magic 1340 level in ES appears to be the line in the sand for now - though given a 10Y at 1.40%, do not expect NEW QE anytime soon - though Gold outperformed its peers on the day as WTI slid over 4% from Friday's close. ES found some significant short-term support and resistance as it auctioned down and up today...
All 8 sectors of the S&P lost ground on the day but there appeared to be heavy rotation intraday as BTFD'ers were playing along ahead of AAPL's earnings, but VIX's undershoot on Friday's close (OPEX) forced a responsive overshoot on today's open which was enough ammo to drive a vol compression all day...
FX market saw their by now ubiquitous EUR selling into the US open and EUR buying into the European close. Notably SEK was a major outperformer relative to its peers...
but gold and stock stayed coupled until the drop in the early part of the day-session only for stocks recouple right into the close (and then selloff)... but leaves ES at the lower end of a trend channel (though failing to make higher highs this time)...hovering at the 1340 level... Risk assets didn't play along this afternoon - and rather notably, ES just reverted back down after the close... Charts: Bloomberg |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:30 PM PDT Money, although most people don't view it as such, is technology. Think about it. Money is not a "natural" thing. Money is a human abstraction. Money is an idea that's harnessed to certain standards. For example, archaeologists tell us that primitive societies used colored stones, seashells or pieces of bone as money. Then for much of human history (including now, depending where you are), mankind used gold, silver and copper as money. In the 13th century, Kublai Khan introduced what some consider the first paper currency (the "chao") throughout China — an idea that Marco Polo brought back to Europe. The point is that across the ages, money is a construct — an invented tool — whether it's seashells, gold, paper currency or even digital ones and zeros on a mobile device app. Another way of viewing it is that money is an agreed-upon standard. Money is like time zones, where it's the same time to the east, west, north and south. Money is like a standard unit of measurement, where a pound of steel weighs the same as a pound of feathers. Or money is like the width of railway gauge, so that rail cars from one railroad can run on the tracks of another railroad. Thus, money is, at root, technology as much as any other basic machine like the wedge, lever or wheel. And along with other basic machines, the idea of money has evolved over many thousands of years of human history. Today, Kublai Khan's Chinese "chao" have evolved into modern U.S. Federal Reserve notes, as well as the multitude of other world currencies, from pounds to euros to yuan and much more. When Money Breaks Down… Now, I'd like you to consider what happens when a system of money — a system of technology — doesn't work, or just breaks down. It brings to mind an old expression from the Soviet Union, that "They pretend to pay us, and we pretend to work." In other words, the Soviet Union was a society with a centrally planned command economy. The system of account, exchange and value was geared for the good of the state, but not much geared for the overall good of the people. Over time, the currency — the Soviet ruble — ceased being much good for anything. Indeed, the ruble was a dodgy unit of account, a poor medium of exchange and a problematic store of value. Basically, there was little to buy in the Soviet command economy, and the Soviet people behaved accordingly. Their "money" (such as it was) shaped their attitudes. The Soviets may have had good technology when it came to things like building tanks, rockets and nuclear bombs. But the Soviet economy failed to deliver for the good of the people. Eventually, the Soviet ruble was an economic technology that failed — along with the national construct known as the Soviet Union. The Best Time-Tested Technology: Precious Metals…Silver Looking ahead, I'm concerned with the trajectory of U.S. governance and the future of the economy. But I don't anticipate that the U.S. federal system will somehow collapse, like what happened with the Soviet Union — although I'm willing to have that talk at another time and place. Still, for the life of me, I cannot envision how the U.S. will avoid more inflation. Federal spending is out of control, and the economy is struggling to gain traction. I don't see how U.S. "monetary technology" — the dollar — can hold its value over the long haul. Next to moving out of the country to Singapore (like Jim Rogers, for instance), my fallback position is to keep building a precious metal portfolio based on physical metal and investing in well-run miners. Along with gold, every portfolio should have exposure to silver. Indeed, if you don't own physical silver — coins, small ingots, bars, etc. — then get some! Buy metal and take delivery. I've been saying that for a number of years, since silver was selling at $10 per ounce. Don't dwell over the near-term ups and downs. Silver is your safety fund for if (or when) the wheels come off the economic bus. The recent silver selloff is due to turn around — silver is currently selling in the range of $27 per ounce. That's far above the historical lows of $5-10 per ounce from the early 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s. But it's also far down from the high over $45 last year. Silver has a long, steadfast history as money, going back to ancient times. Yet it's also a substance with a promising future, thanks to its critical role as an industrial-technological metal. Aside from the traditional uses as money, silver has innumerable uses in electronics, medicine and other metallurgical applications. In the past several years, silver prices have moved due to demand driven by investors. Silver appeals, along with gold, as a safe (at least, safer) haven as an investment in times of economic uncertainty. Like now. Money is technology. Many modern currencies are a failing technology. It's time to get back to basics, and that means silver. Regards, Byron King Money Is Technology! originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, published by Agora Financial provides over 400,000 global readers economic news, market analysis, and contrarian investment ideas. Recently Agora Financial released a video titled "What Causes Gas Price to Increase?". |
Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - A War On Silver and Gold Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:21 PM PDT |
Gold Seeker Closing Report: Gold and Silver End Modestly Lower Posted: 23 Jul 2012 02:16 PM PDT Gold fell to as low as $1563.41 by about 8:45AM EST, but it then rallied back higher throughout the rest of the morning in New York and ended near its noontime high of $1580.30 with a loss of just 0.42%. Silver slumped to as low as $26.671 before it also rallied back higher and ended with a loss of just 1.14%. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Save Your ASSets First To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
No comments:
Post a Comment