Gold World News Flash |
- Spot Gold $1700
- $83,046 For A 3-Hour Hospital Visit – Why Are Hospital Bills So Outrageous?
- Why The Market Expects The ECB To Soak Up All Remaining 2012 Issuance
- Commodities Look to ECB Rate Decision to Yield Direction Cues
- Cometis interview with GoldMoney's Alasdair Macleod
- Gird Your Loins JPM, Silver's On a Rampage – $32.50 Breached
- The Next Round of the EU Implosion is at Our Doorstep
- Catherine Austin Fitts-They're Going to Depopulate or Bankrupt the Rest of Us
- Credit Card Can be a Good Option
- Andy Hoffman – Quadruple Bottoms… It’s All Good For Gold And Silver
- Gold's Coming Rise
- Economic Fallacies and the Fight for Liberty
- Russia's central bank takes note of GATA and gold price manipulation
- The Most Dangerous Trend Facing The World Today
- Brett Arends: Why is Putin stockpiling gold?
- Richard Russell - Gold To Save World From Drowning In Debt
- Interview on the anniversary of gold's peak at $1,923/oz
- GATA Chairman Murphy's appearance on RT's 'Capital Account' posted at YouTube
- The Gold Price Traded in a Tight $8 Range Before it Lost $2.10 to Close at $1,690.80
- Silver Bug Goes Viral With Marketing War
- Guest Post: Gina Rinehart Is A Bubble
- Investing in Silver: Double Down on the White Metal's Gains
- Goldâs Coming Rise
- When "Flu Season" Won't Matter
- No Central Bank Solutions: Liquidity vs Insolvency
- Alasdair Macleod: West pushes gold down, and right into Eastern hands
- Northern Rock vs. Gold
- Expect $2,500 Gold & Silver To Smash All-Time Highs
- Jim Willie: 60,000 Metric Tons of ALLOCATED Gold Likely Used by Cartel to Settle Asian Margin Calls
| Posted: 06 Sep 2012 12:16 AM PDT Earlier we noted Gold's seeming clairvoyance with regard the expansion of the Fed and ECB balance sheets over the last few years. It seems the EUR strength overnight (or stop-run) has provided just enough USD weakness impetus to nudge spot Gold (not futures) back over $1700 for the first time since March 13th. Spot Gold breaks $1700...
and leads Fed/ECB balance sheets higher on expectations of more printing...
Charts: Bloomberg |
| $83,046 For A 3-Hour Hospital Visit – Why Are Hospital Bills So Outrageous? Posted: 05 Sep 2012 11:30 PM PDT from The Economic Collapse Blog:
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| Why The Market Expects The ECB To Soak Up All Remaining 2012 Issuance Posted: 05 Sep 2012 10:15 PM PDT Just what is priced in? That is the question. Based on the aggregate size of the Fed and ECB balance sheets, it appears the S&P 500 is pricing in an increase of around USD300bn in the short-term. This USD 300bn amounts to EUR 240bn - a very special and rather too coincidental number. Based on expectations of supply, the EMU16 nations have EUR 245bn issuance remaining for the rest of 2012. So, it would appear that the market, in its ever-hopeful ebullient way has priced in the expectation that the ECB will soak up the entire remaining debt issuance of the 16 (remaining) Euro nations for the rest of the year. Anything less will be a disappointment - and remember each nation will have to ask for 'help' before receiving this 'support'. Coincidence, maybe? Over-confidence, perhaps? Reality, not a chance.
Comparing the S&P 500's 'expectations' to the aggregate USD value of the Fed and ECB balance sheets over time shows that LTRO2's impact was well-priced in - as was LTRO1 (though less so). Given current levels, SMP 2.0 implies growth of around USD 300bn (or EUR 240bn)...
which just happens to be...
So the equity market - in all its fundamental-ignoring reality - has priced in a conditional put as implicitly triggered for all European nations...
Perhaps even more remarkably - it would appear Gold has been correctly anticipating Fed/ECB actions since the crash lows in 2009. Somewhat explains the 'stagnation' in Gold and the recent breakout once again...(also providing some insight into Gold's downside risk)
Charts: Bloomberg and Morgan Stanley |
| Commodities Look to ECB Rate Decision to Yield Direction Cues Posted: 05 Sep 2012 10:10 PM PDT courtesy of DailyFX.com September 05, 2012 08:09 PM Commodities are looking to the ECB monetary policy announcement to shape risk sentiment trends and help prices establish directional conviction. Talking Points [LIST] [*]Crude Oil, Copper Look to ECB Meeting Outcome to Yield Direction Cues [*]Gold and Silver Looking to US Dollar as Conduit for Risk Sentiment Trends [/LIST] Commodities are waiting for guidance from risk sentiment trends, with the spotlight now pointing to the European Central Bank monetary policy announcement. Expectations are running high for Mario Draghi and company to deliver the highly anticipated bond-buying program alluded to in officials’ commentary over recent weeks and meant to contain borrowing costs for debt-strapped Eurozone member states. On balance, the ECB is likely to disappoint on this front. The bond purchase scheme is contingent on a formal bailout request by those countries whose bonds are to be supported by the central bank, meaning ... |
| Cometis interview with GoldMoney's Alasdair Macleod Posted: 05 Sep 2012 10:00 PM PDT from Gold Money:
Cometis: At today's London PM Fix, the gold price was recorded at US$1,690.00 per troy ounce. But on this day one year ago it spiked to an all-time nominal high of $1,923/oz. Why has gold fallen out of favour with investors over the last 12 months? Is the metal back in a bear market? Alasdair Macleod: On the charts there has been a normal bull market correction. As to whether it has fallen out of favour with investors you have to bear in mind that the run-up to almost $2,000 attracted speculative buyers, who would become sellers when their profits were threatened, and that is indeed what has happened. However, private individuals who look to precious metals as providing insurance against systemic risk have continued to accumulate holdings of physical metal, as our own experience at GoldMoney confirms. It's also worth pointing out that some respected figures in the investment world such as George Soros and John Paulson – two men who could be fairly described as knowing a good deal when they see it – have been big gold buyers of late. In the background, the central banks for the advanced economies have worked hard to contain panic in the markets, and part of this has been to stop gold and silver prices rising further. The short-term speculators unwinding their long positions did the rest. More recently, other central banks, such as China's and Russia's, as well as several other important central banks in Asia are buyers of gold; so at current prices bullion is transferring from West to East. This puts a floor on Western intervention and suggests the correction is coming to an end. |
| Gird Your Loins JPM, Silver's On a Rampage – $32.50 Breached Posted: 05 Sep 2012 09:30 PM PDT |
| The Next Round of the EU Implosion is at Our Doorstep Posted: 05 Sep 2012 09:30 PM PDT from Gains Pains & Capital:
The world is breathlessly hoping that Central Banks will somehow save the day. Indeed, when you consider that the markets have rallied so dramatically based on a vague speech from ECB President Mario Draghi, you get a sense of just how desperate everyone is to believe in this. Outside of beliefs, here are the key developments you need to know: 1) Spain is now outright demanding that the ECB monetize Spanish bonds (in other words, it's back on the brink of collapse after receiving a €100 billion bailout a few months ago). 2) Greece is asking for "room to breathe" because… frankly it's run out of money again despite receiving €240 billion in bailouts and failing to enact any real meaningful reform. 3) Both the ECB and Germany have stated that no more funds are coming without strict conditions. |
| Catherine Austin Fitts-They're Going to Depopulate or Bankrupt the Rest of Us Posted: 05 Sep 2012 09:29 PM PDT By Greg Hunter's USAWatchdog.com Dear CIGAs, Catherine Austin Fitts calls what happened to the U.S since the market meltdown of 2008 a "fiscal coup d'état." Fitts should know because she is a former Wall Street insider who has managed investments worth $300 billion. She is also a government insider. Catherine Austin Fitts was an Continue reading Catherine Austin Fitts-They're Going to Depopulate or Bankrupt the Rest of Us |
| Credit Card Can be a Good Option Posted: 05 Sep 2012 09:00 PM PDT by Silver42, Dont-Tread-On.me :
I am definitely not a fan of having debt and using credit cards irresponsibly, but if you are good with your finances you can definitely use them to your advantage. My main card is through Discover, which I try to use for all my expenses. The great thing with Discover is you get points that directly are available on Amazon after each billing cycle. So if you charge 100 dollars to your Discover card you get $1 off on Amazon. This doesn't sound like much, but if you are paying all your bills on it then it adds up quickly. This is a way you can stock up on supplies since you will be getting money off on your Amazon purchases. The nice thing with this option is you will already have the cash (or at least you should) for the purchases you are making. Another reason I keep a couple of my credit cards open is that they have 0% offers a couple times a year and usually with a free balance transfer from another card. I have used this a couple times when I have bought silver. |
| Andy Hoffman – Quadruple Bottoms… It’s All Good For Gold And Silver Posted: 05 Sep 2012 08:45 PM PDT from FinancialSurvivalNetwork.com:
CLICK HERE FOR AUDIO INTERVIEW This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Posted: 05 Sep 2012 08:30 PM PDT by Darryl Robert Schoon, Gold Seek:
Last year on September 6, 2011, gold reached a high of $1920; but when bullion banks intervened by pushing gold lease rates deep into negative territory in early September, they made sure enough leased gold would reach the markets to drive the price of gold lower. By late September, gold had fallen back to $1600; and when gold began to again rise, gold lease rates were pushed even lower forcing gold this time below $1600. The bullion banks one-two punch took the momentum out of gold's 27 % summer rally and by year's end gold would still be at $1600. In 2012, between March and August, gold traded between $1550 and $1650 until late August. This tight trading range persisted even as global economic conditions deteriorated; and, gold, a barometer of economic distress, should have risen higher. It didn't. WATCHING THE BASIS I read Sandeep Jaitly's Gold Basis monthly newsletter with interest and, as gold's trading range remained intact for much of the year, Jaitly's advice remained remarkably consistent; his study of the basis indicating gold and silver were moving into increasing backwardation and accumulation of both metals was recommended. |
| Economic Fallacies and the Fight for Liberty Posted: 05 Sep 2012 07:45 PM PDT by James E. Miller, Mises:
It's easy to be pessimistic over the future prospects of liberty when major industrial nations around the world are becoming increasingly rife with market intervention, police aggression, and fallacious economic reasoning. The laissez faire ideal of a society where people should be allowed to flourish without the coercive impositions of the state is all but missing from mainstream debate. In editorial pages and televised roundtable discussions, a government policy of "hands off" is now an unspeakable option. It is presumed that lawmakers must step up to "do something" for the good of the people. Thankfully, this deliberate false choice will slowly but surely bring the death of itself. Illogical theories can only go on for so long before the pushback becomes too much to handle. For those who desire liberty, it's a joy that the statist economic policies of the Keynesians become even more irrational as Great Recession drags on. The two following examples will illustrate this point. Former Labor Secretary, public policy professor at University of California, Berkley, and political commentator Robert Reich recently offered President Obama and Mitt Romney a proposal he thinks will help American workers. In lieu of almost 40% of workers in the U.S. not receiving paid vacation for holidays and sick days, Reich proposes that the federal government mandate every worker receive three weeks of paid time off. Reich calls the country's lack of a national leave policy "absurd." Further, he claims that imposing an increase in mandatory paid vacation would be beneficial not just for employees but employers as well. According to the union cheerleader, paying employees for taking time off is great for productivity because they come back with batteries recharged and higher morale. This boost in output would more than pay for the leave and for the hiring of additional labor to offset the absence. |
| Russia's central bank takes note of GATA and gold price manipulation Posted: 05 Sep 2012 07:31 PM PDT Perspectives on Gold: Central Bank Viewpoint By Oleg V. Mozhaiskov I would like to thank the conference organizers for this opportunity to share my thoughts on such a complex, even mythical subject as gold and the prospects for the near and medium-term. I assume that the request was made for one simple reason: that I, as a senior executive of the Bank of Russia, should know more than other ordinary mortals. In general, this logic is flawed, although there is sense to it: It is necessary to understand the central bank's perspective regarding this precious metal, particularly given that it does have approximately 500 tonnes of the metal in its vaults. It is from this perspective, that of central bank, that I intend to base my presentation. I hope you can understand that it is quite a specific topic, management of gold reserves. This is distinct from the views adopted by gold prospectors, industrialists, investors, speculators, and ordinary purchasers of jewellery. For the central bank, the gold stock is the international payment reserve for the whole country -- for the state authorities, private companies and corporations, as well as individual citizens. Like any reserve, it needs to be conserved, in terms of both actual physical form and its value. To a lesser extent, we need to be concerned about its liquidity, or more precisely, market price developments. The central bank's duties in managing gold reserves may therefore not seem particularly onerous to a commercial trader, who has to close dozens of transactions daily to achieve results by the end of the day. In this there is a grain of truth. The central bank's specialists do not have to follow real-time price movements every day and every minute, or react instantaneously to every little twist and turn in the market. We are concerned with other, less immediate problems regarding gold. In a figurative sense the central bank's attitude can be compared with that to a giraffe. I have in mind an image of an animal that suggests certain ambiguity, at least in the Russian language. On the one hand, when Russians say that someone is reacting like a giraffe, they are highlighting that person's slow reaction. It even suggests a degree of slow-wittedness. On the other hand, the evident magnificence of the animal commands respect. "The giraffe is tall, and he sees all" -- the words of the Russian bard Vladimir Vysotskii are well known throughout Russia. With this allegory in mind, I would like to mention the issues concerning gold which fall within the "giraffe category" -- or more formally, present concerns of a central bank. These are several: the volume of actual precious metal stock, both in absolute and relative terms (essentially, the optimum component of the metal in total monetary reserves); methods of controlling the stock; ensuring both security and availability for liquidity purposes and at the same time optimizing income-earning potential. All these issues reflect very practical concerns. It may seem strange but all bear direct relation to a problem that is often considered purely theoretical: What is gold currently, and what will it be tomorrow? Real money with intrinsic value? A raw material? A cash commodity that has lost some of its monetary functions? If so, what are the prospects -- complete loss of gold's role or a restoration of lost functions, in one form or another? There is a wide circle of leading financiers who believe that pondering on these themes is a fruitless academic exercise. They are convinced that the heads of the world's richest countries, who once agreed to abolish exchange of national currencies for gold at a fixed rate, have in fact demonetized gold altogether. In their eyes, the existence of official gold reserves is simply a remnant of the past, a financial monument to the gold and gold-currency standards, which will ultimately be absorbed by the global gold market. This market has properly organized infrastructure, products, rules, and procedures, and central banks are merely one of its clientele. For them, this is the only reality to be reckoned with. Is this a true picture for gold in the modern world? Many people do not think like this; the reality is more complicated. The contemporary gold market has emerged as a byproduct of a series of agreements between governments, initiated by the United States and supported by the other major powers, in whose possession the bulk of all gold ever extracted lies. These agreements (the most important of which were the Jamaica Agreements of 1976) created ideal conditions for stimulating international trade by means of expanding credit facilities in national currencies. The obligations on debtor countries to pay off the trade deficits with gold (upon demand of the creditor countries) severely limited the exporter countries' opportunities for trade expansion. The importer countries were made to live within their means, predicated by their gold reserves. Gold was therefore considered by a number of economists and policy makers as an instrument guaranteeing order and justice in international economic relations, while others remained convinced that it hindered international economic progress and development. The latter, as you know, secured the upper hand. That brief look back into the past was necessary to make the following conclusion: The present state of the gold market and its future cannot be analyzed in isolation from the problems of the international monetary system. Some people may question this conclusion because of the incompatibility of the present volumes in the respective gold and foreign currency markets. I would suggest that the volumes do not matter for this particular purpose. The modern monetary system, although undoubtedly robust and long-standing, in fact has a number of flaws and weaknesses. These, like the birth of the new, can cause health problems to the participants of the system. This disconcerting phenomenon occurs because, by taking gold out of international payments turnover, people are undermining payment discipline. The discipline I have in mind is at a macro-level; that is, the discipline of rich industrial countries whose convertible currencies have taken the role of an international trade medium by virtue of their economic strength and have been accepted by the world community as reserve units of payment. Although there are several reserve currencies, the blatant lack of discipline is demonstrated by the U.S. dollar. I am leaving aside the main aspects of this problem, such as the social and economic injustice of a world order that allows the richest country in the world to live in debt, undermining the vital interests of other countries and peoples. What is important for us today is another aspect, which is connected with the responsibility of the state issuing the reserve currency and for the international community preserving that currency's buying power. Given the actual behavior of the dollar on the foreign exchange markets, the problem could be more accurately termed the irresponsibility of the U.S. government in relation to the market valuation of its currency in international circulation. Today the net debt owed by the United States to the outside world (the so-called "international investment position") is in the region of $3 trillion. To understand the scale of this figure, let me remind you that it exceeds the total official currency reserves in all the world's countries (including the United States itself). According to the International Monetary Fund statistics at last year-end, the world pool of foreign currency reserves totaled Special Drawing Rights 2,013 billion, or about $2,800 billion. The volume of cash only ("greenback" banknotes) available outside the United States totals about $400 billion. The world has come to a paradoxical situation in which the creditor countries are more concerned with the fate of the dollar than the U.S. authorities themselves are. Thus, the evolution of the U.S. dollar's reserve role in recent years has given ground to some quite pessimistic forecasts, based on rational economic theory. No wonder that the number of people who have held assets in dollars and now wish to diversify them partly into gold -- the traditional shelter from inflation and political adversity -- is steadily growing. The statistical correlation between the market prices of dollar and gold is obvious. For the problem we discuss today it means specifically that gold, in addition to its unique physical and chemical properties used in industry, has retained its particular monetary attractiveness for cautious financial investors, and its market price is still heavily influenced by the state of the international monetary system. This dualism in gold price formation distinguishes it from other commodities and makes the movements in the price sometimes so enigmatic that market analysts need to invent fantastic intrigues to explain price dynamics. Many have heard of the group of economists who came together in the society known as the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee and started a number of lawsuits against the U.S. government, accusing it of organizing an anti-gold conspiracy. They believe that with the assistance of a number of major financial institutions (they mention in particular the Bank for International Settlements, J.P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, and others), some senior officials have been manipulating the market since 1994. As a result, the price dropped below $300 an ounce at a time when it should, if it had kept pace with inflation, have reached $740-760. I prefer not to comment on this information but dare assume that the specific facts included in the lawsuits might have given ground to suspicion that the real forces acting on the gold market are far from those of classic textbooks that explain to students how prices are born in a free market. So even those who stick to traditional economic theory in analyzing and projecting gold market developments should admit that various factors that influence gold price interact between themselves in a constantly changing manner, sometimes in a very odd way. Here, as in nuclear physics, some factors briefly disappear or cease to act, and in their place comes a new dominant market factor. This causes confusion for the forecasters in their efforts to build a logically balanced model for the metal price movements. So I do not even dare shed light on the methodology of gold price forecasting, but would like to risk outlining basic factors, which are permanently (and I stress permanently) acting on the market. There are four of them -- two relating to the raw material properties of gold and two to its monetary qualities. As an economist educated in the Marxist school, I believe that the base for gold prices is rooted in the sphere of the real economy. Like any mineral raw material, mined gold has its intrinsic value. This value fluctuates quite significantly depending on the location, time, and technology of extraction. The market averages out the individual expenses, optimizing them at a level that is acceptable to the industry that uses the metal in its production. The absolute values in monetary terms for this factor fluctuate, although they are the least mobile element of the price. The production cost category has its own "floor and ceiling." The technological particularities of gold extraction determine the minimum price level at which production is economically feasible in the industry as a whole. We think that the worldwide level is currently about $200 per ounce. This is the minimum price limit. With lower prices the industry will plunge into a zone of catastrophe. So the average costs of gold production in volumes sufficient to satisfy expected market demand (over the past 15 years this has averaged 2,500 tonnes with the upward trend) are the first factor. The second factor is the real volumes of demand generated by the consuming industries for physical gold. The behavior of industrialists (jewellery is playing the most important role) is mainly caused by factors connected with an economic activity cycle. During the 1990s there was a significant but uneven rise of demand for jewellery: from 2,200 tonnes in 1990 to 3,200 tonnes by the end of the decade, with a peak of 3,350 tonnes in 1997. The first three years of the new millennium saw a decline of demand from jewelers; the volume of metal purchased by the industry dropped down to 2,550 tonnes in 2003. The fundamental correlation between gold prices and the volume of demand from industry is normally linear in character. This correlation cannot be the sole cause behind the dramatic falls in prices, but can show a vector for price movement, which can be enhanced or indeed maximized through the efforts of speculators. However, even when speculative activity is relatively quiet, this vector is not always clear. There are "anti-phases" in economic activity in various parts of the world, and on top of these, various national traditions in demand for the metal. A recent example of this occurred at the turn of the century. After prices reached a 20-year low of $252 in May 1999, demand for physical metal increased and pushed the price temporarily to a new "equilibrium level" of $300 by the end of the year. The concept of "equilibrium" reflects the situation on the market when its participants believe that they are aware of a balance between supply and demand. It brings a measure of price stability to the market. Such a situation appeared to take place following the central banks' Washington Agreement on Gold. However, as soon as demand started to shrink again and a danger of excess supply arose, prices went down. This was the beginning of a two-year market stagnation, with the price waving within a range of $270-290. It was not sufficient for the metal producers, but they were unable to control the situation. It was investors who made the weather on the market. Now the time has come to admit that investment demand was, and still is, the main driving force behind price fluctuations on the gold market. The changing character of demand heavily depends on what is going on in the international foreign currency and financial markets. The investors pay continuous attention first to the dollar rate of exchange and second to the level of interest rates for financial assets. The volatility of these indicators directly influences the investors' interest in gold. Since this interest is realized not through operations with physical metal but through deals with gold derivatives on stock-exchange and non-stock-exchange markets (where gold is mentioned only as a base asset), the volume of these deals can exceed the volume of trade in physical metal dozens of times. Last year turnover with gold derivatives was about 4,000 million ounces (or 129,000 tonnes), but physical metal actually sold totaled 120 million ounces or some 3,860 tonnes. As it is said: Feel the difference! It is true that the markets for derivatives linked to other raw materials also usually exceed the operations with base assets. The difference in volumes are incomparably less (five to 10 times). At the same time the markets for derivatives with foreign currencies and prime securities as base assets are developing every bit as rapidly as the gold derivatives. What can we infer from that? One conclusion, at least, is clear: Gold is predominantly a financial asset, not merely a precious metal. In this capacity gold is competing with other financial assets on a variety of parameters. Being inferior in terms of returns, it is far more reliable than anything else for protection against war-related, political, financial, economic, and credit risks, and provides a high level of liquidity and lower management costs. However, since the rate of return is the main measure of success for financial institutions under normal conditions, investment-related decisions depend directly on the stability of the international monetary system, strength (or weakness) of the dollar, and the level of interest rates on financial markets. This dependence is not linear in nature. Correlation factors change from time to time because decisions are taken by investors individually on the basis of their market expectations. As a result, investors' reaction may race ahead or lag behind developments on the forex and financial markets. If we examine gold price movements over the last 10-12 years, it becomes clear that during the first half of the 1990s the dominant factor was the weak dollar and the market was still living in hope of a recurrence of the 1980s "gold fever." From 1997 onward, as the dollar strengthened, these hopes were dispelled, investors turned around, and price fell to the level of support on the physical market. It seems to us that the depth and duration of this depressed phase of gold prices were to a considerable extent caused by the wide use of gold derivatives by investors. Insofar as these instruments are intended for protecting banks and their customers against unwanted and unexpected changes in price dynamics, they can provoke massive closing of the existing position at a specific moment. This process may take the form of a chain reaction. As a result, the price falls below the level dictated by the sensible interests of investors. I would also like to note that recently the central banks have been playing a significant role in the gold market. Low interest rates in the money markets and revaluation of gold reserves in line with lower market prices have exacerbated the problem of the financial efficiency of gold stock management. To earn some income on the stock and compensate for "book losses" caused by its revaluation, a number of central banks have started to place a part of their reserves into deposits with commercial institutions -- leasing operations. Data available to me suggest that these banks deposited about 1,000 tonnes in 1991, and 10 years later the volume of the deposits reached 4,800 tonnes. Naturally, the central banks' activity increased market liquidity and thus also put downward pressure on the gold price. The influence of these operations, however, must not be exaggerated. It is even incomparable with the pressure that was exerted on the market of gold derivatives. The same conclusion can be made about the central banks' sale of some of their gold reserves. All market participants have been paying particular attention to these operations since September 1999, when 15 European central banks agreed in Washington on the orderly sale of 2,000 tonnes of gold from their official reserves over the next five years. One month ago the agreement was extended for a further five years (to September 2009), setting the total sale limit at 2,500 tonnes or 500 tonnes per year. One may wonder if these agreements and sales indirectly indicate that these countries have embarked on a long-term gold demonetization program and if their statement that "gold will remain an important element of global monetary reserves" is nothing but a sort of soothing therapy for the market. Such opinions exist, although they do not prevail. I think that the agreements do not give ground for this view. First, the participating countries own between them 12,300 tonnes of gold. The share of the metal in their official monetary reserves has reached 36 percent. This is significantly higher than the average for all the world's countries (10-12 percent). So the sales can be seen as optimization of the reserves structure. Secondly, the countries making the sales (France, Germany, and some others) are enduring budget deficits exceeding the limits laid down by the Maastricht Treaty. Hence, this may explain the temptation to solve their budgetary problems without reducing expenditure or raising taxes. The current decisions by the monetary authorities in European countries could therefore be considered sensible, like the actions of certain Asiatic states that in recent years increased the gold portion within their monetary reserves. The internal imperfections of the international monetary system (which I spoke about earlier) have already led to a number of regional financial crises and still carry the danger of larger upheavals. Under these conditions, the growing interest of investors in real assets, gold in particular, is more than justified. And on that optimistic note, I would like to end my presentation. -END- |
| The Most Dangerous Trend Facing The World Today Posted: 05 Sep 2012 07:30 PM PDT from KingWorldNews:
On the heels of news out of Europe that the ECB will do unlimited bond buying, today Marc Faber told King World News, "It was expected that they would start with a further monetary easing at some point." Faber warned, "I believe central bankers are in this world to print money. They are, intellectually, completely dishonest or incompetent, and that's all they know." Faber, who is author of the Gloom Boom and Doom Report, also stated, "This is a very dangerous trend, and I will always, always fight governments on every level I can because the larger the government is, the larger the abuse is in a system." He also added: "I have roughly 25% of my assets in gold. I buy every month, and I will never, ever sell it as long as people such as Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan, Obama, Biden, Bernanke, and Geithner are in government. I will never sell it. Never." But first, here is what Faber had to say upon learning about the news out of Europe: "It was expected that they would start with a further monetary easing at some point. And there is still some opposition from the Germans. We'll have to see what the Germans decide in the high court in the next few days. But basically, globally, central bankers are there to print money, and nothing else. That's all they know." |
| Brett Arends: Why is Putin stockpiling gold? Posted: 05 Sep 2012 06:56 PM PDT Maybe it's because the Russian government has known about the Western gold price suppression scheme since learning about it from GATA in 2004: Maybe it's because the Chinese government knows all about it too: http://www.gata.org/node/10380 http://www.gata.org/node/10416 Maybe it's because practically everybody in the gold market knows about it except those who get their news and commentary only from the Western financial media. * * * Why Is Putin Stockpiling Gold? Commentary: Russia is bulking up its gold reserve By Brett Arends http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-is-putin-stockpiling-gold-2012-09-0... I can't imagine it means anything cheerful that Vladimir Putin, the Russian czar, is stockpiling gold as fast as he can get his hands on it. According to the World Gold Council, Russia has more than doubled its gold reserves in the past five years. Putin has taken advantage of the financial crisis to build the world's fifth-biggest gold pile in a handful of years, and is buying about half a billion dollars' worth every month. It emerged last month that financial gurus George Soros and John Paulson had also increased their bullion exposure, but it's Putin that's really caught my eye. No one else in the world plays global power politics as ruthlessly as Russia's chilling strongman, the man who effectively stole a Super Bowl ring from Bob Kraft, the owner of the New England Patriots, when they met in Russia some years ago. Putin's moves may matter to your finances, because there are two ways to look at gold. ... Dispatch continues below ... ADVERTISEMENT Fred Goldstein and Tim Murphy open All Pro Gold Longtime GATA supporters Fred Goldstein and Tim Murphy have brought their many years of experience in the precious metals and numismatic coins to All Pro Gold as metals brokers who specialize in the delivery of gold and silver bullion bars and coins as well as numismatic gold and silver coins. Fred and Tim follow these markets closely and are assisted by a team of consultants in monitoring market trends. All Pro Gold offers GATA supporters competitive pricing on all bullion products and welcomes inquiries. Tim can be reached at 602-299-2585 and Tim@allprogold.com, Fred at 602-799-8378 and Fred@allprogold.com. Ask about their ratio strategy and the relationship of generic $20 dollar gold pieces to 1-ounce gold bullion coins. Visit their Internet site at http://www.allprogold.com/. On the one hand, it's an investment that by most modern standards seems to make no sense. It generates no cash flow and serves no practical purpose. Warren Buffett has pointed out that we dig it out of one hole in the ground only to stick it in another, and anyone watching this from Mars would be very confused. You can forget claims that it's "real" money. There's no such thing. Money is just an accounting device, a way of keeping track of how much each of us produces and consumes. Gold is a shiny and somewhat tacky looking metal that is malleable, durable, and heavy. A recent research paper by Duke University's Campbell Harvey and co-author Claude Erb raised serious questions about most of the arguments in favor of gold as an investment. But there's another way to look at gold: As the most liquid reserve in times of turmoil, or worse. The big story of our era is not that the Spanish government is broke, nor is it that Paul Ryan apparently feels the need to embellish his running record. It's that the United States, which has dominated the world's economy for several lifetimes, is in relative decline. As was first reported here in April of last year, according to International Monetary Fund calculations, the United States is on track to lose its status as the world's biggest economy -- when measured in real, purchasing-power terms -- to China by 2017. We will soon be the first people in two hundred years to live in a world not dominated by either Pax Americana or Pax Britannica. This sort of changing of the guard has never been peaceful. The declines of the Spanish, French, and British empires were all accompanied by conflict. The decline of British hegemony was a leading cause of the First and Second World Wars. What will happen as the U.S. loses its pre-eminence? Maybe this will turn out better than similar episodes in the past. Maybe the Chinese will embrace an open society and the rule of law. If you believe that, there is probably no reason to hold any gold. On the other hand, we may be about to enter a much more turbulent and dangerous era of power politics and international competition. Not long ago, world gold reserves were mainly in the hands of the U.S. and the Europeans, which accumulated their holdings during their centuries at the top. The U.S. has 75 percent of its currency reserves in gold. Many other First World powers have comparable proportions. But that's beginning to change. According to the World Gold Council, China, Saudi Arabia, and Russia are now in the top five. Western European countries have been selling gold. If the current financial crisis gets any worse, they may yet sell more. Emerging markets have been buying. In most cases, gold remains a very small percentage of their total reserves. China, despite its recent buying, holds less than 2 percent of its currency reserves in gold. But you have to wonder how long emerging countries will want to hold their reserves in any currency that is controlled by someone else. Vladimir Putin clearly doesn't want to. Gold now accounts for 9 percent of Russia's reserves, and that figure is rising. The gold price has had a shakeout since peaking at around $1,900 an ounce a year ago. It fell as low as $1,566 in June. Since then, it has risen to $1,688. But that shakeout has been exaggerated by the rally in the U.S. dollar over most of the past year. Put another way: Priced in euros, gold is nearly back to its old high. It's 1,343 euros per ounce, just shy of the 1,356-euro record set a year ago. The most common means of buying gold is either in bullion or through an exchange-traded bullion fund such as the SPDR Gold Shares. And maybe that's sensible. But you might also take a look at shares in gold-mining companies. They are at, or near, historic lows when compared with the gold price. Contrarians may take that as a buying signal. The Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index, which tracks the stocks of precious-metal mining companies, stood at 170 on Tuesday -- a level first seen five years ago, in September 2007, when gold itself was just $730 an ounce. Relative to gold itself, the Philly index is about 60 percent below the average levels seen since 1985. Die-hard gold fans will tell you that the mining stocks involve all sorts of extra risks that you don't get with the metal. Companies can be mismanaged. Mining costs go up. Countries can wallop miners with windfall taxes. They're right on all of the above. On the other hand, the equities are cheap and they do generate cash flow. Barrick Gold, the world's biggest, trades at eight times forecast earnings, with a dividend yield of nearly 2 percent. Newmont is trading at 10 times forecast earnings, yielding 2.8 percent. As ever, you pays your money and you takes your choice. ----- Brett Arends is a financial journalist who writes for The Wall Street Journal and MarketWatch. 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... |
| Richard Russell - Gold To Save World From Drowning In Debt Posted: 05 Sep 2012 06:35 PM PDT The Godfather of newsletter writers, Richard Russell, believes gold will be used to save the world which is drowning in debt. Here is what Russell had to say: "The national debt of the US is now well over $16 trillion and growing at the rate of over one trillion dollars a year. It can never be paid off through the 'normal' means. Paying off by normal means would entail a huge, really killer boost in taxes and a brutal unmerciful, slashing of entitlements. The only way the US's debts can ever be seriously addressed is to devalue the dollar." This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Interview on the anniversary of gold's peak at $1,923/oz Posted: 05 Sep 2012 06:20 PM PDT I recently gave the following interview translated into German to celebrate the anniversary of gold’s peak for distribution to the German media. The English version is posted at GoldMoney, here. Cometis interview with GoldMoney's Alasdair Macleod2012-SEP-05Cometis: At today’s London PM Fix, the gold price was recorded at US$1,690.00 per troy ounce. But on this day one year ago it spiked to an all-time nominal high of $1,923/oz. Why has gold fallen out of favour with investors over the last 12 months? Is the metal back in a bear market? Alasdair Macleod: On the charts there has been a normal bull market correction. As to whether it has fallen out of favour with investors you have to bear in mind that the run-up to almost $2,000 attracted speculative buyers, who would become sellers when their profits were threatened, and that is indeed what has happened. However, private individuals who look to precious metals as providing insurance against systemic risk have continued to accumulate holdings of physical metal, as our own experience at GoldMoney confirms. It’s also worth pointing out that some respected figures in the investment world such as George Soros and John Paulson – two men who could be fairly described as knowing a good deal when they see it – have been big gold buyers of late. In the background, the central banks for the advanced economies have worked hard to contain panic in the markets, and part of this has been to stop gold and silver prices rising further. The short-term speculators unwinding their long positions did the rest. More recently, other central banks, such as China’s and Russia’s, as well as several other important central banks in Asia are buyers of gold; so at current prices bullion is transferring from West to East. This puts a floor on Western intervention and suggests the correction is coming to an end. Cometis: Historically gold and the US dollar have often been negatively correlated. This seems to have changed with the euro crisis and gold and dollar often move together. Can you explain what has happened and if this is a new paradigm? AM: There have been times when there has been a negative correlation between gold and the dollar, but the real correlation is with real US dollar interest rates, adjusted for inflation. That relationship appears at first sight to have broken down, but when you take into account the purging of speculative excesses over the last year, and the central banks’ obvious interest in keeping a lid on precious metal prices, we have a better explanation. The fact that real US dollar interest rates are negative and that official policy is to keep them there for the next three years, tells us that precious metals are undervalued. It is not a new paradigm. Cometis: How has the global economic situation changed within the past year and how do you expect the gold market to develop in the coming year? AM: The global economic situation has deteriorated significantly. It is easier to list the exceptions: there are none. The eurozone is faced with break-up and the whole European banking system with collapse, unless the European Central Bank finds a way to accelerate its money-printing without collapsing the euro. The UK is sliding back into economic contraction, as is the US. All countries in the West are faced with escalating debt, both on and off balance sheet with future welfare liabilities off the charts. Growth in the emerging markets has slowed. And why Japan with a government debt to GDP ratio of over 250% has not already collapsed is a mystery to observers. These are surely times when ordinary people will take out protection against these systemic risks in increasing numbers by buying gold and silver. They are already doing this in China and India, which between them represent 35% of the world’s population. I expect this trend to grow and spread elsewhere. Cometis: Will we see another all-time high in the gold price anytime soon? AM: There is no way of knowing for sure, but the prospect of a eurozone collapse and its likely effect on the euro suggests that there is substantial European demand for gold in the pipeline to add to that of India and China. If that happens, the previous high at $1,923 could be taken out fairly quickly. Cometis: In the light of the current economic situation, will gold be able to maintain its status as a safe haven in the future? And is it still profitable for Europeans to buy gold? AM: From time immemorial gold has been money, the medium of exchange for buying and selling goods and services. Today’s fiat currencies are a recent phenomenon that look increasingly likely to fall over, as did the German mark in 1920-23. I am particularly worried about the next year or two for the euro, and find it hard to see how history will not be repeated. That being the case, owning gold will become a question of survival rather than profit. This interview was arranged and conducted by Cometis AG. Alasdair Macleod Head of research, GoldMoney Mob: 07790 419403 Twitter @MacleodFinance |
| GATA Chairman Murphy's appearance on RT's 'Capital Account' posted at YouTube Posted: 05 Sep 2012 05:52 PM PDT 7:50p ET Wednesday, September 5, 2012 Dear Friend of GATA and Gold (and Silver): GATA Chairman Bill Murphy's appearance today on the Russia Today television network's "Capital Account" program, hosted by Lauren Lyster, has been posted at YouTube here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxVsosT3GAw CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer ADVERTISEMENT GoldMoney adds Toronto vaulting option In addition to its precious metals storage facilities in Hong Kong, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, GoldMoney customers now can store their gold and silver in a high-security vault operated by Brink's in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. GoldMoney also has recently partnered with Rhenus Freight Logistics to offer another gold storage option in Switzerland. The Rhenus vault is in the secured zone of Zurich Airport and offers customers superb security as well as the ability to inspect their gold. Storage at the new vaults in Canada and Switzerland is available at GoldMoney's lowest fees. Customers can select their storage location when placing their buy order. GoldMoney customers can take delivery of any number of gold, silver, platinum, and palladium bars from any GoldMoney vault, as well as personally collect their bars stored in the Hong Kong, Switzerland, and U.K. vaults. It's easy to open an account, add funds, and liquidate your investment. For more information, visit: http://www.goldmoney.com/?gmrefcode=gata 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... |
| The Gold Price Traded in a Tight $8 Range Before it Lost $2.10 to Close at $1,690.80 Posted: 05 Sep 2012 05:32 PM PDT Gold Price Close Today : 1690.80 Change : -2.10 or -0.12% Silver Price Close Today : 23.272 Change : -0.076 or -0.33% Gold Silver Ratio Today : 72.654 Change : 0.147 or 0.20% Silver Gold Ratio Today : 0.01376 Change : -0.000028 or -0.20% Platinum Price Close Today : 1574.60 Change : 8.60 or 0.55% Palladium Price Close Today : 646.15 Change : 5.90 or 0.92% S&P 500 : 1,403.44 Change : -1.50 or -0.11% Dow In GOLD$ : $159.52 Change : $ 0.36 or 0.22% Dow in GOLD oz : 7.717 Change : 0.017 or 0.22% Dow in SILVER oz : 560.65 Change : 2.32 or 0.42% Dow Industrial : 13,047.48 Change : 11.54 or 0.09% US Dollar Index : 81.23 Change : -0.114 or -0.14% The range on the silver and GOLD PRICE tightened up today. Silver fumbled 7.6 cents to 3227.2c while the GOLD PRICE lost $2.10 to $1,690.80. Today gold traded in a tight $8 range between $1,687.39 and $1,695.10 -- flatlining. Needs a close through $1,700, but won't go anywhere until after tomorrow's tiresome pronouncement. The SILVER PRICE merely backed off to a 3194c low, validating 3190c as solid support. High at 3234c moved toward yesterday's 3236c, but without conviction. Quiet, waiting for domani. I'm leaving Friday for a week's vacation, so I'd like to leave y'all with a few ideas about what the next week might look like. First, though, I want y'all to remember that what I do every day is merely entertainment to keep y'all steady in silver and gold. The only sensible investment strategy, the one that always profits more than any other, is to ride the primary trend of a bull market. In other words, buy and hold, get right and sit tight, that's the money maker, not trading in and out. If, as we can expect, Draghi makes some remark that markets desperate to deceive themselves can color as favorable, i.e., inflationary, silver and gold will shoot on up toward the targets indicated by their flags, $1,740 and 3445 cents. Should he disappoint markets, something central bankers are loathe to do, it will clip gold and silver's wings a day or two, but they'll still advance. Once they hit those targets, expect a correction that will dip toward the points where they broke out over their year-long downtrend lines, say, $1,650 or $1,640, maybe $1,680 and 3050c to 3000c. After a sharp but not lengthy drop they should rapidly recover and rise into the end of the year. After that correction the barrier will become $1,880 for the GOLD PRICE. Steady, steady -- hold your gold and silver and get ready to buy more on a correction. To give y'all an idea how silly, yea, brainless the world hath become, markets are all holding their breath to see what Super Mario Draghi and his Eurocrats will say tomorrow about the plan to buy up bonds of the ailing EZ members. How preposterous is this? Why it's 106 CBs (Central Bankers, a measure of Gross Preposterousness). Let me give you a comparison measure. The usual State of the Onion -- whoops, make that State of the Union -- presidential message hits 65 to 85 CBs. Politicians' speeches about their "faith" usually reach 85 - 103.7 CBs. A drunken husband's explanation of why it was his friend's fault ranks only about 8 CBs. Thus, Draghi is hitting the ball out of the GP park before he even steps up to bat, because he has less chance of fixing the European debt mess as a fruit fly has of finding a banana in Antarctica. The plan to fix the European sovereign debt mess is the famous Garbage Can Ploy. Y'all remember the Resolution Trust Corporation that "solved" the Savings and Loan Crisis after 1989? Basically, the Garbage Can Ploy creates a big garbage can entity which then BUYS (can y'all believe this?) the rotten paper assets, eventually shifting the load off onto the taxpayers after giving the garbage long enough to compost and lose its stench. Draghi is actually trying to make this broken-down old dog hunt! US dollar index fell 11.4 basis points (0.15%) to 81.226, moving sideways. Euro closed above $1.2600 at -- $1.2601, up 0.29% but not broken out yet. Speculators clearly expect great things from Super Mario tomorrio. Yen rose a microscopic 0.3% to 127.58c (y78.38). All of this mirrors markets waiting for the event. All the stock indices except the Dow fell today. After a rocky day falling down a hill, Dow scrabbled up 11.54 points to 13,047.48. S&P500 fell down the hill a bit, down 1.5 to 1,403.44. Something good better happen or the hill becomes a cliff. It will make you laugh, it will make you cry, it may make you mad, and it will you gasp and wonder how people could make so many stupid mistakes without either getting killed or arrested. That's AT HOME IN DOGWOOD MUDHOLE (Vol. I), my new book that recounts my family's move to the country and farming education. Par for the course in my execution of technical excellence, the link to the page I gave y'all in yesterday's commentary was broken. Try http://bit.ly/ahidm-vol1. That's so short even I can't mess it up, and it will get you an autographed copy and a $5 shipping savings if you order before publication on October 15 (approximately). Dr. Clyde Wilson says, it is "an agrarian epic -- no, THE agrarian epic." 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. |
| Silver Bug Goes Viral With Marketing War Posted: 05 Sep 2012 05:07 PM PDT Stacy Summary: Blast from the past; this was from over a year ago now. In that year, JPM's end is ever nearer. As is the dollar's. The big question now, however, is what is the new currency system going forward. … Continue reading |
| Guest Post: Gina Rinehart Is A Bubble Posted: 05 Sep 2012 04:49 PM PDT Submitted by John Aziz of Azizonomics Gina Rinehart Is A Bubble
Today she claimed that Australians should be willing to work for less than $2 a day:
The richest woman in the world is making an increasing number of public appearances, and speaking of increasingly controversial topics. I wonder why. It couldn't be that she is becoming increasingly aggressive and controversial because her core business is in trouble, could it? Marc Faber suggests so:
Here's iron ore priced in dollars: Julia Gillard's denial seems to confirm the inevitable:
That is her "subprime is contained" moment. Larry Elliott explodes the myth that this time is different:
Perhaps Gina Rinehart should spend less time drinking, socialising and writing awful poetry and more time preparing her business for the inevitable iron ore bust? |
| Investing in Silver: Double Down on the White Metal's Gains Posted: 05 Sep 2012 04:35 PM PDT Don Miller writes: Gold remains the favorite of precious metals investors, but silver is now a strong number two...with a bullet. That means you should consider investing in silver now before it goes even higher. In case you haven't noticed, after wallowing around in the mid-20s for months, silver prices have shot back over $30 an ounce. |
| Posted: 05 Sep 2012 04:10 PM PDT |
| When "Flu Season" Won't Matter Posted: 05 Sep 2012 03:31 PM PDT September 5, 2012 [LIST] [*]The $10 billion jackpot awaiting whoever can stamp out the flu... and one small player that has the inside track [*]Small caps' time to shine? Guenthner on a compelling trend, with a chart to match [*]Two milestones, or should we say millstones: National debt rises, ease of doing business falls [*]An "acceptable topic of discussion": Nathan Lewis on the progress of the gold standard... and the long road ahead [*]What beer recipes and TSA pat-downs have in common... reader reflections on the gold standard... an insult to voters... and more! [/LIST] "If I could provide a soundtrack with this letter," Patrick Cox writes, "you'd hear a chorus of angels singing now. "Seriously," says Patrick, "this drug has the potential to change world history and accelerate global progress measurably. That, however, is only the beginning." If you've been paying attention, we've covered a lot of Patrick's updates the last coup... |
| No Central Bank Solutions: Liquidity vs Insolvency Posted: 05 Sep 2012 03:29 PM PDT by Jim Willie CB September 5, 2012 home: Golden Jackass website subscribe: Hat Trick Letter Jim Willie CB, editor of the "HAT TRICK LETTER" Use the above link to subscribe to the paid research reports, which include coverage of critically important factors at work during the ongoing panicky attempt to sustain an unsustainable system burdened by numerous imbalances aggravated by global village forces. An historically unprecedented mess has been created by compromised central bankers and inept economic advisors, whose interference has irreversibly altered and damaged the world financial system, urgently pushed after the removed anchor of money to gold. Analysis features Gold, Crude Oil, USDollar, Treasury bonds, and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and US Federal Reserve monetary policy. The Hippocratic Oath dictates never to do harm to the patient. The central bankers instead take the Hypocritical Oath that dictates to cripp... |
| Alasdair Macleod: West pushes gold down, and right into Eastern hands Posted: 05 Sep 2012 03:18 PM PDT 5:13p ET Wednesday, September 5, 2012 Dear Friend of GATA and Gold: GoldMoney Research Director Alasdair Macleod, interviewed by the German media relations firm Cometis, says Western central banks are trying to suppress the gold price so that they may sustain their policy of negative real interest rates but that Eastern central bank purchases have put a floor under the price. The interview is translated into English at the GoldMoney Internet site here: http://www.goldmoney.com/gold-research/newsdesk/cometis-interview-with-a... CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer 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... 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 GoldMoney adds Toronto vaulting option In addition to its precious metals storage facilities in Hong Kong, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, GoldMoney customers now can store their gold and silver in a high-security vault operated by Brink's in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. GoldMoney also has recently partnered with Rhenus Freight Logistics to offer another gold storage option in Switzerland. The Rhenus vault is in the secured zone of Zurich Airport and offers customers superb security as well as the ability to inspect their gold. Storage at the new vaults in Canada and Switzerland is available at GoldMoney's lowest fees. Customers can select their storage location when placing their buy order. GoldMoney customers can take delivery of any number of gold, silver, platinum, and palladium bars from any GoldMoney vault, as well as personally collect their bars stored in the Hong Kong, Switzerland, and U.K. vaults. It's easy to open an account, add funds, and liquidate your investment. For more information, visit: http://www.goldmoney.com/?gmrefcode=gata |
| Posted: 05 Sep 2012 03:17 PM PDT |
| Expect $2,500 Gold & Silver To Smash All-Time Highs Posted: 05 Sep 2012 03:09 PM PDT Today Tom Fitzpatrick spoke with King World News about the recent surge in both gold and silver. Fitzpatrick expects silver to smash through its all-time highs as the price of gold hits, "... $2,450 to $2,500 as we move into the first quarter of 2013." This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Jim Willie: 60,000 Metric Tons of ALLOCATED Gold Likely Used by Cartel to Settle Asian Margin Calls Posted: 05 Sep 2012 02:54 PM PDT The Doc sat down with the Golden Jackass himself Monday for an exclusive and SHOCKING MUST LISTEN interview! The Golden Jackass makes the SHOCKING claim that perhaps 60,000 tons of allocated, segregated gold have been improperly used by the cartel … Continue reading |
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The fastest way to go broke in America is to go to the hospital. These days it seems like almost everyone has an outrageous hospital bill story to share. It is getting to the point where most people are deathly afraid to go to the hospital. All the financial progress that you have made in recent years can literally be wiped out in just a matter of hours. For example, you are about to read about an Arizona woman that was recently charged $83,046 for a 3 hour hospital visit. How in the world is anyone supposed to pay a bill like that? I have a really hard time understanding why a visit to the doctor should ever be more than a couple hundred bucks or why a hospital stay should ever be more than a couple thousand dollars. Outrageous hospital bills are a real pet peeve of mine and I have not even been to the hospital in ages. What makes all of this even more infuriating is that Medicare, Medicaid and the big insurance companies are often charged less than 10 percent of what the rest of us are billed for the same procedures. There is a reason why 41 percent of all working age Americans are struggling with medical debt right now. It is because our health care system has become a giant money making scam. Millions of desperate Americans go into hospitals each year assuming that they will be treated fairly, but in the end they get stuck with incredibly outrageous bills and in many cases cruel debt collection techniques are employed against them if they don't pay.




Ranting Andy Hoffman and I finally connected after a long and glorius Labor Day Weekend. Andy wrote several weeks ago that the quadruple bottom formation was going to propel gold and silver violently ahead. Now gold is hovering around $1700 and silver's popped through $32 and his words are proving quite prophetic. I guess it proves that the elites can only sabotage markets for so long before the fundamentals eventually assert themselves and prices start heading to their proper range. Of course no one knows what the proper range is until they've gotten there, but even at current levels, precious metals appear to be undervalued. Andy thinks we're about to hit the next great bull move forward and that prices are headed parabolic. If this occurs then the wheels are really coming off the bus and it will be time to seek cover.




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