Thai Guru's Gold und Silber ... (Informationen und Vermutungen)

  • But, there is no inflation:


    The King Report
    M. Ramsey King Securities, Inc.
    Monday Feb. 28, 2005 – Issue 3106 "Independent View of the News"


    It’s 1979 for the markets. We are back to 1978-1979. The legacy of Volcker and Reagan has already been spent and forgotten. But, "The past does not repeat itself, but it rhymes." -- Mark Twain


    The markets now expect inflation – somewhere, in some asset class or classes. Last week the markets were pricing in new inflationary expectations. With oil soaring anew and industrial commodities indices at all-time highs, soybeans and other ‘softs’ or food commodities started to price in higher inflation.


    Merrill’s chief strategist (Bernstein) noted the markets’ inflation proclivities on CNBC last Friday. He emphasized that both oil and chip stocks are stellar performers because oil and chips are commodities.


    But chip prices are in descent!? The markets, especially specs, realize that the Fed is reluctant to put fed funds at a neutral rate (debt deflation fear). So they are back to ‘cash is trash’, AKA rank speculation.


    Loan demand, especially speculative real estate loans, is accelerating and financial institutions are incurring increasing risk at low rates. The Chicago Trib notes speculators are flocking to real estate. Nationally, 9% of all sales are spec buyers… Some financial institutions, like FNM, have to raise capital to keep capital to assets ratios in-line. Regulators are warning that risks and capital is near a danger point.


    The lesson of the ‘70s and inflation in general, is that inflation is an insidious financial and economic disease that commences with wonderfully beneficial effects on the economy and asset markets. The markets and people, like the US Fed’s Easy Al and Bernanke, initially welcome inflation’s ‘benefits’.


    But slowly, almost imperceptibly, inflation inexorably increases. People are unconcerned; many welcome the increasing inflation in the misguided belief that even more wonderful benefits will accrue. Then suddenly inflation becomes entrenched and inflationary expectations escalate until they increase at a parabolic rate. That is the lesson of gold and silver in 1978-1979. Their charts show the slow, meager gains of the seventies going parabolic in not much more than a year.


    The Fed and US solons have been clear that they intend to inflate away the US debt problem. Some pundits have asserted that there is too much debt, so the markets will thwart Fed attempts to inflate. However, that logic has been usurped by wise guys and the greatest central bank intervention in history. Bonds have rallied instead of declining due to these players. If ‘bond vigilantees’ aren’t dead, they are at least catatonic. The concept of ‘freely traded markets’ has been completely and thoroughly debunked.


    The odds now favor the ‘flame out’ that we warned about last year. However that warning was about China affecting a ‘flame out’ on the global economy. Now it looks like we will have some kind of speculative flame out, perhaps in housing or energy. The one thing that looks highly probable to us is that gold and then silver will be the last vessel in the speculation. When the precious metals go postal, the beginning of the end has occurred because it implies central banks have lost control of ‘the game’.


    "Whoever wishes to foresee the future must consult the past; for human events ever resemble those of preceding times. This arises from the fact that they are produced by men who ever have been, and ever shall be, animated by the same passions, and thus they necessarily have the same results." -- Machiavelli


    -END-

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  • Now playing at Jesse's Charts: Gathering Storm: A Whiff of Fear


    http://www.geocities.com/arthurcutten/jesse


    ***


    The stories on the REAL financial scene re the dollar are FINALLY picking up steam around the world:


    Why George Bush should heed Asia's central bankers


    FT
    By Chris Giles
    Published: February 26 2005 02:00 | Last updated: February 26 2005 02:00


    Remember these names. Toshihiko Fukui. Zhou Xiaochuan. Perng Fai-Nan. Park Seung. Joseph Yam. And Yaga Venugopal Reddy. They are the central bank governors of Japan, China, Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong and India respectively. They are also arguably more important for US monetary policy than Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, or his successor who will take on the role next year.


    The argument is not as outlandish as it might seem. Consider some evidence: When Mr Greenspan said the US trade deficit was "increasingly less tenable" last November, financial markets took fright. The Dow Jones Industrial index fell 115 points and the dollar fell by 0.4 per cent against the euro on foreign exchange markets…


    http://news.ft.com/cms/s/06037…d9-ab48-00000e2511c8.html


    -END-

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  • Disgust from the real Conservative camp in the US:


    "The time has come for those we Republicans have elected to high office either to fish or to cut bait, either to decide they are conservatives or Democrat-like moderates, either to cut the size and expense of government or enlarge them, either to butt out of our lives or muscle government's way farther in, in short either to act like Republicans or admit that all this time they've been lying to us. ... Pushing for tax cuts is important but it's not enough. Endorsing a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage (it will never pass) is merely a sop thrown to cultural conservatives. Naming conservative judges is a step in the right direction but one cannot expect them to halt the advance of big government or block actions that affect national sovereignty. Already this year we have seen the House pass legislation that in effect, establishes a national ID card, which is one way for Big Brother to keep track of you and me. Regardless of what you call it, the president continues to push for legislation that will legitimize the presence in this country of more than 10 million illegal aliens. Likewise, he's pushing legislation to increase greatly the federal government's role in public education. ... Far from balancing the budget all he's promised is to cut the size of the annual deficit. Well, hooray! ... Now we are hearing talk that Social Security reform really means another increase in social security taxes.


    The Republican Party, once the party of small government, states rights, individual responsibility and, if you will, America first, is slowly coming to love Big Brother and big government and wanting to be loved internationally at the expense of American sovereignty. ... Anyone who thinks this is still the party of Ronald Reagan should think again." --Lyn Nofziger, former White House Press Secretary.

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  • A GATA supporter is having his own conference:


    The Financial Vortex conference on March 19, 2005.


    Event Details:
    Financial Vortex
    Growing & Protecting your Wealth
    During the Coming Unavoidable Financial Storms


    Your money, career & retirement goals are at great risk! What will you do when economic & financial storms swirl around and hurl devastation at you and your family? It is now becoming clear (even to Washington) that massive problems are facing our economy and that millions could be blind-sided by multiple gathering storms that are at this point unstoppable! Just think about what is facing you and I and so many of our loved ones in the coming months and years…


    http://www.mollyguard.com/event/15170375


    -END-

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    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

  • Tom Allen of http://www.HoweStreet.com has some interviews up from the Joe Martin’s Vancouver gold conference last month at http://www.FinancialBroadcastNetwork.com, including a short one of mine.


    This Reuters story late Friday really struck me re the paragraph in large bold:


    From Reuters
    Friday, February 25, 2005


    FRANKFURT -- A majority of Group of Seven members favour selling some of the International Monetary Fund's gold reserves to finance debt relief, a German newspaper on Friday reported G7 sources as saying.


    But an outright sale from the IMF, the world's third largest gold holder, is not the only option under consideration, according to the Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) article.


    Options could include a sale to an interested central bank or a revaluation of IMF gold reserves to current market prices, which would generate a paper profit that could be used to offset losses from debt write-off, it said.


    The issue of more debt relief for impoverished countries is at the centre of global economic discussions after G7 finance ministers earlier in February agreed to tackle the problem of funding debt relief at their IMF spring meetings in April.


    The agreement came after prompting from British finance minister Gordon Brown, whose country currently chairs meetings of the G7, the world's major developed countries.


    While rich countries have agreed that more debt relief is necessary, they are divided on how it should be done. Gold producers and some U.S. lawmakers have said they will oppose the sale of the IMF's gold, and would prefer an off-market transaction that does not disrupt bullion markets.


    IMF Managing Director Rodrigo Rato said on Wednesday the IMF was studying all proposals, including the revaluation or sale of the IMF's gold stocks.


    According to the FTD, IMF sources say the fund is sceptical of using gold for debt relief but is aware that it will be a political decision so is focusing on the technical aspects.


    Additionally, the G7 would not want to disrupt the gold market, it quoted sources as saying. If the IMF decides on sales, then those sales could count towards quotas allocated under the International Gold Agreement, the FTD said.


    Fifteen European central banks signed the second gold agreement, limiting total sales to 2,500 tonnes over five years ending in 2009.


    –END-

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  • Why:


    *First Germany drops out of the second Washington Agreement in dramatic fashion, wiping out a dearly needed supply of gold for The Gold Cartel.


    * Soon after, England’s Brown starts yapping about selling IMF gold again to help the poor – a charade if their ever was one.


    *Then, they float some talk about the Chinese taking the gold.


    *Now, THIS! They must be VERY DESPERATE even to let that out in writing in any form.

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  • Houston’s Dan Norcini has come up with a beauty here which clarifies in the most simplest of ways how much The Gold Cartel has been all over gold and artificially suppressing the price:


    Here's the chart I put together the other night that I was telling you about Bill.


    CRB vs. Gold Chart.xls (59KB)


    You can see that the last time the CRB index was at this level was in March 1981 when it closed at 298.40. The closing spot price of gold for that month was $513.80.


    One thing to keep in mind with the chart I created is that I only used the CLOSING price for the month which rules out intramonth spike highs.


    I can wait until the CRB closes today to give you an updated one for the month of February 2005 since today is the last day of the month. In creating the chart I used Friday's close for the CRB index. It might make it over 300 today.


    The chart really demonstrates the capping action in gold that has up to this point been successful in hiding the true inflation picture from the vast majority of the public. I personally think that $500 gold is the magic number which will spook even the clueless public. Without the cartel's insidious work, gold would be north of that right now. As it is, it is currently nearly $75.00/ounce below its 1981 price when the CRB was at this level.
    Dan

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  • Chuck checked in Saturday morning:


    I think that the breakout through 100 and 220 respectively on the gold indices should do it. I don't understand the climate here but it seems clear that something very strange is afoot. Take a look at these charts, especially the 5 year jobs. Everyone appears to be breaking out. Given the strength in the major golds, it should start to filter down to the next tier and eventually soon the juniors. Bema and Wheaton are leading the mid-tier ones while stocks like Nova are clearly breaking out. My guess is that the incredible volume in Durban marked the climax of the gold bearishness. We should know as early as Monday.


    http://www.kitcometals.com/charts/zinc_historical.html
    Chuck


    So did GATA’s Chris Powell over the weekend:


    Fun chart, CP
    http://www.zsvideo.com/~princ1/BIG.ht1.jpg


    ***

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  • Rhody on leasing:


    Hi Bill:
    Gold is again in backwardation out to 3 months, and its rate curve continues to be flattened with the spread between one month and one year at a miniscule .06%


    Silver lease rates are climbing with the one month rates up .02%. Silver's rates are now high enough to force one to pay as much in one month as one pays for one year to lease gold.
    Regards, Rhody.
    http://www.kitco.com/market/lfrate.html

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  • Acceptances from money managers and gold producer executives for Gold Rush 21 continue to roll in. GATA received some fabulous news on that score over the weekend. Japan’s "Mr. Gold," Tami Matsufuji, President of Jipangu, told my friends Nick Ferris of J-Pacific Gold and John Anderson of Key Gold (who were in Tokyo) that he would be coming and has accepted our invitation. Why the excitement re this veteran GATA supporter:


    Tamisuke Matsufuji is the most successful bond salesman in the history of Salomon Brothers. He went on to become a famous contrarian financial advisor who has authored 5 best sellers in Japan. In 1989 he wrote a book predicting the collapse of Japanese stock and real estate markets.


    Talk about great calls!


    At the moment, Matsufuji is predicting the coming of the new "Golden Age" and is preparing accordingly via Jipangu – a term for Japan brought to the west by Marco Polo. It means "Island of Gold" – ancient legends of the Japanese roof-tops covered in gold. Jipangu is the only pure gold company in Japan with a goal of becoming one of top 10 gold producers in the world.


    ***


    This means GATA now has five Mr. Golds/Silver (all legendary figures) coming to Gold Rush 21 from five countries and many continents: Peter George from Cape Town, South Africa: Ferdi Lips from Zurich Switzerland, John Embry from Toronto, Canada, Hugo Salinas Price from Mexico City, Mexico and Tami Matsufuji from Tokyo, Japan. Never before have such legends been assembled at one conference. Might never happen again. Should be quite a show and treat for the attendees.


    Both Nick Ferris and John Anderson will also be at Gold Rush 21.

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
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    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von Schwabenpfeil ()

  • One of our speakers, has an outstanding piece just out titled:


    BROWN’S BLEEDING HEART


    Excuse to dump IMF Gold


    South Africa bends to the bankers


    Here is a sample:


    5.1 US OPPOSITION FOR THE RECORD


    The poorest nations are in debt to a tune of $70billion owed to international institutions. Apart from $12billion owed to the IMF, there is further $58billion owed to the World Bank and others. Britain would cancel the lot by raising funds in the international money markets - a so-called International Financial Facility. (IFF) To cover IMF write-offs, Britain suggests revaluing IMF gold holdings and selling off sufficient to cover a $12billion loss.


    Taylor’s response was as follows:


    "The United States is committed to poverty reduction for heavily-indebted countries, but we cannot support the IFF…Our own approach, involving the complete debt write-off of poor country debts to multi-lateral institutions, and the use of (conditional) grants rather than loans, is the right way to go."


    Other members have concerns the ‘conditions’ will be unpalatable to recipients. The problem is that unless one imposes conditions, recipients never learn to mend their ways. Irresponsible children are no different.


    Taylor said he was also ‘not convinced’ by Brown’s other two proposals either. The first was that the IMF revalue sufficient of its gold reserves to enable them to write poor country debts off the balance sheet. The second was the question of sales.


    Taylor continued: ‘The Bush Administration is not convinced that gold sales are a NECESSARY way to raise capital for debt relief.’


    GATA’s reaction to the US attitude was quite direct:


    "No country is more anti-gold than the US. GATA has six years of documentation of this. Therefore, you can be sure US Treasury Undersecretary John Taylor’s objection to gold sales is a red herring of sorts…Maybe the US is scared to death of the Gold issue being raised, it may lead to questions about US Gold, a portion of which has most likely been clandestinely …swapped out."


    In contrast, Brown can console himself with the fact that support for his proposals is growing within Europe. The German Finance Minister, Hans Eichel, told the Guardian newspaper that Germany is in principle in favour of both the IFF and IMF gold sales plan.


    5.2 THE ALLIANCE RUNS DEEPER THAN BLOOD


    If the above reasoning on the closeness of US-UK strategy, fails to convince our readers, try the following. US and UK troops are standing and dying side by side in Iraq. There is however a matter, that runs closer and deeper than blood. It is the health of the world monetary system. Would they ever dream of not swapping notes on such a seminal subject as a plan to sell off gold - of course not! If Gordon Brown even vaguely suspected genuine US Treasury opposition was running high, would he openly court conflict with his blood brother- never!


    In a leaked memo emanating from discussions at a highly secretive get together of the ‘Bilderbergers’ – the European equivalent of the Council on Foreign Relations meetings in New York – there was an innocuous description of how board meetings are conducted at the IMF.


    "Everything the IMF does is voted on. But contested votes are rare: decisions are by CONSENSUS, with the consensus usually put together outside the boardroom."


    If that is how members of the IMF conduct business in the wider context of big meetings, how much more so in the narrow confines of a ‘one on one’ discussion between two nations, linked at the hip by history, war and ongoing financial subterfuge. We rest our case. Prepare for a US ‘turnaround’ on IMF gold sales.


    A couple of days ago GATA reported a Treasury spokesman saying:


    ‘Washington will not scupper the plan’.


    He explained that:


    "The British are hoping to strike a deal on a gold sale or revaluation as soon as April. We are waiting for the IMF to produce its report".


    There we go. Let the situation develop.


    ***

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  • The next section is entitled: "TAMING THE SOUTH AFRICAN SHREW".


    It explains how and why South Africa agreed to IMF Gold Sales under pressure from the ‘international banking cartel’.


    I encourage you to access the full report at Peter George’s website with a view to becoming a possible subscriber. The address is http:// http://www.investmentindicators.com


    -END-


    Nick Ferris stopped in Thailand on the way home from Tokyo. He thought you might like to see how gold demand was holding up over there. This jewelry is very high caratage and most of it is bought for investment purposes.



    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.lemetropolecafe.com/img2005/Midas/Midas0228A.jpg]



    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.lemetropolecafe.com/img2005/Midas/Midas0228B.jpg]


    Had a great time in San Diego with my family. My niece Katie Murphy won two out of three of her college tennis matches. Sister Di, whom a number of Café members know out there, took us out to Mr A’s in San Diego itself. Top notch restaurant with a spectacular view of the downtown area including the harbor and airport (planes are at eye level as they go to land). Mentioning this big because of what I ate. A good omen. Was looking for a beef entrée and there it was with Yukon gold potatoes. Were they delicious.

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  • I have had a number of requests to comment on what the deal is with Durban Deep. Adrian lays it all out:


    Bill,
    I have been reviewing some of the press releases about DROOY. KPMG (the auditors) warned of a cash squeeze as liabilities were almost offset by assets making them technically bankrupt.


    When you look a bit closer the assets that are being referred to are the cash and liquid assets such as mining equipment. The assets are quoted as 700 million rand versus net debt of 300 million rand. That’s 121 million dollars of assets and 52 million dollars of debt. DROOY has 10 million ozs of gold reserves worth 4.35 billion dollars at todays price. But that doesn’t seem to figure in the assets. I am not an accountant but presumably because the current cost of extraction exceeds the gold price the gold in the ground has no value. The market cap of DROOY is 250 million dollars valuing the gold in the ground at $25/oz. In a bull market in gold the financials of DROOY are not good but their fortunes are likely to turn around rapidly. This view seemed to be held by investors on JSE as the DRDgold shares only fell 6% on JSE when the Durban financial results were released. In New York DROOY was hammered for 23% and then a further 15% the following day. Meanwhile Barrick can sell 2 billion dollars of gold that it hasn’t mined yet and that seems to be OK.


    If there are any extraordinary large dips in anything gold isn’t it strange it always happens on a New York exchange? I don’t have anything concrete to go on but my nose tells me something is up. Let’s see which White Knight comes to the rescue of the cash squeezed, resource rich Durban.
    Cheers
    Adrian

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  • Just checked the Access Market. As almost always the case, gold is down after its obvious price capping – 80 cents this time, wiping out most of today's gains.


    The shares are trading as if they have been handed the same yoke. Today they bolted out of the box to the upside and then were hammered down even when gold was up $2. The XAU rose .09 to 98.97 and the HUI lost .04 to 215.32.


    HUI
    http://bigcharts.marketwatch.c…&o_symb=hui&freq=1&time=8


    I’m not only who is ticked off:


    Boy these crooks get more transparent everyday. They had a potential powder keg on their hands today with the HUI. FCX was on fire with copper. Gold and silver were flying. So what did they do? They pounded GSS and MDG. No news on either. JP Morgan of all places upgraded MDG last Thursday. MDG is not liquid and as such subject to big swings. So why not hammer it via naked short-selling and large sell offers? This is getting to be painfully ridiculous. I hope these crooks burn in hell.
    Dave in Denver


    The Gold Cartel is huffing and puffing for all the world to see. The good news for us is these windbags can’t control commodity prices, nor can they bamboozle the bond vigilantes forever. This, along with a diminishing supply of available central bank gold, is going to do them in. Can’t happen soon enough for me.


    GATA BE IN IT TO WIN IT!


    MIDAS

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    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von Schwabenpfeil ()

  • Appendix


    By William Pesek Jr.
    Bloomberg News Service
    Friday, February 25, 2005


    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/commentary/wpesek.html


    It's THE question in global currency markets: What force of nature prompted South Korea suddenly to scrap plans to sell dollars?


    On Tuesday, the dollar was plunging amid a comment by Asia's No. 3 economy that it would diversify foreign-exchange reserves into other currencies.


    By Wednesday, Korea's central bank said it had no such plan, leaving traders scratching their heads.


    Dumping dollars would be a logical move for the world's fourth-largest holder of reserves after Japan, China, and Taiwan. Korea, after all, is going against the tide in Asia, letting its currency rise. It no longer needs so many U.S. Treasuries, nor does it want to sustain huge losses as the dollar falls.


    Korea's hasty and counterintuitive about-face makes you wonder if U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow himself made a call to Seoul. It's hardly in the U.S.'s interest to see Korea pull the plug on Treasuries. It could prompt other Asian central banks to do the same, driving up U.S. debt yields.


    Or maybe it was Japan, the biggest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries, pressuring Korea. Shortly after Korea's denial, Japan's vice finance minister for international affairs, Hiroshi Watanabe, referred to "wild" moves in the yen and said Tokyo "will act when necessary" if its currency rises too rapidly. Asia hardly wants a resumption of Japan's yen-selling campaign.


    Conspiracy theories aside, markets could be excused for wondering if Franz Kafka is roaming the halls of Korea's Ministry of Finance -- and whether the Czech writer is running its currency policies.


    Kafka, of course, is famed for tales possessing bizarre, illogical, and nightmarishly complex qualities. And there are some rather Kafkaesque aspects to recent events, not only in Seoul but also on currency policies throughout Asia.


    Korea's retreat from dumping dollars shows the bind central banks are in these days. This region's mercantilist tendencies have manifested themselves in exchange-rate management efforts the likes of which have rarely been seen before.


    "Bretton Woods II" is what economists have dubbed the system that unofficially replaced the original post-World War II currency regime, which was based on a gold standard that collapsed in 1973. In gold's place, many nations adopted the U.S. dollar as an anchor, formally or informally pegging their currencies to it. We may be seeing the demise of this new system, with Korea in the vanguard.


    "The risk of a disorderly unraveling of Bretton Woods II -- a sharp correction of the U.S. dollar and of the U.S. bond market, a surge in U.S. long-term interest rates, and a sharp fall in the price of a wide variety of risky assets such as equities, housing, high-yield bonds, and emerging-market sovereign debt -- is growing," Nouriel Roubini of New York University's Stern School of Business and Brad Setser of Oxford University said in a research paper this month.


    As their findings suggest, the current system is looking more and more like a huge pyramid scheme. As long as Asian central banks stick together and buy dollar-denominated securities, things are fine. Once they start selling, virtually everyone loses -- central banks experience capital losses and economies become less competitive. Central banks have an interest in keeping the game going and hoping others do too.


    Yet this week's events underline "how vulnerable the dollar is to negative news," says Carl Weinberg, chief global economist at High Frequency Economics, referring to the dollar's biggest drop against the euro in six months. The news, Weinberg says, "unwrapped a lot of tightly-wrapped traders who were spring-loaded to sell greenbacks on adverse news."


    Sure, Korea's Treasuries holdings are much smaller than China's, Japan's, or Taiwan's, but its $200 billion of reserves may be at the forefront of trends to trim dollar holdings.


    Central banks here don't buy U.S. debt out of altruism; it's to hold down currencies to boost growth. Monetary officials find themselves in the unenviable position of having to buy lots of dollar assets they know are likely to lose value over time.


    This may be as good a time as any for the region's monetary authorities to avoid losses ahead of a possible surge in U.S. debt yields. Investors won't ignore the record U.S. current-account and budget deficits forever.


    Yet it's a complex issue for Asian economies, which find themselves in a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation.


    Korea seems to have chosen to let the won rise, and it's a good thing. Asia spends inordinate amounts of time weakening currencies, worried about growth a quarter or two out. That distracts from repairing structural problems. It's always easier to devalue your way to growth than to reform financial systems, improve corporate governance, and promote entrepreneurship.


    Hopefully the rest of Asia will follow Korea's example. Rising currencies are a sign of confidence in an economy, not a problem. They lower bond yields and boost stock prices. Capital a hard money brings in can be more important than increased trade attracted by a
    softer one.


    The Kafkaesque state of the global financial system may leave Asia little choice in the matter.


    -END-

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  • By Irwin Stelzer
    The Times, London
    Sunday, February 27, 2005


    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2095-1502209,00.html



    Happenings in the two global markets that do not conform to Adam Smith's model frequently roil free-market economies such as America's. The foreign-exchange market is dominated by central banks that manipulate the value of national currencies for reasons
    unrelated to what we think of as natural economic forces. And the oil market is heavily influenced by a producer cartel that is determined to keep prices well above those that would prevail in a competitive market.


    So when the Korean central bank announced that it had lost interest (no pun intended) in acquiring more dollar assets to add to the $200 billion it already holds, and the Opec oil cartel drove prices above $50 a barrel by suggesting that it would cut output, shivers ran up the spines of investors. Share prices and the dollar both lost some 1.5% of their value in a single day.


    Panicked investors foresaw a run on the American currency. That would force the Federal Reserve Board's monetary policy committee to abandon its policy of "measured" interest-rate increases in favour of much more rapid increases. The so-called house-price bubble would be pricked, consumers rattled, the economy slowed, profit growth curtailed and share prices driven down.


    Worse still, the oil cartel plans to reduce output despite rising demand due to a cold snap in America, and China's insatiable appetite for oil, and shrinking supplies due to a decline in Russian oil production as Vladimir Putin's old KGB pals take control of the industry.


    The resulting higher prices would, in the words of the new annual report of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, constitute "a headwind for the economy because they raise the cost of production, thus weakening the supply side of the economy, and absorb income that could have been used for other purchases, thus weakening the demand side of the economy."


    Worse still, prices of commodities other than oil are soaring, in part because of China's huge purchases. Last week, the Anglo- Australian company Rio Tinto raised the price of the iron ore it sells to Nippon Steel by 72%. Many investors fear this commodity-price surge would add to the inflationary pressure created by high oil prices just as the US economy slows, reintroducing America to the stagflation it thought it had seen the back of when voters ejected Jimmy Carter from the White House.


    It is not unreasonable to ask, in the face of this plausible and unsettling scenario, just how the president's economists can conclude that the American economy will grow this year at an annual rate of 3.5%, "faster than its historical average," driven by consumer spending, investment growth, and stronger exports.


    The answer, in part, is that the Asian central banks have watched their Korean colleague dip its toe in the water of "let's get out of dollar assets" and get scalded in the process. So they have rushed out statements saying that they have no intention of unloading dollars.


    Even the Bank of Korea looked at what it had wrought and was displeased. In its report to the national assembly, the Bank had said that to increase earnings on its reserves it would "expand investments into non-government bonds ... and diversify the currencies in which it invests." Surveying the carnage that this statement created, Kang Myun-Mo, head of reserve management, hastily issued a "clarification." He said that although he indeed intends to invest in higher-yielding non-government bonds, he has no plan to cut the share that dollars represent in the bank's total holdings.


    The dollar recovered as it became clear that the Asian banks were aboard a tiger, and would see the value of their assets eaten if they climbed off. Were they to unload dollars, they would lop billions off the value of the dollar reserves they hold in their vaults.
    So they will continue to buy dollar assets, although at a slower pace and shifting to non-government bonds.


    Unless the gradually declining dollar sufficiently stimulates exports and shrinks imports, the American trade deficit, running at 6% of GDP, will at some point become difficult to finance without a significant rise in interest rates.


    But that day has not yet arrived. The American economy is far more attractive to investors than the sclerotic EU, a Russia led by a president unfamiliar with the concept of private-property rights, a Middle East in turmoil, and a Britain heading down the European path
    of ever-higher taxes. So investors still want to acquire dollar assets in sufficient quantities to prevent a run, although not a slide, in the dollar.


    The more difficult problem relates to oil prices. Opec has decided to adjust output to prevent consuming nations from accumulating inventories to dampen price run-ups. The cartel will henceforth aim to maintain prices in the $40-$50 a barrel range, Saudi Arabia announced late last week, finally officially abandoning it previous target of about $25.


    The higher price confers political as well as economic advantages on producing countries. Iran can resist pressure to abandon its nuclear-weapons programme because it is so awash in cash that it doesn't need western investment. Saudi Arabia can hold its American critics at bay by playing the crucial role of supplier of last resort. And Venezuela has the funds to finance Fidel Castro and anti-American groups in Latin America.


    The disadvantages to America are obvious. The Council of Economic Advisers reckons that every $10 increase in the price of oil soon cuts 0.4% off real GDP. This means that current prices are shaving about a full point off the growth America might be experiencing had
    Opec been content with its previous target ceiling. That, and constraints on its foreign-policy flexibility, are high prices to pay for the administration's refusal to develop a policy to reduce dependence on foreign oil.


    -------------
    Irwin Stelzer is a business adviser and director of economic policy
    studies at the Hudson Institute.

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
    durch den Keller zu fahren.


    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von Schwabenpfeil ()

  • shaka jr, "of things not yet seen"


    hope you arrived home ready for a stellar week.


    this morning it really hit me hard between the ears;


    -what the dynamic societal growth demographics of china's burgeoning consumption class did to/for copper and oil, is what india's population/consumption demographics is doing/going to do for gold.


    -there is absolutely NO doubt in my mind, gold is going to double (just like copper did) from here because of india's growing consumption class alone.


    -from there gold is probably going to several thousand dollars or more because the cabal failed to factor this in and is standing on the beach, frozen in disbelief, watching the tsunami build. they WILL be wiped out, the Fed IS failing. (bye bye t-bonds).


    -i believe that financial things in the US are going to get so whacked that the dollar we know today WILL NOT exist anymore after this is over, they will have to create a new one. for a time gold may become <"priceless"!


    -i believe that one of the things that you will be remembered most for is your mantra of "Got to be in it to win it".


    may you prosper,
    buena fe

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
    durch den Keller zu fahren.


    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

  • March 1 – Gold $432.40 down $3.70 – Silver $7.19 down 16 cents


    HUGE Development For GATA And Gold In The Arab World!


    A hard beginning maketh a good ending... John Heywood "The Proverbs of John Heywood" (1546)


    GO GATA!!!


    In the last couple of MIDAS commentaries I have done what I could to insult the mainstream gold world as much as possible for their ineptness and cowardly approach to dealing with the blatant manipulation of the gold price. Might as well make it a Trifecta and up the ante at the same time.


    What is so grating is that the mainstream gold world dolts refuse to acknowledge the obvious modus operandi of The Gold Cartel. The cabal bums are so organized they repeat their manipulation techniques over and over again, like the $6 Rule – like taking gold down in the Access Market IMMEDIATELY after a concerted price-capping effort during the day.

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
    durch den Keller zu fahren.


    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

  • Last evening Dallas time was a perfect example. Gold was shoved 80 cents to a buck lower not long after gold closed on Comex. The dollar then strengthened a tad later on. When I woke up this morning, the dollar was slightly lower, yet gold had weakened further, called down $1.40 going into the Comex open.


    Contrarily, the S&P futures contract almost ALWAYS opens higher after a decent sell-off. Even Richard Russell has noted how the S&P’s are almost always called higher these days and have been for years now. The Gold Cartel is the one at work suppressing the price of gold. It is The Working Group on Financial Markets (PPT) who is propping up the US stock market and influencing its price action.


    On that note Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase pressed bullion right off the bat this morning, however, sizeable orders from physical market buyers showed up as the price took out $433. After a brief rally, The Gold Cartel attacked again, following up on their price-capping selling of the past week, even though both the pound and yen were modestly higher. Today’s battering had nothing to do with the dollar. It was all about The Gold Cartel forcing the gold price lower because the euro gave back a piddling of its recent gains.

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
    durch den Keller zu fahren.


    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

  • Today’s outrageous manipulation is a classic example of what I have conveyed to Café members for years. The key to the gold price action is how The Gold Cartel uses the action of the dollar to rig the price. They go into capping mode on various gold up days in an organized un-American fashion, and in violation of all the US anti-trust laws. Then, they simultaneously strike to take the price lower when the word goes out from cabal headquarters to do so. Gold has traded this way for years. Can it be any more obvious? If you can’t see what is going on here, you couldn’t have the brainpower of a gnat or a "grapefruit." Perhaps I am being too kind? Meanwhile, the fact that commodity prices have gone berserk is completely ignored by the dullards in the mainstream gold world. PRICE ACTION MAKES MARKET COMMENTARY. Seems not much matters anymore to US financial markets. US deficits, crummy dollar, soaring real inflation, etc. What does matter is spin and market manipulation.


    Gold and silver traded like heavy stones sinking in water the entire trading session. Rallies were non-existent. Only cash market pricing, as gold sank towards $430, saved the day. The gold open interest rose, as fully expected, to 287,801, up a sizeable 4271 lots. This reflects spec buying and Gold Cartel selling to cap the price, as brought to your attention by MIDAS yesterday. Spec longs who bought after Tuesday morning’s limit up day gold pop are now all losers.

    Die Börse ist wie ein Paternoster. Es ist ungefährlich,
    durch den Keller zu fahren.


    Man muss nur die Nerven bewahren !

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