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

  • November 23 - Gold $491.90 down 50 cents - Silver $8.11 down 4 cents



    The John Brimelow Report


    Dubai's importance. Excellent LRC on Bernanke


    Wednesday, November 23, 2005


    Indian ex-duty premiums: AM $2.98, PM $2.60, with world gold at $491.35 and $488.75. Adequate for legal imports. Indian buying must be conceded to have tolerated gold’s $35 rise since early this month rather well, and can be expected to intensify on any pull back.


    The Dubai Gold Exchange appears to have traded a mere 125 contracts today – the equivalent of only 40 Comex lots. Nevertheless, this entity has great possibilities. If enough capital is attracted to it, the owners of the immense fabricator pipeline of bullion in India and the Middle East could be able to lay off some of their inventory risk. This in turn could make them more willing to hold metal. The Exchange also appears to be anticipating participants taking delivery. If this materializes, Dubai could serve as a valuable price discovery mechanism for Middle East gold appetite. Currently this is an obscure topic, and difficult to follow.


    I think the Dubai Gold Exchange may be a more important development than the Gold ETFs. (GLD is showing a little life at present, increasing its gold holdings twice in the past week, by 6.19 tonnes to 221.23 tonnes, a record.)


    Japan was closed today. Given the dip-buying propensities of the TOCOM public, and their recent interest in gold, the Bears may find the next couple of days in Asia hard on the nerves.


    Reuters carries a story datelined Singapore reporting that sales of gold bars have been seen in the region, and that kilo bars are now at parity with London compared to a 10-40c premium a week ago. Given the abrupt rise in gold, it is surprising they are not at a discount.


    Comex on Tuesday traded 159,501 lots, 86,000 net of switches on Tuesday. Gold was essentially beaten down from the levels it achieved in Asian and European trading, although of course the Comex close was up $3.40 on Monday. Open interest was up only 966 lots.


    ScotiaMocatta said of Tuesday in NY:


    "Short covering entered the market…taking the yellow metal up to a session high of 494.00/494.50. Dealers became aggressive sellers at this point…"


    and Mitsui-London observed


    "Investment banks were on the sell side while funds were buying Feb and rolling their longs as well."


    Given their clear behavior pattern, it must be assumed the ECB group of Central Banks is selling heavily right now. Perhaps this will intimidate the Western Specs who have obviously entered the market: the crucial Indian and Middle Eastern buyers will not be moved.


    A solid reason for Western interests not to be deterred from gold stems of course from contemplating the reputation of the incoming Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, especially in the light of the peculiar M3 abolition decision. This matter has seen its first significant MSM discussion. John Crudele in the NY Post has to my mind a very reasonable comment:


    http://www.nypost.com/business/58052.htm


    while Bloomberg’s Caroline Baum has been deployed to do a hatchet job:


    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…kHk&refer=columnist_baum#


    An excellent essay on Bernanke’s record is posted today on Lew Rockwell’s paleolibertarian website. The author documents that there is good reason to suppose that the new Chairman believes it his duty (and right) to sustain Financial Asset bubbles by intervention. I think this is essential reading for gold’s friends:


    http://www.lewrockwell.com/blumen/blumen10.html


    A happy Thanksgiving to all my friends. I intend to publish on Friday.


    JB

  • What Most People Don't Know About Gold


    By Doug Casey
    Chairman, Casey Research, LLC.
    The International Speculator
    November 24, 2005


    Historically, gold has never been viewed as a speculation. It was simply money: cash in the most basic form. It was a medium of exchange and a store of value. People did not accumulate gold because it could make them wealthy, but because it was a convenient, liquid way to keep the wealth they had.


    http://www.321gold.com/editorials/casey/casey112405.html


    Waiting for the Sky to Fall?:


    Asia and Implications of $500 Gold and $8+ Silver


    By Keith W. Rabin and Scott B. MacDonald


    With gold approaching $500 and silver holding $8+, there is a tendency to wonder whether the long awaited “end game” is now before us. We share a bearish posture, particularly in respect to U.S. equity markets. However, before adjourning to the bunker in anticipation of massive social and economic breakdown, it is important to note the odds favor a more protracted adjustment than the possibility things will spin quickly out of control.


    http://kwrintl.com/library/200…g-for-the-Sky-to-Fall.htm


    November 23, 2005


    A $500 Party or Funeral?


    By Brady Willett


    Rally hats or the death of the latest bull rush?


    Before speculating on what may happen if, and when, $500 an ounce is touched, a quick overview of the gold market is prudent. First and foremost, since holding above $300 an ounce in 2002 the gold bull – at least when studying the COT statistics - has been a relatively predictable animal. Today the COT numbers are screaming sell, and will likely continue to scream sell until the commercials are able to cover part of their position at lower prices. As for the possibility of the commercials covering for losses and/or defaulting, since this is only going to happen once (and will likely result in a full out gold mania), it is difficult to suggest that the recent rally in gold is the rally. Speculations about the commercials being cornered have emerged during every major rally since 1999, and have repeatedly been proven wrong.


    http://www.fallstreet.com/nov2305.php

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Doug Casey`s Folgerung:


    I have no doubt that gold will again regain its traditional role of money, but only after it is trading at far higher prices than it is today. Wait and see.


    Jo!!
    Gruß


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Brad Willett sagt es selbst,mit Einschränkung:


    Forget about $500


    Gold will one day tackle $600, $700, and $800+ an ounce USD, and by then discussion about $500 an ounce gold will be forgotten. 8)


    Gruß E.


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Sorry, its a long one....but a good read too ;)


    From an interview with John Hathaway, Portfolio Manager, Tocqueville Gold Fund - as posted in Barron's - by Sandra Ward (November 21, 2005)


    For Tocqueville Gold Fund's John Hathaway, gold shares "give you more octane than the metal itself."


    If it's gold you're after, Hathaway, who runs about $550 million in the Tocqueville Gold Fund and another $400 million in separate client accounts, is the man for you.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Barron's: Gold seems to be trying to make another run here. What's your outlook for the price?


    Hathaway: In the very near term, I have no idea. But it is still a bull-market trend, and there are a lot of reasons for that, and we will see higher prices. People shouldn't be surprised to see gold trade in the four digits. 8o


    Q: What's behind the move higher?


    A: There is so much paper around, there are so many financial assets, and it only takes a small diversion from financial assets into gold to push the price higher.


    Q: But what would lead to that diversion?


    A: People are buying tangible assets, and gold is tangible and probably one of the most liquid and, in some ways, the least risky of all the tangible assets.


    Q: There doesn't seem to be a lot of it around.


    A: There is not a lot of it around. If you took one-tenth of one percent of global financial assets and stuck them in gold, you would wind up with a couple of years of mine supply. It is a trade you can't do. But it still gets back to the question as to why people would get more interested in gold, and it's not all based on bearishness. India is getting more prosperous, and Indians like gold. China is getting more prosperous, and the Chinese like gold. More disposable income in Asia definitely helps gold.


    Q: Yet there are bearish factors behind the bull case for gold.


    A: There is an ongoing currency debasing. Look at all the people who were bearish on the dollar a couple of years ago -- they've been slammed because they put their money into the euro. They should have put it in gold. Warren Buffett just took a loss on part of his position in the euro. He was famous for being bearish on the dollar. How did he activate that? He took a 22 billion euro position because the euro was liquid and gold isn't.


    Q: Are you surprised at the behavior of the euro?


    A: Not really. It is a piece of garbage, really. There is no national treasury that stands behind it, but a committee of bureaucrats. Then there's the politics and social issues in Europe. There's a big difference in the growth rate between the U.S. and Europe, and there's a big differential in interest rates between the U.S. and Europe. Gold is going to rise against the dollar and the euro and the yen, which it has been doing for quite a while, but it has been doing it quietly, so most people aren't even aware of it.


    Q: There are still a lot of skeptics on gold.


    A: It's been five years since it's been in a bull market.


    Q: Before that it had been in a bear market for about 20.


    A: These days, the generations are much shorter. Residual skepticism is all over the place, and it is terrific because it gives the bull case longevity. If everybody were on board the way they are with energy, I would have to think of a new investment theme to work on.


    Q: You have written about gold benefiting from a bubble in the U.S. Treasuries market.


    A: The bubble is a reflection of the lack of investment alternatives. It is also a reflection of the perceptions of risk and the notion that Treasuries are a safe haven so they should be priced in a different way. There is so much money sloshing around the system, to the extent it is risk-averse it goes into Treasuries. On the other hand, you have negative real rates throughout the yield curve. Latest 12-month inflation is running about 4.7%. An investor has to go out almost 30 years on the yield curve just to get even. There is so much paper around and returns on assets are so hard to come by that it is driving money in this direction, and that's created the bubble. But these conditions are very favorable for gold.


    Q: So what will focus people's attention on gold?


    A: Hitting $500. That will fixate attention. This has been a stealth bull market. Only years after a bottom has been made do people realize it.


    Q: Hasn't there been a disconnect between the price of gold and gold shares?


    A: Day by day, tick by tick, they don't do the same thing. But if you go back to 1999, which was the bottom of the bear market in gold, gold has gone from $250 an ounce to nearly double that. And the XAU, a benchmark for gold shares that most people use, has gone from the low 40s to around 115. For the last year or so, the shares have underperformed the metal to some extent, but over a period of time and on a historical basis, the shares give you more octane then the metal itself.


    Q: Why are the shares underperforming?


    A: Costs are up so much, particularly for open-pit mines, which use a lot of energy pushing dirt around and hauling it. The cost of building a new mine is up a good 30% over what it was five years ago. So the economics of the industry, even though the price of the commodity is up quite a bit, are essentially just as crappy as they were when gold was at its lows.


    Q: Will consolidation in the industry help that?


    A: Not really. They might help a particular company's business, but it is not going to change the economics. What would change the economics would be a $200-$300 price increase so that gold would then outperform commodities. Gold has underperformed other commodities by about 50% for quite a few years. That tells you oil, copper and a lot of these inputs that gold producers need to get gold out of the ground have outpaced the price of gold. That is a fairly straightforward explanation of why margins have been poor. But there is another factor, and that is it is so easy for a gold company to get money. They have abused their ability to access what has been very low-cost capital by over-issuing shares. The stocks might be 20% higher if so many didn't declare open season on investors by issuing so much new stock.


    Q: Do you take an activist role in that sense?


    A: I'm very vocal about how investor-unfriendly the success of share issuance is. I'm particularly upset with the Canadian investment banks that do these deals.


    Q: What's their defense?


    A: The other side of it is that small companies, particularly the ones that are true exploration companies, are analogous to biotech stocks. They have properties that have potential value, but it takes a lot of money for drilling and exploration and metallurgical testing and feasibility before you actually generate revenues. Basically, they have to pass the hat all the time. Issuing shares is a quick and dirty way to get money, and for smaller companies, it's OK. But I object to any company that has a listing here in the U.S. on the New York Exchange or American Stock Exchange doing "bought" deals [in such a deal, a new-share issue is bought entirely by one underwriter to resell to investors].


    Q: Is there any evidence that raising money has boosted production?


    A: No. We just had a company in yesterday that is a particularly good example of this practice, and if you look at benchmarks like resources per share or ounces of production per share, they have been flat at this company for the last four years. So getting back to your question on why the shares have been sluggish in an environment in which the gold price is going up, it's because costs are way up and these companies issue stock without discipline.


    Q: Haven't some gold stocks been hurt by strength in local currencies?


    A: Certainly the South Africans were hurt because the rand went from something like 13 to the dollar to six to the dollar over a period of a year and a half or two years. That's like cutting the gold price in half. Even though the dollar price of gold has gone up, the rand price of gold is just now getting back to where it was a few years ago. To a lesser extent, strength in the Australian dollar and the Canadian dollar until recently squeezed margins for operations in those countries. But you get around that problem if gold is rising in all those currencies, which it is doing. But we have reached a point where gold isn't really linked to foreign-exchange rates because a lot of people are concerned about paper currencies in general.


    Q: Yet Central Banks have been selling gold.


    A: Central-bank selling fills the gap between supply and demand. They have been selling at steady pace. What they have is an arrangement so their selling is orderly and doesn't spook the market. Under that arrangement, there is a quota system of 500 metric tons a year for five years. The selling is transparent, the market knows it is there, and if the program wasn't in place, gold could easily be $200 or $300 higher. We are in the second year of that five-year agreement, and it is hard to imagine where all that gold is going to come from.


    Q: Who's buying?


    A: They sell it into the market. We keep some of our gold in Switzerland, and I went to the facility where we keep it and basically it was a large refining company. They were melting down bars from the Swiss Central Bank, and at the other end of the production line there were semi-finished gold watch cases and jewelry for China, the Persian Gulf and India. That's where it is going. Central bankers are selling their best asset into the markets and it is going into non-monetary forms, and they will never get it back. They are just bureaucrats and not even held accountable for what they do on a financial basis. It has been such a bad trade for the last five years, you would think that at some point they would begin to say maybe we should hang on to what we have. But again, their general agenda is not to have gold as a monetary asset or at least not talk about it if they have it, because what is still true is that a rising price of gold is not a favorable reflection on public financial policies, monetary and fiscal.


    Q: What's the impact of gold exchange-traded funds on the market?


    A: It is potentially huge. Right now there's about $3.5 billion in gold ETFs, which isn't bad considering the first one came out a little over a year ago. As we discussed, gold shares can be risky, yet gold is not necessarily an investment for those who are risk-seeking or risk-tolerant. Gold is essentially financial insurance. It is non-correlated. It has hundreds of years of history of being non-correlated with financial assets, which means that when financial assets are doing well gold doesn't do well. From 1980 to 2000, that was the case, but in the 1970s and 1930s, gold did very well. What the ETF does is open the door for people who should have exposure to gold. It makes it easy for a college endowment that would never typically open up a commodities account or open up an arrangement with a bullion dealer to own gold. The ETF paves the way for an entirely different class of investors to come into gold, not gun slingers looking for huge returns but people who just want to protect capital, which gold does very well. Eventually, this will do a tremendous amount for the gold price. The more money that comes into the ETFs, the more it is going to create momentum for the underlying commodity. Barclays is trying to bring out a silver ETF, and the Silver Users Association, which includes companies such as Kodak and Dow Chemical, are opposed to it because of concern it is going to take the price up.


    Q: What risks are working in gold's favor?


    A: There is a lot of financial risk in the system. The level of household debt, the housing bubble, the amount of U.S. Treasuries held by foreign central banks, the valuation of the stock market, the overvaluation of the bond market, are all legitimate reasons to be concerned, not that I wish for worst-case outcomes. Secular credit expansions, which is what we had from 1982 through 2000, are often accompanied by an ever-decreasing perception of risk. Frankly, we've been in a bear market since 2000, and people still don't realize it. Yet bear markets have a life of their own, and they really don't end until a certain psychology takes hold and people just hate financial assets.


    Q: Are gold stocks attractive at this point?


    A: One of the problems I have is that a lot of my positions are merging, so I'm forced to go down the food chain and look elsewhere for other things to own more of. Among the big producers, companies such as Newmont Mining [NEM], Gold Fields [GFI], Barrick [ABX] and, to some extent, Goldcorp [GG], aren't really growth vehicles. They can get a little bit bigger, perhaps, but if this Barrick merger with Placer Dome [PDG] goes through, for instance, the company will produce 10 million ounces of gold, and that's more than 10% of the market's annual global production. How much bigger can they really get? This is not a business that lends itself to size in the sense that one company could ultimately become 30% or 40% of the market.


    When you are mining that much gold, you have to replace it every year, and if these guys can just replace what they produce and replace it with high-quality ounces, and keep their costs in line, they are doing a great job. They become perpetual options on the gold price. Newmont, for instance, should just say it will be a seven-million-ounce producer for the next 15 years, and that would create a certain instrument in the market- place, which is a long-dated option on the gold price with a very low cost of capital.


    Q: What about the smaller companies?


    A: On the other end of the spectrum are the pure exploration companies that are out there trying to find new reserves, and as the gold price goes higher, the Newmonts and Barricks of the world will be compelled to buy the junior names. We manage our portfolios by owning the best of the large companies that have this long-option characteristic to their shares and the best of the small-cap names where value can be created without the price of gold rising necessarily.


    Q: What junior producers are attractive?


    A: I want to be careful to list companies that are reasonably liquid. We own something called Yamana Gold [AVY], which has a very nice growth profile. They are in Brazil and have a great land package. It's got 190 million shares trading at 4.


    Q: Are you expecting more upside?


    A: Yes. They have a fairly well-defined ramp-up of growth in the next five years, and that is something that we look for. We also like Ivanhoe Mines [IVN] a lot. There are 300 million shares outstanding, so it has a $2.4 billion market cap. They have a huge discovery in Mongolia. Ivanhoe has a world-class copper discovery that just keeps getting bigger and has the potential to match Freeport McMoran's [FCX] big copper property in Indonesia in terms of its size. It is right near the Chinese markets, and it is economically very significant.


    Q: Any others?


    A: A third one is Eldorado :D [EGO]. It's an emerging producer with assets primarily in Turkey, which is geologically a very good place to be. It hasn't been picked over the way some areas have. It is not really a Third World country in that it has got First World infrastructure.


    It's got a billion-dollar market cap. Basically, what we look for is production ramping up so there is some growth component and prospective acreage and land packages allowing for more discoveries.


    Q: Thanks, John.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Danke Eldorado ;)


    Das Interview war lesenswert.


    Bei Yamana meint er YRI.
    Ivanhoe kommt nie so richtig aus den Pantoffeln,
    im Gegensatz zu EGO und YRI.


    Gruß E.


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Auszug seines Nnewsletters vom 22.11.
    Da gibt es bemerkenswerte Einsichten, zum Dollar!


    Keine Rede mehr von den oftmals beschworenen 94. :]
    ___________________________________________
    GOLD


    I am happy to see the friendship between gold and the dollar; they are both walking together and this is of course a new chapter for both of them :D. This new golden era is fine for the USA but not a positive one for other countries. Inflation is a reality, and on average, commodity prices have gone up in the last two years and especially 2005. Are rising commodity prices (especially gold) good for the middle class investor in developing countries? Will the common man be able to buy gold at these prices or will a continuous rise push away the middle class and others from having gold?! This is a different issue and of course a good point to debate, but at the moment let us dwell on this week’s trend.


    Last week gold touched a seventy year high. Oil money moved into gold as a positive short term planetary re-alignment occurred for gold. This is nothing compared to what will happen in future. Though not next year, gold will at one point go as high as $800.

    On higher side may push it towards $496.80....


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Wenn dann schon alles Edel Man:


    Wie immer und staendig:



    NOTE: IN NEXT FEW WEEKS, I AM INCREASING 100% FEE FOR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER.
    Thanks & God Bless my account ;)




    SILVER


    .........my next target is $12.80 if it trades above $8.00 for twenty one days. This week silver should be volatile and may remain in the range of .. ?(
    .... I tell you if you give me your money :P


    COPPER


    Today I am putting copper in the third position as it is very important: a lot of short sellers have been stuck in it. A few powerful traders have been buying it continuously and making a big killing. Tuesday will decide the future fate of copper. Any negative trend on this day will be a confirmation that the short, medium and long term top has been formed. Last week I mentioned that the maximum it can go up is $198.80 and I still hold the prediction.


    WAIT FOR MY ALERT ON TUESDAY ON THIS.


    PALLADIUM/PLATINUM


    Once again, I recommend booking profit in both metals. Palladium may make another new high, but not so for platinum.

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Ulfur

    2005-Voraussagen am besten erst nächstes Jahr veröffentlichen. Sehr clever!!!


    Yepp!!
    In nachgeschobenen "Waves of nature"... ist er besonders gut. :))


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Das ist wohl einer der Gründe,warum er inzwischen "viele Institute" oder so als Kunden hat.
    Da zahlts der Kunde indirekt.


    Den anderen sind seine Dauerwellen der Natur zu teuer geworden. ;)


    Hab den Goldteil wegen der Dollarpassage reingestellt.


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • 4:53p ET Thursday, November 24, 2005


    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:


    When Russian President Vladimir Putin this week attended
    a mineral resources exhibition in the Russian Far East,
    endorsed the plan of the Bank of Russia to double its
    gold reserves, and expressed support for increasing his country's gold production, many assumed that Russian gold purchases would come from domestic production and thus
    not disturb international markets.


    But today's RIA Novosti report, dispatched to you earlier
    today, quoting the Bank of Russia's first deputy chairman,
    Alexei Ulyukayev, suggests otherwise. It suggests that Russia
    is ready to enter the physical gold market everywhere. This would be revolutionary, as noted by Michael Kosares, proprietor of Centennial Precious Metals in Denver, whose analysis at his firm's Internet site, http://www.USAGold.com, is appended here.


    Indeed, the unusual resilience of the gold price in recent months --particularly since GATA's Gold Rush 21 conference
    in Dawson City, Yukon, Canada, which was attended by one of President Putin's economic advisers, Andrey Bykov -- hints
    that a central bank has been a buyer for some time now.


    Of course Russia's central bank took official note of GATA
    in June 2004, when another of its deputy chairmen, Oleg Mozhaiskov, told a meeting of the London Bullion Market Association in Moscow about GATA's contention that Western central banks had been rigging the gold market to the
    detriment of the developing world:


    http://www.gata.org/RCBTakesNote.html


    While GATA, given the Russians' interest, has been trying
    to convey much to them, we have no inside information here.
    The Russians may be good listeners but they have yet to
    prove themselves conversationalists. But if YOU had a
    load of paper and electronic currency whose proliferation
    was unlimited and if you were disadvantaged by the imperial schemes of the issuer of that currency, what would YOU
    do to protect your wealth and your national interests?


    Centennial Precious Metals' Kosares argues that if the
    Russians are serious about buying gold, their announcement
    is the equivalent of the Washington Agreement of 1999,
    which put a ceiling on central bank gold lending and
    touched off gold's bull market.


    Kosares' analysis is below.


    CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
    Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.


    * * *


    By Michael Kosares
    Centennial Precious Metals, Denver
    http://www.usagold.com/cpmforum/


    Thursday, November 24, 2005


    "First Deputy Chairman of the Central Bank Alexei Ulyukayev
    said the bank would be purchasing gold 'on all markets on which it is available,' meaning both domestic and foreign markets."


    A few observations:


    1. We should not forget that it was central bank buying that broke the back of the anti-gold cartel in the late 1960s early 1970s. This paved the way for the massive bull market of the 1970s.


    2. Ulyukayev is not talking about paper trading for
    speculative purposes. He's talking about buying physical gold and storing it in reserve as a long-term asset.


    3. This policy is a major, decisive departure for the G-8 in
    that one of its members will be exchanging currency reserves
    for gold -- and after a public disclosure. Russia now is receiving a large amount of foreign exchange for its oil and
    gas (this will not change for quite some time), probably in
    the form of dollars and euros.This looks like the first
    step in a long-term program.


    4. Russian gold buying will become a new element in the
    physical gold market, and likely will put even more pressure
    on those short the metal to cover now while it is still
    cheap -- of course, that Russia follows through. But I can't
    see why they would announce such a plan without meaning it.


    5. I rate this announcement by the Russian central bank as
    the equivalent of the Washington Agreement in 1999, which
    kick-started the current gold bull market. It amounts to
    a de-jure action that could have a major impact on the gold market and comprise the primary driving force for the
    second leg of this bull market.

    -END-

  • GOLD IS DOING WELL AS PEOPLE LOSE INTEREST IN CURRENCIES

    Gold is strong versus almost every currency.
    1. People don't necessarily want U.S. dollars, but they don’t want Euros, Yen and Pounds more. They are buying gold instead of holding currencies.
    2. Both Chinese and Indian people have a tradition of buying gold. Both countries are increasingly prosperous, as are their inhabitants. More wealth means more gold purchases.
    3. Gold is being demanded more by the Chinese. It appears they may be investing some of their surplus in gold rather than in depreciating currencies.
    4. Inflation is definitely rearing its ugly head.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Moin Eldorado


    Alle Wetter,biste noch wach, oder schon aus den Federn?


    Gute Beiträge oben.Es tut sich was.Mal so oben rausgestanzt:


    It amounts to a de-jure action that could have a major impact on the gold market and comprise the primary driving force for thesecond leg of this bull market.


    Grüsse


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Jo,klar Eldorado.


    Dennoch: Morgenstund hat Gold.............


    Mach mal so weiter!........... :D


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Eldorado


    Interessant, was die Russen da vorhaben, dem Goldpreis wird's gut tun. :]
    Wie wird die Antwort der Kabalen ausfallen? X(
    Die Spannung steigt!


    Dazu Mutmassungen aus den Weiten des WWW's:


    Zitat

    To break Russia's economy a few years ago, the west drove down the world price of oil, which at the time was the only export commodity keeping the Big Bear financially afloat. The USSR collapsed. It was ugly. Now it is payback time.
    With the global economy held together with "digital dollars" and a central bank suppressed gold price to support their funny money, Russia makes a move that will topple the globalist bankster's rig. It seems to be working nicely too...gold just climbed past $495 while the Wall Streeters are on holiday and burping turkey.


    Zitat

    I find it interesting that this announcement should come on the first day of what amounts to a four day American holiday. I believe this announcement may have not so much to do with the Russians wanting to acquire more gold as to put pressure on the gold shorts and the dollar. Notice they said in all real markets. From their perspective, if ever rising oil reserve monies were to be used to buy gold openly, this would be the Western bullion banks worst nightmare, derivatives and all. It doesn't matter who is doing the buying. I think this may be the opening shot in a currency war which the U.S. is ill equipped to fight at this time. Sort of like another nail in the coffin of the U.S. currency. They have not forgotten their economic disaster of 1989, even as the U.S. currency nears the edge of a cliff.

    Es ist noch kein Verschwörungstheoretiker vom Himmel gefallen.
    - Altes Sprichwort, neu übersetzt

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