25 January 2012

Fed To Markets: Buy Gold And Silver

by John Rubino on January 25, 2012

The Fed just spoke. Here’s a slightly edited transcript:
Blah blah blah … the economy has been expanding moderately … blah blah blah boilerplate inanity blatant lie … the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability ….
To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with the dual mandate, the Committee expects to maintain a highly accommodative stance for monetary policy. In particular, the Committee decided today to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that economic conditions–including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run–are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through late 2014.

European turmoil /Portugal/Illinois/


Good evening Ladies and Gentlemen:

Today we had the risk is off trade as Europe is in turmoil due to the lack of progress in dealing with
Greece and other PIIGS nations. They announce a deal for the new mechanism for funding yet no deal can be found written anywhere. These will be discussed in the body of the commentary but first let us head over to the comex.


The price of gold closed at the comex at $1664.20 for a loss of 13.80. The price of silver also fell by 32 cents to $31.93. Tonight is the state of the Union message and always the bankers want to make Obama look good so they bomb the precious metals so to make the paper dollar supreme. Options are expiring on Thursday and tomorrow Bernanke deliveries his FOMC two day statement, so again the bankers have their fingers on the sell button.


The total gold comex OI fell by 1800 contracts or so to 436,642 with gold advancing by 14.00 dollars yesterday. We had some banker liquidation. The front options delivery month of January saw its OI fall from 42 to 14 for a loss of 28 contracts. We had 29 delivery notices yesterday so we gained 1 gold contract or 100 oz of additional gold standing. We are now exactly one week away from first day notice and here the OI fell by 9000 contracts as most rolled into April. The new OI for February rests tonight at 139,274 which is on the low side. Of course, we will have to see how many resolute longs we will have willing to take on the likes of the bankers and Blythe Masters. Will they be tempted with bonus fiat dollars to roll or take physical delivery. The estimated volume at the gold comex today came in at 163,849 which is very low for a rollover period. The confirmed volume yesterday was slightly better at 171,616. There is no question that much business has been taken away from the comex to other jurisdictions probably due to the crookedness of the bankers and of course, the MFGlobal scandal.

Gentlemen, Start Your Printing Presses!

By Eric Fry

leadimage
01/25/12 Laguna Beach, California – Whoops!…Oh dear!…It looks like Ben fell off the wagon again!
Such a shame. He had been doing so well ever since he put that bottle of “Old Q.E.” back on the shelf last June… and got sober. But a few weeks back, he tripped up on his 12-step program and started nipping at the bottle again. Slowly at first… then to excess.
Yes, it’s true, dear reader, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, is printing money again. That’s bad enough. But this time, after he prints it, he sends it over to Europe. Crazy, but true. The chart below tells the tale. It shows the quantity of currency swaps on the Fed’s balance sheet.
Total Amount of Currency Swaps on the Fed's Balance Sheet
What are these things?
Technically, they are an exchange of one currency for another currency. Functionally, they are a loan.

Arabian Money With Peter Cooper: Silver as an Investment

Fiat currency system meltdown has huge implications for gold and silver - Embry

Author: Geoff Candy
Posted: Wednesday , 25 Jan 2012

While not something he wants to see happen, Sprott Asset Management's John Embry says, he can't see the global financial situation improving, which has bulilsh implications for gold.

GRONINGEN -

The 12th year of gold's bull cycle could well be the best to date for the yellow metal, if Sprott Asset Management's John Embry is correct.

Speaking on Mineweb.com's Gold Weekly podcast, Embry said, "If the economies are as damaged as I think they are, particularly in Europe, (I don't think they are as good in China or the US as they are trying to crack them up to be).... I think gold and silver prices could conceivably see the biggest percentage gains this year that they've had in the entire bull market"

He says, although he doesn't want to be right, he can only see two realistic scenarios - both of which are bullish for gold. If the world stops supporting the debt in the system, the global financial system will face a hard deflation event, or he says, the continued creation of debt will result in mounting inflation down the road.

Eric Sprott - Aggressive Chinese Buying Will Spike Gold Price

SilverDoctors: No QE3- ZIRP to Continue Through 2014- Gold & Silv...

SilverDoctors: No QE3- ZIRP to Continue Through 2014- Gold & Silv...: No QE3 today folks, but zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) will now continue through 2014, and TWIST (QE by another name) will be continued ...

The Demise of the Petrodollar

Rumors are swirling that India and Iran are at the negotiating table right now, hammering out a deal to trade oil for gold. Why does that matter, you ask? Only because it strikes at the heart of both the value of the US dollar and today's high-tension standoff with Iran.
Marin Katusa

Chief Energy Investment Strategist
Casey Research


Tehran Pushes to Ditch the US Dollar

The official line from the United States and the European Union is that Tehran must be punished for continuing its efforts to develop a nuclear weapon. The punishment: sanctions on Iran's oil exports, which are meant to isolate Iran and depress the value of its currency to such a point that the country crumbles.
But that line doesn't make sense, and the sanctions will not achieve their goals. Iran is far from isolated and its friends – like India – will stand by the oil-producing nation until the US either backs down or acknowledges the real matter at hand. That matter is the American dollar and its role as the global reserve currency.
The short version of the story is that a 1970s deal cemented the US dollar as the only currency to buy and sell crude oil, and from that monopoly on the all-important oil trade the US dollar slowly but surely became the reserve currency for global trades in most commodities and goods. Massive demand for US dollars ensued, pushing the dollar's value up, up, and away. In addition, countries stored their excess US dollars savings in US Treasuries, giving the US government a vast pool of credit from which to draw.
We know where that situation led – to a US government suffocating in debt while its citizens face stubbornly high unemployment (due in part to the high value of the dollar); a failed real estate market; record personal-debt burdens; a bloated banking system; and a teetering economy. That is not the picture of a world superpower worthy of the privileges gained from having its currency back global trade. Other countries are starting to see that and are slowly but surely moving away from US dollars in their transactions, starting with oil.
If the US dollar loses its position as the global reserve currency, the consequences for America are dire. A major portion of the dollar's valuation stems from its lock on the oil industry – if that monopoly fades, so too will the value of the dollar. Such a major transition in global fiat currency relationships will bode well for some currencies and not so well for others, and the outcomes will be challenging to predict. But there is one outcome that we foresee with certainty: Gold will rise. Uncertainty around paper money always bodes well for gold, and these are uncertain days indeed.

The American Debt Imperium and the Mother of all Bubbles

Addison Wiggin on an Empire of Debt and the Mother of all Bubbles



Belarus Gold Reserves Rise to 1.21 Million Ounces in December 2011

By Esther Tanquintic-Misa: Subscribe to Esther's RSS feed

January 25, 2012 12:37 AM EST

Gold reserves by the Republic of Belarus in the last month of 2011 have grown to 1.21 million ounces from 1.028 million ounces in November 2011, data from the Web site of the International Monetary Fund said.

This, as the World Gold Council (WGC) expects gold buying of central banks could have breached another record in 2011.

The Natsionalny Bank Respubliki Belarus bank on its Webs ite reported it holds 1.2 million ounces of gold for December.

"Gold reserves are replenished as a result of the central bank purchasing gold," Mikhail Zhuravovich, a spokesman for the Natsionalny Bank Respubliki Belarus, said in Bloomberg News. The conversion into gold of interest payments received also supplemented to the increased numbers, Mr Zhuravovich added.

When asked if the country plans to buy more gold purchases in the immediate future, Mr Zhuravovich declined to comment.

Gold & Silver: Why governments want much, much higher prices soon?

By Arnold Bock
That governments will want - and will NEED - much, much higher Gold and Silver prices in the future is counter intuitive, given that they have done everything within their power till now to throttle back and to keep a lid on bullion prices. Let me explain why.



Although we have seen eleven consecutive years of gold bullion price rises, such increases have been incremental, measured and at levels which make the remainder of the commodities and equities markets look volatile. Governments have used their preferred bullion banks as agents in the paper futures markets and their central banks, in conjunction with their respective Treasury bureaucracies, to limit the inexorable rise in precious metals prices as much as possible to keep gold - the only 'real money' - from drawing unfavorable attention to their own failing fiat currencies and uncontrolled sovereign debt.



Recently central banks have become net purchasers of gold bullion after many years being net sellers. In 2011 central banks purchased 430 tonnes of gold, five times more than in 2010 and the highest since 1964. Much of this new demand has come from 'emerging markets' central banks like Mexico, Russia, Turkey, South Korea and of course China and India.



This causes one to speculate as to why governments would suddenly, however quietly, turn into buyers rather sellers of gold.



--Could it be that gold is the only 'real money' in a world comprised of paper money backed up only by faith and confidence, or lack thereof?
--Are 'paper money bugs' losing their confidence and swagger?
--Are governments positioning themselves for a period when paper money loses its value faster than they can create additional digital versions of it?

David Franklin Sprott Asset Management January 23, 2012 Recorded by: TheSilverWatch

David Franklin of Sprott Asset Management speaks at the Vancouver Resource Investment Conference January 23, 2012. Recorded by: TheSilverWatch

SilverDoctors: NY Fed's Key to the Gold Vault- 'This is Where All...

SilverDoctors: NY Fed's Key to the Gold Vault- 'This is Where All...: Zerohedge has discovered a fancy missive/ brochure published by the NY Fed titled "The Key To The Gold Vault" - the official brochure of th...

SilverDoctors: Scotia Mocatta Adjusts 209,144 Ounces of Silver in...

SilverDoctors: Scotia Mocatta Adjusts 209,144 Ounces of Silver in...: Today's COMEX warehouse silver inventory update from the CME lists an unaccounted for 209,144 ounce adjustment out of Scotia Mocatta vault...

John Embry - Gold is the Cure to Epic Monetary Debasement

Turk - Greek Default Imminent as Financial Crisis Propels Gold