Thursday, December 29, 2011

Canada signals it will sell oil to China as US continues to delay Keystone issue


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ONTARIO : Disappointed by the lack of decision making by the US authorities, Canada may infact sell off their oil to the energy hungry Chinese.

In an interview with CTV News, Prime Minister Stephen Harper says- "I am very serious about selling our oil off this continent, selling our energy products off to China”

The US government had put on hold its decision on the Keystone pipeline until after the 2012 elections. And even though the US senate passed a bill that required president Obama to take a decision on the matter within 60 days, the House had rejected it on Dec 20, thus putting a cloak on uncertainty over the energy project.
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The U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue has expressed support for the pipeline project an urged Obama to take a quick decision. “If the president is serious about job creation and energy security, now it the time to act on the Keystone XL pipeline. This is the perfect example of a shovel-ready project that makes sense for our economy”, he said on Tuesday.
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The project has however found staunch resistance from environmentalists arguing that the project will harm the environment.
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The proposed Keystone XL pipeline between Alberta and Texas was expected to pump 830,000 barrels of oil every day.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Why silver is poised for a big crash into the teens


By Clive Maund
Some weeks ago in a Silver Market update we had noted that a large potential Head-and-Shoulders top area was completing in silver, but we got "thrown off the scent" by the positive Accum-Distrib line (now rapidly reversing) and the seemingly strongly bullish COT structure.

In the light of the severe bearish breakdown by stocks indices last week this potential H&S top is now viewed as legitimate.

Silver held up remarkably well last week considering what happened to gold, which is a straw that silver bulls are now clutching on to as evidence that silver is still in a bullmarket, but the reason that it held up so well is that it is close to a zone of strong support towards the lower boundary of the H&S top area.

Once this support fails it's "curtains" for silver which can be expected to plunge into the high teens.

The Head-and-Shoulders top is shown on the 3-year chart for silver shown below. On this chart we can also observe various other bearish factors that are now coming into play.


-One is that silver has been trading way below its 200-day moving average since the September plunge, and this indicator is now rolling over and about to turn down, which will put the price and its moving averages in nearish alignment for the first time since 2008.

-Another important bearish factor is that that the MACD momentum indicator shown at the bottom of the chart is now in an established downtrend, and with it now showing an only moderately oversold reading there is plenty of scope for further heavy losses going forward.


The 6-month chart for Silver shows recent action in more detail, in particular last week's breakdown from what we can now see was a Head-and-Shoulders continuation pattern, which interestingly forms the Right Shoulder of the much larger Head-and-Shoulders top shown on the 3-year chart above. Some eagle-eyed subscribers pointed this out to me ahead of the breakdown, but fooled by the COT, I did not take it seriously enough.

With regards to the COT, if it is not at historically bullish readings, how can silver drop? The answer to that is simple - the further it drops the more bullish the COTs are likely to become, and there is no law against the Commercials going net long one day - now that would be a sight to see.

Source: clivemaund

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Beware of big moves in gold, silver

 With the holiday season nearing, hedge fund managers sitting on the sidelines just waiting for their yearend performance bonuses, I cannot see any large selloff start until January. Selloffs in the market require strong volume and the second half of December is not a time of heavy trading volume.



By Chris Vermeulen 
The past few months have been tough for those holding precious metals stocks, PM futures contracts or physical bullion. With silver is trading down 41%, precious metals stocks down 30% and gold 15%. It has people scratching their head.
The question everyone keeps asking is when can I buy gold and silver? Unfortunately that is not a simple answer. With what is unfolding across the pond and the bullish outlook for the US Dollar index the next move is a coin toss.
That being said, I do feel a large move brewing in the market place so I am preparing for fireworks in the first quarter of 2012. If you step back and look at the weekly trend charts of the dollar index and the SP500 index you will see the strength in the dollar along with a possible stop in equities forming.
What these charts are telling is that in the next 3 months we should know if stocks and commodities are going to start another multi month rally or roll over and start a bear market selloff. With the holiday season nearing, hedge fund managers sitting on the sidelines just waiting for their yearend performance bonuses, I cannot see any large selloff start until January.
Selloffs in the market require strong volume and the second half of December is not a time of heavy trading volume. This leaves us with a light volume holiday season, major issues overseas and no big money players willing to cause waves.
In short, I think the best thing to do is enjoy the holiday season with family and friends. Trading right now is not that great and with the market giving mixed signals. I am keeping my eyes on the market in case it flashes a low risk setup and I will keep you informed if we get one.
I am still bearish on gold and silver longer term but the next week or so its likely we see higher prices. courtesy : TheGoldandOilGuy.com


Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Strong dollar rally will crush gold and stocks in 2012 amidst severe deflation

By Clive Maund
Last week saw a severe breakdown in the Precious Metals sector that is now viewed as marking the start of a bearmarket, and that means the onset of a deflationary episode that is likely to prove more serious than that we witnessed in 2008, because it will involve countries going bust rather than "just" banks and large corporations as was the case in 2008.

At first glance gold's 3-year chart still doesn't look too bad, with its price in the vicinity of a still rising 200-day moving average, but last week it broke below this average for the first time since 2008, which is in itself a serious warning, and ominous developments on the charts for Silver and the Precious Metals stocks indices, strongly suggest that gold is in the process of completing an important top area, which looks like it is taking the form of a bearish Descending Triangle.

Momentum as shown by the MACD indicator, is now firmly in negative territory, and failure of the important support level at the lower boundary of the suspected Descending Triangle will Lead to a severe decline as shown.





The dollar broke out above an important resistance level, negating a potential Double Top, as we can see on its 6-month chart below, although the breakout is not as yet by a decisive margin. This has opened up the possibility of another strong upleg by the dollar, which is of course what we would expect to see if deflation strikes.



 How far could the dollar rally? The 5-year chart gives us a good idea - it could run swiftly to the 88 - 89 area during a major deflationary episode.

 If the PM sector is signalling a major deflationary episode, then we should see signs of topping action in the broad stockmarket, and we do. A large Head-and-Shoulders top is completing in the S&P500 index, and with the index high in the Right Shoulder we are believed to be at an excellent point go short, buy bear ETFs etc


Let's stand back a moment now to consider the larger implications of all these developments on the charts. The breakdowns now occurring across the PM sector are an indication that the forces of deflation are set to assert themselves and come to the fore. These forces have always been there, lurking in the background since the first major deflationary convulsion back in 2008, and their intent is to cleanse the world economic system of the dross of the gargantuan debt and derivatives overhang that is bringing the world economy to a dead stop.

The key point to understand here is that these forces may be kept at bay for a while but they cannot be stopped - and creating even more debt and derivatives in an effort to stave off their impact, which is what central banks and governments have been doing since 2008, simply creates a more disastrous situation later on. Thus the accelerated ramping of the money supply and the maintenance of "zombie banks" and the propping up of bond and stockmarkets is an open invitation to disaster on a massive scale.

There is also a widespread assumption that that the entrenched powers that be, Goldman Sachs, the Republican Party etc are unassailable and immortal - that's what the Tsar of Russia and his family thought before they were summarily shot by the Bolsheviks in 1918. Nothing is forever.

2012 is going to suck - it probably won't be as bad as the movie "2012", but it's going to suck. Prepare yourselves as best you can

Source: clivemaund

Asian gold buyers thrilled at price fall, UBS says buy Gold Asian gold buyers thrilled at price fall, UBS says buy Gold

Gold Core
Gold prices dropped more than 7% last week – the biggest weekly loss since September. Liquidity squeezed speculators and banks have been closing long positions and selling Gold this past week but global physical demand remains robust.

Bullion buying in much of Asia has picked up. Reuters reports that there has been a jump in buying in most Asian countries and that demand for gold in India, still the world's top buyer, rose slightly for the first time in almost a week on Friday.

Bullion dealers in India told Reuters that the price drop “enthused buyers.”

"We saw huge physical demand from Thailand and Indonesia," a Singapore based dealer told Reuters. Gold bar premiums were steady at $1.00 an ounce over spot prices in Singapore. Prices may edge up this week as supply reduces around Christmas holidays according to a dealer.

Opinion has been divided about the outlook for gold. Most analysts of the gold market remain positive about the outlook for gold in the medium and long term. Some are cautiously suggesting that the worst of the sell off may be over as gold looks very oversold technically and the fundamentals remain sound.

Bearish sentiment in the gold market is very high which may be indicative of a market bottom.

Some economists continue to confuse gold’s frequent short term correlation with risk assets with its proven hedging and safe haven properties in the long term.

Nouriel Roubini has declined to elaborate and clarify regarding his suggestions that gold is a bubble. Roubini Global Economics has said that the breach of gold’s 200 day moving average is “signaling that prices may drop to US $1400/oz.”

Denis Gartman whose pronouncements of the death of the Gold bull market were widely publicized this week has said that he may buy gold soon if it falls sharply again. Gartman said that gold was poised to enter a bear market and would hit $1,450/oz before it breached $1,800/oz.

A more nuanced view is that of UBS’ Chief Investment Officer who said that “as we enter 2012”, gold no longer retains “a safe haven status.”

However, “investment in bullion makes sense as a protection against currency debasement and as negative real interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of owning gold”, UBS CIO Alexander Friedman of UBS said.

“Investors should not, however, buy gold expecting it to act as a safe haven during severe, liquidity-driven market sell- offs,” Friedman said.

Last week’s washout in gold is “overdone” according to respected UBS precious metals analyst Edel Tully. Edel said that “we think gold at these levels” presents a “buying opportunity.”

Buyers with a long term view might be prudent to dollar cost average into positions in the coming days and weeks.

The old adage to never “catch a falling knife” is worth remembering and it is still too early to say that this correction is over. A higher weekly close next week and weekly or monthly close above the 200 day moving average at $1,620.60/oz would likely see more speculative players come into the market again leading to gold regaining its footing and the technicals again aligning with the fundamentals.

Source: goldcore

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Why gold seen extremely bullish in 2012: Twelve factors

By Commodity Online
Investors who bought Gold as a hedge against the crisis in Europe may be surprised that prices crashed on Wednesday. Is it just a beginning of price fall, or a repeat of 2008? Some people believe that gold's count down has begun. But Jeff Nichols still believes that gold prices will go above $2000/oz in 2012. He forecasts $2000 levels in the first half of 2012 and in the longer term, the yellow metal is expected to ride higher to $3000, $4000, $5000. Because of the following twelve factors, he still believes in a yellow metal rally in 2012.

Twelve bullish factors for gold in 2012
--Past and prospective U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy, characterized by low or negative real rates of interest and unprecedented central bank monetary creation.

--The U.S. federal government budget impasse, rising U.S. sovereign debt, and eroding U.S. creditworthiness.

--The expected future depreciation of the U.S. dollar in world currency markets . . . and the continuing decline in the dollar’s purchasing power for American consumers.

--The growing insolvency of some European nations - leading to the disintegration of Europe’s Monetary Union and the eventual abandonment of Europe’s common currency, the euro, by at least some of the EU member countries.

--The expected acceleration of global inflation - fueled by excessive monetary creation, world population growth, and changing diets in favor of more meat and protein . . . and led by persistently high and rising agricultural and industrial commodity prices from one country to the next.

--The increasing political instability in the Middle East and North Africa . . . as authoritarian regimes are overthrown . . . but sectarian divisions in some countries prevent orderly transitions to democracy . . . with implications for world oil supplies and prices. And then, of course, there is Iran - which remains an unpredictable “wild card.”

--The growing affluence of the “emerging-economy nations” and the associated growth in both jewelry and private investment and savings demand for gold - especially here in China - as well as India and other gold-friendly countries.

--The development and popularity of new Gold investment vehicles and channels of distribution - especially gold exchange-traded funds - that facilitate physical gold investment by both retail and institutional investors.

--The legitimization of gold as an investment class and rising investor participation . . . together reflecting a growing appreciation of the benefits of including physical gold in a well-diversified portfolio . . . and the entry of new, large-scale, professional investors - including pensions, endowments, insurance companies, sovereign-wealth funds, and especially hedge funds.

--The “stickiness” of much of the recent private sector and central bank gold demand. This is shrinking the available “free float” in the world gold market . . . and it means that less metal will be available to gold-hungry buyers, except at increasingly higher prices. Indeed, many of today’s new investors have no intention of ever selling, even at much higher prices.

--- Eleventh bullish factor, one that I believe is especially important to the long-term development of the gold market - is the affect this rising wealth is having on emerging-economy central banks . . . prompting some countries that are over-weighted in U.S. dollars and underweighted in gold to diversify their official reserves through the prudent acquisition of the yellow metal.

--And, twelfth in my catalog of bullish factors supporting a continuing long-term rise in the price of gold is the fact that world gold-mine production, although growing, will not keep pace with the expected growth in global gold demand. Even a rash of new mine discoveries would take five to 10 years - or more - to contribute significantly to supply . . . and, meanwhile, existing resources are being depleted, nationalized by unfriendly governments who tend not to be good mine operators, or are simply mined out.

(Courtesy: Jeffrey Nichols is Senior Economic Advisor to Rosland Capital and Managing Director of American Precious Metals Advisors.

Commodity Outlook for early 2012: Base metals sluggish, Silver, Oil moderately bullish

Volatility will continue in commodities and equities but commodities will continue to outperform other asset classes.  The markets will be impacted by the Eurozone crisis, US financial crisis, already the United Nations has signaled a global recessionary threat in 2012-13.

Recently, central banks in China and some European countries have lowered their interest rates, focusing on growth, which augurs well for commodities.

Commodities witnessed  $10 bn outflow of fund money in September but rebounded with $2.1 bn inflows in October. The outlook is still mixed for most commodities although precious metals may perform better in 2012.  Commodities witnessed in January to April – net inflows of $24 bn (Compared to January –April 2010 inflows of $16 bn)
May to October 2011- Net outflow of $8.5 bn. May saw acute market volatility due to strengthening of Eurozone debt worries, US financial crisis.

Rupee depreciated 17.4% in 2011 against US Dollar , Euro, GBP fell by 5.3%-- to impact India’s imports, inflation and commodity markets. Domestic inflation may sustain on higher imported cost of oil, coal, metals, minerals. Export oriented IT, textiles to benefit.

Indian commodities

Falling financial institutional infows (FII) inflows suggest weak outlook on Indian economy, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows less volatile to Eurozone worries.

Key points: Rs 115 lakh crore turnover in commodity futures trading in 2010-11 representing 50 % growth  The cumulative value of trade from 1st April, 2011 upto 31 st  October, 2011 for the financial year 2011-12 was ` 106, 36,960.76 crore.  Commodity trading volumes in India have risen close to 70% in April to November 15, 2011 at  Rs 113 lakh crore compared to Rs 67.11 lakh cr in corresponding period last year.

It is observed that at least 20 per cent of capital market traders have added commodity to their trading pattern and out of them at least 7 per cent have shifted completely to commodities from equities. (based on three years of data collection by Commodity Online)

Gold Outlook: To touch 28700 by the end of  2011, 32500 by 2012
Gold will trade positive in 2012 driven by central bank buying, India China consumption, global macro-uncertainties and higher investment demand especially through exchange traded funds (ETFs).

Gold prices surged 28% to $1923.70 in September in 11th year of bull run and with US interest rates close to zero and continuing Eurozone debt crisis  that adds to the safe haven appeal of gold.  Gold has surged 38 percent this year, touching a record 29300 rupees per 10 grams in Indian market.  Weak rupee may provide further support for prices. Commodity Online Research expects gold to touch Rs 28700 per 10 gms by end of this month and Rs 32,500 by 2012.

Gold  held in ETFs globally has climbed to a record 2,358.206 metric tons on December 6.

Global gold demand in third quarter of 2011 was strong at 1,053.9 tonnes, an increase of 6% compared to the same period last year. This equates to US$57.7bn, an all-time high in value terms. This increase was driven by investment demand which rose by 33% year-on-year to 468.1 tonnes, generating record quarterly demand of US$25.6 bn. Healthy growth in jewellery demand and modest gains in demand from the technology sector were offset by a year-on-year decline in investment, principally from ETFs and similar products.

In India, latest industry report indicates that the average assets under management for Gold ETFs is more than Rs. 9000 Crores which indicates that Gold is emerging from the shadows of equity and debt with an identity of its own as a preferred investment opportunity.

Gold has risen 20 percent annually in the past four years. In 2011, Gold has given highest return of more than 35 percent in last 10 years. This year closing prices are expected in range of 28700-900 rupees. In 2012, first quarter, gold to touch Rs 31,600 per 10 gms.

Downside momentum is expected till 28200.  Support – 26500, 27300, 28500 .Resistance – 30200, 31500, 32600.Recommendations : Buy Gold in range of 28500-28600 SL 27200. Target 31300, 32700

Silver to be moderately bullish
Silver prices may witness moderately bullish trends in 2012 on global macro-economic uncertainties and possible fall in industrial demand for the commodity. Investment demand may gain especially in India where the demand usually comes from farmers and rural households who store their savings in Silver bangles and coins. Depreciating rupee may weaken demand for precious metals as import costs rise. Higher prices may act as deterrent for buying in India.

In 2010, silver futures have outperformed all base metals and bullion commodities giving a return of 73%.  Current market prices are trading in range of 55000-57000 rupees per kilogram in India.

Silver is also having direct relationship with Euro and inverse relationship with US dollar, as the movement of EURO is generally moving in negative direction with US dollar and most of the other currencies, we may face zig zag movement in the prices of silver.

MCX Silver will trade positive at 58526 levels in the coming weeks could rise to Rs 64000 per kg by February if it breaks Rs 60,000 levels or else it could fall to Rs 46000.

Silver futures climb to more than 56 percent to 73600 rupees per kilogram. After touching all time high levels, Silver dips to 46000 rupees as Euro zone debt crisis fear market condition. Silver move downside along with base metal complex.

Overall view for Silver is moderately bullish for coming year. Short term bearishness can be considered as buying opportunity to buy this white metal at dip. As the world economy worsens, its affects Industry demand for Silver. In case, down-trend continus,  then Silver may touch bottom levels of 48000 and 42000 rupees in coming months. Supportive micro economical data will help Silver to move higher till 62000. Looking at the current market, we don’t expected much space in upper range for now.

Support : 48500, 52000, 55000
Resistance : 58000, 60000, 62500
Recommendations : Buy Silver in range of 51000-52000 SL 47000 Target 58000, 61500

Crude Oil
Crude oil prices may continue to remain bullish at the start of 2012 on geo-political tensions and possible production cuts by OPEC to be announced on December 14, 2011.  Libyan production has resumed and is expected to come back to 1.6 mn barrels per day by end of 2012, but is still lags behind pre-civil war levels.  Global oil demand is expected to decline on Eurozone debt crisis, US financial crisis and weakening of growth in emerging economies.

Hence, Crude Oil prices will trade in positive territory. MCX Crude Oil futures outlook is positive and may climb to Rs 5360 to Rs 5500 per barrel.

Base Metals to remain sluggish in 2012
Base metals will remain sluggish on slower rate of growth reported in China and Japan, the leading consumers of metals.  In India, higher inflation rates, lower IIP data and lower GDP growth is dampening the base metals market.

The ongoing Eurozone sovereign debt crisis and tighter Chinese monetary policy appear to have also had an impact on demand and confidence.

LME Copper is down 18 percent this year, and is headed for its first annual decline since 2008 when a financial crisis tripped the global economy, with demand from top copper consumer China also far from aggressive. Aluminium capacity is being idled on lack of demand and higher energy curbs in China.  Nickel   has fallen significantly in 2011 among the all base metals from its high due to increasing concerns of global economy,low demand and increasing LME stocks.

Nickel will remain bullish for coming sessions and its expected to touch the level of Rs. 1006 which is expected to touch within couple of months.

Lead market is balanced in demand and supply scenario but goiing ahead into 2012 it we believe that supply side would be steadily increasing yet structural change announced by Chinese government should be watched properly as mojor Lead producers are being stopped.

Agriculture

In the agri front, some commodities have shown immense potential in its movement in Futures market while it has also given marginal profit to producers and farmers as well. Take for instance Guar Seed, the prices of which may extend the gains in near term on expectation of lower output in 2011-12 and lower carryover stocks along with robust export demand.

At the same time a commodity like Cardamom has prices have falling by Rs.670 per k.g – from 1580 to 609 -almost 170% down from last year closing. Higher production, and some carryover stocks are some of the reasons for downside in Cardamom.

Rubber prices have shown a firm trend in recent times and rising Crude Oil prices and adverse weather in Thailand had given support for prices. The Indian tyre industry demand for further import at concessional or zero duty has been ruled out by Finance Ministry which allowed 40,000 tonnes at concessional rate of 7.5%. China buying in January may push prices. Indian prices are consolidating at 20,000 levels and is looking for fresh triggers for upside gains.  With a deficit of 75,000 metric tonnes forecast and growth in production of 2.5%, consumption by 2.5%, Rubber prices seem well supported at current levels.

In Pepper, domestic demand is moderate to strong and arrivals are weak these days. In long term, technically the break out of 37300 will take price higher to 39600 if volume supports. While in short-term the prices of future are expected to trade positive. Futures traders can enter into buying positions.

Strategic decisions in moving commodities can bring gains to Futures traders while in the case of physical traders, lack of storage facilities have put them in a dock to store agri commodities. Most traders in north are buying agri commodities and is taking advantage of the mushrooming cold storage facilities from Jaipur to Delhi corridor to store them for two to three years.

According to Futures Industry Association (FIA), number of contracts traded globally in futures and options is higher in agri-commodities compared to metals, energy and other categories.

curtsey  www.commodityonline.com 

Gold: How to invest safely in this financial crisis?

By G. Paul Avalos
Investors who prefer to own physical Gold that they can see and touch have multiple ways to achieve that comfort level. But when stacking up the choices, bullion appears to have the edge over coins for investors who also think about selling as much as acquiring.

“Everyone should keep a little physical at hand,” said Adrian Ash, head of research with London-based BullionVault. “The problem with using coins or small bars for the bulk of your precious metals is threefold: cost, liquidity and security.”

Either way, it’s clear buyers who want physical gold have an array of purchase options to pick through. And these choices come at a time when buyers clamor for owning the real thing.

“We’re seeing an increase in demand by investors for gold ownership in all forms,” said William Rhind, managing director of ETF Securities US.

Gold coins, the smallest of the physical units, can be bought in some surprising venues, said New York City-based attorney David Ganz, a past president of the American Numismatic Association and an expert in the gold market over a period of decades.

“There are even machines at airports that have them,” Ganz said. “I was at an airport in South Africa where I saw them. Cape Town has vending machines where you can buy gold in about half-ounce increments.”

Many vending machines for gold have also popped up in Europe and Asia.

Yet the precise form of gold ownership might not matter as much as making sure to be an owner of the metal, Ganz opined.

“I’m a strong proponent of gold ownership, whether in bullion form, ingots, bars, rounds, an ounce or more, or coins,” Ganz said.

The channels of ownership have proliferated along with the remarkable jump in the price of precious metals such as Gold and silver. This may seem something of a throwback to the past in an era of gold and Silver ownership through financial instruments like ETFs.

“The advantage of coins, bars and bullion is they are physical,” Rhind said. “The disadvantage of an ETF is it is not tangible. You can’t see or touch or hold the gold.”

Experts also point to advantages and disadvantages in owning coins compared with bullion.

“They are very different products,” said Sharlene Dozois, a marketing director for Kitco Inc., a Canadian retailer in bullion and other precious metals products. “Coins are more of a collector’s item. Bullion is more of an investment product. But you can argue that the coins can grow in value with time.”

Overall, ownership of coins is a good idea, Ganz noted.

“Coins have a numismatic value,” Ganz said. “This is true of coins that are intended to be bullion. You know what is the mint, what is the condition, and there are people who collect them.”

Coins themselves are offered in multiple categories when it comes to investment goals. Some gold coins are more appropriate for numismatic-oriented investors.

“The public generally does not have the experience or the knowledge level to buy numismatic coins,” said Walt Breitinger, president of Breitinger & Sons, a commodities futures brokerage. “Investing in numismatic coins is a subspecialty that would require an enormous amount of homework to be undertaken to be done properly.”

Buying bulk gold coins, or purchasing bullion, is a different matter altogether.
“The most popular bulk Gold coins include Krugerrands, Canadian Maple Leafs and American Gold Eagles,” Breitinger said. “These have been mass produced in such quantities that they tend not to retain much numismatic value.”

Typically, these kinds of coins contain one ounce of gold. Their weight varies a bit, depending on the amount of Copper melded with the coin. During the first 11 months of 2011, the spot price for American Gold Eagle coins ranged from $1475 to $1810.

Investors also need to consider the availability of potential buyers when the time comes to sell coins, compared with selling bullion.

“Bullion coins are very liquid, but not as liquid as a 100-ounce bar,” Breitinger said.

With a bullion coin, buyers also face a markup in price when they buy the coin and a markdown when they need to sell. That markup could be $20, $30 or even $40 an ounce, which can be a noticeable additional cost even on an $1,800 purchase.

And on the selling side, investors should be braced to see the flip side.

“When they walk back into the shop to sell, the shop owner who’s buying the coins has to make a profit too,” Breitinger said.

“The owner is keeping an inventory, there is risk of theft, of robbery, of fraud. There is also the risk that somebody might have sold the dealer a gold coin that is really a gilded piece of lead.”

Plus, ubiquitous market forces can to come into play.

“There is the risk that the price might move the wrong way at the wrong time,” Breitinger said. “The owner has all kinds of risks in the business.”

Owners will often add 5 percent to the price of gold so they can harvest a small profit when they sell a gold coin. In contrast, somebody trading 100 ounces of gold bullion might have to employ a markup of $1/oz. to make a profit.

Investors who own coins face risks beyond the price discounts and markups linked to the retail market. These other risks are why BullionVault’s Ash suggests using storage outside one’s own country.

“Keeping it all at home also risks becoming a victim of history,” Ash said. “History is littered with people who rightly feared severe trouble in their own country, but then made the mistake of not owning Gold overseas.”

Ash points to the current turmoil in Zimbabwe, and economic and political upheavals in Argentina in 2001, Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Vietnam and Cambodia in the 1970s, Nazi Germany in the 1930s, the United States during 1933 and Russia in 1917.

“When people needed it, they could not release the value of their gold, because it had become contraband,” Ash said.

Either way, though, risks are present whether buying coins or their bulkier cousin, bullion.

“Anytime anybody buys physical gold, there is the potential that they are not buying pure gold,” Breitinger said. “Counterfeit coins or counterfeit bullion are things that have happened quite a bit through history.”

Regardless of what method investors pick, the trend of steadily rising gold prices remains their friend.

“I am certain that if you take all the gold in the world that has been mined and refined from the time of the Lydians to the present, melt that into a giant ingot the size of the Washington Monument, it would only go up about two-thirds of the way,” Ganz said. “There is not that much gold available. But there is a lot of demand.”

Yet even that isn’t a guarantee of future profits.

“People are concerned that paper currencies could continue to decline, compared with commodities in general. That could make buying precious metals more popular,” Breitinger said. “But it’s also possible we could see a deflationary swing. In that case, people who own paper money would wind up as winners and the price of gold would decline.”




Source: Hard Asset Investor

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Crude oil prices fall; gas prices make gains



HOUSTON, Dec. 9
By Sam Fletcher
OGJ Senior Writer

Stock market and oil prices fell Dec. 8, with crude closing below $99/bbl in New York, as pessimistic markets shrugged off interest rates reductions by the European Central Bank (ECB) and a US government report of the lowest number of initial claims for unemployment benefits in 9 months.

However, natural gas rallied after the Energy Information Administration reported the withdrawal of 20 bcf from US underground storage during the week ended Dec. 2. That left 3.83 tcf of working gas in storage, up 102 bcf from a year ago and 307 bcf above the 5-year average.

Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist, Deutsche Bank AG, Washington, DC, said, “Despite a warm start to the heating season, the probability for the current La Nina event to continue through early spring (March-April) is higher than 50% according to forecasters at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. This would introduce the potential of a more rapid storage drawdown this winter.”

Stock indexes turned around in early trading Dec. 9 after all 17 members of the Euro-zone agreed to a treaty that will provide more central authority over their individual budgets in response to the growing debt crisis in Europe. Another nine members of the European Union are considering signing the treaty that was hammered out in an all-night session. Only the UK turned it down.

Analysts remained skeptical of the latest European effort, however. “A pledge to regulate budgets is all well and good, but without a commitment from the ECB to print lots of euros, it doesn't address the immediate issue at hand,” said analysts in the Houston office of Raymond James & Associates Inc.

Despite their marathon overnight session, EU leaders failed to come up with a binding pact for all 27 nations represented and resorted instead “to intergovernmental treaties,” said Olivier Jakob at Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland. “The text of the agreement is to be finalized by March, and after that we will still have to go through the ratification process for those countries that want to join in.”

Meanwhile, everyone is waiting to see if Standard & Poor’s follows through on its threat to downgrade credit ratings of 15 Euro-zone countries, including the strongest European economies of Germany and France, pending the outcome of the Dec. 9 summit (OGJ Online, Dec. 6, 2011).

“Given the poor political unity between the EU-27 members, we have to increase the risk assessment that the next step is to see some downgrade review materialize maybe even before the end of the year,” said Jakob. “[Although] the Italian 10-year bond yields were falling sharply at the beginning of the week, they are now surging back towards their previous peaks. The Italian-to-German bond spread is back over 5%, and the Italian 10-year bonds back above the 7% mark. Not good.”

Jakob said, “For weeks, global assets have been supported by all sorts of rumors that the ECB will become the buyer of last resort, but yesterday the head of the ECB poured some water on those hopes. The ECB will stick to its constitutional mandate and will not engage in any financial engineering scheme with the International Monetary Fund. The ECB did cut interest rates from 1.25% to 1%, but overall it did not come up with any [balm for the European economy].”

The European Banking Authority later increased its estimate of the European capital shortfall under the stress-test, “which will likely lead European banks to sell more assets by June,” said Jakob.

Sieminski said, “Commodity index returns remain positively correlated to the US equity market. The fact that the current episode of risk aversion is one of the longest in history as well as the tendency of the S&P 500 Index to rally in US presidential election years are encouraging signs for index returns heading into 2012, in our view. However, ultimately the performance of index returns will be determined by the extent to which a more pronounced downturn in economic activity can be averted.”

In other news, he said, “We believe China will add about 950,000 b/d of new refinery capacity over the course of 2012 and utilize it. This could add to the country's stockpiling requirements, which could mean that the 5.5% consensus for oil growth in China is too low.”

Energy prices

The January contract for benchmark US light, sweet crudes continued to fall, down $2.15 to $98.34/bbl Dec. 8 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The February contract dropped $2.14 to $98.54/bbl. On the US spot market, West Texas Intermediate at Cushing, Okla., was down $2.15 to $98.34/bbl.

Heating oil for January delivery lost 5.26¢ to $2.93/gal on NYMEX. Reformulated stock for oxygenate blending for the same month declined 2.03¢ to $2.57/gal.

The January natural gas contract regained 3.6¢ to $3.46/MMbtu on NYMEX. On the US spot market, gas at Henry Hub, La., gave back 1.1¢ to $3.43/MMbtu.

In London, the January IPE contract for North Sea Brent lost $1.42 to $108.11/bbl. Gas oil for December dropped $9 to $948.25/tonne.

The average price for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ basket of 12 benchmark crudes was down $1.08 to $109.02/bbl.

Contact Sam Fletcher at samf@ogjonline.com.

Crude Oil Rises on Increasing U.S. Consumer Sentiment, European Accord




Oil climbed the most in more than a week after a report showed that confidence among U.S. consumers rose to a six-month high and as European leaders agreed to boost the region’s rescue fund and tighten budget rules.

Futures gained 1.1 percent after Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment increased to 67.7 in December from 64.1 at the end of last month. European countries announced steps to ease the area’s debt crisis without forging an accord among all European Union members.

“The consumer confidence number is another positive signal about the U.S. economy,” said Gene McGillian, an analyst and broker at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut. “We seesawed earlier today as people tried to get a handle on the results of the European summit. The agreement is starting to give the market some reassurance.”

Crude oil for January delivery advanced $1.07 to settle at $99.41 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was the biggest gain since Nov. 29. Futures have increased 8.8 percent this year. Prices decreased 1.5 percent this week because of rising U.S. stockpiles and concerns about the debt crisis.

Brent oil for January settlement increased 51 cents, or 0.5 percent, to end the session at $108.62 a barrel on the London- based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

The U.S. consumer confidence reading was projected to rise to 65.8, according to the median estimate of 73 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

The U.S. was the world’s biggest oil-consuming country in 2010, responsible for 22 percent of global oil demand, according to BP Plc’s Statistical Review of World Energy released on June 8. The 17 countries using the euro accounted for about 12 percent of world demand last year, BP figures show.
Debt Rules



The European countries enshrined debt rules in a new treaty that leaves out the U.K. instead of amending EU agreements that date back to the 1950s.

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi hailed a “very good outcome” a day after he damped expectations that a deal would prompt the ECB to step up its bond-buying.

The agreement added 200 billion euros ($267 billion) to the region’s war chest and tightened rules to curb future debts. The leaders sped the start of a 500 billion-euro rescue fund to next year and diluted a demand that bondholders shoulder losses in rescues.
Market Driver

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) gained 1.7 percent, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 1.5 percent at 3:06 p.m. in New York on the rescue fund and the U.S. confidence figure.

“The oil market is being driven for the most part by what’s happening in equities,” said Kyle Cooper, director of research for IAF Advisors in Houston. “We could open a dollar higher or lower Monday based on the weekend headlines from Europe.”

Oil may fall next week on concern that the summit won’t ease concerns about the spread of the debt crisis, a Bloomberg News survey showed. Eleven of 27 analysts and traders, or 41 percent, forecast oil will decrease through Dec. 16. Nine respondents, or 33 percent, predicted futures will increase and seven estimated there will be little change.

EU governments are also considering imposing stiffer sanctions on Iran, OPEC’s second-largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia, amid “serious and deepening concerns” over the country’s nuclear program, according to a draft EU summit statement. Foreign ministers will decide on the next set of sanctions Jan. 30, the statement showed.

Japan issued new sanctions against Iran over the country’s suspected nuclear weapons program, the Trade Ministry said in a statement today in Tokyo.
Iranian Output

Iran pumped about 5 percent of the world’s crude last year, based on BP’s data. The country is on the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of global oil supply is transported, according to the U.S. Energy Department.


The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries may set a new collective production quota at its meeting in Vienna on Dec. 14 without setting individual country allocations, according to consultant PFC Energy. The group has not changed output targets since 2008.

Nymex will cut the margin requirement on crude and heating oil futures from the close of business Dec. 12, CME Group Inc., the exchange’s parent company, said yesterday. The margin for light sweet crude will be $7,560 per contract, 6.7 percent lower than the current level. The exchange last reduced the margin to $8,100 from $8,437.50 in May.

Oil volume in electronic trading on the Nymex was 555,760 contracts as of 3:06 p.m. in New York. Volume totaled 647,193 contracts yesterday, 1.8 percent below the three-month average. Open interest was 1.33 million contracts.


To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Shenk in New York at mshenk1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dan Stets at dstets@bloomberg.net

Friday, December 2, 2011

Fallacy of gold and primacy of silver





By Craig D. Hanks
The decade long flight of wealth from fiat currencies and naked stocks, to gold, as a safe haven to guard against economic chaos and worldwide depression, is a curious aberration of market speculation. Considering the vast amount of information available to those wealthy enough to be able to own gold, and the history of Gold and Silver as money to be used for purchasing consumables; one wonders why companies, banks, and persons of wealth, along with their financial advisors, are so poorly informed about the impracticality of owning gold as a potential emergency money for individuals and businesses; especially considering the current very distorted relative value of gold to silver.

Since I am more than sixty years of age I can reminisce that I grew up with silver money in my pocket, though I do not ever recall even seeing any gold money; and my parents, grandparents, and great grandparents all had silver money in their pockets, nor did they ever speak of having or using gold as money.

While silver was domestic money for more than 100-years here in the U.S., both as coin and currency backed by silver; and was used by consumers to purchase their food, clothes, and shelter. Gold, on the other hand, has been used by governments, banks, and international businesses during the past century to settle international trade accounts, and not as domestic money. Both gold and silver ceased to be used as money by banks and government by 1971. So buying gold to hold for an eventual use as domestic money to purchase consumables is incredibly silly, if not outright stupid.

Gold and silver have been mined, in the most recent century, at a ratio of about 10-ounces of silver for each 1-ounce of gold. In a hard currency economy where both metals would only be used as money and all production would be sold to governments to coin stable money, the relative price would be 10-to-1; that is, each ounce of gold would exchange for 10-ounces of silver. Yet the commodity markets have at this time (Nov. 2011) continually traded these metals in a range that is approximately 1-ounce of gold for 50-ounces of silver. In the past 20 years it has been as high as 1-ounce of gold for 100-ounces of silver; and as low as 1-to-30.


It is important for people purchasing gold and silver to question why this market is so skewed. First off, gold and silver are not used as money in the U.S. economy; nor does our government purchase or sell any significant amount of these metals annually, except in the production of non-monetary bullion coins. Consider that more than 50% of all gold mined annually is stored in bars or stamped into investment coins by several countries; while another large portion goes into jewelry and is relatively easily recoverable back to bullion. The world has accumulated more than 4.3 billion ounces of gold and the stock pile is growing around 75-million ounces per year. Silver is a very different story; for the past generation, more silver is consumed annually by industry than is mined.

Even though mining has increased the annual production of silver more than 50% in thirty years, worldwide industrial demand has increased even more; such that the above ground stocks of silver in the 1970's was around 24 billion ounces and has declined to between 18 and 19 billion ounces today; a large portion of which is not easily recoverable to bullion. Even if all the silver tied up in film, electronics, plumbing, military hardware, silverware, medical bandages, industrial catalysts, jewelry, anti-microbial clothes, etc., was available to serve as doomsday money there is still less than 5-ounces of silver available to each ounce of gold to serve as money. So 5-to-1 in quantity supports and affirms the current 50-to-1 price difference, right?



Actually, there is a lot of missing information about gold and silver. Because the market is always right, the 50-to-1 ratio has to be correct at this time, in this economy; the law of supply and demand can be manipulated, but it cannot be broken. Gold production is constrained such that a great deal of the above ground gold is mined and stored in a cave to cave sequestration by governments, banks, precious metal investment companies, and ETFs; all hoarding a lot of gold and some silver. In essence little new gold, relative to hoarded stockpiles, is available to be owned by individuals as bullion, while essentially all silver, both mine production and stockpiles is for sale to the highest bidder for industrial consumption. 

Gold is artificially high in price relative to its quantity above ground because of hoarding; which is done to promote a high price and facilitate price control. The markets in gold and silver are not free markets; supply and price are manipulated to benefit governments, banks, and industries. A great deal of newly mined silver is sold by miners at very low prices to benefit industry, presumably to gain help from the financial markets in having the gold market managed in such a way that prices are kept very high to benefit miners; and to give a false wealth effect to governments and banks that sequester gold. Considering that most of these large mining companies are publicly owned; the dumping of silver at prices as low as 10% of the spot price seems to disparage their stockholders unless there is a price benefit to their gold production side of the precious metal market.

The cave-to-cave aspect of gold comes from the vast system of caves made by miners to remove gold ore; refine a fraction of that ore into gold bars; which are to a large extent bought by governments, banks, and ETFs and immediately put back into concrete caves with thick Steel doors, to keep it locked away as a hoard, and not likely to ever be used as money by citizens to purchase consumables. So if the 50-to-1 price ratio reflects the available amount of silver to gold, and if there are 18-billion ounces of silver that could be made available for exchange and consumption by markets, then there are only 360-million ounces of gold available for exchange and consumption by the markets. 



At least that is the quantity relationship supported by the lack of information to the users, holders, and investors of gold and silver. But this quantity relationship is false, since banks and governments have sequestered a little over 2-billion ounces of gold (about half of the mined gold), leaving 2-billion ounces or so to be held by individuals, businesses, and ETFs; and since several billion ounces of silver are sequestered in film, electronics, etc.; the amount of silver available to individuals as bullion is about 4-billion ounces; giving us a ratio of tradable bullion of 2-ounces of silver to 1-ounce of gold in the possession of private citizens, (this includes jewelry and bullion that could act as money). If silver is correctly priced at about $35.00 per ounce then gold should only command a price of two times greater or $70.00 per ounce; based simply on a supply foundation for price. 

Since the current price ratio is 50-to-1 this should Lead us to suspect that the market is skewed by ignorance, misinformation, and probably disinformation through market management; which has created a speculative market in gold, in place of an investment market, which can only correct itself downward as individuals become more knowledgeable about the bullion supply and the more effective monetary use of silver versus gold.

There are some aspects of investing in gold that make it undesirable to own, should there be an economic meltdown. The first is that governments have the power to force those who possess Gold to sell it to government at a price set by government. This was done in the U.S. by President Roosevelt in 1933, when private ownership of most gold became illegal; until President Nixon overturned this law in 1971. The price paid to those turning over their gold was $20.67 per ounce; while the following year, in 1934, President Roosevelt devalued the dollar 41% by declaring that the U.S. would exchange gold internationally at $35.00 per ounce. Why would anyone want to own gold when government can confiscate it and cheat the owner while doing so? Granted Silver could also be confiscated by government, but because it is highly effective as domestic money and has many industrial uses, government would cause economic harm to itself by interfering in the use of silver as money in our economy.

An even worse problem for those who speculate in gold ETFs, ETCs, or purchase gold that is stored and managed by investment companies, is that they will never gain possession of the gold they have invested in; and therefore will not have any of the economic protection they were seeking when they bought into these investment scams. A full meltdown of the world economies could occur in a matter of days or at most a few weeks; and along with such a meltdown all forms of secure distribution of goods will fail; making it impossible to ship items such as gold and silver from any form of investment depository to individuals and businesses. Not to mention that in an economic meltdown all depositories of precious metals (which include all forms of precious metals investment companies) will be raided; and their gold and silver will be confiscated by governments in the political interests of those in power at the time.

There is a relatively new way to speculate in commodities like gold and silver called Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). A precious metal ETF is run be a trustee organization that buys and sells a commodity like gold and also sells paper certificates that act like stock in that ETF. The trustee hires a bank to be the custodian of its gold; to store it and to receive additional gold when the trustee buys, or deliver gold to a buyer when the trustee sells. You as an investor (actually you are a speculator in paper, not an investor in gold) can trade your paper ETF stock with other speculators, who as a group must pay all of the overhead and profit of the trustee organization, such as wages, rent, shipping, storage, insurance and brokers fees. It is impossible to find a chair in this game when the music stops, because the custodian banker is the only one with a chair and he is not playing the game; the banker already has the gold; you hope!

I recently had a good laugh at the expense of a popular television business program when one of their reporters was doing a series on gold, wherein he was in London and was allowed to view gold that he reported was owned by a very large Exchange Traded Fund (ETF). He viewed this gold only after surrendering all electronic devices that could pinpoint his location and after being driven around London in a blacked-out van to ensure he had no idea of his location. For some reason he felt privileged to take part is this charade, without his understanding that an ETF is an investing charade by design. If you do not know where your investment is, or its condition without an audit for quantity and quality, it might as well still be disbursed in the crust of the earth.

What proof can this reporter provide that the gold he saw belonged to that ETF? How often is that gold randomly assayed to prove that it is gold? What assurance can the ETF provide that any gold they possess will not be confiscated by the British government, or any government of any country that allows ETFs to store precious metals in their banks? What prevents the custodian of gold or silver from selling the metals to cover short positions or raise cash by selling metals to profit from price spikes, when they, as banks, speculate in the precious metal markets, without informing the trustee of the ETF?

If ETF funds are good investments, with their hidden gold and only ownership of paper stocks in the ETF, why not create an ETF on gold that is hidden in the earth and cannot be mined. It is estimated that we have mined roughly 5% of the gold in the earth and that future mining will extract a further 5%, leaving 90% of the gold in the earth to form the basis for our ETF. All sales and purchases of our stock will be through our broker at current spot prices. Since 5% represents over 4-billion ounces of gold, our earth ETF would be roughly 90-billion ounces of gold; and we know exactly where all of it is; we also know that it is secure and cannot be stolen or confiscated by government. If our fund needs to sell gold we can sell ownership of gold in cubic kilometers of the earth's crust and buy those ownership rights back, when our fund has better cash flow from higher gold prices that will bring in more investors. 

We will sell stock in our ETF for a premium (broker's fee) over and above our gold's value and live off that premium while speculators try to out speculate each other trading our ETF stock through our broker. Since cows need to be milked and investors need to be bilked; not only can we form one ETF in this manner, we can form hundreds using the same gold; the gold is irrelevant, because ETFs are all about paper. Outside of ETFs concentrating commodities that make it easier for governments to confiscate those commodities, there is nothing special about them; they are just a newer game in the gambling casino known as Wall Street; and in every ETF you are speculating in paper and only paper.

Then there are companies that will sell you gold and silver and offer to store it and insure you against its being lost or stolen for an annual storage fee and insurance fee. So when the economy goes into inflationary meltdown and you want to take possession, you will first need to have some sort of distribution network that is still operating and is trustworthy to bring your gold to you; then you will need to be sure that the company storing your gold has not repeatedly sold and resold your gold and stored it for many other investors that may also want delivery of "their gold", causing that company to simply send everyone a cash refund, if that. If you do not have it in your land you cannot sell it or spend it to support life and limb.

Consider the possible scenario occurring about mid-September 2013, the limited Wheat and Corn harvest is coming in, controlled by government after social declension brought on by political corruption and greed, and the self-fulfilling prophecies of December 21, 2012, cause an economic meltdown in the winter of 2012-2013. Anyway, by September 2013 there are long lines in the cities to purchase the meager amount of goods available. Government is by Marshal Law and standing in bread lines is the priority activity for most people. 

On one side of the street there is a very long line of people waiting to receive two slices of bread every other day from a government storehouse, provided they have the proper government identification; while on the other side of that street a line forms outside a bakery that is allowed to bake and sell their own surplus bread over and above what they bake for the government dole. The bakery sells on a black market that the government tolerates to avoid social unrest, but which the banks will be jealous about, because it shuts them out of these transactions.
The bakery sets a limit of two loaves per person per week at a profiteering price of one ounce Silver per loaf; and a sign that says we do not make change; of course the baker will barter for other items of value, but he will not accept Federal Reserve Notes, because their value will be declining daily and they cannot be trusted to replenish the baker's flour, sugar, and shortening. In the line outside the bakery are a number of people with questionable assets that they hope they can trade for bread. Obviously the person with two 1-ounce silver pieces will get two loaves of bread and the person with six half-dollar coins (minted pre-1965) containing 2.16-ounces of silver will get two loaves of bread. 

What about the person that presents the baker a 1-ounce American Gold eagle coin; what will they get? They will receive two loaves of bread for their 1-ounce of gold, provided that gold is exchanging for two or more ounces of silver; and they will receive no change. While the person with the nice ETF certificates, showing a picture of gold on each certificate, will presumably be able to exchange them for a piece of paper with a picture of a loaf of bread on it. Similarly for the person that owns gold stored by an investment company; the baker informs them that when they have gold or silver in their possession he will do business with them.

How will gold and silver compare in an economic meltdown? Well if gold is not confiscated by governments worldwide; and hoarded gold is not sold to businesses and individuals by governments and big banks, there would be about 1-billion ounces of gold in tradable bullion coins and bars and about 1-billion ounces of gold in the form of jewelry, that to some extent would serve as money if the gold content of any piece of jewelry can be estimated. Similarly for silver, there are about 4-billion ounces of silver in the form of coins and bullion worldwide and perhaps a billion ounces of sterling silver in the form of jewelry and silverware that could serve as tradable money. Leaving us a ratio of 2-ounces of gold to 5-ounces of silver, held by individuals, to serve as stable money worldwide.

These figures are actually declining right now in Europe and the U.S., because several companies are canvassing owners of gold and silver coins, bullion, and jewelry to sell it for cash; and as this recession continues, more and more gold and silver is disappearing into increasing industrial consumption and large depositories such as governments, banks, and ETF funds. Here in Eugene Oregon we have had more than 100 full page ads in the local newspaper in the past year, offering to purchase gold and silver in any form; not to mention the almost continuous television ads that have occurred over several months in the past year, soliciting viewers to sell unwanted gold jewelry for cash. This is causing a significant decline in the amount of gold and silver still available to individuals to be used as money in future economic duress; while this recycled gold is mostly sequestered to maintain the high price of gold, this recycled silver is sold mostly to industry, and resulting in depressed silver prices until it is consumed.

It is important to note that the ratio of gold to silver that is held by individuals is somewhere between 1-to 1 and 1-to-2.5 ounces of gold to ounces of silver. So the barter value (money value) of these metals in a failed economy will be parity or near parity; making an investment in gold for the purpose of personal economic preservation a very unwise act. It is silly to stockpile a shelter with champagne, caviar, and frozen pastries, against a threat of war or natural disaster, when apple juice, peanut butter, and crackers will sustain you just as well, for a fraction of the cost. 

It is therefore silly to buy gold to insure your economic future when purchasing silver would give you between 20 and 50 times the value at today's prices (gold around $1750 and silver around $35 per ounce each). Even for people playing the metals markets as investors or speculators, without concern or consideration of using gold as future money, the price of gold relative to silver will continue to change in favor of silver and the cost of investing in gold will require more capital for less profit relative to silver as time goes on.

So when is it a good time to buy silver or even gold if you are still so inclined? Anytime between now and a global depression, when you will presumably spend it to maintain a supply of food clothes, shelter, purchase raw and finished commodities, pay wages, make loans, etc. Individuals, small and large businesses, small and large banks should all have a stock of silver bullion from which they can profit from while stabilizing their local economy with liquid barter money. It does not matter what you pay to purchase silver; today's market value of silver cannot be associated with the value it will have in a global depression.

If market conditions cause silver to drop in price to $10.00 per ounce it's a good deal, or if conditions cause it to rise to $100,00 per ounce its still a good deal; obviously a lower price allows you to acquire more, which for individuals should be at least 350 ounces (1-oz per day for expenses for one year); a two year supply would be more prudent, because it gets you through two growing seasons where food production and preservation should be recovering from the depression's initial shock to all forms of production.

The so-called free market concept of buying and selling any stock, bond, commodity or consumable is a fallacy. Open competition in energy and industrial commodities is a myth. Demand does not control supply; rather supply is managed to provide maximum profit no matter how great or small demand may be at any given time. If consumers reduce their demand for Gasoline by 10%, the supply of Crude Oil and refined gasoline are reduced 10%. 



The oil companies just reduce the amount of oil they pump out of the ground and they reduce the amount of oil that is refined into gasoline, to keep prices as high as the market will bear. Oil is a totally managed market devoid of competition. Commodities like corn, soybeans, sugar, etc., are also controlled in production to provide maximum profits to those who process and distribute products made from these commodities; by controlling the amount of acreage to be used to grow any specific crop. Government programs to keep farm land idle and unproductive, are ongoing to limit supply to consumers so that producers can maximize profits in a managed market.

Gold and Silver are similarly managed, but for different reasons. Outside of decorative accessories to our persons and a limited demand for industrial uses, Gold is a totally useless metal, which is why most of it sits in vaults and safe-deposit boxes (caves). It serves no economic purpose outside personal decoration; it is no longer money. Gold is to a large extent hoarded, and has always been hoarded by governments and the controllers of economic activity.

Anything that is hoarded serves no purpose but to increase the wealth of the hoarder in a controlled managed market where supply to markets is limited by those hoarding gold to maximize the price a consumer is willing to pay. Oil companies hoard oil and gas in the earth, government and banks hoard gold in vaults, and they all profit from the management of their hoard, with respect to consumption. The latest gimmick to hoard commodities is ETFs. Gold mining companies can for example supply gold to an ETF in relatively large quantities, at a price beneficial to both, and let the ETF sell stock to speculators and use that income to purchase and hoard the miners' gold bit by bit over time. That gold is managed in supply to the market and hoarded in a location where it may easily be confiscated when economic conditions both permit and require that it be removed from the supply and demand activity of consumers or speculators and only be used to benefit the controllers of governments and economic activity (banks).

Because of the continuous relationship of cost of all goods and services in terms of dollars, year in and year out, consumers are mesmerized into thinking that the dollar is stable in its purchasing power; when in fact the dollar's instability continues to erode everyone's wealth, except those who create and loan dollars at interest rates that are higher than the rate of inflation. Consider that the current Federal Reserve Note has lost at least 98% of its purchasing power in the 98-year history of the Federal Reserve Private Banking Corporation; which seems like a sad tale when you consider that the primary responsibility written into the law that created this privately owned corporation was to maintain a stable value for the dollar and maintain full employment for all of our citizens who want to work. 

The dollar is not stable, has never been stable, and never will be stable, because there is more profit for banks with mild continuous inflation; while the Federal Reserve Private Banking Corporation now admits it cannot create jobs or economic conditions that increase jobs; the Federal Reserve can only protect, preserve, and enrich the banks that own the Fed. I always get a laugh out of the business channels on TV that report the rising prices of gold and silver as nearing or reaching record prices, given in U.S. dollars. They cannot seem to understand that gold would have to go above $2400.00 per ounce today to have the same purchasing power that it had in 1980 when it reached more than $800.00 per ounce; and silver would have to rise above $150.00 per ounce today to have the purchasing power that it had in 1980 when it reached over $50.00 per ounce. Gold at $1750.00 per ounce today is still about 25% below its record price; and silver at $35.00 per ounce is more than 70% below its record price. The dollar is not stable and continually rising prices of everything, year in and year out, prove it.

Silver is a great example of commodity management to protect the profitability of big banks. Unlike gold, silver is both an industrial commodity and a consumer money. Although it has not been used as money per se since 1980, when many retail businesses were accepting silver as payment in place of paper dollars during the last big run up in gold and silver amidst the 1970's high inflation; silver will rear its head as money in inflationary times; provided there is a large enough supply to assist bartering and displace fiat dollars. The big banks are very much concerned about the competition of silver as money and are actively supporting the removal of as much as they can from the possession of ordinary citizens. 

In times of accelerating inflation, economic activity can only be controlled by banks if everyone must use their instantly created fiat dollars at their profiteering rates of interest. Obviously banks make profits off debt; much of that debt is long term at relatively fixed interest rates. This represents fixed income for banks, which would be eroded by inflation if they cannot be rolled over into new loans at higher interest rates. While accelerating inflation causes many businesses and retailers to look to direct barter or stable replacement money for the fiat paper money that may be declining in purchasing power. Outside of direct barter, goods for goods, silver is the only competition for Federal Reserve Notes to fulfill the role of money.

So control and removal of silver from the pockets of consumers is essential to controlling economic activity during the upcoming run away inflation. The banks must force everyone to use their fiat money at their interest rates to maintain control of all economic activity from which they can profit. Hence all of this activity in the past year advertising for people to sell their gold and silver to refiners where it can be concentrated into bullion and stored by banks in ETFs, or sold into industrial consumption. 

Every time there is a run up in the price of gold and silver there is a coincident increase by refiners to purchase these metals, then the price falls, while the latest roundup of precious metals is consumed by ETFs, governments, and industry; then another round of price pumping removes more gold and silver from personal possession, until there will be insufficient gold and especially silver to compete with Federal Reserve Notes as money in a failed and hyper-inflating economy. But without silver to act as a relatively stable currency during a depression involving hyper-inflation of Federal Reserve Notes, economic revitalization will be nearly impossible, because continually devaluing fiat dollars will not be trusted or exchanged for any significant transactions and direct barter is too slow a process to significantly and quickly improve any economy.

Oh well, the music will soon stop; and though the banker appears to have the only chair, that chair has no legs, so the game must start over from scratch; i.e., candles, hand tools, hard money, physical labor.

Courtesy: EzineArticles

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