Sunday, January 31, 2016

Star Wars VII: The Audience Awakens

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-31/star-wars-vii-audience-awakens

 

 

 

 

 

By EconMatters

While I do not see EconMatters as a movie critic like Roger Ebert, sometimes it feels almost like civil duty to let people know not to waste money on a bad movie. I missed the Start War VII when it opened during Christmas last year and at the same time endured a horrible experience with Fandango. In retrospect, I should have taken it as an omen not to see the movie at all. But since everyone was telling me how "awesome" the movie was, I finally made it to the theater last night.

 

One of the Worst Movies I've Ever Seen

 

Compared to the previous installments, this Episode 7 was a major disappointment and it was the most excruciating 2.5 hours I've ever experienced in a movie theater. It was a bad movie compunded by an old and filthy movie theater (AMC Studio 30, located in the better part of Houston). The movie and the movie theater were so bad that I actually had the thought to short both Disney (NYSE:DIS) and AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) stocks.

 

When Disney bought Lucasfilm from George Lucas for $4 billion in 2012, it gave Disney ownership of the "Star Wars" franchise but also "Indiana Jones" franchise. Now, I can't wait to see how bad Disney can mess up Indiana Jones.

 

I like action, suspense, and thriller movies. Although I think the Twilight movie series is nothing more than a teen romance story wrapped in vampire myths and action (I am a fan of "The Underworld", though), I do have certain appreciation and understanding of Twilight's popularity -- It has an interesting story line about the romance, marriage, family, etc. between a social misfit teenage girl and a vampire guy/boy (I think he is actually at least several hundred years old).

 

Watch: The Silver Market, Jan. 31, 2016 (Video)

 

Make a Movie That Tells a Story

Anyway, I still believe movies are about story telling and Star War VII has no story line to keep me remotely interested. The movie has a very simple plot: a bunch of people (heroes and villains) chase a secret map to find Luke Skywalker, the last Jedi, to help fight the new evil power--the First Order. While there's nothing wrong with a simple plot, it is a cinematic crime to have such a poor screenplay without any substance like Star Wars VII.

 

"Making Something for the [Kardashian] Fans"

Reportedly Lucas had some ideas for how Star Wars VII story could be told. According to Lucas, "All I want to do is tell a story...", but Disney was keen on "making something for the fans." I now totally understand why Disney told George Lucas and his story to take a hike -- Disney sees no use to spend time and effort to develop any story in an established franchise with built-in audience like Star Wars.

 

Yes, I can see how all the galaxy air fighting and bombs away can put the simpleton Kardashian-following crowd in awe. However, the repetitive explosions, shooting and space fighting gets old real quick. The 135-minute movie is way too long with cliché after cliché, and predictable outcome.

 

"Jurassic World" and "Avatar" are two deservingly awesome movies with good story, production and beautiful high tech graphic scenes to boot. Star Wars VII is not even in the same zip code as the similarly cliché Transformers franchise, in my opinion.

 

Only High Point: Original Han Solo & Chewie

 

Even the space air fighting scenes are not that impressive as I've seen better alien, space fighting scenes from any number of high tech movies adapted from the Marvel or DC Comics.

 

In fact, the only high point of the entire movie was when the original cast of Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Chewie appear. The interaction between Han Solo, Chewie, and Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) is interesting, nostalgic but too little too late to save the movie.

 

Lipstick on a Pig Sold as a Beauty Queen

 

In all fairness, I have to applaud Disney Studio's Marketing Department for an outstanding job of promoting the movie a year in advance with a superb editing job on the promotional trailer. The trailer gives an impression of much more grandeur to build up hype, expectation and, in my opinion, directly led to the box office success.

 

Yes Lucas, You Sold Your Children

 

During a recent interview, George Lucas indicated he felt he sold the company he created, Lucasfilm, to "the white slavers," referring to Disney (Lucas later issued an apology to Disney). Lucas also said he felt like he sold his children [for $4 Bn].

 

After watching the first Star Wars movie by Disney, I can understand how Lucas must have felt after Disney butchered his legendary creation -- Star Wars. However, in this case, Lucas made his bed (and was well-compensated) on Star Wars and now he must lie in it.   

 

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle

The Silver Market (Video)

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-31/silver-market-video

By EconMatters

In 2015 it was always beneficial to buy silver when it was below $14 an ounce in the futures market. Are things going to be any different in the Silver Market for 2016? Do we get a breakout in either direction this year, or does it remain largely a dead market for long term price trends.

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle  

The Fed's Next Surprise Move

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-31/feds-next-surprise-move

FED

The Federal Reserve seems to have been caught off-guard by the recent turmoil on the markets. As the Chinese economic growth seems to be slowing down, all of the Western central banks need to re-think their plans, and the Federal Reserve will have to kneel in the dust.

Whereas just a few weeks ago, the Fed ‘promised’ the markets it would increase the interest rates 4 times in just twelve months, the central bank is already reneging on its promise as it no longer thinks it will be able to do so without completely suffocating the economy. As we explained in a previous column, the use of some specific words when the original rate hike was announced indicated to us the Fed was actually anticipating the markets might not be ready for more rate hikes just yet.

This has now been confirmed by Robert Kaplan, the president of the Dallas Fed. In one of the most recent statements of the Federal Reserve, the central bank has no longer used the word ‘balanced’ to describe the potential risks to the US economy, and Kaplan has now confirmed this was caused by the bank no longer willing to trust its own expectations and projections.

The implications of this news, you ask? Well, they are huge. First of all it does indicate the American economy (and the world economy) is in a worse shape than one would have anticipated. The muscle-flexing of the Federal Reserve is now really blowing up in their own faces. This updated view was obviously also influenced by the Bank of Japan which has now introduced a NIRP. A Negative Interest Rate Policy.

Bank of Japan interest rate

Source: tradingeconomics.com

That’s absolutely unheard of for any central bank in a civilized country, and Japan seems to be desperate to try to get its economy going again, even though the interest rates have been low for the past few decades. As you can see on the previous image, Japan has had an interest rate close to zero for the past 20 years, and that hasn’t helped the country too much. That’s also one of the main reasons why we didn’t expect the zero interest rate policy of the Federal Reserve to be very helpful.

Federal Reserve Fed 10Y Note

Source: Yahoo Finance

Indeed, the market had lost its faith in the Federal Reserve earlier this year. Even though the central bank was still pretending it would be able to increase the interest rates by no less than four times in 2016, the yield on the 10 year treasury notes continued to fall (which would actually indicate the market participants were expecting the interest rate of the Federal Reserve to decrease rather than seeing it hiked).

CME Group Pic

Source: CME Group

The new wording in the press release of the Federal Reserve as well as the sudden move by Bank of Japan has rattled the futures market of the 30 day funds rate, and it now looks like the market is right now assigning a possibility of just 80% to see just one rate hike (of 0.25%) this year. This basically means Mr Market has now given up on expecting the federal reserve to increase the interest rates this year. They tried but failed (miserably).

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Janet Yellen Just Revealed a Big Reason to Be Bullish on Silver Prices

Published here: http://www.profitconfidential.com/silver/janet-yellen-just-revealed-a-big-reason-to-be-bullish-on-silver-prices/

Precious metals like silver and gold dulled under the Federal Reserve. When the Federal Reserve raised interest rates in December, silver prices took another hit.

But after stocks got off to their worst start to the year ever, Janet Yellen failed to raise rates again in January. And silver bulls rejoiced. The absence of further rate increases should help propel silver prices higher throughout 2016.
Worst Start to Stock Market Rocks Silver Prices
After four straight years of declines, silver prices are getting a much deserved boost from Janet Yellen.

Back.

The post Janet Yellen Just Revealed a Big Reason to Be Bullish on Silver Prices appeared first on Profit Confidential.

Friday, January 29, 2016

Steve Forbes Speaks Out on the Presidential Race, Fed Recklessness, and Gold

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/steve-forbes-speaks-out-on-the-presidential-race-fed-recklessness-and-gold/

Forbes Pulls No Punches in Exclusive Interview with Money Metals Exchange

forbes-interview1Mike Gleason, Director, Money Metals Exchange: It is my great privilege to welcome Steve Forbes, Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Magazine, CEO of Forbes, Inc. to our Money Metals Exchange podcast. Steve is also author of many fabulous books, including Flat Tax Revolution, How Capitalism Will Save Us, and his latest work, Reviving America: How Repealing Obamacare, Replacing the Tax Code and Reforming the Fed Will Restore Hope and Prosperity. He’s also a two-time Presidential candidate, having run in the Republican primaries in both 1996 and 2000. It’s a tremendous honor to have him with us today. Mr. Forbes, thank you so much for joining us and welcome.

Steve Forbes, CEO of Forbes, Inc.: Good to be with you, Mike. Thank you.

Mike Gleason: I want to start out by getting your take on the 2016 Presidential election cycle, especially given your first-hand experience in the whole process. We’re seeing an anti-Washington voter revolt of sorts… it’s the anti-establishment candidates that have been getting all the momentum. This is especially true on the Republican side, where we see an outsider like Donald Trump currently leading and guys like Ted Cruz, Ben Carson and others having garnered a lot of support. But also on the Democratic side we’re seeing admitted Socialist Bernie Sanders starting to overtake Hillary Clinton with his outsider bid. What’s driving this phenomenon, and is this a good thing or a bad thing?

Steve Forbes: What it demonstrates is the intense, deep voter dissatisfaction with where the country is and fears about the future. There’s contempt for the political class for not being able to handle things. There’s the feeling that those who are in charge either don’t know what to do, or if they do they don’t know how to do it, so people are looking for outsiders for a fresh perspective. Just as in business where incumbents get too comfortable, you always find the entrepreneurial outsiders to challenge the status quo and upend things, and you’re seeing the same thing happening on the political side.

So who knows if Trump will go all the way, how far Bernie Sanders will go, but it’s a way of (at least for now) voters expressing dissatisfaction, unhappiness, and saying we want positive change. You cannot continue doing what you’re doing.

Mike Gleason: The issue of sound money has been getting more attention during the GOP debates than it has in several decades. It’s quite encouraging to us at Money Metals Exchange, as proponents of precious metals ownership, to hear Cruz, Paul, Carson, and even Trump bring up issues related to sound money such as reigning in the Federal Reserve, returning to some sort of a gold standard, and adoption of other measures to get America’s fiscal house back in order. I’m guessing you probably felt like a lone voice in the wilderness when you raised these subjects during your Presidential runs. So among the current candidates, who do you think best understands the problems created by our current monetary policy and might actually do something about it if elected President?

forbes-interview-quote1Steve Forbes: I think it’s encouraging that a growing number are recognizing there is a problem. Even before you get to solutions you’ve got to recognize and acknowledge that the way things are being done is not working and that the Federal Reserve has been a huge factor in the sluggishness of the U.S. economy; very, very destructive actions they’ve taken. I was delighted that Ted Cruz in one of the debates brought up the idea of a gold standard. Rand Paul of course was suckled on the idea of safe and sound money. Ben Carson has made reference to it. Donald Trump has made noises about the Federal Reserve. I think that’s a good sign.

One of the things that really most of the economics profession doesn’t seem to get is that money is simply a means for us to buy and sell with each other. It’s like a claim check. You go to a restaurant, check your coat, the claim check has no intrinsic value, but it’s a claim on the coat. Money is a claim on products and services. It has no intrinsic value. What it does, it’s like a claim check on products and services. It works best when it has a fixed value.

Money measures value the way scales measure weight or clocks measure time or rulers measure space and length, and it works best when it’s stable. The best way to get stable money, as we explained in our book Reviving America, is precisely to link it to gold the way we did for a hundred and eighty years. It works. Gold is like a ruler. It has a stable value. When you see the price fluctuate, that means that it’s the dollar’s value that’s fluctuating, people’s feeling about it for the present and for the future. But gold is like Polaris. It’s the North Star. It’s fixed.

Mike Gleason: That leads me right into my next question here. About a year ago you and Elizabeth Ames co-wrote the book titled Money: How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy and What We Can Do About It. You proposed a modified gold standard… and I’ll quote here, and then I’d like to get your comments.

The twenty-first century gold standard would fix the dollar to gold at a particular price. The Federal Reserve would use its tools, primarily open market operations, to keep the value of the dollar tied at that rate of gold.

What would be the main benefits of such a reform? And also I’m curious why you stopped short of calling for an end to the Fed all together and a return to true free markets when it comes to gold and the rate of interest?

Steve Forbes: In terms of the role of the Federal Reserve, I think you’ve got to take one step at a time. One of the fears is that if you didn’t have the Fed you get a panic, which happens for whatever reason every few years, the thing would spin out of control. I think the key thing now is to get the dollar fixed in value, which we propose in that book, whether it’s a thousand dollars an ounce or eleven hundred dollars an ounce.

I think the best way to understand this is to imagine what would happen if the Federal Reserve was in charge of the time bureau, and the Fed decides to float the clock, sixty minutes to an hour one day, thirty-five minutes the day after, ninety minutes the day after that. Everyone would know that if you had a fluctuating clock, if your timepieces couldn’t keep accurate time, life would be chaotic. The same is true of money when it has a floating value. If you had the floating clock, imagine baking a cake. It says bake the batter thirty minutes. Is that inflation adjusted minutes, nominal minutes, a New York minute, a Mexican minute?

Gold is the best way to fix that value. The only role for the Fed, at least for now, would be to keep that fixed value and then deal decisively with the occasional panic, just as the British showed us a hundred and fifty years ago. If you have a panic where banks need the temporary liquidity, they go to the Fed with their collateral, borrow the money at above market interest rate, and then, as the crisis recedes, they quickly pay it back and it’s done. So the Fed’s role could almost be done by summer interns if they knew what they were doing, so it would not be the monster that it is today where the Fed tries to dictate where credit goes, what happens to the economy, etc. It’s really bizarre and destructive.

Mike Gleason: They certainly have a whole lot of control and a lot of people have a lot of interest in Fed policy, way too much for our liking, and I’m sure yours as well.

Steve Forbes: One other example on that is Janet Yellen, the head of the Federal Reserve, says that we should have two percent inflation, which in her mind is seeing the prices rising two percent a year. If you take a typical American family making fifty thousand bucks a year, that means their costs would go up a thousand dollars a year, two percent of fifty thousand. Who gave her the authority to raise the cost of living, which is an effective tax, a thousand dollars on a typical American family? Yet Congress, they just nod their heads. It’s a travesty.

Mike Gleason: I’ve always wondered if two percent is good, isn’t three percent better? What about four percent? It seems like it could just go on and on and get higher and higher.

Steve Forbes: Yep, which is what happens. An unstable dollar, whether it’s weak or strong, is like a timepiece, a watch that is too slow or too fast. Neither one is going to help you.

Mike Gleason: The equity markets have been quite vulnerable here in the early part of 2016 and a lot of that seems to stem from these over-valuations we were starting to see. Do you believe the recent pullback is just a short-term market cleansing? Or do you expect a bigger, more dramatic event to occur with this just being the tip of the iceberg?

Steve Forbes: Well, when you get a big change in the stock market it’s usually because of a surprise. People talk about oil, people talk about China, the pressure on earnings, those things are already known. It’s the unknowns that hit you. I think one of the things that has hit the markets – and they can’t be able to know the exact consequences – is precisely what’s happening in our politics. The idea of Bernie Sanders winning is still remote, but now you can’t rule out the possibility. What does Donald Trump want to do about trade? Well he’s been all over the map, to be blunt about that. He says he’ll negotiate it, but with that kind of uncertainty, people stay on the sidelines.

Mike Gleason: Looking at the current economic landscape and the debt-based dominated markets that we have now, the situation appears to have only worsened since the ’08 financial crisis, how do you envision this playing out? Are we looking at some kind of economic collapse again or will the Fed and the central planners be able to keep the wheels on this thing?

Steve Forbes: Those words “central planners” get to the very problem with the Fed. The idea that the economy is a machine is a preposterous one. The economy is individuals. The idea that you can control people the way you can modulate an automobile is… that’s how you get tyranny. That’s why in the third part of our book, Reviving America, we talk about Soviet style behavior by the Federal Reserve and by economic policymakers. When you look at the great disasters of the past – like the Great Depression, the terrible inflation of the 1970s, what happened to us in the panic in 2008-2009 – all of those had at their roots disastrous government policy errors.

Mike Gleason: I want to talk to you about the role that gold, and to some extent silver, can play into all of this. In your book you’ve written about gold and its role in an investor’s portfolio, but we shouldn’t necessarily look at it as an “investment.” Talk about that and then also whether you view gold ownership as more or less important now versus say ten, twenty, or thirty years ago.

Steve Forbes: In terms of gold, unless you’re a jeweler, I see it as an insurance policy. It doesn’t build new factories or things like that, new software. What it is, is insurance that if things really go wrong you’ve got something that will balance your portfolio. So whether it’s five percent, ten percent, it shouldn’t be dominating your portfolio. But since you cannot trust this right now, what politicians do, what you have working out here is a situation where yes, the price of gold has come down since 2011 when it looked like the U.S. Government might default, but today in this kind of environment, is probably a good time. Not that you’re going to make quick money on it, but it’s like an insurance policy. You hope it doesn’t have to be used, but if it does you’ve got it.

Mike Gleason: We talked about how anti-establishment forces are starting to get some momentum. Do you see any real change coming about in our monetary system without some kind of crisis event forcing it? Generally it seems like things don’t change unless they’re forced. What do you think, is now maybe the time in Washington for some of these politicians to seize on the fact that a lot of Americans are very frustrated and maybe there is the ability to get some traction with some of these radical reforms and getting us back to sound money?

Steve Forbes: Well, this is one of the reasons why we did the book. It was to lay out what needs to be done so, if the opportunity or the crisis arises, we have the tools to do it. We had this terrible crisis in 2008-2009, but because policymakers were still holding these obsolete theories and dangerous notions about money, which got us in the crisis in the first place, they not only made mistakes, they invented new mistakes such as Quantitative Easing or zero interest rates.

Zero interest rates sounds great, like price controls sound great. You’re in an apartment; you only pay ten dollars a month, boy, that sounds great if you don’t mind having no maintenance. But when you suppress prices you distort the marketplace, deform the marketplace, people don’t invest, and you get stagnation. If the Federal Reserve announced that it was going to put price controls on Big Macs at McDonald’s and what you pay for a rental car and things like that, people would say that’s outrageous. And the Fed would say we want to suppress prices to stimulate the economy so you have more money to spend. We know it just wrecked the economy.

Yet when they do the same thing with interest rates, Congress hardly says boo! The Fed has distorted markets to the point where on zero interest rates, what the Fed in effect did was seize almost four trillion dollars of assets out of economy, made it very easy for those assets to go to the government and the large companies, and starved credit to small and new businesses.

Just one statistic, in the last five years the growth of credit to government has gone up thirty-seven percent, growth of credit to corporations thirty-two percent, growth of credit to small businesses and households only six percent. As you know, small and new enterprises are where the bulk of the jobs are created. So the Fed is in the business of credit allocation. That is profoundly wrong and must be changed.

Mike Gleason: We’re talking here in advance of the January Fed meeting. By the time this interview will air that decision will be known. But just more generally speaking, where do you see Fed policy going here? Are they truly stuck between a rock and a hard place? What do you think their policies are going to be as we go throughout the year?

forbes-interview-quote2Steve Forbes: They’ll be tempted to stop allowing the market interest rates in the name of saving the economy, which is like taking an anemic patient, a patient suffering from anemia, and bleeding them. With the Fed the “rock and a hard place” (idea) is only in their minds. What they should do is just step aside, let borrowers and lenders determine what interest rates should be, and let the markets function again instead of trying to control them like commissars in the old Soviet Union. Free markets always work when you let them, but the Fed has to be pushed on that.

Mike Gleason: As we begin to close here, what do you think it’s going to take for gold and silver to become a mainstream asset class again? For example, will it be China or Russia backing its currency with precious metals because the devaluation has gone too far too fast? Something like that? What are your thoughts there as we wrap up?

Steve Forbes: Well I think if they see precious metals for what their historic role has been, we have gold-based, gold-backed money today. Remember, gold is a ruler. Because it’s got that fixed value, it makes sure that the politicians don’t muck around with the integrity of the U.S. dollar. We had a gold standard from the 1790s right through the 1970s, a hundred and eighty years, and it worked very well. We had the most phenomenal growth of any country in the history of the world.

Since then we’ve had more financial crises, more dangerous banking crises, lower economic growth, and we see the stagnation that we have today. So maybe the Russians will get it, maybe the Chinese will get it, but the reason we have this book Reviving America, is to help activist citizens have the tools they need to push and get integrity back to the U.S. dollar, get rid of this horrific tax code, and get patients in charge of healthcare again. We do those things and you’ll see the American economy will roar off like a rocket. You should have your gold as that insurance policy and life will be good again.

Mike Gleason: Mr. Forbes, I can’t thank you enough for your fantastic insights and for being so generous with your time. I very much enjoyed reading your latest book in advance of this interview. You give the reader a great explanation of the history behind all of this, and then also more importantly some practical things that they can do to protect themselves, and we certain urge everyone to check that out.

It was great speaking with you today and we wish you and your family and your team there at Forbes and Forbes.com all the best. Thank you so much, and thank you for your continued efforts to spread the ideals of free market and liberty. It’s been a real pleasure to talk with you.

Steve Forbes: Great pleasure to talk with you. Don’t lose faith. Markets are people, and people thrive most when they are free.

Mike Gleason: Excellent way to end. That’ll do it for this week. Thanks again to Steve Forbes, CEO of Forbes, Inc, Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Magazine, and best-selling author, including his latest work, Reviving America: How Repealing Obamacare, Replacing the Tax Code and Reforming the Fed Will Restore Hope and Prosperity. You can obtain a copy of your own at Amazon.com, download it onto your Kindle or iPad, or purchase it at other places where books are sold.

And don’t forget to check back here next Friday for our next Weekly Market Wrap Podcast. Until then, this has been Mike Gleason with Money Metals Exchange, thanks for listening and have a great weekend everybody.

Crude Oil Bottoms and Blues

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/crude-oil-bottoms-and-blues/

Crude oil prices have dropped from about $106 in June of 2014 to briefly under $30 in January of 2016 – down about 74% peak to trough. This appears to be an on-going disaster for oil companies, the banks who loaned money to frackers, oil exporting countries, global stock markets and others.

Conventional wisdom suggests that crude oil prices will stay low for a long time because of low demand (global recession), huge supply (Iran, fracking, etc.), decline in commodity prices globally, and at least ten more reasons.

Maybe!

But crude oil prices have crashed before and then rallied. Examine the following chart and the 4 step sequences shown.

W-Crude-Legs

Note the following “1” to “2” down legs shown on the chart. They are:

 

table1

Note that crude oil has crashed before, and probably will again. But it has also rallied after crashes and probably will again. Note the following rallies:

 

table2

There have been several substantial rallies from deeply oversold conditions over the past 30 years. At each of those lows I think there were many good reasons why crude oil had crashed and would stay low for years — just like now. And yet crude oil prices rallied, in spite of those many good reasons.

What about Cycles in Crude Oil Prices?

Note that in the graph above the #2 bottoms have been circled with green ovals. Examine the next graph with the 88 month cycle lows shown with green ovals. The bars are compressed slightly more but the #2 bottoms are the same.

W-Crude-Cycles

There have been six important crude oil bottoms in the last 30 years. Five of those six important lows occurred close to the 88 month cycle bottoms indicated by green ovals and purple vertical lines. The low in 1998 was mid-cycle.

The green ovals and vertical lines as drawn indicate a crude oil price low is due about now. Given that the cycle is 88 months long – more or less – that probably means the low is due in anytime in 2016Q1 or 2016Q2, and perhaps it has already occurred.

What could cause a bottom to occur now and crude oil to rally or fall further from here? Well, there are many possibilities. Consider the reasons for and against a rally from here as listed in: 60 Reason Why Oil Investors Should Hang On from Zerohedge.

From Peter Schiff:

The bust in commodities should only last as long as the Fed pretends that it is on course to continue raising rates. When it finally admits the truth, after its hand is forced by continued market and economic turmoil, look for the dollar to sell off steeply and commodities and foreign currencies to finally move back up after years of declines. The reality is fairly easy to see, and you don’t need an invitation to Davos to figure it out.”

My Opinion: We will see more currency devaluations, based on 100 years of history, and we will see central banks “doing something” to levitate the stock and bond markets, based on decades of history, and we will see bankers taking care of themselves and the political elite, based on thousands of years of history. Expect higher crude oil prices – eventually – and expect more currency devaluations and higher gold and silver prices in 2016 and 2017.

Expect bankers and politicians to do what they do, and expect gold and silver to protect us from their machinations.

Gary Christenson
The Deviant Investor
gechristenson.com

Report Accidentally Reveals Big Reason to Be Bullish on Silver Prices

Published here: http://www.profitconfidential.com/silver/report-accidentally-reveals-big-reason-to-be-bullish-on-silver-prices/

This Is Big for Silver Prices
If you are asking where silver prices are headed next, then just look at the demand for the precious metal. It makes a very strong bullish case for silver prices to be much higher by the end of 2016.

Mainstream media will have you convinced that customers for the precious metal are not there and that’s precisely why silver prices are down and it’s not worth owning. Wrong!

I certainly can’t deny that industrial demand for silver could be down, mainly due to the widespread slowdown in the global economy, and that major economic hubs.

The post Report Accidentally Reveals Big Reason to Be Bullish on Silver Prices appeared first on Profit Confidential.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Monetary Metals Brief 2016

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-28/monetary-metals-brief-2016

We have consistently been making the contrarian call for a falling silver price and a rising gold to silver ratio for years. This ratio has risen a lot during this time. So are we ready to change our call yet?

Review of Our Call in 2015

Let’s hold ourselves accountable for what we said last year in our Outlook 2015: “There is currently no evidence that scarcity is rising, and thus gold should shoot da moon.” Our bottom line recommendation was, “To those looking to trade, at the moment this report is published you might buy gold for a quick trade. There is no case to buy silver.” We added, “We see no rush to load up the truck just yet.” We said the likely driver for a higher price would be deteriorating credit conditions.

How did we do with these calls?

The gold price has not yet risen to meet our fundamental price. The price was basically down all year after a blip in January. Our silver call turned out to be conservative. Silver closed the year at $13.84, which was below even our number.

Our call on the gold-silver ratio was in the right direction, though the market did not move a lot. It went up about 1.6%.

How Not to Think about Gold

There are several popular approaches to analyzing gold but the most popular is the conventional commodity analysis of annual supply and demand figures. However, gold cannot be understood by looking at small changes in production or consumption.

This is because virtually all of the gold ever mined in human history is still in human hands (to a somewhat lesser extent for silver). No other commodity comes even remotely close. The US Geological Survey estimated the total gold stocks at 171,300 metric tons at the end of 2011. Annual production is just 1.6% of these stocks. In other words, it would take 61 years at current production levels just to produce the same amount of gold as is now stockpiled. In regular commodities, this same ratio—stocks to flows—is measured in months. We just don’t hoard wheat and oil for the long term, for obvious reasons. Nor even iron or lumber or other durable materials.

If total gold mining is 1.6% of gold inventories, then small changes to that 1.6% are not likely to have much impact on the gold price.

How We Think About Gold

The implications of this are extraordinary.

All of that stockpiled gold represents potential supply, under the right market conditions and at the right price. Yet there is never a glut in gold. Through thick and thin,
through rising and falling prices, for thousands of years, the market goes on hoarding and absorbing whatever the miners put out.

Conversely—unlike ordinary commodities—virtually everyone on the planet represents potential demand. Why? Because gold and silver are money. Compare gold to oil. The marginal utility of oil—the value one places on the next barrel compared to the previous—declines rapidly. For oil, it falls rapidly because once your tank is full, you have a storage problem—assuming you even use oil at all.

However, the marginal utility of gold hardly declines at all. People are happy to get the 1,001st ounce, and accept it on the same terms as the 1,000th or the 1st ounce.

We therefore think that changes in the desire to hoard or dishoard gold have a big impact on price and are more important than small changes in annual supply and demand flows.

How We Analyze the Gold Market

As a result, we think of the market as the coming together of 5 different primary groups.

  1. Buyers of metal, typically hoarders. Unlike buyers of other commodities, they don’t have to incorporate it into a product and sell it to make a profit. So there is no particular price that is necessarily too high, other than whatever their notion of a fair price is at any given moment.
  2. Sellers of metal who are dishoarding. They may think the price has hit a high enough level to attract their greed, or a low enough level to activate their fear.
  3. Buyers of paper (e.g. futures). These are speculators, with three key differences from buyers of metal. One, they use leverage. Two (for that reason and others) they have a short time horizon. Three, their exclusive goal is to make a trade for dollar gains.
  4. Short sellers of paper. Not nearly so big a group as popularly imagined, there are people who take the two lopsided risks of (1) shorting something with limited profit and unlimited loss potential and (2) fighting a 100-year trend. These people are nimble and aggressive and certainly play for the short term.
  5. Warehousemen, aka market makers. If few people are willing to bet on a rising dollar (i.e. falling gold price), then who sells gold futures? Enter, the warehouseman, who stands ready to carry gold for anyone who wants future delivery. If you buy a future, you are signaling that you want gold, not to be delivered now, but at some date in the future and this group will sell it to you by buying metal in the spot market and simultaneously selling a contract for future delivery. They don’t care at all about price, as they have no exposure to price. They respond to spread.

While virtually all of the gold ever mined is in someone’s hoard and thus there cannot be such a thing as a glut or shortage, the market can experience relative abundance and scarcity and the spreads of the warehouseman provide a good signal to see it.

If there is a big spread, such as in our example in #5, that means two things. One, speculators are bidding up futures contracts. And two, the marginal use of gold is to go into the warehouse. This is a sign of abundance.

Normally, the price in the futures market is higher than the price in the spot market - called contango. Contango means it is profitable to carry the metal, which is to buy a metal bar and sell a future against it. However, the spread can invert and it has many times since the crisis of 2008. When it is inverted—called backwardation—it is profitable to sell metal and buy a future. Incentives to decarry metal should never happen in gold, as it is a sign of shortage and there is no such thing as a shortage in a metal which has been hoarded since ancient times. In backwardation, the marginal supply of metal is coming from the warehouse (carry trades are unwinding) but there is only a finite supply of gold held in carry.

This is the only way to analyze supply and demand fundamentals for the monetary metals: studying spreads between spot and futures, and changes to these spreads, to understand the constantly changing interaction of these five market participants (see here for more on our approach).

Our Call

For a few years, the market had been in a mode of soft to declining fundamentals for both monetary metals. In 2015, the fundamentals of gold firmed up though silver continued the same trend. There are, of course, price blips. In each blip, we see the same pattern repeated. As price goes up, abundance of the metal rises. Scarcity declines. Then the price subsides and the abundance drops again. It is a pattern of speculators testing the market to see if it has the magic go-juice.

For over three years, we have been calling this publicly. On every silver price blip, a chorus of voices from the precious metals community has cried “break out!” But it has not been so. We have been publishing our data, and our analysis. “This is not the break out you’re looking for,” quoth us (paraphrasing from Obi Wan Kenobe in Star Wars).

Needless to say, this is not the behavior of a silver market price that is shooting, or signaling that it will soon shoot, higher. So what is the outlook for silver, and gold, in 2016?

As of year’s end 2015, the Monetary Metals fundamental price of gold is $1,246. For silver, it is $14.20. That puts the gold-silver ratio at around 88.

There is so much more to say. Read the full Monetary Metals Outlook 2016 (free registration required). We explore in-depth the points made above. We provide a detailed look at the collapse of commodities, threat of deflation, debt crisis, the dollar, interest rates, the quantity of money and what it all means for gold and silver in 2016.

 

© 2016 Monetary Metals LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Precious Metals Strategy: Bullion or Jewelry?

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-27/precious-metals-strategy-bullion-or-jewelry

 

 

 

Precious Metals Strategy: Bullion or Jewelry?

Written by Jeff Nielson (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

 

 

Bullion confiscation has been a risk and concern which has been analyzed in previous commentaries and examined from different angles, so it’s not surprising that this was also the subject of a recent reader question. Part of the answer to that query raised a new topic: the “anti-bullion confiscation” strategy.

What is the easiest way for silver- and gold-holders to avoid the harm and impact of any bullion confiscation decree which might be announced? The answer is to not hold bullion, or rather, not to acquire all your precious metals holdings in the form of bullion.

By now, most readers are aware that historically, the world’s largest bullion market and thus largest repository of bullion is found in India, distributed amongst its enormous 1+ billion population. Indeed, the comically fraudulent attempt by the bankers to “liberate” some, most, or all of the 20,000 tonnes of gold estimated to be held in India was the subject of a recent commentary.

Despite the large income and wealth disparity in India, the majority of gold and silver held in India is distributed amongst its massive peasant/agrarian population. The majority of this population either refuse to use (or trust) banks, or simply lack access to such financial services altogether.

As a consequence of this reality, the modest amounts of wealth accumulated by these families is invariably held in silver and gold. However, Indians don’t carry their silver or gold in the form of coins, or even store it in the form of bars. They wear it, in the form of jewelry, typically hung around the necks of Indian women.

In North America (and the West, in general), “jewelry” and “bullion” are essentially entirely independent concepts. We buy jewelry for vanity, or to earn the favour of females; we exchange our paper currencies for silver or gold bullion as a preferred strategy for wealth preservation. Perhaps it is time for our populations to eliminate that distinction and merge these two activities into a single strategy.

Regular readers are fully aware of the criminalized nature of our governments and economies, with the nexus of all that corruption emanating from the financial sector (under the control of the banking crime syndicate). The actions of these regimes have become increasingly lawless, with the theft-of-assets known as “the bail-in” being the most extreme example to date.

In such societies, it is no wonder that the concern of bullion confiscation becomes an increasingly larger issue in the minds of precious metals holders. For this reason, “diversifying within the sector” has been a frequent theme of previous commentaries. Hold silver and gold. For those who consider themselves competent to engage in equities investments, spread some of your precious metals holdings into the extremely suppressed and undervalued gold and silver miners as well.

Now we have another example and means of diversifying within the sector: holding our physical silver and gold in the form of bullion and jewelry. We should remember that previous acts of bullion confiscation in Western societies (by the US government in 1933 and 1934) focused exclusively on bullion: coins and bars of gold and silver.

Numismatic coins were exempted from seizure. However, “bullion certificates” were included, thus in any modern confiscation, all bullion held in “funds” or “accounts” would be the first bullion seized. We cannot be certain that numismatic coins would be exempt in any future seizures.

However, there was certainly never any thought given to confiscating silver or gold jewelry in those US seizures. Even the most lawless of regimes would be extremely hesitant to attempt to invoke a jewelry confiscation as part of any broader bullion confiscation perpetrated against our populations.

The arguments against attempting to perpetrate any sort of jewelry theft or confiscation are numerous and powerful, and they begin with our still-strong cultural attachment to the world’s only form of Honest Money. Thanks to decades of anti-bullion brainwashing, only a tiny percentage of our populations currently have the prudence to store some or most of their wealth in the form of silver or gold bullion.

Conversely, all of us, except for the growing population of desperately poor, have at least a few items of gold or silver jewelry in our possessions. Indeed, with respect to the married majority, gold engagement rings and wedding bands are regarded by most as an essential symbol of that commitment. As well (particularly for the younger and/or more avante-garde segment of the population), body-piercing is now endemic in our culture.

Much of our population retains a literal physical attachment to their gold and silver. Meanwhile, for the more affluent, there is perhaps an even stronger wealth attachment to jewelry. For the wealthy of the West, just as with the peasant population of India, gold jewelry (in particular) is a symbol of wealth and status.

For these reasons (and more), it is virtually unthinkable that Western corruption would descend to the invasive extreme of any sort of jewelry confiscation. And for that reason, precious metals holders may decide that now is the time to consider acquiring jewelry as part of their overall wealth preservation strategy.

Here it must be understood that there are pros and cons involved, so even those who are most fearful of bullion confiscation — or simply most enamoured with jewelry — would not want to take this strategy to an extreme. The first con to consider here is cost (and thus efficiency). Swapping our paper for gold or silver jewelry inevitably yields far fewer ounces-per-dollar, as we pay for the craftsmanship involved in the fabrication of the jewelry followed by a retail mark-up that is usually higher than what we experience in swapping our paper for bullion.

We also need to consider the reduced liquidity of jewelry. If one needed to “raise cash” for an item of jewelry today, the options range from bad to worse. Selling jewelry back to a jeweler inevitably has a steep discount attached, meaning we lose for a second time in our paper-for-jewelry strategy. Sinking even lower, we can head to pawn shops to attempt a jewelry-for-cash swap and experience an even greater price shock as we are told what our gold or silver jewelry is (supposedly) worth.

Faced with those concerns, larger and/or wealthier precious metals holders may see foreign storage of their bullion as a means of avoiding both the risk of domestic confiscation and the transaction costs involved in storing our wealth in the form of jewelry. Yet here as well, there is no perfect strategy available.

For even those individuals who choose most wisely in shopping for a “safe” jurisdiction, the risk of bullion confiscation in this second jurisdiction will still be greater than zero. A government which appears honest today could morph into something more sinister tomorrow, or simply a new election can result in a complete change in the political landscape.

Then we have a different form of liquidity concern. Not only is there time (and cost) involved in choosing to retrieve one’s bullion held in a different jurisdiction, but we could face a far more serious impediment as we think through such a strategy.

Suppose we choose to store some of our precious metals holdings overseas, and we do so to escape a potential bullion confiscation event, and then such a seizure does occur. If we cannot legally hold gold or silver bullion, we certainly will not be able to legally ship such bullion back to our own jurisdiction (and possession) if or when we require some of that bullion to satisfy immediate liquidity demands.

Storing a large portion of our wealth overseas essentially implies a commitment to relocate, in any worst-case scenario. If we couldn’t bring our bullion home (over the foreseeable future), then we would need to move to wherever our bullion was stored. No matter how we engage in our diversification-within-the-sector strategy, we find no perfect answer.

Our governments have clearly abandoned the Rule of Law, as witnessed by the systemic, financial crime in which they not only facilitate, but participate. Given this reality, no matter how carefully we plan, we cannot be immune from all potential (lawless) acts administered with brute force by fascist regimes.

 

We have liquidity concerns. We have safety concerns. We have cost and efficiency concerns. We diversify within the sector, because no one strategy can possibly address all of these concerns. It is thus important for readers to become fully apprised of all their options (and the risks involved), and then to allocate their wealth amongst those options in a manner most personally optimal.

 

 

Please email with any questions about this article or precious metals HERE

 

 

Precious Metals Strategy: Bullion or Jewelry?

Written by Jeff Nielson (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

There’s Something Worse than Having a “Losing Position”

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/theres-something-worse-than-having-a-losing-position/

There’s something worse than giving up at the bottom…

There’s something worse than watching prices fall as you continue to add on the way down…

It’s giving up “three feet from gold,” when if you had just stuck it out a bit longer, things might have turned your way.

This tendency is part and parcel of human nature, and its effect is not to be underestimated. Way back in 1938, Napoleon Hill wrote about it in the classic book, Think and Grow Rich. Consider what his research uncovered. Said he:

More than five hundred of the most successful men the country has ever known, told the author (Napoleon Hill) that their greatest success came just one step beyond the point at which defeat had overtaken them. Failure is a trickster with a keen sense of irony and cunning. It takes great delight in tripping one when success is within reach.

When the precious metals make a turn to the upside that really holds, one of two things is going to happen. Either the price trades sideways for awhile, building higher highs and higher lows into a bona fide uptrend, or there will be a trident spike that shocks everyone, present company included.

Either way, we’ve been so conditioned to expect market failures to the upside into overhead ceilings that almost no one will believe it when things change.

They will wait for the price of silver to rise where they hope and expect it to go before they jump in (above $20, $26 or $40?). They may sell aggressively into each rise until they end up with little or no holdings. Then the mostly empty bullish train will really leave the station, with the “parade crowd” standing forlornly at the gate, wondering what went wrong.

Of course, no one can predict the future, and the price of silver might stop at say, $25. But by doing your homework and looking at the evidence – from the very accurate to the not-so-helpful – you’ll be on the way toward making the right decision… for you.

What’s your own risk tolerance? What’s your opinion of the best upside case?

If you believe silver has a $2 downside risk, but see the potential on the upside as $10, then your perceived risk/reward would be 1:5. You could be wrong. But if you spend time studying others who’ve successfully been and done – It’s likely that you’ll come out a winner if you decide to stay in the game. Not to mention – if “being wrong” means that instead of a 5x return, you end up with 10x… or more!

Eric Sprott, who went from “just” wealthy to perhaps billionaire status during the previous rise, worked through several up/down cycles along the way. He no doubt had to ask himself the same questions you’re wondering about right now. His conclusion?

If you believe you’re right; hold your ground. Normally there’s a big payday at the end.

Are you willing to “stick to your guns,” adding on a dollar-cost-averaging basis?

If so, take encouragement from people who’ve gone through this before – who watched gold decline by 50% into 1976 – then saw it rocket 850% higher during the next three years or so?

Or will you be swayed by the financial channel talking heads, as they trash talk gold and silver – just like they did from 2002-2011 while gold rose from $275 to over $1,900… while foolishly buying none themselves?

Looking forward, the odds are much better than even the remaining perma-bulls can now imagine – that during the next few years, gold will change the first digit on its four-place handle several times, and silver will come to be defined by a three-digit price tag.

If you’ve lost your belief that the precious metals are going to rise meaningfully and perhaps move to all-time nominal highs while you are willing to wait for that to happen, then honor your conclusions and move onto something else.

Investor Spirit Needs to Be Nurtured and Strengthened…

But if you’re still willing to be convinced, or just need a little more emotional support, consider this quote from Stu Thomson of Graceland Updates, an analyst who has established an excellent track record charting the movements of the precious metals, as well as the investor sentiment which drives the price. Recently he said,

When an investor in a major asset class has draw downs, care must be taken not to break the spirit of that investor. Investor spirit needs to be nurtured and strengthened…The Western gold community is now entering the year 2016, as gold approaches another mighty support zone, this time at $1033. It’s unknown whether gold enters that support zone, or rallies from just above it. What is known is that this is a major buying area, and a generational low appears to be in the works for both the bullion and the miners. Intestinal fortitude, and nurturing of investor spirit, are all that is required now.

You can watch from the sidelines as a spectator while the crowd in the parade builds in size, or buy your ticket by holding and adding to a sensible stash of “hold in your hand” physical gold and silver. Are you willing to not stop “three feet from gold”?

David Smith is Senior Analyst for TheMorganReport.com and is a regular contributor to MoneyMetals.com. For the last 15 years, he has investigated precious metals mines and exploration sites in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Mexico, China, Canada, and the U.S. and shared his findings and investment wisdom with readers, radio listeners, and audiences at North American investment conferences.

Buy “Physical Gold” Coins and Bars – Bloomberg Interview GoldCore

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-27/buy-%E2%80%9Cphysical-gold%E2%80%9D-coins-and-bars-%E2%80%93-bloomberg-interview-goldcore

Buy “Physical Gold” Coins and Bars – Bloomberg Interview GoldCore

  • Gold: the 3,000 year old “fashion” is back in favour
  • Rising interest rates – when happen – are positive for gold
  • This seen in data, charts – 2003 to 2006 period and 1970s
  • Given risks today – higher allocations of as much as 30% are merited
  • Important to own “physical gold” coins and bars in safest vaults in world
  • Important to own physical due to increasing likelihood of COMEX default

goldcore_bloomberg_January_2016

GoldCore discussed the outlook for gold on “Bloomberg Markets” yesterday with Matt Miller and Mark Barton and the interview can be watched here.

LBMA Gold Prices

27 Jan: USD 1,116.50, EUR 1,027.14 and GBP 781.04 per ounce
26 Jan: USD 1,114.70, EUR 1,028.42 and GBP 785.80 per ounce
25 Jan: USD 1,103.70, EUR 1,020.29 and GBP 773.96 per ounce
22 Jan: USD 1,097.65, EUR 1,012.55 and GBP 769.63 per ounce
21 Jan: USD 1,096.80, EUR 1,006.98 and GBP 774.99 per ounce

Breaking Gold and Silver News Today – Click here

Call Us Today To Protect and Grow Your Wealth – (302) 635-1160

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Gold Could Lose Safe-Haven Bid as Equities Rebound

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/gold-could-lose-safe-haven-bid-as-equities-rebound/

Gold and Silver have held up well during the recent selloff in equities. From December 28 through Wednesday the broad NYSE lost 10.4% while the S&P 500 lost 9.6%. Precious Metals gained strength during that period. Gold advanced 3.0% while Silver gained 1.7%. Gold relative to the NYSE broke its downtrend and touched an 11-month high. Gold relative to global equities (excluding the US market) reached a 2-year high. Precious metals have clearly benefitted from the equity selloff but therefore figure to lose strength as the equity market begins a relief rally.

Equities have become very oversold and are forming a bullish reversal. The weekly candle chart of the S&P 500 is shown below. The market is forming a bullish hammer (reversal candle) right at important support. The week is not over but we expect volume to be sizeable. The last two hammers on big volume came at the October 2014 and August 2014 lows. The market became extremely oversold this week as only 15% of stocks within the NYSE were trading above their 200-day moving average. That is the lowest figure in more than four years. Furthermore, various sentiment indicators are showing extreme pessimism. The AAII survey for example is showing the lowest amount of bulls since 1987.

Jan222016SPX

S&P 500 Weekly Chart

The S&P 500 could rally as high as 1990 where there is major resistance. Wednesday’s low should hold for at least a few months.

The recent poor performance of the gold miners is another signal that the metals (Gold and Silver) are at risk of making lower lows. During the aforementioned period when the metals were positive the miners (GDX and GDXJ) lost 9.6% and 12.0%. That relative and nominal weakness is a strong signal that the recent strength in the metals is unlikely to last.

GDX and GDXJ are charted below. The miners are recovering in part due to the recovery in the stock market. They are also retesting Tuesday’s breakdown to new lows. The rally has been weak as there is strong resistance overhead in the form of recent support ($18 for GDXJ and $13 for GDX) and the 50-day moving averages.

Jan222016miners

GDXJ & GDX Daily Candles

Recent relative weakness in the gold miners along with the bullish reversal in the equity market is a bearish development for precious metals. Gold and surprisingly Silver have held up well amid the decline in equities. They enjoyed a safe-haven bid yet are likely to lose that bid as the equity market begins a relief rally. The gold stocks, while initially following the stock market could resume their decline once metals have resumed their downtrends. Precious metals bulls should wait for an extreme oversold condition amid extreme bearish sentiment before turning bullish. As we navigate the end of this bear market, consider learning more about our premium service including our favorite junior miners which we expect to outperform in 2016.

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT
Jordan@TheDailyGold.com

Central Bank Created Silver Rally

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/central-bank-created-silver-rally/

Central banks have created a mess, unless you enjoy unemployment, crashing economies, a wave of bankruptcies, and half of the world’s assets owned by only a few people.

From Chris Martinson: The Deflation Monster Has Arrived

Most of the bad decisions that will haunt our future were made by the Federal Reserve in its ridiculous attempts to sustain the unsustainable.”

“… looking at the next few years, we will experience this as a time of unprecedented financial market turmoil, political upheaval and social unrest. The losses will be staggering. Markets are going to crash, wealth will be transferred from the unwary to the well-connected, and life for most people will get harder…”

V-Federal Reserve

From Egon von Greyerz:

In spite of a 50% increase in global debt since 2008 to $230 trillion and zero interest rates, the world economy is now deteriorating rapidly. Add to that $1.5 quadrillion of mostly worthless derivatives and a very serious geopolitical situation and we have the ‘perfect scenario’ that is going to lead to the most serious crisis that the world has ever experienced.”

From Ambrose Evans-Pritchard:

The global financial system has become dangerously unstable and faces an avalanche of bankruptcies that will test social and political stability…”

Pritchard quoting William White, OECD, former chief economist of the BIS:

It will become obvious in the next recession that many of these debts will never be serviced or repaid, and this will be uncomfortable for a lot of people who think they own assets that are worth something.” [emphasis mine]

V-Paper Money

From Chris Martinson: The Deflation Monster Has Arrived

I’m not just calling for another run of the mill bear market for equities, but the unwinding of the largest and most ill-conceived credit bubble in all of history. Equities are a side story to a larger one.”

It’s global and it’s huge. This deflationary monster has no equal in all of history …”

Faced with the prospect of watching the entire financial world burn to the figurative ground (if not literal in some locations), or doing something, the central banks will opt for doing something.”

Repeat: The central banks will do something! The likely choices are: more QE such as “printing currencies,” bailouts, bail-ins where banks take depositor accounts to recapitalize banks, and helicopter money – money given directly to taxpayers, more giveaways, tax rebates, and whatever else politicians think will buy votes.

From Larry Edelson:

We are entering a crash and burn phase for government. Especially Western governments and their socialist and safety net experiments of the last several decades.”

It will manifest itself mostly in the sovereign bond markets of Europe and the United States…”

“… opportunities I see coming… A new, explosive bull market in precious metals and mining shares.”

Yes, but silver and gold have been dropping since mid-2011. Why an explosive bull market rally now?

From Taki Tsaklanos at Investing Haven

Silver hitting major support.”

“…somewhere in 2016 silver has to break out or break down.”

Silver prices are at support near the bottom of a triangle. A break out seems likely.

V-Silver weekly

Silver prices are bottoming in a seven year cycle which means their next important move is probably up.

S-Silver-xx

Silver Investment Demand is strong: Steve St. Angelo has pointed out the strong investment demand for silver in sales of Silver Eagles. He has also reported on the collapse of registered gold and silver at COMEX. See Silver Eagle sales chart below from srsroccoreport.com.

V-Silver-Eagle-Sales-1996-vs-2015

CONCLUSIONS:

The central banks of the world have made a mess of global economic systems, although they have successfully enriched the financial and political elite. But systems are collapsing, the deflation monster has arrived, and more QE, negative interest rates, bailouts, devaluations, and bail-ins are coming.

The central banks of the world will “do something” rather than watch economies crash and burn, along with the assets of the financial and political elite. Doing something almost always means devaluing their currencies, repressing the prices of silver and gold (if they can), levitating stock and bond markets, and lowering interest rates to penalize savers, retirees, pension funds, and others.

Inflation and war are the likely consequences, probably after more deflation and defaults in the financial markets. Silver and gold prices will benefit:

  1. There is massive demand for investment silver and gold.
  2. Central banks are, so it seems, running out of gold to sell or “lease” to maintain price suppression.
  3. Eventually people will realize that silver and gold are a good store of wealth while fiat currencies, which will be aggressively devalued by central banks, are not.
  4. Silver and gold are currently at the bottom of triangle patterns and silver is at the bottom of a seven year cyclic.
  5. Would you rather own physical silver or paper dollars, euros, pounds, or yen?
  6. Would you rather own physical gold or a bond “paying” negative interest rates backed by an insolvent government?
  7. The reality of devaluing fiat currencies will become devastatingly clear to the middle classes of the US, Europe, the UK, and Japan. By that time the prices for silver and gold will be much higher than they are today.

 

Silver thrives, paper dies!

Gary Christenson
The Deviant Investor
gechristenson.com

Monday, January 25, 2016

Peak Gold and Silver May Have Come and Gone

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/peak-gold-and-silver-may-have-come-and-gone/

Have we reached peak precious metals? Many analysts think so.

Just to be clear, however, the idea of peak gold and peak silver doesn’t refer to a peak prices. The precious metals put in a cyclical price high in 2011. But annual mining production levels may have peaked in 2014-2015. This is what is meant by “peak precious metals.”

There is good reason to believe that newly mined supplies of gold and silver will decline in 2016 and beyond. The main culprit is low prices. In 2015, gold and silver prices spent most of the year trading below miners’ all-in production costs (which average $17/oz for silver and $1,150/oz for gold).

Primary silver production is already on the decline in the major producing countries. Last year silver output fell in Chile by 4.6%, in the United States by 6.5%, and in Canada by more than 20%!

What Scalebacks in Copper Mining Mean for Silver

It’s important to keep in mind that the majority of silver that is mined comes as a byproduct of mining operations for other metals. Fully 55% of all silver produced comes from copper, lead, and zinc mining. Another 13% comes as a byproduct of gold mining.

In order to understand the supply dynamics of the silver market, you have to take a look at what’s happening with base metals mining…

…annual [supply] deficits can begin to apply upward pressure to prices.

Much like gold miners, copper producers are struggling to cope with low spot prices. One of the ways they are trying to survive is by cutting production. Nine of the largest copper producers announced they would cut output by 200,000 metric tons in the first quarter of 2016.

The contraction in the base metals mining industry will contribute to supply tightness in silver. The silver market has experienced an annual supply deficit for most of this decade. That deficit could widen in 2016 and beyond.

The Silver Institute notes, “While such deficits do not necessarily influence prices in the near term, multiple years of annual deficits can begin to apply upward pressure to prices in subsequent periods.”

Drilling Down on the Demand Outlook

Industrial demand for gold and silver may turn out to be tepid for 2016. This is less of a factor in gold markets than for silver, where manufacturers require a good portion of what is produced annually.

Some economists worry about the possibility of recession in the months ahead. Any slump will weigh on demand for items such as jewelry and other goods. However, a lot of industrial demand comes from high-growth sectors which have proven resilient during past recessions. Electronic, solar, and healthcare-related applications for silver come to mind.

It would be a big mistake to analyze silver demand as if silver were just another industrial metal.

It’s true that industrial applications remain the biggest single component of silver demand. But unlike with zinc, nickel, iron, and other industrial metals, silver is also sought after by investors as a precious metal and a form of money. Demand for silver coins, rounds, and bars has grown steadily in recent years, accounting for 19.5% of the total silver market in 2015, according to the Silver Institute.

U.S. and Canadian Silver Production Can No Longer Satisfy Coin Demand

Surging investment demand for physical bullion was perhaps the biggest story in precious metals for 2015. Mints and refiners spent much of the 2nd half of the year unable to keep up. Investors had to contend with higher premiums and delivery delays.

Steve St. Angelo of the SRSrocco Report put out a striking analysis showing how U.S. and Canadian silver coin demand has now eclipsed silver production from the two countries. That would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

He notes that “in 2001 U.S. and Canadian silver production totaled 96.6 million oz (Moz)… That year, Silver Eagle and Maple Leaf sales totaled 9.2 Moz.” A net surplus of 87.4 million ounces.

Fast forward 14 years, and we have a “net deficit of 26.2 Moz in 2015 as total Silver Eagle and Maple Leaf sales reach a record 75 Moz versus combined mine supply of 48.8 Moz.”

That means investment demand is single-handedly outstripping supply.

It’s indicative of a broader trend. According to a 2016 forecast for precious metals markets issued by Commerzbank, “rising physical demand will meet with falling supply.” That is surely a formula for higher prices – eventually.

When Will Physical Realities Override Paper Machinations?

In the long-term, physical supply and demand is everything. But in the short-term to intermediate-term, the fundamentals are almost meaningless. Big institutional futures markets traders can move markets in any direction for any reason… until, at some point, they no longer can.

Leverage recently surged to record levels in the paper-traded gold and silver markets. Physical inventories of silver on the Comex fell from 184 million ounces in July 2015 to 158 million by the end of the year. A run-on-the-bank scenario becomes a very real possibility if just a tiny proportion of futures contract holders stand for delivery of physical metal.

Holders of physical metal would be wise to hang on tight to it and keep a long-term perspective. At some point – perhaps soon – the major price trend will turn back in favor of the bulls as the bullish supply and demand fundamentals on the physical side overwhelm the paper bears.

Stefan Gleason is President of Money Metals Exchange, the national precious metals company named 2015 “Dealer of the Year” in the United States by an independent global ratings group. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason is a seasoned business leader, investor, political strategist, and grassroots activist. Gleason has frequently appeared on national television networks such as CNN, FoxNews, and CNBC, and his writings have appeared in hundreds of publications such as the Wall Street Journal, TheStreet.com, Seeking Alpha, Detroit News, Washington Times, and National Review.

Investing in Silver – 3 Must See Charts

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-25/investing-silver-%E2%80%93-3-must-see-charts

Investing in Silver – 3 Must See Charts

Precious metals continue to look  very undervalued vis a vis most asset classes – particularly stocks and bonds.

This is especially the case with silver which has fallen by more than 70% from what we believe was an intermediate price high of $49 in 2011 – despite surging demand for silver bullion coins and bars from canny buyers investing in silver.

24hGold - If You Are A Silver ...
Silver Eagle Sales – Full Year 1996 and First 19 Days of 2016

Silver is currently trading at just over $14.25 per ounce – 1/77th of the price of gold at $1,100/oz. GoldCore continue to believe that silver will surpass its non-inflation adjusted, nominal high of $50 per ounce in the coming years. Indeed, we believe that silver will surpass its inflation adjusted high or real record high of over $150 per ounce in the next 5 to 7 years.

We are currently doing a research note on silver which will outline why we are so positive on silver.

In the meantime, let us whet your appetite and give you an understanding of the rationale for our bullishness. Steve St Angelo of the SRSrocco REPORT has just done an excellent blog with three very interesting charts which contribute to our positive outlook for silver bullion.

24hGold - If You Are A Silver ...
Silver Eagle Sales – 1996 (Full Year) Versus 2016 (Full Year)

He points out that

In 1996, total Silver Eagle sales for the year were 3,466,000. Now compare that to the 4,950,000 Silver Eagles sold in the first half of January. We must remember, Silver Eagle sales in 2016 started on January 11th. So, in just six working days (this Monday was a holiday), the U.S. Mint sold 43% more Silver Eagles than all of 1996. 

 

Furthermore, if we compare sales of Silver Eagles in 1996 versus 2015, this was the result:

Investors purchased a record 47 million Silver Eagles in 2015 compared to 3.5 million in 1996. Basically, investors bought 13.5 times more Silver Eagles in 2015 than they did in 1996.

 

This next charts compares the 20-year change of silver investment versus Jewelry and Silverware demand:24hGold - If You Are A Silver ...
Silver Investment & Jewelry Demand – 1996 (Full Year) Versus 2015 (Full Year)

In 1996, total global Silver Bar and Coin investment was only 23 million oz (Moz) versus 264 Moz of Jewelry & Silverware. However, 20 years later… we see a much different picture. While global Jewelry & Silverware demand increased to 280 Moz, Silver Bar & Coin investment surged to 236 Moz.

Steve’s blog in full and charts can be seen here

Breaking Gold and Silver News Today – Click here

 

Silver bullion coins – like Silver Nuggets (Kangaroos), Eagles, Maples and Britannias are great forms of insurance against currency debasement and financial collapse. They also make very nice gifts for loved ones and are a great way to pass on wealth to the next generation.

product_coins_The-American-Silver-Eagle

We have the best prices – some of the most competitive in the U.S. and internationally.

Call us today to order – 1 302 635 1160 – or buy silver coins online here.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Betting on Deflation May Be a Huge Mistake. Here’s Why…….

Published here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-24/betting-deflation-may-be-huge-mistake-here%E2%80%99s-why%E2%80%A6%E2%80%A6

 

Submitted by StealthFlation Guest Contributor,  Clint Siegner – Money Metals Exchange

Precious metals investors heading into 2016 worry the dollar will continue marching ahead, right over the top of gold and silver prices. The Fed is telegraphing additional rate hikes throughout the year, and commodity prices – led by crude oil – are falling. There have been tremors in the biggest beneficiary markets of all when it comes to the Fed’s QE largesse – U.S. equities and real estate. And the possibility of a recession is growing, both in the U.S. and around the world.

There are plenty of reasons we might see even lower official inflation numbers and a stronger dollar in 2016. But don’t think for a second that consumer prices or living costs will fall. They haven’t, they aren’t, and they never will in a sustained way – thanks to the Fed’s creation in 1913. This is where the deflationists have it wrong.

The impact of further disinflationary forces or even a deflationary episode on precious metals prices is a bit harder to predict.

The bear case for precious metals is rather simple. Should metals trade like commodities, they are likely to follow other raw materials lower. If we get a liquidity crunch akin to the 2008 financial crisis, just about everything will be sold as investors raise cash to meet margin calls or flee to the dollar as a perceived safe-haven.

There is also the possibility that metals prices will simply be managed lower. Growing numbers of investors realize that Wall Street is not a bulwark of free markets. Major banks have admitted to rigging markets against their own customers, and the Federal Reserve aggressively intervenes in markets in its quest to centrally plan the world economy. Why wouldn’t the Fed also be active in trading precious metals? Those dismissing the notion that metals prices are manipulated are naive.

Today’s Situation Is Different Than 2008

The bear case assumes history, in particular the experience surrounding 2008, will repeat. Or that there is still plenty of ability for anyone seeking to force metals prices lower in the futures market to actually do so. Or both.

Maybe. But relying on those assumptions could be a tragic mistake.

For starters, the U.S. dollar is already near record highs. Meanwhile, commodities and precious metals have been beaten down mercilessly. This set-up is the complete opposite of what faced investors leading up to the summer of 2008. And even though stocks and commodities got hammered in 2008, gold posted modest gains for the year as a safe haven from the threat of a collapsing economy.

Lower gold and silver prices have already produced an imbalance between bullion supply and demand. Supply deficits in 2016 are likely to make the developing problem with inventory at the COMEX and other exchanges even bigger. Registered stocks of gold all but vanished recently as bargain hunters, particularly in Asia, have been happy to buy and take delivery. Silver inventories aren’t in much better shape.

More deliverable bars must come from existing stocks, but holders won’t be anxious to sell. Those with “eligible” COMEX bars have certainly been slow to convert them to “registered” of late. By all indications, miners will be unable to provide the needed supply.

With prices below the cost of production, mine output is set to drop significantly this year.

If the metals markets look forward, as markets are supposed to do, they will anticipate the Fed’s response to a strengthening dollar and economic malaise. In 2008, investors knew little about the lengths to which the Fed would be willing to go. Today they DO know. The Fed will overwhelm deflation by creating new inflation.

Markets are completely dependent on Fed stimulus, and people simply expect officials to roll out an even bigger initiative whenever the need arises. Anything to prevent the cleansing effect of corrective forces from restoring health to the economy. In a recent interview, market expert Jim Rickards predicted the Fed will abandon rate increases and actually commence lowering before the year’s end.

Metals investors should take heart in the fact that gold and silver prices have shown some resilience in the face of disinflationary forces recently. Both metals outperformed oil and most other commodities last year. Yes, prices declined roughly 11% for both metals. But crude oil fell 36% and copper lost 22%. The precious metals gained purchasing power against many other things.

 

Bottom line: Don’t bet on a meaningful deflation. Fed officials will not allow it. And they can keystroke dollars into existence until the power goes out for good.