Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Like Jeffrey Epstein, Bullion Banks Get Sweet Deals from the Justice Department

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/physical-market/like-jeffrey-epstein-bullion-banks-get-sweet-deals-from-the-justice-department/

First, a bank’s commodities trading department takes metals investors for a ride like unwitting victims in the back of Jeffrey Epstein’s “Lolita Express.”

Now federal prosecutors have extended the same sort of cozy non-prosecution agreement to shield the bank itself from a criminal indictment.

Federal prosecutors signed a non-prosecution agreement in June with Merrill Lynch Commodities, Inc. (MLCI) and Bank of America (Merrill’s parent company) for rigging the precious metals markets.

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) found gold and silver traders working at Merrill Lynch had “schemed to deceive other market participants by injecting materially false and misleading information into the precious metals futures market.”

The agreement references “thousands of fraudulent orders” – intended artificially to move the markets up or down by “spoofing” other traders and investors – over a period of 6 years.

Two traders have been indicted on criminal charges so far. The non-prosecution agreement was only for the mega bank, not for its more expendable staff.

The bank gets off with a less-than-consequential $25 million fine, a promise not to do it again, and a commitment to set up more controls… which they can self-monitor.

The generous agreement was granted in part because “MLCI has no prior criminal history.” The prosecutors who drafted the agreement must not have had access to the Department’s own files, or the internet.

Suffice it to say the malfeasance covered here isn’t the first bit of shady activity Merrill has been involved in. DOJ prosecutors also didn’t take into consideration Bank of America’s own record. Both organizations have been implicated in schemes, scandals, and frauds going back decades.

Here is a partial list of what the bankers have been accused of doing to clients, shareholders and other victims (a more complete accounting can be found here):

  • Screwing the State of California as its Bond Trustee
  • Charging excessive fees
  • Withholding information from shareholders
  • Foreclosure fraud
  • Deceptive sales practices

Maybe prosecutors limited their definition of “criminal history” to past criminal convictions. There would undoubtedly be a lot more of those if Justice Department prosecutors stopped settling and signing non-prosecution agreements and instead started taking the banks to trial for their role in crimes.

Bank of America has a history of cutting deals with the Department of Justice.

In 2014, for example, the DOJ crowed about “the largest civil settlement with a single entity in American history.” Prosecutors settled allegations of massive mortgage fraud in return for $16.65 billion in penalties and restitution.

Prosecutors seem to have forgotten the bank’s involvement in that mess.

It isn’t clear whether any amount of crooked behavior would be sufficient for officials to finally prosecute and seek to ban these banks from trading in the markets.

As part of the June agreement, Bank of America agreed to ramp up internal controls and training to prevent future fraud.

That will be small comfort to anyone who has read the Bank’s rap sheet, but DOJ prosecutors seem confident that Bank of America will start policing itself. They “determined that an independent compliance monitor was unnecessary.”

The agreement not to pursue criminal charges is, naturally, framed as a big win for victims in the DOJ press release.

In order to see just how much “winning” there is, we encourage victims to send an email to VictimAssistance.fraud@usdoj.gov. The DOJ promises to reply with more information about how victims of the market rigging can get compensation.

We have yet to receive a response to the email we sent.

Those with the time can also call the toll-free victim hotline – 888-549-3945 – where they will go straight to voicemail. There has not yet been a reply to the message we left there either.

Victims may have to accept the Justice Department’s word that the $25 million penalty “represents the combined appropriate criminal fine, forfeiture, and restitution amounts in this matter.”

It’s a good round number – probably crafted to sound like a hefty amount to average citizens. It is, however, a paltry sum for the behemoth bank. It sounds woefully inadequate given the thousands of fraudulent orders and 6 years of history under review.

Plus, the agreement makes no mention of the huge numbers of metals investors who didn’t trade in the futures markets, but who relied upon the phony price setting that goes on there. This includes investors in physical bullion.

The beauty (for DOJ prosecutors and perpetrators cutting these deals prior to evidence being heard in court) is that there is no accounting as to whether the penalty is commensurate with the crime.

Victims don’t know, for example, what officials estimate as the total illicit gains related to the price rigging. It’s possible nobody at Justice bothered to make an estimate.

Thus far Deutsche Bank and Bank of America have cut deals on the issue of price rigging in the precious metals markets. Meanwhile the high-profile indictments, based on all the “cooperation” prosecutors are supposedly getting, have yet to materialize.

Perhaps the DOJ plans to secure non-prosecution agreements with the other bullion banks involved. It is not hard to imagine a scenario where several banks agree to cooperate against one another, but none gets convicted because prosecutors gave them each one of these nifty shields.

The sordid story of the Jeffrey Epstein case reveals something really important about how non-prosecution agreements are used to protect the well-connected from accountability.

It is time the Department of Justice stopped settling out with terrible human beings and the organizations they run. Actual justice for precious metals investors will involve throwing cheating bank executives in prison and tossing the crooked banks out of the markets.

Clint Siegner is a Director at 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 Linfield College in Oregon, Siegner puts his experience in business management along with his passion for personal liberty, limited government, and honest money into the development of Money Metals’ brand and reach. This includes writing extensively on the bullion markets and their intersection with policy and world affairs.

Monday, July 29, 2019

Jp Cortez: Sound Money Movement Gains Momentum in the States

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/economy/jp-cortez-sound-money-movement-gains-momentum-in-the-states/

Mike Gleason: It is my privilege, now, to welcome in Jp Cortez, with the Sound Money Defense League, a non-partisan national public policy organization working to restore sound money on the state and federal level.

Jp is a proponent of, and has studied in the Austrian School of Economics, and his role at SMDL as policy director, has him regularly testifying at legislative hearings and speaking at various events throughout the country.

His articles and analysis have appeared in many national news publications, including The Washington Examiner, Huffington Post, Mises Institute, Foundation for Economic Education, and more, and he’s a frequent guest on various podcasts and national radio shows to talk about the importance of sound money legislation. And it’s a real pleasure to have him on with us today.

Jp, thanks for the time and welcome.

Jp Cortez: Mike, I appreciate you having me on. Thank you so much.

Mike Gleason: Well, Jp, as we start out today, let’s set the stage here and first have you explain why this idea of sound money is important in the first place, and then, as a follow up to that, what kind of policies would help restore and reinforce sound money? Let’s begin with that.

Jp Cortez: Sure. In fact, actually, I’d like to take a step back from there. I think it’s important to define sound money and kind of understand what it is to really understand the implications that it has.

So sound money, just to begin, a cursory definition is money that isn’t really prone to severe appreciation or depreciation in the purses in power of the money over the long term. And this is a function that’s aided by the self-correcting processes that a free market has. It’s a money that has been subject to competition and to market forces, over a long enough timeline that we see, and we collectively understand that it’s a money that holds up.

And so it’s important because historically, now that we know what sound money is, historically we can see it, it’s the linchpin of a prosperous society. Throughout history, if you look back, you can go back to the Roman Empire and see the debasing of money is not something new to the United States. Dollar devaluation has a long and storied history.

And so understandably, Roman soldiers were getting upset when their government was issuing less pure coins to fund the empire that they’d created. And so I think sound money and the importance of sound money can really be boiled down into two value propositions.

The first is that, sound money reduces uncertainty. The money that we choose has really, really important impacts on how societies, as a whole function, the ways societies spend, the way they save, the way they invest. The entire process from capital accumulation to capital investment is very dependent, or at least strongly influenced on the money that we use.

So, by moving to a sound money, we find that uncertainty is reduced, and entrepreneurs and consumer and investors can better and more accurately react and really take account of the signals that are being provided by the market.

The second kind of important point of sound money is that it acts as a safeguard against big government. So, on top of, and aside from any sort of economic implications that the money you choose may have, sound money acts as a safeguard against big government. I like to imagine sound money as sort of an equal opportunity money. It’s very inclusive in that we all have things about the government we don’t like, whether it’s massive wars, or domestic spying, or immigration, whatever it may be, there are things that the government does that we don’t like.

And without sound money in a monetary system like the one we have today, the government doesn’t need consent from its people to do these things that we don’t like. They can just print the money. But under sound money, a government has to turn to direct taxation to fund wars, to fund ineffective policies on domestic drug use, or illegal domestic spying, or constitutional, or rather unconstitutional wars.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, and obviously there’s taxation a couple of different ways. One is the old fashion way where they raise our taxes, and the other one is that stealth tax, the inflation tax which happens through printing all that money that the Treasury Department’s doing to pay for all this, like you mentioned.

Now I know that the Sound Money Defense League has released a Sound Money Index, which scores each state and assess how well they’re doing when it comes to the sound money policy. And that index is also available at MoneyMetals.com, as well, by the way.

So, talk about the state of the states, Jp. What was the criteria you used there? And give us a run down on some of the best and worst states for sound money.

Jp Cortez: Mike, if you don’t mind, I’d like to go back. You asked a question about what policies would help send sound money or help facilitate sound money in the United States.

Real quick, I think mostly the biggest issue here is the taxes – the taxation around money, sales tax and capital gains tax, and all of these things that serve as a disincentive to using sound money every day. In a lot of ways, in 1971 you could say that the American dollar hit an iceberg, with the closing of the Gold Window, with Nixon’s actions, money hit an iceberg. And there are very few lifeboats available to people to get off this sinking ship. And to tax money is to throw shackles on one of the few lifeboats that is available to move away from an asset that we know is moribund, that we know is depreciating, and that, historically, we know eventually will die as all fiat currencies have.

So, back to the Sound Money Index. Yeah, the Sound Money Index is a really cool project that we put together. It’s the first of its kind and we ranked all 50 states. At least, in 2018, we ranked all 50 states using nine specific indicators, nine points of criteria to determine which states offer the most pro sound money environments in the country.

So, to that end, last year we had Utah, Wyoming, and Texas. Those were our top three. They had recently passed laws. The Wyoming Sound Money Act eliminated all taxation liability on gold and silver in Wyoming. Arizona had recently passed a capital gains exemption, exempting gold and silver from capital gains. Utah, of course, in 2011 had the original Sound Money Act.

And so, this year it’s exciting to see the renaissance, the revolution of sound money continue on the state level. This year in West Virginia, we had two bills that were introduced, and fortunately I’m happy to say that gold and silver are no longer taxed in West Virginia anymore.

In Nebraska and Washington, tax hungry legislators over there tried to introduce bills to impose taxes where exemptions had already been passed. I’m happy to say that, because of grassroots efforts, and because of in-state dealers and other coming in to really voice their concerns, those efforts were squashed.

Unfortunately in Ohio, we suffered a defeat. It’s kind of a strange dynamic that’s playing out there. Not too long ago, there’s still a cloud hanging over Ohio of a swindler, a rare coin “Investor” who swindled Ohio taxpayers out of 50 million dollars in taxpayer money. And so, Ohio had a bad taste in its mouth, it was an environment that was sort of against sound money to begin with, and it was an uphill battle. But we look forward to bringing, hopefully new legislation next year and helping to convince and really show the Ohio legislature that they made a big mistake. And the people most harmed by their mistakes, unfortunately are the poorest… the savers, those on fixed income, retirees, the people who can’t afford to hedge the loss of their purchasing power.

Mike Gleason: You mentioned Utah and Wyoming and Texas as your top ones there on the Sound Money Index. How about some of those bottom states?

Jp Cortez: Ah well, at the bottom, the 2019 Sound Money Index hasn’t come out yet, but the 2018 Sound Money Index has six states with a zero score. That is Arkansas, Maine, Kentucky, New Jersey, West Virginia, and Vermont.

And so part of the reason I’m so fired up about sound money, and part of the reason that the path looks clearer than it ever has before to restoring sound money, is that just these here, just in these bottom three states, three of these states this past session introduced legislation to remove taxes on sound money. Arkansas, Maine, and West Virginia, all three introduced legislation.

Unfortunately not all of them passed, but West Virginia is making big strides, and state policy is more of an incremental game and it’s laying the foundation to continue to build on this in future sessions.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, certainly a lot going on at the legislative level over the last couple of years, which is one of the big reasons why we wanted to have you on to kind of update us on all this.

Now what about federally, Jp? We’ve all heard Trump make some pro sound money comments, although he did a little more of that as Candidate Trump than he has as President Trump. What’s with the situation at the federal level, what kind of legislation or executive action can be pursued there?

Jp Cortez: Yeah, it was really exciting to hear Trump, and Pence, talk so favorably about a gold standard while they were on a campaign trail. Unfortunately that’s simmered down a little bit, but with the recent news about Trump’s plan to nominate Judy Shelton to the Fed, we’re seeing sound money kind of make an uptick again here, at least in mainstream media.

So, it’s exciting, and there’s a lot going on here aside from the potential nomination. Just generally, the IRS a while ago, unilaterally decided that gold and silver are collectibles, that is to say there’s no difference from gold and silver to a Beanie Baby, or a baseball card, or something like that. So, at the top level, one of the easiest things that could happen at the federal level is for the IRS to just decide either, A, we are not going to tax gold and silver at a discriminatorily high 28%. Another option is just to stop taxing at all, this classification is wrong.

That’s probably all that could happen without legislation, but fortunately there are a few sound money allies in Congress that have been fighting this fight. Just this year, Alex Mooney, Representative Alex Mooney from West Virginia has introduced two pieces of legislation. One, to very broadly remove taxation on gold and silver coins, rounds, and ingots, foreign and domestic, which would be a very broad and great step forward for sound money. Representative Mooney also introduced an Audit the Gold bill. The bill that calls for a full assay, inventory and audit of all the U.S.’s gold holdings and any encumbrances on that gold that might exist. And then it calls for subsequent audits ever five years too.

So, our last audit was mostly for show, and it was in the 1950s, and we haven’t really seen or heard much about America’s gold since then. So, it’s great to have Representative Mooney on the front lines, calling for an audit on this stuff.

Mike Gleason: Yeah hopefully he can get some more allies there in congress. These are certainly uphill battles, and we would love to see him get some others to join him in those efforts.

Well, as we begin to wrap up here, Jp, any other comments or anything else you want to share with our audience, or maybe something else that we haven’t touched on yet?

Jp Cortez: Yeah, great. I’d just like to talk about the Sound Money Scholarship really quick, Mike. As you know, the Sound Money Defense League in conjunction with Money Metals Exchange offers and awards the Sound Money Scholarship every year. We’ve been doing this since 2016, we offer money for deserving students, high school seniors, undergrads and graduate students who have shown a very acute understanding of the problems in economics that we’re faced with today.

So, every year we award five scholarships. Two to undergrad and high school students, and then two to graduate students. And then we also have People’s Choice Award where we get on social media and try to spread the word as much as we can about the essays that these incredible students are writing.

These are questions, essay prompts, that are on the Federal Reserve, and money and (the) gold standard. We have a Blue Ribbon panel of judges – Austrian economists, professors, pundits – who’ll come in and they’ll grade the essays, they’ll judge the essays and determine the winner.

So, I encourage anyone, any students, if you know any students, please let them know about the scholarship, it’s an awesome opportunity, it’s a great way to get published. And the deadline this year is September 30th and you can look on Money Metals website or Sound Money’s website for more information.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, the only scholarship of its kind, a gold-backed scholarship out there, it’s a great thing, and we’re happy to partner with the Sound Money Defense League, and we certainly urge anyone to take advantage of that and let’s see if we can give away some more scholarships this year to some very deserving people.

Well, keep up the great work, Jp, it’s a vitally important cause and we appreciate the time very much, and I look forward to having you on again in the future to update us on a lot of what’s going on these legislative fronts, because I know you’re following it and are involved like nobody else when it comes to the sound money related bills. We wish you continued success in those efforts and, thanks again for the time, take care.

Jp Cortez: Thanks a lot, Mike. I look forward to coming back with some good news.

Mike Gleason: Absolutely. Well, that will do it for this week, thanks again to Jp Cortez, policy director at the Sound Money Defense League. For more information or to follow these ongoing sound money efforts, or to even make a donation to help support the mission of sound money advancement, please visit SoundMoneyDefense.org. And in terms of the previously mentioned Gold-Backed Scholarship, you can find that on the Sound Money site, or you can also check out details on that at MoneyMetals.com/scholarship.

Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a national precious metals dealer with over 50,000 customers. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.

Friday, July 26, 2019

Trump Then and Now on Deficits: What a Difference 3 Years Make!

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/economy/trump-then-and-now-on-deficits-what-a-difference-3-years-make/

As investors look ahead to a likely rate cut next week by the Federal Reserve, gold and silver markets have been consolidating their recent gains.

A big move in metals markets could come after the Fed’s policy meeting next Wednesday. Of course, the magnitude and direction of the move will depend on what Chairman Jerome Powell and company do and say.

Central bankers are under immense political pressure to lower interest rates and resume purchases of government bonds. A recent downturn in manufacturing and home sales data may well give them cover to roll out new stimulus even as the stock market sits near a record high.

It remains to be seen whether stocks will be the primary beneficiaries of Fed easing. If investors fear the Fed is inflating to try to get out in front of an oncoming recession, they may rotate out of economically sensitive equities and seek inflation protection in hard asset related investments.

Congress and Trump Suspend Debt Limit, Jack Up Spending

One thing that is certain to continue inflating is government debt. On Monday, President Donald Trump announced he reached a grand compromise with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on the federal budget.

In reality, though, neither side made any meaningful compromises when it comes to spending restraint. Instead, Republicans and Democrats came together to compromise the nation’s fiscal health by blowing through previously installed spending caps and raising the debt limit. That paves the way for another $320 billion in deficit spending.

Under the deal, the debt ceiling will be suspended until July 2021 – effectively taking it off the table as a campaign issue in 2020.

Many Republicans cheered increases in military spending while Democrats celebrated increases in pet social programs that the White House had once tried to put on the chopping block.

The budget President Trump originally sent to Congress contained numerous cuts to discretionary programs. The proposed cuts weren’t enough to balance the budget, but they were symbolically important to fiscal conservatives.

Now they are left with nothing to latch onto except perhaps the faint hope that if he wins a second term, Trump would engage in a budget fight with Congress and finally deliver on his promise to drain the swamp.

Some Republicans think the time to fight against wasteful deficit spending is now. The House Freedom Caucus is opposing the budget deal, as is Kentucky Senator Rand Paul.

For most members of Congress, though, the political price of standing in the way of spending is simply too great.

When Senator Paul insisted recently that that funding for 9-11 first responders be offset by spending reductions elsewhere in the budget, he got viciously attacked from all sides. The attacks were amplified by liberal comedian Jon Stewart and the mainstream media. At the end of the day, only one other Senator supported Rand Paul’s lonely campaign to stop new spending from being added to the national credit card.

Trump Railed against Debts and Deficits in 2016

Ironically, the budget deal that President Trump now backs represents exactly the sort of “bad deal” he railed against on the 2016 campaign trail.

Donald Trump: We have $19 trillion dollars in debt going very soon to $21 trillion because we made a bad budget deal. We have got a mess in this country. We owe $19 trillion. We owe $19 trillion as a country, and we’re going to knock it down, and we’re going to bring it down bigly and quickly. We’re going to bring jobs back. We’re going to bring business back. We’re going to stop our deficits. We’re going to stop our deficits. We’re going to do it very quickly.

Campaign Audience: How? How? How?

Donald Trump: Oh, how? Are you ready? Number one, we have tremendous cutting to do.

Well, the national debt has since gone from $19 to over $22 trillion. Instead of dealing with it directly by cutting spending as candidate Trump had suggested, President Trump now aims to reduce the cost of servicing the debt.

He is pushing the Fed to lower interest rates and resume Quantitative Easing. He is also pushing for a weaker dollar to diminish the real value of the trillions we owe to ourselves and to foreign governments including China.

Republicans defenders of the deficit-expanding budget deal say it will help rebuild our military and enhance national security. But at some point, the skyrocketing national debt will itself become a national security risk to America.

JPMorgan Warns Federal Reserve Note Could Lose Status

Investment banking analysts at JPMorgan recently issued a report warning that the fiat U.S. dollar could soon lose its world reserve currency status. Trump administration officials appear to be worried about this prospect as well.

They fear adversarial countries such as Russia, Iran, and Venezuela will successfully circumvent U.S. sanctions using alternative trading channels such as Instex.

In the meantime, Russia and China continue to add steadily to their gold reserves.

If the dollar standard falls, then gold holders will be in a far more secure position than those that hold only promises issued by governments.

Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a national precious metals dealer with over 50,000 customers. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Race to the Bottom: What to Expect as the Fed Eases

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-experts/race-to-the-bottom-what-to-expect-as-the-fed-eases/

How low will they go?

With the Federal Reserve all but certain to cut interest rates multiple times in the months ahead, central bankers are engaged in a race to the bottom.

As negative interest rates expand in Japan and across Europe, as long-term bond yields in the U.S. plummet, and as President Donald Trump continues to talk tough on trade, the Fed has little choice but to cut.

President Trump has effectively declared a currency war – and enlisted a reluctant Fed to help him fight it. He is convinced that lower interest rates will boost the economy and that a lower dollar will boost U.S. producers in international trade.

Over the past year, Trump has inserted himself into monetary policy matters almost to the point of obsession.

He has berated Fed chairman Jerome Powell, his own appointee, on a regular basis and conferred with White House counsel about removing or demoting him from the Board of Governors. In June, one of his Twitter rants likened the Fed to “a stubborn child” for refusing to undo its 2018 rate hikes.

Trump even went after European central banker Mario Draghi, calling his pro-stimulus (weak euro) policies “unfair” to the United States.

Central bankers insist they aren’t moved by political pressure. Regardless of how true that may or may not be, they ultimately are moved by pressures in the economy and financial markets – which, in turn, are moved by politics.

Fed’s “Symmetric” Inflation Targeting Is Code for Accelerating the Dollar’s Debasement

The question for investors is: Which asset classes will come out on top as the U.S. shifts toward monetary easing?

Heading into the summer, we saw an “everything” rally. Stocks, bonds, precious metals, and even cryptocurrencies all rallied simultaneously.

In late June, gold prices broke out to a 6-year high above $1,400/oz. The S&P 500 traded back up to a new all-time high.

It’s unusual for the Federal Reserve to begin a stimulus campaign with the stock market already juiced. The Fed’s historical habit is to wait until markets break down and recession indicators flash before coming to the rescue.

This time is different.

What appears to be driving central bankers’ preemptive dovishness is their belief that inflation is not only tame, but too low.

They want to push inflation rates higher, above even their stated 2% target for a prolonged period.

Jerome Powell and his fellow Fed Governors have a term to describe their push for above-2% inflation: “symmetric” inflation targeting. By “symmetric” they mean that periods of low inflation should be countered with periods of higher inflation (accelerated currency debasement).

According the Fed’s preferred “core” inflation indicator (which understates some aspects of realworld cost increases), we’ve spent a lot of time running below target in recent years.

Investors are buying long-term bonds with yields that imply inflation will be contained by the Fed at or below target for years to come.

But if inflation starts rising above 2% and the Fed fails to keep it within its symmetrical objective, real losses on bonds and other interest-rate-sensitive assets could be asymmetrical in nature.

On the flip side, inflation risk has been so heavily underpriced by markets that even a slight return of inflation fears has the potential to drive hard assets dramatically higher.

The Spark That Could Ignite the Silver Market

Silver, for example, is perhaps the single most deeply depressed investment asset on the planet.

The white metal’s lagging price performance has resulted in it trading at its biggest discount to gold in three decades. Hardy silver bugs are excited at this rare opportunity to buy more ounces on the cheap.

The recent breakout in gold suggests the precious metals bull market is back. Most of the public just doesn’t know it (or believe it) yet.

We are still in the stealth phase of a precious metals bull run. When we enter the public participation phase – and demand for physical bullion increases – we have no doubt that silver will shine.

It only takes a tiny spark of investor interest in silver to light a fire under prices. That spark could be provided by the Fed’s upcoming round of inflationary stimulus.

 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, Detroit News, Washington Times, and National Review.

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Financial Media Elite Defensively Bash “Useless” Gold

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/physical-market/financial-media-elite-defensively-bash-useless-gold/

At least the Financial Times now has come clean about its hostility to gold – as well as to free markets and elementary journalism.

Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) friend Chris Kniel of Orinda, California, sent to the newspaper’s chief economic columnist, Martin Wolf, the excellent summary of gold and silver market manipulation just written by gold researcher Ronan Manly.

Wolf replied derisively and dismissively: “This is a matter of absolutely no importance whatsoever. Who cares about the prices of useless metals?”

Stunned by such a counterfactual assertion, Kniel prompted Wolf to elaborate, receiving this from the FT columnist: “I mean to dismiss the whole monetary history of gold. It has no significance in the modern world. It is, as Keynes said, a barbarous relic.”

Actually, Keynes’ “barbarous relic” remark was made not about gold itself but about the gold standard for currencies. Keynes wasn’t denying gold’s use as money. But that is the least of the problems with Wolf’s reply.

Who cares about the prices of useless metals? “No significance in the modern world”?

For starters, governments themselves care.

That’s why central banks, against Wolf’s advice, continue to hold huge inventories of gold and lately have been increasing them.

It’s why central banks classify gold as a Tier 1 asset, equivalent to government-issue bonds and cash.

It’s why central banks constantly trade the metal and its derivatives surreptitiously, directly and through the Bank for International Settlements, usually to restrain the metal’s price, recognizing that gold is a determinant of currency values, interest rates, and government bond prices.

It’s why the International Monetary Fund forbids its members from formally linking their currencies to gold, lest the metal gain precedence over government-issued currencies.

Further, London is the center of the world’s gold trading, the bullion banks are major employers there, and the FT is based in London, so the newspaper itself ordinarily might care.

Of course, Wolf’s dismissing “the whole monetary history of gold” doesn’t make that history disappear. Indeed, today Agence France-Presse distributed a report about gold’s monetary history that is both fascinating and tragic, gold’s history being a big part of human history.

But Manly’s wasn’t only about gold and silver. It was also about largely secret market rigging by government, and the Financial Times says it’s in the business of reporting about markets.

So is market rigging by government of no concern to Wolf as well? Since such market rigging is now so pervasive – for years now there have really been no markets anymore, just central bank interventions – why does any reader need someone of Wolf’s views of journalism?

And if Wolf’s indifference to both history and market rigging really represents the Financial Times (FT), what does anyone need the newspaper for, except possibly disinformation?

For years, GATA has been supplying FT journalists with documentation of surreptitious intervention in the gold market by governments and central banks. At least twice your secretary/treasurer has delivered such documentation to FT staffers face to face in London – in 2011 to the journalist who is now chairman of the newspaper’s editorial board and U.S. editor at large, Gillian Tett, and in 2017 to FT reporter Thomas Hale.

Tett took enough notice to mention GATA in a column in the newspaper without ever pursuing the issue of market manipulation and without ever putting a critical question to a central bank.

Hale listened politely for 45 minutes, asking a few questions, perhaps not realizing that the FT would never permit him to commit journalism with this issue. Maybe Wolf himself told Hale that market rigging by governments doesn’t matter or at least must not be revealed.

But in fairness to the FT, GATA long has been providing the same documentation to many other mainstream financial news organizations around the world with not much more satisfactory results, though a major story might be gained just by asking the U.S. Federal Reserve and Treasury Departments to specify the markets in which they are secretly trading and why, and then reporting their refusals to answer, and then by asking the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission whether it has jurisdiction over secret manipulative trading by the U.S. government or its agents or if such trading is legal.

For more than a year, those agencies have refused to answer those questions for a member of Congress.

Also in fairness to the FT, most monetary metals mining companies don’t care, or pretend not to care, about the suppression of the prices of their products.

But then mining companies are terribly vulnerable to governments for their mining permits, royalty requirements, and enforcement of environmental regulations, and to their bankers, most of whom are formally government agents in financial markets.

By contrast news organizations in the West and in some places in the East are free, at least nominally. So what are they afraid of? What is the FT afraid of? What is Wolf afraid of?

Do they fear not getting invited to the Bank of England’s Christmas party? Or is it the revelation that the conventional wisdom on which Wolf bases his pontification is a bit off?

 

Chris Powell is a political columnist and former managing editor at the Journal Inquirer, a daily newspaper in Manchester, Connecticut, USA, where he has worked since graduating from high school in 1967. His column is published in newspapers throughout Connecticut. He is also secretary/treasurer of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc., (GATA) which he co-founded in 1999 to expose and oppose the rigging of the gold market by Western central banks and their investment bank agents.

Friday, July 19, 2019

Craig Hemke: Silver to Continue Lagging Gold, Will Struggle to Overcome $17

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-price-news/craig-hemke-silver-to-continue-lagging-gold-will-struggle-to-overcome-17/

Mike Gleason: It is my privilege now to welcome in Craig Hemke of the TF Metals Report. Craig is a well-known name in the metals industry, and runs one of the most highly-respected websites in our space, and provides some of the best analysis on the banking schemes, the flaws of Keynesian economics, and evidence of manipulation in the gold and silver markets that you will find anywhere.

Craig, welcome back and thanks for joining us. How are you today?

Craig Hemke: Mike, Happy Pet Rock Day. As we record this it’s July 17th, that is the four year anniversary of the infamous article written by Jason Zweig of the Wall Street Journal where he said, “Let’s face it, gold is just a pet rock.” So Happy Pet Rock Day, my friend.

Mike Gleason: Good start. Craig, I want to talk about silver first off here. Silver is showing some real life finally these last couple of days. It has been underperforming gold and that was certainly making us a bit nervous, we’d rather see silver confirming gold’s move higher. James Turk was out with a great statistic this week talking about how there have been 11,186 trading days in the COMEX since the prohibition of owning gold was lifted in January 1975. The ratio traded at 93, as it did just a few days ago, or higher, only 82 days. 82 days out of over 11,000 so you get the feeling for how extraordinary the current discount in silver is relative to gold.

What do you make of silver’s under-performance to this point, Craig? And then, what are you expecting for the white metal moving forward and is this bump that we’ve seen here over the last few days in silver the start of something, perhaps?

Craig Hemke: Mike, that’s a question that requires a whole bunch of different answers that hopefully kind of tie together. First and foremost, people need to understand that in 2009 to 2011 that most recent price run that took us all the way to $49 was fantastic obviously, but the last part of it from $38 to $49 was almost exclusively what we call a commercial short squeeze. The CTFC data, the Commitment of Traders report, the bank participation report all bore that out back in 2011. And what I always thought was going on was that you had the story of JP Morgan had inherited this massive short-position from Bear Stearns and they were maintaining it rather than getting out of it and thus were getting squeezed. They had no physical silver. Back then they were immediately rubber-stamped in the spring of 2011 to start their own COMEX silver vault. And in the eight years since, that vault now controls more than half of the total vaulted silver on the COMEX, more than 150 million ounces they’ve accumulated. Most of it through their proprietary house accounts, stopping 1,000 contracts or so every single month and taking into delivery and holding it in the eligible accounts.

First thing you’ve got to understand is JP Morgan still has a monopolistic control of the pricing structure, at least as it applies through the COMEX. They’ve worked very hard in the last several years to paint silver into a corner and you can see that on the weekly chart. Maybe there’s a physical floor at around $14, the price keeps getting wedged tighter and tighter into a corner below some trend lines, the 200-week moving average. Why is silver under-performing? I think that’s it. I think these banks, JP Morgan and Citi, specifically, make a boatload of money shorting it on a consistent basis, issuing new contracts, taking the risk of being short against the speculator longs, that they can just outwait until the speculator longs rollover and then get back out or even move onto the short side.

So, I think that’s the biggest thing. I’ve been telling folks on my site that I would not at all be surprised to see the gold/silver ratio go to 100 to 1 before silver finally breaks out just because of that monopolistic control of the pricing scheme by those banks… meaning gold could go to $1,600 while silver could still be at $16. Now recently, here this week, we’ve seen silver rally and there’s a lot of speculation as to what’s going on with that. The thing I think is probably most interesting and perhaps even most valid is this idea that some big institutions have been, because of looking at the gold/silver ratio, have been long gold and short silver in this process. You can see … maybe you can see it some of the data … and now they’re taking those trades off, which has maybe been holding gold back this week while silver has been rallying.

I don’t know, there might be some validity to that, but let’s watch real closely here, Mike, because yes it’s exciting. Silver’s picking up, but man, there is an incredible amount of technical and we’ll just call it bank-created resistance between about $15.80 and maybe $17, so let’s get above $17 and your old friend Craig is going to start getting really excited, but between now and then, it’s still going to be a tough fight for this next 10% from here.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, still stuck in that range for sure and until it pops through that one way or the other, it’s hard to get too, too excited, but we’ll be watching. You wrote something on Tuesday that I wanted to get into. The current interest rate environment is a killer for banks, at least to the extent they are relying upon banking MO of borrowing at lower interest rates and lending at a higher rate, making a spread. Right now the margin is pretty low, the Fed funds rate is currently higher than the rate of a 10-year Treasury. Banks borrowing at the Fed’s discount window are finding it difficult to lend profitably.

At least the current rate environment finally killed the free-money scheme by which banks borrow at zero from the central bank to then buy Treasuries, pocketing two or three percent. Deutsche Bank recently announced massive layoffs and is restructuring its business so that, coupled with your observation about the tough operating environment for banks makes us wonder if there are other casualties coming. What are you expecting there? Talk about the banks here, Craig.

Craig Hemke: Well, I tell you what, Mike. Talk about history repeating and rhyming and all that kind of jazz. There’s a reason why, if you plot the chart of the yield on the German 10-year bund together with Deutsche Bank common stock you see they move almost together tick for tick and as rates go more negative in Europe, it’s just killing the European banks because again, traditionally the bank business model is to borrow short and lend long and pocket the spread. That’s how banks have operated for centuries. Well the problem is now the short rates, especially in the U.S., are higher than the long rates.

How do you make any money in that regard? You’re seeing that now even in the U.S. banks. Wells Fargo was talking about that yesterday. Citi talking about that today on Wednesday, the 17th and this is clearly a problem for Deutsche Bank and the rest of the EU banks. And then what does it do? It drives the kind of behavior that led us into 2008 where the banks can’t make money the old fashion way of printing it and then stealing it from everybody on the interest on the money they create. No, they’ve got to branch out and do all kinds of risky crap like create credit default swaps and CDOs and all of their proprietary trading and investment banking and all the stuff as they’ve had to take on more and more risk to generate more and more return and line their bonus pools that led us to the events of 2007 and 8. Well, here we go again.

They can’t make money the old-fashioned way, so now they’re going to start continuing down this road of more and more risky ventures. Don’t underestimate too, Mike, all of those European banks are tied together in kind of a daisy chain of risk where Bank A owns the debt of Bank B and Bank B owns the debt of Bank C and Bank C owns the debt of Bank A. And so if one of them starts to struggle and fail, it’s like an industry-wide margin call and you get this run on those banks. This is a really nasty situation all brought to you by your glorious charlatans at the ECB and at the Fed that have tried to maintain this illusion for now a decade that they have it all under control. They know exactly what they are doing and that things are going to one day go back to normal.

Nothing could be farther from the truth. The recognition of that is what is now driving gold and silver higher this year and as this continues to play out, it’s going to drive both even higher the remainder of this year and into next.

Mike Gleason: Staying on the topic of the Fed. People have been wondering why, if the U.S. economy is so strong, the FOMC is likely to start cutting interest rates when it gets back together in a couple of weeks. Perhaps the pain in the banking sector is part of that answer. We know the central banks actual mandate is to defend private sector banks, it isn’t maintaining a stable currency in fostering for full employment, the nonsense stated publicly. But in addition to their commitment to maintaining the profitability of banks, there’s also plenty of evidence that the U.S. economy is nowhere near as strong as represented.

What do you see as the Fed’s motivation for lower rates, Craig? And where do you think the FOMC is headed over the next year or two?

Craig Hemke: Mike, this is what I’ve been talking about at TF Metals Report says since last year, specifically late last year: is that 2019 is going to look a lot like 2010 and that in 2010 we were told that QE1 was just a one-time deal. There were green shoots to the economy everywhere. Ben Bernanke was hailed as the savior on the cover of The Atlantic. All these different things about how … oh look, we’re saved, everything’s great. And we were cooking along, more than 3% GDP, but then we started to fail in the third quarter. By the fourth quarter, a negative GDP and the first quarter of ’11 was negative as well thereby there’s your recession. The Fed responded in November 2010 with QE2, loss of faith and confidence that the central bankers had any idea what they were doing is what eventually drove a dive in the dollar, silver from $18 to $48 and gold from $1,160 to $1,920. Well here we are again, right.

We were told in the beginning, even late last year there were going to be four rate hikes this year. All the Wall Street economists were echoing, parroting that from the Fed. We were told the economy was just growing infinitely, everything was just hunky dory and all this beautiful stuff, and I said, “No way, uh huh. This is all going to come crashing down, recession is inevitable.” And so now these moves by the Fed revealing themselves to be the charlatans that they are – they’re just making this stuff fly by the seat of their pants – it’s all playing out like we said now in a retracement, something that rhythms at least with 2010, but when you look at why the Fed is looking to cut … you read all this stuff, and yeah, but look at retail sales and the employment report and we can talk about the BS of those particular government statistics, but in the end the Fed knows their only hope to keep the place spinning is economic growth. It’s got to keep the U.S. economy chugging along so that the stock market keeps going up and they can keep this illusion going that they have some control.

Well, anybody that’s ever-studied economics knows that an inverted yield curve invariably leads to recession. Now, you can just look at it straight as lower rates on the long end versus the short end or some people look at other metrics. Is the three-month T Bill below Fed funds and is it there for more than a month? Is that the thing that guarantees a recession is coming? Either way, all I know is an inverted yield curve, where the Fed funds, the short rate, is higher than say the 10-year note leads to recession every time and these fuzzy headed academics at the Fed know this. The Fed funds rate is basically quoted at 2.4%. The two-year U.S. Treasury note is 1.85. The 10-year U.S. Treasury note is 2.1. so just simply to get the yield curve to be flat, the Fed needs to cut 50 basis points, lowering the Fed funds to 190 versus 185 for two and 210 for the ten.

They owe us probably 75 to get it down to 165 and at least have a positive slope again. That, Mike, is why they’re talking about cutting rates. All the other stuff, inflation, that’s all just window dressing to try to mollify the masses and keep them confused and buying stocks. They are looking to cut the Fed funds rate to simply reestablish a positively sloping yield curve. Help their banks for the same reasons that we talked about in the first question and then hope to keep the economy growing. I think they are behind the curve; they’ve been behind the curve all year. They’ll continue to be behind the curve. I would love it if they did not do anything two weeks from now and didn’t even cut at all. That would be fabulous, if they didn’t do anything. But they’ll probably cut 25 and talk about cutting at least 25 more. That will still continue to be beneficial for the metals as people figure out once again, like they did in 2010 that the emperors have no clothes as that awareness ripples through, again, precious metal prices just continue higher.

Mike Gleason: Obviously the real interest rate environment is what drives a lot of metals prices or drive them higher so that’s certainly what we’ll be looking for.

I want to get back to Deutsche Bank here for a second. Talk about that specifically if you would. We’ve all been watching the share price move lower, they’ve had constant legal troubles and they are loaded with bad debt. Part of the restructuring plan entails dumping $50 billion of toxic assets. They will be laying off 18,000 employees around the world. The big question is whether that will be enough to save them. ZeroHedge reported a quasi-bank run earlier this week, it appears nervous clients are pulling roughly $1 billion per day of deposits.

Deutsche Bank has $50+ trillion in derivatives exposure. What do you think? Will Deutsche Bank survive, first of all? Will Germany step up with a bailout and could this be the first domino that falls and starts a global economic panic?

Craig Hemke: Yes, yes and yes. How’s that? You like that? That a short enough answer? Deutsche Bank will survive in some form because, yes, the German … it’s the national bank of Germany. They’ll step in, the Bundesbank will step in regardless of what the ECB says what they can or can’t do. And they’ll keep it afloat. Now in the meantime, you mentioned this money flowing out of there, think if they’re acting as custodians for all your funds, for all your hedge fund, all your money in your hedge fund and you’re moving it all over the place, the last thing you want to do is see Deutsche Bank shuttered or a bank holiday or something like that. You don’t have access to your money for a certain period of time. It’s like, you might remember when MF Global bit the dust back in whatever that was, 2011.

I think eventually most everybody, whatever cash you had in there, you got back, but it took months. You got a little bit at a time over months. Well, if you had a billion fricking dollars in your hedge fund at Deutsche Bank, do you think you want to play that game over the next six to 12 months? Not a chance. So then there’s a possibility that that becomes kind of a critical mass exodus. Now Deutsche Bank’s a huge bank with supposedly billions if not trillions in what they would consider to be assets, but nonetheless, that’s a lot of cash that could really head for the exits and put them in quite a bind.

The end game of all this, though, is what we talked about at the beginning about how all of those European banks are linked together and to some extent the U.S. banks are linked to them as well. A renewed, even more severe EU banking crisis is most likely what’s coming, which is why the ECB is talking about restarting QE and buying whatever debt they can get their hands on over there. All of that is what’s driving interest rates even more negative in Europe. I mean, we’re up now over 13 trillion globally in negative yielding debt, even junk bonds are now negative yield in Europe. Even emerging market debt is even now negative yielding. This is madness.

But when the central bankers set off on this course to create 20 trillion in fresh currency over the last decade, that money just sloshes around the planet and when the risks get high, just simply getting your money back in 10 years from Switzerland, that sounds like a pretty damn good deal. And so all of this feeds on itself. It certainly appears that we’re reaching a point of critical mass here in 2019.

Mike Gleason: Craig, before we wrap up, I’d like to get your thoughts on maybe the technical side of gold and silver here. What levels you’re looking at, you spoke about that a little bit earlier with silver maybe over $17, kind of being the breakout point that we need to see breached. What levels are you looking for and what would you get excited about if we took them out to the upside and then conversely, where on the downside do we need to hold if we do see a pullback. Let’s get your update there as we begin to close and then perhaps anything else you want to touch on.

Craig Hemke: Mike, let’s go back to silver real quick because I want to make sure it’s clear what I’m talking about, and I’ll send you a chart that I posted for everybody on my site back on Friday, the 12th that illustrates this point. On the weekly chart of silver, since everything broke down in 2013 and everybody remembers that back in April 2013 when gold fell $200, was smashed down through $1,525. And silver fell $3 in a day, smashed down through $26. I mean, we’ve been going sideways. Now, gold is finally breaking out, but silver is not. And if you look at a weekly chart of silver, you can clearly see three obvious points of resistance. One, there’s the main trend line that starts back at the recovery high in August of 2013 when price got all the way back up to $25. You connect that to the next high of near $21 in July of 2016 and continue that on down. That’s the line that’s near $17.

Now below that is the 200-week moving average, which we barely got above in 2016 and then every single time we’ve gotten above that 200-week moving average on a weekly closing basis, from the middle of 2016 to the middle of 2018, we were immediately smashed the very next week and that doesn’t happen by accident. That’s JP Morgan and Citi making sure there’s no breakout. It’s happened 15 times, 15 weeks where price closed above the 200-week moving average only to be smashed the next week with a big red candle. Sol, you’ve got to figure that trend is probably going to continue.

The 200-week moving average right now is at $16.28. And then if you draw a parallel line to the main line, and you start it when that 200-week moving average was first broken in September of 2016, you’ll see a whole bunch of tops that connect with that line through ’17 and ’18. That line is around $15.80. So, between $15.80 and $17, as I mentioned earlier is a tremendous amount of bank created and technical resistance. That’s why I think gold continues higher and silver continues mostly sideways maybe for another six to eight months. And that’s why I think the gold/silver ratio could go to 100.

Now, at some point the demand for silver, just simply because the substitution effect will take over. Now what do I mean by that, that’s where economists talk about well, you know, when things are bad, instead of buying steak, you buy hamburger. Well if gold keeps going like I think it’s going to go, to $1,600 and $1,700 and back up to the old all-time high, just like its doing in every other currency, at some point people are going to go, “Well, hell’s bells, what is silver doing at $16?” And then it’s going to break out and then it’s going to feed on itself and it’s going to get a whole bunch of positive momentum and people are going to be seeing it just like they are seeing now in gold. So, to begin with in silver, I just think it’s going to be a tough ride. It doesn’t mean you can’t trade it and make money, but it’s going to be a tough ride maybe for another six months.

Gold, on the other hand, everybody knows it broke out through $1,360, that was the top end of the range it’s held since 2013. Last week it posted its highest weekly close since May of 2013, it’s even higher now. All of the stuff that’s going on between the central bankers and, don’t forget about political risks. Gosh, that summer of 2011, we had the U.S. credit being downgraded by S&P, we had the massive gridlock and debt ceiling debates in Washington, DC. Well, all of that’s happening again now, here in the summer of 2019.

Gold’s going to keep going higher, though of course obviously never straight up. It’s overbought. The Commitment to Traders report is heavy and all that kind of stuff, but the next target from here once it’s above $1,440 is maybe $1,480. The key level, I mentioned a second ago is $1,525, that was the level that held for 19 months from 2011 into 2012. That was a level that was taken out in April of 2013. $1,525 will be a key important level of resistance in the months ahead. I think we go up and get close there some time before the end of this year and then go blasting through there next year. Either way, both metals look great and man, oh man, should people be buying the shares. My friend, Eric Sprott told me a little over a month ago that in the early stages of a bull market it’s the large cap, high cost producers that really make money because if you’re making $100 an ounce at $1,300 gold, you make $200 an ounce at $1,400 gold, so you just doubled your earnings. And thus, we’re seeing the large big shares, the HUI Index, the GDX just going like crazy. That’s a sign of an early stage of a bull market too.

Everything looks good, but again, never does it mean we’re going straight up, but all of these forces that I’ve been writing about, that you and I have been talking about, that I’m sure you’re telling your listeners on a weekly basis, are really coming together. You should be averaging into your metal stack if you still have a higher cost basis than the current price you should be adding into it now. You should acquiring new metal now. Now is the time. This is the early stages of renewed bull market and you do not want to fall behind and be trying to play catch up all through the remainder of this year and into next.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, figures it can get pretty exciting and does seem like we’re on the verge of something that could be maybe explosive perhaps and look forward to catching up with you as that unfolds. Well, outstanding commentary once again, Mr. Hemke and thanks for your time today. Now before we sign off, please tell everyone more about the TF Metals Report and what it is that they’ll find there if they visit your site.

Craig Hemke: I’m sorry I can’t stop laughing about this Mr. Hemke stuff, Mike. That’s okay. You can call me anything you want; I’ve been called a lot worse especially on Twitter. Anyway, the TF Metals Report obviously there’s never been a more valuable time to be a part of it. What I do, all of this analysis is only $12 a month, so it’s 40 cents a day. I think the people that subscribe have recently felt like they get a pretty tremendous value. I think we do a pretty good job. But the community itself is fantastic. There’s people from around the world, literally around the world of all political persuasions, all working together helping each other out to see ourselves through this madness because we recognize at the end of the day we’re all in the same boat, man, whether you’re a progressive or a conservative or whether you live in Australia or whether you live in England.

Join us at TFMR, it’s a great place to discuss the metals. I’m pretty proud of what we’ve built there, we’ve been around almost 10 years and it’s finally starting to get fun again, TFMetalsReport.com.

Mike Gleason: You should be proud, it’s a great site and we follow it closely here in our office, I can tell you it’s fantastic analysis and everyone should definitely check it out. Excellent, thanks again, Craig. Enjoy the rest of your summer and I look forward to our next conversation. Take care my friend.

Craig Hemke: All the best to everybody on your end too, Mike.

Mike Gleason: Well, that will do it for this week, thanks again to Craig Hemke. The site is TFMetalsReport.com, definitely a fantastic source for all things precious metals and a whole lot more. We urge you to check that out so you too can get some of the very best commentary on the metals markets that you will find anywhere.

Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a national precious metals dealer with over 50,000 customers. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.

Federal Debt Ceiling Reached as Federal Spending Rages

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/economy/federal-debt-ceiling-reached-as-federal-spending-rages/

The federal government will soon run up against its self-imposed borrowing cap once again.

Current estimates are for the government to max out its credit limit at a little over $22 trillion in early September. Congress goes on recess in August, so there is some pressure to address the cap right now.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin has been fulfilling what seems to be the most sacred responsibility of his position: borrowing money. It’s one that each of his predecessors has also undertaken, without fail and without regard to party affiliation, in recent decades.

He is solemnly arguing why it would be wholly irresponsible for Congress not to approve another massive increase in what the Treasury can borrow.

Now that his ritual is complete, the only question is whether Congress and the President will engage in another sham fight before approving an increase, or if the politicians will agree quietly and hope not too many citizens notice.

While the outcome is all but assured, the context surrounding Federal borrowing is interesting. Let’s review…

According to government statisticians, we are in the longest economic expansion on record. There have been 105 straight months of job growth. Federal tax revenues are expanding – currently up 3% versus the prior year.

Some may wonder why the Federal government is bumping into the cap already. Congress and the president gave themselves more than a $2 trillion increase in the credit line over the past couple of years.

The trouble is that while tax revenue is growing at 3%, government spending is growing at 7% – about 4 times the official inflation rate. The deficit for October through June is 23% higher than the same period last year.

Despite the “rosy” economy, we are running trillion-dollar deficits. This much borrowing was last seen under Barack Obama in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis.

What will deficits look like the next time recession cripples tax receipts and Congress ramps up fiscal stimulus? It may not be too long before we have a chance to find out.

“Americans are being told the economy is strong. Yet the Fed is getting ready to start cutting rates.”

The Treasury department will be stuck trying to peddle multi-trillions in Treasuries with yields near zero. We’re guessing the line of prospective buyers will get pretty short.

Americans are being told the economy is strong. Yet the Fed is getting ready to start cutting rates.

Jerome Powell is worried about trade and stubbornly low inflation. President Trump is concerned that current interest rates, while still historically low, aren’t low enough.

So here we are again with Congress once more getting ready to grapple with the debt ceiling. Establishment politicians may want to avoid headlines and quietly agree on an increase.

Any public debate over increasing the federal debt ceiling will be especially awkward for Republicans. Getting caught voting for trillions more in borrowing is not a good look – especially after years of screeching about deficits when the Democrats were in control.

However, regardless of what happens in the weeks ahead, the size of Federal deficits and debt probably can’t be swept under the rug for too much longer. America is one recession away from serious trouble.

Clint Siegner is a Director at 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 Linfield College in Oregon, Siegner puts his experience in business management along with his passion for personal liberty, limited government, and honest money into the development of Money Metals’ brand and reach. This includes writing extensively on the bullion markets and their intersection with policy and world affairs.

Monetary Metals Don’t Need a “Gold Standard” Proxy System

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/money-currency/monetary-metals-dont-need-a-gold-standard-proxy-system/

By Stefan Gleason, Money Metals Exchange

President Trump moved recently to nominate an avowed sound money advocate, Judy Shelton, to the Federal Reserve Board. That triggered a flurry of superficial and derisive references in the controlled media to Shelton’s past support of a gold standard.

For example, CBS News described her as “a believer in the return to the gold standard, a money policy abandoned by the U.S. in 1971.” According to the story, “mainstream economists believe it’s a fringe view.” 

As the “mainstream” media portrays sound money advocates, we apparently are nostalgic for the monetary system that existed all the way up until 1971. 

Being backward looking by nature, our driving purpose in life is apparently to salvage that “abandoned” system. 

Never mind the fact that the post-World War II Bretton Woods gold window that existed until 1971 was meant to ensure U.S. dollar hegemony in international trade – not sound money for the people. 

Never mind the fact that the Federal Reserve’s creation back in 1913 spelled the death of sound money. We apparently endorse any purported “gold standard” that calls itself that. 

We persist despite the fact that our views have been relegated to the “fringe” by all the approved experts. Establishment economists may not have seen the financial crisis of 2008 coming, but they sure know what’s best for the economy going forward! And what could be better than a debt-based fiat monetary system that facilitates unlimited government spending and borrowing?

New Fed Nomination Has Rekindled Debate on Gold

In all seriousness, we are grateful for the opportunity provided by Judy Shelton’s expected nomination to the Fed to clarify what sound money is, what it would mean for a modern economy, and how it might be implemented. 

Sound money has intrinsic value, is stable, is trusted, is fungible, and has widespread acceptance. It need not necessarily be gold, although thousands of years of history have shown the yellow metal ably fills that role – even today. 

Often overlooked, even among some sound money advocates, is silver. It arguably has a longer history than gold of being circulated as money. 

The Founders wrote a bi-metallic gold-silver standard into the United States Constitution. Article 1, Section 10 makes it explicit: “No State shall… make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts…”

vintage gold coin government noteThe Coinage Act of 1792 defined a dollar in terms of silver. Specifically, a dollar was to be 371.25 grains (equivalent to about three-fourths of an ounce) of silver, in harmony with the Spanish milled dollar. 

Even before the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913, certain banking and political interests had worked to de-monetize silver. 

In 1873, Congress moved to sideline the silver dollar. That sparked the so-called Free Silver Movement, which stood for allowing the supply of silver coins to be increased in accord with demand. 

In 1893, populist orator William Jennings Bryan gave his famous “Cross of Gold” speech before the Democratic National Convention: “We shall restore bimetallism… If they dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard as a good thing, we shall fight them to the uttermost…by saying to them, you shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.” 

At the time, Bryan saw gold as the money of the elites; silver as the money of the masses. At the least, both were needed.

Fiat Federal Reserve Notes Cause Global Turmoil

The money of today’s financial and political elites is the unbacked Federal Reserve Note. The arbitrary power of central bankers to create currency out of nothing has resulted in bubble after bubble in real estate, stocks, bonds, student loans, and government spending commitments. 

Sound money proponents believe that artificially inflating certain sectors of the economy fosters waste and inefficiency – not to mention unfairness. 

We believe that markets become corrupted when they are driven by particular words or syllables contained in policy statements issued by a central bank.

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Moving to a rules-based, gold-pegged, or commodity-pegged system (as Trump economic advisor Stephen Moore has proposed) would reduce much of the drama and impact of Fed policy decisions by effectively making them automatic. 

But the purpose of sound money isn’t merely to tie the hands of central bankers. It is to replace Federal Reserve notes and other fiat currencies with currency that is as good as gold (or silver). 

Our friend Larry Parks of the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education argues that even going back to the classical gold standard would still leave bankers and politicians with too much power. 

Under a gold standard, government would still enforce Federal Reserve Note acceptance through legal tender laws, would be engaging in price fixing by setting the exchange rate to gold, and would almost certainly cheat the system over time through revaluations and manipulations.

Gold & Silver Themselves Can Supplant All Proxies

Ideally, sound money would spring from market forces, with gold and silver warehouse receipts (and digital equivalents) from the most reputable private vaults and banks gaining acceptance as currency. 

Working backward from a monopolistic fiat system toward sound money presents a number of philosophical and technical challenges. 

Some hard money purists might disagree, but in our view the advent of digital currency platforms is one of the likeliest ways for gold and silver to attain more widespread circulation as free-market money.

Debit cards and smartphone apps linked to accounts backed by – and denominated in – precious metals are in development, as are gold and silver-backed cryptocurrencies. 

Granted, a digital currency linked to silver requires trust in counterparties and isn’t the same thing as actual silver dimes, quarters, rounds, or bars

But in an era of e-commerce putting shopping malls and big box retailers out of business, most consumers won’t use money that can’t be spent digitally. 

The upshot is that people who feel comfortable using a digital silver in transactions might also grow comfortable exchanging their digits back into silver coins. 

A modern sound money system won’t be established overnight. Steps toward it can be made through both free-market forces and political activism aimed at freeing precious metals from taxes, legal tender laws, and other impediments to free competition with the fiat dollar.

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, Detroit News, Washington Times, and National Review.

David Smith: Silver Has Already Gone from Weak to Strong Hands

Published here: http://goldsilverworlds.com/gold-silver-price-news/david-smith-silver-has-already-gone-from-weak-to-strong-hands/


Artwork for Fed Chair Powell and “Systemically Important” Banks Nervous about Gold
MONEY METALS’ WEEKLY MARKET WRAP PODCAST Fed Chair Powell and “Systemically Important” Banks Nervous about Gold
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Mike Gleason: It is my privilege now to welcome back David Smith, Senior Analyst at The Morgan Report and regular contributor to MoneyMetals.com. David, thanks for coming on again and how are you, my friend?

David Smith: Oh, very good. It’s great to be back again.

Mike Gleason: Well, David, as we start out today, and before we get into silver and what’s going on with the white metal, let’s focus on gold for a moment and the recent move we saw there as it finally pushed through the multi-year overhead resistance level of, say, $1,370 or $1380. It’s now been consolidating over the last couple of weeks at or around $1,400. Talk about what you’re seeing there with the yellow metal, why you think it was finally able to break out of that five year long trading range, and then where we’re likely to go from here.

David Smith: Well, I think it was just a convergence of factors that all came together that gave it that extra critical mass to move through, and it did so decisively and, in closing above there around $1,365 or so, it was really, really powerful. And what I’m impressed by lately, I’m always aware that we could see a $100 drop before things get going again, but it looks less and less likely the longer it stays at a very high consolidating level. For example, it was up today around $15 or so. It just doesn’t like to stay much below, say, $1,395. It likes to be above 14 (hundred).

And then also, there’s another tale going on with the mining stocks. They are remaining pretty strong. All the good ones are giving up ground very begrudgingly. And so, what I think is going on is accumulation, not only in the mining stocks, but also in the physical metal itself. Maybe the retail sector hasn’t caught on fire yet, but I think the big players are adding to their physical metal and that’s, of course, going to be draining more and more physical out of the place where people can buy it at the retail level.

Mike Gleason: We talk a lot about the real interest rate environment. Obviously, there’s now a lot of momentum for a reduction in interest rates, which obviously helps gold look a lot better as an investment. The big knock on gold is it doesn’t earn you a yield, and you think part of that is playing into this recent move?

David Smith: Oh, I definitely think so. I was just reading, a couple days ago, that there are over 13 trillion dollars of negative interest rate paper that’s written in Europe in the Eurozone, that’s just incredible where, actually, you pay people to take your money. And they talk about gold not earning interest, but another thing, nowadays with all this negative interest, you never have to pay people to buy your gold. It’s just stunning and this is not going to end well, but it’ll keep the fiction going for a while and, as long as they want to do that, that’s just going to be a real tailwind for gold because, like you said, the real interest rate, when that changes in favor of gold, then it makes more sense to hold gold than it does paper. And it looks like we’re going to be seeing basically flat to lower interest rates here about as far as the eye can see, and that means that we’re going to see continued strength in gold as far as the eye can see.

Mike Gleason: Turning to silver, it’s definitely been a laggard, and one of the big questions many are asking in the metals community is when will silver similarly break to the upside and confirm gold’s rally? What is it going to take to get the white metal moving again, David, and will see this year’s long trading range in silver breach like gold’s was recently? And then what are some of the reasons silver has been held down here? Let’s get your thoughts on silver now.

David Smith: Well, the day, a few weeks ago, when GLD established the largest inflow in history, I think it was one and a half billion dollars in one day, people didn’t realize it, but silver also had the second highest volume inflows in ETFs, in its history as well too. And what I think was happening with silver is it was going from the last of the weak hands to stronger and stronger hands. And so, the longer it stays down like it is and not doing too much, the longer that happens, I think the more explosive will be the movement. And I think, one of these days, it’ll just pop up above these trim lines like gold did and suddenly, there’ll be people going, “Good grief,” and then it’ll be off to the races. We’ll need that investment group to come back in, but I think they’re moving in and I think it’s going to be pretty darned interesting.

And, of course, the silver mining stocks themselves have been pretty strong. So, again, like with the gold stocks, it indicates accumulation and it won’t take too much to get it moving on the upside, and it may wait until the first week of September. I don’t think it’ll wait that long, but, if it does, it still doesn’t mean that we’ve got a problem because gold and silver over time do correlate. They don’t correlate every day, but the direction of movement tends to be very similar to the point of about 90%. If gold is going to be strong, say, over the next few weeks or so and silver is subdued, at some point, it will play catch-up and you’ll probably see, and I remember this in 1980, ’79, ’80, you would see gold moving strongly for day after day and silver just sat there. And then, all of a sudden, gold would take a breather and silver would go for a week or so.

I think we’ll see tag team going on, playing catch up between gold and silver, and that will become the leitmotif of the bull market as it gets going and you’ll see that going on for months and perhaps years at a time.

Mike Gleason: We’ve got the silver to gold ratio in the 92 to one range right now. Where are you looking for that to go over the next several years? We’re obviously at an extreme. I don’t think we’ve ever seen it higher than about 100 to one, and I think it’s been 25-plus years since we’ve seen it even this high. Comment on gold versus silver as an investment right now.

David Smith: Well, just by that alone (the gold to silver ratio) people have made a lot of money by speculating on the type of movement coming back into balance. And so at 90 to one, they would buy more silver and less gold, or they would sell some of their gold and buy silver, and then when it drops, say, to 60 to one, they’d buy gold again. And it went down into the high teens in 1980 and so this thing, it could go higher. It could go back and challenge at 100. Part of this is because it’s an industrial metal first and an investment metal second, and it’s the investment level that brings out the real powerful push on the upside. And so I think, once the investors start coming back in, I wouldn’t be surprised to see this staying as high as it is. When we get into September, October, I think that’ll start to see a change and then, if it’s profound enough, it’ll be a change that lasts for quite a while and it’ll work its way down. But 90 to one is not normal, as you said.

Mike Gleason: Getting back to the mining sector, you follow that very closely, and I wanted to get a little bit of an update from you there. Mining stocks have often been a leading indicator for metals’ prices. Those stocks have bounced pretty hard off the lows put in back in May. The GDX index is up about 25% this year, with most of those gains coming in the last two months, for instance. What do you think? Is this another false start for shareholders or is the long drought finally over here?

David Smith: I don’t think it’s a false start, and I look at a number of the ones that I have and, gee, they’re 30, 40% above where they were last spring or last winter, and some of them are 70 or 80, some of the exploration plays that had really good drill holes. And so, usually, you’ll see the big mining stocks go up first and then the juniors second and then the explorers third, but what I’m seeing now is that the best big ones are going up sharply and then the juniors, the good juniors, are going up. In other words, it’s a quality thing. Quality, I think, is really important. And the good thing for people picking up stocks these days, mining stocks, is that a lot of the dead wood has been just blown away or doesn’t trade anymore or went out of business or literally went to pot, they’re selling pot stocks.

And so there are less bad ones out there now, but there are still some that won’t hunt. There are some that are inefficiently managed. There are some that are just burning through cash, and some of them are almost like a lifestyle company where they keep issuing shares and drilling holes and never finding anything or never selling anything. And so you really want the quality and, what I talk about when I go to these conferences, when we’re talking about the mining shares, I just say, “Look. Try to find somebody that’s done it before.” Now, there are cases where somebody new comes on the scene and makes a big discovery, but, generally speaking, somebody that’s done it once or twice or three times, like a Ross Beaty or a Lundin or a stock-picker like Rick Rule, someone like that, they’re going to be able to do it again. And so when they start a new project and they find a new brownfield project or they buy a shell company or whatever, keep an eye on what they’re doing.

Rob McEwen is one of my all-time favorites in this sector, I’ll tell you that. He’s a quality human being and he’s an amazing professional, and I have several companies that I either have stocks in, exploration stocks, that I think are really special, or even some producers, and I look and I find that Rob’s got stock in that company. He does not sit on his laurels. He’s doing a great job with his own company, but he’s out there taking positions in others, whether it’s a new way of looking at mining, a digital-type company, or a new type of geophysics that’s going on, he’ll have shares in that. Or there’s one stock I’m following in the Red Lake district in Canada, which has some of the richest veins in the world. They’re finding some great drill holes and darned if he doesn’t have about 15% of the shares, pretty neat.

But watch the guys that have done it, and the ladies, there are a few ladies, watch the people that have done it before and, the odds are, they’ll do it again.

Mike Gleason: You are involved with the LODE project. It’s an effort to combine the advantages of cryptocurrency with the stability and confidence of physical metal. The tokens are backed by actual silver sitting in a vault, and we encourage listeners to check that out at LODE.one. We are all working to promote honest money. Cryptocurrency certainly has some promise, but I wanted to get your thoughts on a phenomenon we don’t really understand in the Bitcoin world. A group of fairly prominent people in the Bitcoin community recently began taking shots at gold. Instead of finding common ground with gold bugs, they sound more like John Maynard Keynes when he referred to gold as a barbarous relic. Bitcoin was launched as a form of honest money and intended to take away power from the central bankers and free-spending politicians and those are the same reasons to promote gold. We think these people would do better attacking their actual enemies and not their friends. What is your view here?

David Smith: Well, I agree. I don’t see any reason to be antagonistic toward Bitcoin in particular or certain other crypto assets in general. Bitcoin, at its root, is really a transfer mechanism. It enables you to transfer value. And so, if you think about it, transfer of value can be yuan to dollars and it could be gold to dollars or it could be dollars to gold and you transfer the Bitcoin and you buy the gold. And I believe Money Metals even has the ability to make sales with people who have Bitcoin. Is that not correct?

Mike Gleason: Yeah, we accept all forms of crypto for payment and we’ll even pay people in crypto when they want to sell metal too.

David Smith: Yeah. So, it’s just another form and it’s not money per se, but it’s the utility that gives it value and people see it as historic value. And, for example, I saw a chart not too long ago about Bitcoin in Argentine pesos, and I think it was about the middle of June, the Bitcoin exceeded the number of pesos it took to buy from when it was priced at $20,000 a Bitcoin in the U.S., and so it was like it had been about 140,000 Argentine pesos that it took to buy a Bitcoin when it was at 20,000. Well, now, it’s worth 190,000 or 200,000 Argentine pesos.

It’s really saving people that don’t have access to the metal or that need a transfer vehicle to get it. It’s really saving some of their wealth and keeping them, literally, sometimes from starvation at death’s door because they could all those massive amounts of pesos, into a Bitcoin or a fraction, it can go down to six or seven places or eight places, I think, and then when they are in a place where they can buy gold and silver, then they can take their Bitcoins, just like they would at Money Metals, and they can buy the metal with it. I think they’re complementary to each other.

And I think one of the earliest comments that I thought that was really valid was the whole idea of cryptocurrencies and Bitcoin in particular has started a discussion about what is money? People always just thought it was what’s in your pocket, it’s a currency, even though they know it’s being inflated away and the purchasing power keeps dropping. And people are asking, “What is money? Is what I have in my pocket that keeps being devalued, is it really money?” And so they’re saying, “Hey, there are other things and there are historically other things that were money, such as and gold and silver.” So, it’s kind of a virtuous circle. It brings people back, they start comparing what Bitcoin is, how that compares to money, and then they end up talking about gold and silver. It brings people back into that arena where they continually find themselves, and have done so for thousands of years in any time of concern about inflation or about societal issues or political issues, metals are always a safe harbor.

And the LODE project, being backed by silver, each AGX coin is backed by one gram of silver and each LODE token, which creates a silver mass, is backed by the gram of silver and it’s stored in eight vaults around the world. And when these coins start trading, we had a soft launch this spring in Anarchapulco, but when they start fully trading we’ll have a Visa type of card for our debit that you can use. You’ll be able to speculate on the value of silver in relationship to buying AGX coins, and there’ll be store of value. I think what’s going to be amazing, it’s hard to predict exactly how long it will take and what that footprint will look like when it gets out there, but I think of people in South America, like in Venezuela and in Mexico and Chile and these places, and Africa and in India, I think they’re going to really like this idea of not only having a crypto asset, but one that’s backed by physical metal and that can be redeemable upon demand at some place somewhere in the world in a different vault.

It’s pretty exciting, and it’s exciting to me that David Morgan, who’s had this vision for his whole professional life, of somehow getting silver as money back into the public usage. And it’s not going to end up in our pocket, but it won’t to. It’ll end up digitally on a card that we have. And in India, 100,000 people a day are opening wallets, which they put cryptocurrencies in, and so they’re not going to need a big discussion about what are the benefits. They already know what it is.

And so this whole idea, it’s going to involve more physical metal being sold, because every time an AGX coin is created and purchased, the LODE program has to go in and buy silver in the open market to back that. And so you’ll have a new demand factor, which we’ve never had before, on physical silver in addition to more and more investors coming back into the market buying physical silver and gold. So, I think these things are going to come together in a way that will be a perfect storm for demand and a perfect problem that’s going to be hard to solve for supply over time with silver. And I don’t think the market is understanding what this could be like, and it could be a massive outlier that really knocks the supply situation out of kilter in relationship to demand.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, very well put. There’s a lot of things that can converge here and really cause a massive supply shortage with silver. The mining industry, for what it’s been the last several years, there is not a tremendous amount of exploration happening, which means there’s not a whole lot of extra ounces. We still have lots of industrial uses for silver. We may have some serious demand coming from things like LODE and maybe some other projects with backing of physical precious metals. And then, obviously, as the dollar continues to devalue and paper currencies around the world, more and more people are going to get interested in this precious metal story as a true store of value and, yeah, it could get very interesting.

Well, thanks so much for time today, David. We always enjoy getting your insights. And, before we sign off, you’ve got a couple of speaking engagements coming up that I was hoping you would fill people in on. Talk about that, if you would.

David Smith: Yeah. At the end of this month, July 30th through August 2nd, there’ll be a four-day symposium, the Sprott Symposium in Vancouver, BC. I’ll be there on media day, on the first day, interviewing people, and I’ll be helping a little bit at the conference introducing a few people that are doing workshops as the conference progresses and attending a lot of these myself. There’ll be a lot of big names there, and some of the people you’ve interviewed, like Steve Forbes will be there and Jim Rickards, you’ve interviewed Jim. These are all high-powered people and it’s a tremendous conference. If anybody can get up to it, I think they’re really benefit by it.

And then around the middle of August, it’s actually the, let’s see, the 15th through the 17th of August, I’ll be in San Francisco and I’ll be presenting on the 17th of August there at the San Francisco Money Show. Looking forward to those two events plus keeping up with you guys and watching the price of metals, so it should be a pretty interesting summer. It’s definitely not going to be a quiet one.

Mike Gleason: Yeah. It’s already been an exciting one for many people in the metals community and I think it’s going to continue to be that. We’ll be keeping a close eye and look forward to catching up with you again before long. Hope you have some safe travels there and a good rest of your summer. Take care, David.

David Smith: You bet. Take care, Mike. Bye-bye.

Mike Gleason: Well that will do it for this week, thanks again to David Smith, Senior Analyst at The Morgan Report and a regular columnist for MoneyMetals.com, and the co-author, along with the aforementioned David Morgan of the book Second Chance: How to Make and Keep Big Money During the Coming Gold and Silver Shock Wave, which is available at MoneyMetals.com and Amazon. Pick up a copy today.

 

Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a national precious metals dealer with over 50,000 customers. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.