Olá, Visitante. Por favor entre ou registe-se se ainda não for membro.

Entrar com nome de utilizador, password e duração da sessão
 

Autor Tópico: Ouro - Tópico principal  (Lida 244944 vezes)

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1020 em: 2023-09-12 16:16:16 »
E ainda, outra notícia já com alguns meses...


«Central Banks All Over The World Are Scrambling To Buy Gold

By ZeroHedge - May 08, 2023, 9:00 AM CDT


    Central bank gold buying drove gold demand in Q1 2023.
    Gold demand continues to hold strong after a record-breaking 2022.
    Gold purchases will likely continue to outweigh sales for the foreseeable future, and may explain in part why gold trades just shy of its all time high north of $2,000 per ounce.

Join Our Community
Gold

It may not be the off the charts gold buying observed in the second half of 2022, but central bank Central bank gold buying made a blistering start to 2023 when according to the latest report from the World Gold Council, demand for the hard currency by the world's money-printing authorities reached 228 tonnes in Q1, a 176% increase compared to the 82.7 tonnes one year ago. While lower than the figures seen in the previous two quarters this was nonetheless the strongest first quarter on record. According to the WGC, "this is all the more impressive considering it follows the record-breaking pace of demand last year."

The rolling  four-quarter total soared to a record 1,224 tonnes in Q1 following massive buying in recent quarters. As with the figures for both Q3 and Q4 2022, data for the current quarter contains a significant estimate for unreported activity.

Four central banks accounted for the majority of reported purchasing during Q1:

    The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) was the largest single buyer during the quarter thanks to the addition of 69 tonnes of gold, the first increase in its gold reserves since June 2021, confirms that buying in Q1 was not only the domain of emerging market central banks. Gold reserves at MAS now total 222t, 45% higher than at the end of 2022.

    The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) disclosed that its gold reserves had risen by 58t. Since recommencing reports of purchases in November 2022, the PBoC has added 120t to its gold reserves, lifting them to 2,068t (4% of total reported gold reserves). Overnight, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange reported the latest, April, reserves data which revealed that China's gold reserves rose to a record 66.76 million ounces at the end of April, up from 66.5 million ounces at end-March.

    Turkey was again a big buyer of gold during the quarter: official reserves rose by 30t. Combined purchases of 45t in January and February were offset by a sale in March – the first since November 2021.11 15t of gold was sold into the local market following a temporary partial ban on gold bullion imports.12 Overall, this lifted total gold reserves to 572t (34% of total reserves).

    The Reserve Bank of India also added a modest 7t in Q1, lifting its gold reserves to 795t, while the Czech Republic (2t) and the Philippines (1t) were also notable buyers.

A significant update during Q1 came from the Central Bank of Russia in a resumption of its reporting of gold reserves, back filling data from the end of January 2022 to date.

We can now see that in Q1 Russia’s official gold reserves fell by 6t, to 2,327t (25% of total reserves). However, even with this decline – possibly related to coin-minting – the country’s gold reserves are 28t higher than when it stopped reporting last year. .

Selling was again much more modest by comparison. The Central Bank of Uzbekistan (-15t) and the National Bank of Kazakhstan (-20t) were the largest sellers of gold during the quarter. According to the WGC, it is not uncommon for central banks that purchase gold from domestic sources – as both Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan do – to be frequent sellers of gold. Cambodia (-10t), UAE (-1t) and Tajikistan (-1t) were the other notable sellers. Croatia reported a 2t reduction in its gold holdings in January but this was a transfer to the European Central Bank – which is required of all countries joining the euro area – and, as such, it does not represent a decline in the global universe of official sector gold.

Here is a chart summarizing the most notable central bank transactions during Q1.

The bottom line: expectations for strong central bank demand in 2023 have been borne out. Central bank buying remains robust, with little to indicate that this will change in the short term. As such, purchases will likely continue to outweigh sales for the foreseeable future, and may explain in part why gold trades just shy of its all time high north of $2,000 per ounce. But the exact pace of this net buying is difficult to determine.

By Zerohedge.com»


https://oilprice.com/Metals/Gold/Central-Banks-All-Over-The-World-Are-Scrambling-To-Buy-Gold.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1021 em: 2023-12-02 22:13:28 »
Um video mto int. acerca do q poderá estar a acontecer com o Au:

2024 gold revaluation coordinated or weaponised? - LFTV Ep 151 - Kinesis Money

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvejdnwZlc4&t=3s
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1022 em: 2023-12-04 02:43:41 »
Interessante!:


«Gold Spikes To Record High Over $2,130, Bitcoin Soars Above $40,000 As Market Calls Powell's Bluff

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden

Monday, Dec 04, 2023 - 12:26 AM


On Friday, shortly after Powell failed to hammer the hawkish case in his "fireside" chat with stocks eager to take out 2023 highs, we said that Powell has a big problem on his hands not so much because if the market was indeed correct about imminent easing that only assures that inflation will come back with a vengeance and Powell would indeed be the "second coming" of a former Fed Chair - only Burns not Vlcker  - but because the kneejerk surge higher in gold (and digital gold) meant that the once again deathwatch for the dollar - and fiat in general - had resumed.

Well, with futures having opened for trading on Sunday night, what we joked about on Friday, namely that Powell - having seemingly once again lost control of the hawkish narrative - may be leaking emergency rate hikes though Nick Timiraos on Dec 12, ahead of the December FOMC (now that the Fed is in blackout mode)...

... is all too real because suddenly everything that is non printable is soaring, starting with gold, which has exploded as much as $60, spiking to a new all time high of $2,135...

... while bitcoin, and the entire crypto sector following closely, spiking above $40,000 for the first time since May 2022.

The bitcoin move was to be expected after what we reported yesterday, namely that cryptos had just seen their largest inflows in two years... and Friday's comments by Powell only guaranteed even more capital would flow into the largely illiquid asset class.

"Bitcoin continues to be supported by optimism around SEC approval for an ETF and Fed rate cuts in 2024,” Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG Australia Pty, wrote in a note. Technical chart patterns point to $42,330 as the next level to watch for, he added.

As for gold, everything is suddenly going in its favor, and not only the violent resumption of the Israel-Hamas war (which now includes attacks on US warships in the Gulf)...

... as well as the relentless buying out of China which we discussed last week in "Behind The Mysterious Explosion In Gold Prices: China's "Massive Accumulation Of Gold" which noted the staggering divergence between Shanghai and London gold prices, a clear proxy for outsized demand for physical gold on the mainland...

... but also years of market reflexes which prompt algos to buy gold any time the Fed is set to ease, something which markets assigned 80% odds on Friday could happen as soon as March.

And so, going back to square one, Powell is once again boxed in: either he pushes back on the market's sudden dovish euphoria which could well send dollar sparling lower, and in turn send commodities exploding higher guaranteeing that all the worst aspects of Burns Fed make a triumphant return, or he does nothing, and we see gold go parabolic.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/gold-spikes-record-high-over-2130-bitcoin-soars-above-40000-market-calls-powells-bluff
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1023 em: 2023-12-06 19:24:13 »
"Why Gold Miners Are Lagging The Price Of Gold":


«The Debt Numbers Are "Spiraling Out Of Control"

quoth the raven's Photo

by quoth the raven

Wednesday, Dec 06, 2023 - 14:22


Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance


Over the weekend I had the pleasure of talking to my friend and favorite economist, Peter Schiff. Over the course of our exclusive hour-long conversation, I wanted to pick Peter’s brain about several key questions:

    Why gold miners are lagging the price of gold

    Whether or not the stock market is going to move higher or lower

    Why Peter thinks CPI could wind up moving higher yet again

    Is there a case for deflation as well as inflation?

    Does the forthcoming Bitcoin spot ETFs validate the crypto enough for him to get behind it yet?

Here are all of the key points from our conversation.


Why Gold Miners Are Lagging The Price Of Gold


Watching gold miner stocks lag gold over the last week, I wanted to ask Peter why he thought this gap existed, what it would take for miners to move higher, and whether or not this means the gold rally can’t be trusted.

Peter told me: “This, you know, one is—and this is kind of ironic—but inflation has actually really hurt gold mining companies. You would have thought, well, inflation is going to be good for gold miners because it's going to mean people are going to want to buy gold to hedge inflation. The gold price is going to go up, and so you would think that the miners would benefit from inflation. But what happened was inflation really pushed up the cost of mining, their raw material costs, you know, their energy cost, their labor costs.”

He continued: “It's an expensive procedure to mine gold, and the cost of mining kept going up and up. So even though the price of gold has gone up to $2,000, the mining companies are not that much more profitable than they were when gold was $1,000, because the costs have gone up commensurate. In fact, in many cases, the costs have gone up more than the price of gold. And so, that's been a problem.”

“But also, stocks are more of a reflection of investors' outlook for the future, and now you're trying to discount that future to the present. It's very forward-looking. So when investors are looking at a gold company and they see the price of gold at $2,000, they extrapolate what the profits are going to be over the next five or ten years,” Peter told me.

He concluded: “They have to make an assumption about where they think the price of gold is going to be over the next five or ten years to have any indication of what the profits are going to be. And if you look at the assumptions, they're generally for a lower gold price in the future than the price we have right now. So it's because the stock market investors are so bearish on the future of gold that they're not discounting a positive earnings impact of a rising gold price. Right? Whereas the gold price itself is just a reflection of what it costs to buy gold right now. What is the current supply and demand? What is the price? It's not what the price is going to be in a year or two or ten; it's what's the price right now. So it's kind of a different market. And to me, it's been a positive-negative indicator, a reverse contrarian indicator.”
Why Are Stocks Still Moving Higher Despite Ugly Economic Data Incoming?

I also am baffled by the market’s moves of late — with a coming crack up boom and 20 years of toxic market sentiment and behavioral psychology the only reasons I can think of for a stock market moving higher at this valuation.

Peter told me: “The market's going up because the buyers are more motivated than the sellers. You know, and the prices are going up, but the buyers are operating under a lot of false assumptions that are going to come back to bite them. But my approach, and what I have been advising my clients, is...(READ THIS FULL INTERVIEW AND LISTEN TO THE FULL PODCAST HERE).

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2023-12-06/debt-numbers-are-spiraling-out-control
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1024 em: 2023-12-14 19:59:55 »
Acerca do Au:


«War on Gold: Bullion Banks Not The Enemy Anymore

VBL's Photo

by VBL

Wednesday, Dec 13, 2023 - 20:01

Submitted for your approval:

Authored by GoldFix ZH Edit

With Gold on All Time Highs UBS’ Chief Investment Office puts out a report saying gold is too high while simultaneously saying it will hit $2,250 in 2024.

That same day, DB also puts out a report saying Gold is too high short term. Two days later that same bank puts out a 2024 report in which they state Gold is going up.

JPM also tells clients this rally is too much too soon, after having said 2 weeks prior gold was going up in 2024. There are other analyses we have not seen for sure.

A contradiction? No. Gold was short-term overbought and long term a buy.  The commentary was actually spot-on.  We are now in the Bullion Bank Zone.
The Bullion Bank Zone

Are the Banks lying? Not likely at all. They are trying to keep some integrity1 and do right by their customers, while making money for themselves (the Broker-Dealer model) and simultaneously dealing with Central Bank obligatory interference.

Bullion Banks always serve two masters, American Capitalism (their P&L) and Collective Bureaucracy in the form of Central Banking. When those masters’ interests align, Gold always goes down. But we just saw  two Sundays ago what happens when those interests do not align. It is not pretty as we saw that evening Dec. 3rd.

Incidentally, that night was a glimpse of true price discovery. If metal is continually throttled from flowing east while increasing price is slowly transmitted to the west,  you will see more of those glorious moments.
While the transmission of Western pricing decreases in effectiveness, the transmission of Eastern demand exerts more influence. It is harder to keep price down when the buyer wants the physical metal. The SGE and the Comex are a proxy war for USD dominance.  Banks are just profitably in the middle.
"Selfish" Capitalists versus "Bigger Picture" Socialists

When push comes to shove, the capitalist bank trader wants to make money. If that is because Gold is going up, then they will be long Gold- as some have been for months!

But when Gold going up upsets the bigger2 picture (Central Banker) types, those traders cannot ignore the call. Banks were definitely called Sunday night. Somebody was not happy.

So, hate the Bullion Banks if you must. But, know this market has turned from bear to bull. Bullion banks ultimately will not be the enemy. The G7 Central Bankers however, always will be, as long as Fiat exists.
What’s The Point?

GoldFix readers knew what the banks would write *before* it was written. We predicted as much 8:55 p.m.Dec 3rd Sunday night as it was happening.

“Then what are you doing?” one may ask; Taking the opportunity to point out a kind of mission GoldFix is on.

For years we have studied not just markets, but player behavior themselves in times of crisis.3 We give the information and analysis to make *you* less concerned with day-to-day price action by showing (when we can) true market drivers. You stay out of harm’s way and preserve/grow your wealth. That's the idea
The Advice Now:

Be bullish if you like, but Buy-Season has run into a brick wall. And while every bullion bank in the world is buying dips (at what depth noone knows) which will result in much higher prices over the next 5 years (because they see it as well) speculating on another new All Time high  between now and January 1st is going to be difficult.
Final Comment:

You cannot keep grass roots demand in Gold from driving this market higher. You can, however slow its ascent. Gold is going up. Truly we wish our members the best. Spread the word

Continues here ...
Free Posts To Your Mailbox

     

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2023-12-13/war-gold-defense-bullion-banks-sort
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1025 em: 2023-12-15 05:13:07 »
Stil about gold:


«Gold Jumps As FOMC Signals What’s To Come

GoldCore's Photo

by GoldCore

Thursday, Dec 14, 2023 - 12:36


Gold Jumps As FOMC Signals What’s To Come


All eyes were on the FOMC yesterday as they met for the final time in 2023. In the weeks running up to the meeting Fed officials stuck to the brief of sounding flexible when it came to questions asked about the direction of rates. For the last few months, FOMC members have repeatedly been asked if they have finally reached the ‘terminal’ rate after a long and onerous task of trying to take down inflation.

Well, it seems they now all feel they have reached it, as Fed Chair Jay Powell said yesterday that the current rate of 5.5% is “likely at or near its peak for this tightening cycle”.

17 of the 19 members indicated that they expect rates to be lower by the end of 2024. A cut of up to 0.75% across multiple meetings is expected. Markets are pricing in a near 60% chance that the first of those cuts will come in March 2024.

In response to the FOMC announcement, gold climbed over 1% and silver by 2.5%, global stocks also soared whilst bonds fell. Markets will also be looking out for announcements from both the Bank of England and European Central Banks, later today.
Are we there yet?

For what has felt like months, traders have been keen to know if the FOMC is finished with their rate hikes. It was expected that this was the peak of rates as inflation and other economic indicators increased convictions that the FOMC had arrived at where they felt they needed to be.
Chris Vermeulen on Gold: This Is A Super Cycle At Play
https://youtu.be/Scu4Y8JqvQw?rel=0

However, while there is still officially inflation in the economy, is now the right time to entertain the idea of upcoming rate cuts? One could argue that the Fed will now have made its inflation fight even harder as looser conditions could see a further wave of unbridled spending and borrowing from businesses and consumers, thus starting the whole cycle again.

Of course, we all know that the current fight on inflation isn't really fighting inflation. It’s more like a small battle in a very long, drawn out and damaging war. The Fed may well have brought down headline inflation, but they are yet to confront the real firepower that is sticky core inflation brought about by years of QE and low rates.
More to come…

The FOMC isn’t the only one tidying things up before the end of the year. Both the Bank of England’s MPC and the European Central Bank are set to hold their respective rate setting meetings.

The Bank Of England is fighting a battle against a very stubborn inflation issue. Few expect them to start cutting rates as soon as their peers do. Currently there is little evidence that the economy is ready for rates to be cut.

The ECB meanwhile is seeing some progress, with inflation at a two-year low. Investors expect to see rate cuts coming soon.
Policy by stealth?

So if (the majority) of major central banks are feeling punchy about their inflation victory what does this mean for gold? As we’ve seen this year, gold has become less sensitive to rate  hikes, instead choosing to play its own tune. Whilst it did react to the FOMC news last night, it has been holding its own throughout the year. We will watch with some interest to see how it will respond to monetary policy in 2024. Of course, low rates are traditionally good for gold, but this year the inverse has been the case. We think we are starting to see a slight decoupling of the long-term relationship between rates and the price of gold, watch this space.
 

As we head to the new year it is worth noting one of the major trends of 2023 - central bank gold buying. For many gold bugs there will come a day when gold is central to the international monetary system. For decades the bulk of goldbugs have suggested this will come about as a result of a collapse in the US dollar i.e. the global monetary system.

Instead what we are starting to see is a change in the international monetary system by stealth, rather than by policy. We’re talking about the increase in gold reserves by a number of central banks. Central bankers have been net buyers of gold for some time now, without feeling the need to make any announcements.

Changes in the geopolitical state of play has clearly prompted central bankers (as well as individuals) to question the status quo when it comes to managing their international finances. As a result, they’re turning to the ultimate insurance - physical gold.

With very little set to improve in the coming years, whether it  is money supply, the MIddle East, the Russia-Ukraine war and even climate change, we think 2024 will prove to be another pivotal one for gold, with or without monetary policy announcements.
 

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2023-12-14/gold-jumps-fomc-signals-whats-come
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1026 em: 2023-12-27 18:17:10 »
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1027 em: 2024-01-13 19:02:27 »
+ 1 vídeo muito actual e interessante, acerca do Au:

2024 reveals a GOLD BEAR TRAP - LFTV Ep 155 - Kinesis Money

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTafCMBGuKk&t=8s
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

vbm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13744
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1028 em: 2024-01-13 22:11:41 »
Não há paciência +ara ver anúncios!

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1029 em: 2024-01-13 22:34:21 »
Não há paciência +ara ver anúncios!

Pois, é complicado, realmente... tem q se ir fazendo outras coisas - e tb há vídeos q são mto técnicos e de não fácil entendimento para leigos comme moi...   ::)
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1030 em: 2024-01-26 23:20:11 »
Gold is money...


«Macleod: Summary Of The Dangers Facing Us In 2024

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden

Friday, Jan 26, 2024 - 10:00 PM


Authored by Alasdair Macleod via Substack,


This year is likely to see wealth destruction on a massive scale. The reason this is not widely anticipated in financial markets is due to a mistaken belief that interest rates are at their peak and will decline over the year. The reason interest rates will rise is due to the colossal mountain of government debt to be financed and the restriction of commercial bank credit for non-financial businesses, forcing borrowing rates up and guaranteeing an economic slump.

This article summarises the economic outlook, the consequences for government finances, the fragility of the banking system, and the prospects for financial asset values. All these factors are inter-related to combine in undermining the value of fiat currencies in a widespread flight from credit.

Only direct ownership of gold, which remains legal money despite five decades of US and state-educated economists’ propaganda that it is not, protects citizens from the mounting threat of a collapse in the value of credit.

Introduction

Henceforth, my detailed economic and geopolitical analyses will migrate to my newsletter on Substack.

I will continue to write a summary introduction for Goldmoney’s readers on Thursdays. My market reports for Goldmoney will be published on Fridays as normal.

Accordingly, this is an opportunity to summarise the economic and geopolitical challenges ahead for all Goldmoney readers and how they affect credit and legal money, which always has been and still is gold. There is little doubt now that many of the problems about which I have been warning readers of this column over the years are coming home to roost, and 2024 could go down in history as a year of enormous economic, political, and social change.

Growing instability in the American, European, and Japanese banking systems has encouraged me to emphasise the distinction between money and credit, a topic which is poorly understood even among economists and bankers. Yet growing financial instability is all about the value placed on credit, characterised by obligations which bear a risk of default. And almost the entire Western economic establishment and even its critics mistakenly think that currency is money, having replaced gold. It is an error leading to dangerous misconceptions.

Protecting personal wealth increasingly depends on understanding the distinction between the two, because hoarding real money without counterparty risk is the refuge from an increasingly likely economic crisis, currently facing what we used to call the advanced economies. The economic distinction is no longer appropriate: China is more advanced in terms of consumer goods production than the old school, and India is rapidly catching up. Even the Third World is rapidly evolving. And after multi-decades of socialism, Peronism, and dictatorships Argentina is leading the way back to free markets, a smaller state, and stabilising her currency.

Our governments dare not follow this unexpected change of direction. The legacy of rapid economic development in the nineteenth century and the wealth created have been squandered. Under the accumulating burdens of various socialist delusions, westerners still think someone else owes them a living and that their governments are morally right to rob the rich to keep them in idleness. You can’t blame them for this indolent attitude when the political class thrives on promoting it. But it is our decline and our fall.

The world is bifurcating into two halves — the declining woke old and the dynamic new. While we in the west are declining at an increasing pace, under the influence of our supposed enemies the rest of the world welcomes an escape from our hegemony. Absorbed in our own delusions, our establishments and their media barely recognise this development. And the defeat that looms in Ukraine over Russia and a worsening situation in Palestine hardly disturbs our complacency.

So violent are our economic prospects becoming and the wealth destruction that will follow that we could end up being rescued from our follies by our former empires and spheres of influence. After all, measured by population and GDP we westerners are now in a decreasing minority. Led by the Asian hegemons, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America will still be there trading with each other and anyone else who can pay for their goods while we go to hell in a handcart. And crucially, Russia, China, members of the Gulf Cooperation Council, and assorted others do understand that gold is money and currencies are merely unbacked credit.

Indebted nations owing dollars could even begin to welcome the collapse of the dollar because it would wipe out their obligations. It would wipe out American hegemony. This was definitely an attraction for supporters of the gold-backed BRICS trade settlement currency which failed to make the agenda in Johannesburg last August.

This is the background we are dealing with for the new year. In our misplaced belief in the fiat dollar and allied currencies, we are rotting from the head down while the rest of the world is rising like a fabled phoenix.
The economic outlook

Investment research echoed by western media has a common theme which runs like this: “The economic outlook is for a mild recession, which will permit interest rates to decline, taking pressure off the financial system.”

The confidence expressed in our economic condition appears to be supported by backward facing statistics. We extrapolate our forecasts from the past, relying on economic models for interpretation. But it is plainly obvious to anyone who is aware of the true economic conditions that non-financial businesses are struggling badly. Bankruptcies in American and European jurisdictions are hitting new highs. Having unexpectedly soared, mortgage expense is leading to personal distress and reducing consumer spending. Small and medium sized enterprises are facing cash flow difficulties at the same time as banks are withdrawing credit facilities. Larger corporations face radical restructuring to deal with their excess debt.

Yet official statistics do not reflect these difficulties.

The current expansion in US and European GDPs relies entirely on excess government spending. We know that the US Government’s budget deficit is probably running at about $3 trillion in the current fiscal year, including interest on its debt. That $3 trillion represents excess government spending being injected almost entirely into the GDP economy. This debasement of the currency amounts to over 10% of nominal GDP, inflating it accordingly. To the extent that nominal GDP does not increase by this amount reflects an underlying contraction of private sector transactions, ex-government.

The next question to address is the consequence of this debasement on the purchasing power of the dollar. Macroeconomists forecasting consumer price inflation currently believe it will decline in the current year to perhaps an average of 3% or even lower. However, after an indefinable time lag currency debasement will almost certainly lead towards a significantly higher than expected CPI figure. The timing difference between currency debasement and its consequence for the general level of prices makes a mockery of the concept of an inflation-adjusted real GDP. This Cantillon effect partly explains why the US economy appeared to resist fears of a recession in fiscal 2023. It was the net result of an indefinable prior debasement, the extra spending from the then $2 trillion budget deficit, and the contraction of private sector activity. These factors are yet to fully catch up with the current situation.

In the same vein, in 2024 the GDP outturn will suggest that the US economy is extraordinarily robust by continuing to grow both nominally and in inflation-adjusted terms. Perhaps the best way to illustrate the falsity of the GDP statistic as a measure of economic activity is to imagine if it had existed to quantify Germany’s economy in the early 1920s. Nominal GDP would have been soaring, while the CPI inflation adjustment lagged, only until the final few months when the paper-mark collapsed in 1923. Yet, at the same time acute poverty by any measure had been growing, and personal wealth completely wiped out.

Today, the US economy faces similar dynamics with the dollar being as fiat as the paper mark, and to think otherwise is delusional. Once this line of reasoning is adopted, it becomes clear that talk of recession is misleading. It is a concept which arose from Keynesianism as a justification for state intervention. Instead, we must consider changes in the levels of economic activity and the long-term legacy of the expansion of non-productive debt. Ignoring the evidence in favour of corrupted macroeconomic statistics not only misleads us all but encourages further destructive monetary and fiscal policies.

You cannot get away from the consequences of budget deficits being currency debasement. Furthermore, anticipation that a recession leads to lower consumption and therefore declining prices makes the fatal mistake of not understanding that production declines first, restricting product supply. The idea that a recession offsets currency debasement with respect to the general price level is simply untrue. We face the naked consequences of currency debasement together with changes in the balance of personal savings and cash retained relative to consumption, and the value imparted to the currency on the foreign exchanges.

Once the enormous distortions of covid had worked out of the system, the drawdown on US savings and the increase in consumer credit have not been significant. If it had, we would expect the purchasing power of the dollar to decline more than it has. For now, the greatest additional risk to the dilution of the dollar’s purchasing power comes from changes in foreigners’ collective valuation of the dollar, to which they are dangerously overexposed. For the moment, they exhibit a complacent attitude, broadly retaining their exposure without adding to it.

It has been changing, particularly when anti-dollar sentiment followed US sanctions against Russia at the start of her “special military operation” in Ukraine. While we in the NATO camp might feel it was justified, the refusal to honour Russian-held dollars is a default by the US Government. It is no different from a common debtor refusing to honour obligations to its creditors, a point which is understood by every nation not allied to the Americans. It is hardly surprising that those at the centre of this maelstrom are reducing their dollar reserves in favour of gold.

Foreign creditors’ loss of faith in the dollar for now is confined to relatively few nations, but it forms the background to prospective US debt funding. While offshore financial centres are prone to continue to accumulate dollars and underlying debt, national central banks and sovereign wealth funds are likely to quietly liquidate positions in US Treasuries and Agency bonds, a trend already reflected in China’s and Japan’s position. As the marginal buyers of US Treasuries, declining foreign appetite for funding the US Government’s budget deficit plus maturing debt together totalling over $10 trillion is bound to drive dollar bond yields higher.

Domestic conditions also indicate that the interest rate outlook is not for lower levels. Being overleveraged in their balance sheet relationships of assets-to-equity, risk-averse commercial banks are reducing their exposure to non-financial borrowers, forcing up their costs of borrowing. Far from the Keynesian’s benign analysis justifying an outlook for lower interest rates, they miss the point. 2024 is not about their textbook recession, it is about the difficulties of refinancing excessive quantities of unproductive debt.

For now, the US Treasury is in a sweet spot, with money funds reducing their deposits at the Fed in favour of Treasury bills yielding 5.4%, and the commercial banking system shifting its combined balance sheet into short-term government debt as well. But this is a one-off adjustment into short-term liquidity which has its limits. And we can then expect funding difficulties to emerge with respect to longer-dated debt.

Meanwhile, the US Government’s debt demands are starving the productive private sector of credit. The consequences are to be found in yet more bankruptcies for want of cash flow and overdraft facilities, and the failure of corporations of all sizes which took advantage of zero interest rate policies for financial engineering purposes. These otherwise stable businesses, even with utility characteristics, will likely follow Silicon Valley Bank into oblivion which similarly believed interest rates would never rise again.
The consequences for government finances

In our western welfare states, there is a common expectation that governments will intervene in order to rescue the economy from the consequences of an economic downturn. They go beyond mandated welfare commitments, being seen as having a democratic duty to intervene and support industries, irrespective of the downturn’s magnitude.

The extent to which these commitments arise will determine the magnitude of additional spending to which governments will be committed. America faces a presidential election this year without a debt ceiling. In a rerun of President Hoover’s failed interventions in the wake of the 1929—1932 Wall Street crash and the associated banking collapse, President Biden has the latitude to increase unfunded support as much as is necessary.

Essentially, this downturn is driven by an emerging debt crisis as described above, which will be worsened by attempts to stop the rot. When one accepts that western capital markets face an immense debt crisis it becomes clear that interest rates are bound to continue rising because lenders are becoming increasingly risk averse in order to avoid their own bankruptcies. The economic consequences for government finances will lead to unexpected increases in mandated welfare obligations, declines in tax revenues, calls to bail out indebted businesses and a further escalation of government debt.

All this costs governments, costs which they must recover through taxes and currency debasement. The government’s funding is either through taxing private sector actors who can ill afford to pay the taxes demanded (and being thrown out of work will be paying less anyway), or through higher prices the consequence of currency debasement. The outlook being for higher, not lower prices, the markets will require higher interest rates to compensate.

In short, major western governments are ensnared in debt traps. And as debt comes due, they end up refinancing it at higher interest costs, never reducing the rate of interest rate cost accumulation. The table below shows the current debt to GDP ratios for some major economies.

Some of these ratios have declined dramatically in the last decade, with Greece being the obvious example. Declining ratios follow from a combination of balanced budgets and economic expansion. Following the Napoleonic Wars, Britain was in a similar debt to GDP position to Greece today, with her ratio estimated by the Bank of England to be 184% in 1816. Without the mandated expense of a welfare state, it was able to control government spending, keeping it low as a portion of total economic activity. Furthermore, by operating a gold standard successfully, the cost of borrowing also remained low. But even then, it took almost a century to reduce the ratio to 28% in 1913.

On the eve of a severe economic downturn debt reduction can be ruled out. Ratios will be rising as further debt accumulates and GDP increases at a lower pace. But the real killer is high interest rates. And any attempt by the Fed to keep them suppressed would simply lead to weakening of the dollar on the foreign exchanges and pressure on the general level of prices to rise even further.

The funding situation is similar to that which faced the UK in the 1970s. Sterling was over-owned by foreigners who were sensitive to the deteriorating economic conditions under the socialist government. Sterling fell from 2.6 dollars to the pound in 1972 to 1.06 in March 1985. Funding dislocation drove gilt coupons to 15 ½% in October 1976.

Furthermore, an IMF loan was required to rescue UK government finances in January 1976. But as a creature of the US Government and its dollar, it is impossible for the IMF to come to the rescue of the US Government. The debt problem will either be solved by the US Government taking remedial action which is politically impossible, or the dollar’s purchasing power must collapse.
The fragility of the banking system

A further colossal difficulty looming for the US Government as well as its European and Japanese allies is banking systems rotten from the central banks down to the entire commercial banking network. Thanks to a previous combination of interest rate suppression and quantitative easing, all the major central banks have substantial losses, which properly accounted for, wipes out their balance sheet equity many times over.

It is a relatively simple matter to recapitalise a central bank. The central bank makes a loan to its shareholder (the government) recording it as an asset. A balancing entry is made on the liability side not as a deposit, but as equity. In most jurisdictions, legislative confirmation can be rapidly obtained. The Fed and the Bank of Japan can be expected to recapitalise themselves this way. The Bank of England has losses on its portfolio specifically underwritten by the UK’s Treasury and will not be required to recapitalise itself, losses simply being added to the national debt.

The problem facing the euro system of the ECB and its national central banks who are its shareholders creates additional difficulties. Theoretically, the ECB can recapitalise itself in the manner described above. But legislative confirmation will almost certainly be required in multiple jurisdictions, not just to recapitalise the ECB but individual national central banks as well. Additional questions over the TARGET2 imbalances are bound to be raised, particularly in Berlin given that the Bundesbank is owed over €1 trillion from other central banks through the TARGET2 system. Unless these thorny issues are resolved, the entire euro system and the currency itself risks collapse.

Another legacy of zero and negative interest rates is that slender credit margins encouraged commercial banks to leverage their balance sheets higher in order to protect bottom line profits. Consequently, they now face capital losses on bonds and higher funding costs than the income from bond coupons. And now that bankers are increasingly aware of the deterioration in business conditions, they are desperate to reduce lending risk. Inevitably, loan losses will mount over the course of this year threatening the equity of all thinly capitalised banking networks, spreading systemic risk globally. In the US, it is estimated that the collapse in commercial real estate values alone will wipe out over half total bank equity.

Even if interest rates and bond yields don’t fall slightly, there are other Silicon Valley Banks likely to fail. Rising interest rates increase the risks facing the entire banking system. Central banks with their respective government treasury departments will be faced with having to ensure that no banks fail. Inevitably, it will mean yet more credit expansion of base money, further undermining currencies’ purchasing power and leading to yet higher interest rates in time.
The consequences for financial asset values

Obviously, higher interest rates lead to higher bond yields, undermining bond values. And the yield on bonds is one of the most important determinants of equity values, the other being prospective earnings.

Clearly, faced with an economic downturn coupled with a developing banking crisis and the contraction of bank credit, equities should be declining on earnings prospects. But the S&P 500 Index has been hitting new highs, despite the rise in bond yields over the last three years. However, the valuation disconnection with bond yields has become extreme as shown in the chart below.

The negative correlation (the 30-year UST yield is inverted) is usually tight. The previous overvaluation for the S&P was the dot-com bubble in 2000. Today, the overvaluation is even more extreme. This suggests that the slightest disappointment over the interest rate outlook could crash the equity market.

This matters particularly for foreigners invested in US equities, which according to the US Treasury amounts to over $14 trillion at risk of a bear market.

Bond yields are already rising again, with the 10-year Treasury Note’s yield having risen from 3.75% to 4.16% — obviously not enough to undermine equities yet. But with a combination of the supply and demand issues described above and Middle Eastern troubles potentially escalating, the chances that yields are going no lower before tracking higher are mounting.
The outlook for gold

Clearly, the risks facing credit valuations are growing and a systemic crisis threatening the entire banking system looks increasingly likely. An expansion of central bank base money through new rounds of QE in an attempt to prevent falling financial asset values from triggering systemic events looks inevitable. The problem is common to the jurisdictions of all the major western currencies: dollar, euro, yen, and sterling.

The deployment of central bank credit in an attempt to secure the entire financial system will simply undermine the purchasing power of these currencies even more, risking yet higher interest rates and bond yields. Inevitably, this valuation crisis will destabilise currency relationships as enormous quantities of credit flees from one perceived risk to a lesser one. But it is here that an understanding is required of the difference between legal money, that is gold bullion and coin where there is no counterparty risk, and fiat-based credit which imparts values to all economic assets.

It is credit, including fiat currencies, which is at risk. Gold has broadly maintained its purchasing power over millennia, even though as explained by Gresham’s law it rarely circulates. It’s not generally realised what this means, but the chart below of major currencies valued in gold illustrates the decline of currencies since President Nixon suspended the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971.

Note the log scale, which records the percentage loss. In US dollars, the loss is 98.3%, and that is on top of the decline from $20.67 to the ounce which was the rate before 1934. Including that devaluation of the dollar, it has lost 99%. In sterling, the post 1971 decline is over 99%. Longer term it has been even worse, bearing in mind that one pound was exchangeable for a sovereign coin, which is currently valued at £390.

The euro comprised of national currencies before 2000 has declined by 98.7%, and the yen 96%. The lack of awareness that the purchasing power of fiat currencies has declined so much encourages investors to believe that their investments and property are the best hedges against inflation, without realising the true extent of currency value destruction.

The conventional approach to wealth preservation is governed by government diktat. The state makes the regulations and educates the compliance officers, now required to be appointed by every financial institution. Any investment manager advising or managing on a discretionary basis who promotes gold has difficulty justifying the case because gold is not a regulated investment. Accordingly, after decades of increasing regulatory intervention, gold is estimated to be represented by less than one percent by value in the estimated $150 trillion equivalent of global investment portfolios.

Before regulatory intervention by governments, as a base case it was generally reckoned that a balanced portfolio should have exposure to gold or related investments of 10%. At current prices, taking average portfolio exposure to just 2% requires the purchase of 23,300 tonnes, or a mixture of mining stocks and bullion to that value.

While it is true to say that the value of gold measured by its purchasing power has been remarkably stable over millennia, it is likely to rise spectacularly in the event of a general credit crisis, because the scale of liquidity to accommodate portfolio adjustment doesn’t exist.

I have been increasingly asked whether governments will deal with the gold question by confiscating and prohibiting ownership of it by their citizens. The first point to note is that by his executive order President Roosevelt did not confiscate gold, only requiring gold and gold notes to be submitted in return for $20.67 dollars per ounce. If Biden or Trump tried that line again, a question arises over the rate of exchange: will it be at the official rate of $42.22, or the market rate?

While there is no knowing the bounds of political stupidity in purely economic terms, we can assume that any move to banning gold ownership would require the agreement at G7 level at the least, which might be difficult to get. And the signal sent to other nations and central banks is likely to drive gold higher and the dollar down. Indeed, instead of putting off Westerners from owning gold, if they think this course of action is a strong possibility they would probably accumulate as much gold as they can.

And finally, the likelihood that a gold backed BRICS currency will make the agenda this year is high, with Russia the rotating chairman and over 200 meetings planned in Russia for existing and prospective members. Russia herself would gain significant advantages from reintroducing the gold standard dropped by Khrushchev in 1961. While the merits already appear to be appreciated at the highest levels in the Russian government, in the face of collapsing credit values in the western alliance Russia, China, and most of the Middle East will have little option to protect their credit markets by anchoring them to gold.

To summarise, we face a strong possibility that a combination of excessive debt, rising not falling interest rates, an extremely fragile banking system and a collapse in financial asset values are in prospect for this year. In these circumstances, only those prescient enough to possess real money, which is gold bullion and coin, will emerge with at least some of their wealth intact.

*  *  *

Dedicated to explaining why gold is money and the rest is credit. Dedicated to explaining economics relevant to the preservation of wealth. And dedicated to explaining geopolitical developments relevant to investors.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/macleod-summary-dangers-facing-us-2024
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1031 em: 2024-02-07 18:20:17 »
«Gold's Unbelievable Surge: Why It's Not Stopping at $2,000

Wealthion's Photo

by Wealthion

Wednesday, Feb 07, 2024 - 2:59


Join James Connor of Bloor Street Capital (@BloorStreetCapital ) in a conversation with John Hathaway, a Senior Portfolio Manager at Sprott Asset Management USA. They’ll bring their extensive experience in gold and gold equities. In this episode, we explore the intriguing dynamics of the gold market, including the impact of Federal Reserve policies on gold stocks, the intriguing relationship between gold and private equity, and the unique role of central banks in the gold market. Join us for a comprehensive analysis that challenges conventional wisdom and unveils the true potential of gold as an investment in today's economy.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2024-02-06/golds-unbelievable-surge-why-its-not-stopping-2000
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1032 em: 2024-02-14 02:45:24 »
«Gary Savage's Bold Call for $10,000 Gold

GoldCore's Photo

by GoldCore

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - 18:09

 

Last week we spoke to Gary Savage of Smart Money Tracker where he discussed the current state of the market and provides insights into potential future movements.

He discusses various topics, including stock market trends, four-year cycle lows, precious metals like gold and silver, and the oil market.

Gary predicts significant moves in commodities, such as gold reaching $5000, and silver hitting $100 or even $250. He also anticipates oil prices potentially rising to $200.

The discussion delves into technical analysis, market cycles, and potential implications for inflation and investment strategies.

As ever please let us know your thoughts and comments, we always love to read them. And if you have any questions for future guests, then send them our way.
 

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2024-02-13/gary-savages-bold-call-10000-gold
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1033 em: 2024-02-16 01:45:19 »
A inflação natural do Au (pela mineração) é de ca. de 2,5 % (ou 1 pouco +) ao ano - o q corresponde à produção anual em relação à quantidade total de Au existente.
Por o Au não ser controlado por ninguém, tem uma considerável força monetária (tem sido usado como moeda desde há ca. de 5000 anos).

Cortex Frontal com Joana Amaral Dias – Episódio 5: O Fim do Dinheiro Físico

Jornal SOL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGcEfb5ZMUE&t=2s
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1034 em: 2024-03-28 16:48:45 »
Acerca do Au:


«Gold: The Everything Hedge

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden

Thursday, Mar 28, 2024 - 04:10 PM


Authored by James Rickards via DailyReckoning.com,


Gold is trading at $2,211 per ounce this afternoon. Since its interim low of $1,832 per ounce on Oct. 5, 2023, gold has posted a 21% gain. That’s in less than six months. Almost half of that gain occurred in the one-month period from Feb. 11 to March 11.

That overall gain is especially impressive considering gold had been stuck in a fairly narrow range of $1,650–2,050 for the past two years. That’s a range of about 10% above and below the midpoint of $1,850. Starting from the high end of that range, gold traversed the entire range to the upside and beyond in just one month.

Now, any reference to “gold prices” is an interesting one. If you treat gold as a commodity, then the price per ounce measured in dollars is one way to think about price.

On the other hand, if you think of gold as money (as I do) then the dollar price is not really a price — it’s a cross-rate similar to euro/dollar (about $1.08 today) or dollar/yen (about 152 today). When analysts say the “price” of gold is $2,211 per ounce, I think of that data as showing the gold/dollar cross-rate = $2,211.

That’s useful because there are two sides to a cross-rate. While most analysts say that gold has rallied from $2,000 to $2,211 per ounce, it is just as valid and perhaps more useful to say that the dollar has crashed from 1/2,000 per ounce to 1/2,211 per ounce.

In this analysis, gold is constant (by weight) and the dollar gets stronger or weaker relative to gold. All of the recent market action points to a weaker dollar.

This mode of analysis also solves another market riddle. Given huge U.S. budget deficits, unprecedented levels of U.S. national debt, slow growth, rising unemployment and persistent inflation, how is it possible that the dollar has been so “strong” lately?

The answer is that it’s only been strong relative to the euro, yen, sterling and some other reserve currencies and as measured by certain dollar indexes (DXY, Bloomberg, etc.) composed of baskets of currencies (but not gold).

But that’s often because those other currencies are issued by countries with debt and growth problems even worse than the U.S.’ Those currencies dropping against the dollar have the look and feel of a good old-fashioned currency war.

It’s only when you use gold as your metric that the real weakness in the dollar becomes apparent, as it should. In effect, certain currencies are weakening against each other but all currencies are weakening against gold.

Returning to the “higher gold price” frame, there are a number of reasons for this trend.

The first factor is simple supply and demand. Mining output and recycled gold have been about flat for the past eight years running between 1,100 metric tonnes and 1,250 metric tonnes per year.

At the same time, central bank demand for gold has surged from less than 100 metric tonnes in 2010 to 1,100 metric tonnes in 2022, a 1,000% increase in 12 years. Central bank gold demand remained strong in 2023 with 800 metric tonnes acquired through Sept. 30, 2023. That puts central bank gold demand on track for a new record in 2023. There’s no sign of that demand slowing in 2024.

Constant output with surging demand by central banks does not by itself explain the recent surge in gold prices, but it is a contributor. Importantly, continued strong demand by central banks puts a floor under gold prices. This sets up what we describe as an asymmetric trade where downside is limited but upside is open-ended.

The second factor driving gold prices higher is the need for hedging. This is not the same as inflation hedging. It covers a larger list of risks including geopolitical risk, risks of escalation in the Ukraine and Gaza wars, Houthi efforts to close the Red Sea and Suez Canal, increasing risks of war with China and the intrinsic risk of a senile president of the United States.

As the list of risks grows longer and potentially more dangerous, the need for a hedging asset such as gold that does not rely on any nation-state for its value increases. I call gold the everything hedge.

Finally, gold prices are being driven higher by U.S. threats to steal $300 billion in U.S. Treasury securities from the Russian Federation. Those assets were legally purchased by the Central Bank of Russia as part of their reserve position.

The actual securities are held in custody in digital form at European banks, U.S. banks and the Brussels-based Euroclear clearinghouse. Only about $20 billion of those Treasury securities are held by U.S. banks; the majority are held by Euroclear. Those assets were frozen by the United States at the outbreak of the war in Ukraine.

Freezing assets means the Russians cannot collect interest or sell or transfer the assets or pledge them as collateral. Asset freezes are used frequently by the U.S. including in the cases of Iran, Syria, Cuba, North Korea, Venezuela and other nations. Often the assets are frozen for years but ultimately released to the owner as happened in the case of Iran after 2012.

Now the U.S. wants to go further and actually seize the assets, which may be viewed as outright theft under international law. The U.S. proposes to use the $300 billion to finance the war in Ukraine. European entities have expressed considerable uncertainty about this plan but the U.S. has maintained the pressure and wants to complete the theft before the June and July summits of G7 leaders and NATO members.

If the U.S. steals these assets, Russia will likely confiscate an equivalent amount of industrial and commercial assets located in Russia and owned by German, French, and Italian interests among others.

The bottom line is that if U.S. Treasury securities are not a safe investment, then securities of Germany, Italy, France, the U.K. and Japan are no better. The only reserve asset free of this kind of digital theft is gold. Nations are beginning to diversify into gold in order to insulate themselves from digital confiscation by the collective West.

Finally, there’s an interesting bit of math here, which I’ve explained in the past that shows each $100 per ounce increment in the price of gold is a smaller percentage gain because the denominator is larger.

That makes each $100 milestone ($2,400, $2,500, $2,600) easier to reach than the one before. People don’t really notice this; they just focus on the dollar amount of the gains. But this explains how price rallies gather crazy momentum.

All of these trends — flat output, rising central bank demand, hedging, protection against digital confiscation and simple momentum — will continue. Based on those trends, one would expect the gold price rally to continue as well.

The trend is gold’s friend.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/gold-everything-hedge
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

vbm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13744
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1035 em: 2024-03-28 19:48:38 »
Interesting! But I must reread it.

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1036 em: 2024-03-29 00:45:17 »
Interesting! But I must reread it.

Yes, I think it's going up!...   :)
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

vbm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13744
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1037 em: 2024-03-29 07:21:00 »
... even, more!? hum...
but very wise correlating gold price with dollar.

that link nor even trump will cut.

India and China and Switzerland
and London are wtaching Washington

Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5363
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1038 em: 2024-03-29 18:44:15 »
... even, more!? hum...
but very wise correlating gold price with dollar.

that link nor even trump will cut.

India and China and Switzerland
and London are wtaching Washington



Bom, Goehring & Rozencwajg já andam a falar nisso há muito tempo... por ex.:

«Once again, the winners would be gold investors.»

(Goehring & Rozencwajg, 08/ 31/ 2023)
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

D. Antunes

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5284
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Ouro - Tópico principal
« Responder #1039 em: 2024-03-30 00:41:24 »
O ouro vai de vento em popa. Reduzi um pouco a posição que tinha, com ganhos.
« Última modificação: 2024-03-30 00:41:59 por D. Antunes »
“Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.”
“In the short run the market is a voting machine. In the long run, it’s a weighting machine."
Warren Buffett

“O bom senso é a coisa do mundo mais bem distribuída: todos pensamos tê-lo em tal medida que até os mais difíceis de contentar nas outras coisas não costumam desejar mais bom senso do que aquele que têm."
René Descartes