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Debt ceiling negotiations during primary season? This should be great. Republicans are going to eat their young on this one.

On the list of reasons why nobody, even in a giant pool of careerist social climbers, wants to be speaker, having to rubber stamp this limit increase while every man and his dog uses you as a chew toy on national TV during the debates has to be right up there.
 
Economics 101 & Gold

Supply and demand is one of the most basic principles of economics. The principle states, simplistically, that with limited supply and strong demand the price will rise to reduce demand in line with supply. The much discussed supply squeeze in September this year did indeed see a modest rise in the USD spot price of gold and silver, but not in proportion to the supply / demand dynamic playing out. Why? We've discussed at length the fact the spot price is (currently) largely dictated by COMEX futures trades, which whilst huge in value, rarely see actual metal change hands and of which have a fraction of that traded in physical metal on account backing it up. Recent discussions on this were here and more briefly recently this week.

On Friday we talked about the percentage of investment in silver and what that represents against total fabrication capacity. We consider it a must read for anyone weighing up silver right now. Along the same vein, consider the graph below on gold. We discussed earlier this year the fact that the total financial assets value was c$294t and that available gold represented about $1.5t (it's very much worth a revisit). The graph below shows very clearly that statistic with historical context, importantly showing that prior to the commencement of this epic credit based financial assets expansion gold represented 5% of investment portfolios or 10 times that currently. The chorus of experts warning we are very near the catastrophic end of that debt splurge is growing strongly. So if even a small fraction of that $294 trillion tries to move into physical gold, the fundamental principal of supply and demand can only have one outcome. Physical supply / demand simply must overcome this paper based sham sometime and its feeling sooner than it has for some time. September was simply a small preview

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US Fed, Markets Dancing to the Music

Early this morning our time the US Fed's FOMC released their minutes of this month's meeting. As with previous announcements, analysts and markets around the world were hanging on any change in wording. With all the poor recent economic data and rupturing of financial markets last month, next to no-one expected a rate rise this month. Regardless, the all-important wording was scrutinised to determine when (if) they might do it. And with the omission of a few key words the odds of a December US rate rise jumped from 34% to 47% and predictably shares and gold tumbled whilst the US dollar soared. Interestingly this time though, shares resumed what was already a strong day, largely off Apple stocks, to shrug off concerns of the rate rise and finished higher (don't forget 53% still think it won't happen). Also the silver spot price rebounded almost back to where we finished yesterday afternoon after a big surge before, and drop after, the Fed announcement.

With US and global economies still weak there remains no growth/inflation/employment reason to raise (listeners to the Weekly Wrap podcast know full well). This could still just be a case of the Fed knowing at some stage you have to rip off the bandaid even if the wound hasn't healed because you just make the underlying issue worse and worse. But for now the free money continues. There is an oft repeated quote from the then (now former) CEO of Citi, Chuck Prince made in 2007 immediately before the GFC crash which saw Citi, and most other, shares plunge and the world come perilously close to a complete financial meltdown:

"The music is still playing, so we're still dancing."

Global central banks (Fed, ECB, BoJ, PBoC, RBA etc) are desperately cranking the handle of their 'free money' music boxes and the financial market monkeys continue to dance. Ironically a rate rise could well be the trigger for the end of the music, but regardless when the music gets as out of control as it currently is, it will stop. It always does.
 
NIRP Expands

The US Fed recently admitted contemplating it, now half of Europe is doing it, and bets are firm for Tuesday that Australia will head towards it. NIRP (negative interest rates policy) is the new ZIRP (zero interest rates policy). The US has been on ZIRP now since soon after the GFC, desperately trying to dissuade saving and promote debt fuelled risk 'investment'. It has done a wonderful job of driving up financial assets (shares, bonds, property) enriching the rich, but left retirees and other savers with nothing. Wall Street wins, Main Street suffers.

But it's also not working for the broader economy. So what does a desperate central bank do to force growth and inflation? ZIRP it. That's right, you PAY for the right to hold Government Debt. Negative yield. The table below should be nothing short of alarming, showing over half of all European issued sovereign 2 year debt yielding negative returns, and as we reported in today's Weekly Wrap https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...0th-october-2015/tabid/88/a/1086/default.aspx, Sweden is taking it to a whole new level.

ZIRP.jpg


So if you have to pay the bank to hold your money it would see people not banking cash right? Denmark are one step ahead and proposing banning cash forcing it's citizens to bank their money so they can purchase on cards etc. Extraordinary stuff, and clear signs of a financial system in disarray.

As we reported a couple of weeks ago, a Fed spokesman said they had discussed NIRP in the past but were afraid of what might happen. That it has been implemented for some time now in Europe and nothing has broken means they are no longer afraid of it if they need to. He seemed to gloss over the fact even NIRP is not working in Europe as just last week the ECB flagged even more QE (money printing) to try and spur on growth and inflation.

There has never in history been a clearer difference between currency and money. Gold and silver are money, the rest is pretend "music".
 
Why a Rate Rise Could Be Good for Gold & Silver

Gold and silver took a hit last week on the 'news' that the US Federal Reserve ("Fed") is now looking more likely to raise rates in December (i.e. one doesn't need a safe haven investment if things are awesome enough to raise rates). We are clearly on record stating their doing so would not be because the broader US economy is in good enough shape, but because at some stage they need to rip off this financial markets bubble inflating bandaid. There is another thing to consider and that is they have a particularly lousy track record of predicting markets and the ramifications of their actions. London's The Telegraph ran a story over the weekend titled "Another recession is coming - the only question is how bad" including the following quote from the legendary American economist Rudi Dornbusch:

"none of the US expansions of the past 40 years died in bed of old age; every one was murdered by the Federal Reserve"

The article rightly goes on to point out:

All US business cycles have ended on the actions of the Fed raising rates. "invariably they leave it too late, so that when they do apply the brakes, the economy crashes."

Both the US and UK current growth expansions (mild as they are) are getting long by historical standards. In the US "a full 76 months, against the 58.4 month average for the 11 post war cycles identified. Only three of these cycles have been longer." This one more than any other fuelled by printed money and zero interest rates not fundamentals.

The UK is already showing very real signs of a slow down and the OECD is pointing "unambiguously to a pronounced UK slowdown and to a loss of growth momentum in the US."
Europe and China (they don't mention Australia, but us too) are both so bad they are easing monetary policy not talking about tightening.

As we stated earlier re 'the bandaid' they go on to say:

"The other is that it [Fed] simply yearns, like the rest of us, for a degree of normality in interest rates. If it can't do it now, with the economy growing, when will it ever?

Regrettably, it may already be too late. After seven years of "unconventional monetary policy", the world economy is once more drowning in easy credit, with few of the underlying causes of the global financial crisis even remotely addressed."

Clearly the threat of raising rates should not be considered 'bad' for gold and silver indeed almost the opposite seems the case.
 
NY Fed Gold Outflows Coincidence or Signal?

It would be fair to say the thrust of a lot of what we report deals with the various threats of an economic collapse soon and the need to protect your wealth (and indeed profit) through the world's oldest and most trusted safe havens, physical gold and silver. The main catalyst for the severity of the coming crash is the unprecedented monetary stimulus program the world's central banks have undertaken trying to kick start the post GFC global economy, preaching 'gold is dead, hop on board the free currency train'. The irony is they have also been BIG buyers of gold over that same period. Since the world left the gold standard in the early 70's, central banks were selling their gold; it was all about credit expansion. Since the GFC (the first major glimpse of the implications of debt fuelled expansion) central banks have been big buyers of gold each and every year. Note below the correlation with the gold price until 2013

Gold-q3-2015-Net-central-bank-gold-purchases.jpg


What's more, recently more of them have been removing their gold holdings from the world's biggest gold vault, the US Federal Reserve in NY and repatriating it. It doesn't take a genius to figure out why. The chart below shows very clearly the historic context where there were also major withdrawals immediately prior to the GFC. Coincidence or do they know what's coming and are getting ready?. again. Also at what point will the price suppressing paper shorting on COMEX fail and the price correlation pictured above resume?

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'Eastern' Gold Demand Outstrips Production

Yesterday we discussed the outflows from the NY Fed gold depository. Whilst most of that is reportedly going back to Europe it's not the only gold leaving the 'West' in droves. Indeed the much spoken of move of physical gold from 'West to East' is alive and well. The chart below encompasses the 'new' Silk Road countries of Russia, China, India and Turkey. There are a few things to note from this chart. Look down the bottom and you will see the grey horizontal line representing global production of gold. You will note quite clearly that since 2013 these 4 countries alone are consuming more than total global production. With outflows from the speculative gold investments like the ETF GLD it is clear where the shortfall is coming from. And there is no sign of this letting up. In 2 weeks China is on target to consume more gold than in any year before and with an expect 2000t by year end is set to surpass the previous record year of 2013 by over 400t. Russia's press has just quoted a Government official as stating they believe gold is the best form of money and will form the basis of the next monetary system. They are on record as aiming to double their current gold holdings. As reported in a recent weekly Ainslie Podcast India is still on target for around 1000t this year despite their draconian restrictions. They are set to launch their gold monetisation scheme to unlock internal supply but few analysts expect this to curb demand.

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If It Looks and Smells Like a Recession

Gold took another hit last night (along with bonds and shares) as the US Fed Chair, under testimony before Congress, gave more hawkish comments about a December rate rise. The 'market' odds are now at 60%. So let's just remind ourselves of how swimmingly the US economy is really going. The following are courtesy of ZeroHedge but provide a nice summary. First let's start with something visual. One of the real bellweathers of the economy is the Factory Orders index. They released new figures this week and for the 11th month in a row the YoY number has fallen, and this time a whopping 6.9%. But check out the graph below and note the light shaded pink areas are previous recessions. We are always reminded of the famous saying "The 4 most expensive words in investment are 'this time is different'"

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Zerohedge also put together a list of 18 things pointing to a recession:

#1According to the biggest bank in the western world, British banking giant HSBC, the world is already in a "dollar recession". Global GDP expressed in U.S. dollars is down3.4%so far in 2015, and total global trade has fallen8.4%.

#2In September, Chinese exports were down3.7%compared to one year ago, and Chinese imports were down a whopping20.4%compared to a year ago.

#3Demand for Chinese steel is down8.9%compared to a year ago.

#4China's rail freight volume is down10.1%compared to last year.

#5In October, South Korean exports were down15.8%from a year ago.

#6Accordingto the Dutch government index, a year ago global trade in primary commodities was sitting at a reading of 150 but now it has fallen all the way down to 114. What this means is that less commodities are being traded around the world, and that is a very clear sign that global economic activity is really slowing down.

#7U.S. exports aredown 11%for the year so far. The only other times they have fallen this dramatically since the turn of the century were during the last two recessions.

#8Since March, the amount of stuff being shipped by truck, rail and air inside the United Stateshas been falling every single monthon a year over year basis. If less stuff is being moved around the country, does that mean that economic activity is growing or declining? The answer, of course, is obvious.

#9The ISM Manufacturing Index, which is the most important measurement of U.S. manufacturing activity, has fallenfor four months in a row. [this was printed before the abovementioned factory orders reinforced this further]

#10The Dallas Fed's Manufacturing Outlook has droppedfor 10 months in a row.

#11Wholesale sales in the U.S. have fallen to the lowest levelsince the last recession.

#12The inventory to sales ratio has risen to the highest levelsince the last recession. This means that there is a whole lot of unsold inventory that is just sitting around out there and not selling.

#13It looks like a new housing slump is emerging in the United States. Sales of previously owned homes fellby 2.3%in September.

#14New home sales in the United States declined by a whopping11.5%in September.

#15Wal-Mart is projecting that its earningsmay fallby as much as 12%during the next fiscal year.

#16Accordingto John Williams of shadowstats.com, if the government was actually using honest numbers the unemployment rate in the United States today would be 22.9%.

#17According to Challenger Gray, layoffs at major firms have risen to the highest level that we have witnessedsince 2009.

#18The number of job openings in the United States declined by5.3%during the month of August. That was a very large plunge for just one month.

As we wrote on Monday this certainly doesn't mean they won't raise rates in December and that certainly doesn't mean bad news for gold. Indeed it could well be the straw that breaks the camel's back. Either way, strap yourself in for an interesting ride
 
New Gold Record 293oz Paper to 1oz Real

Short and sweet today because sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. We've explained before the set up in COMEX future contracts v actual gold eligible for delivery before so revisit here to understand. Please ask yourself if the chart below looks in anyway real and whether holding the real thing, physical gold, make sense.

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October's NFP The REAL Story

We warned our Weekly Wrap podcast https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...th-november-2015/tabid/88/a/1093/default.aspx listeners to brace themselves for Friday night's NFP employment number fallout and it didn't disappoint. Printing 271,000 new jobs and a 5% unemployment rate it was a headline that predictably saw shares, bonds and precious metals hit as the USD surged. 'Good news is bad news' continues to reign as this is seen as the final straw to a December rate rise. But as usual one need only look behind the headlines to see a vastly different story. For a start the participation rate remains at a 37 year low as 94.5m Americans are not even counted in that 5% because they have given up / officially left the labour force. If you include these "discouraged" workers who have left the market, that unemployment number jumps to 23%.

In the core employment sector of 25 54 year olds we actually saw 119,000 jobs LOST. The 55's and older saw a gain of 378,000 as they apparently took part time jobs replacing those lost. That also isn't apparently contained to just one each, as there were an extra 109,000 multiple job holders providing a clear indication of stress in the market as people struggle to make ends meet.

Even more telling is that just over half of that 271,000, or 145,000, of the new jobs are from the 'dark art' birth-death model which estimates unreported jobs losses from closing businesses and likewise new jobs in new business openings. Thursday's Initial Jobless Claims for the week surged 6.15% and so far in 2015 there have been just under 545,000 layoffs, 31% higher than 2014. If you want a clear insight into the reality of new small businesses (and the sustainability of employment) the following chart tells it all. Anyone simply accepting that new startups are miraculously creating or keeping all these jobs might want to reconsider (the previous red arrows are recessions).

US%20new%20bus.jpg


All that said, the headlines give the Fed something to hang their hat on for a December rise. Whilst we in no way think it will create a sustainable situation (higher rates on record debt, higher USD forcing the US into recession, and EM chaos) it may represent a point from which gold and silver will be able to truly rally rather than this drawn out jaw boning by the Fed weighing them down. Don't fear the rise https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...-for-gold-silver/tabid/88/a/1088/default.aspx.
 
Why SMSF & Gold Make Sense Right Now

The odds of a US rate hike in December are certainly shortening and opinion is torn on whether this will be good or bad for the UISD gold spot price. You can read more on that here https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...-for-gold-silver/tabid/88/a/1088/default.aspx. But one thing there is little speculation on is that an increase in rates will almost certainly see an increase in the USD and an increase in the USD will almost certainly see a decrease in the AUD. This is a simple point but one that is lost on many Australian investors when considering gold and silver. We've explained this at length before (most recently here https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...a-e2-80-99s-woes/tabid/88/a/1036/default.aspx), but a falling AUD sees your gold and silver increase in value in the only thing that matters to an Australian (or any other country than the US); your local currency.

It's not just the USD strength that will put downward pressure on the AUD, the front page of today's AFR is a reminder of what is ahead for Australia. The OECD has again cut the growth forecast for this year to 2.2% and next year down from 3% (just 5 months ago) to 2.6%. Whilst that's not good, try and remember the last time the OECD or IMF etc actually increased a growth forecast since the GFC? They are continually and consistently revised down as hope loses out to reality. They are also assuming 3.2% Government spending growth to get to that measly 2.2% this year. In our new norm of constant deficits that spending is by definition more debt. They also forecast our unemployment rate will remain at around 6.2% for 2 more years seeing the most sustained period of high unemployment since the 1990's recession.

This should all be ringing alarm bells for Aussie investors and particularly for their superannuation. Why the latter in particular? Well you are essentially 'forced' to invest your super, you can't simply pay off your home loan etc with what spare money you may have. Most managed super funds are weighted very heavily into Aussie shares and you have little to no say in that. At these low (and likely lower) interest rates you get essentially no return after tax if you save cash either. All the while too, the declining AUD is increasing the cost of most goods that zero growth cash can buy. Those who take control of their super through a Self Managed Super Fund (SMSF) have the opportunity to look at investments like gold and silver that actually benefit from a declining AUD and balance their wealth accordingly. You can learn more about SMSF here https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/SMSF.aspx, call us or come and visit to talk through this further. It's incredibly simple.
 
A Critical Message From the 'Seas'

There a couple of 'barometers' of the health of the world's demand for 'stuff'. The production and consumption of stuff is the key fundamental of any economy. Australia is feeling the pinch now as China doesn't need our commodities anymore. China is feeling the pinch as it can no longer keep producing infrastructure (needing our commodities) at the pace it has done since the GFC. It did that through quadrupling it's debt from $7 trillion to a simply staggering $28 trillion over just six years after the GFC. It's not just China but a worldwide slump in commodities as illustrated clearly below (as at this week) yes we are nearing an all time low and it's heading down quickly.

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China is also feeling the pinch as the world wants less of the stuff it makes. We saw more terrible data over the weekend showing the continued slump in both imports and exports for China and the chart below again paints a clear picture. More broadly, the international Baltic Dry Index (the so called bellweather of global consumption) has dropped to 631,the lowest level for this time of year (the usually strong pre Xmas month) in history and getting very close to an all-time historical low.

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The US is trying to paint the picture that this is just 'the rest of the world's' problem but data shows that a full third of all containers leaving their 2 biggest ports are empty. This will only worsen as the USD gains strength, eroding their already weak competitiveness, as the Fed talks up an imminent rate rise. Let's be clear, this is a global economic downturn and the US is firmly part of that. Whilst the IMF and OECD etc keep revising down growth projections around the world, sometimes you need to hear from where the rubber hits the road. The CEO of the world's largest cargo shipping company, Maersk, just had this to say:

"The world's economy is growing at a slower pace than the International Monetary Fund and other large forecasters are predicting. We believe global growth is slowing down. Trade is currently significantly weaker than it normally would be under the growth forecasts we see. We're a little bit more pessimistic than most forecasters."
And this is in a world where most developed countries are at zero or even negative interest rates or reducing them towards that (ala Australia) and, critically, before any supposed US rate rise. What happens if they do?
 
When you look at these sorts of non-headline figures for China to infer real GDP, like electricity consumption and real freight tonnage, then things look truly grim. Similar story when you look into the breakdown of the "good" jobs figures in the US, gains are all for people over 55, for men aged 24-55 and all demographics in important sectors like manufactoring or primary production things are looking truly dire. They're also not hitting their inflation targets in the US, even though real cost of living is going up.

It's a very very mixed up crazy world we live in. I must admit that I'm in the tin foil hat camp that says they won't raise and didn't intend to or if they do it will be one and done for appearance sake.

There are some very interesting comments from regional Fed presidents that are saying that they should be doing more QE rather than raising rates. On a target/expected rate chart where they asked to plot where they thought rates would be next year one of them, a real genuine accrual Fed president, predicted negative rates in the US.

Whether you think they should or shouldn't do it I don't think anyone can call this a consensus environment.

Their back is certainly up against the wall though, after not raising in March or September and getting the big numbers everyone was looking for they will struggle to find the words to explain away not raising if they don't bite the bullet without (further) seriously damaging their credibility. Really this is the showdown all us PM bugs have been looking for, a rise is being priced in and it's either going to happen now or likely not at all. Either way I'm fairly happy, if it happens I'll be currency hedged and I'll happily buy the smackdown all day, if it doesn't happen then the market at large will be joining us and the Peter Schiffs and Marc Fabers of the world through the looking glass into the "easy money forever" world we've actually already been living in for years.

One way or another we'll have clarity in a few weeks.
 
Real Gold, COMEX Gold & THAT Crash

A simple pictorial journey of logic today The first graph below shows a composite illustration of all major US share indices

us%20shares%20composite.gif


Keeping in mind buying shares is buying a share in the future earnings of a company, the next graph shows the new trend in said US earnings

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The first graph represents a huge increase in investment funds moving into the US shares bull market. The second could be writing on the wall (together with the global slowdown reported yesterday) and of course just one month out from the supposed rate rise of December, itself a possible trigger for the overdue correction. Whilst we've had all those funds moving into US equities, the opposite has been the case for gold by the same western investors (who needs gold when everything is awesome?). Now consider the telling story of east v west in gold

SGE-vs.-COMEX.gif


Now to be clear this is not a direct comparison, but it is instructive nonetheless. COMEX contracts deliver physical gold rarely as they are largely paper trades between short sellers and long buyers, closed out each month. That is of course until something happens (let's say, a big market crash) and one or two big buyers demand their metal now please. We reported recently the current record set up in this respect and it's a must read in this context https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...aper-to-1oz-real/tabid/88/a/1092/default.aspx. It would take just a $200m contract to demand delivery of real gold and there's not enough registered to do so (PS. December is traditionally the biggest month of deliveries in each year.)

The perverse thing is the COMEX trades, those most removed from physical reality, largely dictate the spot price. For now.

Meanwhile the canny Chinese have been taking delivery of physical gold, not so coincidentally as COMEX has seen outflows. The former are long term holders of the real stuff, the latter simply speculative traders. Note too, that 2,062t to China is just year to date. Predictions are for around 2,600t by year end. An all-time record.
So if China have consumed most of the gold and even a fraction of the c$300t of total financial assets try to move into the c$1.5t gold market on a sizeable correction what do you think might happen?
 
WGC 3rd Quarter Demand Trends

Yesterday afternoon the World Gold Council released their quarterly demand trends update for Q3 2015. As usual we provide the summary for you as follows:

India lead a price-led surge in gold jewellery demand to 631.9t

Global demand for gold jewellery grew 6% year-on-year as lower prices during July and early August attracted consumers. Q3 2015 was the strongest third quarter for jewellery demand since 2008.

A jump in bar and coin demand drove 27% growth in the investment sector

Investment demand was up to 295.7 tonnes of gold bars and coins. Demand for these products was 33% higher year-on-year. Outflows from ETFs in July were slightly offset by small inflows throughout August and September.

Central banks again bought in bulk, adding 175.0t to their gold reserves

Gold demand among central banks and other official institutions almost matched the 179.5 tonne record from Q3 2014. This is now 19 quarters of consecutive net purchases as gold continues to be recognised for its diversification benefits.

The technology space remains a challenging environment for gold

Gold used in technological applications diminished further in Q3. Substitution to lower-cost alternatives, and further economies in the volume of gold used in wireless chip production, saw demand in the sector weaken by 4% year-on-year to 84.3 tonnes.

Total supply increased marginally to 1,100.1 tonnes, despite a slight decline in mine production

Mine production inched lower to 827.8 tonnes as a number of new projects neared steady state production levels. Recycling activity shrank, as falling price encouraged consumers to buy rather than sell. A modest 20 tonnes of producer hedging was therefore the reason behind overall growth in the sector.
 
New Gold Records "Very Bullish"

Those paying attention are witnessing an historically bullish set up playing out in gold right now. We wrote recently of the continuing epic shift of gold from west to east https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...trips-production/tabid/88/a/1090/default.aspx and record number of futures contracts per ounce of registered gold https://www.ainsliebullion.com.au/g...aper-to-1oz-real/tabid/88/a/1092/default.aspx. We've now also seen a couple more very telling signals that can't be ignored. Firstly the registered gold inventory on COMEX has declined even further check out the graph below:"

Part of the significance of registered v eligible gold inventories is the real availability each presents (as we've explained previously). Case in point, last Thursday the Chinese gold kilo inventory stocks saw an all-time record daily withdrawal of nearly 713,000 oz.

We also learned late last week that September gold exports from London to China saw an all-time record high of 37.6 tonne (25% up month on month, 280% year on year!!). Note that London of course produces no gold, rather it is often the main holder of gold backing up the likes of ETF's etc. This is yet another clear illustration of the shift of west to east, speculator to long term holder, at a time of record gold demand. Total Chinese consumption also just surpassed the previous all-time record of 2013 at over 2200 tonne and at just week 43. This has all prompted Hebba Investments to last week issue this to investors:

"The Comex inventories have been falling for a while, but the fact that we just saw a huge gold withdrawal from China coupled with rising gold premiums is making us very bullish. Maybe this Chinese withdrawal was simply jewellers replenishing gold stock (bullish) or maybe this was a larger fund or entity recognizing low inventory levels on all gold exchanges and taking advantage of it (very bullish), either way despite the negative sentiment we are now really bullish on gold at these prices.
That is why we think that investors should consider keeping a large exposure to gold with positions in physical gold"
And that, Aussie investors, is in USD. The AUD set up is even better again.
 
Hope investing
Upon entering the lift to our office this morning the news headline said G20 leaders agreed on wanting to increase economic growth by 2%. I wryly thought 'and I agree I want a Ferrari'. In the reality of the current economic conditions there are simplistically 2 scenarios they can follow politically unpopular economic structural reforms or growth fuelled by, you guessed it, more debt. No prizes for guessing which is the most likely. Sure I could by a Ferrari, but the debt burden would likely cripple me. This is a simple analogy of the world we find ourselves in growth fuelled by too much debt is unsustainable.
Last night we learned of Japan entering its second recession since Abe took power in 2012 and implemented the unprecedented monetary stimulus program affectionately called Abenomics including central bank purchases of essentially all issued debt and incredible swathes of public shares. Clearly all that printed money, debt and zero rates is working a treat. Reality is setting in. It's why the US is so scared about raising rates. It hasn't worked, its creating a huge problem, but the market is hooked on free money. Where do you go?
One clear symptom of debt fuelled growth is the creation of bubbles in the 'free money' fuelled stock market. Even after the recent relatively small correction, the market includes a host of incredibly fanciful price earnings multiples and is dominated by high frequency trades using algorithms not fundamentals as a basis of trade.
The thing with real growth is it needs consumption. The thing with consumption is it needs prosperity for the masses not the share buying few. After debunking the latest Australian employment numbers (by the way the more independent Roy Morgan employment survey has unemployed at 8.8% PLUS under-employed at 8.6% - that's 17.4% in total) The Daily Reckoning's Vern Gowdie poignantly had this to say:
"The statisticians can fool some of the people, but not all of them. If people don't have genuine jobs or enough hours of employment, they won't spend money or go into debt (unless it is to pay for essentials).
This is why the economic data (that also has a thick coating of lipstick and make-up on) looks so weak.
Which is why we see negative interest rates in Europe. Which is why we see Japan still going full tilt with its wacky print-and-be-damned policy. Which is why we see such wailing and gnashing of teeth over a 0.25% interest rate rise in the US. Which is why Australia's GDP growth rate slumped to 2%. Which is why we are seeing mining companies scrambling to find creative ways to pay down their debts.
Next time you hear 'good news' on the unemployment front, think a little deeper than the headline."
Our point? One can too easily get caught up in market euphoria, supported by bogus economic data and hope based projections rather than reality based projections, especially if the hope is debt funded. Ask yourself honestly where you think markets are at. Then ask yourself if you have enough financial insurance through safe haven investments.
 
Cancelling Insurance Before the Storm

Yesterday's article touched on the term 'insurance' as a reason to own gold and silver. Some people don't like that term as a reason to buy gold and silver as they are doing so as an investment for capital gain based on 'buying low and selling high'. The word 'insurance' puts some off as it implies zero return. Have a look at the last 10 years and gold is up 127% - hardly zero and better than most shares or property. For many the golden rule of investment is preservation of capital, with a search for yield and capital gains secondary depending on one's appetite for risk. Call it insurance or call it preservation of capital, an allocation of your savings in to gold and silver has never looked more prudent. We won't go over old ground (you can read back our daily articles) but no one, no matter how bullish, can deny the world is in an unprecedentedly dangerous economic position.

However on the back of the rising USD we see gold and silver spot prices currently at over 5 year lows. It's enough to test the resolve of many investors. Again we remind you that in AUD both gold and silver are still up around 4% for the year (and the All Ords is down by 4.5%). You will find articles predicting a lower USD spot price but you will be hard pressed finding the same on AUD gold and silver. Many believe the bottom is in. Frankly, none of them really know and that is why you balance your wealth, having a bit of everything. But in times such as this, with record high debt, historically low growth, unprecedented monetary stimulus deployed around the world and the growing threat of outright war gold and silver simply must be considered as a sizeable percentage of your savings (and of course now on sale at 'bargain prices'). Bill Holter put's it simply:

"Let's ask a few questions to put this in perspective. If your local forecaster showed you the radar of a cat5 hurricane out in the gulf moving very slowly toward you, is there anyone or anything that could get you to cancel your homeowners or flood insurance? This is the case in today's financial and geopolitical world. You see daily where leverage has risen to previously unseen ratios. You have watched as interest rates around the world have been zeroed out and in many cases have gone negative. You see reported economic numbers that make no sense and are regularly contradicted by real world experience.

We mathematically have the largest financial hurricane of all time coming and will be a direct hit worldwide."
 
Quote of the Week (or Last 4 Years)

We very rarely quote any of the plethora of 'chart expert' or 'technical' timing predictions of what the precious metals market is going to do. Not only are they many and varied, but we question the effectiveness of technical analysis in what we consider (for now) to be a fairly manipulated market; one where there appears a disconnect between physical demand and commercial paper trades, with the latter currently dictating the spot price. Many know of Larry Edelson and many have not enjoyed his forecasts for the last 4 years as he has been quite bearish on gold and silver. He famously picked the November 2011 high and has been bang on since (again though we remind you in USD, not AUD). So here is what he released just yesterday:

"I've waited four long years to be able to say this:

This isthe beginning of the endfor the bear market that has depressed gold, silver and other commodities since 2011!

This is truly a red letter day for me: For four years now - ever since I called the exact top of the commodities market in November of 2011 - I've been known far and wide as a commodities bear.

I've begged, pleaded and even nagged my readers to "go short" gold, silver, oil and other commodities - to own investments that soar when commodity prices sink. (If you followed my lead you had the chance to grab some impressive profits.)

As recently as last month I told you it would be many months before this great bear market in commodities ended and that they would most likely bottom sometime next year; possibly even in June, July or even later.

Now I have no choice but to revise that forecast:

-RED ALERT -

My cycles charts are virtually screaming it:

The bear market in commodities is beginning to end NOW; more than SIX MONTHS EARLIER than I expected!

And as I just pointed out in my emergency briefing, "NEW Supercycle Profits" ...

-The cycles charts CONFIRM that the bear market in seven key commodities is beginning to end now ...

-The facts on the ground - the supply and demand fundamentals on gold, silver, oil, grains, copper and more - CONFIRM this conclusion ...

-Right now I'm eyeing aggressive GOLD investments with the potential to deliver gains of 1,215% ... 1,273% ... up to 1,303% ...

-And I'm also considering aggressive SILVER INVESTMENTS with the potential to deliver gains of 1,517% ... 1,896% ... up to 2,002%."
 
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