China  Becomes World’s Larest Gold Buyer - Buys 93.5 Tonnes Of Gold Coins /  Bars in Q1 - Gold Ownership Rising From Miniscule Levels 
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 07:46 -0400

Gold and silver are higher again today with the debt laden dollar, euro and yen all being sold. News that China has become the world’s largest buyer of gold bullion and has seen investment demand double continues to reverberate in the markets and may have contributed to this morning’s strength. China becoming the world’s largest gold buying nation is very important. While informed analysts have been saying that this would inevitably happen much of the commentary and most of the public remain completely unaware of the huge implications that Chinese gold demand has for the gold market. Chinese investors bought 93.5 tonnes of gold coins and bars in the first quarter. China produced 340 metric tons of gold last year and consumption was about 700 tonnes, leaving a gap of nearly 360 tonnes. Demand is forecast to increase due to the growing wealth of the Chinese middle class and deepening inflation in China. What is most important and rarely covered is the fact that gold ownership by the Chinese public remains minuscule. Especially when compared to other Asian countries such as Vietnam and India.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 07:46 -0400

Gold and silver are higher again today with the debt laden dollar, euro and yen all being sold. News that China has become the world’s largest buyer of gold bullion and has seen investment demand double continues to reverberate in the markets and may have contributed to this morning’s strength. China becoming the world’s largest gold buying nation is very important. While informed analysts have been saying that this would inevitably happen much of the commentary and most of the public remain completely unaware of the huge implications that Chinese gold demand has for the gold market. Chinese investors bought 93.5 tonnes of gold coins and bars in the first quarter. China produced 340 metric tons of gold last year and consumption was about 700 tonnes, leaving a gap of nearly 360 tonnes. Demand is forecast to increase due to the growing wealth of the Chinese middle class and deepening inflation in China. What is most important and rarely covered is the fact that gold ownership by the Chinese public remains minuscule. Especially when compared to other Asian countries such as Vietnam and India.
Zimbabwe To Trade Diamonds For Gold As It Prepares To Launch Gold-Backed Currency
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 11:35 -0400A week ago we presented the  idea floated by once hyperinflationary Zimbabwe, oddly jeered by most,  that the country is seeking to move to a gold-backed currency, adding,  somewhat surrealistically, that the "days of the US dollar as the  world's reserve currency are numbered." And if anyone should know a  hyperinflationary basket case, it's Zimbabwe. Well, today this bizarre  story just went fuller retard, after the country announced that it may  exchange diamonds for gold "so that it can have a gold-backed currency,  according to a recent proposal from the governor of Zimbabwe’s central  bank." Indeed we speculated previously why: "Zimbabwe, a country rich in natural resources, took  so long to figure out that it was nothing but a puppet in the hands of  western monetary interests." Well, others are now getting this idea -  Commodity Online reports that "The country is a resource hub: It  sits on gold reserves worth trillions. It has the world’s second  largest reserves of platinum, has got alluvial diamonds that can fetch  the nation $2 billion annually and even boasts of chrome and coal  deposits." And since Zimbabwe is now fully on board this whole  "pioneering" thing perhaps it should just go ahead and create the first  diamond-platinum backed currency. Just don't give China and Russia ideas  about floating a new reserve currency that actually has real commodity  backing. What's that, you say? They are launching one soon? Oh well.
Criminal Probe Into Goldman Starting? US Prosecutors Subpoena Vampire Squid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2011 23:14 -0400In yet another confirmation that Goldman's multi-million dollar push to advertise its humanitarian image on various websites has been a colossal failure, the WSJ has just broken news  that the firm will shortly be the proud recipient of yet another  barrage of legal inquiry in the form of subpoenas relating to its  mortgage-related business, only this time not from the SEC but from criminal prosecutors. This stems from Carl Levin's massive 639 page report which referred the firm to the justice department  (and whose findings were summarized best by Matt Taibbi),  an escalation which could rekindle not only a civil case against the  squid, but also potentially force the new District Attorney to finally  lob a couple of criminal indictments here and there, thus guaranteeing  that GS stock is about to be pulverized (and cementing those plans to  finally MBO the company, as the Fed's balance sheet has largely served  its purpose). The WSJ clarifies: "Subpoenas don't necessarily mean  criminal charges against Goldman or individuals at the firm are  inevitable or even likely. The company turned over hundreds of millions  of pages of documents to the Federal Crisis Inquiry Commission, a  10-member panel that examined the causes of the financial crisis.  Goldman also gave tens of millions of documents to the Senate Permanent  Subcommittee on Investigations." Yeah, but... ""Any step in the  direction of criminal charges would be bad news for Goldman's stock  price," said Jeff Harte, an analyst at Sandler O'Neill + Partners LP."  And now that Rolling Stone has peeled off the scab once more and made it  all too clear that the villain is and has always been GS, Lloyd may  find himself on the wrong side of the Q&A session all over again.

As if Spain did not have enough to worry about with now daily protests gripping the main cities (the live webcam for the daily festivities in Madrid can be found here), next according to Goldman's John Noyce not only are Spanish bonds on the verge of a technical breakdown (and yields about to breakout), but due to the very high correlation between the Bund-Spain spread and the inverse EUR, it likely means that should the market start pricing in the Spanish domino, then the EUR, already lagging the move, is about to take out 1.40 rapidly. And with Spanish spreads flying as is over concerns what the Spanish elections on Sunday could mean for the country and the region, we can see something snap in advance of the weekend any minute.
    
Another oops:
FITCH DOWNGRADES GREECE TO 'B+'; RATING WATCH NEGATIVE
Goldman Warns That Spanish Bonds, EUR Poised For Technical Breakdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 08:29 -0400
As if Spain did not have enough to worry about with now daily protests gripping the main cities (the live webcam for the daily festivities in Madrid can be found here), next according to Goldman's John Noyce not only are Spanish bonds on the verge of a technical breakdown (and yields about to breakout), but due to the very high correlation between the Bund-Spain spread and the inverse EUR, it likely means that should the market start pricing in the Spanish domino, then the EUR, already lagging the move, is about to take out 1.40 rapidly. And with Spanish spreads flying as is over concerns what the Spanish elections on Sunday could mean for the country and the region, we can see something snap in advance of the weekend any minute.
Norway Stops Aid Payments To Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 09:37 -0400And here comes the first domino: according to  Swiss journal NZZ, the Greek bailout is about to take a turn for the  worse. "Norway will first stop all further financial aid payments to the  highly indebted Greece. The reason is that Greece does not fulfill its  obligations descendants, the Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr   Store said on Thursday before the Parliament." And with Norway which is a  member of the European Economic Area, and actually one of the few  solvent and non-basket case European countries saying let the chips fall  where they may, it is just the first. Look for every other country  currently on the sidelines vis-a-vis Greece (and just as insolvent) to  follow suit as the European experiment falls apart. 
And A Little Fuel To The Fire: Greece Downgraded By Fitch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2011 10:32 -0400Another oops:
FITCH DOWNGRADES GREECE TO 'B+'; RATING WATCH NEGATIVE
 
 
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