The Coming Economic Collapse, Currency Induced Cost Push Inflation/Hyperinflation, Weimar Germany, Euro Collapse,
Zimbabwe Hyperinflation, Survival in Economic Collapse, World Economic Collapse, Dollar Collapse,
What Would Happen If the Economy Collapsed,The Coming Economic Depression.
Gold and Silver Will Protect Your Wealth.
Ron Paul is the only one I’ve seen in American politics that seems to have a
clue.
A pox on both their houses, the Democrats and Republicans.. However, in this
election if Ron Paul gets anywhere close to a nomination, I will certainly
support him.” - *in The Daily Crux*
*Jim Rogers is an author, financial commentator and successful international
investor. He has been frequently featured in Time, The New York Times,
Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times and
is a regular guest on Bloomberg and CNBC.*
There
was little to smile about in today's Treasury International Capital
data for June (as always 2 months delayed). As usual the press release was
chock full of irrelevant gross level data, so here is the bottom line.
The good news: despite all the posturing China, continued to buy
Treasurys, with its total increaseing from $1160 billion to $1165.5
billion. The bad news: China was more or less the only one buying, as
total LT Treasury activity saw a net sale of $4.5 billion in June: the first net sale of US paper since May 2009,
and only the third time we have seen a net sale of US paper since the
start of the Second Great Depression (the third time being,
paradoxically, just after the bankruptcy of Lehman, see chart below).
The bad news gets downright ugly when digging into the foreign
transactions. As is well known, total foreign purchases (or sales as the
case may be) consist of central bank transactions, as well as those by
non-monetary authorities, i.e., retail and institutionals. And here is
where we get today's record: at $18.3 billion in total non-central bank sales, this was the biggest one month sale of US Treasurys in history! Luckily,
in keeping with the maintenance of the optics of the global ponzi,
this was buffered by central bank purchases of $13.8 billion. With
everyone needing someone else to buy their debt we wonder just how much
longer, everyone will be able to buy everyone else's debt, even as sales are
bound to increase month after month. And the last really ugly news
(for ponzi'ists): while China may be posturing, Russia is doing
anything but: its holdings have plunged to a fresh multi-year low after
Putin gave the green light to dump another $5 billion in US paper,
bringing Russia's total to just $110 billion, a 38% drop from the $176
billion in October. A little birdie tells us gold is the primary
beneficiary of this asset roll over.
On this day, August 15th, 40 years ago, President
Nixon announced the end of the Gold Standard and the end of the Bretton
Woods international monetary system (see video of Nixon’s dramatic announcement here).
This was one of the most important decisions in modern financial,
economic and monetary history and is a seminal moment in the creation
of the global debt crisis confronting the U.S., Europe and the world
today. Nixon ushered in an era of floating fiat currencies not backed
by gold but rather deriving value through government “fiat” or
diktat. While Nixon justified the move was that the U.S. , then as
today, was living way beyond its means with the Vietnam war and
growing military industrial complex leading to large budget deficits
and inflation. Governments internationally including the French and
their President Charles de Gaulle were concerned about the debasement
of the dollar and began to exchange their dollar reserves for gold
bullion bars. Subsequent to Nixon’s decision 40 years ago, the U.S.
dollar has fallen from 1/35th of an ounce of gold to 1/1750th of an
ounce of gold today. This is not the fault of “speculators”, rather it
is the fault of profligate governments and central bankers debasing the
U.S. dollar since 1971 (except for Federal Reserve Chairman Paul
Volcker).
A
day after the US downgrade to AA+, Warren Buffett (who elsewhere
continues his op-ed uber-campaign in hypocrisy by writing in the NYT
that the government should "Stop Coddling the Super-Rich")
said that in his book the US is AAAA. Amusingly, hours later S&P
downgraded Berkshire to pari with the US. Judging by the record near
surge in volatility in the ensuing days, the market was not too
convinced with the octogenarian of Omaha's latest orations. What it was
more convinced by, judging by market results, was the fact that Bank of
America upgraded something totally different to an AAAA rating: gold,
with a $2000 12 month target. To wit: "High commodity prices have now
created a terms-of-trade shock for importers, feeding into current
accounts, the financial sector and, ultimately, sovereign debt. How will
these imbalances unwind? Physical gold is the ultimate
collateral because it has no credit risk, so EM Central Banks have been
diversifying their foreign exchange reserves into gold and other
non-dollar, non-euro assets in recent quarters. Looking ahead,
the deterioration in credit quality in Europe and the US coupled with
an increased probability of QE3 means these pressures will continue. As a result, we revise our 12-month gold target to $2000/oz."
Basically everything that Zero Hedge has been saying for about two and
a half years now. Naturally, this coming from Bank of America, should
set of contrarian call alarm bells everywhere. Regardless, here is
BofA's Michael Widmer explaining his call, as well as the full upgrade
report from BAC, which lately has far, far greater problems than
getting its commodities call right or wrong.
After it was disclosed that Bank of America's firesale of its China
Construction Bank is not going as well as expected, Moynihan's company,
which was trounced by the market in the past week, continues to shed
assets, this time offloading its $8.6 billion Canadian credit card
portfolio to TD Bank for an unknown amount, a deal about which all BAC
said was that the "transaction is expected to have a positive impact on
the company's Tier 1 common and tangible common equity and the
respective ratios." So it may also have a negative impact? That's
encouraging. This news follows earlier disclosure that BAC has sold its
UK and Ireland credit card business. Unfortunately for BAC
shareholders, as long as the CFC bad bank is not nationalized by the
Fed (sending its tracking CDS to parity with US default risk) such
incremental asset sales will continue. Which also means that as BAC
retains the non-performing assets, it is forced to sell its
cash-generating trophies. At what point will there be nothing left of
BAC but a husk that promises to everyone that going forward its Tier 1
ratio will be over 6% for real this time. And how long until the next
Reps and Warranties lawsuit against BAC's mortgage handling practices?
The
first August leading indicator starts off with a thud, after the
Empire State manufacturing index just confirmed that the recent brief
push higher was, well, transitory. Printing at -7.72, on expectations of
0.00, down from -3.76, the first diffusion index of the month just saw
a third consecutive contractionary print in a row, setting the stage
for much more ugliness in August. The summary was succint: "Business
conditions continue to deteriorate: "The general business conditions
index fell four points to -7.7. The new orders index also fell, inching
down to -7.8; the negative reading—the third in a row—indicated that
orders had declined. The shipments index held steady at 3.0, a sign that
shipments were slightly higher over the month. The unfilled orders
index continued to drift down, falling three points to -15.2. The
delivery time index was little changed at 0.0. The inventories index
dropped two points to -7.6, suggesting that inventory levels were down
slightly." What is surprising is not that the current outlook is
deteriorating, but that for the first time, the future index finally
cracked as the hopium has finally ran out: "The future general business conditions index fell twenty-fourpoints
to 8.7, its lowest level since February 2009. The future new orders
and shipments indexes dropped to their lowest levels since September 2001." I.e., hope is no more. And there is nothing to take its place.
The
ECB just disclosed its much anticipated weekly purchases under the SMP
(or direct monetization) program, which at €22 billion came well above
expectations of €15 billion, and represents the biggest weekly total
in the 66 weeks of purchases under the program, more than the previous
record €16.5 billion purchased in the inaugural week of the SMP.
Furthermore, as has been disclosed before on Zero Hedge, with a regular
(T+3) settlement on SMP purchases, this means that the full weekly total will
not be clear until next week's number is announced, and the presented
number is only indicative of the pre-settled purchases of Italian and
Spanish bonds. As before, what happens under the SMP is irrelevant
(although is occurring as predicted by
Zero Hedge back in November, when we said the SMP total is about to
double as the crisis spreads) since the only thing that matters is when
and how big the EFSF will become. Continuing monetizations at this rate
under the SMP is political suicide (because make no mistake: the ECB
is nothing but a political player now) for JC Trichet and his Italian
soon to be replacement. We can't wait to hear Germany's reaction to the
fact that cumulative SMP purchases (and thus "Weimar" risk) increased
by 30% in one week.
In 2011, so far gold has been the champion investment above and beyond any contender, including stocks and equities. At the announcement of the S&P downgrade of America’s credit rating, only gold showcased immunity. In
fact, gold has thrived (as we predicted) in the face of any potential
economic threat, from deflation in stocks, to inflation of fiat
currencies. Some may wonder, though, where silver has been while its big brother is flexing its investment muscle? While
traditionally, silver tends to follow market surges in gold, the past
eight months have been rather confusing for the cheaper metal. Admittedly,
silver has performed far beyond the predictions of slow witted
mainstream skeptics, but it still has not come anywhere near its true
potential, especially in light of gold’s incredible strides. Many
may be wondering how it was possible for gold to stampede into the
$1800 an ounce range after the downgrade while silver stayed completely
static at around $40 an ounce. The behavior of commodities markets has been, indeed, very strange…
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