Showing posts with label GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st, 2012-: Future Money Trends: The Day the World Ended

Future Money Trends: The Day the World Ended

9:10p ET Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Our friends at Future Money Trends have put together a couple of short mock-news videos depicting how international disputes could quickly spiral out of control with cataclysmic consquences for what we call our financial markets. While the videos together are only about eight minutes long, they may be enough to convince you to obtain all the gold and silver bullion you can -- and then start looking for a safe planet to keep it on. Future Money Trends calls its presentation "The Day the World Ended" and you can find the first part at YouTube here --

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJdgudIUHzs&feature=plcp

-- and the second part at the Future Money Trends Internet site here:

http://futuremoneytrends.com/theend.php

Your secretary/treasurer would have dispatched these sooner but, against the advent of an interruption in oil supplies, he wanted to buy a horse first. Now if only he could be trained to jump to Mars.

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st, 2012-.: Indian Government may offer bonds payable in gold.


Indian government may offer bonds payable in gold

Do they really think people will fall for such a promise rather than keep owning gold directly?
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Government May Issue Gold Bonds
By Mahua Venkatesh and Anupama Airy
Hindustan Times, Guragon, India
Wednesday, November 21, 2012

http://www.hindustantimes.com/business-news/WorldEconomy/Government-may-...

You may soon have options to invest in new financial instruments that are linked to gold, such as a possible gold bond.

With savings rates dropping from 35% about five years ago, the government, trying to boost savings and discourage hoarding of gold in physical form as a speculative activity, is planning to soon come out with attractive paper products including gold bonds, riding on India's craze for gold.

Though the details are yet to emerge, experts say that in such instruments investors may be allowed to invest cash or offer gold against an assured minimum return.

At the time of maturity investors are given the option of receiving gold or cash. The funds raised are likely to be used to build infrastructure projects. The government is expected to offer soverign guarantee to notified companies that can sell such bonds and back it up with hedging in global gold markets to assure minimum returns linked to the metal.

Top government sources told Hindustan Times that a gold instrument proposal was discussed at a recent high-level meeting on efforts to boost savings and investment rates in which the chairman of the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC), C. Rangarajan, and finance minister P. Chidambaram were present.

"As the recent RBI data showed a declining trend of savings by Indian households including bank deposits, it was suggested in the meeting that in order to attract household savings, paper products that are linked to gold be developed," a finance ministry official said.

Asked what would be the nature of these instruments, the official said, "We are still working out options. Gold bonds could be one of them."

India has never issued gold bonds but banks have gold deposit schemes that have not been very successful.
With gold prices soaring in the last couple of years, officials said there is a good chance that the new schemes would find takers unlike the past gold-linked schemes that were on offer that did not do well because investors preferred stocks that then offered higher returns. Now, with stock markets hit by high interest rates that lowered corporate earnings amid a global economic crisis, gold is treated as a safe haven.
"Uncertainty in the stock market coupled with U.S. fiscal cliff fear would favour gold and schemes and instruments linked to gold are likely to succeed," said senior economist D.H. Pai Panadikar.

However, a official in the Planning Commission said, "Breaking the trend of Indian households that are keen to hold gold in physical form to parking funds in instruments that are linked to gold will take time and may not happen immediately."

India is the largest consumer of gold in the world and largest investor in gold -- mostly bought as coins, jewels, and bars.

India and China account for nearly 50% of world demand for gold either as jewellery or investments. This year India imported gold worth $60 billion amid rising prices, while in 2011 it was worth $40 billion, putting pressure on the country's current account deficit that may in turn depreciate the rupee.

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Join GATA here:
Vancouver Resource Investment Conference
Sunday-Monday, January 20 and 21, 2013
Vancouver Convention Centre West
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
http://www.cambridgehouse.com/event/vancouver-resource-investment-confer...

GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st, 2012-.: Antrew Mguire: Price suppression mechanics of GLD and SLV


Andrew Maguire: Price suppression mechanics of GLD and SLV

1:24p ET Wednesday, November 21, 2012

In commentary posted at Turd Ferguson's Internet site, the TF Metals Report, London monetary metals trader and silver market rigging whistleblower Andrew Maguire explains how the gold and silver exchange-traded funds, GLD and SLV, are used by the major bullion banks for price suppression. The commentary is headlined "Price Suppression Mechanics of GLD and SLV" and it's posted at the TF Metals Report here:

http://www.tfmetalsreport.com/blog/4327/guest-post-price-suppression-mec...

GATA | THE GATA DISPATCH -November 21st, 2012-.:Bundesbank won't explain sale of gold even if it's only to Finance Ministry for coins :


Bundesbank won't explain sale of gold even if it's only to Finance Ministry for coins

After all, one explanation might necessitate another, and then secret intervention in the gold and currency markets might be compromised. Our German friends should pounce on this. But congratulations to Bloomberg News for having the wit and initiative to ask the German central bank about the reduction in its gold reserves. Questioning central banks about their gold reserves and their activities in the gold market doesn't happen much with mainstream financial news organizations. Imagine if it became a habit.
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Brazil Boosts Gold Reserves to the Highest in More Than 11 Years
By Nicolas Larkin
Bloomberg News
Wednesday, November 21, 2012

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-21/brazil-boosts-gold-reserves-to-...

Brazil raised its gold reserves for a second month in October to the highest level in more than 11 years as emerging nations from Kazakhstan to Russia boosted holdings by more than 40 metric tons.

Brazil's holdings expanded 17.2 tons last month to 52.5 tons, the most since January 2001, according to data on the International Monetary Fund's website. The country's 1.7-ton purchase in September was the first since December 2008. Kazakhstan's holdings increased 7.5 tons, Russia added 0.4 ton, and Turkey's reserves rose 17.5 tons, the data show. Germany, the second-biggest holder, after the U.S., cut gold holdings by 4.2 tons, the first reduction since June.

Central banks have been expanding reserves as the metal heads for a 12th straight annual gain and investors hold a record amount in bullion-backed exchange-traded products, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Nations bought 373.9 tons in the first nine months of the year and full-year additions will probably be in the "bottom end" of 450 to 500 tons, the London-based World Gold Council estimates.

"This is a chunky purchase by a central bank, and the gold market will likely sit up and pay attention," Edel Tully, an analyst at UBS AG in London, wrote today in a report, referring to Brazil's addition. "Today's news confirms much of the market chatter at the time that official-sector buying was taking place and was one of the key factors that gave prices a reasonable floor last month."
Germany holds 3,391.4 tons, the IMF data show. The Bundesbank declined to comment on the past month's gold reserves, spokeswoman Susanne Kreutzer said, adding that the central bank reserves 7 tons a year to sell to the Finance Ministry for minting. The year started on Sept. 27, she said. The Bundesbank sold about 0.7 ton to the finance ministry in June and 4.7 tons in October 2011 to mint commemorative coins.
Gold for immediate delivery was little changed at $1,726.99 an ounce by 10:57 a.m. in London. Its gained 10 percent this year. Holdings in gold-backed ETPs reached a record 2,604.9 tons yesterday, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
"The IMF figures showed continued strong buying by central banks," said Dan Smith, a commodities analyst at Standard Chartered Plc in London. "This continues the trend of recent months and we expect this to support gold prices."
Turkey's bullion holdings have increased due to it accepting gold in its reserve requirements from commercial banks. Belarus expanded holdings by 0.1 ton in October and Mexico reduced them by 0.2 ton, the IMF data show.
Gold accounts for about 0.5 percent of Brazils total reserves and 20 percent of Kazakhstan's, according to the World Gold Council. That compares with more than 70 percent for the U.S. and Germany, the biggest bullion holders, the data show.

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Join GATA here:
Vancouver Resource Investment Conference
Sunday-Monday, January 20 and 21, 2013
Vancouver Convention Centre West
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
http://www.cambridgehouse.com/event/vancouver-resource-investment-confer...