Showing posts with label official gold reserves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label official gold reserves. Show all posts

01 February 2023

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - Central Banks Buy Most Gold Since 1967

 

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”

Upton Sinclair

"It is important to bear this in mind, because it tends to knock down the assertion that the current financial crisis is somehow an act of God, something that just happened.  There was an intent to subvert the regulatory process, to increase leverage beyond what has long been known to be prudent, and to engage in systemic fraud with a group of enables and agencies, such as the ratings firms, in order to reap fabulous personal profits for a small group at the expense of the many. 

There was planning, premeditation, malice aforethought. They may not have intended to harm; they just did not care. They really truly did not care, if they got theirs.  Until the banks are restrained, and the financial system reform, and balance restored to the economy, there will be no sustained recovery.

And there can be no better start than to stop the gambling with the public money that is the core of the existing US banking system.  The parallels with organized crime and the subversion of the public interest through graft and corruption are compelling.  And one thing we must accept is that the financiers will never be able to reform themselves, to regulate themselves, to even tell the truth overmuch about regulation while they are still 'in the game.'  It goes against their very nature, their creed, the rules of their profession. They keep what they kill, and everything that is not theirs is fair game."

Jesse, Restoring Glass-Steagall, 28 October 2009

"Successful crime is dignified with the name of virtue; the good become the slaves of the wicked; might makes right; fear silences the power of the law."

Lucius Annaeus Seneca

“Those entrapped by the herd instinct are drowned in the deluges of history.  But there are always the few who observe, reason, and take precautions, and thus escape the flood.  For these few gold has been the asset of last resort.”

Antony C. Sutton

Just another day in the Pax-American Metaverse.

The FOMC raised interest rates the expected 25 bps.

And in the end Wall Street read this as dovish, and rallied to beat the band, going out near the highs.

The NDX set a new 'third high.'  

The SP 500 was lagging and failed to set a new high.

The Meta stock was soaring after hours dye to 'not as bad' as expected results.

The Dollar slumped hard.

Gold and silver rocketed higher.

While stocks were soaring the Metaverse, back in the real world:  Central Banks Buy the Most Gold since 1967  

And the times, they are a-changing.

Why didn't the spokesmodels, chief strategists, breathless Mahoneys, and sock puppets talk about this historic development, which has been slowly unfolding since before 2009??

Yeah, buddy...

Non-Farm Payrolls on Friday.

Let's see if bully can keep it up.

With these jokers its always easy come, easy go.

Have a pleasant evening.

 



29 November 2014

Switzerland Leads In Gold Sales Among Central Banks Since 1993


Although they are still among the top ten in total gold holdings, Switzerland has been one of the largest sellers of gold among official entities since 1993.
 
It is no surprise then that some of the people of Switzerland have taken to a referendum to provide their opinions on this to the Swiss National Bank.
 
With regard to the second chart, personally I do not believe that the World Gold Council estimates are correct for China at all, and probably Russia.
 


Source: Wikipedia, Gold Reserve

27 August 2013

One of the Most Important Gold Charts That You Should Remember


"We looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further. A further rise would have taken down one or several trading houses, which might have taken down all the rest in their wake.

Therefore at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold price, manage it."

Sir Eddie George, Bank of England, in private conversation, September 1999

Few people realize that around 2008 central banks turned from being net sellers of gold to net buyers, and began to accumulate gold reserves in a big way for the first time since the 1970's, when Nixon slammed shut the gold window.

This is based on what they report officially to the IMF. There is strong anecdotal evidence that the actual turn in buying occurred quite a few years earlier, and more in line with the rapid appreciation in price as selling declined. 

First the selling slowed and the stealth buying began, particularly in Asia and the Mideast.

There was a sea change in the gold market as central banks scaled back on their strategy of supplying official gold to the bullion banks in order to keep the price down. 

The bottom in the gold price occurred when Gordon Brown threw England's gold with a pre-announcement into the market in order to bail out any bullion banks that were caught flatfooted 'in the turn' in May of 1999.  This was the first clear sign that change was in the wind.

The Big Turn occurred in 2007 when the western central banks capitulated, and realized that they must allow the price of gold to rise, or exhaust their own gold reserves in the process. The central bank change did not cause this, although it certainly reinforces the trend. It is a symptom of the great change and the first unmistakable manifestation of the currency war.  Although astute observers could see this coming in the aftermath of the Asian currency crisis in the 1990's and the Russian default on the rouble.

Gold commentators who do not realize this significant dimension of what has occurred and account for it in their thinking have been simply left behind, lost in an outdated frame of reference. They do not see the forest for the trees.

This is about much more than gold and silver. This is about a major, an historic change, in the composition of the world's global currencies and trading system. The dollar regime that has been in place since the end of World War II is undergoing a major evolution.

If there is anything that shocks me, it is how few economists understand it, or even realize it. I suppose that is how it is when the big things occur. Most of the operational people are left staring at the old paradigms, and wondering why their models are malfunctioning.

Rather than accept the change and understand it, they get busy trying to prove that it is not happening, since they have such a vested interest in the past. And so we see the occasional hysterical outburst from the status quo, that what is indeed happening does not make sense, and is irrational. 

Their reasoning begins to take on the shrill character of propaganda as they do their duty for their powerful patrons.  And they further discredit and isolate themselves from things as they are, and from people who have eyes to see.

The Anglo-Americans will be the last to let this folly go.  And I hear there is quite a bit of official irritation with those bullion banks who do not wish to go along with them.  They prefer to get out of this while they can with their balance sheets intact, even to the extent of getting out of the business, and enduring subtle retaliation for their recalcitrance.

I cannot foresee exactly where we are going, no one can, because there are simply too many exogenous variables.  But I doubt that it will be back to where we have been.