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MNI report on the BIS, Federal Reserve and BoE selling gold was posted in error
Dec 9th, 2011 17:08 by News

09-Dec (USAGOLD) — The MNI bullet about official gold selling that was posted on this page yesterday was subsequently retracted by them.

From MNI:

The bullet that was posted was posted in error. We had one contact mentioning that this might be the case but when we called other more trusted sources later they said this was not the case and in fact selling by these institutions was totally unlikely.

We later put out a retraction shortly after the initial bullet

We apologize for any confusion.

We apologize as well.

Bailout Total: $29.616 Trillion Dollars
Dec 9th, 2011 15:50 by News

09-Dec (TheBigPicture) — There is a fascinating new study coming out of the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. Its titled “$29,000,000,000,000: A Detailed Look at the Fed’s Bail-out by Funding Facility and Recipient” by James Felkerson. The study looks at the lending, guarantees, facilities and spending of the Federal Reserve.

The researchers took all of the individual transactions across all facilities created to deal with the crisis, to figure out how much the Fed committed as a response to the crisis. This includes direct lending, asset purchases and all other assistance. (It does not include indirect costs such as rising price of goods due to inflation, weak dollar, etc.)

The net total? As of November 10, 2011, it was $29,616.4 billion dollars — (or 29 and a half trillion, if you prefer that nomenclature). Three facilities—CBLS, PDCF, and TAF— are responsible for the lion’s share — 71.1% of all Federal Reserve assistance ($22,826.8 billion).

[source]

Britain vs. the EU 26: The Man Who Said No to Europe
Dec 9th, 2011 12:29 by News

09-Dec (Der Spiegel) — British Prime Minister David Cameron has completely isolated his country on the European stage — and many in his country applaud him for it. But he will soon have to prove that London still has clout in the EU, and that his no to fiscal union wasn’t just a bone thrown to euroskeptic conservatives.

The decision by British Prime Minster David Cameron to block a European Union treaty change by using his country’s veto power has sparked a festive atmosphere among euroskeptics in the United Kingdom. “At last,” Lord Norman Tebbitt, once one of Margaret Thatcher’s closest confidants, blogged on the Daily Telegraph’s website. Cameron, he wrote, has applied the very veto that former Prime Minister John Major should have used against the Maastricht Treaty, which created the euro. “We should just be grateful,” he added.

[source]

Inflation Seen Outpacing Home Prices
Dec 9th, 2011 12:09 by News

08-Dec (The Wall Street Journal) — The ailing housing market is unlikely to return to health before 2016 and is weighing on the two-year-old U.S. recovery, which finally is showing signs of picking up steam.
Charts and Full Results

That’s according to economists in the latest Wall Street Journal survey, who expect home prices will begin to increase in 2012 but—by an 8-to-1 margin—don’t see prices outpacing inflation over the next three years. That means that the value of the largest investment for most consumers—their home—would fail to keep pace with increases in the cost of other items, such as food, clothing and gasoline.

[source]

It’s Still Up to the ECB to Stem the Crisis
Dec 9th, 2011 12:07 by News

09-Dec (Bloomberg) — The euro-zone leaders adopted a pact to move toward fiscal union and stepped up stabilization measures to face the immediate crisis. This is progress, but as Thomas Mayer, chief economist at Deutsche Bank, told me this morning:

“The leaders have now defined the end point they want to reach in terms of fiscal governance, but it’s a long way to go there.”

He added:

“We’ll probably see more near-term tension and that will probably then trigger a more hands-on intervention by the ECB.”

The stabilization measures still come back to the European Central Bank, the one institution with the resources to provide the liquidity backstop to stem the crisis. Let’s take the 200 billion euros that could be given to the International Monetary Fund from Europe’s central banks: 150 billion euros from the euro zone and the rest from non-euro members. German Chancellor Angela Merkel says these could be bilateral credit lines.

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Dec 9th, 2011 11:31 by News

09-Dec (USAGOLD) — Gold has been somewhat choppy this morning amid uncertainty about the outcome of the EU summit. Summit attendees are trumpeting a consensus toward treaty changes that may be signed by March. Yet there is still plenty of skepticism over whether Europe can be saved, even with the treaty changes. UK PM David Cameron held out for concessions to protect “the City” — London’s financial district — which ultimately undermined hopes for a treaty change for all 27 EU members, adding an additional level of uncertainty to the whole mess.

At the end of the day, as Chancellor Merkel and President Sarkozy touted their “breakthrough,” the market maintains a sense that only the ECB can truly save the day. There were in fact reports of aggressive ECB bond buying in the secondary market today, perhaps to give the illusion of a positive market response to the summit agreement. The market will likely continue pressuring the ECB to act, and as such hopes ebb and flow, so will asset prices.

PIMCO’s Bill Gross tweeted the following this morning: Oh what a tangled web the EU has weaved. Never ending story, hard to trust. Risk off.

• US University of Michigan sentiment (prelim) rose to 67.7 in Dec, above market expectations of 65.6, vs 64.1 Nov.
• US trade deficit narrowed to -$43.5 bln in Oct, in-line with expectations, vs -$44.2 bln in Sep.
• Canada Q3 productivity +0.3%, above market expectations of -0.2%, vs -1.0% in Q2.

Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $2.512 billion in Treasury coupons with a maturity range of 02/15/2036 – 11/15/2041.
Dec 9th, 2011 10:52 by News
The only way to save the eurozone is to destroy the EU
Dec 9th, 2011 10:49 by News

by Wolfgang Münchau
09-Dec (Financial Times) — So we have two crises now. A still-unresolved eurozone crisis and a crisis of the European Union. Of the two, the latter is potentially the more serious one. The eurozone may, or may not, break up. The EU almost certainly will. The decision by the eurozone countries to go outside the legal framework of the EU and to set up the core of a fiscal union in a multilateral treaty will eventually produce this split.

…On Thursday night, Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy clashed with David Cameron in a familiar Britain-versus-the-rest diplomatic standoff. That itself is not new. But a determination to go outside the treaty to overcome the disagreements adds a new dimension to this long-lasting dispute.

The fiscal union likely to be agreed in March may not initially be very effective in resolving the crisis. It focuses on all the wrong issues, mostly fiscal discipline, which is not the real reason why the crisis has spread to Spain or Belgium, for example.

[source]

Eurozone deal leaves Britain isolated
Dec 9th, 2011 08:11 by News

09-Dec (Financial Times) — European leaders are struggling to cope with a profound split over crisis plans for the eurozone, leaving the UK isolated as the rest of the European Union agrees to press ahead with new fiscal rules to balance budgets.

The measures are designed to restore confidence after a two-year crisis that has stalled growth in the world’s biggest economic bloc.

The refusal by David Cameron, UK prime minister, to agree to a full treaty change for all 27 EU members unless there were safeguards for UK financial services caused a standoff in the early hours of Friday morning with Angela Merkel, German chancellor, and Nicolas Sarkozy, French president.

[source]

US trade deficit narrowed to -$43.5 bln in Oct, in-line with expectations, vs -$44.2 bln in Sep.
Dec 9th, 2011 07:37 by News
Gold higher at 1716.54 (+7.14). Silver 31.875 (+0.245). Dollar easier. Euro better. Stocks called higher. Treasuries steady to lower.
Dec 9th, 2011 07:26 by News
US Economic Recovery Tests Patience and Faith
Dec 8th, 2011 16:04 by News

07-Dec (CNBC) — After three years of watching the U.S. economy sputter along at stall speed, it seems long overdue to start revving up.

Don’t bet on it.

There’s been plenty of debate over the past few years: has the U.S. Federal Reserve been doing too much or not enough to revive the economy; did the $787 billion government stimulus package help, or was it a waste of money; is a double-dip recession in the wings; should we be worried about inflation or deflation; is Washington killing the economy with regulation or is business simply gun shy; is tight lending because of a lack of demand, cautious banks, tougher regulations, or all of the above?

The answers almost don’t matter when the upshot is that the current recovery is poised to be long and painful.

[source]

Europe Must Swallow ‘Bitter Pill’
Dec 8th, 2011 15:39 by News

08-Dec (CNBC) — Fiscal transfers from Germany to other countries in the euro zone will be essential to resolving the euro zone debt crisis in the long term, Erik Britton, director at Fathom Consulting told CNBC.

“What needs to happen is the bitter pill needs to be swallowed. In particular Germany needs to accept the need for a fiscal transfer from itself to other countries in the euro area,” Britton said.

He said the transfer would need to be large and continue for an indefinite period to be effective.

[source]

PG View: I can hear the German’s gagging already…

Gold Slips on Disappointment Over ECB Moves
Dec 8th, 2011 15:32 by News

08-Dec (The Wall Street Journal) — Gold slumped as investors sought safety in the U.S. dollar after the European Central Bank’s latest efforts to shore up the euro-zone financial system fell short of market hopes.

The contract for December delivery fell $31.10, or 1.8%, to settle at $1,709.80 a troy ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest settlement since Nov. 25.

Futures climbed early Thursday after the ECB cut its benchmark interest rate and announced a new set of crisis-fighting measures, steps viewed as easing the risk of a credit crunch in the currency union.

But gold gave up those gains after ECB President Mario Draghi said at a news conference that the central bank wouldn’t buy unlimited quantities of the debt of distressed European countries. Mr. Draghi also said the ECB would respect a treaty that prevents it from giving monetary financing to governments.

…In the long term, the ECB’s moves could be supportive to gold prices, analysts said.

[source]

Operation Twist Part 2: New York Fed sells $8.630 billion in Treasury coupons with a maturity range of 03/15/2012 – 09/30/2012.
Dec 8th, 2011 15:28 by News
MARKET SOURCES REPORT BIS, BOE & FEDERAL RESERVE WERE SELLING GOLD AFTER IT POPPED TO SESSION HIGH AT GMT 1335 -MNI NEWS via BLOOMBERG
Dec 8th, 2011 13:17 by News
#OperationTwist: New York Fed purchases $4.617 billion in Treasury coupons with a maturity range of 02/15/2020 – 11/15/2021.
Dec 8th, 2011 10:40 by News
Banks step up gold lending for dollars
Dec 8th, 2011 09:17 by News

07-Dec (Finacial Times) — A dash for cash by European banks in a little watched corner of the gold market has accelerated this week, highlighting the continued scarcity of dollar funding even after a co-ordinated intervention in the market by the world’s largest central banks.

Gold dealers said that banks – primarily based in France and Italy – had been actively lending gold in the market in exchange for dollars in the past week.

The rush has pushed gold leasing rates – the implied interest rate for lending gold in the market in exchange for dollars – to record lows, according to Thomson Reuters data.

…Edel Tully, precious metals analyst at UBS, said banks were “looking to offload metal either for balance sheet reasons or funding – or both”.

[source]

Draghi Announces New ECB Crisis Moves
Dec 8th, 2011 09:15 by News

08-Dec (The Wall Street Jouornal) — The European Central Bank embarked Thursday on a series of unconventional measures in a step to fight the euro-zone’s debt crisis.

At a regular press conference following the bank’s monthly rate-setting meeting, new President Mario Draghi unveiled the measures: two new operations offering unlimited 36-month credit to euro-zone banks, a cut in the reserve requirement for commercial banks to 1% from 2% and the loosening of collateral requirements for ECB loans.

“This will free up liquidity,” Mr. Draghi said.

The new refinancing operations are the longest ever from the ECB. The new facility will first be offered Dec. 21 and will replace the 12-month operation that was to be offered the same date.

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Dec 8th, 2011 08:24 by News


08-Dec (USAGOLD) — It’s been a busy morning already. Central bank action has been pretty much as expected. The BoE held steady on both rates and its asset purchases. The ECB cut the refi rate by 25 bp back to a record low 1.00%, in-line with expectations.

ECB President Mario Draghi began the press conference by announcing a number of new temporary “non-standard” measures aimed at juicing liquidity: The central bank will conduct two LTRO’s with 36-month maturities (the market had been expecting 24-month repos). They will ease collateral requirements on ECB loans, and halve the reserve requirements for commercial banks from 2% to 1%.

The euro, stocks and gold all liked the news initially, with the yellow metal moving within $10 of last week’s high at 1762.70. However, Draghi kept talking…

The ECB lowered its growth forecast while simultaneously raising the inflation outlook. Draghi also severely tempered expectations of further ECB bond buying and then proceeded to shoot down the recurring rumor about the ECB lending money to the IMF so they could in turn buy eurozone bonds.

Let’s be honest here, additional liquidity measures are all well and good, but what the market really wanted to hear was that by hook or by crook the ECB was going to launch real quantitative easing measures. With such hopes largely dashed by Draghi, the euro, stocks and gold collapsed back into their respective ranges.

On the bright side; US initial jobless claims came in at a 9-month low of 381k for the week ended 03-Dec, versus an upward revised (they all get revised higher) 404k in the previous week.

As for entertainment, Jon Corzine, the former CEO of bankrupt MF Global will testify before the House Agriculture committee. All the entertainment will come from the committee members as litigation is likely to prompt Corzine to exercise his Fifth Amendment rights.

In a statement prepared for today’s testimony, Corzine said, “I simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date. I do not know which accounts are unreconciled or whether the unreconciled accounts were or were not subject to the segregation rules.”

That’s a pretty damning indictment of internal controls at a major broker-dealer and FCM. It is also a damning indictment of clearing firm controls and NFA audits. It should give everyone that has funds at a broker-dealer or FCM pause. It is also another in a long lists of reasons that every investor should have a portion of their portfolios allocated to a physical asset…like gold.

• US initial jobless claims -23k to 381k in week ended 03-Dec, well below market expectations of 399k, vs upward revised 404k in previous week.
• Canada housing starts tumble to 181.1k in Nov, well below market expectations at 197k, vs 208.8k in Oct.
• ECB cut refi rate by 25 bp to 1.00%, in-line with expectations. New “non-standard” liquidity measures announced at presser.
• BoE holds repo rate steady at historic low of 0.5%. Asset purchase target unchanged at £75 bln.
• Japan machinery orders (ex-Elec&Ship) -6.9% m/m in Oct, vs -8.2% in Sep.
• Bank Indonesia holds policy rate steady at 6.0%.
• BoK holds repo rate steady at 3.25%.

ECB cut refi rate by 25 bp to 1.00%, in-line with expectations. Draghi presser underway.
Dec 8th, 2011 08:00 by News

08-Dec (USAGOLD) — ECB President Mario Draghi has announced a new raft of “non-standard” measures to pump liquidity into the system.

BoE holds repo rate steady at historic low of 0.5%. Asset purchase target unchanged at £75 bln.
Dec 8th, 2011 07:55 by News
US initial jobless claims -23k to 381k in week ended 03-Dec, well below market expectations of 399k, vs upward revised 404k in previous week.
Dec 8th, 2011 07:36 by News
Gold higher at 1747.10 (+7.10). Silver 32.81 (+0.332). Dollar slips. Euro better. Stocks called easier. Treasuries steady to lower.
Dec 8th, 2011 07:33 by News
S&P At It Again, Warns EU, Large Eurozone Banks of Downgrades
Dec 7th, 2011 15:05 by News

07-Dec (Barron’s) — Standard & Poor’s, which just can’t seem to satisfy its urge to downgrade things these days, warned Wednesday of possible downgrades to its ratings on some of the largest rated banking groups in the eurozone, adding that similar rating actions on other large banks in the eurozone will follow soon, and warned that it might downgrade its ratings on the European Union itself.

[source]

PG View: This really ramps up the pressure on the EU to do something real and meaningful at the summit that begins tomorrow. And vague expectations that a new treaty will be agreed to by oh, say March…probably ain’t going to provide the reassurance that markets are looking for.

Operation Twist: New York Fed sells $1.330 billion in TIPS with a maturity range of 04/15/2012 – 04/15/2014.
Dec 7th, 2011 10:53 by News
Sarkozy, Merkel Submit EU Treaty Change Proposals To EU Council
Dec 7th, 2011 10:11 by News

07-Dec (The Wall Street Jounal) — A day ahead of a crucial gathering of European Union leaders in Brussels, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel outlined their detailed plan for solving the euro crisis through deeper fiscal integration.

In an open letter to European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, Mr. Sarkozy and Ms. Merkel issued an ultimatum to the 27 EU governments, saying they must decide whether they will accept greater central control over their national budgets.

Should some countries decide not to participate, the 17 countries in the euro zone will press ahead with a more integrated union by signing a new agreement outside EU treaties, they said.

“We are convinced that we need to act without delay,” the two leaders said in the letter. “We need to make a decision at our next European Council meeting in order to have the new treaty provisions ready by March 2012.”

…[senior official in the German government]: “I am more pessimistic than I was last week on the chances of total agreement,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

[source]

U.S. officials quietly cajole European leaders on debt crisis
Dec 7th, 2011 10:02 by News

06-Dec (Washington Post) — Senior U.S. officials are playing a behind-the-scenes role in efforts to contain the European debt crisis, cajoling the region’s leaders to take more steps to calm markets and trying to mediate among European governments with competing interests.

U.S. officials have served at times as a quiet intermediary between European political leaders and the powerful European Central Bank, which tries to stay out of the political fray. In particular, according to U.S. officials, Americans have passed along information about how much money European governments might be willing to contribute to a rescue fund, a crucial question for the central bank as it considers its actions.

Since the European crisis began last year, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has urged reluctant countries to create a large rescue fund, U.S. officials said.

[source]

Banks hoover up dollars from ECB as stress persists
Dec 7th, 2011 08:45 by News

07-Dec(Reuters) — Banks took more than $50 billion from the European Central Bank on Wednesday in its first offering since slashing the cost of borrowing dollars, a sign that some euro zone banks have problems finding dollar funding as the region’s debt crisis intensifies.

Top central banks last week acted to ensure banks outside the United States have easier access to dollars, which banks in Europe have more difficulty obtaining in the market as investor concerns about their exposure to the debt crisis have grown.

…The demand was well above the $10 billion median forecast in a Reuters poll of money market traders.

[source]

PG View: The stress indicated by much greater than expected dollar demand and German rejection of a plan to combine the EFSF and the ESM have spurred renewed widening in eurozone yield spreads.

Germany opposes combining ESM, EFSF
Dec 7th, 2011 08:34 by News

07-Dec (MarketWatch) — The German government opposes combining the euro-zone’s interim bailout fund, the 440 billion euro ($593.1 billion) European Financial Stability Facility, and the permanent 500 billion euro European Stability Mechanism, news reports said Wednesday. An unnamed German official told reporters in Berlin that it has already been decided that the ESM will take over from the EFSF at an appointed time, Bloomberg reported.

[source]


Author key: MK - Michael J. Kosares; GC - George Cooper; PG - Peter A. Grant; JK - Jonathan Kosares; RS - Randal Strauss. [see also 12 yrs of Discussion Archives]


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