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Gold Price Cracks $1,900: New Record on Safe-Haven Buying
Aug 22nd, 2011 16:43 by News

August 22 (International Business Times) — Gold ripped past $1,900 Monday to a new record, the upshot of enough fears about global wealth-destroying developments to erase any doubts that the world’s oldest safe-haven investment remains the world’s No. 1 safe-haven investment.

Gold for December delivery, the most active contract traded on the CME Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, hit $1,900.70 per ounce in electronic trading, up from Friday’s closing price of $1,852.20.

Gold is now up 33 percent this year and has been in a bull market run for more than a decade.

[source]

PG View: Spot gold has extended to a new all-time high in late trading at 1911.50.

Gold Rallies as Money Flees “Leveraged Financial System,” Dempsey Says
Aug 22nd, 2011 14:39 by News
Consumer Edge says U.S. confidence hits new low
Aug 22nd, 2011 10:27 by News

August 22 (Reuters) — Consumer confidence has fallen further after weeks of intensified economic concerns and broad stock market declines, and Conference Board data due later this month could be even weaker than current projections suggest, Consumer Edge Research said on Monday.

Readings from high, middle and low-income consumers all deteriorated sharply, due mainly to dramatic declines in outlook, the independent equity research firm said.

[source]

New York Fed re-monetized $0.820 billion in Treasury coupons in today’s QE2.5 operation.
Aug 22nd, 2011 10:03 by News
Gold shines as Swiss franc’s haven appeal dims
Aug 22nd, 2011 09:48 by News

August 22 (Reuters) — Moves by the Swiss National Bank to curb strength of the Swiss franc will fuel investors’ insatiable demand for gold, adding to its relentless rise to new record highs as confidence in the franc as a safe store of value dwindles.

Analysts say this could help gold vault $2,000 an ounce within the coming weeks, with the potential for very large spikes if risk aversion on financial markets gains momentum.

[source]

Europe struggles with path to fiscal union
Aug 22nd, 2011 09:46 by News

August 21 (Financial Times) — During a closed-door summit in June, José Manuel Barroso, European Commission president, made a 14-slide presentation to Europe’s presidents and prime ministers on the state of the continent’s economy – but he dwelt on one slide in particular.

The slide had two bar charts, one showing the level of eurozone debt measured against its economic output (about 88 per cent for 2011) and the other showed the US’s, at nearly 100 per cent of its gross domestic product.

Mr Barroso’s message was clear: despite Europe’s debt crisis, taken together, eurozone countries were in better fiscal health than the US, which continues to borrow at exceedingly low rates.

…Fiscal union may indeed be the debt crisis’s ultimate solution. But it is hard to find the appetite for getting there.

[source]

The Daily Market Report
Aug 22nd, 2011 09:28 by News

Gold Nears $1900

August 22 (USAGOLD) — Gold extended to a new record high near $1900 in overseas trading before coming under modest corrective pressures. The all-time high currently stands at 1894.25, just $105.75 away from the $2,000 level. Rising concerns over the implications of last week’s request by Venezuela seeking the repatriation of their gold reserves held overseas continue to underpin the yellow metal, amid escalating growth risks and persistent sovereign debt issues in Europe.

The latest revelations about massive, yet secret, Fed liquidity measures totaling $1.2 trillion between August 2007 and April 2010 have added an additional level of concern to the market. These facilities dwarfed the much maligned $700 bln TARP program. Together, we’re talking about nearly $2 trillion and the best we could muster is an economy muddling along at stall-speed. With headwinds to growth on the rise in recent weeks, investors are rightfully concerned about future fiscal and monetary responses.

The President has said he will unveil his plan for job creation in September. Will these new jobs be the result of additional fiscal stimulus? Is there any room at all for compromise on such matters with the 2012 Presidential campaign already underway? The recent debt ceiling debate would suggest not; so perhaps the plan will be nothing more than an opportunity to color Republicans as obstructionists to job creation.

Meanwhile, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will speak at the KC Fed symposium in Jackson Hole on Friday. Market watchers will be looking for any hints that additional Fed accommodations are in the cards. Odds seem to favor a reiteration of the latest FOMC statement, which noted the rise in growth risks and stated that the Fed stands ready to employ a host of policy options to fulfill its dual mandate of full employment and stable prices. In other words, Bernanke is unlikely to be forthcoming with a clear signal about QE3 this week, but he will probably acknowledge that QE3 — or some variation — is a card he is prepared to play, should it become necessary.

If the government and the Fed do indeed look to once again try and fill the economy’s sails with additional liquidity pumps, gold will likely continue to rise as the dollar comes under renewed pressure once again. The dollar index has been consolidating in a narrowing range since it bottomed back in May, ahead of the termination of QE2. Breakouts from such patterns tend to come in the direction of the dominant trend, which remains unquestionably bearish.

Rickards likes gold, because it’s money
Aug 22nd, 2011 08:11 by News

August 22 (CNBC) — Tangent Capital Partners’ James Rickards believes gold is heading toward $7,000 based on simple currency ratios. He believes that price level will be achieved in an orderly managed way by returning to a gold standard; or it will get there as a result of a chaotic collapse of fiat currencies.

Fed’s $1.2 Trillion Loan Lifelines Dwarfed TARP
Aug 22nd, 2011 07:24 by News

August 22 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Federal Reserve mounted an unprecedented campaign to head off a depression by providing as much as $1.2 trillion in public money to banks and other companies from August 2007 through April 2010, exceeding the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program.

…The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEHMQ) in September 2008 triggered losses at the world’s oldest money- market mutual fund, the Reserve Primary Fund, threatening to touch off an industrywide rout as investors began withdrawing from other money funds.

To keep the funds from realizing losses as they liquidated assets to meet customers’ redemption requests, the Fed created the Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility, or AMLF, on Sept. 19, 2008. Under the program, the Fed loaned money to banks so they could buy asset- backed commercial paper — collateralized bonds with a maturity of 270 days or less — from the money funds.

[source]


The Fed’s Secret Liquidity Lifelines

Housing’s Drag on Economy May Worsen
Aug 22nd, 2011 06:54 by News

August 21 (Bloomberg) — Sanjay Jain called his real estate broker four days ago to cancel a deal to buy a three-bedroom home in Folsom, California, unnerved by another plunge in the most volatile equities market on record.

“Seeing what’s happening on the stock market made me think that it’s not a good time to be buying a home,” Jain said. “I’m going to wait and see.”

As the U.S. economy shows signs of sputtering, instability on Wall Street is sapping the confidence of would-be property buyers, said Karl Case, co-founder of the S&P/Case-Shiller home- price index. That means housing, which aided every recovery except one before the most recent recession, may deepen its five-year drag on growth.

[source]

Not easy for bullion banks to put golden Humpty Dumpty back together again
Aug 20th, 2011 11:26 by MK

August 20 (USAGOLD) — I can’t help but think that the recent news about Venezuela has had something do with gold’s rise late this past week. And it may have had something to do with the strong run-up over the past few weeks.

When Venezuela first made its intentions for gold repatriation public, the press reports indentified the Bank of England as the depository for 211 tonnes of its gold. Later, it came out that 99 tonnes were on deposit at BoE and the rest sprinkled among JP Morgan Chase, Barclays, Standard Chartered, and Bank of Nova Scotia — gold bullion banks all.

It was the addition of the bullion banks in press reports that sent off alarm bells in the gold market. We were no longer talking simply about gold under a depository arrangement at the BoE (a rather benign proposition), but metal that had been committed to various lending operations. The inclusion put a whole new light on the Venezuela matter in that it suggests a short position in the physical metal that would need to be filled. Financial Times called the Venezuela withdrawal “one of the largest transfers of physical gold in recent history.” When the news sunk in, gold promptly rallied — trading at $1850 as this is written and trading as high as $1875 overnight Thursday/Friday. Too, and overlooked, Venezuela’s repatriation effort might have been one of the chief driving factors for gold’s strong rally over the past several weeks. The bullion bank scramble, in other words, may have started weeks ago long before Venezuela went public with its intentions.

In plain terms, it is unlikely that Venezuela’s gold is sitting prettily in the above named bullion banks just waiting to be loaded on a cargo plane and sent to Caracas. It was probably loaned out long ago, and then perhaps, redeposited at some other bullion bank and loaned out again, etc. on down the line until it was fractionalized, atomized, and otherwise depleted from its unified whole. In short, it will not be easy for the bullion banks to reassemble this golden Humpty Dumpty.

In turn, failure to materialize the physical metal could prompt similar demands from other gold-depositing nation states and private funds and individuals alike. Moneyed interests globally, as reported extensively in the mainstream press, are on a hair trigger, and ready to move defensively at a moment’s notice. At the whiff of trouble, the equivalent of a bank run could develop in the bullion banking sector. (It is interesting to note that a similar circumstance 40 years ago, almost to the day, forced the United States to close the gold window.)

At the very least, some depositors might be prompted to move their gold into allocated accounts thus removing it from the lending pool. In other words, a great deal more incipient demand may be bubbling beneath surface of the gold market than we presently know.

Michael J. Kosares
The ABCs of Gold Investing: How To Protect and Build Your Wealth With Gold

——

I note that Ireland’s GoldCore registers similar concerns, as does Dennis Gartman (whose newsletter is followed religiously at many of the bullion banks), and Ben Davies of Hinde Capital. Davies stated in an interview at King World News today that Venezuela’s withdrawal was a “game changer” that could catapult gold to the $2100/oz level. I agree with Pete Grant that Venezuela going public with this matter, instead of attending to its business quietly, raises additional questions about the kind of initial response it received. Chris Powell at GATA has done an excellent job tracking this important story.

——
We invite you to subscribe to our free online newsletter — USAGOLD News, Commentary & Analysis (top left column)

The Great Stocks Vs. Gold Round Trip
Aug 19th, 2011 16:14 by News

August 19 (BusinessInsider) — When priced in gold stocks have now returned to where they were at the market’s low-point, back in 2009. Actually, we’re even worse now.

[source]

Waiting for De Gaulle
Aug 19th, 2011 15:13 by News

August 19 (The New York Sun) — Governor Perry’s remarks on Chairman Bernanke’s debasement of the dollar were greeted with widespread complaints owing to the governor’s raucous tone. So how could he have better made his case? For an example, we commend none other than Charles De Gaulle. We comprehend that the general-turned-president of Free France is renowned for his haughtiness and, for that matter, his mixed view, to put it mildly, of America. Let’s lay that aside for the moment and feature the prophetic remarks he made in February 1965, warning of the incipient monetary crisis that would, absent a return to gold-backed money, engulf the world. When these columns speak of our hope that some leader of our time will address this issue, this is the kind of talk for which we are hankering.

PG View: In 1965 De Gaulle called for a return to an “indisputable monetary base,” one that “does not bear the mark of any particular country.” He of course was referring to gold. As was pointed out in a Forbes article early in the week on the 40th anniversary of President Nixon closing the gold window, “over the last four thousand years, the only period in which humanity has not consistently based its currency in metal, specifically gold, is the last forty.” And look what that has wrought…

West shows worrying signs of ‘Japanisation’
Aug 19th, 2011 15:11 by News

August 19 (Financial Times) — The big question for many investors these days is one that could scarcely have been thought about a few years ago: is the west turning into Japan?

The response to that will determine the future direction of western economies as well as of shares and bonds. To date, the tentative answer has been that the developed world is heading Japan’s way as government bonds have far outperformed equities.

“This is looking like a Japan-style scenario. I am more nervous than I have ever been before about it,” says Sushil Wadhwani, founder of the eponymous hedge fund and a former member of the Bank of England’s rate-setting monetary policy committee.

…Since Japanese yields breached the 2 per cent barrier in 1996, they have never risen above it for any sustained period.

[source]

Dow Falls 172.93 Points, Led Lower by H-P
Aug 19th, 2011 15:07 by News

August 19 (The Wall Street Journal) — U.S. stocks closed down Friday, ending another choppy week lower as investors continued worrying about a potential global recession and the health of the European banking system.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 172.93 points, or 1.57%, to 10817.65. The index swung 284.99 points from its session highs to the lows in another volatile session. The zigzag action comes after the blue-chip index tumbled 419.63 points on Thursday.

[source]

The United States of Unemployment
Aug 19th, 2011 13:58 by News

By David Wessel
August 19 (The Wall Street Journal) — There are 13.9 million unemployed people in the U.S. – and that just counts those looking for work. That works out to 9.1% of the labor force, the widely publicized unemployed rate.

But here are a few more ways to look at it.

There are more unemployed people in the U.S. than there are people in the state of Illinois, the fifth largest state.

In fact there, there are more unemployed people in the U.S. than there are people in 46 of the 50 states, all but Florida, New York, Texas and California.

There are more unemployed than the combined populations of Wyoming, Vermont, North Dakota, Alaska, South Dakota, Delaware, Montana, Rhode Island, Hawaii, Maine, New Hampshire, Idaho and the District of Columbia.

If they were a country, the 13.9 million unemployed Americans would be the 68th largest country in the world, bigger than the population of Greece or Portugal (each of which has 10.8 million people) and more than twice the population of Norway (4.7 million.)

[source]

The Daily Market Report
Aug 19th, 2011 13:09 by News

Venezuela’s Repatriation Demand Adds to Gold’s Bid


August 19 (USAGOLD) — Gold extended to yet another new all-time high in European trading on Friday at 1876.81, before pulling back into the range. At its high point, the yellow metal was just $123.19 away from $2000 per ounce as rising global growth headwinds continue to wreak havoc on worldwide shares, increasing the appeal of hard assets like gold as a safe-haven. Continued uncertainty that measures to mitigate the sovereign debt crisis in Europe will be successful are also underpinning the market. However, this week’s demand by President Hugo Chávez that Venezuela’s gold reserves held overseas be returned to the country is the latest wild-card that seems to be having a predominantly positive impact on gold.

Venezuela is the 15th largest holder of gold in the world with 365.8 metric tonnes, the majority of which is held in London. For exactly the same reasons that individual investors/savers prefer to have their gold close at hand, it would seem that Venezuela now wants their gold back. They are troubled by the counterparty risks; worried that as the global financial system unravels under the weight of massive debt burdens, that if they don’t get their gold now, they might never be able to get it back. Chávez went so far as to volunteer the basement of the presidential palace if additional storage space were needed.

It’s certainly not beyond Chávez to take a poke at the West purely for the sake of getting everyone all worked up. He’s done it before and he will likely continue to do so as long as he holds power. With such a mindset, he perhaps has a legitimate concern that Venezuela’s assets — including their gold holdings — might be frozen at some point; as we have seen time and time again with other rogue-states. However, in also announcing plans to nationalize Venezuela’s gold production and processing, Chávez clearly is expecting gold prices to continue climbing.


The Bank of England reportedly holds 99.2 metric tonnes of Venezuelan gold. There is some speculation that an initial “official channel” request for a return of their gold may have been met with some resistance, which prompted Chávez to go very public with his demand. All eyes are now on the BoE and arguably they are under a fair amount of pressure to deliver in a timely manor. Failure to do so will rattle the confidence of other sovereigns with gold held outside their borders…and there are a lot of them. If the BoE or any of the other holders of Venezuelan gold proved unable to deliver, it could trigger similar requests for repatriation from other nations, setting off a mad scramble for physical gold.

Based on yesterday’s FT article on the topic, it would seem that the BoE is indeed making preparations to return Venezuela’s gold. Logistics experts have said that they’ve never heard of a physical gold transfer of this size before, but I’d hazard that this wont be the last major transfer of of the yellow metal given the rising price and the rising global uncertainty.

Traders prepare for Chávez gold transfer
Aug 19th, 2011 11:14 by News

August 18 (Financial Times) — Bullion traders are preparing for one of the largest transfers of physical gold in recent history after Hugo Chávez, Venezuela’s president, ordered the country’s gold reserves to be returned to Caracas.

Venezuela’s central bank is the world’s 15th largest holder of gold, with 365.8 tonnes, of which some 211 tonnes, worth $12.3bn, are held overseas, according to a proposal for the transfer from the Venezuelan central bank and finance ministry.

…“There is a growing preference among many different communities in the gold market to have their physical gold at home,” said Edel Tully, precious metals strategist at UBS.

[source]

Gold at new high as growth fears persist
Aug 19th, 2011 11:09 by News

August 19 (Financial Times) — Gold has powered to a fresh record, revelling in investors’ fears of a sharp global economic slowdown that have laid waste to equities over recent weeks.

Traders’ wariness is being reflected in the yen’s move to a record versus the US dollar, falling below Y76 for the first time and now on offer at Y76.94, stronger by 0.2 per cent on the day. The Japanese unit has long been considered by some investors as a refuge in turbulent times.

[source]

Bank funding costs rise on Europe tension
Aug 19th, 2011 11:01 by News

August 19 (Reuters) — Some European banks were forced to pay more for short-term loans on Friday as anxiety about a rapidly spreading debt crisis in Europe stayed high.

The benchmark for unsecured dollar loans between banks, three-month Libor, rose above 30 basis points for the first time since early April. It fixed at 0.30300 percent.

[source]

High Gold Prices are Sustainable
Aug 19th, 2011 10:37 by News

by Lianna Brinded
EuroMoney (August 19) — Gold prices are not a bubble, strategists tell Euromoney. Rather, they point to a loss of confidence in quantitative easing; fears of another recession; and the crisis in central banks’ abilities to manage the

“Given the scale of capital destruction that has yet to be acknowledged and which quantitative easing with its fiat money has in effect tried to cover up, the distrust of western paper money continues to run high. This is not only a financial sector crisis, but also a crisis of overall governance in the eurozone, the US and the UK,” says Marc Ostwald, financial markets strategist at Monument Securities. “It is difficult to argue that gold is in a bubble, even if the one-way charge into gold has bubble-like qualities. It would require a sharp rise in money rates and bond yields to attract money away from gold, as the opportunity costs of holding an asset that does not pay interest or a dividend is very low at the moment; a sharp rally in equities and/or real economy commodities would also prompt some profit-taking.”

Joshua Raymond, chief market strategist at City Index, says: “Gold continues to be the safe-haven asset class of choice among investors; the precious metal has bullish momentum at present with long-term support levels holding and resistance levels quickly being broken. While its fantastic rise in price is something one would attribute to a bubble, continued economic uncertainty is only likely to support gold prices further.”

The long-term sustainability of gold prices is compounded by fears of recession, say the analysts.

“I’m bearish on the economy and I don’t think the gold price is tied to debt,” says Roger Nightingale, strategist at Agency Partners. “Debt is irrelevant. It is more because the economy is in desperate trouble and investors are realising this. Investors are also realising that the central banks’ abilities to manage money supply and to direct it into the stock market is not happening and their investments need to be directed in the safest options – gold and bonds. While some people say they hate bonds and gold because they are over-valued, they are by far safer options to invest in, compared to stocks. With the rush of money going into these asset classes, it will push up the price and keep it at that level for as long as the economy is in the situation it is now.”

“The health of the financial system and government finances, interest rates and inflation are thus paramount to the outlook,” says Wills. “Will governments be able to sustainably serve the debt hangover from post-credit crisis stimulus? Do banks have sufficient capital to withstand any downgrade in government finances? Is QEIII back on the table in the US, with further acceleration in money supply even as inflation remains elevated? How fast will interest rates and yields on risk assets rise should growth recover? These are among key questions investors need to ask when considering the sustainability of the recent vault higher in gold prices.”

[Source]

Gold higher at 1857.45 (+32.10). Silver 41.865 (+1.34). Dollar weakens. Stocks called sharply lower. Treasuries mostly lower.
Aug 19th, 2011 06:20 by News

New record high in gold established in earlier European trading at 1876.81.

Stocks Plunge, Gold Surges on Global Concern
Aug 18th, 2011 14:30 by News

August 18 (Bloomberg) — Stocks plunged while Treasuries rallied, pushing yields to record lows, amid growing signs the economy is slowing and speculation that European banks lack sufficient capital. Gold climbed to a record, while oil led commodities lower.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index tumbled 4.5 percent to 1,140.74 at 4 p.m. in New York. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 4.8 percent in its worst plunge since March 2009 and Germany’s DAX Index slid 5.8 percent, the most since 2008. Ten-year Treasury yields fell as much as 19 basis points to 1.97 percent as rates on similar-maturity Canadian and British debt also reached all-time lows. The dollar gained versus 15 of 16 major peers, strengthening 0.6 percent to $1.4336 per euro. Gold futures rallied as much as 2.1 percent to $1,832 an ounce, while oil slid 5.9 percent.

[source]

European Shares Fall Most Since March 2009
Aug 18th, 2011 12:01 by News

August 18 (CNBC) — European equities suffered their biggest daily fall in two and a half years on Thursday, as a slew of data cast further doubt on the strength of the recovery in the world’s biggest economy.

German shares lost most, with traders citing the effects of a short-selling ban on financial stocks in other parts of Europe and intensifying worries about politicians’ lack of a plan to address the euro zone sovereign debt crisis.

The European banking sector, exposed to the euro zone debt crisis, fell 6.6 percent and is down 29.7 percent this year.

[source]

Connecting the Dots: Texas Employment Growth; a Dissenting Vote; and the Ugly Truth
Aug 18th, 2011 11:55 by News

Richard W. Fisher
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Remarks at the Midland Community Forum
Midland, Texas
August 17, 2011

FOMC Decision
Now to the second matter I wish to discuss with you today: my decision to dissent from the commitment of the majority of my colleagues on the FOMC in their decision to hold the base interest rate for interbank lending―the fed funds rate, the anchor of the yield curve―at its current level well into 2013.

I have posited both within the FOMC and publicly for some time that there is abundant liquidity available to finance economic expansion and job creation in America. The banking system is awash with liquidity. It is a rare day when the discount windows―the lending facilities of the 12 Federal Reserve banks―experience significant activity. Domestic banks are flush; they have on deposit at the 12 Federal Reserve banks some $1.6 trillion in excess reserves, earning a mere 25 basis points―a quarter of 1 percent per annum―rather than earning significantly higher interest rates from making loans to operating businesses. These excess bank reserves are waiting on the sidelines to be lent to businesses. Nondepository financial firms—private equity funds and the like―have substantial amounts of investable cash at their disposal. U.S. corporations are sitting on an abundance of cash―some estimate excess working capital on publicly traded corporations’ books exceeds $1 trillion―well above their working capital needs. Nonpublicly held businesses that are creditworthy have increasing access to bank credit at historically low nominal rates.

I have said many times that through the initiatives we took to counter the crisis of 2008–09, and the dramatic extension of the balance sheet that ensued, the Fed has refilled the tanks needed to fuel economic expansion and domestic job creation. Though I questioned the efficacy of the expansion of our balance sheet through the purchase of Treasury securities known as “QE2,” I have come to expect that the Federal Open Market Committee would continue to anchor the base lending rate at current levels and also maintain our abnormally large balance sheet, now with footings of almost $2.9 trillion, for “an extended period.”

I do not believe it wise to commit to more than that, or to signal further accommodation, when the cheap and abundant liquidity we have made available is presently lying fallow, and when the velocity of money remains so subdued as to be practically comatose. At the FOMC meeting, the committee announced that it “currently anticipates that economic conditions … are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.” In monetary parlance, that is language designed to signal that we are on hold until then.

I voted against that commitment-cum-signal. In the press’ reporting of my dissenting vote and those of the other two members of the FOMC who voted against that commitment―Mr. Kocherlakota, my counterpart from the Minneapolis Fed, and Mr. Plosser, my counterpart from Philadelphia―there was substantial speculation as to the reasons for our dissent. I will let my other two colleagues speak for themselves; I can only speak for myself. Let me make clear why I was opposed to freezing the fed funds rate for two years.

…In the interest of full disclosure, I should add that I was also concerned that just by tweaking the language the way the committee did, our action might be interpreted as encouraging the view that there is an FOMC so-called “Bernanke put” that would be too easily activated in response to a reversal in the financial markets. For those of you unfamiliar with the expression “Bernanke put,” or more generally, a “central bank put,” this term refers to the concept that a central bank will allow the stock market to rise significantly without tightening monetary policy, but will ease monetary policy whenever there is a stock market “correction.” Given the extent of the drop in the stock market leading up to and following Standard & Poor’s downgrade of U.S. debt, combined with the FOMC’s commitment to hold short-term rates near zero until mid-year 2013, some cynical observers might interpret such a policy action as a “Bernanke put.” My long-standing belief is that the Federal Reserve should never enact such asymmetric policies to protect stock market traders and investors. I believe my FOMC colleagues share this view.

[full speech]

Chavez Orders $11 Billion of Gold Home
Aug 18th, 2011 11:19 by News

August 18 (Bloomberg) — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the central bank to repatriate $11 billion of gold reserves held in developed nations’ institutions such as the Bank of England as prices for the metal rise to a record.

Venezuela, which holds 211 tons of its 365 tons of gold reserves in U.S., European, Canadian and Swiss banks, will progressively return the bars to its central bank’s vault, Chavez said yesterday. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Barclays Plc (BARC), and Standard Chartered Plc (STAN) also hold Venezuelan gold, he said.

“We’ve held 99 tons of gold at the Bank of England since 1980. I agree with bringing that home,” Chavez said yesterday on state television. “It’s a healthy decision.”

[source]

PG View: I wonder if private requests for a return of their gold met resistance; and that’s why Venezuela has gone public?

US $12 bln 5-year TIPS auction awarded at -0.825% on solid 2.49 bid cover; indirect bid 47.2%.
Aug 18th, 2011 11:11 by News
Stocks Plunge
Aug 18th, 2011 09:11 by News

August 18 (The Wall Street Journal) — .S. stocks tumbled as further concerns rose about flagging global economic activity, as investors digested a grim mix of weak U.S. economic data and fresh concerns about the health of Europe’s banks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 434 points, or 3.8%, to 10978. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index dropped 51 points, or 4.3%, to 1143, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 116 points, or 4.6%, to 2397.
Market Data Center

Gold jumped to above $1,820 per troy ounce, while Treasurys the yield on the benchmark 10-year note briefly dipped below 2.00% in intraday trading, for the first time since at least 1954.

[source]

DJIA -423 pts. 10-yr yield trades below 2%. Gold new record high 1826.10.
Aug 18th, 2011 08:29 by News
US existing home sales -3.5% to 4.67 mln in Jul, below market expectations of 4.90 mln, vs upward revised 4.84 mln in Jun.
Aug 18th, 2011 08:25 by News


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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