http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/unprecedentedshortages.htm
‘All over the United States we are witnessing unprecedented shortages of
ammunition, physical gold and physical silver. Recent events have helped
fuel a "buying frenzy" that threatens to spiral out of control.
Gun shops all over the nation are reporting that they have never
seen it this bad, and in many cases any ammo that they are able to get is being
sold even before it hits the shelves. The ammo shortage has already
become so severe that police departments all over America are saying that they
are being told that it is going to take six months to a year to get
their orders. In fact, many police departments have begun to trade and
barter with one another to get the ammo that they need. Meanwhile, the takedown of paper gold
and paper silver has unleashed an avalanche of "panic buying" of
physical gold and physical silver all over the planet. In the United
States, some dealers are charging premiums of more than 25 percent
over the spot price for gold and silver and they are getting it. People
are paying these prices even though they are being told that delivery will not
happen for a month or two in many cases. Some dealers are feverishly
taking as many orders as they can, and they are just hoping that they will be
able to get the physical gold and silver to eventually fill those orders.
Personally, I have never seen anything like this. If things are this
tight now, what is going to happen when the next major financial crisis strikes
and people really begin to panic?
The shortages and rationing of
ammunition at gun shops all over America just seem to keep getting worse.
The following is from an article by a gun owner down in Texas named Brad Meyer...
If
you’d like to see a normally sullen sales clerk chortle with derisive pleasure,
just walk into just about any gun range, sporting goods store or mass
merchandiser and try and buy a couple boxes of .22 ammunition.
Gun
enthusiasts are up in arms about a nationwide shortage of ammunition. Handgun
ammo in general is particularly difficult to find – and when you do find it,
there are restrictions on the amount you can buy and how much you’re going to
be paying for it.
While
the list of hard to find ammo is long, .22 long rifle and 9mm handgun
ammunition are particularly difficult to find in quantity. And the few places
that have it are charging a premium rate and usually limiting purchases to one
box, per person, per day.
Many
gun owners try to find ammunition by going on the Internet, but things have
gotten so tight that now any ammo that becomes available online is often gone within
seconds...
There
are websites where people across the country post links to where ammunition is
available – and it sells out within seconds. Not minutes or hours – seconds.
Unfortunately,
all of this demand is also driving up prices. Just check out what Meyer
says is happening to the price of standard .22 ammo...
The
demand is driving up the cost of ammunition. Six months ago, standard .22 ammo
– the most common type of bullet produced in the world – could be had in bulk
for around five cents apiece. It is now going for 50 cents or more on some
websites – and people are paying it.
But
this shortage is not just affecting private citizens. According to Newmax, police departments all over the nation
are dealing with ammo shortages unlike anything that they have ever seen
before...
Sheriff
Anthony DeMeo of Nye County, Nev., was told his department’s regular order of
50,000 rounds could take up to a year to arrive.
“This
is the first time ever I’ve heard that there’s a problem with a law-enforcement
agency getting ammo for their agency,” DeMeo told The Las Vegas Sun.
These
departments are not alone. Law enforcement agencies in Oklahoma, Wisconsin,
Arizona, and Georgia are among many that are having to limit how much they give
their officers due to the shortage.
Could
you imagine waiting for "up to a year" to get more ammunition?
A
recent article posted on CNSNews.com had some more examples of
police departments that are reporting that there is a massive wait to get more
ammo...
Chief
Pryor of Rollingwood, Texas says of the shortage:
"We
started making phone calls and realized there is a waiting list up to a
year. We have to limit the amount of times we go and train because we
want to keep an adequate stock."
"Nobody
can get us ammunition at this point," says Sgt. Jason LaCross of the Bozeman, Montana
police department.
LaCross
says that manufacturers are so far behind that they won't even give him a quote
for an order.
"We
have no estimated time on when it will even be available," LaCross says.
This
is insane.
What
in the world could be causing such an ammo crunch?
Well,
certainly the demand for guns and ammo has been trending up in recent years -
especially since Barack Obama was elected.
But
that doesn't fully account for the shortages that we are witnessing at the
moment.
So
what is going on?
Well,
some people believe that the federal government is responsible. It has
been reported that they have signed contracts to purchase "up to" 1.6
billion rounds of ammunition. According to Forbes, this
amount of ammunition would be enough to fight a "hot war" in America for 20 years...
The
Denver Post, on February 15th, ran an Associated Press
article entitled Homeland
Security aims to buy 1.6b rounds of ammo, so far to little
notice. It confirmed that the Department of Homeland Security has issued
an open purchase order for 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition. As reported elsewhere, some of this
purchase order is for hollow-point rounds, forbidden by international law for
use in war, along with a frightening amount specialized for snipers. Also reported elsewhere, at the
height of the Iraq War the Army was expending less than 6 million rounds a
month. Therefore 1.6 billion rounds would be enough to sustain a hot war
for 20+ years. In America.
Could
this be a way that the Obama administration is trying to restrict the amount of
ammo that gets into the hands of private citizens?
That
is what some people are suggesting.
According
to talk radio show
host Michael Savage, the ammo contracts that the federal government has
signed give them priority over all other purchasers...
What
Homeland Security is doing here is they’re issuing a contract to buy up to that
amount of ammo if they want it…
It’s
a way to control the amount of market that’s available on the commercial market
at any time.
If
they go to the ammo manufacturers and say give me 50 million rounds, give me
another 30 million rounds… if they periodically do this in
increments, they’re going to control how much ammo is available on the
commercial market.
As
part of their contract it stipulates in there that when the government calls
and says give us another quantity, that everything they make has to go
to the government priority one before any of it goes to the commercial market.
So,
if they get nervous, all they have to do is use that contract that they
have in place… and they just say ‘give us some more.’
So
whenever the government wants to tighten the supply of ammunition, all they
have to do is invoke their contracts and order more for themselves.
Meanwhile,
Obama appears to be doing other things to restrict the amount of ammo that gets
into the hands of private gun owners.
For
example, there are reports that the Obama
administration plans to use executive orders to greatly restrict the
importation of ammo from overseas.
So
if anything, the shortage of ammunition is only going to get worse, not better.
Meanwhile,
the "panic buying" of physical gold and physical silver that we have
seen lately has really run down inventories.
According
to Reuters, demand has become so intense that
the U.S. Mint has suspended sales of gold coins for the first time since
2009...
The
U.S. Mint said it has suspended sales of its one-tenth ounce American Eagle
gold bullion coins as surging demand after bullion's plunge to two-year lows
depleted the government's inventory. This marks the first time it has stopped
selling gold product since November 2009, dealers said.
At
the same time, precious metals dealers all over the country are scrambling to
meet the voracious demand that they have been seeing this month. The
following is an excerpt from a letter
that the CEO of Texas Precious Metals recently sent out to his customers...
The physical silver market is, in a word, ugly. There is no telling at this point when
mint inventories will return to normal, but you can be sure it will not
happen within the next 8 weeks. Most dealers, at this point, are
selling their current customer demand forward, meaning they are selling product
they do not presently have, expecting to pull from future mint allocations.
Consequently, future allocations will face pressure from today's demand. It is
not my intent here to comment on the business practices of other companies, but
I will say that no one can possibly predict future allocations at the time. The
US mint, for example, releases its allocations weekly, and until then, dealers
have no insight into allocation levels. Last week, we turned away
business in excess of 100,000 ozs of silver because of stock depletion.
However, we stand by the notion that it is better to lose a sale than lose a
customer by delaying delivery two months (or more).
A
similar thing is happening over in Asia. According to the
Financial Times, soaring demand has caused a shortage of gold at the Hong
Kong Gold & Silver Exchange Society...
Haywood
Cheung, president of the Hong Kong Gold & Silver Exchange Society, said the
exchange had effectively run out of most of its holdings as members looked to
meet a shortfall in supply amid rampant retail demand for gold products.
“In
terms of volume, I haven’t seen this gold rush for over 20 years,” he told the
Financial Times on Monday, adding that the exchange only had around twenty 1kg
bars, and 100 five-tael bars left in its inventory. “Older members who have
been in the business for 50 years haven’t seen such a thing.”
But
most disturbing of all is what Jim Sinclair told King World News recently.
Apparently his friend went to get his gold out of a Swiss bank the other day
and they refused to give it to him...
A
person that I know with significant deposits in one of the primary Swiss banks,
in allocated gold, wanted to take out his gold and was just refused on the
basis of directives from the central bank....
They
told him the amount was in excess of 200,000 Swiss francs and the central bank
had instructed them not to do it because it has to do with anti-terrorism and
anti-money laundering precautions.
I
really wonder whether those are precautions or whether the gold simply isn’t
there. Now you tell me that a London delivery has basically failed. It has to
raise our suspicions that the lack of physical gold behind the paper gold is
literally so severe that we are coming to understand that it is in fact not
there.
The
gold that people think is stored is not stored, and the inventory of the
warehouses for exchanges may not be holding deliverable gold. There has always
been speculation about whether or not the physical gold the US claims to store
is in fact in those vaults.
The
greatest train robbery in history might be all of the gold, and it would only
be something like we have described above that would happen right before gold
makes historic highs.
There
simply is no gold behind the paper. One example is AMRO, a second is your
example with Maguire, and a third is my dear friend who was refused his gold on
the basis that its value was too high. Remember this friend of mine had his
gold in an allocated account in storage at a major Swiss bank. I repeat, there
is no gold.
So
are we going to see more of this?
Will
it soon become evident that there is simply not enough physical gold to cover
all of the promises that the banks have made?
Jim
Sinclair sure seems to think so.
In
another interview, John Embry expressed similar sentiments
to King World News...
This
gets back to the tip of the iceberg when the Dutch Bank ABN AMRO came out and
literally said that if you have allocated gold with us, you can’t have it.
That,
to me, is a default, and it gets back to what Jim Sinclair related when one of
his friends went to a Swiss bank and couldn’t get his allocated gold. I
mean that’s preposterous. If it’s allocated it should be there, but it’s
clearly not there. I think this is the beginning of the end of the
massive Ponzi scheme in paper gold. I have been talking about this for
some time, and it will have an enormous impact on future gold and silver
prices.
When
it becomes widely known that all of the people who think they own gold in fact
don’t own gold, that it’s been hypothecated and re-hypothecated so many times
that there are 100 claims for every single ounce of physical gold, that is when
the prices of gold and silver will really go berserk to the upside, and at that
point the shorts will have serious problems.”
If
those that helped engineer the recent takedown of paper gold and silver were
hoping to scare people away from physical gold and silver, then they failed
miserably. For even more on this, please see my recent article entitled
"10
Signs The Takedown Of Paper Gold Has Unleashed An Unprecedented Global Run On
Physical Gold And Silver".
All
of this is just another example why I encourage people to get prepared while
times are still relatively good.
Once
disaster strikes, it may be too late to get the things that you need.
Right
now there are a whole lot of people out there wishing that they had stocked up
on ammo when it was much cheaper and much more readily available.
We
are moving into a time when everything that can be shaken will be shaken.
Use the stability provided by the false bubble of economic hope that we are
experiencing right now as an opportunity to get prepared. The next major wave of the
economic collapse is rapidly approaching and time is running out.’