The economic commentary by Donald Hunt was one of the things that helped me understand more of the economic world of corruption and manipulation and I must admit that I was one of those who missed them when they stopped appearing. I thought to compare a couple of things from the last report and add a couple of other items of interest. The last report was done almost 4 years and 7 months ago.
Here is the weekly summary from then:
To compare here are the numbers for the week ending May 4th 2013:
Gold closed at 1470.70 dollars an ounce Friday, up 74.9% from $840.80 since last report. The dollar closed at 0.7622 euros Friday, down 5.1% from 0.7255 in 2008. That put the euro at $1.3121 compared to 1.3783 (in 2008). Gold in euros would be € 1120.89 an ounce up 83.7% from €610.03 (2008). Oil closed at $95.61 a barrel Friday, up 2.7% from $93.10 (in 2008). Oil in euros would be €72.86 a barrel, up 7.8% from €67.55 in 2008. The gold/oil ratio closed at 15.28, up 70.3% from 9.03 in 2008. In U.S. stocks, the Dow closed at 14,973.96 Friday, up 45.0% from 10,325.38 from the last report in 2008. The NASDAQ closed at 3,378.63 Friday, up 73.5% from 1,947.39 in 2008. In U.S. interest rates, the yield on the ten-year U.S. Treasury note closed at 1.74% down, down 186 basis points from 3.60 at the close of the week ending October 4th 2008.
The attempt to desperately suppress the price of gold seems to have failed and could well backfire. The dumping of 1100 tons of gold on to the market did have a short term effect of decreasing the price of gold. 1100 tons of gold is more than half of the annual world production, so it was a big player who wanted to dump the price. Here is what marketwatch had to say at the time:
All the financial experts came out of the woodwork and were almost falling over each other in proclaiming that this was the end of gold, that gold was going to go further down and how it was just a bubble waiting to burst. This action in the mass-media was the psychological attempt to suppress gold after the dumping of the 1100 tons of gold on the market.
The reasons propagated about why gold was falling were nothing short of ridiculous. One of the allgeged reasons were that the American economy was improving. Wishful thinking. Another that Cyprus has to sell its gold, all 10 tons of it. That is less than what the Chinese Central bank will buy up in a bad week! Then there was the reason given that the Chinese economy would only be growing with 7.7% instead of the expected 8.0%. Yes that is of course shocking but hardly what brought the price of gold down. Any Western country can dream for a long time yet about having such growth rates.
Things did not work out for the gold bears as nobody on the street bought the idea that gold was finished and hence nobody sold any physical gold. People instead flocked to the mints and jewellery shops the world over to buy physical gold. This was especially true in Asia. China has Bangkok, Perth Mint to mention a couple recorded the most buying since 2008 and the president for the HongKong gold and silver exchange society recorded it as being the strongest buying in 50 years. (from Max Keiser interview with John ‘J.S.’ Kim of SmartknowledgeU.com in episode 439) It was mentioned on the Keiser report that the buyer to seller ratio was 50:1, so people realised that this was a historic opportunity to buy gold and silver too for that matter. There were needless to say also central banks using the opportunity to buy up. As a consequence the price of gold for the week that finished this Friday was just 5.6% lower than 30 days earlier, before the dumping of (paper) gold.
Here is an article from April 30th
The continual suppression of the gold price is needed by the PTB, so as to keep the illusion going that all is well and that there is no inflation. The money printing presses the world over are working non stop to flood the market with easy money. Normally printing more money would mean more inflation which would mean higher interest rates. But nothing is normal and those printing the notes are the same ones that decides the interest rates. So the interest rates are at a historic low, thus facilitating cheap money for the banksters, and at the same time Government bonds in the UK are at a 300 year high while in the US they are at a 240 year high. Talk about a bubble waiting to burst!
In connection to this: The European Central Bank (ECB) cut its refinancing interest rate to 0.50 per cent on Thursday, in a bid to kick-start the bloc’s sluggish economy. Not that it has helped up until now with all the previous interest rate cuts.
The Dow Jones stock index also briefly reached a new high on Friday of 15009,yet another indicator that inflation is rife. This was allegedly because of better than expected jobs data, data that are so manipulated that they have little relevance with the real world.
If one takes the gold price as a benchmark measure of the true currency then the picture becomes clearer that there is inflation. The gold price increased 74% since the last report by Donald Hunt, which is close to the increase in the NASDAQ (73.5%) and close to double the increase in the Dow Jones industrial average index (45%).
Another way of saying it is that the dollar has fallen against the the gold price with 42.8% to a value of just 0.57 cent compared to the dollar value of October 2008. So if you had $100 in your pocket in October 2008 then you now just have $57. The oil has actually fallen considerably and is almost the same in dollar terms as in 2008, but the gold to oil ratio shows that oil has fallen 41.3%. As wages have changed very little in dollar tems in the last few years since the last update, then it is obvious that wages in real terms have been gutted.
On top of the above the fact should be added that the gold price has been and still is massively suppressed.
So the race to the bottom is on, with perhaps Japan in a slight lead position. Their aim is to double the money supply in the pursuit of spurring inflation . In the old days when Japan was exporting a lot and importing little that could possibly have helped the economy, but these days a lot of the Japanese manufacturing has been outsourced, which means that having a cheaper currency will only make imports a lot more expensive, something that will not be outweighed by a diminished export sector.
The record low interest rates and the massive amounts of money printing or quantitative easing as it is called in newspeak, has consequences for everyone who don't belong to the financial elite.
Neil Macdonald writes about this:
So the manipulation and corruption in the world economy to the benefit of a tiny elite at the expense of the common man is just another symptom of a malaise that is planetary. As Laura writes in Comets and the Horns of Moses:
Here is the weekly summary from then:
http://www.sott.net/article/166977-Signs-Economic-Commentary-for-6-October-2008 said:Signs Economic Commentary for 6 October 2008
Donald Hunt
SOTT.net
Summary: The big financial bailout plan finally passed in the U.S. Congress Friday over the strong objections of the public. Will the bailout prevent the coming depression? Probably not. Mortgage securities are only a part of the problem.
The bailout plan is more than just a giveaway to the rich as represented by the big banks (although it is that). It probably is a panicked attempt to forestall the real potential crisis: a collapse of the huge, unregulated hedge funds based on derivatives and Credit Default Swaps (CDS).
Gold closed at 840.80 dollars an ounce Friday, down 5.6% from $887.90 for the week. The dollar closed at 0.7255 euros Friday, up 6.0% from 0.6845 at the close of the previous week. That put the euro at 1.3783 dollars compared to 1.4609 the week before. Gold in euros would be 610.03 euros an ounce, up 0.4% from 607.78 at the close of the previous week. Oil closed at 93.10 dollars a barrel Friday, down 15.2% from 107.26 at the end of the week before. Oil in euros would be 67.55 euros a barrel, down 8.7% from 73.42 for the week. The gold/oil ratio closed at 9.03 Friday, up 9.1% from 8.28 at the close of the previous week. In U.S. stocks, the Dow closed at 10,325.38 Friday, down 7.9% from 11,140.26 at the close of the previous Friday. The NASDAQ closed at 1,947.39 Friday, down 12.1% from 2,183.34 for the week. In U.S. interest rates, the yield on the ten-year U.S. Treasury note closed at 3.60%, down 24 basis points from 3.84 at the close of the week before.
To compare here are the numbers for the week ending May 4th 2013:
Gold closed at 1470.70 dollars an ounce Friday, up 74.9% from $840.80 since last report. The dollar closed at 0.7622 euros Friday, down 5.1% from 0.7255 in 2008. That put the euro at $1.3121 compared to 1.3783 (in 2008). Gold in euros would be € 1120.89 an ounce up 83.7% from €610.03 (2008). Oil closed at $95.61 a barrel Friday, up 2.7% from $93.10 (in 2008). Oil in euros would be €72.86 a barrel, up 7.8% from €67.55 in 2008. The gold/oil ratio closed at 15.28, up 70.3% from 9.03 in 2008. In U.S. stocks, the Dow closed at 14,973.96 Friday, up 45.0% from 10,325.38 from the last report in 2008. The NASDAQ closed at 3,378.63 Friday, up 73.5% from 1,947.39 in 2008. In U.S. interest rates, the yield on the ten-year U.S. Treasury note closed at 1.74% down, down 186 basis points from 3.60 at the close of the week ending October 4th 2008.
The attempt to desperately suppress the price of gold seems to have failed and could well backfire. The dumping of 1100 tons of gold on to the market did have a short term effect of decreasing the price of gold. 1100 tons of gold is more than half of the annual world production, so it was a big player who wanted to dump the price. Here is what marketwatch had to say at the time:
http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2013/04/15/amid-gold-slaughter-1300-even-1200-seen-as-lines-in-the-sand/ said:“It’s a slaughter,” said Carsten Fritsch, senior commodity analyst at Commerzbank AG. “It all comes via the futures market. On Friday, more than 1,100 tons of paper gold had been traded. That is more than annual gold demand from China or India. I can’t see a fundamental reason for this, to be honest."
Speaking on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Monday, Dennis Gartman, editor of the Gartman Letter, had this to say: “There are a lot of people throwing up their hands. Throwing positions overboard. Panic is everywhere. I’ve never seen anything like this. I mean it.”
And the blog Pragmatic Capitalism bluntly told its readers that commodities have almost no place in their portfolios: “If one actually takes a look at the long-term real returns of commodities you realize they’re actually quite dreadful,” wrote Cullen Roche. “Over the last 20 years commodities have returned just 1.6% per year over the last 20 years. That’s a real return of about MINUS 1%.”
Lots of reasons have been bandied around for gold’s recent slide: fears of central-bank selling triggered by Cyprus; downgrades from investment banks; and Monday’s downbeat China economic data.
All the financial experts came out of the woodwork and were almost falling over each other in proclaiming that this was the end of gold, that gold was going to go further down and how it was just a bubble waiting to burst. This action in the mass-media was the psychological attempt to suppress gold after the dumping of the 1100 tons of gold on the market.
The reasons propagated about why gold was falling were nothing short of ridiculous. One of the allgeged reasons were that the American economy was improving. Wishful thinking. Another that Cyprus has to sell its gold, all 10 tons of it. That is less than what the Chinese Central bank will buy up in a bad week! Then there was the reason given that the Chinese economy would only be growing with 7.7% instead of the expected 8.0%. Yes that is of course shocking but hardly what brought the price of gold down. Any Western country can dream for a long time yet about having such growth rates.
Things did not work out for the gold bears as nobody on the street bought the idea that gold was finished and hence nobody sold any physical gold. People instead flocked to the mints and jewellery shops the world over to buy physical gold. This was especially true in Asia. China has Bangkok, Perth Mint to mention a couple recorded the most buying since 2008 and the president for the HongKong gold and silver exchange society recorded it as being the strongest buying in 50 years. (from Max Keiser interview with John ‘J.S.’ Kim of SmartknowledgeU.com in episode 439) It was mentioned on the Keiser report that the buyer to seller ratio was 50:1, so people realised that this was a historic opportunity to buy gold and silver too for that matter. There were needless to say also central banks using the opportunity to buy up. As a consequence the price of gold for the week that finished this Friday was just 5.6% lower than 30 days earlier, before the dumping of (paper) gold.
In other words the Chinese have gobbled up an amount equivalent to Cyprus 10 tons of gold before lunch on any given day in the last two weeks, as 300 tons in two weeks translates to 21 tons a day. And that was only in China.http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2013/05/02/chinese-housewives-buy-300-tons-of-gold/ said:Chinese housewives buy 300 tons of gold
May 2, 2013, 10:45 AM
They are numerous and thumbing their noses at Wall Street, evidently. And perhaps they offer some explanation for the turnaround in gold lately.
On Thursday, the Shanghai Daily reported on a “Voice of China” radio program that claimed Chinese housewives are propping up gold prices. The program said those women reportedly spent 100 billion yuan ($16 billion) over the past two weeks, buying up 300 tons of gold and helping keep prices steady at around $1,468 an ounce.
Putting it all in perspective nicely, blogger Max Keiser notes that while Chinese housewives were out scooping up gold, Americans sold $16.6 billion worth in the first four months of the year. (Read: Gold ETF loses No. 2 spot to emerging markets)
Here is an article from April 30th
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-30/gold-rush-from-dubai-to-istanbul-drains-supply-as-premiums-jump.html said:Premiums paid by wholesalers and bulk buyers in Dubai to secure a 1 kilogram bar of bullion are being quoted between $6 an ounce and $9 an ounce over the London cash price, said Frederic Panizzutti, global head of marketing and sales at the Swiss-based bullion refiner. That compares with about 50 cents before the rout, Panizzutti, also chief executive officer of MKS Precious Metals DMCC, said in an interview from Dubai.
Gold fell to the lowest in more than two years this month on speculation that the global economy is recovering, unleashing a purchasing frenzy among coin and jewelry buyers from China to the U.S. Consumer demand for jewelry, bars and coins in Turkey and the Middle East represented about 9.4 percent of the global total last year, according to the World Gold Council. Bars have been cleared from display in the souks, according to Gerry Schubert, head of precious metals at Emirates NBD PJSC.
“Physical demand has been tremendous in a way I haven’t seen for a number of years,” said Jeffrey Rhodes, global head of precious metals at INTL FCStone Inc., who’s worked in the industry for more than three decades. “The price collapse prompted a physical gold rush and the evidence of the extent of that is the prolonged period of high premiums that we’ve seen. Reports from the gold souks are that business is good,” Rhodes said from Dubai.
…
In Turkey, the fourth-biggest gold consumer last year, bullion on the Istanbul Gold Exchange traded at premiums of as much as $25 an ounce over the London spot price, something that hasn’t happened in “a very long time, we’re talking years,” said MKS’s Panizzutti.
“In the gold souk, you see some coins left over, but the investment bars are all gone from the windows,” said Schubert at Dubai-based Emirates NBD, the United Arab Emirates’ second- biggest bank by assets. Domestic retail prices moved to a premium of about $5 an ounce from a small discount before the rout, said Schubert, who has traded the metal since 1979.
…
Gold jumped 4.2 percent last week, the most in 15 months, as coin demand from mints in the U.S. and Australia to the U.K. soared. The volume for the benchmark contract on the Shanghai Gold Exchange surged to a record last week, while premiums to secure supplies in India jumped to five times the level before the slump. China and India are the world’s largest buyers.
…
“Physical metal is still not available,” Ng said by phone from Singapore. “The Chinese are on holiday these few days and at this level, the market might slow down a bit on the demand side. People are a little bit more patient now compared with two weeks ago, where everybody was rushing for physical metal.”
Chow Sang Sang Holdings International Ltd. said that jewelry sales at its 44 shops in Hong Kong more than doubled in the two weeks ended April 27 from a year ago. In China, financial markets are closed through May 1.
“It’s not just a Middle East story, it’s all across the globe,” said Panizzutti. “The fact that premiums are so high, it means that no one is making enough. We are producing 24 hours a day.”
The continual suppression of the gold price is needed by the PTB, so as to keep the illusion going that all is well and that there is no inflation. The money printing presses the world over are working non stop to flood the market with easy money. Normally printing more money would mean more inflation which would mean higher interest rates. But nothing is normal and those printing the notes are the same ones that decides the interest rates. So the interest rates are at a historic low, thus facilitating cheap money for the banksters, and at the same time Government bonds in the UK are at a 300 year high while in the US they are at a 240 year high. Talk about a bubble waiting to burst!
In connection to this: The European Central Bank (ECB) cut its refinancing interest rate to 0.50 per cent on Thursday, in a bid to kick-start the bloc’s sluggish economy. Not that it has helped up until now with all the previous interest rate cuts.
The Dow Jones stock index also briefly reached a new high on Friday of 15009,yet another indicator that inflation is rife. This was allegedly because of better than expected jobs data, data that are so manipulated that they have little relevance with the real world.
If one takes the gold price as a benchmark measure of the true currency then the picture becomes clearer that there is inflation. The gold price increased 74% since the last report by Donald Hunt, which is close to the increase in the NASDAQ (73.5%) and close to double the increase in the Dow Jones industrial average index (45%).
Another way of saying it is that the dollar has fallen against the the gold price with 42.8% to a value of just 0.57 cent compared to the dollar value of October 2008. So if you had $100 in your pocket in October 2008 then you now just have $57. The oil has actually fallen considerably and is almost the same in dollar terms as in 2008, but the gold to oil ratio shows that oil has fallen 41.3%. As wages have changed very little in dollar tems in the last few years since the last update, then it is obvious that wages in real terms have been gutted.
On top of the above the fact should be added that the gold price has been and still is massively suppressed.
So the race to the bottom is on, with perhaps Japan in a slight lead position. Their aim is to double the money supply in the pursuit of spurring inflation . In the old days when Japan was exporting a lot and importing little that could possibly have helped the economy, but these days a lot of the Japanese manufacturing has been outsourced, which means that having a cheaper currency will only make imports a lot more expensive, something that will not be outweighed by a diminished export sector.
The record low interest rates and the massive amounts of money printing or quantitative easing as it is called in newspeak, has consequences for everyone who don't belong to the financial elite.
Neil Macdonald writes about this:
http://www.sott.net/article/261442-A-monumental-social-experiment-The-Monarchs-of-Money-and-Quantitative-Easing-Updated-The-illusion-of-growth said:Stock markets have risen on this tide of cheap money. So has real estate. So, arguably, has everything else.
But there are two big concerns with what this new central banker elite has done.
One is that no one really understands the consequences of pumping such vast amounts of money into the world economy. It's already distorted the prices of certain assets, and some fear hyperinflation or market crashes are inevitable (the subject of tomorrow's column).
The other is that it's caused a massive shift in wealth, from savers to borrowers, and is taking money out of the pockets of almost everyone approaching or at retirement age.
A war on savings
Probably the most painful of the consequences of quantitative easing has been borne by the elderly.
Most of that generation grew up believing that if you save and exercise prudence that you will earn at least a modest return on your hard-earned money to keep you comfortable in your old age, perhaps along with a pension.
But the money-printing orgy of the last five years looks to have shot that notion to smithereens.
Very deliberately, the central bankers have punished savers, pushing interest rates so low that any truly safe investment - and older people are always advised to play it safe - yields a negative return when inflation is factored in.
The policy has savaged pension and savings returns worldwide, but particularly in Britain, a nation of savers and pensioners.
There is more money in British pension funds than in the rest of Europe combined, and now that money is just sitting, "dead," as some call it, not working for its owners.
Ask Judy White, a retiree in her late 60s who lives in Teddington, south of London, with her husband, Alan.
This year, the Bank of England shattered her retirement. Her pension benefit was effectively slashed by half.
"I don't understand what quantitative easing is, except that it's printing money," she says. "But I do understand that I now have 50 per cent less.
"What they have done is take money from people who have been really careful all their lives."
On the backs of the virtuous
Actually, by the Bank of England's own reckoning, the £375 billion of quantitative easing it has carried out since 2008 has cost British savers and pensioners about £70 billion, roughly $100 billion. (At the same time, the richest 10 per cent of British households saw the value of their assets increase over the same period, the bank reported.)
That cost to the elderly is largely because pension payouts in the U.K. are pegged to the yields on government bonds, and quantitative easing has forced those yields down to almost nothing.
Speaking for the Bank of England, Paul Fisher acknowledges that the bank has created a paradox: It does want people to save and be prudent - just not right now.
"We try," he says, "to get people to do things now to get out of this mess, which in the long run we prefer not to do."
In other words, might we please have some more of the wild consumer spending and borrowing that helped get us all into this situation, at least for a while?
The plain fact, though, is that central bank- and government-imposed solutions to disasters caused by irresponsible, greedy, foolish behaviour are almost always carried out on the backs of the virtuous.
So it was with the bank rescues in 2008, and so it is with quantitative easing.
As Ros Altmann, a longtime pension manager and director of the London School of Economics, puts it, quantitative easing has amounted to a "monumental social experiment" - a large-scale transfer of wealth from older people to younger people.
"Anybody who was a saver and has got some accumulated savings will have had a reduction in their income," she says.
While "anyone who had a big debt, particularly mortgage debts, would have had improvement in their income because their interest payments have gone down."
As stupid as it might sound, older people everywhere would probably be better off if they'd abandoned prudence and borrowed more.
So the manipulation and corruption in the world economy to the benefit of a tiny elite at the expense of the common man is just another symptom of a malaise that is planetary. As Laura writes in Comets and the Horns of Moses:
It is said that power corrupts, and that absolute power corrupts absolutely. What this view does not convey is that power attracts deviants and the corruption of everything else is then a result of pathological persons – who are innately attracted to gaining power over others – spreading their corruption and making it easy for other corrupt persons to join them ‘at the top’. This is the primary driver of all the so-called ‘cycles of history’ (page 379).
