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View Full Version : GOLD & SILVER NOW BREAKING OUT IN ALL CURRENCIES - WILLIE



mamboni
16th December 2010, 09:57 PM
GOLD & SILVER BREAKOUTS

Excerpted from http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article25035.html


The breakouts in the Gold & Silver prices will continue for the next two years and beyond. Every several weeks, a fresh record high will come. The unique aspect of the precious metals breakout is its foundation in a crumbling global monetary system. Demonstrated proof is that the Gold & Silver prices are making record highs in all major currencies. The gold chart is less impressive than the silver chart. The long held favorite by the Jackass is silver. Central banks own none, and industry demands plenty, as substitutes are few. Gold & Silver have found their place as global reserve assets and currencies within FOREX accounts during the global assault on sovereign debt. The claims that Gold & Silver are in a bubble are as stupid as they are humorous. Money is never in a bubble. The big bubble is USTreasurys. The desperation of the captains of fiat fraud is showing like underwear worn on the outside in plain public view.

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2010/Dec/gold-silver.gif

Note the Silver price breakouts in all four major currencies, from upper left to lower right in the US$, the Euro, the Pound Sterling, and the Yen. The promised land for many precious metals investors has been to witness a bull run in all currencies. It has begun, and it will continue until the series of pre-ordained climax events occurs. It will be as tragic as exciting. The global monetary system is collapsing, led by sovereign debt ruin and amplified monetary expansion that brings no viable solutions anywhere. The major banks are collapsing in insolvency and futile defense of their broken fortresses. Government deficits are spiraling out of control, whose solution in fiscal austerity only makes the economies weaker. The metals exchanges are being systematically drained, even as revealed for the leveraged paper fraud they operate. They buy and sell paper gold and paper silver without too much benefit of physical, permitting naked short sales by the biggest US and London banks. Their game is being called. The Swiss banks are under critical eye for foot dragging on gold & silver withdrawals from Allocated accounts.

The Chinese have done something remarkable, only to be done if they know the game is over and the victory over fiat paper money is complete. The Chinese have laid out their game plan, their modus operandi, their tactics if not strategy, through an anonymous London broker. Hats off to the King World News for sharing the invaluable information that should encourage even the most timid and reticent investor. The Anglo bankers are stuck!! They are running out of physical metal to sell in a fractional scheme. They cannot afford to pounce too hard on the price, with either naked shorts or higher margin requirements. Doing so only plays into the Chinese hands, which are grabbing all the bullion available. So the challenge is for the Anglo bankers to control the pace of the demise of the Gold & Silver metal market. This is game over. In these times of monetary hyper-inflation, called euphemistically and absurdly Quantitative Easing by another name, the prospects for a double and triple in the Gold & Silver price is utterly obvious.

THE HAT TRICK LETTER PROFITS IN THE CURRENT CRISIS.

mamboni
17th December 2010, 06:44 AM
I have a gut feeling that today will be an explosive price day for silver and gold. ;D ;D ;D

JohnQPublic
17th December 2010, 07:13 AM
I was planning to go to a local show tomorrow. Hope you don't mind me posting this to help keep prices from surging. ;D

mamboni
17th December 2010, 07:23 AM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D

Plastic
17th December 2010, 07:42 AM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D



WTF?? No dick stab for them thar rockets? You are slipping Mamboni.

mamboni
17th December 2010, 07:46 AM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D



WTF?? No dick stab for them thar rockets? You are slipping Mamboni.


I subscribe to a simple formula:

Forum administrator + dick stabbing = likely banning of dick stabber ;D ;D ;D

Plastic
17th December 2010, 07:46 AM
LOL! :D

JohnQPublic
17th December 2010, 10:21 AM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D



WTF?? No dick stab for them thar rockets? You are slipping Mamboni.


I subscribe to a simple formula:

Forum administrator + dick stabbing = likely banning of dick stabber ;D ;D ;D


My dick is depending on that formula. :D

Neuro
17th December 2010, 11:46 AM
I have a gut feeling that today will be an explosive price day for silver and gold. ;D ;D ;D
Seem to begin exploding now!

mamboni
17th December 2010, 11:57 AM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D



WTF?? No dick stab for them thar rockets? You are slipping Mamboni.


I subscribe to a simple formula:

Forum administrator + dick stabbing = likely banning of dick stabber ;D ;D ;D


My dick is depending on that formula. :D


Aren't we all? ;D ;D ;D

JohnQPublic
17th December 2010, 03:44 PM
The small rockets effect worked ok. We certainly stayed out of the $30+ range. If it were not for the picture, the price may have gone much higher today. I hope the picture also has an effect on the premiums charged at the show.


:rocket_hor

gunDriller
19th December 2010, 01:16 PM
That brings back memories - I used to build them rockets when I was a kid. ;D


so did i. i was one of Estes' best customers.

JohnQPublic
19th December 2010, 02:42 PM
The small rockets effect worked ok. We certainly stayed out of the $30+ range. If it were not for the picture, the price may have gone much higher today. I hope the picture also has an effect on the premiums charged at the show.


:rocket_hor


The show as good. Premiums were ok. ASEs were $30-33. Maples and Phils were ~$32. I picked up a couple of Canadian Wolfs finally. 90% junk was 21-21.5. I picked up Maples, Phils and the Wolfs, plus three 1/10th ozt. silver coins for the heck of it. Nothing big, just helping out Max a little ;).

I did not price gold. One dealer had dos pesos for $69. There was some gold, and a lot of silver, too.

Libertarian_Guard
20th December 2010, 12:23 AM
http://i52.tinypic.com/21105n4.jpg


Silver Man Has Landed. Clearly sub $30 silver has brought him here. Good luck finding some scraps and the next coin show.

Libertarian_Guard
20th December 2010, 11:30 PM
Vietnamese seek safety in gold as currency wobbles


(AP:HANOI, Vietnam) Do Hai Ninh has been stashing away her meager earnings until finally saving enough to make a deposit. But the high school teacher isn't about to put her money into a Vietnamese bank with the value of the local currency steadily dropping. She's investing in a safer bet: gold.

Jewelry shops and black-market money changers have overflowed with customers in recent weeks, desperate to unload their Vietnamese dong for greenbacks or gold nuggets as the fast-growing Southeast Asian nation is buffeted by double-digit inflation and the near collapse of one of its largest state-owned companies.

The problems have underlined the downsides of the Communist government's push for rapid economic growth, which has lifted millions out of poverty but created new challenges that the country's technocrats are often ill-equipped to deal with.

Attempts to create national corporate champions have wasted capital with unwise investments and left state-owned businesses loaded with too much debt. Rapid growth in lending, meanwhile, has not been matched by increases in deposits, a phenomenon partly explained by suspicion of banks after previous bouts of hyper inflation destroyed savings.

It all adds up to a financial system creaking under immense pressures that are reflected in the lack of faith Vietnamese have in their country's currency.

"People's trust in the local currency, the dong, has been eroded seriously," said economist Nguyen Quang A, former president of the Institute of Development Studies, the country's first independent think tank, which disbanded in protest last year following a government decree restricting the right to conduct and publish research.

"One of the most important tasks of the government, specifically, the State Bank is to protect the power of the local currency," he said. "The policy aiming for high growth with inefficient investment in the economy, particularly investment in state-owned enterprises and in the government, has led to this situation."

Last week, Moody's Investor Services slashed Vietnam's government foreign currency bond rating to B1 from Ba3 and kept the outlook as negative, meaning it could cut the credit rating again.

It said the country was facing an increased risk of a balance of payments crisis because Vietnam is importing more than it exports, foreign exchange reserves are being depleted to prop up an overvalued currency and foreign capital is fleeing. High inflation, excessive bank lending and problems at Vietnam's beleaguered state-run shipbuilding conglomerate Vinashin were further reasons for the downgrade, Moody's said.

The head of Vinashin repeated Monday that the shipbuilder did not have enough cash to make the first repayment of principal due that same day on a $600 million loan from a group of creditors led by Credit Suisse. He told the official Vietnam News Agency that the company was still awaiting word from the lenders on whether they will agree to delay the payment.

The government has said it will not bail out the company, also known as Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group, which owed $4.5 billion (86 trillion dong) in debts as of June. That's equal to 4.5 percent of the country's gross domestic product last year. Vinashin has asked creditors for extra time to make good on its payments after the company's restructuring.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung last month assumed responsibility for the floundering company, blaming its problems on corporate malfeasance and unchecked rapid expansion into numerous areas outside shipbuilding from animal feed to tourist resorts.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor's issued a statement last week saying the company's woes would likely result in higher bad debts at the country's banks.

"Currently, the government has asked local banks not to collect debts and interest on Vinashin," said senior Vietnamese economist Le Dang Doanh. "I'm sure the government will have to subsidize the interest for the banks because the banks cannot afford not to collect interest while they have to mobilize savings with increasingly high rates."

The local currency plunged to an all-time low earlier this month on the black market, hitting 21,560 dong to one U.S. dollar, according to a state-run telephone information service. It was trading at 21,140 on Tuesday, it said. The official rate was 19,500.

The State Bank has devalued the official dong rate three times since Nov. 2009, reducing its value about 10 percent against the dollar over that time, but it is still widely regarded as overvalued.

Vietnam's leaders are quick to tout the country as one of the fastest emerging economies in Asia _ after China _ averaging more than 7 percent growth annually over the past decade. The Communist government's embrace of capitalism since the mid-1980s followed attempts at collective farming and central planning that kept the country mired in extreme poverty after the Vietnam War ended in 1975.

But despite all the country's progress, high school teacher Ninh, 33, says she's sticking with something that never loses its luster.

"You can see that the dong is losing its value. Everyday, you go to the market and everything is getting more expensive," she said while exchanging 7.2 million dong ($360) for about 7.5 grams of gold at a bustling gold shop in Hanoi. "It's a safer place for my savings."

http://news.ino.com/headlines/?newsid=689758446680

mike88
21st December 2010, 01:23 PM
high inflation, propping up of state run industries.................sounds familiar.

Libertarian_Guard
29th December 2010, 09:07 AM
http://i55.tinypic.com/33upibo.jpg