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View Full Version : Gold And Silver Levitate As The Day Of Printing Nears



MNeagle
25th July 2012, 07:07 AM
Submitted by Tyler Durden (http://gold-silver.us/users/tyler-durden) on 07/25/2012 08:52 -0400



Central Banks (http://gold-silver.us/taxonomy_vtn/term/10130)
Unemployment (http://gold-silver.us/taxonomy_vtn/term/10938)
Wall Street Journal (http://gold-silver.us/taxonomy_vtn/term/10139)



Gold has pushed back above $1600 this morning (and +2.6% year-to-date) as it appears the Hilsenrath-rumor is sinking in and the day of reckoning printing draws nearer. There was little new in the statement, as we have stated, but its timing and specificity is to be noted though we, like BofAML are more predisposed to expectations of a rate extension next week to mid-2015 followed by NEW QE in September (with a disappointed equity market slump in between that 'enables' NEW QE). The herald cry from every hypocritical CEO and retired banker this morning appears to be "but, but, but the central banks have to do something" - even if they 'know' the economic impact is nil - as pre-emptive omnipotence has always worked before.

http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user3303/imageroot/2012/07-2/20120725_gold_0.png
BofAML: Fed action is likely in the next several months





The Wall Street Journal is suggesting that the “Fed Moves Closer To Action.”

Originally posted on the WSJ Online late yesterday it helped spark an end of day rally in equities (even with the rally equities finished down on the day) and a bid in Treasuries. Today, the article appears on the front page of today’s Wall Street Journal, Jon Hilsenrath, argues that “Federal Reserve officials, impatient with the economy’s sluggish growth and high unemployment, are moving closer to taking new steps to spur activity and hiring. Many officials appear inclined to move unless they see evidence soon that activity is picking up on its own.” The last statement is important because as we have argued the Fed does not need to see a further deterioration in growth to spark more monetary easing but rather no meaningful pickup from today’s sluggish pace.

Further, Hilsenrath notes that “central bank officials could take new steps at their meeting next week though they might wait until their September meeting to accumulate more information on the pace of growth and job gains before deciding whether to act.” Overall, this article is very much consistent with our view. In our view, the Fed isn't quite ready to launch QE3 yet – would prefer to see more data – but could extend forward guidance to reflect the recent string of disappointing data at their August 1 meeting. We continue to expect a rate extension next week to mid-2015 followed by QE3 in September.


http://www.zerohedge.com/news/gold-and-silver-levitate-day-printing-nears?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+zerohedge%2Ffeed+%28zero+hedg e+-+on+a+long+enough+timeline%2C+the+survival+rate+fo r+everyone+drops+to+zero%29

beefsteak
25th July 2012, 07:57 AM
Thanks, MNeagle,
Never heard of Jon Hilsenrath until this article you posted. WSJ, eh? So, yours truly went and read up on him online. Seems to be a seasoned veteran economics reporter with some street creds both stateside and abroad. Good to know. Now we have 3 FR birddogs...Pimco's Gross, Zero's Durden, and this WSJ's Hilsenrath fellow. Thanks again.


beefsteak

beefsteak
27th July 2012, 09:22 AM
MNeagle,
following up your fine headszup OP...this from ZERO just now....

.........more Hilsenrath grist

http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/pictures/picture-5.jpg (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden)
Hilsenrath Has Spoken: GDP Is Worse Than Expected After All, "Won't Constrain Fed" (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/hilsenrath-has-spoken-gdp-worse-expected-after-all-wont-constrain-fed)

Submitted by Tyler Durden (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden) on 07/27/2012 - 09:52AM

Just after the GDP number was released, we joked that the only opinion on the sub-standard Q2 US economic growth that matters is that of Fed uberchairman Jon Hilsenrath:
https://si0.twimg.com/profile_images/72647502/tyler_normal.jpg zerohedge @zerohedge (https://twitter.com/zerohedge)
Only Hilsenrath's take on the GDP matters


Turns out we were not joking: the Fed mouthpiece has just released his take on the GDP. His bottom line: Inflation Data Won’t Constrain Fed. In other words, the Fed ignores the modest beat to expectations, and has given the green light after all.

CONTINUED on Zero's "page 2"...

From Jon:

GDP Highlights: Inflation Data Won’t Constrain Fed

A few quick thoughts on GDP report out this morning:


Key price indexes are uniformly running below the Federal Reserve’s 2% objective. The personal consumption expenditures price index was up 1.6% from a year ago, thanks in part to falling gasoline prices. This is the price index that the Fed watches most closely, more so than the consumer price index produced by the Labor Department, which is running a touch higher. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index was up 1.8% from a year ago. The Fed watches this ex-food-and-energy index to get a read on underlying inflation trends. For the quarter at an annual rate, the PCE price index ran at 0.7% and excluding food and energy it ran at 1.8%. An alternate measure, the “market-based” price index, is also running below 2%. This is ammunition for Fed officials who want to act right away to spur growth. Not only is growth subpar, and the job market stuck in the mud, inflation is also running below the Fed’s long-run goals.
National defense spending contracted three quarters in a row. The winding down of two wars, it seems, is having a short-term negative impact on growth, though it is certainly in everyone’s interest in the long run that the nation not be at war. Of course budget cuts are also part of this story.
Business investment ran at an 8.5% annual rate in Q2. Not bad, despite all of the uncertainty business leaders express about the world. That includes 7.2% in the all important equipment and software category.
With very little fanfare, housing investment has been growing for a full year and went at a double digit pace in the first half of 2012.
Final sales of domestic product — a measure of how the economy is doing when you take out inventory swings – up at a 1.2% rate in Q2 and averaging a 1.7% rate since 2011. That’s really substandard for a recovery.


And there you have it: the central planners' parrot has squawked.

===================

What amazes me is that statement in red yours truly highlighted above.....
I KNEW from my years in the commodity brokerage industry, that PPI and CPI always "X'ed out the FOOD AND ENERGY" pricing...an absurd statistical fade in and of itself... Yeah, like producers don't eat, and production doesn't consume energy in one form or another....

but...

......I did NOT know that this GDP number the FR is watching according to Hilsenrath ALSO X'ed the Food & Energy in its calcs/algorithm. Seems almost as if F&E are "X'ed out twice, ya'know?"

To paraphrase with my current poetic license clutched tightly, "Yes, Virgina, there is a liar doin' the figurin'."

So, when's chow time, and do I have enough time to walk to meet up?


beefsteak