United Kingdom
All Aboard The Gold Repatriation Train: First Germany, Next: The Netherlands?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/16/2013 14:57 -0500
While moustachioed managers, contrary to the far better insight of their superiors, and mainstream spivs are trying to talk down Germany's somewhat stunning shift in thinking - i.e. to repatriate its gold - as nothing but political pandering (or cost-saving); it seems, just as we predicted, the rest of the world are seeing this crack-in-the-confidence-armor the same way we have suggested. As we noted here, the first party to defect from the prisoner's dilemma of all the bulk of global gold being held by the Fed, defects best (then the second, or even the third perhaps) and sure enough, via RTL, we see the Dutch CDA party has requested that Holland's gold supply be repatriated. Who next?
FOR THE RECORD: GATA, Ted Truman And Gold … Another Stunning Revelation
Submitted by lemetropole on 01/01/2013 22:05 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- BIS
- Central Banks
- Chris Powell
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Foreign Central Banks
- Institute For International Economics
- Krugman
- Market Manipulation
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- None
- Ohio
- Paul Krugman
- Spencer Bachus
- SPY
- Trade Deficit
- Transparency
- Treasury Department
- United Kingdom
- World Bank
On May 10, 2000 a GATA delegation consisting of Reg Howe, Frank Veneroso, Chris Powell and Bill Murphy met with Denny Hastert, The Speaker of the House in the United States Congress; Spencer Bachus, the Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy; and Dr. John Silvia, the Chief Economist of the Senate Banking Committee. We presented each of them our 100 page "Gold Derivative Banking Crisis" document and personally delivered it to the staff of every House and Senate Banking Committee member.
S&P Cuts UK Outlook To Negative
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2012 12:26 -0500The drainage of AAA quality collateral contonues as S&P cuts it outlook on the United Kingdom to negative...
- *BANK OF ENGLAND OUTLOOK TO NEGATIVE FROM STABLE: S&P
- *UNITED KINGDOM OUTLOOK TO NEGATIVE FROM STABLE BY S&P
more as we get it...
The Central Bank Backlash: First Hong Kong, Now Australia Gets Ugly Case Of Truthiness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 23:06 -0500Glenn Stevens, RBA Governor: "Central banks can provide liquidity to shore up financial stability and they can buy time for borrowers to adjust, but they cannot, in the end, put government finances on a sustainable course... They can't shield people from the implications of having mis-assessed their own lifetime budget constraints and therefore having consumed too much."
Frontrunning: December 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2012 07:52 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- BBY
- Best Buy
- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- fixed
- Freddie Mac
- GOOG
- Greece
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- Lazard
- Merrill
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NBC
- Nelson Peltz
- Newspaper
- Omnicom
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- SWIFT
- Swift Transportation
- The Economist
- Trading Strategies
- Unemployment
- United Kingdom
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Central Banks Ponder Going Beyond Inflation Mandates (BBG)
- Bloomberg Weighs Making Bid for The Financial Times (NYT)
- Hedge Funds Fall Out of Love with Equities (FT)
- Obama and Boehner resume US fiscal cliff talks (FT)
- Italy Front-Runner Vows Steady Hand (WSJ)
- Spanish Bailout Caution Grows as Business Lobbies Back Rajoy (BBG)
- Japan sinks into fresh recession (Reuters)
- China economic recovery intact, but weak exports drag (Reuters)
- Greece extends buyback offer to reach target (Reuters) ... but on Friday they promised it was done
- Basel Liquidity Rule May Be Watered Down Amid Crisis (BBG) ... just before they are scrapped
- Irish, Greek Workers Seen Suffering Most in 2013 Amid EU Slump (BBG)
Economic Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism or Simply Modus Operandi In the Colonization Of Greece?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/06/2012 09:50 -0500It would appear that many are lookng at the Greek serial default debacle as a muppet wearing Goldman-tinted gold colored glasses. Here's a more realistic view, complete with the math to back it up!
Guest Post: BRICS: The World's New Bankers?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2012 19:45 -0500
The BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) bloc has begun planning its own development bank and a new bailout fund which would be created by pooling together an estimated $240 billion in foreign exchange reserves, according to diplomatic sources. To get a sense of how significant the proposed fund would be, the fund would be larger than the combined Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of about 150 countries, according to Russia and India Report. Many believe the BRICS countries are interested in creating these institutions because they are increasingly dissatisfied by Western dominated institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The Cost Of Kidding Yourself
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2012 15:55 -0500
Five years ago, every American would have considered a trillion-dollar budget deficit a national tragedy. If you believe the CNBC parrot show, NOT having a trillion-dollar deficit is now a sure sign of the Apocalypse. I speak of course of the cleverly dubbed “Fiscal Cliff,” which panicked CNBC apologists are required to mention no less than 5,000 times a day. Creating the illusion of economic growth is easy if you can print money. It’s a prank you can play on an entire country. Cut the value of the currency in half and the economy’s size will appear to double. If it doesn’t, you’re in recession (whether you know it or not). Cavemen probably understood this concept better than America’s best economic minds.
Austrian Parliament Hears 80% Of Austrian Gold Bullion Reserves In London
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2012 08:01 -0500The Austrian central bank keeps most of its 280 metric tons of gold reserves in the United Kingdom, Vice Governor Wolfgang Duchatczek was quoted as saying in the finance committee of the country’s parliament today, according to Bloomberg. Answering lawmakers’ questions, Duchatczek said 80%, or 224.4 metric tons of the metal was stored in the U.K., 17% or 48.7 metric tons in Austria and 3% in Switzerland, according to a summary of a closed-door committee meeting provided by the parliament. The reserve has been unchanged since 2007, Duchatczek was quoted as saying. The central bank has earned 300 million euros ($385 million) over the last ten years by lending the gold, he said.
Grantham: Biggest Housing Bubble Since 807 A.D. Has Burst
Submitted by George Washington on 11/20/2012 20:52 -0500Or Maybe the Biggest of All Time ...
Where Should Gold Be Based on Inflation?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/29/2012 12:43 -0500So with world central banks printing paper money day and night it is no surprise that Gold is now emerging as the ultimate currency: one that cannot be printed. Indeed, Gold has broken out against ALL major world currencies in the last ten years. The below chart prices Gold in Dollars (Gold), Euros (Blue), Japanese Yen (Red) and Swiss Francs (Purple):
Guest Post: Secession Fever Sweeping Europe Meaningless Without Debt Repudiation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/24/2012 21:41 -0500
While regional independence is superior to both the failing European Union and the façade of special interest controlled democracy, one further action should taken by any jurisdictions that choose secession: Newly restored sovereign nations should repudiate their share of the illegitimate sovereign debt when they exit existing unions and nation-states. Created by distant banking elites buying national politicians and parliaments to load up on sovereign debts that can never be paid off, this massive national debt load is illegitimate and destructive to existing and new national economies. Governments have three ways to deal with debt loads of this magnitude: The first is hyperinflation designed to destroy the payoff value of the debt, second is the official repudiation of the debt or third, a combination of both options. Attempting to hold the bankers accountable is not an option. The first nations to repudiate sovereign debt will have the advantage; and as nations undertake this endeavor, they should keep this in mind: All government bureaucracies grow until contained, taxes rise until curtailed and politicians borrow and seek power until thrown out of office.
Google Reports Early: Huge Miss Sends Stock Plunging
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 11:39 -0500Google is down over 8% as it reported earnings early and surprised to the downside...
- GOOGLE 3Q REV. EX TAC $11.33B, EST. $11.83B
- GOOGLE 3Q ADJ. EPS $9.03, EST. $10.65
- Q3 REVENUE EX-TAC $11.33 BLN VS EXP. $11.83 BN
- Q3 NETWORK REVENUE USD 3.13 BLN
Full EDGAR filing below...
Guest Post: The Many Guises Of Financial Repression
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2012 19:31 -0500- Australia
- Bank of New York
- Bill Gross
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Corruption
- credit union
- default
- European Union
- Fail
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Guest Post
- Institutional Investors
- Insurance Companies
- Ludwig von Mises
- Monetary Policy
- Netherlands
- Nobel Laureate
- Purchasing Power
- Real Interest Rates
- Risk Premium
- Sovereign Debt
- State Street
- Switzerland
- Tobin Tax
- Transaction Tax
- United Kingdom
Economists, market analysts, journalists and investors alike are all talking about it quite openly, generally in a calm and reserved tone that suggests that - to borrow a phrase from Bill Gross – it represents the 'new normal'. Something that simply needs to be acknowledged and analyzed in the same way we e.g. analyze the supply/demand balance of the copper market. It is the new buzzword du jour: 'Financial Repression'. The term certainly sounds ominous, but it is always mentioned in an off-hand manner that seems to say: 'yes, it is bad, but what can you do? We've got to live with it.' But what does it actually mean? The simplest, most encompassing explanation is this: it describes various insidious and underhanded methods by which the State intends to rob its citizens of their wealth and income over the coming years (and perhaps even decades) above and beyond the already onerous burden of taxation and regulatory costs that is crushing them at present. One cannot possibly "print one's way to prosperity". The exact opposite is in fact true: the policy diminishes the economy's ability to generate true wealth. If anything, “we” are printing ourselves into the poorhouse.
The European Disunion: The Richest Increasingly Want To Fragment From The Poorest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/06/2012 14:36 -0500
Europe, and its apparent Union, is rapidly fragmenting as tensions mount on large and small scales across all of its regions and nations. From Scotland's independence referendum to Flanders' autonomy and now Catalonian separatism on the rise once more, this is no longer a north-south divide, but a rich/poor, debt/no-debt divide. As the NY Times notes, this seems to emerge from the ebbing of the concept of shared sovereignty (richer - or less debt-saturated - nations increasing anger at having to bail out their poorer neighbors), or as Stratfor describes it - the paradox of integration - as 'more Europe' means vastly different things depending on which side of the fence you sit on. Now, as Russia Today reports, Venice is pushing for independence from Rome and there is increasing independence movements in Sicily and Sardinia. As old battles and historical grievance come back to the fore, "when it comes to the crunch, while money may be the catalyst (who commits what to central budgets); it is, as the NY Times puts it, "the meta-narrative and emotions of 'do we feel oppressed?... as the ghosts of history return." From Bannockburn to WWII, "Europe seems shakier; some of the taboo questions are coming out again!"






