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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Waiting for a Real Boom

Bill Bonner (September 23rd, 2009) Writes:

The trouble with being a contrarian is that you can never be quite contrarian enough.

We began having doubts about the ‘feds inflate… gold soars’ hypothesis last year. It was too easy… too obvious. And if it were that easy to inflate a nation’s currency, how come the Japanese couldn’t get the hang of it in the ‘90s?

So, we moved towards a contrarian position – inflation, yes… but not for a while. And gold? Well, we are in it for the long run. In the short run, anything could happen.

To clarify our view on gold, the Daily Reckoning is not bearish on the metal. It is not bullish on the metal either. It is buggish. We are gold bugs. In the long run, gold will retain its value. Since that’s all we ask of it, we are always satisfied. Even if it is down in the short

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Increase in the Fed’s balance sheet – let’s be objective

Prieur du Plessis (July 3rd, 2009) Writes:

This post is a guest contribution by Paul Kasriel* of The Northern Trust Company.

In recent weeks two prominent economic commentators - Arthur Laffer and Alan Greenspan - have warned about the inflationary potential emanating from the unprecedented increase in the Fed’s balance sheet. Yes, as shown in Chart 1, reserves created by the Fed have increased by a staggering $858 billion in the 12 months ended May. But excess reserves on the books of depository institutions have increased by almost as much, $842 billion (see Chart 2). So, in the 12 months ended May, 98% of the increase in reserves created by the Fed has simply ended up as idle reserves on the books of depository institutions.

northern-trust-30-june-2009

Yes, the bulk of the reserves the Fed has created

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Prieur’s readings

Prieur du Plessis (June 13th, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to some interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• Doug French (Ludwig von Mises Institute): Dead banks walking, 11 June, 2009. It’s widely acknowledged that hundreds if not thousands of banks are on the ropes and just waiting for regulators to wrap them in yellow tape some Friday evening. However, fewer than forty US banks have been seized this year. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) list of problem banks grew to 305 in the first quarter, the highest number since 1994, but of course the names of those banks are not released so that depositors can be forewarned.

• The Economist: Seeing red, June 10. America’s debt is Barack Obama’s biggest weakness

• Arthur Laffer (Wall Street Journal): Get ready for inflation and higher

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