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What China Could Do to the Price of Gold

Bill Bonner (September 16th, 2009) Writes:

“I’m Brazilian. I have gold. And I’ve just arrived from Rio richer than anyone…” Thus sang one of the characters in an operetta by Jacques Offenbach. But that was in the mid-19 th century. But hey… what goes around…

Guess what happened last year? According to a study from Boston Consulting Group, the only area of the world that got richer last year was Latin America… led by Brazil!

The rest of the world got poorer. By 11%, according to BCG. Down in the rum and sun zone, on the other hand, they got 3% richer.

So maybe our investments in South and Central America will turn out all right after all.

Meanwhile, back in the developed world… what’s going on? There are two main schools of thought. Ours. And theirs.

Who’s right? You decide.

They say – the crisis is over. We can thank our lucky stars – and the feds.

Now, we’re getting back

...

Buy, Sell or Hold: The iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund

Contrarian Profits (August 24th, 2009) Writes:

The U.S. stock market has enjoyed a strong rally since the early spring, but while the economy has shown improvement, it still faces major headwinds. So it may be best to hedge against the U.S. dollar, which is likely to experience a significant decline over the next few months.

There are a lot of uncertainties permeating the market right now, not the least of which is healthcare reform. Will that reform entail a public option that could add $1 trillion to the deficit?  How is reform going to be financed?  And is it going to mean higher costs for employers across the board, or just the healthcare insurers?

Investing is made infinitely more difficult when 18% of U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) is hanging in the balance.

And you still have to consider:

That unemployment is likely to keep rising, perhaps over 10%. That the U.S. ...

Talk vs. Action: Russia’s Currency Dilemma Continues

Robert Amsterdam (June 15th, 2009) Writes:
090614 foreignholdersofUST.source reuters.png

I'm a few days behind on this as I've been busy with other parts of this website, but there have been a number of developments since my post last week regarding how Russia discusses its currency maneuvers. The specific language used here is VERY important, so bear with me as I get nitpicky.

First, the facts as reported by various news outlets whose links are embedded within each bullet point:

Bank Rossii officials announced a plan to swap $10 billion worth of US Treasury holdings.for the equivalent in the proposed IMF bond issue expected in the fourth quarter of this year.Brazil and China also expressed interest in buying $10 billion and $50 billion, respectively, of IMF bonds. Alexei Kudrin said Russia has full ...

Russia’s Economy Contracts By 7% In Q1 2009

Edward Hugh (April 7th, 2009) Writes:
by Edward Hugh: Barcelonabr /br /According to Deputy Economic Development Minister Andrei Klepach last week, Russia's economy shrank by 7 percent year on year in the first quarter of 2009, a staggering turnaround for an economy which has just enjoyed eight years of solid oil-fueled growth.br /br /"These figures are worse than we expected," Klepach said at a press conference in Kiev,citing preliminary figures. Klepach also stated that net capital outflows reached $33 billion in the first quarter of 2009, following record outflows of $130 billion in the second half of last year.br /br /pa href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_ngczZkrw340/SdsTJmo57XI/AAAAAAAANbI/gYR1beR2NiI/s1600-h/russia+gdp.png"img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5321868440380239218" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 229px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_ngczZkrw340/SdsTJmo57XI/AAAAAAAANbI/gYR1beR2NiI/s400/russia+gdp.png" border="0" //abr /br /The Russian State Statistics Service have also released official gross domestic product figures for the fourth quarter of 2008. GDP was up 1.2 percent year on year, the worst reading for any quarter since ...
Tags for this Post:
/ppThe Central Bank;, /ppThe Russian Cabinet;, Alexei Kudrin, Andrei Klepach;, Bank, bank loans, bank of england, Bloomberg Television, Canon PowerShot S400 / IXUS 400 Digital Camera;, central bank, central bank reserves;, Chemicals, Economics, Edward Hugh, electro-technical and optical equipment;, electronics, European Central Bank, finance ministry, Headache, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Kiev, longest rail network, lower oil prices, Ministry of Finance, non-metal products;, OAO Sberbank, Oil Drilling, Oil Prices, optical equipment;, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, projected gross domestic product;, Reserve Fund, retail loans, Retail Sales, RUB, Russia, Russian Government, Russian State Statistics Service;, Samsung 400PX 40 in. HDTV-Ready LCD TV;, Sergei Ignatiev;, Siberian Services;, strongAs Does Manufacturing;, Svetlana Aslanova;, Transportation Equipment, Urals, Us Federal Reserve, USD, utilities charges;, Vladimir Yakunin;, VTB Capital;

Why the IMF and Fort Knox Won’t Put the Hurt on Gold

Alex Stanczyk (March 2nd, 2009) Writes:

Alex’s Notes: My favorite part of this article was this:

Bluffing Into the Nuts

We’ll close with a quick poker analogy.

In No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em, to hold “the nuts” means you can’t be beaten – that your hole cards in combination with the board give you the best possible hand.

Needless to say, it is useless to bluff a player who is holding the nuts. Why would they fold? They know they have the best hand. If you raise such a player, they will happily call… or better yet shove their own stack in the middle, a reraise to put you all-in.

If the Fed or the IMF were to dump gold onto the market in this environment, I believe it would be the poker equivalent of bluffing into the nuts. I don’t think the powers that be are that dumb.

******

Written by Justice Litle, Editorial Director, Taipan Publishing Group  

Is

...

Why the IMF and Fort Knox Won’t Put the Hurt on Gold

Justice Litle (February 24th, 2009) Writes:

Is there a Sword of Damocles hanging over gold’s head? Here’s why U.S. and IMF gold holdings aren’t as big a deal as some think…

Last week, I promised to answer this popular question:

“Hey JL, what about all that gold in the vaults of the IMF and Fort Knox? Aren’t you worried they might try to dump it on the market?”

But before we get to that, a quick correction. In Friday’s piece, Europocalypse, I made reference to Colonel Kurtz as a “deranged flyboy lost deep in the Congo.”

The film-buff contingent among you corrected me with relish. Kurtz was in Cambodia, not the Congo, at the height of the Vietnam War when the movie took place.

My apologies… in Joseph Conrad’s novella, Heart of Darkness, Kurtz is a rogue ivory trader lost in the Congo. (Conrad himself drew on personal experiences

...

Emerging Markets – Spotting the Good News …

Claus Vistesen (February 3rd, 2009) Writes:

... is getting increasingly difficult at the moment. Take Hungary for example. I take it that most economic commentators and analyst know that it is bad in Hungary and together with Ukraine I would submit that these two face the largest risk of sporting the next global macro blowout (assuming that Russia does not suddenly collapse prematurely).

Hungary's biggest problem at the moment is how on earth to stay worried about a dropping Forint while at the same time realizing that the country is headed towards the worst recession in several decades. As some readers will remember the reason that the Forint today is subjected to full force of currency punters is to be found one year ago. Back in February, Hungary as well as other emerging markets opted to loosen their pegs towards the USD, the Euro or both in an attempt to "allow" the currency to

...

Russia’s Reserves No Longer Cover Foreign Debt

Edward Hugh (January 31st, 2009) Writes:

The a href=”http://www.eiu.com/index.asp?layout=VWArticleVW3article_id=1434203528refm=vwHomepage_title=Latest%20analysisrf=0″Economist Intelligence Unit warns/a:br /br /blockquoteState handouts cannot continue indefinitely, not least because reserves no longer cover total foreign liabilities: on the basis total debt was US$540bn at the end of September 2008, and that US$73bn was repaid in the fourth quarter, total debt is now US$467bn and private-sector debt US$425bn. Russia entered the crisis with the world’s third largest cache of central bank reserves, but it has been dwindling at an accelerating pace. By mid-January, reserves had declined to just below US$400bn, meaning that more than a third of the total was spent over the past five months./blockquotebr /br /Longer post coming over the weekend.


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