Gold & Precious Metals
Janet Yellen, the nominee for Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, will likely try in some ways to convince markets that she is not the Super Dove which her previous comments and actions suggested that she is.
But, we have seen this play before. Prior to ascending to Fed Chairman in 2006, Ben Bernanke was already known has “Helicopter Ben” after a 2002 speech in which he said that the Fed could always fight deflation simply by dropping money from helicopters.
He appeared to be constrained during the first year and a half of his tenure as Chairman. Then, in the summer of 2007, the winds began to shift. A few months after HSBC admitted to having problems with subprime mortgages in its U.S. division, news came out that a couple of Bear Stearns funds which invested in subprime mortgages, collapsed. Despite a trickle of subprime naysayers at the time, the HSBC and Bear Stearns episodes were generally a surprise to the rest of the market.
As details of the Bear Stearns debacle emerged beginning in June and accelerating through July, Bernanke casually noted that the U.S. subprime mortgage situation was “contained.” He and U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson spoke together a number of times stating that the worst of the situation had passed. They downplayed the need for any bailout at all. And then, to reassure markets even more, Paulson said that he had a bailout “bazooka” ready to use if the situation did take a turn for the worse and began to impact the main government mortgage insurers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Seven weeks later Paulson was firing his bailout “bazooka” and, in an effort to calm markets, Bernanke cranked open the liquidity spillways around the dam and never looked back. For the last six years of his tenure, it has been full on “Helicopter Ben”, artificially suppressing interest rates and printing trillions in money whenever it looked like the U.S. economy might have a hiccup. After the early brave talk, he reverted back to his old ways.
So, when Janet Yellen tries engaging in some early brave talk of her own and the markets give her the benefit of the doubt, remember her predecessor.
Although there is almost no chance that bond yields will fall back to the generational lows that we saw in July 2012, a dovish Yellen could mean that bonds will tread water for a while longer before the relatively young secular bear market in bonds resumes.
The opinions expressed in this report are the opinions of the author and readers should not assume they reflect the opinions or recommendations of Richardson GMP Limited or its affiliates. Assumptions, opinions and estimates constitute the author’s judgment as of the date of this material and are subject to change without notice. We do not warrant the completeness or accuracy of this material, and it should not be relied upon as such. Before acting on any recommendation, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and, if necessary, seek professional advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Richardson GMP Limited, Member Canadian Investor Protection Fund.
Richardson is a trade-mark of James Richardson & Sons, Limited. GMP is a registered trade-mark of GMP Securities L.P. Both used under license by Richardson GMP Limited.
What we heard from the IMF (International Monetary Fund) was not good. But it was not surprising either. And that’s the point, I think.Conveniently, there’s plenty to distract the market from the downward revisions the IMF made to global 2013 and 2014 growth forecasts plus the fact that the IMF believes:
- Long-term global economic growth will run at subdued levels; “A likely scenario for the global economy is one of continued, plausible disappointments everywhere.”
- Short-term US fiscal matters could shake-up the rest of the world
- The European Central Bank must continue on with accommodative policy; “The ECB should consider additional monetary support, through lower policy rates, forward guidance on future rates, negative deposit rates, or other unconventional policy measures. Since these factors reinforce each other, a vigorous response on all fronts offers the best way forward. In the absence of a comprehensive policy response, matters could easily worsen.”
- Countries must use their exchanges rates to alleviate growth pressures, rather than unwind fx reserves to try and stem capital outflows
- Some emerging markets are suffering what could be called stagflation
- China’s growth model — dependence on exports, credit and investment — has become exhausted and must change
Gee. How depressing.
But guess what — the market doesn’t care today. And it likely won’t care too much about these comments down the road either.
Why?
Because the IMF has aired the dirty laundry. They have made know the growth head-winds and the financial risks. These things can not come as a surprise to anyone now. Ultimately, the only things that will impact the market are individual data points or trends that suggest policymakers and leaders cannot contain the risks to growth and financial markets.
Until then, investors are more than likely happy to give economic growth the benefit of the doubt.
Besides, we’d much rather focus on the charades in Washington D.C.
Today it appears politicians are closer to a compromise than they were yesterday. Yesterday I believed ideological differences would push us past the debt ceiling deadline, force a market downturn and then generate a compromise and continuing resolution.
I tend to think we’ll see the broad market, particularly US and global stock markets, slide before the month is over. I believe it will be sharp. But I also believe it will be relatively short-lived, barring a real surprise from the US debt standoff.
The market is higher today. I’ll be looking to sell into any follow-through strength early next week.
-JR Crooks
Today a man who has lived in 18 countries around the world, and witnessed collapses in many of these countries firsthand, told King World News, “What shocks the people is how quickly things can flip. One day everything seems to be alright, and the next day there is panic.” Keith Barron, who consults with major companies around the world and is responsible for one of the largest gold discoveries in the last quarter century, also spoke about some of the astonishing firsthand accounts of what he witnessed. Below is what Barron had to say.
…..read more HERE
India Will Dominate the Silver Market in 2013. With silver falling by 26% so far this calendar year, even factoring in the recent surge, you’d be excused for presuming there were negative fundamentals developing in the market for the white metal. Indeed the fundamentals have been changing, but they all favour the price of silver. Unfortunately for investors, this has not yet been reflected in the price. The most recent import data from the Indian government confirms reports that Indians are importing significant quantities of silver. The latest data, provided to us by Nikos Kavalis from Metals Focus Ltd., shows that India imported US$1.78 billion worth of silver during Q2 – a 311% increase over the same period last year. This equates to 3,015 tonnes of silver in the first half of 2013, putting Indians on track to import more than 6,030 tonnes of silver this year. If this trend continues through the rest of 2013, we would see the highest silver imports in the past five years.
As we examined the Indian import data in more detail we saw that silver is coming to India from all corners of the earth to satiate demand. The most notable sources have been the UK, Switzerland and China. Many countries that had not previously shipped the metal to India are also making their first shipments this year. The Indians have become an enormous new buyer of silver, sopping up bullion supply from around the world. Putting these numbers into perspective, according to the Silver Institute, the world produced 24,478 tonnes of silver in 2012, meaning the Indians are currently on track to import 25% of the world’s mined silver supply. And, believe it or not, this number could increase given the forecasts for monsoon season.
via Mark Leibovit’s VRGoldLetter





