(GATA News) ...per some experts...WHY gold has been held down...since 1979.
Date: 1/2/00 10:49:45 AM EST From: LePatron@LeMetropoleCafe.com To: dougak
Le Metropole members,
David Tice has served commentary at The Hemingway Table entitled, "Equity Mae or Techie Mac - Day 45."
"... the current game will not work well in reverse." Steve Hickel has served commentary at The Kiki Table entitled, "Euro Speaks."
"The market is friendly to the least amount of people possible."
----------------------------------------------------------------- The Hemingway Table Discussion du Jour: US Financial Markets
David Tice The Prudent Bear Fund ticed@prodigy.net December 31, 1999
Equity Mae or Techie Mac - Day 45
For the year, Dow S&P500 NASDAQ Composite S&P100 Wilshire 5000 NASDAQ Composite NASDAQ100 NASDAQ Telecommunications index AMEX Composite AMEX Broker/Dealer index Russell 2000 Interactive Week Internet Index and the Street.com Internet index.....
The bond market, on the other hand, ended with the worst year since 1977.
Throughout most of the world, historic stock market gains.
In Europe,
German Dax index French CAC 40 Amsterdam exchange Italian Milan index Demark Finland Luxembourg Norway Sweden and Iceland.....
In Eastern Europe,
Poland Hungary Romania and in Ukraine.....
Wild speculation has led stocks in,
Greece Turkey Cyprus major index in Israel Egypt South Africa and in Zimbabwe.....
In Asia,
Japanese Nikkei 225 Nikkei 500 ... by huge gains in technology shares, Japanese JASDAQ stock index
In Hong Kong,
Hang Seng
while in China
Shanghai A index and Shanghai B index
Taiwan Korea Singapore Malaysia Thailand Indonesia India Pakistan.....
Down South,
Mexican stocks Argentina Brazil Chile Peru and Costa Rica.....
Up north in
Canada, TSE index
1999 was a defining year for the US and global financial system.
After the Federal Reserve accommodated...in the face of global crisis..... ... it could have and should have been a year when the Fed..... ... not only continued but gathered additional momentum. ... while the epicenter for this bubble is the US financial system and economy, increasingly it appears that a synchronized boom is unfolding in the economies of the industrialized world. Certainly, the global boom in shares has been extraordinary, especially in technology stocks.
... extraordinary price gains, we pin responsibility for rampant stock market inflation and speculation firmly on a global financial system that only grows more dysfunctional by the year. For more than two years now - since the boom turned terrible bust throughout SE Asia and particularly since the Russian and Long Term Capital Management collapses last year - global central bankers have accommodated rampant money and credit growth. Global liquidity has been stoked by unprecedented credit creation by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, as well by profligate lending by bankers and investment houses worldwide. Here at home, Wall Street has been operating with reckless abandon, while Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank System have increased credit by upwards of..... ... the past two years, creating unprecedented financial system liquidity and fueling an historic financial and economic bubble. The liquidity flowed to where inflation psychology was strongest, technology stocks. It has been a classic and exceptional mania.
So now a big question becomes, who is left to buy technology stocks?
And, more specifically, who is going to purchase shares from the flock of leveraged speculators and derivative players who now hold positions that could easily total more than $* trillion. We certainly do not believe that the majority of hedge funds bought tech stocks to hold for long-term investments - no way. In fact, we strongly suspect that many funds have simply been playing the speculation game buying what the crowd is buying while aggressively playing the greatest stock market speculative blow-off in history. With this in mind ... leveraged speculating community moves in herds and when this immense pack begins to liquidate tech shares, it is certain to be.....
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stepped up and were massive buyers in the marketplace when the speculators were panic sellers. They, however, buy mortgages and credit market instruments. What will be needed this time is an Equity Mae or Techie Mac buyers for $***'s of billions of technology and Internet shares to let the speculators off the hook again, thus providing yet another lease on life for.....
With this in mind, we will make one prediction for the new year: ... in spite of epic bullish euphoria, the number one issue for investors over the next * months will be a *** and, specifically, in *** and *** shares. As we have said before, the current game will not work well in reverse.
From all of us at the Prudent Bear Fund, we wish everyone a healthy, happy and risk-averse New Year.
David Tice The Prudent Bear Fund ticed@prodigy.net ------------------------------------------------------------ The Kiki Table Discussion du Jour: Potpourri
Steve Hickel smhickel@iserv.net
Euro Speaks
Stratfor has been accused by some readers of being.....
For example, the Euro is directly competing with the dollar for market share as a world reserve currency. At first glance that doesn't seem frightful because Europe and the US both have about the same amount of gold (which everyone says is dead, except all the people who have bought the ** thousand tonnes of metal that has been sold short into the market) with the EU at **,000 tons and the US at *,000 tons.
The US has burned its gold bridges twice: first was with the US citizen back in 1932 when Roosevelt made all US citizens turn in their gold. Next, President Nixon defaulted on the dollar's gold backing in 1971. This is considered by some experts to have been the reason for the Mid-East oil crisis, as the Arabs love their gold and didn't want to give up their oil for fiat dollars (fiat is faith in Italian). As a result of this default, the Jamaica Accords saw the demonitization of gold and an allegedly secret deal that would keep dollars strong and gold weak while the Arabs become the Fanny Mae, Freddie Mac of paper gold delivery contracts from large mining companies.
In other words, the Arabs were able to take long-term delivery of gold mining production while the dollar was kept strong and oil kept low as the Arabs were able to buy cheap gold with cheap dollars. This is the reason, again per some experts, that gold has been held down and actually dropped over the period of 20 years since 1979.
Currently the Federal Reserve and Goldman Sachs and other bullion banks have been actively participating in a large paper gold sales effort culminating in the Bank of England auction whose direct result was to knock gold down to its 20-year low of $252 per ounce.
Some suggest that.....
... Paper gold is defined as gold derivative contracts that leverage physical gold at times up to 100 times the actual amount of metal available.
Why are bullion banks trying to restrain gold ? Gold is.....
... Certainly gold isn't reacting to normal market forces as.....
As I see it, the US dollar is likely to lose its stature as a world reserve currency. When that happens, the Euro will takes its place. Signs of this are evident now. EU long term bonds..... ... I am even hearing discussion of oil contract settlement in..... ... As oil turns the world, as oil countries prefer..... ... and as the Euro is less encoumbered with..... ... whose debt is estimated to be *** Trillion dollars and whose derivative positions and counter-party risk contracts go into the..... ... including gold-based investments, stocks, and bonds.
The EU is going to treat gold differently this time than at any other time in history. They have said they will allow their currency to be marked to market or be valued at the price gold on the open market at the end of each quarter. If the price of gold were to double, that would back the Euro effectively with a **% gold-backing. If gold doubled again, they their current money supply, which is all digital currently, would be backed by **% gold. This is sufficient to interest the Saudi's in their quest for gold instead of dollars. For when Saudi oil is gone they don't want dollars, they want the gold.
So what does this mean for the US? I believe it means a massive ***** or ***** of commodities and gold ***** and a ***** where current ***** and ***** come down as this market mania unwinds with the flow of dollars overseas to EU investments.
Is this a guaranteed analysis ?
No, but it certainly breaks a mold of current CNN and CNBC financial guru's and wizards who talk their book and predict the trend.
Any market at an ... from where nobody suspects. I say watch the *** market, watch the ***, and watch *****. They are making noises about jumping the dollar ship and moving into the EU. Further, watch the settlement of ***. If that moves towards the Euro then the writing is on the wall.
One other factor may also surprise people. The stock option plans of the tech companies creates a bookkeeping profit only if the prices of these stocks continue to rise. Here is how it works:
Company A ... if the stock ... doesn't get the ***, doesn't get the ***, and their *** ..., stock price.....
If the company isn't making a profit then the pattern intensifies.
Combine these factors and the rosy outlook of the US economy becomes somewhat susceptable to foreign inflow of cash and an ever rising high-tech stock market. Combine that with a competing Euro for world reserve currency status that will orphan lots of excess dollars whose sole purpose was a reserve of a foreign CB. When that money needs a home, where will it go ? [Answer] The *****.
When that situation reverses because of the liquidity that is constantly being pumped into this market dries up then this could turn out to be worse than..... ... they have been trained to buy on dips, they may just buy all the way down on the dips of the big dipper ... Are they that smart they will know when to get out of a down market? Not.
... The market is friendly to the least amount of people possible.
... Beware the *** of March ... *** already announced a *% surcharge on.....
Steve Hickel smhickel@iserv.net ------------------------------------------------------------------- All the best, Bill Murphy
For new readers, the above mention of GATA is as follows.
Bill Murphy, Chairman, Gold Anti Trust Action (GATA) gata.org
Also, GATA related articles can be obtained at the pay for view site.
Bill Murphy, Le Patron, Le Metropole Cafe lemetropolecafe.com |