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Strategies & Market Trends : The coming US dollar crisis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Real Man who wrote (34979)2/3/2011 10:50:50 AM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 71475
 
Good post....and I agree. ben destroyed the place and turned our currency into a carry trade. More than that though, IMHO, they have to print now just to keep the gov't open....they took it too far....and ben is dug in a hole so fricken deep....he'll never get out. Just like bush....ben is a bush midget....no exit strategy. Birds of a feather flock together. Losers.



To: Real Man who wrote (34979)2/3/2011 2:25:41 PM
From: ggersh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71475
 
Consider the following paragraph from London's highly respected
Financial Times - a publication not usually prone to hyperbole: Precious
metals traders in London and Hong Kong said on Wednesday they were
stunned by the strength of Chinese buying in the past month. "The demand
is unbelievable. The size of the orders is enormous," said one senior
banker, who estimated that China had imported about 200 tonnes in three
months.

Now China has already reported a five-fold increase in gold imports over
the first 10 months of 2010 and if the estimate quoted above is correct
the country may well be seen to have imported upwards of 320 tonnes in
the full year which brings the total to within a hairsbreadth of Indian
imports - and India has for many years been the world's largest importer
of gold by a considerable margin. If Chinese gold purchasing momentum
continues at anywhere near close to current levels it will soar past
India as the world's largest importer of the yellow metal this year.

The FT quotes UBS gold strategist Edel Tully as commenting that not only
is China on the fast track to replace India as the largest physical
consumer of gold but that now the Chinese New Year holiday, which starts
tomorrow, has already become significantly more important than India's
Diwali Festival in gold buying volume terms.

What is perhaps being ignored by many investors who have been
liquidating gold holdings in the U.S. in particular where there is a
growing, but perhaps unwise, perception that the stock market is on a
roll again, is the burgeoning, and seemingly accelerating, strength in
Asian demand. As fast as investors are selling their gold ETFs in the
U.S., the Chinese and other Asian nations are snapping up the physical
gold which thus becomes available again.

Indeed in some parts of Asia, gold has been selling at a strong premium
over and above the London price - as much as a $20 an ounce premium is
being reported as applying recently in Shanghai, although now the
Chinese New Year holiday itself gets under way the demand strength is
expected to slip a little. Nevertheless Chinese observers expect buying
to surge again once the holiday is over.

With China having been the world's largest producer of gold for the past
several years now, with output rising each year, if we add this to the
perceived import levels China will have consumed close on 650 tonnes of
gold in 2010 - around 25% of estimated global mined production on its
own - a remarkable statistic. China, India and other southeast Asian
countries together will thus be absorbing around half of global newly
mined gold output and for the moment this demand is not just rising, but
rising fast, with the Chinese, Indian and several other Asian nations'
growth rates rising at close to 10% per annum or more. Those analysts
out there who continually harp on about gold's fundamentals not
supporting current price levels, let alone further rises, seem to have
totally missed this point