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Strategies & Market Trends : JAPAN-Nikkei-Time to go back up? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: chirodoc who wrote (468)11/22/1997 4:15:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3902
 


To: +Bobby Yellin (3395 )
From: +Sergio R. Mejia Saturday, Nov 22 1997 10:42AM EST
Reply #3398 of 3418
From the Privateer Gold page: "It Can't Happen Here". Korea, Japan,...
U.S.A?

the-privateer.com

For three days at the start of this week, the South Korean Won fell
limit down on a daily basis. The Korean government gave up and "floated"
the Won. The next day, it fell 10% against the $US fifteen minutes. The
government went to the U.S. and Japan and asked for bailout money,
saying it was in these two nations' long-term best interests to bail
them out. The U.S. said no. So, South Korea bit the bullet and went to
the IMF. They asked for $US 70 Billion. There are many estimates that
they will need more than 100 Billion.

It's been quite a week. The Japanese stock market was rescued from the
brink while a large bank bit the dust and so did another large Japanese
broker. A department store chain went bust in
Hong Kong. The IMF is facing the biggest bailout in its history. China
is staring at a banking system with bad loans on its books that are
conservatively estimated at $US 350 Billion. The Dow is back to within
120 points of the 8000 level. Oh yeah - and Gold didn't go below $US 300
after all.

The complacency in the U.S. staggers the imagination. The obvious
comparison is with the title of an old book by Sinclair Lewis: "It Can't
Happen Here". Of course, it hasn't, has it? Social Security almost went
belly up in 1982. The market "crashed" for a whole day in 1987. Savings
rates are at historic lows while bankruptcies continue to set records.
Government funded debt is almost $US 5.5 TRILLION. No problem. The U.S.
(that is, the IMF) bails out the Asians, and they rescue their markets,
and we recover from the "Asian Flu". And off we go again.

There is a classic old cartoon from Warner Bros which puts all of it in
a nutshell. In one of the scenes, the character is standing on a branch
high up in a tree with a saw in his hands. He
proceeds to saw off the branch he is standing on. What happens? Simple,
the tree falls down, leaving the character smiling happily while the
branch hovers in mid air. "See" - he says - "we can do anything in a
cartoon."

In real life, things are different. A group of men get together and sign
some official documents. With that, a book keeping entry appears in the
ledgers of some hard-pressed banks. Presto, the
"debt" is no more. According to modern economics, these things don't
only happen in cartoons any more.

Gold itself stopped falling this week. So far, it has not gone on to
slip below the $US 300 level. What has happened is that it has been
divorced from its traditional "little brother", silver. While
Gold languishes just above the $US 300 level, silver has jumped 6% over
the past three days and now sits at $US 5.41, its highest level in
eighteen months. Please see our precious metals chart for a comparison
of the action in silver and Gold over the past two weeks.

It is Gold against the Dollar. As long as the Dollar holds up, and as
long as Treasury long bond yields continue to fall, the financial world
is sticking with Dollar denominated assets as their ultimate "safety".
Watch for one or both to weaken as a lead indicator that it's time to
start watching the Gold price for evidence of a bottom.

That's what we said here last week, and it still holds.

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