Baylen Linnekin: Why Government Menu Mandates Are Not Curing Obesity

ObesityThe good news is that data show obesity levels
among K-12 students in Philadelphia fell by 4.7 percent from the
2006-2007 school year to the 2009-2010 school year. The caveat
there—and it’s a big one—is that the data doesn’t track individual
students.

This clear uncertainty, though, hasn’t stopped the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation from suggesting that policy changes it favors
are behind the change, according to Baylen Linnekin.

Cheering on mandatory calorie labeling is a constant RWJF
refrain. In a 2013 report listing four key strategies for reducing
obesity, for example, RWJF also credited four
states for “requiring chain restaurants to post nutrition
information.”

But, as Linnekin writes, laws requiring the posting of
calorie counts don’t work. In fact, research has shown they can
push people to ingest more calories, rather than
fewer.

View this article.

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If Americans Knew What Was Happening In Israel …

If my fellow Americans understood the history of Israel and Palestine, their views would change overnight … and they would demand that Israel no longer be given unconditional support and blank checks to do whatever they want:

Postscript: Former Israeli Minister: Calling people who criticize Israeli policy “anti-semitic. It’s a trick … we always use it”.




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ObamaFraud: GAO Study Finds Almost All Fake Applicants Are Approved For Subsidized ObamaCare

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg

ObamaFraud: GAO Study Finds Almost All Fake Applicants are Approved for Subsidized ObamaCare

Although it hasn’t been a focus for a while, the incompetent disaster that has been the ObamaCare rollout has been well documented on this site. Here are just a few posts on the subject:

The Obama Administration is Forcing Insurance Companies to Keep Quiet About ObamaCare Problems

Woman Touted as Obamacare Success Story is Now Kicked Off Obamacare

Humana Warns of “‘Adverse ObamaCare Enrollment Mix”

Computer Security Expert Claims he Hacked the ObamaCare Website in 4 Minutes

Serfs Up – Average Healthcare Premiums Have Soared 39%-56% Post Obamacare

 

Well the hits just keep on coming. The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), recently conducted a study in which investigators attempted to use fake identities to sign up for subsidized healthcare under ObamaCare. The results are frightening. All but one phony applicant was successful. Moreover, the GAO more broadly notes that “about 2.6 million ‘inconsistencies’ existed among applicants who had chosen a health plan.”

The Washington Post reports that:

In undercover tests of the new federal health insurance marketplace, government investigators have been able to procure health plans and federal subsidies for fake applicants with fictitious documents, according to findings that will be disclosed to lawmakers Wednesday.

 

The results of the inquiry by the Government Accountability Office are evidence of still-imperfect work by specialists intended to assist new insurance customers as well as government contractors hired to verify that coverage and subsidies are legitimate. The GAO also pointed to flaws that linger in the marketplace’s Web site, HealthCare.gov.

 

According to testimony to be delivered before a House Ways and Means subcommittee, undercover GAO investigators tried to obtain health plans for a dozen fictitious applicants online or by phone, using invalid or missing Social Security numbers or inaccurate citizenship information.

 

All but one of the fake applicants ended up getting subsidized coverage — and have kept it. In one instance, an application was denied but then approved on a second try. In six other attempts to sign up fake applicants via in-person assisters, just one assister accurately told an investigator that the applicant’s income was too high for a subsidy.

 

The GAO’s account of fictitious applicants obtaining subsidized coverage goes beyond a related problem that surfaced this spring and that the investigators also cited: The government may be paying incorrect insurance subsidies to a significant share of the 5.4 million Americans who signed up for health plans for this year through the federal marketplace.

 

The GAO testimony contains updates on that problem, saying that, as of mid-July, about 2.6 million “inconsistencies” existed among applicants who had chosen a health plan and that 650,000 of them had been resolved.

Just more proof of a completely disconnected and incompetent government. As if you needed any more evidence.

Full article here.




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Economic Laws Are Not Optional

Submitted by Monty Pelerin of Economic Noise blog,

Economic laws are not optional. They are like the laws of physics – inexorable!

economic policy

 

Economic laws are less precise in terms of their timing and effects, only because they deal with human behavior rather than physical particles. Human beings alter their behavior to cope with changing conditions. Particles do not. Free will and the survival instinct make prediction, especially regarding timing, very different and difficult in the human realm. Nevertheless, the laws are immutable!

Long-time readers of this website know that no recovery is possible given past and current economic policies. Initially, it was argued by some that government intervention was necessary and would effect an economic recovery. By now, even the dullest of Keynesians know their policies failed. Yet they continue.

Why would failed policies continue? The political class argues for their continuance, but not on the basis of sound economics. Their arguments are motivated by political self-interest. The appearance of a recovery is more important for politicians facing another election or a legacy than the damage being done to the economy. Remember when the focus of the Clinton campaign against George H. W. Bush claimed that it was the worst economy in fifty years? That was not true, but it was effective.

Stopping the Federal Reserve juice threatens what remains of our economy. No one wants to be known as the “new Herbert Hoover,” although someone will inevitably be tarred with that association.

Early Warnings

This website began in September 2009 recognizing the futility of applied economic efforts to “cure” the problem. The very first post appeared on September 7, 2009  and was entitled No Exit From Economic Mess. To put matters into perspective, the government claimed the recession had ended in June of 2009. This economic lie was apparent to anyone who had a modicum of economic understanding or common sense. The more of the latter one possessed, the less of the former was required.

Over time I have come to believe that the two types of knowledge may now be incompatible — a sad commentary on how the economic profession has been hijacked by the political class. A good rule of thumb is to ignore any economist who is involved in politics. Unfortunately, with government grants, that includes much of the profession, including those never directly employed by government.

The first paragraph of that very first post stated the following:

Doug Noland of www.Prudentbear.com has it right on his “No Exit” Possible scenario. Our economy has become totally dependent upon government spending, interventions and subsidies. There is no recovery in the private sector, nor is there likely to be one in the next several years. Federal meddling will continue to create distortions that will require additional and continued meddling. From a political standpoint, there will be no good time for an exit. However, at some point, the system will not be sustainable. Markets will eventually end the meddling regardless of whether it is politically or economically feasible or timely. When that happens, our lives and economy will never be the same again.

On that same day, there were six other articles suggesting that no economic recovery was possible until policies and conditions changed. Links to them follow:

1. Stocks Divorced From Real World

 

2. Banking Mess where it was said:

Enron-type accounting is allowed to enable banks to keep exposure on non-consolidated subsidiary books. Banks are allowed to value assets at whatever they deem them to be worth rather than accounting standards that have been in place for centuries. Condoning this fraud may defer the political problem. It cannot solve the economic problem and likely makes it unsolvable at some point. Market forces will eventually overwhelm the charade, and put our entire economic system at risk of implosion.

3. Timely Economic Analysis from Dilbert???? The Dilbert cartoon provided a possible reason why economists find it easier to bring good rather than bad news:

It appears that the writer of Dilbert is a better economist than many Nobel laureates who are proclaiming “Green Shoots.”

 

 

4. The Banking System, The Dollar and The Welfare State stated:

There is no mathematical possibility of escaping the economic bind we face without reducing the welfare state. The current financial crisis only exacerbates a situation which long ago passed the tipping point. The Federal government’s total liabilities exceed $100 trillion (most of that from the unfunded liabilities of the welfare state: social security, medicare, etc.). With the financial crisis, we now have an additional black hole, our banking system. The condition of the banking system has been covered up, but that is becoming harder and harder to do as banks collapse under their own weight as a result of deteriorating conditions.

5. The Crash Course by Chris Martenson  presented his ideas of how the policies were economically foolish and mathematically impossible to continue.

 

6. Moral Hazard Destroys Social Capital and Cooperation discussed the corrosive moral effects of an immoral government:

When the “game” is perceived to be corrupt and exploitive, it is easy to rationalize immoral behavior at the level of the individual. Contracts, promises and obligations start to become meaningless. For many, the phrase “is it legal?” replaces the phrase “is it right.” Loopholes in the law trump ethics. Soon even the law becomes less of a barrier as cheating and stealing become acceptable for some.

These were posts on the inaugural day of the website. The passage of time has not changed anything, except the understatement of some of the problems from the first day. The post regarding stock market valuations was arguably incorrect as the market recovered nicely from that point. However, it is valid today, more so than ever.  Almost five full years from the date of these posts, there is less reason for optimism. The economic structure of the country has been further weakened.

The declaration that the recession ended was a lie. Polls show that a majority of the population now agrees we never left the recession. Zerohedge referred to a recent article by Eric Sprott to provide an up-to-date assessment of conditions:

As Eric Sprott points out in his latest letter, “if one looks past headline figures, things are not really getting better. As shown in Figure 1, real disposable income per capita in the U.S. has increased only modestly since the Great Recession. However, all of this increase is due to Government Transfers, not from an improvement in the real economy. If we exclude those transfers from the numbers, disposable income per capita is actually lower than it was at the end of 2005 and has been painfully flat since 2011. Also, those numbers assume that the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) accurately represents people’s purchasing power.”

 

Presenting our chart of the day: disposable income with and without government transfers.

 

 

And it is not just disposable income: as Sprott explains, “the U.S. economy has been on life support, graciously provided by Central Planners. However hard they try, they will soon realize that no amount of money printing can cleanse the rot of the U.S. economy.”

Here is why for a large portion of the population, “things are not anywhere close to being better, in fact they are worse than before the recession.”

Nothing Has Changed

The smoke and mirrors obfuscating true economic conditions for five years has been deliberate. The economy has not recovered. It has been made more distorted and imbalanced by the futile attempts to pretend that all is well. Government has more smoke and mirrors left. Yet, even the political class now seem to sense that they are playing out the clock without altering the ultimate conclusion. When your time frame is limited to the next election, longer-term consequences of current policies are ignored.

The economic piper will be paid. All that has been accomplished by these actions is a deferral of the correction and the creation of a bigger debt upon which the piper will collect. The warnings expressed on the first posts on this website are as relevant now as they were five years ago.

A massive political cover-up of the true condition of the country has been accomplished at the cost of making underlying economic conditions worse. The economy is no longer growing and people are becoming poorer as a result of the political shenanigans used to hide the true conditions.  As expressed in the very first post:

There is no recovery in the private sector, nor is there likely to be one in the next several years. Federal meddling will continue to create distortions that will require additional and continued meddling. From a political standpoint, there will be no good time for an exit. However, at some point, the system will not be sustainable.

Zerohedge’s recent assessment of current economic conditions indicates that matters may be progressing rapidly toward this end:

Despite the best efforts of The Fed, its apologists, and the commission-taking talking-heads to persuade the world that the US economy is picking up and set to reach escape velocity any minute… the fact is, the US economy (judged on data not fantasy) is hurting. Consensus expectations for 2014 US GDP growth have collapsed from over 3.00% to a mere 1.7% now. But what is more critical is the incessant bleating that data is picking up and suggests a 2nd half recovery… it doesn’t.

The inevitability of what is coming is what is important. The timing remains uncertain. It need not occur in the next week or month. Timing may still be measured in years, but the outcome is more certain today than it was five years ago. The laws of economics make it so. Any geopolitical or economic misstep could trigger the event. Without such a misstep, the charade could continue for a while.

A collapse is coming. It is unavoidable and will be worse than it should have been as a result of political duplicity.




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Hillary Clinton Asked Why Russia "Reset" Didn't Work, Blames Putin, Distances Herself From Failure

if he's hitler is she chamberlain?With U.S.-Russian relations appearing
to be at a thirty-year low the Obama Administration’s attempt to
“reset” relations with the former Cold War adversary has been an
utter failure. Hillary Clinton, who served as secretary of state
while the administration was working on this reset and will likely
be a candidate for the presidency in 2016, would like to distance
herself from this pretty obvious, and pretty difficult to spin
away, foreign policy failure.

Asked by CNN’s Fareed Zakaria what happened to the reset,
Hillary Clinton provided a wandering answer that flagged her own
skepticism at the time and blamed it on Putin’s return to power in
2011 (everyone in the world knew this was coming, not just the top
men). A portion of her answer,
via CNN
:

So when he announced in the fall of 2011 that he would be
changing positions with Medvedev, I knew that he would be more
difficult to deal with. He had been always the power behind
Medvedev, but he had given Medvedev a lot of independence to do
exactly what you said and make the reset a success.

I saw that firsthand with respect to the primary elections in
Russia, because they were filled with irregularities and Russian
people poured out in the streets to protest. And I, as Secretary of
State, said the Russians deserve better. They deserved elections
that reflected their will.

Putin attacked me personally because he is very worried about
any kind of internal dissent. He wanted to clamp down on any
opposition within Russia and he wanted to provide more influence
and even intimidation on his borders.

And I certainly made my views known in meetings, as well as in
memos to the president. I think that what may have happened is that
both the United States and Europe were really hoping for the best
from Putin as a returned president. And I think we’ve been quickly,
unfortunately, disabused of those hopes.

Mitt Romney insisted during the 2012 campaign that Russia was
America’s “number one geopolitical foe.” Insofar as that meant
Russian and U.S. interests don’t always align it’s
kind of a no shit thing.
The idea that through good will alone
a relationship with a sovereign country with its own national
security interests could be “reset,” and by extension the idea at
somehow the personage of George W. Bush was why Vladimir Putin
didn’t align himself with U.S. interests, is a ridiculous one and
certainly not reality-based. As President Obama’s first secretary
of state, Clinton ought to accept her responsibility in the failure
that resulted from so misunderstanding (or misrepresenting) Russian
foreign policy interests.

Putin, on the other hand, denies a frosty relationship with the
U.S.,
pointing out
his country, for example, still permits the U.S.
to transit through its territory to supply troops in Afghanistan—in
that interview he asked who Obama was to judge another country’s
interventionist foreign policy, suggesting the president go be a
judge somewhere if that’s what he wants to do. In a separate
interview, responding to Clinton comparing him to Hitler Putin

suggested
it was better not to respond to a woman.

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Hillary Clinton Asked Why Russia “Reset” Didn’t Work, Blames Putin, Distances Herself From Failure

if he's hitler is she chamberlain?With U.S.-Russian relations appearing
to be at a thirty-year low the Obama Administration’s attempt to
“reset” relations with the former Cold War adversary has been an
utter failure. Hillary Clinton, who served as secretary of state
while the administration was working on this reset and will likely
be a candidate for the presidency in 2016, would like to distance
herself from this pretty obvious, and pretty difficult to spin
away, foreign policy failure.

Asked by CNN’s Fareed Zakaria what happened to the reset,
Hillary Clinton provided a wandering answer that flagged her own
skepticism at the time and blamed it on Putin’s return to power in
2011 (everyone in the world knew this was coming, not just the top
men). A portion of her answer,
via CNN
:

So when he announced in the fall of 2011 that he would be
changing positions with Medvedev, I knew that he would be more
difficult to deal with. He had been always the power behind
Medvedev, but he had given Medvedev a lot of independence to do
exactly what you said and make the reset a success.

I saw that firsthand with respect to the primary elections in
Russia, because they were filled with irregularities and Russian
people poured out in the streets to protest. And I, as Secretary of
State, said the Russians deserve better. They deserved elections
that reflected their will.

Putin attacked me personally because he is very worried about
any kind of internal dissent. He wanted to clamp down on any
opposition within Russia and he wanted to provide more influence
and even intimidation on his borders.

And I certainly made my views known in meetings, as well as in
memos to the president. I think that what may have happened is that
both the United States and Europe were really hoping for the best
from Putin as a returned president. And I think we’ve been quickly,
unfortunately, disabused of those hopes.

Mitt Romney insisted during the 2012 campaign that Russia was
America’s “number one geopolitical foe.” Insofar as that meant
Russian and U.S. interests don’t always align it’s
kind of a no shit thing.
The idea that through good will alone
a relationship with a sovereign country with its own national
security interests could be “reset,” and by extension the idea at
somehow the personage of George W. Bush was why Vladimir Putin
didn’t align himself with U.S. interests, is a ridiculous one and
certainly not reality-based. As President Obama’s first secretary
of state, Clinton ought to accept her responsibility in the failure
that resulted from so misunderstanding (or misrepresenting) Russian
foreign policy interests.

Putin, on the other hand, denies a frosty relationship with the
U.S.,
pointing out
his country, for example, still permits the U.S.
to transit through its territory to supply troops in Afghanistan—in
that interview he asked who Obama was to judge another country’s
interventionist foreign policy, suggesting the president go be a
judge somewhere if that’s what he wants to do. In a separate
interview, responding to Clinton comparing him to Hitler Putin

suggested
it was better not to respond to a woman.

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But Wait, There Are A Few Differences Between Amazon and the US Postal Service

Wolf Richter   www.wolfstreet.com   http://ift.tt/Wz5XCn

When Amazon reported second quarter earnings, or rather losses, it surprised no one, though some people were surprised that it lost that much ($126 million). To make us feel better about those losses, and to be able to beat analysts’ expectations later, it preannounced losses between $410 and $810 million for the current quarter. Analysts fell all over each other dodging the question how a company with over $19 billion in revenues could lose that much, and so consistently.

Amazon has been doing this sort of thing for years. Countless analyses have been written about how terrible its financial performance has been, and how the metrics have been deteriorating, including the operating margin that has swooned from 4.9% in Q2 2010 to a nearly invisible 0.8% now (excellent analysis and charts by Zero Hedge). The company made a tiny bit of profit in 2012, lost money in 2013, and is starting this year out in the hole as well.

“We continue working hard on making the Amazon customer experience better and better,” explained CEO Jeff Bezos in the press release. “We’ve recently introduced Sunday delivery coverage to 25 percent of the U.S. population, launched European cross-border Two-Day Delivery for Prime….” Etc. etc.

He sounded like Patrick Donahoe, CEO of the US Postal Service. Amazon has a lot in common with USPS: they’re in the same ballpark in terms of revenues, both dominate their markets, and neither can figure out how to make money.

But there are a few differences between Amazon and USPS:

Bezos can run his show as he sees fit. OK, there is a board, but it doesn’t seem to give him a hard time about the company’s performance. As long as the stock keeps going up, who cares?

The Postal Service, which had revenues of $16.7 billion in Q2, can’t even sneeze without Congress giving it prior approval. Shutting down unneeded post offices or dropping Saturday delivery? Addressing its huge pension obligations or switching to a pension plan of the kind Amazon has (LOL)? Forget it. Not if any of it would happen in any congressional district and impact negatively any voters. A lawmaker’s sole job is to hang on to his or her job, and everything else serves to get that accomplished.

In return for its valiant service as Congressional and public punching bag, USPS is allowed to perform financially about the same as Amazon: losses as far as they eye can see.

So traders weren’t amused with Amazon’s losses, and there were some hick-ups in revenues too, and the stock plunged over 10% in after-hours trading and stayed near that loss on Friday. It’s now down 20% from its $400 peak at the end of last year.

Bezos doesn’t care. At least Donahoe gets grilled ceremoniously by Congress from time to time about the losses USPS generates. And when he comes up with ways to save money, lawmakers in whose districts he wants to save money in whack him over the head.

Bezos is not subject to this sort of enlightened treatment.

After each loss, shares either jump or dive, depending on whether the loss was worse or less bad than expected, and then, the stock rises again to continue its incredible rally, independent of the company’s performance. At least that’s how it worked until the end of 2012.

During the dotcom bubble, Amazon became famous as a precursor. In December 1999, the stock peaked. A month later, it was down 40%. It had started crashing three months ahead of the market. Ironically, only hindsight will tell if it is once again a precursor.

But in late 2008, Amazon commenced its current mega-rally. It was the time when the Fed began throwing money and ZIRP at Wall Street and speculators, and from then on, nothing else mattered. In five years, the stock rose 10-fold. And the company is still not making any visible profits. The stock is simply surfing on the Fed’s endless sea of liquidity and Wall Street’s hoopla.

That’s why Bezos doesn’t have to produce profits. As long as the stock keeps going up, why bother? Having to produce adequate profits would crimp his style. He has thrown off these constraints normally imposed by owners and creditors on management.

Here is where that’s a problem.

Amazon competes with companies that must make money because their investors demand it, and if these companies don’t make money, investors and creditors walk away, and the money dries up, and they’re finished. Amazon, free from profit constraints, competes with bookstores that, like Borders, go bankrupt if they can’t make money, and with smaller stores that just shut down one day because they must make money to stay in business.

Their big competitor has unlimited resources by being able to raise billions at practically no cost. It can always sell more of its inflated shares, a safety blanket if it runs out of money. It pays executives and other employees via its equity compensation plans, which is like raising money by selling shares to the public and using the proceeds to pay these folks in cash. When Amazon needs additional money beyond that, it sells bonds that cost it, depending on maturity, less than the rate of inflation and are thus free money.

Throughout, neither creditors nor stockholders demand to see any profits.

If the owner of a small bookstore walked into the bank with red on its income statement and begged for a loan, the loan officer would ask, after the pleasantries, “You mean you want to get a loan to fund your operating losses?”

For a small business owner, that’s not a good place to be. And this questions, which was entirely rhetorical, would be followed by another one: “How are you going to pay this back if you can’t make any money already?”

You get the drift. This loan, if it materializes at all, is going to be very expensive and will likely entail the bane of small business, a personal guarantee.

Amazon is Exhibit A of how the Fed’s policy of flooding Wall Street and corporate mastodons with nearly free money is destructive to the rest of the economy.

It creates unfair competition.

Because Amazon can competes on its ability to not ever have to make a profit, it can cut prices to the bone, offer free shipping, etc., which initially is great for consumers until its monopoly power allows it to trample on consumers and suppliers alike – and suppliers, namely publishers, are already experiencing the wrath of Amazon.

This type of competition stifles the local economy, leads to job losses among companies that are not so privileged, and cements the monopoly or oligopoly power of the corporate mastodons [read…. The Jobs Curse At Amazon, And How Obama Stepped Into It].

Of course, that’s how the Fed operates. These corporate mastodons (particularly the big banks) are the legal owners of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks that make up the main part of the Federal Reserve System, and their executives and former executives play important roles in that system. For example, GE owns a stake in the New York Fed, and GE CEO Jeff Inmelt was a Class B director of the New York Fed during the period when it handled the bailouts, including the bailout of GE. Amazon too got bailed out, but indirectly, by investors flush with this freshly printed cash which had to go somewhere.

This is one of the pernicious effects of the Fed’s policies.

They drove stocks to insane heights and the cost of money (for those with access to it) to insane lows in order to create that “wealth effect” and enrich the very top layer of society beyond any measures previously imaginable. But for the rest of the economy, the wealth effect has been an utter failure, a sham, and a pretext.

In the process, these policies destroy the functionality of the Main Street economy where investors and creditors keep companies in line by pushing them to produce real income – not ex-bad-items adjusted pro-forma operating income or some such contrived figure, but real income under GAAP. This form of discipline that every executive of a small or medium-size business is subject to, is completely absent for Amazon (and many other publicly traded companies, including the likes of Twitter). And the only cure is a decision by investors and creditors to walk away from them until they deliver real and adequate profits.

Bubbles are easy to discern – including the performance of Amazon’s stock – despite the Fed’s rhetoric that bubbles cannot be discerned. What’s hard is pinpointing the moment they top out. But that’s precisely what everyone wants to know to cash out before it implodes. Lacking reliable scientific indicators of when to get out, everyone has their own list of ersatz indicators. And I just added a new one to my list, concerning the startup and IPO bubble. You can’t make this up! Read…. Sign of Top? Banana Republic Trots out ‘Startup Guy’ Look




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Gold Trends: 2014 & Beyond

Along with Incrementum’s 94-page extravaganza on gold, this infographic, the final in our 2014 Gold Series (part 1, part 2, part 3, & part 4 here) looks to the future, covering gold trends that investors should be watching through the rest of the year and beyond. With input from some of the most important names in gold such as Brent Cook, Doug Casey, Frank Holmes, Bob Moriarty, and James Fraser, we aim to cover the broadest and most important signals for investors to watch. Those include Chinese wealth, Indian demographics, money printing, debt, and a lack of significant gold discoveries.

 

 

Source: Visual Capitalist




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1uoMt6W Tyler Durden

Gold Trends: 2014 & Beyond

Along with Incrementum’s 94-page extravaganza on gold, this infographic, the final in our 2014 Gold Series (part 1, part 2, part 3, & part 4 here) looks to the future, covering gold trends that investors should be watching through the rest of the year and beyond. With input from some of the most important names in gold such as Brent Cook, Doug Casey, Frank Holmes, Bob Moriarty, and James Fraser, we aim to cover the broadest and most important signals for investors to watch. Those include Chinese wealth, Indian demographics, money printing, debt, and a lack of significant gold discoveries.

 

 

Source: Visual Capitalist




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1uoMt6W Tyler Durden