Turmoil: Biggest Dow Point Plunge Since Lehman; Bonds, Bitcoin Crash

This week for Bitcoin, Bonds, and Bullish stockholders…

Today, and this week, saw some extremes:

  • Dow’s biggest single-day drop since Brexit (June 2016)
  • Dow’s biggest point drop since Lehman (Oct 2008!)
  • Dow’s worst week since Jan 2016
  • VIX’s biggest spike since Aug 2015 China Deval / Flash-Crash
  • China’s Shanghai Comp worst week since Dec 2016
  • China’s Shenzhen Comp worst week since Jan 2016
  • Germany’s DAX worst week since Feb 2016
  • 30Y UST Bond’s worst weekly drop since the election (Nov 2016)
  • UST Yield Curve (2s30s) biggest steepening week since election (Nov 2016)
  • High Yield Bond’s worst week since March 2017
  • Dollar Index first weekly gain in two months
  • Dollar Index biggest daily gain since Jan 2017
  • Gold’s worst week in two months
  • Silver’s worst week since July 2017
  • Bitcoin’s worst week since Jan 2015

Where were the dip-buyers?!

 

China ugly..

 

Europe dumped into the red…

 

And US Stocks were crushed…

 

 

And today was a bloodbath for stocks…

 

 

Risk-Parity fund deleveraging was triggered again (with bonds and stocks down hard)…

It appears the bond spike has spooked stocks…

 

 

In fact this is the worst day for aggregate losses in bonds and stocks since September 2016…

Bonds bloodbath’d on the day and week…

 

 

30Y Yields were within a tick or two of 3.10% this week…

 

 

The yield curve steepened notably on the week

 

 

And debt ceiling anxiety is back as the Bill curve inverts…

 

The Dollar Index managed its first weekly gain of the year, but remains well below the Trump rescue highs…

 

 

In commodity-land, everything was red on the week with silver getting monkey-hammered today…

 

Silver is back at 6-week lows..

 

Finally, there was carnage in cryptocurrencies this week, with a modest rescue today.

 

This was the worst week for Bitcoin since January 2015, back below $9,000…

 

And finally… remember, you are here…

 

 

via RSS http://ift.tt/2DZXW3X Tyler Durden

Is The VIX-‘Tail’ Wagging The Bitcoin-‘Dog’?

While Bitcoin has bounced back above $9,000 miraculously today, after its early collapse, if Deutsche Bank’s Masao Muraki is right, VIX’s spike is signaling cryptocurrencies have a lot further to fall…

The recent ‘triple-low environment’ of low interest rates, low spreads, and low volatility gave birth to new asset classes like implied volatility (ETFs selling volatility), and cryptocurrencies. Deutsche Bank has begun to monitor these indices closely as new frontiers of risk-taking.

The prices of both asset classes have plummeted and rebounded simultaneously, and in 2018, correlation between Bitcoin and VIX has increased dramatically.

Besides them being a new frontier of risk-taking, Deutsche see another similarity between these two new asset classes: “the tail wagging the dog.”  

First, implied volatility. Implied volatility is an index calculated from the price of a derivative product (options) of an underlying marketable security. However, we now have a “tail wagging the dog” situation where the price of the derivative product is feeding back into the price of the underling marketable security.

Next, cryptocurrencies. Cryptocurrencies are closely watched by retail investors, affecting their risk preferences for stocks and other risk assets. Although institutional investors recognize that stocks and other asset valuations may have entered bubble territory (US equities’ average P/E is around 20x), they cannot help but continue their risk-taking. Now, a growing number of institutional investors are watching cryptocurrencies as the frontier of risk-taking to evaluate the sustainability of asset prices. The result is that institutional investors, who are supposed to value assets using their sophisticated financial literacy, analysis, and information-gathering strengths, are actually seeking feedback about the market from cryptocurrency prices (which are mainly formed by retail investors).  

We believe the correlation between Bitcoin and VIX can increase as more institutional investors begin trading Bitcoin futures.

And as we can see today, implied volatility (VIX) is feeding back directly into the prices of Japanese stocks and Bitcoin… dragging them both lower.

Last year, cryptocurrencies experienced “melt-up,” a situation where prices surged, irrespective of fundamentals, because a flood of investors seeking capital gains outstriped supplies. If the current “triple-low environment” persists, and inflation rate and the likelihood of a recession remains low, we believe this “melt-up” phenomenon could spread to other products, creating massive asset bubbles.

On the flip side, Deutsche warns that predicting the timing of an asset bubble’s collapse is fraught with difficulty.

Investors required to seek out high returns, even in the current “triple-low environment,” are under pressure to manage assets near their fund’s value-at-risk (VaR) upper limit (CTA, macro funds and volatility-targeting funds such as variable annuity funds and risk parity funds). This means that, structurally, they will increase their holdings of stocks and other risk assets when volatility declines, but reflexively dump risk assets when volatility rises.  

*  *  *

All of which suggests that if VIX keeps rising then expect Japanese stocks and Bitcoin to keep tumbling.

via RSS http://ift.tt/2EwGuF7 Tyler Durden

Here’s What Rand Paul, Mark Meadows, and Others in Washington Are Saying About the Nunes Memo

Nancy Pelosi“The Memo” is out and the reactions are unfolding in entirely predictable patterns.

Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), chair of the House Intelligence Committee, released his short memo today after the White House agreed to its declassification. The document claims that the FBI withheld from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that the “Steele Dossier,” used as justification to snoop on former Donald Trump adviser Carter Page, was funded by Democratic Party sources and pushed by FBI officials with an agenda against Trump. (Read it all here.)

What are major political players saying? Pretty much what you would have predicted.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) calls the memo “partisan spin” and says its release is reckless and will help Russia. Yet she doesn’t actually counter any of the claims in the memo itself:

There are some variations in responses among Republicans. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), no friend of Trump’s, does not the Nunes memo to threaten the investigation of whether Russia colluded with members of Trump’s campaign during the election outcomes. McCain, you may recall, might have played a major role in the spread of the contents of the Steele Dossier:

The latest attacks on the FBI and Department of Justice serve no American interests—no party’s, no president’s, only Putin’s. The American people deserve to know all of the facts surrounding Russia’s ongoing efforts to subvert our democracy, which is why Special Counsel Mueller’s investigation must proceed unimpeded. Our nation’s elected officials, including the president, must stop looking at this investigation through the warped lens of politics and manufacturing partisan sideshows. If we continue to undermine our own rule of law, we are doing Putin’s job for him.

As for the Republicans who favor the memo’s release, I’ve been blasting some of them for complaining about secret surveillance when it’s connected to Trump while explicitly reauthorizing the use of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Amendments to allow the feds to secretly snoop on American citizens.

But some Republican lawmakers, like Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) who have been philosophically consistent. This tweet may sound like what we’ve been hearing from other Trump supporters…

…but Meadows, as a member of the House Freedom Caucus, supported reforms to the FISA amendments that would have put tighter restrictions on using secret surveillance of American citizens. He was overruled by some other Republicans, who now are also acting outraged about the contents of the memo. Unfortunately, those hypocritical politicians end up amplifying those who see this whole thing as a partisan fight intended to either protect or destroy the president. But unlike a lot of the Republicans, Meadows understands this is a bigger issue than just snooping on people close to the president:

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) who tried to organize a filibuster to stop FISA from being reauthorized without reforms, applauded the memo’s release for similar reasons:

While I applaud the release of this memo, I also call for Congress to take immediate action to help prevent such behavior in the future. It is imperative it start by listening to Americans who have expressed outrage over its disregard for the Fourth Amendment and reexamining the powers it reauthorized right before we learned of the memo. Continuing to ignore the Constitution will only guarantee that others fall victim to government abusing its domestic surveillance powers.

Then there’s the question of just how accurate Nunes’ memo actually is. RedState questions Nunes’ claim that then-FBI Director James Comey testified that the whole Steele dossier was “salacious and unverified.” That doesn’t seem to accurately reflect what Comey said, which is that parts of the dossier were unverified and perhaps parts were.

Speaking of which, here’s how Comey himself responded:

Turning our attention to what happens next: The Democrats produced their own memo describing how they interpret the warrant application process for this whole investigation. They’d like it to be declassified and released too. When House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) defended the release of the Nunes memo today, he also showed support for releasing the Democratic Party’s analysis. His spokesperson told The Hill, “The speaker is in favor of greater transparency. If it is scrubbed to ensure it does not reveal sources and methods of our intelligence gathering, the speaker supports the release of the Democrats’ memo.”

Beyond that, if we want to see who’s really committed to transparency, watch to see who wants to declassify and release all the underlying warrant application information that was submitted in the first place, rather than just relying on partisan interpretations.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is no fan of Trump’s, but it’s one of the major civil liberties groups concerned about unwarranted FBI surveillance of Americans. And in the wake of the Nunes memo, it wants more information to come out. From Christopher Anders, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Washington Legislative Office:

Rather than one side or the other cherry-picking facts, all Americans deserve to see all of the facts, including both the minority report and the underlying documents. The goal should be more transparency, not less, particularly when a congressional committee chairman makes serious charges of abuse but does not provide the facts to either prove the charges or allow Americans to make up our own minds.

And one last response, just for the eyerolls. The same Arizona congressman (Rep. Paul Gosar) who wanted capitol police to arrest any illegal immigrants who might have shown up at Trump’s State of the Union Address thinks the Nunes memo is evidence of treason:

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2GFiJvc
via IFTTT

To Jeff Gundlach, This Is The “Chart Of Death”

That high-yield bonds have decoupled from stocks (despite both their valuation-bases being driven from underlying business volatility) is not a new factor in the melt-up manic-manipulated markets we experience every day.

But, as DoubleLine’s Jeffrey Gundlach notes, the size of the divergence is becoming extreme to say the least.

“JNK chart looks like death. No way to win here, folks…”

It sure does! Medium-term…

Short-term…

And Long-Term…

And as Bond yields surge so HY is accelerating lower…

 

This follows an earlier warning:

JNK ETF now down YTD.  If rates keep rising, I expect JNK to underperform Treasuries. Even more likely if rates fall. Not a good JNK set-up.”

Not pretty…

 

And don’t forget positioning among institutional investors has turned markedly more bearish recently

Which makes sense if Central banks stick to their plan this year…

 

via RSS http://ift.tt/2EcBDv9 Tyler Durden

‘The State Has Been One of the Largest Perpetrators of Gender Inequality and Violence’: Podcast

If you think libertarianism is just for privileged white dudes, you really need to meet Kat Murti.

She’s the 29-year-old co-founder of Feminists for Liberty, a group that is “anti-sexism and anti-statism, pro-markets and pro-choice on everything.” A native of both India and Texas, she wants to make libertarianism the default option among women, people of color, and millennials.

“We believe the state has been one of the largest perpetrators of gender inequality and gender violence,” she told a reporter at the recent Women’s March in Washington, D.C. “We want government to get out of the way and for people to live their own lives, their best lives.”

Murti’s day job is doing digital outreach for the Cato Institute and she’s also a board member for Students for a Sensible Drug Policy. Reason‘s Nick Gillespie spoke with her about feminism, individualism, intersectionality, and more.

Audio production by Ian Keyser.

Subscribe, rate, and review the Reason Podcast at iTunes. Listen at SoundCloud below:

Don’t miss a single Reason podcast! (Archive here.)

Subscribe at iTunes.

Follow us at SoundCloud.

Subscribe at YouTube.

Like us on Facebook.

Follow us on Twitter.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2nA8L6z
via IFTTT

Bank Of America, JP Morgan Bar Crypto Purchases On Credit Card

The latest crackdown against cryptos was unveiled on Thursday when the largest US bitcoin exchange, Coinbase, sent out notices to clients, informing them that purchasing cryptocurrencies on credit would now be prohibitively expensive, if not impossible, as banks have started to process payments for bitcoin et al as “cash advances”, which tend to come with extremely high interest rates:

Dear Coinbase Customer

We’re writing because you have a credit card on file and want to inform you of a recent change that may increase the cost of purchasing digital currency with a credit card.

Recently, the MCC code for digital currency purchases was changed by a number of the major credit card networks. The new code will allow banks and card issuers to charge additional “cash advance” fees. These fees are not charged or collected by Coinbase. These additional fees will show up as a separate line item on your card statement.

The move came as a number of bank and card issuers announced that they would be reviewing changes to their policies around the purchases of crypto assets using credit cards.

Then, last Thursday the Wall Street Journal reported that Capital One banned customers from using credit cards to purchase bitcoin or coins on the Ethereum blockchain, citing “limiting mainstream acceptance and the elevated risks of fraud, loss and volatility.” Discover Financial announced it would likewise block bitcoin transactions.

Then yesterday, MarketWatch  reported that Bank of America and other major lenders are assessing the use of credit cards to purchase bitcoin and other virtual currencies, which could result in restrictions or limits.

Today that was confirmed when Bank of America became the largest U.S. lender yet to bar customers from using their credit cards to buy cryptocurrencies.

According to an internal memo to employees obtained by Bloomberg, the second largest US bank said it “will begin declining credit card transactions with known cryptocurrency exchanges” starting today. It said the policy will apply to all personal and business credit cards issued by the bank.

Betty Riess, a spokeswoman for the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank, confirmed the bank will no longer allow the transactions. 

And then, moments later, JPM joined the fray too:

  • JPMORGAN TO HALT CRYPTO PURCHASES ON SATURDAY, SPOKESWOMAN SAYS

As a reminder, a recent LendEdu survey revealed that just over 18% of bitcoin purchases were made using a credit card.

 

The good news: 82% of all crypto purhcases were not made using a credit card.

via RSS http://ift.tt/2nCIIe2 Tyler Durden

Just Three Charts

Forget valuations…

(because they can always be shrugged off by using 10Y forward estimates with some hockey-stick extrapolation)

These three charts are the real worries for anyone about to play the ‘greater fool’ and pile the remaining cash in their retirement savings into stocks…

Deutsche Bank’s Binky Chadha notes that US equity positioning is extreme (+1.5sd above average levels). Mutual fund positioning has risen in tandem with the rebound in growth to a 6-year high, with cash balances well below the historical normal range…

Aggregate shorts in cash equities and ETFs, led by cuts in Tech shorts, have for the first time fallen below the elevated range they have been in since the financial crisis…

Margin debt in brokerage accounts has risen to extremes…

Option market indicators had till last week painted a similar picture, with skew and correlation down sharply, especially at near term maturities, and the put/call ratio low. Inflows into equities have surged recently and are on track for the largest monthly inflow on record. But equity inflows have lagged far behind those to bonds through the cycle and also through the rally over the last 15 months, suggesting plenty of room to catch up.

From a fundamental perspective, we see equities as having priced in the rebound in US and global growth, the corporate tax reform and as having gotten a little ahead.

To summarize – for the hard of reason – There’s no more shorts to squeeze as ammo for the ramps, there’s no cash on the sidelines, and those that are already in are the most-levered to gains in the history of stocks.

“Probably nothing…”

via RSS http://ift.tt/2BT4mA8 Tyler Durden

Drug War’s Failures Play Out in The Trade: New at Reason

'The Trade'In all the billions of words and electronic images expended in telling the story of the war on drugs, perhaps nothing sums it up quite so concisely as a scene in Showtime’s new documentary series The Trade. As a bedraggled mother is dragged off following her arrest on heroin charges, a cop kneels to speak to her crying children. “It’s okay,” he comforts them. “We’re the good guys.” After more than a century of this senseless, futile war, you still can’t identify the players without a scorecard.

Producer-director Matthew Heineman, in his second go-round with the war on drugs (his 2015 film Cartel Land was nominated for the Oscar in documentaries), has given us an unnervingly close-up study of the conflict. Given an astonishing level of access to both Mexican drug lords and American junkies, he’s intercut their stories with a narrative about an Ohio police narcotics squad, which though far more ordinary, is still revealing. Television critic Glenn Garvin previews.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2EcF98W
via IFTTT

Apple Enters Correction, Drops 10% From Highs As Moody’s Warns

Despite a roller-coaster dump-and-pump overnight, Apple stock is falling hard again today – along with many of the tech giants – and is now down over 10% from recent highs, entering a correction.

The latest leg comes after Moodys warned that Apple’s plan to target net cash neutral is credit negative.

 

Full Moody’s Statement:

Moody’s Investors Service said Apple inc. indicated on its first quarter 2018 earnings call that it plans to become approximately net cash neutral over time. Though this change in financial policy is credit negative, the Aa1 senior unsecured rating and stable outlook remain unchanged. As of December 30, 2017, Apple holds a net cash position of $163 billion, comprised of $285 billion of cash and investments and $122 billion of debt. Management stated that it would provide specific capital allocation plans during its next earnings calls.

While the $163 billion reduction of cash and investment balances will represent a substantial weakening of its liquidity position, Moody’s believes that Apple will remain well positioned in the Aa1 rating category given the enduring strength of the company’s underlying business, including a large and global installed base of iPhones, tremendous customer loyalty, and our expectation of annual free cash flow of over $40 billion (after dividends). Even with a net debt balance of zero, Apple would have a robust financial profile with financial metrics that compare favorably with other highly rated companies.

As of December 30, 2017, adjusted debt to EBITDA was 1.6x, or just over 2x including the tax repatriation liability of $38 billion, which will be payable over 8 years. With tax reform, Apple will have greater flexibility to access its offshore cash flows. Accordingly, Moody’s expects significant de-leveraging over the next several years as Apple will likely cease issuing debt to fund domestic capital allocation and repay maturing debt. Moody’s expects healthy profit growth of at least high single digits over the next year spurred by the demand for the iPhone X, the momentum of the services business, and the return of growth in the greater China market. Within 2 years, Moody’s would expect gross financial leverage to decrease to the low 1x range (or mid 1x including the tax liability, which will gradually decline with the required 8% annual payments for the first 5 out of 8 years).

via RSS http://ift.tt/2DUMtm1 Tyler Durden

Gold-Backed Cryptocurrencies: Icing On An Already Tasty Cake?

Authored by John Rubino via DollarCollapse.com,

The blockchain has discovered gold (or gold has discovered the blockchain). Either way, this means several things.

 

First, the decades-long dream of a gold-backed cybercurrency may finally be realized. Second, gold and probably silver are looking at a big new source of physical demand. Third, the huge number of gold-related initial coin offerings (ICOs) in this largely unregulated pipeline will require buyers to learn how to tell the legitimate offerings from the scams.

Two probably-legitimate examples:

 

UK’s Royal Mint Launches Gold-Backed Cryptocurrency

(Cointelegraph) – The UK’s Royal Mint, the institution responsible for producing all the physical money the country has for circulation, has announced the launch of its own gold-backed cryptocurrency.

 

The Blockchain-based coin, called Royal Mint Gold (RMG), is a digital representation of gold stored in The Royal Mint vault.

The Royal Mint Bullion, the Royal Mint company that sells physical gold, is the first company to allow customers to hold gold-backed assets on Blockchain, Tom Coghill, RMG’s Commercial Lead, stated in an interview with Express.co.uk. Coghill also mentioned that one RMG coin is equal to one gram of gold, adding that “it’s real gold you’re holding when you’re holding our RMG.”

A recent report published by the World Gold Council (WGC) compared Bitcoin and gold, declaring that though Bitcoin saw a higher growth in value in 2017, gold would remain an important store-of-value investment.

Coghill claimed that Bitcoin investments are more uncertain than investments in gold:

“Gold has probably had an argument that it’s been a store of value for 6,000 years, bitcoin’s a bit younger and the future of bitcoin is uncertain.”

——————–

Cryptocurrency backed by gold being developed by Perth Mint to entice investors back to precious metals

(ABC) – Australia’s biggest gold refiner, the Perth Mint, is developing its own cryptocurrency backed by physical precious metals.

 

The ambitious plan, which is subject to a confidentiality agreement, will make it easier for consumers to buy gold.

The mint also plans to make use of blockchain technology, first used as the core component of the digital currency Bitcoin, where it works as a public ledger for transactions.

In the 10 years since its inception, blockchain has been used to track transactions in industries from agriculture to land registration and the music recording industry.

For the Perth Mint, the need to bring investors back to precious metals after a boom in alternative investments such as cryptocurrencies posed an opportunity, according to chief executive Richard Hayes.

“I think as the world moves through times of increasing uncertainty, you’re seeing people look for alternate offerings,” he said.

“And you’re seeing this massive flow of funds into the likes of Bitcoin at the moment because people are looking for something outside of the traditional investments.”

But Mr Hayes said the volatility of some of the current cryptocurrencies meant they did not suit all investors.

And that is where a gold-backed offering may fit.

“With a crypto-gold or a crypto-precious metals offering, what you will see is that gold is actually backing it,” Mr Hayes said.

“So it will have all the benefits of something that is on a distributed ledger that settles very, very quickly, that is easy to trade, but is actually backed by precious metals, so there is actually something behind it, something backing it.”

Some thoughts on gold-backed cryptocurrencies (or tokens or whatever the correct term ends up being):

24 hour trading

Most financial markets have trading hours that are limited to the business day. Which means that most US investors can buy and sell, say, Amazon stock or silver coins only when domestic markets are open. Owners of a blockchain asset, in contrast, can wake up in the middle of the night, see an accurate quote, and act on it instantly. Whether this is a good or bad thing depends on the temperament and self-control of the individual. It’s possible that we’re creating a financial time-suck comparable to social addictions like Facebook and Instagram. And maybe a new danger for sleepwalkers…sleep trading?

On the positive hand, when things spin out of control in Asia or Europe, American owners of crypto-gold won’t have to wait until morning (which may be too late) to move their assets out of harm’s way.

Is it allocated?

Lots of different kinds of gold and silver accounts are already available, with the biggest differentiator being the ownership of the bullion sitting in custodial vaults. With allocated accounts buyers own specific metal bars, while with unallocated accounts buyers are in effect creditors of the company running the fund. The former is vastly safer and should be the only way that anyone ever owns remotely stored precious metals, including cryptos.

Good for gold/silver price?

Precious metal cryptos might engage some of the animal spirits that have been driving the bitcoin bull market — especially now that existing cryptos are correcting hard, thus reinforcing the lesson that these currencies aren’t backed by anything real. It’s possible that the contrast between bitcoin and crypto-gold will become a major topic of conversation in 2018, with the latter looking good by comparison and attracting serious speculative cash.

Existing tokens

It turns out that there are already a number of gold-backed cryptocurrencies out there. Here’s a list compiled by GoldScape:

Gold-Backed Cryptocurrency Directory
This is a current list of gold-backed cryptocurrency. This is a directory and not an editorial endorsement, so research all of the alternatives before investing. Some of the cryptocurrencies listed here don’t detail how they store and account for gold either, so proceed with caution. Any questions regarding each coin should be referred to their social media channel or forum listing.

Since this post was first published there have been new coins added to the list and some are now ready to buy. The list is now sorted in order of availability.

Flashmoni (OZT)
Location: UK
Website: flashmoni.io
Flashmoni is a blockchain-powered fintech company that offers a physical gold-pegged cryptocurrency, innovative payment solutions and a smart contract-based advertising solution. In addition to using gold to back their tokens, they also plan to raise funds to directly operate mines to “improve miner’s working conditions, their lives and of the communities where they live.”

There are two gold-backed tokens: OZG which is a private token pegged with 24 K gold stored in Dubai’s DMCC Free Zone and in Singapore. 1 OZG = 1 grain of gold (1 grain is approx 0.065 gram). OZT is the public token tradable on crypto exchanges and OZTs core value is 1/20th of the OZG.

GoldCrypto (AUX)
Location: Belize
Website: goldcrypto.io

AuX tokens by GoldCrypto are a cryptocurrency backed by physical gold. Currently, each 750 AuX Tokens will be backed by one ounce of gold (approximately US$1.70 per AuX Token). This gold backing per AuX Token then progressively increases.

Gold Bits Coin (GBeez)
Location: Australia
Website: goldbitscoin.com

Gold Bits Coin is a gold-backed crypto but the site and White Paper is light on details. It says that each coin is “backed by real gold”, but it doesn’t say how much gold is in each coin, or how it is stored. Gold Bits Coin Pre-ICO is on until 31 January 2018.

XGold Coin (XGC)
Location: Panama
Website: xgold.lu

XGold Coin (XGC) is a gold backed digital crypto-currency option. The price of one XGC Coin at initial pricing is based on a single gram of Gold. PRE-ICO First Round is on until 10 February 2018 and is offering a Pre-ICO 35% bonus.

AurusGold (AWG)
Location: Netherlands
Website: aurus.io

AurusGold is fully-allocated, gold-backed cryptocurrency. The Aurus asset tokenising protocol is used by top European gold traders to tokenise 99.99% LBMA approved, fully audited gold under the AurusGold (AWG) currency.

PureGold (PGT and PGG)
Location: Singapore
Website: puregold.io

Puregold is a payment gateway using Gold backed cryptocurrency. They offer two digital tokens called PGT for transactions; and PGG which is a cryptoasset backed by physical gold. The company uses physical gold (of 999.9 quality) as its security. Puregold’s gold reserves equal or exceed its circulated amounts of PGG gold-backed tokens. The physical gold is stored by a third party in a decentralized storage unit that Puregold stores investment grade gold, gold jewellery, small ingots (up to 100 grams) and coins. Puregold is part of Puregold.sg, which is a private mint in Singapore with its own in-house factory producing gold and bars. The ICO for Puregold runs from 15 January 2018 to 14 March 2018

Reales (RLS)
Location: Estonia
Website: realescoin.io

Reales coin is a token that combines a basket of precious metal and cryptocurrencies. The breakdown of each token is 10% physical gold, 35% physical silver, 20% Bitcoin, and 20% for ICO’s and alt-coins (total 85%). The remaining 10% is for company’s budget and 5% for operational costs. Reales ICO ends 8 March, 2018.

Icing on the cake

The forces driving precious metals higher (out-of-control credit creation pretty much everywhere, geopolitical chaos in much of the world, bond and stock bubbles that should, if history still matters, burst shortly, and the looming mass devaluation of fiat currencies) are already nothing short of spectacular. So gold and silver don’t need the blockchain to be big winners in the next few years.

Still, the number of gold-related blockchain products is apparently going to soar in 2018 as the big gold players stake their claims. The result? A potentially significant jump in demand for physical gold as all these promoters acquire metal to back their offerings. So while gold is likely to soar in any event, the blockchain connection might be a big help. Think of it as icing on an already tasty cake.

via RSS http://ift.tt/2nDnE7h Tyler Durden