“In His Own Words” – Donald Trump Addresses The ‘Birther’ Issue – Live Feed

Following a confusing exchange of comments by his campaign (that President Barack Obama was born in the US), and his tweets ("Don't believe the biased and phony media quoting people who work for my campaign…The only quote that matters is a quote from me!"), Donald Trump is reportedly going to address the issue of President Obama's 'birthplace'…

Trump is on a major roll following pneumonia-gate; will this 'birther' commentary break the trend?

As AP reports, Donald Trump's campaign is declaring that the Republican presidential candidate believes now that President Barack Obama was born in the United States, though Trump has yet to say that himself. And his campaign is cheering Trump for bringing an end to an "ugly incident" that it blames, without evidence, on Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.

For many years, Trump was the most prominent proponent of the "birther" movement, which claimed Obama was born outside the U.S. — despite the fact that he was born in Hawaii. As recently as Thursday, Trump would not acknowledge Obama's birthplace, declining to address the matter when asked by The Washington Post.

 

"I'll answer that question at the right time," Trump told the paper. "I just don't want to answer it yet."

 

Clinton seized on Trump's refusal during a speech Thursday night before the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute.

 

"He was asked one more time where was President Obama born and he still wouldn't say Hawaii. He still wouldn't say America," Clinton said. "This man wants to be our next president? When will he stop this ugliness, this bigotry?"

 

Hours later, campaign spokesman Jason Miller issued a statement that suggested the question had been settled five years ago — by Trump.

 

"In 2011, Mr. Trump was finally able to bring this ugly incident to its conclusion by successfully compelling President Obama to release his birth certificate," Miller said.

 

"Mr. Trump did a great service to the president and the country by bringing closure to the issue that Hillary Clinton and her team first raised," he added. "Inarguably, Donald J. Trump is a closer. Having successfully obtained President Obama's birth certificate when others could not, Mr. Trump believes that President Obama was born in the United States."

 

Yet Trump repeatedly stoked the issue in the years since Obama released his birth certificate. In August 2012, he was pushing the issue on Twitter.

 

"An 'extremely credible source' has called my office and told me that @BarackObama's birth certificate is a fraud," he wrote.

 

Trump has said repeatedly during the campaign that he no longer talks about the "birther" issue while refusing to retract his previous comments.

 

"I don't talk about it because if I talk about that, your whole thing will be about that," he told reporters aboard his plane last week. "So I don't talk about it."

But now he is speaking on the matter…

via http://ift.tt/2cL5FZ3 Tyler Durden

Gartman: “We Were Uncommonly, Inordinatedly, Improperly Bearish… We Were Wrong”

Yesterday, in providing the best daily indicator of which way the market will trade, we reported just before the market open, that the biggest fade in the history of capital markets, Dennis Gartman, had bought “far out of the money SPY puts.” The S&P then soared and never looked back, on the shoulders of the latest abysmal macro data.

Which brings us to this morning where Gartman writes that share prices have risen quite sharply since yesterday, “and we begin by admitting that we were uncommonly, inordinately, improperly bearish, believing that the weakness that had developed since last Friday’s collapse had merely been consolidated… had merely been corrected.. and that further weakness sufficient to carry the global market generally and the US market specifically downward toward 2075-2080 in the S&P. Further, we were convinced that the break that had taken place in the EUR STOXX 50 as the short term upward sloping trend line going back into late June had been definitively broken would give way to lower prices all across the European equity markets. We were wrong.”

He continued:

We were wrong because there is still confidence on the part of the investment community that the magic elixir of central bank expansionary policies shall carry the day. We may not any longer believe that to be true but it matters not what we think; it matters only what the collective mind-set of the universe of investors thinks. It matters not what the economic fundamentals may dictate; it matters only what that same collective mind-set dictates, and for the moment the notion of TINA… There Is No Alternative… obtains. We may believe that CITA… Cash Is The Alternative… is the better investment choice, but it matters not. We are wrong; the market’s collective psychology is right and that, as they say, it that!

Also, one of the biggest mysteries of 2016, how Gartman could be outperforming the market, has been answered: he no longer is.

For the year-to-date, stocks as measured by our International Index are up 4.2% while stocks here in the US as measured by the S&P are 5.0%. We, on the other hand, having gone through the singularly worst three week period in the past two or three years are down a bit more than 3% for the year-to-date. We have simplified our position, cutting it back to only a long position in aluminium, hedged with sufficient derivatives positions to leave us marginally net short of the equity market, and long of gold in EUR denominated terms.

Finally, for those asking if they can re-short stocks, the answer is yes: Gartman is now on the “sidelines.”

We may be right on the crude oil market; we may be right on the bond market; we may have been right … or soon shall be… on the EUR, but we are and have been uncommonly wrong for the past week on  equities. As Hamlet told Ophelia, “Hie thee to a nunnery,” we shall hie then to the sidelines:

Judging by the market’s tumble after the open trading, the algos got the memo early. Trade accordingly.

via http://ift.tt/2cCkIEf Tyler Durden

WTI Crude Tumbles To One-Month Lows As Libya, Nigeria Supply Looms

Concerns over Libya, Nigeria compounding the already record high global crude surplus (glut) has sent WTI Crude futures to $43.50 – one-month lows…

Stocks are ignoring crude’s collapse for now…

As Bloomberg notes, OPEC members Libya and Nigeria, whose supplies have been reduced by domestic conflicts, are preparing to boost exports within weeks. The oil surplus will last longer than previously thought as demand growth slumps and output proves resilient, the International Energy Agency said Tuesday.

“Oil prices keep trading in a narrow range,” said Michael Poulsen, an analyst at Global Risk Management Ltd. “A short spike yesterday is erased this morning as supply glut worries rule.”

World oil stockpiles will continue to accumulate through 2017, a fourth consecutive year of oversupply, according to the IEA. Just last month the agency predicted the market would return to equilibrium this year.

via http://ift.tt/2ctRycB Tyler Durden

Deutsche Bonds “Dropping Like A Stone” As ‘Most Dangerous Bank In The World’ Plummets

"They are dropping like a stone," warns one European credit strategist as signals from the bottom of Deutsche Bank's capital structure signal a "huge increase in the potential for a coupon skip."

 

With DB stock tumbling towards record lows again…

 

Back to an EUR11 handle…biggest drop since Brexit

 

Bloomberg reports, the bank’s 1.75 billion euros ($2 billion) of 6% additional Tier 1 bonds, the first notes to take losses in a crisis, are crashing… as the world's most systemically dangerous bank faces existential problems once again.

Deutsche Bank AG’s riskiest bonds plummeted after the German lender received a $14 billion claim from the U.S. Justice Department to settle an investigation into the firm’s sale of residential mortgage-backed securities.

 

“They are dropping like a stone,” said Tomas Kinmonth, a credit strategist at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. “The fine, even if reduced, could surpass all provisions held by the bank.”

 

Interest payments on additional Tier 1 bonds can be switched off if a lender runs into trouble and Germany’s biggest bank has the least available distributable funds among banks in Europe, according to CreditSights Ltd. The bank said in March it had 1.1 billion euros available to pay AT1s for the year.

 

“Anything above $10 billion will make things very difficult for them,” he said. “This is unequivocally bad for their AT1s. It hugely increases the potential for a coupon skip.”

Then who's next?

 

As we previously conclude, considering two of the three most "globally systemically important", i.e., riskiest, banks just saw their stock price scrape all time lows earlier this week, we wonder just how nervous behind their calm facades are the executives at the ECB, the IMF, and the rest of the handful of people who realize just close to the edge of collapse this world's most riskiest bank (whose market cap is less than the valuation of AirBnB) finds itself right now.

via http://ift.tt/2cKZjJu Tyler Durden

Nasdaq Turns Green After Intel Hikes Guidance Moments Before Market Open

With Deutsche Bank foundering, oil tumbling to lows not seen since August 11, and futures taking on water, a sticksave had to come from somewhere to avoid another Friday risk-parity fund deleveraging. We got just that moments ago courtesy of Intel, which announced just before the market open that Q2 revenue is expected to be above the company’s previous outlook.

The company now expects third-quarter revenue to be $15.6 billion, plus or minus $300 million, as compared to the previous range of $14.9 billion, plus or minus $500 million. “The increase in revenue is primarily driven by replenishment of PC supply chain inventory.”

The company said it is also seeing some signs of improving PC demand; it was unclear if there was actual improving demand or merely wishful thinking, however the market, desperate for any good news no matter how lacking in credibility, rebounded, sending the Nasdaq all the way in the green. And now we look forward to INTC’s Q3 earnings report in a few weeks to see just how big the miss to boosted upward guidance will be as we intend to #timestamp today’s stick saving announcement.

More from the press release:

The company is forecasting the mid-point of the third-quarter GAAP gross margin range at 62 percent, plus or minus a couple of points, up 2 points versus the prior third-quarter GAAP outlook gross margin midpoint of 60 percent, driven mostly by higher PC unit volume. The midpoint of the third-quarter non-GAAP gross margin range is now forecasted at 63 percent, plus or minus a couple of points, up 1 point versus the prior third-quarter non-GAAP outlook gross margin midpoint of 62 percent.

 

Third-quarter R&D plus MG&A spending is expected to be approximately $5.2 billion, $100 million higher than the prior expectation of approximately $5.1 billion. Third-quarter gains and losses from equity investments and interest and other income are expected to be a net loss of approximately $125 million, as compared to the prior expectation of a net loss of approximately $75 million. The tax rate for the third quarter is expected to be 22 percent, as compared to the prior expectation of 21 percent.

 

All other expectations have been withdrawn and guidance will be updated with the company’s third-quarter earnings report on Oct. 18.

 

Business Outlook

 

Intel’s Business Outlook for the third quarter 2016 was originally published in the company’s second quarter 2016 earnings release, available at www.intc.com.

 

Intel’s updated Business Outlook does not include the potential impact of any business combinations, asset acquisitions, divestitures, strategic investments and other significant transactions that may be completed after Sept. 16. Intel’s updated Business Outlook is posted on intc.com and may be reiterated in public or private meetings with investors and others through the close of business on Sept. 16. Intel’s Quiet Period will start from the close of business on Sept. 16 until publication of the company’s third-quarter earnings release, scheduled for Oct. 18. During the Quiet Period, all of the Business Outlook and other forward-looking statements disclosed in the company’s news releases and filings with the SEC should be considered as historical, speaking as of prior to the Quiet Period only and not subject to an update by the company.

 

Electronic communication sent to or from this contact may be recorded by our compliance system and are subject to archival, monitoring, and/or disclosure to someone other than the recipient. This message and any attached documents contain information which may be confidential. These materials are solely for the use of the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient of this transmission, you are hereby notified that any distribution, disclosure, printing, copying, storage, modification or the taking of any action in reliance upon this transmission is strictly prohibited. Delivery of this message to any person other than the intended recipient shall not compromise or waive such confidentiality. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately and delete this message from your system. Any attached presentation is not part of and does not constitute an offering of securities. An offering can only be made pursuant to a confidential private offering memorandum or prospectus.

via http://ift.tt/2ctRxp2 Tyler Durden

Mexican Peso Crashes To Record Lows As Trump Odds Surge

While correlation is not causation, it is certainly a wink and a nudge in this case. As Donald Trump’s poll numbers soar so the Mexican Peso has been collapsing against the US dollar, and just broke to fresh record lows…

 

After last year’s annus horribilis that saw the currency shed more than 14 per cent of its value against the dollar, the peso is down an additional 10.5 per cent so far this year – making it the world’s second worst performing major emerging market currency after the Argentine peso, report The FT’s Pan Kwan Yuk and Jude Webber.

Low oil prices have hobbled Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto’s efforts to open up the country’s energy sector to private investments and forced the government to cut spending and growth forecasts. In addition Mr Peña Nieto has seen his approval ratings sunk to record lows amid anger over his handling of corruption scandals and perceived inability to maintain law and order in Latin America’s second most important economy.

 

Meanwhile, uncertainty over the timing of the next US interest rate rise and Mr Trump’s recent recovery in the opinion polls against Hillary Clinton have further sapped enthusiasm for Mexican assets.

Combined together, analysts say this mean it’s no longer a question of when the peso will breach the once unheard-of level of 20 to the dollar. It’s when.

via http://ift.tt/2cKWWX3 Tyler Durden

Record Outflow From Junk Bond ETFs

“Easy come, easy go.”

That saying was certainly accurate when it comes to the recent extremely volatile flows in and out of junk bonds. Following weeks of “scramble for yield”, the recent mini tantrum (which may morph into a maxi one yet), has resulted in rising rates and volatility, which in turn has prompted an outflow from high yield US HY funds to the tune of $2.84 billion  (-1.3%) net outflow last week, the first negative print in the last 6 sessions.

 

According to BofA, last Friday’s jump in volatility and risk-free yields, combined with a 3.6% decline in oil prices, prompted the risk-off outflows which continued into this week. As tends to be the case when a shift in sentiment occurs, HY ETFs responded more quickly and violently with a -$2.54bn (-6.1%) net outflow, compared to the more muted -$296mn (-0.2%) reaction from open-ended funds.

In terms of $AUM, this was the largest ever outflow from ETFs and the first net redemption from open-ended funds in the past 11 weeks, underscoring the fear of a rising rate environment and its negative impact on high yield. Non-US HY also lost money to outflows this past week (-$698mn, – 0.3%), its first in the last 6 sessions.

Outside of high yield, flows were mixed. Although equities (-$1.97bn, -0.0%) and money markets (-$37.6bn, -1.6%) also lost money to inflows, most other asset classes recognized inflows last week: loan funds continued their streak with a $269mn (+0.4%) gain, high grade added $617mn (+0.1%), EM debt gained $113mn (+0.0%), and munis increased their AUM by $319mn (+0.1%). Over the last 5 weeks, money market funds have experienced net withdrawals representing 3.45% of AUM, the most over such a time span in over a year.

via http://ift.tt/2cj5raR Tyler Durden

Core CPI Highest Since Lehman (Above Fed Mandate) As Rent, Healthcare Costs Soar

"The Fed is increasingly F#ked," exclaimed one veteran market participant as Core CPI – among The Fed's favorite inflation indicators – surged to +2.3% YoY, the highest since Sept 2008. This is the 10th month in a row above the Fed's mandated 2% 'stable' growth as shelter and healthcare costs continue to surge.

Core CPI growth above Fed mandate for 10th month in a row…

 

Healthcare and Rent are soaring (bottom right)…

As the cost of living under a roof at night continues to outpace headline inflation…

 

And Medical Services rose the most since Nov 1982 MoM

 

The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.3 percent in August, following a 0.1-percent increase in July.

The shelter index continued to rise, increasing 0.3 percent after a 0.2-percent advance the prior month. The indexes for rent and owners' equivalent rent both rose 0.3 percent in August, as they did in July. The index for lodging away from home turned up in August, increasing 2.0 percent after a 2.4-percent decline the prior month. The medical care index rose sharply in August, increasing 1.0 percent. The hospital services index rose 1.7 percent, and the index for prescription drugs advanced 1.3 percent. The index for motor vehicle insurance continued to rise in August, increasing 0.5 percent. The apparel index increased 0.2 percent, and the index for tobacco rose 0.7 percent after falling in July.

 

In contrast to these increases, the index for used cars and trucks continued to decline, falling 0.6 percent in August, its sixth consecutive decrease. The indexes for household furnishings and operations, for recreation, and for airline fares all fell slightly in August, each decreasing 0.1 percent. The   indexes for new vehicles and for alcoholic beverages were unchanged in August.

It appears the untenable Keynesian dilemma of 'stagflation' is upon us.

via http://ift.tt/2ceAnKT Tyler Durden

Here Are The “Lines Of People” Waiting For The New iPhone 7

After several spurious reports of substantial preorder spikes for the iPhone 7 out of the likes of T-Mobile, if not so much Verizon, AAPL stocks enjoyed the biggest weekly surge in years. However, judging by the “lines of people” waiting for the new gadget as it goes officially on sale in retail outlets, said jump may have been premature.

via http://ift.tt/2cs3CpI Tyler Durden

Mother Of All Systemic Threats Is Italy, EU Bail-Ins and World War? Happy Friday !

EU Bail In Rules Ignored By Italy  – Mother Of All Systemic Threats and World War?

by George Friedman for Mauldin Economics via Forbes

Italy has been in a crisis for at least eight months, though mainstream media did not recognize it until July. This crisis has nothing to do with Brexit, although opponents of Brexit will claim it does. Even if Britain had voted to stay in the EU, the Italian crisis would still have been gathering speed.

Bail In EU

The high level of non-performing loans (NPLs) has been a problem since before Brexit. It is clear that there is nothing in the Italian economy that can reduce them. Only a dramatic improvement in the economy would make it possible to repay these loans. And Europe’s economy cannot improve drastically enough to help. We have been in crisis for quite a while.

Banks were simply carrying loans as non-performing that were actually in default and discounting the NPLs rather than writing them off. But that only hid the obvious. As much as 17 percent of Italy’s loans will not be repaid. This will crush Italian banks’ balance sheets. And this will not only be in Italy.

Italian loans are packaged and resold, and Italian banks take loans from other European banks. These banks in turn have borrowed against Italian debt. Since Italy is the fourth largest economy in Europe, this is the mother of all systemic threats.

Bail-Ins, Not Bail Outs

The only way to help is a government bailout. The problem is that Italy is not only part of the EU, but part of the eurozone. As such, its ability to print its way out of the crisis is limited. In addition, EU regulations make it difficult for governments to bail out banks.

The EU has a concept called a bail-in, which means the depositors and creditors to the bank will lose their money. This is what the EU imposed on Cyprus. In Cyprus, deposits greater than 100,000 euros ($111,000) were seized to cover Cypriot bank debts. While some was returned, most was not.

The bail-in is a formula for bank runs. The money seized in Cyprus came from retirement funds and payrolls. Rome wants to make sure depositors don’t lose their deposits. A run on the banks would guarantee a meltdown. A meltdown would topple the government and allow the Five Star Movement, a Euroskeptic party, a good shot at governing.

The bail-in rule exists because Berlin doesn’t want to bail out banking systems using German money. Anti-European sentiment in Germany is already growing, with the rising popularity of the nationalist Alternative for Germany party. The Germans feel that they are fiscally responsible, and they resent paying for others’ irresponsibility.

Therefore, the German government’s hands are tied. It cannot accept a Europe-wide deposit insurance system, as it would put German money at risk. Nor can it permit overprinting of the euro. That would come out of the German hide as well.

The Italians can only try to manage the problem by ignoring EU rules, which is what they are doing.

bail-ins-considerations

Crisis Spreading

And another European economic crisis is brewing. Germany derives nearly half of its GDP from exports. All the discipline and frugality of the Germans can’t hide the fact that their prosperity depends on their ability to export. The ability to export depends on the demand of their customers.

Germany exports heavily to the EU, and the Italian crisis could cause an EU-wide banking crisis. That would cut deeply into German exports, slashing GDP and driving up unemployment. Logically, the Germans should be desperately trying to head off an Italian default. But Chancellor Angela Merkel is not eager to announce to the German people that their economy depends on Italy’s well-being.

Clearly, German businesses are aware of the danger. German production of capital goods fell nearly 4 percent from last month. German production of consumer goods rose only 0.5 percent.

German consumption can’t possibly make up for half of Germany’s GDP. In addition, the IMF recently said Deutsche Bank is the single largest contributor to systemic risk in the world. A rippling default through Europe will hit Deutsche Bank.

The US Piece of the Puzzle

However, the real threat to Germany is a U.S. recession. Recessions are normal, cyclical events that are necessary to maintain economic efficiency by culling inefficient businesses. The U.S. has one on average once every six to seven years. Substantial irrationality has crept into the economy. The yield curve on interest rates is beginning to flatten. Normally, a major market decline precedes a recession by three to six months. That would indicate that it likely won’t happen in 2016, but it could in 2017.

Given the stagnation in Europe, Germany has been shifting its exports to other countries, particularly the U.S. If the U.S. goes into recession, demand for German goods, among others, will drop. But in the case of Germany, a 1 percent drop in exports is nearly a half percent drop in GDP. With Germany’s minimal growth rate, drops of a few points could drive it into recession and high unemployment.

A U.S. recession would not only hit Germany, but the rest of Europe. Many countries export to the U.S., either directly or through producing components for German and British products. The U.S. is somewhat exposed to foreign debt defaults, but not enough to bring down the American system. The United States, with relatively low export percentages and low exposure, can withstand its cycle. It is not clear that Europe can.

The Big Picture

The EU must address Italy’s and Germany’s problems, but its regulations make finding solutions very difficult. This all was put in motion in 2008, but it is not a 2008 crisis. This is most of all a political and administrative crisis. The European system was created to administer peace and prosperity, not to manage the complex gyrations of an economy.

The argument from those who are against internationalism is simple. Sometimes the major international systems fail. The less entangled you are with these systems, the less damage you suffer. And since such systemic failures historically leads to political conflict and crisis, the case for nationalism increases – assuming you aren’t already trapped in the systemic crisis. In any event, increasing nationalism follows systemic failure like night follows day.

Italy’s contagious crisis is part of a storm of instability engulfing a region that’s home to 5 billion of the planet’s 7 billion people.

In this provocative documentary from Mauldin Economics and Geopolitical Futures, George Friedman uncovers the crises convulsing Europe, the Middle East and Asia … and reveals the geopolitical chess moves that could trigger global conflict.

Watch George Friedman’s Ground-breaking Documentary ‘Crisis & Chaos: Are We Moving Toward World War III?’ and access the Forbes article here

Editors Note: The U.S. will not be unscathed from the collapse of the EU banking and political system, from a new global financial crisis or indeed a new world war. Indeed, we believe the U.S., being the largest debtor nation the world has ever seen, would have plenty of its own financial, economic and geo-political challenges. Financial and economic contagion is the likely outcome. We agree with the substantive point made in the article and believe that an important way to protect investments and savings in the coming years is to be diversified and have a healthy allocation to physical gold – both in one’s possession and in secure storage, in the safest vaults in the world.

Protecting-Your-Savings-In-The-Coming-Bail-In-EraDownload Bail-In Guide

Gold and Silver Bullion – News and Commentary

Gold firm after U.S. data adjusts Fed rate hike views (Reuters)

Dollar Rally Fades as Odds of Fed Move This Year Drop Below 50% (Bloomberg)

Gold set for first weekly loss in three as investors turn to risky assets (Reuters)

Deutsche Bank falls another 7% – U.S. seeks $14 billion as settlement in mortgage case (Reuters)

Wells Fargo fallout: More pressure to break up the banks? (CNBC)

Bond Bull Market Will Ends – “Going To Get Ugly” (MoneyWeek)

Unusual dangers that are unique in the ‘5,000 years-ish’ history of finance (CNBC)

Gold: The Best Performing Asset of the 21st Century (GoldSeek)

Gold Will Skyrocket When Anchor To New Monetary System (KingWorldNews)

Stuff getting cheaper but stuff we really need getting more expensive (WashingtonPost)

7RealRisksBlogBanner

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

16 Sep: USD 1,314.25, GBP 999.56 & EUR 1,170.08 per ounce
15 Sep: USD 1,320.10, GBP 998.26 & EUR 1,174.23 per ounce
14 Sep: USD 1,323.20, GBP 1,001.40 & EUR 1,177.91 per ounce
13 Sep: USD 1,328.50, GBP 1,000.36 & EUR 1,183.69 per ounce
12 Sep: USD 1,327.50, GBP 1,000.80 & EUR 1,182.54 per ounce
09 Sep: USD 1,335.65, GBP 1,004.68 & EUR 1,184.86 per ounce
08 Sep: USD 1,348.00, GBP 1,009.11 & EUR 1,195.81 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

16 Sep: USD 18.91, GBP 14.36 & EUR 16.85 per ounce
15 Sep: USD 18.96, GBP 14.32 & EUR 16.87 per ounce
14 Sep: USD 19.04, GBP 14.42 & EUR 16.96 per ounce
13 Sep: USD 19.16, GBP 14.44 & EUR 17.06 per ounce
12 Sep: USD 18.72, GBP 14.11 & EUR 16.68 per ounce
09 Sep: USD 19.41, GBP 14.58 & EUR 17.23 per ounce
08 Sep: USD 19.93, GBP 14.90 & EUR 17.65 per ounce


Recent Market Updates

– Buy Gold – Bonds Are ‘Biggest Bubble In World’ – Billionaire Singer Warns
– Silver Bullion Market – “Most Bullish Story Ever Told?”
– “Sorry, You Can’t Have Your Gold Bullion”
– Global Stocks, Bonds Fall Sharply – Gold Consolidates After Two Weeks Of Gains
– Gold, Silver, Blockchain and Fintech – Solutions To Negative Rates, Bail-ins, Cash Confiscations and Cashless Society
– Jan Skoyles Appointed Research Executive At GoldCore
– Silver Bullion Surges 3.5% To Over $20/oz
– Ireland “Especially Exposed” To “International Shocks” Warns Central Bank
– Deutsche Bank Tries To Explain Failure To Deliver Physical Gold
– Physical Gold Delivery Failure By German Banks
– Avoid Paper Gold – “Gold Delivery” Refused By Gold Exchange Traded Commodity
– Debt Bubble in Ireland and Globally Sees Wealthy Diversify Into Gold
– “Why Case Against Gold Is Wrong” – James Rickards

via http://ift.tt/2cDRtxy GoldCore