Gay Egyptians Worry the Government Has Been Using a Hookup App to Track Them

Insert lengthy Foucauldian analysis here.From the
your-tool-of-liberation-might-be-turned-against-you files, here’s a
development in Egypt, where the regime’s regression to police-state
status has included a crackdown on gay men. Amid the arrests,
activists claim that the government has used Grindr, a gay hookup
app, to locate and incarcerate men seeking sex. (If so, the
pleasure police there are more sophisticated than their
counterparts in Turkey, who simply
banned the app
.)

Here’s a Cairo Scene
report
 from August:

A source close to the gay and lesbian community claims that the
apps are putting the country’s homosexuals in danger.

“It’s a bad system right now,” he said. “There have been a
number of arrests in the last few months linked to these
applications. They are using technology to triangulate the
location.

“It is possible to tell a user’s position within a few hundred
metres, and many users include personal pictures, making them
easily identifiable to cops.”

Evidently the folks at Nearby Buddy Finder—yes, that’s what the
company is called—were listening. Yesterday The New York
Times

reported
 that Grindr has “disabled the feature that
discloses how far other users in Egypt are.”

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“Common People Do Not Carry This Much Currency” – How Police Justify Stealing American Citizens’ Money

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Police confiscating Americans’ hard earned cash, as well as a wide variety of other valuables, without an arrest or conviction is a disturbing and growing practice throughput these United States. Since cops get to keep the seized funds and use the money on pretty much anything they want, the practice is becoming endemic in certain parts of the nation. The theft is often referred to simply as civil forfeiture, or civil asset forfeiture. Incredibly, under civil forfeiture laws your property is incredibly “guilty until you prove it innocent.”

The extent of the problem came to my attention last summer after reading an excellent article by Sarah Stillman in the New Yorker. The article struck such a chord with me, I penned a post highlighting it and addressing the issue, titled: Why You Should Never, Ever Drive Through Tenaha, Texas. That article ended up being one of my most popular posts of 2013.

Fast forward a year, and many mainstream publications have also jumped on the topic. Most notably, the Washington Post published an excellent article last month titled, Stop and Seize, which I strongly suggest reading if you haven’t already.

Fortunately for us all, the issue has also caught the eye of the always hilarious, John Oliver of Last Week Tonight. The following clip from his show is brilliant. Not only is it hilarious, but it will hopefully educate a wider audience about this insidious practice so that it can be stopped once and for all.

As one officer admitted in an affidavit justifying his confiscation of an innocent driver’s cash:

“Common people do not carry this much U.S. currency.”

Enjoy:

 




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Why Volume Matters

As FBN Securities’ Jeremy Klein notes, daily S&P 500 E-Mini volumes have climbed to an average of roughly 2.1MM contracts over the past week. This could be a problem…

Rising volumes are often associated with market pullbacks

When this metric < 2MM, S&P futures have climbed 496 points; when > 2MM, the E-Minis have dropped 355 points in 2014

Above this benchmark, the blue chip index has generated negative daily returns 77.8% of the time year-to-date

And to add some spice to that rising volume concern, small capitalization shares have not underperformed by such a wide margin since 2007

*  *  *

Klein concludes:

  • I switched to a bearish outlook from September 10 with an expectation that small capitalization shares will underperform
  • A neutral fundamental environment belies the optimism exhibited by the bulls especially with more restrictive monetary policy on the horizon
  • Earnings expectations are far too effusive given the pace of the recovery 
  • Weakness overseas and a rising dollar limits growth for large multinational corporations




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Japan Admits It Has Entered A Triple-Dip Recession

On Sunday we warned it would happen. Well, it happened.

From Goldman Sachs:

The Indexes of Business Conditions comprises leading, coincident, and lagging composite indices compiled from various economic statistics and market indicators. Since the components are already announced in advance, the composite indices come as no surprise as they can be estimated in advance. That said, the data release is closely watched as an indicator of potential turning points in the economy, as the Cabinet Office makes an assessment of the state of the economy based on the trend in the coincident CI, using a set of objective criteria that eliminates arbitrariness.

 

Of the 11 indicators that make up the coincident CI, 8 made a negative contribution mom in August, as expected. The coincident CI fell 1.4 points in August to 108.5 from 109.9 in July. The three month average of the coincident CI declined 0.84 points, declining for 5 months in a row, and the 7-month average declined 0.87 points, a third month of decline in a row.

 

The Cabinet Office revised down its economic assessment to “signaling a possible turning point” from “weakening” for the first time since April, as the 7-month average sign for the coincident CI changed, and the change swung by more than 1 standard deviation in the reverse direction. According to the Cabinet Office, such a change in assessment provisionally indicates a likelihood that the economy has already fallen into recession. This is effectively akin to the government acknowledging that the economy is in recession.

 

Which means Japan is now in its third recession since Lehman, and fourth since 2008.

 

So, triple-dip in Europe first, and now Japan. It’s good to see those $11 trillion spent by the world’s central banks to buy a recovery was well spent.




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Is The Gold/Silver Ratio Indicating The HUI Will Shortly Triple?

These are unprecedented times for investors in gold and other precious metals. Gold is nearing its lows again, and combined with a TSX Venture Exchange which seems to be looking for the bottom, the capitulation phase could be near. However, when we were looking at some charts, some interesting facts popped up.

First of all, in a phase of panic, one would think the mid-tier and junior producers would be falling faster than the more senior gold producers because of the assumed higher risk profile. Surprisingly, that’s not the case in this downturn as on the next chart it’s clearly visible that if you compare the two listed ETF’s GDX (the senior producers) and GDXJ (the junior and mid-tier gold companies), the ratio GDXJ/GDX hasn’t actually changed much in the past two months.

Chart 1

Source: Stockcharts

Granted, the ratio is currently lower than in April last year when the gold and silver prices started to slide, but it’s surprising to see that since July of this year, the GDXJ/GDX ratio has been moving in roughly the same band with as you can see when you zoom in on the chart:

CHart 2

Could this mean the risk perception of investors has changed? Maybe, as even the larger producers definitely haven’t been immune to a volatile gold price and in some cases they had to put several large multi-billion dollar projects on hold and write down the book value of its assets.

Is this phenomenon limited to the gold sector? If you’d compare the Junior Gold Miners ETF with the ETF which is tracking the global silver producers, a surprising fact pops up. After a decline of three years in the GDXJ/SIL ratio decreased from 5 to just 2.8 this winter, the ratio has been increasing again, lately.

Chart 3

Does this mean the gold sector is in a better shape than the silver sector? Not at all, but we think the Gold/Silver ratio is the main culprit here.

Chart 5

At a ratio of in excess of 70, the Gold-Silver-ratio is extremely high and is actually at its highest point since 2009. We have been digging a little bit deeper, and have come to a very surprising conclusion. The last two times the Gold/Silver ratio was higher than 70, the market was at the verge of a huge break out pattern in the mining stocks. If you look at the next chart, you’ll see the Gold/Silver ratio of the past 15 years, and during that time frame, the level reached a peak of 70 (and a bit higher) just two times.

Chart 4

Source: goldprice.org

And this is an extremely interesting fact. When the Gold/Silver ratio hit 80 in 2003, the HUI was getting fired up for a major move. Whereas the HUI (also known as the Gold Bugs Index) was at 120 points in H1 2003, it reached a high of in excess of 500 points in 2008 (+257%), at a level where the Gold/Silver ratio has been relatively low.

The same pattern emerges at the height of the commodity crisis. In Q4 2008 the Gold/Silver ratio peaked at more than 80 whilst the Gold Bugs Index was trading at 200 points. And guess what? The index tripled by the time the Gold/Silver ratio took a nose dive and seemed to be on its way to 30. And yes, as the Gold/Silver ratio started to increase again, the HUI was going down again. In fact, the Gold Bugs Index is currently trading at a level close to the lows of 2008 (during approximately two weeks the Index was trading lower than the current level), and now the Gold/Silver ratio is spiking again, we might be looking at a next upward move in the Gold Bugs Index.

However, as the previous leg up was only facilitated after a capitulation phase, it will be interesting to see how the HUI will behave over the next few days and weeks. A rebound isn’t and cannot be guaranteed, but the history likes to repeat itself. And the past two times in just 15 years the Gold/Silver ratio was above 70, the Gold Bugs Index started a move up of at least 200% within weeks.

This strengthens our belief that the current action on the markets might be the last part of the ‘shaking of the tree’ whereby the final weak hands will be selling out. It’s unimaginable that with all the Central Banks which are trying to beat each other to print money at a faster pace, that the gold price will continue to tumble. On top of that, the junior and mid-tier gold mining segment isn’t currently being seen as exceptionally riskier than other moments in the past few months, as the GDXJ/GDX ratio has roughly been in the same trading zone for several months now.

Based on historic evidence, the general state of the markets and the underlying money-printing issue, we remain confident in the future of gold.

* IMPORTANT MESSAGE: This month wil be the last month of our introductory offer, as it has be online for a year now. Next month, our prices will be raised from 179 USD to 399 USD for a yearly subscription. Those who still want to lock in our current prices, please visit our subscription page 

** Check out our latest Gold Report!

Sprout Money offers a fresh look at investing. We analyze long lasting cycles, coupled with a collection of strategic investments and concrete tips for different types of assets. The methods and strategies from Sprout Money are transformed into the Gold & Silver Report and the Technology Report.

Follow us on Twitter @SproutMoney




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European Stocks Slide Below Key Support Level

As Europe's triple-dip recession arrives, European stocks are breaking bad…

STOXX50 <200ma

 

DAX <200ma

 

CAC <200ma

 

IBEX <200ma

 

FTSEMIB <200ma

 

FTSE100 <200ma

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: In Europe, central planning powers appear to have achieved optimal control over the credit markets (keep rates low for everyone) and have left the equity market to its own devices… In the US, it's all about stocks for confidence…

 

*  *   *

So for Europe, stocks are the "tell" that all is not well; In the US, credit is the "tell"




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Global Warming Heat Not “Hiding” in the Deep Ocean After All

Argo FloatsOne of the leading explanations
for why the postulated rise in global average temperatures due to
man-made warming has “paused” for nearly 18 years now is that the
“missing heat” is hiding
in the deep ocean
. Two new papers in Nature Climate
Change
look at how much heat the oceans are supposed to have
absorbed since the 1970s. The press
release
from the Jet Propulsion Lab whose researchers did much
of the
analysis
notes:

The cold waters of Earth’s deep ocean have not warmed measurably
since 2005, according to a new NASA study, leaving unsolved the
mystery of why global warming appears to have slowed in recent
years.

Scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California, analyzed satellite and direct ocean temperature data
from 2005 to 2013 and found the ocean abyss below 1.24 miles (1,995
meters) has not warmed measurably. Study coauthor Josh Willis of
JPL said these findings do not throw suspicion on climate change
itself.

Basically, satellite measurements between 2005 and 2013 find
that sea level has been increasing at rate of 2.78 millimeters per
year. Some 0.9 millimeters results from expansion due to warming
and 2.0 millimeters is due to additions of freshwater, e.g.,
melting glaciers. Since 2.9 millimeters is greater than the
measured increase of 2.78 millimeters, the researchers concluded
that the deep ocean is likely cooling down and thus
contracting. 

By the way, at this rate of increase sea level would rise by
about 11 inches over the next century – basically the amount of sea
level rise experienced in the 20th century. 

In any case, why do these findings not “throw suspicion” on
man-made climate change? In a
companion paper
researchers cite recent data from the network
of autonomous Argo floats that measure temperatures in the upper
ocean. Combining those data with climate model simulations suggest
that upper 700 meters of the oceans have absorbed a great deal of
the extra heat resulting from anthropogenic increases in greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere. The JPL press release continues: 

Landerer also is a coauthor of another paper in the same Nature
Climate Change journal issue on ocean warming in the Southern
Hemisphere from 1970 to 2005. Before Argo floats were deployed,
temperature measurements in the Southern Ocean were spotty, at
best. Using satellite measurements and climate simulations of sea
level changes around the world, the new study found the global
ocean absorbed far more heat in those 35 years than previously
thought — a whopping 24 to 58 percent more than early
estimates. 

It’s always interesting when models find discrepancies in
observational data. 

For more background, see my post, “Do
Researchers Really Know Why Global Warming Is On Pause and When It
Will End?

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VID: Lyft President Says Patchwork Regulations Are Bad for Business

“Lyft President Says Patchwork Regulations Are Bad for Business”
is the latest video from Reason TV. Watch above or click on the
link below for video, full text, supporting links, downloadable
versions, and more Reason TV clips.

View this article.

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Law Enforcement Keeps Defending ComputerCOP Spyware, Will Distribute Until Someone Gets Hurt

Last week I
highlighted
an impressive, in-depth report by the Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) on a piece of software called
“ComputerCOP.” The product, distributed by 245 law enforcement
agencies in 35 states, ismarketed as “Internet safety software” for
parents to keep watch over their kids. The problem is, it comes
from a company that’s given itself a bunch of fake endorsements,
the software is glitchy at best, and it actually puts people at
greater risk of cyberstalking and identity theft by
fundamentally operating like spyware.

I also reported last week that one sheriff shot back by saying
that the EFF, which has long been defending digital rights and
fighting surveillance, has no credibility on technology issues and
that they’re just a bunch of
“ultra-liberals” trying to protect pedophiles and mass
murderers
.

Unfortunately, that sheriff has
doubled down
on his pedophile-murderer claims, and now more law
enforcement officials are coming to the defense of ComputerCOP with
equally bogus arguments, instead of apologizing for their
negligence.

In Arizona, the Maricopa County District Attorney’s Office has
quietly
removed
information about the software from its website, but it
publicly stands by the product. The office issued a bizarre,
baseless statement accusing the EFF of tarnishing ComputerCOP’s
reputation in order to sell competing software, and made this
claim:

Unlike what most experts would term “spyware,” ComputerCOP does
not surreptitiously send information to third parties. The
hysterical claim that ComputerCOP sends notifications emails
without encryption… is utterly fatuous and disingenuous. The
software uses a user’s existing e-mail service to send
notifications. A ComputerCOP notification has no greater potential
for being compromised than any other e-mail a user sends.

“That suggests a level of technical ignorance that is, well,
kinda scary,”
writes
TechDirt‘s Mike Masnick. As he and the EFF have
repeatedly
stated
, ComputerCOP collects information a user types (e.g.
passwords) and makes it vulnerable by sending it “to third-party
servers without encryption. That means many versions
of ComputerCOP leave children (and their parents, guests, friends,
and anyone using the affected computer) exposed to the same
predators, identity thieves, and bullies that police claim the
software protects against.”

In Contra Costa, California,
one district attorney senior official
tells
The Contra Costa Times, “I believe the EFF is
overstating the risk and, the fact that this program has been
handed out by hundreds of law enforcement agencies over a period of
10 years and there’s been no reported incidents of identity theft
as a result of the use of the software is indicative of that.”

That’s dubious. The EFF tested major spyware scanners, and none
of them recognized ComputerCOP. That people would install this
software, experience identity theft, scan their computer and pick
up nothing, and be dumbfounded about the source of their woes is
well within the realm of possibility.

The Contra Costa District Attorney himself, Dan Cabral, says he
has no plans to recall the product and that he’s going to send more
out. “If it turns up later that there’s some sort of breach we
will [recall it], but right now we feel it serves its purpose and
it assists parents in what it’s supposed to do.”

So, basically, only after people been proven victims of
ComputerCOP will Cabral reconsider his campaign of distributing
hundreds of copies of it.

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Silver “Particularly Cheap” as “Blood On The Commodity Streets”

Silver “Particularly Cheap” as “Blood On The Commodity Streets”

With few exceptions, commodity prices have fallen sharply in recent months, to their lowest levels in over a year. 


Silver in U.S. Dollars,  5 Years (Thomson Reuters)

Relative to stock market indices, broad commodity indices are now at their lowest levels since the late-1990s dot com boom. 

But key commodity price ratios, such as those between precious and industrial metals, are already at levels associated with financial crises such as that of 2008. In other words, there is already ‘blood on the commodity streets’, presenting investors and commodity traders with potentially attractive opportunities.

COMMODITY PRICES, RATIOS, WARNINGS
Back in 2007, before it became generally apparent that the US housing bubble had burst, commodity prices were in a strong uptrend, which accelerated into 2008. By June that year, multiple commodity prices had soared to all-time highs. Copper reached $450/pound, soyabeans soared to over $1,600/bushel, cotton rose through $200/pound and crude oil briefly exceeded $140/bbl.

Source: Bloomberg, CME

COMMODITIES:FROM BOOM TO BUST (SEP 2007=100)

Many commentators at the time argued that soaring commodity prices were indicative of a so-called ‘supercycle’ driven by soaring demand from emerging economies such as China, India and Brazil. Growth in these countries was indeed rapid in the decade leading to 2008. But commodity supply was nevertheless rising to meet demand and it has continued to do so. 

Following a sharp correction lower during the global financial crisis of 2008, commodity prices recovered in 2009-11, only to re-enter a downtrend which has continued to this day. Some argue that this is but a normal cyclical correction due to slowing global demand. Others believe it implies that the ‘supercycle’ is over.

In a previous report, I used commodity price ratios to argue against the ‘supercycle’ explanation for the boom (or bust) of commodity prices in recent years, pointing out that growth-oriented commodity prices, such as those for copper or crude oil, had not risen materially relative to those for non-industrial commodities, such as gold.[1] Were the ‘supercycle’ for real, this would not have been the case.

Thus it is my view that the sharp downtrend in commodity prices in recent months is primarily a cyclical phenomenon indicative of sharply weaker global industrial demand, combined with a stronger dollar.[2] There is some support for this view in that global leading indicators have declined in recent months. In many cases, commodity prices and price ratios have fallen to levels not seen since the depths of the global financial crisis of 2008.

COMMODITIES LEFT FAR BEHIND IN THE RALLY

Source: Bloomberg, Standard and Poor’s

Does this imply that a crisis is imminent? Perhaps not, but it does highlight the fact that, notwithstanding a modest correction of late, equity and risky asset prices generally remain elevated and could well experience a major correction lower. Commodities, by contrast, are almost as cheap as during the 2008 crisis and thus it would appear prudent to take profits, rotating out of the former and into the latter.
 
SLOWING PRODUCTIVITY AND STAGFLATION
An ever stronger case can be made for commodities when adding in the evidence that productivity growth has slowed. Other factors equal, weak (or negative) productivity growth shifts the overall growth/inflation mix within an economy, such that there is proportionately more inflation relative to growth. Even in the event of recession, for example, inflation might not decline by much, if at all. This was observed in the US during much of the 1970s and early 1980s, for example, and the term ‘stagflation’ was coined at the time to describe it. Price inflation might be low at present, as was also the case in the early to mid-1970s, but it picked up much more rapidly relative to growth later in the decade.

In another recent report I focused on stagflation, including the financial market consequences:
          
Stocks might be able to outperform bonds in stagflation but, when adjusted for the inflation, in real terms they can still lose value. Indeed, in the 1970s, stock market valuations failed to keep pace with the accelerating inflation. Cash, in other words, was the better ‘investment’ option and, naturally, a far less volatile one.

Best of all, however, would have been to avoid financial assets and cash altogether and instead to accumulate real assets, such as gold and oil…[3]

A persuasive case can be made that the potential for gold, oil and other commodity prices to outperform stocks and bonds is higher today than it was in the mid-1970s. Monetary policies around the world are generally more expansionary. Government debt burdens and deficits are far larger. If Keynesian policies caused the 1970s stagflation, then the steroid injection of aggressive Keynesian policies post-2008 should eventually result in something even more spectacular.

This combination of low commodity prices, both outright and relative to those for equities and other risky assets, and weak productivity growth implying a period of stagflation ahead, is both highly unusual and, from the perspective of an opportunistic investor, highly attractive. Perhaps not since the 1970s—perhaps not even since the early 1930s—has there been such a good opportunity in which to accumulate and overweight real assets in a portfolio.[4]
 
PASSIVE AND ACTIVE TECHNIQUES FOR COMMODITIES INVESTING
Investors sharing this view need to consider how best to acquire a commodity exposure. There are numerous ETFs out there, some of which follow prominent broad indices, such as those calculated by Standard and Poor’s or Bloomberg, for example. However, as I have written before, these products are not well-designed as investment vehicles because they are not well diversified. In particular, they are strongly overweight industrial commodities, which tend to be highly correlated with one another. A better diversified product would be preferable, for example one based on the ‘Continuous Commodity Index’, a broad, equal-weighted basket of both industrial and non-industrial commodities.[5]

Those inclined to take a more active approach should consider overweighting specifically those commodities which appear to have attracted speculative selling of late. Here at Amphora, we advise clients on commodities markets and also trade on our own behalf. Our investment process begins with a proprietary tool we call our ‘heat map’. This is a visual representation of statistically-normalised commodity price ratios, arranged in a matrix. Those price ratios at statistical extremes appear in red; those within normal ranges are shown in white. The amount of red relative to the amount of white thus indicates to what extent commodity price ratios, in general, are out of line with historical averages.

At present, those commodities appearing particularly cheap on key ratios would include silver, wheat and soybeans. Crude oil and copper prices have also fallen sharply but not to the same degree against their key ratios. Thinking fundamentally, it is also unlikely that industrial commodity prices will rise in the event that equity markets meaningfully correct to the downside in the coming months.
 
SILVER, WHEAT and SOYABEANS ARE PARTICULARLY CHEAP AT PRESENT 

Source: Bloomberg, CME (Sept 12 = 100)
      
On the other side, there are a handful of commodities that have bucked the downtrend, but all of these can be explained with reference to extreme weather patterns or other unusual factors. 

Coffee, the year’s top performer, remains elevated in price due to poor rainfall in the Brazilian Highlands, the world’s top-producing region.

Cocoa prices are elevated in part due to concerns that the tragic West African Ebola outbreak will complicate this year’s harvest (which appears quite large). 

Cattle prices have soared in recent months as seasonal rains have failed to arrive in key ranching areas of the Western US. (That said, the sharp decline in hog prices in recent months could contribute to lower cattle prices if and when consumer substitution effects begin to kick in.)

Strength in these commodity prices in no way contradicts the general weakness or the view that global industrial production has slowed sharply.
 
COFFEE AND CATTLE PRICES ARE COMMODITY OUTLIERS AT MULTI-YEAR HIGHS

Source: Bloomberg, CME, ICE

SHADOW BANKING, MONEY AND GOLD
Finally, a few words on gold. On multiple occasions over the past year gold has fallen to and found support around $1,200/oz. This has now happened again. 

There is widespread evidence of strong physical demand around this level, which I believe is long-term and strategic in nature, associated with official institutions, such as emerging economy central banks, and wealthy investors seeking a hedge against a future financial crisis. 

That said, a new forward hedging programme on the part of major gold mining firms could send the price lower. Once this was completed, however, I am confident prices would recover quickly to above $1,200 again. 

The flow of produced (or forward-hedged) gold is tiny relative to the strong underlying physical demand over a multi-month or longer horizon.
 
GOLD CONSISTENTLY FINDS SUPPORT AROUND $1,200/OZ AS THE S&P500 CATCHES UP

Source: Bloomberg, CME
      
Fundamentally, the arguments in favour of a substantially higher gold price remain intact. 

The global money supply continues to increase at a historically elevated rate. 

Bank credit concerns faded for a time but have recently returned to the fore, a source of concern for the safety of bank deposits, especially in the euro-area. 

In this context, in the event the Fed, ECB or other major central banks indicate they are concerned by growing signs of economic weakness and declining rates of consumer price inflation, the gold price is likely to re-enter an uptrend that could continue for some time.

As the IMF recently observed,[6] the global ‘shadow banking system’ has been growing rapidly, fuelled by rapid money supply and credit growth, and has again become a potential source of systemic risk, as it also was back in 2007-8. 

By the time the IMF makes such observations, prepares a report, approves it for publication and makes it available for external distribution, you can be rather certain that the developments in question have long since rung the alarm bells in the hallowed halls of that esteemed supranational financial regulatory institution. The Bank for International Settlements published a report expressing similar concerns over the summer.[7]

Longer-term, with economic officials stubbornly clinging to worn-out monetary stimulus measures that have lost most if not all their effectiveness due to excessive debts, public and private, and with an equal reluctance to implement any meaningful structural reforms to encourage sustainable business investment and boost productivity, there is simply no where for the gold price to go but up as the effective purchasing power of fiat currencies goes down. 

There is also the possibility that, when investors least expect it, certain currencies, perhaps even major ones, suffer sudden crises of confidence in which the threat of devaluation looms. 

The dollar itself is not immune, given that the US possesses the world’s largest cumulative external trade deficit. 

Indeed, I have long predicted an eventual loss of pre-eminent reserve status for the dollar, something that would send the greenback lower and dollar interest rates higher when it occurs.

Gold is a form of insurance against this eventuality or against currency crises more generally, as indeed it always has been. For those so concerned, the ideal time to add to such insurance is when it is temporarily ‘on-sale’, as it is today at just under $1,200/oz.

John Butler is a respected investment manager with Amphora Capital. He is the author of the excellent ‘The Golden Revolution : How to Prepare for the Coming Gold Standard’ and author of the must read Amphora Report. 

Follow John on Twitter @butlergoldrevo

http://ift.tt/1oMx0G3  
 

[1] Please see COMMON COMMODITY MISCONCEPTIONS, Amphora Report vol. 5 (June 2014). The link is here.
[2] As it happens this view appears to be shared by the staff of the Economist, as presented in this recent article linked here.
[3] Please see STAGFLATION IS, ALWAYS AND EVERYWHERE, A KEYNESIAN PHENOMENON, Amphora Report vol. 5 (August 2014). The link is here.
[4] Although characterised as deflationary by most, following the large devaluation of the dollar in 1934, the second half of the 1930s was in fact a period of ‘stagflation’, as consumer prices rose alongside generally weak economic growth.
[5] The CCI index components are: Cocoa, Coffee, Copper, Corn, Cotton, Crude Oil, Gold, Heating Oil, Live Cattle, Live Hogs, Natural Gas, Orange Juice, Platinum, Silver, Soybeans, Sugar and Wheat.
[6] This IMF report can be found at the link here.
[7] This BIS report can be found here.

GOLDCORE MARKET UPDATE

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,207.50, EUR 957.27 and GBP 751.49 per ounce.    
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,193.25, EUR 951.56 and GBP 746.67 per ounce.

Gold in Dollars,  5 Years (Thomson Reuters)

Gold climbed $15.20 or 1.28% to $1,207.00 per ounce and silver soared $0.50, nearly 3% to $17.31 per ounce yesterday. 

Gold in Singapore ticked marginally higher from  $1,204 per ounce to near $1,210 per ounce. Gold continued marginally higher in early London trading prior to slight falls. 

Premiums for gold in Asia were quoted at $1.20 to $1.60 an ounce to the spot London prices, unchanged from last week. In Tokyo, sellers pushed up premiums for gold bars to 25 cents to spot prices from zero last week.

The price fall attracted physical buyers and bargain hunters for gold yesterday, boosting prices.

Gold imports into Turkey rose sharply in September to 12.599 tonnes, their highest this year and more than double last September’s total of 4.843 tonnes, data from the Istanbul Gold Exchange shows. 

Turkish gold bullion imports climbed to 12.6 tonnes in September, verses 2 tonnes in August, data published from Borsa Istanbul showed.

Total gold imports in the first three quarters, at 65.577 tonnes, are sharply down on the 235.4 T imported in the first nine months of last year (a record year for gold imports). 

Gold in Euros,  5 Years (Thomson Reuters)

Bullion demand has picked up but remains anemic and we are seeing only quite a small amount of new clients despite huge engagement with our emailed research and social media community. 

Some of our long standing clients, particularly more liquid HNW clients, are adding to allocations and see this latest sell off as an opportunity. New business is also coming from existing gold and silver  investors and owners as we are seeing flows from ETF and other bank vaulted gold and silver into our allocated storage in Zurich and Singapore

Sentiment is as bad as I have seen it and reminiscent of the 2003 to 2007 period. We believe that the poor sentiment is quite bullish from a contrarian perspective and would share John’s view that there is blood in the streets of the golf and especially silver markets.

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