Richard,

I’m playing a conservative game these days. Would prefer to see a stop to the current blood-letting before getting in any deeper. Plus my theory has been that we should see a dollar bounce somewhere, and I want to see if this is it. I don’t want to try to trade against that, especially when I consider that the fundamentals will soon dictate a weakening dollar. But some of the trading certainly did look like capitulation selling, and it might present an opportunity.

“That’s rare”, and don’t you forget it!

“How rare is gold? If you could gather together all the gold mined in recorded history, melt it down, and pour it into one giant cube, it would measure only about eighteen yards across! That’s all the gold owned by every government on earth, plus all the gold in private hands, all the gold in rings, necklaces, chains, and gold art. That’s all the gold used in tooth fillings, in electronics, in coins and bars. It’s everything that exists above ground now, or since man learned to extract the metal from the earth. All of it can fit into one block the size of a single house. It would weigh about 91,000 tons - less than the amount of steel made around the world in an hour. That’s rare.”

Daniel M. Kehrer

~ ~ ~ ~

A Very Happy Easter Weekend
to all of you and your loved ones.

JBI

PS - GOLD’s 300 DMA = $745.79 = New All Time High

……………..New TARGET = $1,112.42………………..

gold.png

Margaret2 @ 21:50 pm

I spent five weeks in New Zealand back in 76, visited Auckland, Christchurch, Hamilton, Wellington and Dunedin and or course Mt. Cook and the Fiords.  I remember the beer was good, the ice cream the BEST I have ever had anywhere (they did not remove the cream then and I hope it is the same)  and  they had this bad habit of putting beets on everything!The people were wonderful and it is a trip my wife and I still cherish.  I wish my travels had brought be back there again but my travels always seemed to take me to Australia in years after that.   Have a nice weekend!

I think I might be mistaken about the Easter timetable for the NZ sharemarket.  I’ll try anfind out.

No closed tommorrow Newtogold

thought the cretins might cover after hours until I realized that the markets were closed tommorrow.

  At the risk of being wrong for the second time today, I think we’ve seen at least a temporary bottom in the HUI. Weird close. They pounded NEM as usual but the dogs GFI and GSS finished higher.

   I hoping the is a “V” shaped shakeout, fast, furious and short.

   We’ll see.

newtogold @ 21:51 pm.

Most markets in the Americas and in Europe will be closed, but many coin shops and bullion dealers will be opened, I’m sure.

JBI

“Alice in Wonderland”

How do you know when you’re through the looking glass? A fairly good indication is when the price of gold, which normally moves up in response to monetary easing, instead plummets in reaction to one of the largest rate cuts in Fed history. Apparently, yesterday’s 6% drop in gold resulted from the “hawkishness” shown by the Fed in only cutting rates by 75 basis points, rather than the 100 points that many had expected. It is a testament to how low the bar has been set that the Fed can slash rates in the face of a collapsing dollar and soaring commodity prices and still be viewed as hawkish on inflation. Is it just me, or is Ben Bernanke morphing into the Mad Hatter?

Despite the mildly tough language in its statement, it should be clear to all that the Fed sees inflation as the only politically acceptable “solution” to the problems it created. The conclusion that a 75 point cut shows concern about inflation is half right. The Fed is concerned, but only to the extent that the markets stay focused on bogus CPI numbers and fail to notice severe price increases throughout the economy. The fact is that inflation will be with us for some time, and the knee jerk drop in gold is yet another excellent buying opportunity.

As the credit and financial crisis spirals out of control, and the Fed moved $30 billion of garbage Bear Stearns debt onto the public balance sheet, the proposals coming from other market leaders are taking similarly phantasmagorical turns. Steve Forbes, in an interview on CNBC earlier in the week, proposed that the government suspend “mark-to-market” rules for one year so that holders of unsellable mortgage-backed securities no longer have to recognize losses. Remember, the dominos began to fall precisely when two Bear Stearns hedge funds were forced to actually sell assets they had failed to properly mark-to-market. Were the government to actually follow this advice it would destroy what little confidence remains in our financial system. However, Mr. Forbes believes that the markets can be spared unnecessary pain if participants can simply pretend that their holdings are worth par value. This amounts to a plea for accounting by mutually beneficial mass delusion.

Later in the week, investors were cheered by the Government’s decision to slash the surplus capital requirement of already overextended Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by 33%, and by Wall Street’s success in convincing investors to dump $17.9 billion into the record IPO of Visa…which may qualify as the largest sucker bet in history. But the most bizarre idea was introduced on the pages of the Wall Street Journal when veteran opinion page writer Holman Jenkins Jr. recommended that the government buy and “bulldoze” foreclosed homes in order to prop up the values of those that remain standing. I’ll deal with these ideas in sequence.

After pushing through earlier proposals that allow and encourage Fannie and Freddie to buy larger loans, the reduction of capital requirements now pushes the government sponsored lenders farther out on a leveraged limb. By allowing the accumulation of even more taxpayer guaranteed debt, the moves will merely delay and exacerbate the housing problems and will increase the size of losses when these two government sponsored enterprises ultimately fail. In the meantime, by taking on more risk, the appeal of existing Fannie and Freddie insured debt will erode further, driving up mortgage costs, and creating additional losses for leveraged owners of these securities.

In the early stages of the biggest credit crunch in U.S. history, buying shares in Visa, a company that derives its revenues based on transaction fees from credit card purchases, qualifies as a particularly ill- timed investment. Perhaps buyers of these shares didn’t get the memo, but the days of Americans using credit cards to buy products they cannot afford are about to come to an end. For all its flaws, Wall Street does possess an extraordinary ability to apply lipstick on any pig. For the formerly private owners of Visa, this is perhaps one the best exit strategies ever engineered, on par with the Hail Mary orchestrated by Blackstone last year (shares of Blackstone are now trading for half their IPO price).

Finally, in response to Mr. Jenkins’ proposals, there is no question that we built far too many homes during the housing bubble. However, destroying them now will merely compound our losses. The one benefit we have from excess construction is an ample supply of what will soon be highly affordable homes. At the moment foreclosed houses are only unwanted because their prices are still too high. Once prices drop sufficiently there will be plenty of demand. However, destroying existing homes reduces their value to zero (actually less due to demolition costs) and only exacerbates the losses to creditors and society. Mr. Jenkins’ thinking is formed by the same perverse logic that led the Roosevelt Administration to destroy farm animals and crops during the 1930’s because he wanted to prop up food prices. As I wrote in my book “Crash Proof”, we must certainly be on the eve of our financial destruction, as we are clearly a nation gone completely mad.

by Peter Schiff
Euro Pacific Capital
March 20, 2008

Copyright © 2008 Peter Schiff

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Great day to add to my physical.

Mission accomplished…..for now. :lol:

JBI

Are the markets open tomorrow?


Floridagold

You’re sure right about that.  The best pavlova in the world.

The farmers here are having big problems at the moment due to drought.  There are times when it doesn’t rain for a while causing inconvenience, but this is something serious.   Many are in trouble financialy.  A number of farmers have left home to travel to Australia to work in the mines  where the money is good. Hopefully, it will rain soon.  Everyone is watching the weather map on tv  every day  wondering when the rain will come for the farmers.

From what you say, it seems that you have visited.

winedoc @ 20:19 pm

Your link has blown us away. The Irish situation from both sides brings tears to our eyes. We went to a party on Monday night - and there is nothing like the Irish for a party or a wake.

I hope I have said nothing here that will cause problems - just a heartfelt response to the song.

aurum Irish

Margaret2 @ 21:08 pm

I always did like New Zealand!   http://www.sweetim.com/s.asp?im=gen&ref=10    The world’s best Pavlova!  Ac15

ment17 @ 21:10 pm

us Nickle Flippers gotta have fast fingers!  :-)

floridagold @ 21:06 pm

mr rapid finger lol

Floridagold. Thanks. It’s Good Friday here and our markets don’t open until Tuesday.


Margaret2 @ 21:01 pm

friday.march. 21st next may 26th