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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

2 responses to “Monetary Metals Brief 2016”

  1. Keith,

    I have been following precious metals for 40 years and 28 of those years as a Stock-Broker.

    I am now an Author and Consultant on Convertible Bonds.

    This is about the best and the easiest article that I have ever read.

    Bravo and THANKS.

    Best regards,

    Yvon

  2. I understand the argument. However, when financial interests dominate the market (that is, the number of contracts are multiples of the underlying stream of physical goods) one can have situations where the tail is wagging the dog. This does in fact happen, and financial interests (speculators) have been known to actually enter the physical trade, buying up storage facilities and moving around goods (to make it appear as if they are being traded) just to make it appear that physical shortages are real, in an attempt at passing their losses on to other parties and consumers. Or even buying controlling interest in physical production to artificially control supply. There are good reasons why there is market regulation that attempts to halt anti-competitive/ monopoly manipulation and anti-trust legislation: parties have in the past been able to control supply or made supply/demand to appear other than it is (fraud).
    This is the argument of all the precious metals bugs, who are convinced that financial interests have stepped into the role of the warehouseman and artificially control the apparent (seeming) fundamentals. That in fact they are playing the same game as fractionally-reserved banks who hope that there will not be a run on the money they don’t have, and, in fact, have put many mechanisms into place to be able to suppress (locally and temporarily — divide and conquer) any dislocation as it arises, hoping they can pre-empt aggregated runs, even enjoining the powers of the state in their efforts.
    I don’t think you have adequately dispelled this popular angle on the markets: The counter-parties (banks) are operating with credit instead of money/metal and thus have almost unlimited resources with which to manipulate appearances in the short-term, long enough to smoke out the people who are operating under limited constraints (in terms of credit, concerted action, and behind the scenes information).

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