GATA’s Chris Powell Reveals Why Governments Manipulating the Precious Metals

April 4, 2019

Welcome to this week’s Market Wrap Podcast, I’m Mike Gleason…

Coming up we’ll hear a fascinating interview with Chris Powell of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee. Chris gives perhaps the most thorough explanation of why governments are so intent on manipulating the precious metals markets and reveals some very interesting recent data about what they’ve quietly been doing. Don’t miss our conversation with Chris Powell of GATA, coming up after this week’s market update.

Precious metals markets got slammed late this week as the U.S. dollar showed some surprising strength.

The value of Federal Reserve Notes on international currency markets was widely expected to fall after the Fed went into full dovish mode last Wednesday. But markets have a way of often doing the exact opposite of what everyone expects.

Especially in the case of markets that are subject to being manipulated by large institutional traders, daily price swings don’t necessarily correlate to fundamentals. Suffice it to say that neither central bankers nor commercial bankers wanted to see gold and silver strength become the storyline following the Fed’s announcement of no more rate hikes.

The financial media attributed this week’s dollar strength to the latest reports on employment and GDP. GDP growth came in at 2.2%, down from the previous reading of 2.6% but in line with consensus forecasts. Jobless claims, meanwhile, dropped.

The gold market shows a weekly decline of 1.4% and currently comes in at $1,295 per ounce. Silver got hit harder but is bouncing back slightly here on Friday with spot prices down 2.0% now for the week to trade at $15.20.

Relative weakness in silver hit a major extreme on Thursday, with the silver-to-gold ratio dropping to a multi-year low. Put in terms of relative gold strength, the gold-to-silver ratio traded at a multi-year high of 86.5 to 1. Those who want to speculate on the ratio falling back into a more normal range can potentially profit by selling gold and buying silver. Long-term investors can simply use this opportunity to accumulate silver while it is trading at bargain basement levels.

Turning to the platinum group metals, platinum prices are essentially flat for the week at $850. Palladium, meanwhile, is headed for one of its worst weekly declines on record. As of this recording, palladium prices are suffering an 11.1% weekly walloping to trade at $1,395, and that’s despite a 3% rise today, lessening the weekly carnage somewhat.

Whether the palladium bull run has ended, or volatility is just ramping up ahead of the next push to new highs, remains to be seen. The market had gotten overbought technically after going nearly straight up since last August. But no improvement in palladium’s tight supply situation appears to be forthcoming.

(Redacted from Mike Gleason Podcast)

Well now, for more on the manipulative workings of the central banks and much more, let’s get right to this week’s exclusive interview.

Mike Gleason: It is my privilege now to welcome in Chris Powell, Secretary-Treasurer at the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, also known as GATA. Chris is a long time journalist and a hard money advocate and through his tireless efforts at GATA he is working to expose the manipulation of the gold and silver markets. Through GATA’s work over the years some important revelations have come to light, which quite honestly should concern everyone.

It’s great to have him back with us. Chris, good to have you on again and how are you?

Chris Powell: Oh, very good, Mike. Glad to be here.

Mike Gleason: Well, Chris, before we get into other things please start by giving our audience a bit of background on your organization as some may not be familiar. What is GATA? How did you get started? And where do you focus your efforts?

Chris Powell: GATA is the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee. We got started in January 1999 to expose and complain about and, if we could, stop the manipulation of the gold market, which is done largely surreptitiously by central banks and their agents. Certain investment banks.

We originally thought that the suppression in the monetary metals prices was an ordinary market rigging scheme run by the largest participants in the markets, the banks. After we did a year or two of research we realized that gold price suppression is longstanding Western government and central bank policy going back many decades. It used to be implemented in the open through the gold standard and the London gold pool and mechanisms like that. Now it is implemented largely through the rigging of the futures and derivatives markets. The major participants in this rigging are the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department, the Bank of England, the Bank for International Settlements.

If you look closely through the government archives, the policy records, you can see this policy of gold price suppression is very plainly articulated. There’s really nothing secret about it if you’re ready to look for the documents. The problem is there’re very few people who want to get into this issue because it would show that our market system is an illusion. That governments and central banks are really rigging not only the monetary metals markets, but they’re rigging all markets and that in fact, we have a very elaborate government system of control of the prices of all capital labor goods and services in the world. It’s really a totalitarian system and we just try to show people the documentation of it, urge them to raise questions about it and slowly push the world toward a free market system.

Mike Gleason: On that note, you guys have been at this a long time and the evidence just keeps piling up as to pervasive price manipulation in the metals markets. And to be fair, banks have now been caught cheating in a variety of markets – LIBOR, currency markets, mortgage back securities – you name it, they’ve rigged it. It seems like your job should be getting easier, but it isn’t. Why is that? Why is it so difficult to get reform given the markets so clearly need fixing?

Chris Powell: Well I think there’s two reasons, Mike. First is the cowardice and corruption of the mainstream financial news organizations. In fairness to them, this market rigging is considered a national security issue by most major governments. If we ever had free markets, governments would lose much of their control over society. Mainstream financial news organizations, for the most part, do not want to pick up this issue. They will never put a critical question to a central bank. That is really the most aversive thing that journalism could do, and it would never do it.

The second reason is that the industry that is most devastated by this longstanding policy, the mining industry, is too cowardly as well because the industry is completely vulnerable to governments and completely vulnerable to the biggest banks that are the government agents. There’s a couple of reasons for that. Mining requires government approval for access to minerals. I mean, minerals are the product of land rights and governments are sovereign over land rights. Any mining company can lose its mining rights, its favorable royalty arrangements with governments very quickly if a government is alienated by the political activism of a mining company.

Further, of course, mining’s a very environmentally sensitive business and any government can shut down any mining company really on any environmental pretext at any time. So, the mining companies are terrified of the government and don’t want to alienate the government further. Mining is also the most capital intensive business in the world. It can take billions of dollars and many, many years before a mine can be opened and since so much capital is involved, it’s required by the mining industry, the biggest investment banks in the world dominate the industry’s financing globally. The biggest investment banks in the world are also formally agents of governments.

In the United States, most of the big banks are primary dealers in U.S. government securities. They’re very intimately connected to the U.S. Treasury Department. Mining industry looks at this scheme and says, “Gee, if we complain about the suppression of the price of monetary metals by the government, not only is the government going to try to cut us off, well our own banks will cut us off.” So, the mining industry is helplessly, cowardly here. There’s some exceptions. There’s a few very brave exceptions, but on the whole the industry is absolutely useless for the cause of free markets and sound money.

Mike Gleason: Yeah, that’s a real shame. One of those few guys sticking his neck out there, Keith Neumeyer, First Majestic Silver, we both know. We’ve had Keith on our program several times and he’s doing the work that should be done by all of his colleagues.

Chris Powell: Well, there are few other mining entrepreneurs. Eric Sprott being one very-

Mike Gleason: That’s true.

Chris Powell: -very prominently. And there are, you know, a few companies that have helped us consistently over the years. I’m not sure if I should mention them, to praise them or that would just get them in trouble, but there are some. But, on the whole, the industry is useless and its trade organization, the World Gold Council, is essentially a functionary of the government and distracting the world from the gold price suppression issue.

Mike Gleason: What about the potential for civil courts to hold crooked bankers to account. Plaintiffs have brought a high profile civil case for metals price rigging against Deustche Bank and a number of other bullion banks more than a year and a half ago. Deustche settled and provided mounds of documents and recordings to assist in the suit against the remaining banks. The lawsuit made some headlines and gave some reason for hope. It was a way of end running regulators who seem to be totally inept. But the news around that case has dried up. We know these things do take time, but since GATA is well connected in these sorts of matters I wanted to ask if you might be able to update our listeners about the status of this civil suit and what are your thoughts generally about whether the civil courts might be able to hold banks to account for their frauds?

Chris Powell: Well, yes, there is an anti-trust lawsuit in New York against some of the major banks, including Deustche, and Deustche has confessed to rigging the market and offered a financial settlement there. That lawsuit is essentially on hold right now because the Justice Department intervened in the middle of it, claiming that it wanted to begin investigating the gold and silver market rigging issue and it thought that the lawsuit proceeding to discovery and deposition would interfere with the Justice Department’s own investigation.

Well, just a couple of weeks ago, the Justice Department did bring criminal charges against a bunch of investment bank traders in the gold and silver markets. Traders for three European banks and those three banks, completely separate from this lawsuit in New York, they agreed to pay fines to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission for manipulating the gold and silver markets through spoofing. These were European banks, and the most recent action, HSBC, Deustche Bank, and UBS. There were no U.S. based banks involved in that criminal action and that regulatory enforcement action.

I have to believe no action has been brought against U.S. banks by the Justice Department or the CFTC because U.S. banks that are involved in the gold price suppression scheme are almost certainly acting in the markets as the formal agents of the Fed and the Treasury Department. In fact, in the United States, under the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, as amended in 1970’s, the U.S. government has been given power by Congress and the President, as a matter of law, to secretly rig any market in the world. I know that sounds like an astounding assertion, but anybody can look it up. You can go to the Treasury Department’s internet site and look up the Exchange Stabilization Fund, which is an agency of the Treasury, and you’ll see that the Exchange Stabilization Fund has the power under the Gold Reserve Act to intervene secretly in any market and rig any market.

I infer from that, and I don’t think very wildly, that any bank broker who assists the U.S. government, functions as an intermediary for the U.S. government in rigging markets, shares the sovereign immunity of the U.S. government and can’t be prosecuted or sued civilly for it. And I imagine that is why no U.S. banks were charged in the CFTC and Justice Department’s enforcement action that was brought a couple of weeks ago because when it is done in the United States by U.S. banks and brokers acting for the Treasury Department or the Federal Reserve, market rigging is completely legal.

Among the documents that we have and can show to anybody are filing by CME Group, the operator of all the major futures exchanges in the United States. Filings with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission acknowledging that the CME Group gives trading discounts to governments of central banks for trading secretly all futures contracts in the United States and that’s, I think, pretty much in documentation that governments are secretly trading off futures contracts in the United States. I’m not making this up. These are filings with the CFTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission where the exchange operator admits that not only are governments and central banks secretly trading all futures contracts, all major futures contracts in the United States, but they’re getting trading discounts from the Exchange for doing so. And while these documents are on our internet site and on the CFTC’s internet site, on the SEC’s internet site, these cannot be acknowledged and examined by the mainstream financial news media. It’s just too sensitive. Too much of a national security issue.

Mike Gleason: Chris, you sent out an alert to your email list earlier this week about some very substantial gold market activity by the Bank of International Settlements. Apparently, the BIS has engaged in gold related derivatives and swap transactions in January involving some 580 tonnes of gold. First, why is the BIS even involved in the gold market in the first place, and does this increase in activity have any significance?

Chris Powell: The Bank for International Settlements is kind of a central bank association of all the major central banks in the world. It is the gold broker for many of the major central banks. A primary purpose of the Bank for International Settlements is to facilitate interventions in the currency markets by its member central banks. Among the documents we have on our internet site is the PowerPoint presentation that was given by the BIS, I think about eight or nine years ago, to prospective central bank members in a meeting at BIS headquarters in Basel, Switzerland.

Among the services of the BIS that were advertised in the PowerPoint presentation are secret intervention in the gold and currency markets. I mean, that’s just another document that’s out there. That’s what the BIS does. It intervenes secretly in the gold and currency markets on behalf of its central bank members. The BIS is a major player in the gold market. It’s the gold broker for central banks. It puts out a monthly statement of account, which our consultant Robert Lambourne monitors very closely. I think he’s the only person in the world, at least in the public arena, who monitors the BIS activity in the gold market. As signified by the monthly reports by the BIS, over the last year, he has tracked very substantial increases in the BIS’s activity in the gold market. The growth of its gold derivatives.

The BIS seems to have gotten out of the gold derivatives business until about a year ago and then it got back in, in a huge way. And I guess in December, I think, the BIS monthly report showed that its involvement in gold swaps and gold derivatives had gone down slightly, but then in the January report, which we publicized this week, the BIS’s involvement in gold swaps and derivatives increased substantially. So the BIS is undertaking gold trades and gold derivative trades for its central bank members virtually every day. It has been for a long time. The BIS is moving gold around among central banks and among their bullion bank agents to apply metal and derivatives in markets where gold is most threatening to explode. That is the primary mechanism now of managing the gold price. Central banks cooperating through the BIS and moving gold and gold derivatives around to tamp the price down.

Again, these are public documents. Anybody can find these documents on the internet site of the BIS. You won’t find the PowerPoint presentation there that advertises secret interventions in the gold market, but we have that on our internet site. All you got to do is question the central banks about this. I did this a couple of months ago. I sent the BIS press office Rob Lambourne’s most recent report asking, “Does he construe your data correctly about your gold and gold derivatives and could you please tell me the purpose of your intervention in the gold market this way,” and I got a very quick response from the press office saying, “No, we don’t talk about this stuff and you can get more information about gold from other central banks.” Well of course the other central banks don’t talk about it either.

Mike Gleason: Is there any legitimate reason for governments to be trading gold? I mean, it’s no secret that central banks hold gold because, despite what they say, they do recognize it as money. Is there any legitimate reason for them to be doing this?

Chris Powell: Well, sure. Some central banks could be wanting to purchase gold because they could see it as the ultimate money. They could see it as being very undervalued. They could look at it as an asset they’d do well to have more of. But, that’s not the explanation that central banks give if you really press them. In recent years they’ve said, for example, that they have been leasing gold to earn a little interest on a dead asset. It’s kind of a ridiculous explanation because central banks don’t have to earn any money. Central banks create money. Central banks create money to infinity. They don’t have to lease gold to make money.

In fact, the secret March 1999 report of the staff of the International Monetary Fund, which is posted on their internet site, confirms that central banks conceal their gold swaps and leases precisely to facilitate their secret interventions in the gold and currency markets. Actually, central banks, many of them, still own gold because you need to own some gold if you’re going to control the currency markets. You can’t control the currency markets unless you can intervene in the gold market, gold being the ultimate currency. Even now, central banks recognize it as such. That is primarily why central banks own gold. In fact, a few years ago, the annual report of the Reserve Bank of Australia was candid enough to acknowledge this. It said that central banks own gold for currency market intervention.

Mike Gleason: Well eventually maybe the whole system breaks and they lose control, they lose the confidence in the system and then finally they won’t have an opportunity to continue to suppress pricing. Maybe that will come at some point in the future.

Well, excellent stuff, Chris. I really want to thank you for your insights today and for the work you’re doing there at GATA. Somebody’s got to do it and we’re very thankful that your organization is. And before we let you go, give our listeners more information on how they can learn more about this and follow what you’re doing there at GATA, and then also, how they can get involved and donate if they wish to see your organization continue to do this important work.

Chris Powell: Thanks, Mike. Well, our internet site is gata.org. We put out daily dispatches of news interests to gold investors and people who believe in free markets. You can enroll in our internet site to get on our free dispatch list. We are also recognized as a 501(c)(3) charitable organization under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. We’re an educational and civil rights organization and if people would like to make donations to us, those donations are federally tax exempt in the United States and there’s a mechanism on our internet site for donating to us and we do welcome donations maintaining the site and really supporting the research of our consultants and undertaking our travel to conferences. These things do run into a little money anyway. We’re not a very big, rich non-profit. We’re usually running from hand to mouth, so if anybody wants to help us out we much appreciate it. We’re certainly not really getting much help from the mining industry, so if you want to send us t$10 by check or credit card, it’ll be $10 more than we’ll ever be getting from Newmont Mining.

Mike Gleason: Well we appreciate you coming on as always and spending some time with us here today, Chris. Look forward to catching up with you again down the road as this continues to develop, and I hope you enjoy your weekend. Take care, my friend.

Chris Powell: Thanks, Mike.

Mike Gleason: Thanks again to Chris Powell at the Gold Antitrust Action Committee. Again, check out gata.org for more information. They publish a lot of great content there at GATA, and we highly recommend everyone check that out. And I also want to urge folks to consider making a tax-deductible donation to ensure GATA has the resources to continue this important work. Again, gata.org is where you can do that.

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Sales Of Gold And Silver Should Not Be Taxed

This story appears in the March 31, 2019 issue of Forbes.

WHEN YOU EXCHANGE a $20 bill for two $10 bills, you don’t pay sales tax on the transaction, even though, theoretically, you are “buying” the tens. The notion is utterly preposterous. Yet if you purchase a gold coin that was created by the U.S. Mint and is legally usable for commercial transactions, in some states you have to pay sales tax on that coin. Uncle Sam also says people who buy and sell such coins are liable for capital gains taxes. Of course, you would never buy a silver dollar from the mint for, say, $35 and then use it to pay for a $1 candy bar, but the point is that such coins are legal tender.

$50 Gold American Eagle

That’s why the White House should follow the recommendation of the American Principles Project, an organization that, among other things, advocates sound money: “President Trump should direct the U.S. Treasury Department to issue a rule ending taxation on U.S.-minted gold coins.” While we’re at it, let’s add silver ones as well.

It’s only a matter of time before Washington undermines the value of the dollar again, and people should be able to hedge themselves against such depredation. And someday soon, Congress should allow Americans to use alternative currencies for domestic commercial transactions if they so wish.

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Goldman Sachs Sees Higher Gold, Silver Prices, Neutral On Overall Commodities

Neils Christensen 3/5/201

Goldman Sachs is turning lukewarm on the general commodity index but the firm remains positive on gold and silver, increasing its forecast for the precious metal in its latest commodities report.

In a report published Monday, commodity analysts at Goldman Sachs raised their forecast by $25 across the board over the next three, six and 12 months. The analysts now see gold prices pushing to $1,350, $1,400 and $1,450 an ounce, respectively.

“The negative gold-real rates correlation has re-emerged, with the gold rally closely tracking the fall in real rates. In our view, this switch in the gold-rates correlation after the Fed pause reflects why this stage of the rate cycle is the sweet spot for gold,” the analysts said. “Higher rates can lead to more financial-market volatility and recession fears, boosting safe-haven demand for gold, while a rate cut boosts gold demand as it lowers opportunity cost of holding gold.”

Looking at silver, the investment bank raised its short-term and long-term forecasts up 25 cents. Analysts see silver prices rising during the next three, six and 12 months to $16.5, $17 and $17.5 an ounce, respectively.

Although silver’s industrial demand looks anemic going forward, Goldman Sachs is optimistic that silver will continue to rally in line with gold prices.

“At the same time, a high gold/silver price ratio should help incentivize investors to diversify some of their gold holdings into silver,” the analysts said.

The bullish sentiment comes at an important time for gold, which has been hit with a wave of selling pressure as investor optimism in equity markets has weighed on the yellow metal. Gold prices have dropped nearly 5% since hitting a 10-month higher last month. April gold futures last traded at $1,285.20 an ounce, down 0.18% on the day.

The silver market is defying gold’s weakness with the precious metal modestly up on the day. May silver futures last traded at $15.135 an ounce, up 0.20% on the day.

While Goldman is optimistic that gold prices will continue to push higher, analysts are not as optimistic on the overall commodity complex, saying that prices are no longer overvalued and need a new catalyst to push higher.

“From this point, positive returns will need to be justified by further evidence of improving fundamentals. The risk-reward of being outright long commodities is therefore less compelling now compared to a few months ago, and we recommend a neutral portfolio position in commodities,” the analysts said.

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The Fed Blinked – Gold And Silver Are Going Higher

February 5, 2019

Price inflation has been badly misrepresented by CPI figures and have been averaging closer to about 8% annually since gold topped in Sept 2011. Since then the purchasing power of the dollar has declined by about 43%, so that in 2011 dollars the gold price is $740. No one seems to have noticed, leaving gold extremely cheap. – Alasdair Macleod, “Ten Factors To Look For In Gold In 2019

The following is an excerpt from the latest issue of the Mining Stock Journal, which included an analysis of a  highly undervalued, relatively new and unknown junior mining company advancing a gold-silver project in Mexico.

As I have suggested in the past (in more detail in the Short Seller’s Journal), the Fed is retreating quickly from rate hikes and balance sheet reduction (QT). The Fed deferred on raising rates at its FOMC meeting this week. What I found somewhat shocking, however, was the removal of reference to “further gradual rate increases.”

Perhaps more shocking was the reference to the possibility of re-starting the money printing press:  “…the Committee would be prepared to use its full range of tools, including altering the size and composition of its balance sheet, if future economic conditions were to warrant a more accommodative monetary policy…” That statement translated means, “we’ll have to print more money eventually.”

This should be extremely bullish for the precious metals sector. The only issue is the timing of the next big move higher. That depends on the degree to which the banks can continue controlling the price with gold and silver derivatives.  No one knows that answer, not even the banks. At some point, as occurred from 2008-2011, the western banks will be unable to suppress the natural price rise of gold/silver. That said, the Chinese and the Russians could pull the rug out from under the western manipulation if and when they want. That will happen eventually as well.

Alasdair Macleod wrote a brief and insightful essay from which I quoted and linked above describing key factors in 2019 that could push the price of gold significantly higher. Most of the factors are familiar, especially for subscribers to my Short Seller’s Journal. First and foremost will be the Fed, along with Central Banks globally,  reverting to easy monetary policy.

Notwithstanding official propaganda to the contrary, the U.S./global economy is rapidly slowing down. Many areas are contracting. Government spending deficits will soar as tax revenues fall behind the rate at which Government spending is increasing.

At some point, the Government will plead with the Fed to help finance Treasury issuance (this will occur in the EU, Japan and China as well), creating another acceleration in monetary inflation/currency devaluation. This will act as a transmission mechanism to inflate the dollar price of gold. Smart investors understanding this dynamic, and who have the financial resources, will move dollars out of financial assets and into gold. See 2008-2011 for an example of this process.

Gold has outperformed almost every major asset class since 2000:

Gold has outperformed most other assets since 2000 because Central Banks globally began to implement extreme monetary policies in response to the global stock market crash in 2000 led by tech stocks. As John Hathaway, manager of the Tocqueville gold fund, describes it, “gold has been a winning strategy since monetary policy became unhinged nearly two decades ago.”

In addition to the fiscal and monetary policies implemented globally in response to deteriorating economic and financial conditions, Alasdair identifies four factors directly affecting the price of gold this year.

One factor not widely perceived or understood by the markets is the gradual and methodical shift away from using the U.S. dollar for trade and as a reserve asset by Russia and China. It’s clear that both countries are swapping dollar reserves for gold and conducting an increasing percentage of bi-lateral trade with their trading partners in each country’s sovereign currency.

As an aside, gold has been soaring in most currencies besides the dollar. At some point, this shift away from using the dollar as a reserve currency will remove the “safe haven asset” status of the dollar, causing a considerable decline in the dollar vs global currencies. Concomitantly, the dollar price of gold will soar.

Another factor identified by Macleod is price inflation: “price inflation has been badly misrepresented by CPI figures and has been averaging closer to about 8% annually since gold topped in Sept 2011. Since then the purchasing power of the dollar has declined by about 43%, so that in 2011 dollars the gold price is $740. No one seems to have noticed, leaving gold extremely cheap.”

In my view, the price inflation factor as it affects investor attitudes toward gold will be a “slowly then suddenly” process. Investors and the population in general tend to move in herds. Currently the headline Government CPI is accepted and discussed as reported. At some point,  a large contingent of mainstream institutional investors will decide the Government’s measurement of inflation is wrong and will begin to buy gold and silver. The masses will soon follow. We saw this dynamic leading up to the parabolic move by gold in 1979-1980.

The third factor is “monetary inflation.” Most people think of price when they see the term “inflation.” But the true economic definition of “inflation” is the rate of growth in the money supply in excess of the rate of growth in economic (wealth) output. This in essence reduces the value of each dollar. Think about it terms of an increasing amount of dollars made available to chase a fixed supply of goods and services. That’s the monetary inflation that causes “price” inflation. Rising prices are the manifestation of monetary inflation.

As discussed at the beginning, at some point the Fed will be forced to re-start the printing press or face the consequences of a rapid economic and financial collapse.  Macleod points out that “these are exactly the conditions faced by the German government between 1918 and 1923, and the likely response by the Fed will be the same. Print money to fund government deficits.”  Recall that the policies used by the Weimar Government eventually led to hyper price inflation. The hyperinflation did not occur until the early 1920’s. But the policies leading to this condition began in 1914, when Germany World War 1 started and Germany’s huge war debt began to pile up. This is strikingly similar to the huge U.S. Government debt outstanding currently.

The final factor mentioned by Macleod is simply, “Gold is massively under-owned in the West.” By 1980, institutional investors on average held 5% of their assets in gold. Currently the percentage allocation to gold (or fake gold like GLD) is well under 1%. All it would take for a massive price reset  in gold and silver is for institutions to allocate 1-2% of their assets to gold. I believe eventually that allocation percentage will move back to 3-5%, which will drive the price of gold well over $2000/oz.

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James Turk – This Breakout Move In Gold & Silver Is Real, Enjoy The Ride

January 29, 2019

With gold punching above $1,310 and silver surging toward $16, today James Turk told KWN“This move is real.”

January 29 (KWN) – James Turk: “This move is real, Eric. We’ve got gold over $1,300 and it’s in a powerful uptrend. Silver is breaking through its resistance at $15.80 and looks ready to head higher along with gold…

Money Flowing Into Mining Stocks
James Turk continues:  “Importantly, money is not only moving into precious metals but into the mining stocks as well. There is some caution and hesitation by many investors.  This caution is understandable in view of what investors in the precious metals sector have gone through in the past several years.  But bull markets always begin this way, Eric.  They are always climbing a ‘Wall of worry,’ so we have to step back from the trees and take a look at the forest.

Expect Upside Surprises In Gold & Silver Bull Markets
In that regard, there are two things to focus on: how undervalued the precious metals are, and secondly, how many bullish factors indicate that 2019 is going to be a great year for gold, silver, and the mining stocks.  For what it’s worth, Eric, the powers that be could not keep the precious metals down during this option expiry week, at least up to now.  And if this bullish trend continues through tomorrow, after the FOMC announcement, that would be an even bigger surprise.  That is very unusual and it’s an important sign when markets trade differently like this. Or said another way, there is a lot of buying pressure in the market, which just goes to show that surprises in bull markets almost always happen on the upside.  Enjoy the ride.”

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