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Showing posts from October, 2014

Silver premiums push higher

I can't make charts yet as I'm in Hong Kong, but I do know that Shanghai silver premiums have now hit 17%, which means that silver in London can now be transported to China for a profit, including the 17% tax. Very important now to watch SLV to see what happens there. If GLD can be raided, which is in progress at this very moment, why can't SLV be raided? On another note I see that physical silver is getting high demand now. Look at the Sprott physical silver trust premium, which recorded a new high for the year. The probability of Eric Sprott making a silver offering has increased, especially now when silver is scarce and in deficit, especially in Shanghai.

First Majestic Silver Decreases Silver Premium For First Time In A Year

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First Majestic Silver, after one year of waiting, has finally thrown in the towel and dropped their silver prices from $23/ounce to $20/ounce, a 13% drop. I wonder if this has anything to do with the end of QE announcement last night... This is also not consistent with what they said a few weeks ago, namely betting on a higher silver price in the fourth quarter, thus retaining a large amount of their silver inventory stock for the sake of selling it at a higher price in the future. In fact, a week ago the CEO encouraged other silver miners to halt their silver sales, how will lower premiums accomplish that goal?

Peter Schiff on CNBC

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Posting video like a true Peter Schiff fan.

Correlation: leading Vs. coincident Vs. lagging indicator

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The FRED site gives leading indicators for the U.S. When we compare that indicator to the coincident indicator we do see that there is a lag. This is consistent with the definition of coincident and leading indicators. A coincident indicator gives the status on current economic data points in the present. These include indicators like the inflation rate. A leading indicator gives a prediction on future economic activity. For example bond yields. This is why the coincident indicator always lags the leading indicator. See chart above.. We also have lagging indicators like the unemployment rate. Moreover, when we compare the coincident and lagging indicator with each other, we have a leading indicator. Because tops in the stock market often happen when the coincident indicator rises slower than the lagging indicator. The recession will be on the horizon as the ratio of coincident to lagging indicator falls.   The weekly economic index gives a better view of the economy in real time o...

Correlation: gold per capita Vs. income per capita

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Apparently, Indians and Chinese buy more gold when their wages go up and I'm pretty sure Chinese people will continue to see wage growth in the future. One reason in particular is that their currency will continue to appreciate. Another reason is that their government debt to GDP is very low. So businesses won't be taxed to death like in the Western world. Besides, they are creditor nations with a lot of foreign exchange reserves. The WGC issued another report on gold here: http://www.gold.org/download/file/3543/investment_commentary_looking_into_q4_2014.pdf In there you can see the correlation between income and gold net worth per capita. The more you earn, the more gold you buy, and the funny thing is that it's exponential. So rich people put more money in gold than poor people. You would expect that the curve were linear. Probably poor people have more basic needs...

Day 4-7: The Almighty Lion Dance

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The main event in Hong Kong was the da jiao festival (太平清醮). This event occurs every 10 years in Yun Long. It's a lion dance festival in super size to honor the ancestors.

Willem Middelkoop Seminar on Gold

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A splendid seminar by Willem Middelkoop on gold. You can't understand a thing about it, but I sure can. Just follow the highlights that I'm going to summarize. China purposely stopped buying U.S. bonds in 2010 and made a deal with the U.S. to buy up the important J.P. Morgan vault building in order to store its physical gold. In 2012-2013 China started to buy U.S. bonds again probably because they made a deal to get cheap gold from the U.S. Willem estimates China has 3000 tonnes of gold now. Willem says we are in a major bond bubble and advises you not to take part in bonds. Plans are being made behind the screens to reset sovereign debt. Switzerland is actually the only country that hasn't ever defaulted on debt. When this reset comes, bonds will default. Pension funds are now heavily invested in bonds, so don't count on your retirement. The SDR, a basket of currency reserve assets, will compete with the U.S. dollar. The composition of the SDR will probably start to in...

Correlation: GLD holdings Vs. Total U.S. Gold ETF holdings

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I did some research on the GLD gold trust physical holdings versus the Total U.S. gold backed ETF holdings and these are the numbers. 2014 sep 795 ton gld 1726 ton global 2013 dec 798 ton gld 1810 ton global 2012 dec 1351 ton gld 2690 ton global 2011 dec 1255 ton gld 2457 ton global 2010 dec 1281 ton gld 2146 ton global 2009 dec 1133 ton gld 1816 ton global 2008 dec 780 ton gld 1202 ton global

Day 3: Some more protesters

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Sha Tin has a heritage museum for Bruce Lee, which we visited. All museums have free admission every Wednesday. Then we went shopping in Mong Kok, I did come across some more protesters. Again evidence that all is well, they were very peaceful. I expected more excitement.

Day 2: Where are the maple leafs?

At Hang Seng Bank in Hong Kong, they used to sell Maple leaf gold coins. But when I asked for those, they said they weren't available. They only had Australian kangaroos from the Perth Mint. What they also had are these weird 5 tael bars of 0.99 gold. That's around 7 ounces of gold. Gold bars with 1% impurity. They said I shouldn't buy those when taking them back to Belgium as they wouldn't recognize them as gold. Later on I found out that there were delays of one month to get maple leafs, Perth mint sales and U.S. Mint sales are exploding. Next on I went to a retail gold shop Luk Fook to look at what they have in store. When I went in, they shoved some golden rings under my nose and I quickly saw the premiums were in the 20%. Not exactly what I was looking for. But you can also buy 1 tael gold rings which have a normal premium of around 5%. It's amazing how many gold shops there are in Hong Kong. Just walk along and you can buy gold anywhere you go.

Day 1: Wandering in Central Hong Kong

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We're just walking through Central Hong Kong. I see nothing special on the streets. I have the feeling there aren't a lot of busses as I normally would expect. That's because all busses are diverted back when they reach the protester areas. I haven't seen it yet and actually don't plan to either. Instead, I'm going to buy some physical gold while I'm here. Currently I'm sitting in the Bank of China tower for some business activities. The security here is pretty good. I need to hand over my identity card to get a visitor pass. There is also security screening when you are carrying any bags. Yesterday, completely unrelated to economics, I attended a concert at a protestant Church in Hong Kong. This guzheng talent was pretty amazing. Next on we go to Hang Seng Bank to buy some gold. It's very easy, you just go to counter, ask for some Perth mint kangaroo coins and it's like going to the store buying groceries. The prices at that time were HKD 10065/...

Managed Money Short Update: Gold/Silver

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What is very surprising this week is that gold and silver managed to go up, while no short covering has taken place. So we are seeing shorters trying to keep the gold/silver price down and not succeeding in it. This is a very bullish sign for precious metals as the real short squeeze is still to come. Currently we are seeing a rally in the precious metals market based on fundamentals and not solely on short covering. Probably some of the hot money in stocks went into gold during the stock market sell-off. The COT report also confirms from last week that the bottom is in as large commercials have positioned themselves on the long side. In particular, silver still has a long way to rally. On the premium side, nothing special is happening, still record silver premiums of 14% at Shanghai. Junk silver premiums still at new plateau of 9%. The next 3 weeks, the blog will be a bit quiet as I'm going to Hong Kong (to report on the protestors).

Correlation: Buybacks Vs. S&P

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Buybacks are the hot item in 2014. Share repurchases happen when companies have a lot of cash. They buy up the company's shares with that excess cash and then destroy the shares. The amount of shares go down, the earnings stay the same. The earnings per share go up, so the share price will go up. The correlation below shows that relationship between buybacks and share price.   Today (2014), almost 90% of all S&P companies are buying back stock. But when we look at it on a market cap basis, buybacks are decreasing, which will mark a top in the stock market. When the stock market finally goes down, liquidity will be a problem as companies have spent all their cash. These buybacks are financed by debt.

Market Outlook

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In the past few weeks we have seen a lot of changes in investor sentiment. It all started at the end of September 2014. We had a lot of bad economic news coming. A falling labor participation rate, lower PMI readings, falling consumer sentiment, lower factory orders, declining oil demand, falling home prices, lower GDP growth revisions, declining bond yields, a drop in Dow transportation index, lower Baltic Dry Indices, lower Chinese power consumption growth and more recently falling retail sales. As a result, the Dow Jones has posted losses for 2014. What's most interesting is that volatility has now started spiking, which is never a good sign for stocks (see chart below from Google Finance ). Volatility has seen similar spikes in 2008, 2010 and 2011 which all resulted in a correction in stocks. On the other hand, gold has been very strong this year based on a higher fear index and higher volatility. Since October 2014 we have seen an additional anomaly where oil goes down and go...