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      Giant panda Juxiao hangs out with one of her triplets at Chimelong Safari Park in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China. This is the fourth set of giant panda triplets born with the help of artificial insemination procedures in China. The birth is seen as a miracle due to the low reproduction rate of giant pandas. Reuters
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   A man rows his boat in River Yamuna at dawn in New Delhi. Clogged with garbage, sewage, and industrial runoff, the Yamuna, which is one of India’s major rivers, is also one of the most polluted. Benat Armangue/AP
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   Thousands of water tax protesters congregate close to government buildings in Dublin city center, Ireland. Peter Morrison/AP
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All Items Gold Related / Re: Discussion of Gold - Deconstructing Money & Reality
« Last post by Golden Oxen on December 14, 2014, 08:15:05 am »
                             https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrSoJHfGIug
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Gold Research / Golden Age – Is Gold’s Role As Economic Instrument Over?
« Last post by Golden Oxen on December 13, 2014, 08:41:06 pm »
Golden Age – Is Gold’s Role As Economic Instrument Over?

YOU would have thought by now — 43 years after President Richard M. Nixon scrapped the gold standard — that gold’s role as an economic instrument was over. After all, the mighty metal that once held sway over the global monetary system was supposed to have, by this point, finally been reduced to just another asset peddled on the Internet.

But in fact in recent weeks, gold has experienced a renaissance of sorts, quietly re-emerging as the centerpiece of a handful of initiatives in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. On Dec. 1, voters in Switzerland considered — and eventually rejected — a populist plan to force its central bank to buy gold in a controversial bid to stabilize its currency. Russia and China both made headlines by snapping up enormous stores of gold. In late November, Marine Le Pen of France, a nationalist politician, called on her government to start amassing gold, and the Netherlands followed suit, revealing that same week that it had repatriated $5 billion of its own gold from a vault in New York City owned by the Federal Reserve.

Even the Islamic State, it appears, has become intrigued by gold. Declaring last month that it wanted to avoid “the tyrant’s financial system,” the group released a statement announcing that it was planning to produce a line of custom-made gold coins.

What’s going on here? Like almost everything concerning gold, the experts don’t agree. Some have interpreted the metal’s mini-comeback as an indication that financial Armageddon, in the guise of runaway inflation, is approaching. Others have read the recent moves as a symbolic way for central banks and governments to make a show of strength in nervously uncertain economic times.

“Holding gold, for people and for governments, reflects our anxieties about the future,” said Michael Bordo, a professor of economics at Rutgers University who specializes in monetary history and policy. “Even though it might seem somewhat retrograde, to many investors, having it on hand is something safe.”

At a time when central banks around the globe have tried to foster growth by aggressively printing money — which can in theory devalue sovereign currencies — moves by countries to recall their stores of gold can help create a “culture of stability,” Professor Bordo said. But then again, to simply stockpile gold doesn’t guarantee the health of an economy, and some analysts have said that such notions of stability are often more psychological than actual.

The Swiss proposal, for example, called for the central bank to hold at least 20 percent of its national reserves in gold. While the referendum was designed in part to reassure Swiss citizens concerned about the solvency of their money, some historians have argued that, even had it passed, it would have had no palpable effect on the value of the franc.

“It was mostly a symbolic move,” said Richard Sylla, a professor of the history of financial markets and institutions at New York University. “Which isn’t to say that it was crazy or unfounded. What the Swiss were really saying by considering the plan was that some of them were going to feel a whole lot better if they had tons of gold inside the bank.’”

There remains the question of why gold has traditionally served as the economy’s equivalent of comfort food. According to Professor Bordo, it is, for one thing, a highly liquid asset that is easily exchanged for other currencies.

Furthermore, he added, when it was used as part of the gold standard, its controlled supply served to limit central banks from printing money and put a lid on profligate government spending.

Needless to say, in an era when the balance sheets of many central banks have expanded to unprecedented scope, there has been plenty of discussion of those last two trends, causing a pessimistic sect of economic experts to augur pending doom in the repatriation schemes and the shopping sprees by Moscow and Beijing.

“By purchasing gold, China and Russia have indicated that they understand how fragile things are and that they’re getting ready for the demise of the dollar,” said James G. Rickards, author of “The Death of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System.” “At the same time, other countries have been watching what they’re doing and are saying to themselves, ‘If things are really that bad, then we better get our gold back,’ possession being nine-tenths of the law.”

Of course, not all economists have interpreted gold’s resurgence as heralding a geopolitical disaster.

To Joshua Aizenman, a professor of economics and international relations at the University of Southern California, dabbling in gold is mainly an attempt by bankers and officials to send a message to the world — one that signals an appetite for power or that broadcasts a desire to challenge a rival. “I doubt that the Chinese or the Russians actually believe that gold is such a great investment in terms of pure returns,” Professor Aizenman said. “But if they’re trying to suggest that they’re unhappy with the dollar or that they want to become a global player, then gold is very powerful.

“The investment is a symbol,” he explained. “It’s made for political, not financial, gain.”

Source
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http://bmgbullionbars.com/golden-age/
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Gold Research / Spare Dollars
« Last post by Golden Oxen on December 13, 2014, 07:33:01 am »
Spare dollars

Alasdair Macleod – 12 December 2014

Last week I wrote that contrary to the prevailing mood US dollar strength could reverse at any time. This week I look at another aspect of the dollar, which almost certainly will become a significant source of supply: a global shift out of it by foreign holders.

As well as multinational corporations that account in dollars, there are non-US entities that use dollars purely for trade. And so long as governments intervene in currency markets, governments end up with those trade dollars in their foreign reserves. Some of these governments are now pushing hard to replace the dollar, having seen its debasement, which is beyond their control. This has upset nations like China, and that is before we speculate about any geopolitical angle.

The consequence of China’s currency management has been a massive accumulation of dollars which China cannot easily sell. All she can do is stop accumulating them and not reinvest the proceeds from maturing Treasuries, and this has broadly been her policy for at least the last year. So this problem has been in the works for some time and doubtless contributed to China’s determination to reduce her dependency on the dollar. Furthermore, it is why thirteen months ago George Osborne was summoned (that is the only word for it) to Beijing to discuss a move to urgently develop offshore renminbi capital markets, utilising the historic links between Hong Kong and London. Since then, it is reported that last month over 22% of China’s external trade was settled in its own currency.

Given the short time involved, it is clear that there is a major change happening in cross-border trade hardly noticed by financial commentators. But this is not all: sanctions against Russia have turned her urgently against the dollar as well, and together with China these two nations dominate and carry with them the bulk of Asia, representing nearly four billion rapidly industrialising souls. To this we should add the Middle East, most of whose oil is now exported to China, India and South-East Asia, making the petro-dollar potentially redundant as well.

In a dollar-centric currency system, China is restricted in what she can do, because with nearly $4 trillion in total foreign exchange reserves she cannot sell enough dollars to make a difference without driving the renminbi substantially higher. In the past she has reduced her dollar balances by selling them for other currencies, such as the euro, but she cannot rely on the other major central banks to neutralise the market effect of her dollar sales on her behalf. Partly for this reason China now intends to redeploy her reserves into international investment to develop her export markets for capital goods, as well as into major infrastructure projects, such as the $40bn Silk Road scheme.

This simply amounts to dispersing China’s dollars into diverse hands to conceal their disposal. Meanwhile currency markets have charged off in the opposite direction, with the dollar’s strength undermining commodity prices, most noticeably oil, very much to China’s benefit. And while the talking-heads are debating the effect on Russia and America’s shale, they are oblivious to the potential tsunami of dollars just waiting for the opportunity to return to the good old US of A.

http://www.financeandeconomics.org/spare-dollars/
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    Movers prepare to hang Leonardo da Vinci's 'Earlier Mona Lisa' painting ahead of its exhibition at The Arts House in Singapore. The world premiere exhibition runs from Dec. 16 to Feb. 11. The exhibition is the first public viewing of the painting with new findings and evidence from research conducted and published by The Mona Lisa Foundation to demonstrate its attribution to da Vinci. Edgar Su/Reuters
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    A couple sits under a street lamp in a park near Christmas lights in central Tokyo. Thomas Peter/Reuters
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    Shi'ite Muslim pilgrims gather as they commemorate Arbain in Kerbala. Hundreds of thousands of black-clad pilgrims from across Iraq streamed into the city a day before the culmination of Saturday's Arbain, which marks the end of 40 days of mourning for Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammed, who died in a 7th century battle at Kerbala. Reuters
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