To: Black Blade who wrote (29602) | 3/20/2023 1:00:13 PM | From: dara | | | This move increased JP Morgan’s total allocation of Registered from 32% to 41.6%. This means almost half of all Registered silver now sits in JP Morgan vaults… most likely for optics.
Incredible! |
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To: dara who wrote (29604) | 3/20/2023 8:21:03 PM | From: Black Blade | | | JP Morgan has a long history of Silver market manipulation and has been hit with lawsuits and penalties over the years. It doesn't seem to phase them one bit as they just keep on manipulation the price of Silver by "papering over" the market with "paper silver" contracts (not physical silver) because there simply isn't enough silver to cover if the counter parties ever called in their positions. This is partly due to rules put into place when the Hunt Brothers cornered the silver market in the 1980s. The regulators simply changed the rules on them and caused the Hunt Brothers to declare BK as a result. There is no true "free market" in commodities anymore unless investors demand delivery of the underlying commodity. Even then, the regulators changed the rules making it possible for market makers like JP Morgan to pay off in USDs rather than actually delivered the (non-existent) physical Silver.
I just buy and hold the physical PMs and have my own personal "central bank" should the economic and banking crises keep destroying wealth. As they say "if you don't hold it you don't own it".
- BLACK BLADE |
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From: Black Blade | 3/25/2023 12:19:13 AM | | | | "It's Getting Real": Unease Over Banking Sector Turmoil Spurs Huge Demand For Physical Precious Metals Friday, Mar 24, 2023 - 11:11 AM Authored by Allan Stein via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), Coin Heaven co-owner Gabe Wright saw precious metals demand rise to new heights during the pandemic, but nothing as spectacular as Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) collapse. “It’s getting real,” Wright said, standing behind the glass showcase filled with various silver and gold bullion, coins, jewelry, and sterling in his busy Cottonwood, Arizona, shop on March 20. “On a dime, it turned around—big time. It’s unprecedented,” he said. “We’ve seen the demand high, but not like this. Of course, SVB started this phase we’re in.”  Gabe Wright, co-owner of Coin Heaven in Cottonwood, Ariz., holds gold and silver coins, two of the hottest selling items on March 20, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) And where the buying phase—more like a buying frenzy—ends up is anybody’s guess, Wright said.  U.S. coins minted with 90 percent silver, known as “junk silver,” were in high demand at Coin Heaven in Cottonwood, Ariz., on March 20, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) Once regarded as a “barbarous relic” by the Wall Street financial sector, gold and silver are now in heavy demand to hedge against inflation and financial risk. Wright said retail demand for precious metals could soon outstrip supply, and if more banks fail, to expect a full-blown “panic.” He agreed that U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen didn’t help matters by not announcing a government bail-out for SVB after depositors withdrew $42 billion in early March, spurring the bank’s collapse. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insures depositor accounts up to $250,000. Almost immediately after the run on SVB, people began buying gold and silver on the spot market, putting the squeeze on coin and bullion dealers large and small. As of March 20, gold was on sale at $1,979 per troy ounce, and silver at $22.51 per ounce. One troy ounce weighs 31.10 grams or 1.1 regular ounces. Buy Low, Sell High In November 2011, an ounce of gold rallied to a multi-year high of more than $2,000 while silver soared to almost $50 an ounce before the bull run on precious metals corrected to new lows. Wright, whose uncle started Coin Heaven in 1985, said that demand for precious metals was robust during COVID-19. “But after that bank fell, it created quite a panic, and people wanted to get their funds out of banks and into something real and tangible—gold and silver,” Wright told The Epoch Times. “It’s something you own. There’s no third party involved. It’s solely yours.” Galina Suvorova, owner of Galina Fine Jewelers in Cottonwood, said business has been steadily increasing since the fall of SVB, and “there’s more interest in bullion—specifically, bullion and coins.” Read more here... |
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From: Black Blade | 3/25/2023 12:21:12 AM | | | | Platinum seen at $1500 by year-end amid South African power crisis - BofA Commodities 10 hours ago (Mar 22, 2023 01:02PM ET)  By Barani Krishnan Investing.com - Platinum prices are expected to rise to $1,500 an ounce by year-end, underpinned by the power crisis in South Africa as chronic electricity outages undermine one of the world's largest operators of mines, Bank of America said in an investors' note Wednesday. "Power supply [is a] long-standing issue for South African miners," analysts at BofA Securities wrote in the note. "The power situation in South Africa has gained attention as power cuts have become more frequent." South Africa is a key platinum supplier with a global market share of 75% and it wasn't surprising that platinum prices have remained resilient amid the nation's power crisis, the note pointed out. Hosting Robert Baxter, CEO of South Africa's Minerals Council, to a fireside chat on the power crisis, BofA said it will take time to ensure stability in the country's electricity supply. "Bringing power plants back from maintenance, solar water heaters and PV panel systems are among the options to alleviate pressure on the grid. In the medium term, the private sector must bring on capacity," BofA said. In the meantime, national power Eskom needs to fix its asset base and sell all concessions of power generation capacity that it can't run, BofA said, adding: "Self-generation of power is [a] critical solution for miners." Given that the crisis won't be resolved anytime soon, BofA said it was optimistic of a large rally in platinum prices by December. "As such, we remain constructive on platinum and see prices rallying to $1,500/oz by year-end," the BofA note. Platinum futures on New York's Comex were trading at just over $990 an ounce by 12:45 ET (16:45 GMT). |
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To: Black Blade who wrote (29606) | 3/25/2023 2:04:40 AM | From: nicewatch | | | Saturday March 11, the day after SIVB was seized by the government, Apmex had a record day for Saturday silver sales by ~50% and over 300% above average. For gold it was a Saturday record by ~30% and over 200% above average.
The CEO of bullion dealer Miles Franklin recently said they did about 10% of their entire 2022 sales in the week following the SIVB collapse. |
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From: Black Blade | 4/14/2023 4:24:27 PM | | | | Gold and Silver Surge On Recession Worries and a Dollar Decline ........................................................................................................
Last week, gold and silver saw gains as recession worries persisted. The pair had plenty of tailwinds throughout this week in a declining dollar, continued recession fears, and rate hike bets. In terms of economic news, investors anticipated consumer and wholesale inflation data, which was due out Wednesday and Thursday, respectively.
Gold slipped below the $2,000 level on Monday, as the dollar index ticked higher and investors digested a U.S. jobs report from the prior Friday, showing 236,000 new jobs in March.
Stocks in the U.S. were mixed on Tuesday, as investors anticipated the release of CPI and PPI data. On the same day, the dollar edged lower which cleared the path for a 1% gold uptick to $2,018. On Wednesday, data showed that consumer prices increased by 0.1% in March, which was the smallest uptick for that index in three months. The core rate of inflation, which does not include food and energy, was up by 0.4% in March.
While inflation still rose in March, gains were largely in line with expectations. For some, this meant that the Fed was more likely to pause its current rate hike campaign. In his speech, Chicago Fed President Goldsbee suggested the central bank should be cautious with future rate hikes, especially considering recent banking sector struggles. Some other Fed officials are still favoring a 0.25% rate at the next policy meeting on May 3rd.
Meeting from the Fed’s March 21-22 meeting were also released on Wednesday. The minutes showed that officials remained concerned about inflation, tighter credit conditions, and a recession later in 2023. Recession worries weighed on Wall Street sentiment throughout Wednesday, as The S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and Dow Jones Industrial Average all ended the day lower.
Gold and silver momentum persisted through Thursday, as the dollar continued its downward trend, and recession worries intensified. Gold neared a fresh all -time high and would end the day 1.6 % higher, at $2,044. Meanwhile, silver managed to breach $26 for the first time in nearly a year.
This morning, gloomier economic news once again drove U.S. equities lower. Data released this morning showed retails sales slid lower by 1% in March, when a 0.5% decline was forecasted. Meanwhile The University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey showed that Americans remain worried about persistent inflation. Despite this morning’s dip, all three major averages are currently on track for small weekly gains.
Gold pulled back from its recent highs this morning as the dollar bounced. Currently, the yellow metal is near $2.003, which is 0.5% higher for the week. Silver is currently eying a 2.2% weekly uptick, at $24.78 an ounce. |
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From: Black Blade | 4/26/2023 12:54:42 AM | | | | What Strong Gold Says About The Weak Dollar ........................................ Tuesday, Apr 25, 2023 - 09:30 AM Authored by Ruchir Sharma, op-ed via The Financial Times, The US has been weaponising its currency - but that comes with a cost...  Today commentators overwhelmingly agree that a weakening US dollar cannot possibly lose its status as the world’s dominant currency because there is “no alternative” on the visible horizon. Perhaps, but don’t tell that to the many countries racing to find an alternative, and such complacency will only accelerate their search. The prime example right now is gold, up 20 per cent in six months. Surging demand is not led by the usual suspects — investors large and small, seeking a hedge against inflation and low real interest rates. Instead, the heavy buyers are central banks, which are sharply reducing their dollar holdings and seeking a safe alternative. Central banks are buying more tons of gold now than at any time since data begins in 1950 and currently account for a record 33 per cent of monthly global demand for gold. This buying boom has helped push the price of gold to near-record levels and more than 50 per cent higher than what models based on real interest rates would suggest. Clearly, something new is driving gold prices. Look closer at the central bank buyers, and nine of the top 10 are in the developing world, including Russia, India and China. Not coincidentally, these three countries are in talks with Brazil and South Africa about creating a new currency to challenge the dollar. Their immediate goal: to trade with one another directly, in their own coin. “Every night I ask myself why all countries have to base their trade on the dollar,” Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said recently on a visit to China, arguing that an alternative would help “balance world geopolitics”. Thus the oldest and most traditional of assets, gold, is now a vehicle of central bank revolt against the dollar. Often in the past both the dollar and gold have been seen as havens, but now gold is seen as much safer. During the short banking crisis in March, gold kept rising while the dollar drifted down. The difference in the movement of the two has never been so large. And why are emerging nations rebelling now, when global trade has been based on the dollar since the end of the second world war? Because the US and its allies have increasingly turned to financial sanctions as a weapon. Astonishingly, 30 per cent of all countries now face sanctions from the US, the EU, Japan and the UK — up from 10 per cent in the early 90s. Until recently, most of the targets were small. Then this group launched an all-out sanctions attack on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, cutting off Russian banks from the dollar-based global payment system. Suddenly, it was clear that any nation could be a target. Too confident in the indomitable dollar, the US saw sanctions as a cost-free way to fight Russia without risking troops. But it is paying the price in lost currency allegiances. Nations cutting deals to trade without the dollar now include old US allies such as the Philippines and Thailand. The number of countries with central banks looking at ways to launch their own digital currency has tripled since 2020 to more than 110, representing 95 per cent of the world’s gross domestic product. Many are testing these digital currencies for use in bilateral trade — another open challenge to the dollar. Though some doubt a dominant dollar matters for the US economy, high demand for the currency in general tends to lower the cost of borrowing abroad, a privilege America sorely needs today. Among the top 20 developed economies, it now has the second highest fiscal and current account deficits after the UK and the second highest foreign liabilities (as reflected in its net international investment position) after Portugal. The risk for America is that its overconfidence grows, fed by the “no alternative” story. That narrative rests on global trust in US institutions and rule of law, but this is exactly what weaponising the dollar has done so much to undermine. It rests also on trust in the country’s ability to pay its debts, but that is also slipping, as its reliance on foreign funding keeps growing. The last line of defence for the dollar is the state of China, which is the only economy sufficiently large and centralised to challenge US currency supremacy — but even more deeply indebted and institutionally dysfunctional. When a giant comes to rely on the weakness of rivals, it’s time to look hard in the mirror. When it faces challenges from a “barbaric relic” such as gold and new contenders like digital currency, it should be looking for ways to strengthen trust in its finances, not taking its financial superpower status for granted. * * * Ruchir Sharma is chair of Rockefeller International |
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From: Black Blade | 4/26/2023 12:56:02 AM | | | | Central banks are leading a revolt against the US dollar and shifting to gold at a record pace, market expert says Story by fdemott@insider.com (Filip De Mott) • 6h ago  - Central banks are turning away from the US dollar and shifting to gold, Ruchir Sharma wrote.
- Central banks account for a record 33% of monthly global demand for gold, he said in the FT.
- "Thus the oldest and most traditional of assets, gold, is now a vehicle of central bank revolt against the dollar."
The anti-dollar drive spearheaded by Asia has spread to Europe, with France growing sour on the greenback's dominance. Here are 6 rising threats to the buck's supremacy of global trade. - The dollar's supremacy in global trade faces fresh challenges as several countries float plans to use local currencies in commerce.
- Russia and Iran are working to create a gold-backed stablecoin, while France has pursued a trade deal with China in yuan.
- Here are 6 rising challenges to the greenback's dominance of international trade and investment flows.
The dollar's dominance of global trade and investment flows is facing a slew of new threats as more and more countries draft plans to boost the use of alternative currencies. For some time now, nations from China and Russia to India and Brazil have been pushing for settling more trade in non-dollar units – with projects ranging from the use of local currencies to a gold-backed stablecoin and a new BRICS reserve currency. Now, even Europe appears to be jumping on the anti-dollar bandwagon, with French president Emmanuel Macron recently warning against the continent's dependence on the greenback. With movements to undermine the dollar's unipolar supremacy gathering momentum, it comes as no surprise that the buck's status as a reserve currency eroded in 2022 at 10 times the pace seen in the past two decades, according to Eurizon SLJ Asset Management. Strategists at the asset manager found that the greenback's share of total global reserves fell to 47% last year, from 55% in 2021 and as much as two-thirds in 2003. For decades, the US dollar has reigned supreme as the world's reserve currency and is widely used in crossborder trade, especially for commodities such as oil. Thanks to its relative price stability, investors see it as a safe-haven asset in times of heightened economic and geopolitical uncertainty. The dollar was further bolstered last year by a surge in US interest rates that made it attractive to foreign investors seeking higher yields. It surged 17% during the first nine months of 2022, but has since lost some of its shine on the prospect that the Federal Reserve may soon end its rate hikes as inflation cools rapidly. Against this backdrop come the latest threats to the greenback's reign — here are 6 currency projects from across the world that are ultimately aimed at undermining the dollar's supremacy. Assurance in the dollar's dominance ignores signs that countries are serious about seeking alternatives, according to Ruchir Sharma. This is illustrated when taking account of recent trends in gold: the safe haven commodity has surged 20% in the last half year. But demand is coming from central banks reducing their dollar holdings, not the "usual suspects" made up of large and small investors, the chair of Rockefeller International wrote in The Financial Times on Sunday. In fact, central banks account for a record 33% of monthly global demand for gold and are buying more gold than at any time since data began in 1950, he added. "This buying boom has helped push the price of gold to near-record levels and more than 50% higher than what models based on real interest rates would suggest," said Sharma. "Clearly, something new is driving gold prices." Nine of the top 10 central banks buying gold are in developing countries, including China, Russia and India, he said. Those three countries, along with fellow BRICS nations Brazil and South Africa, are also part of an effort to create a new currency that is separate from the dollar. "Thus the oldest and most traditional of assets, gold, is now a vehicle of central bank revolt against the dollar," Sharma wrote. "Often in the past both the dollar and gold have been seen as havens, but now gold is seen as much safer. During the short banking crisis in March, gold kept rising while the dollar drifted down. The difference in the movement of the two has never been so large." He attributes the rush for gold to the increasing use of financial sanctions by the US and its allies, with as much as 30% of nations facing sanctions from the US, European Union, Japan and UK. That's up from 10% in the 1990s. But after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the West froze the country's currency assets and kicked it out of the SWIFT system. "Suddenly, it was clear that any nation could be a target," Sharma wrote. In the face of the dollar's weaponization, even US allies like Thailand and the Philippines are beginning to seek alternative currencies. Most notably, the Chinese yuan has been growing its international reach, but Sharma cites another threat — the fact that the number of central banks attempting to create digital currencies has tripled in three years. "The risk for America is that its overconfidence grows, fed by the "no alternative" story. That narrative rests on global trust in US institutions and rule of law, but this is exactly what weaponizing the dollar has done so much to undermine," Sharma wrote. "It rests also on trust in the country's ability to pay its debts, but that is also slipping, as its reliance on foreign funding keeps growing." Others have been less wary of de-dollarization fears, citing that the trust in the greenback is difficult to replicate. Commonwealth's Brad McMillan said even if a strong alternative was to emerge, it would take monumental effort and persuasion to replace the dollar. And former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said the yuan isn't a threat to the US dollar, largely because China isn't a predictable and reliable market. |
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From: Black Blade | 5/5/2023 12:39:20 AM | | | | Newmont Merger Would Create The World's Biggest Gold Miner Thursday, May 04, 2023 - 11:15 AM By Charles Kennedy of OilPrice  The board of Australia's Newcrest Mining has recommended the latest takeover offer of bigger sector player Newmont, which last month valued the target company at $19.5 billion. "The latest offer is one that the board would be prepared to recommend subject to successful due diligence during the period," interim Newcrest chief executive Sherry Duhe said this week, as quoted by Bloomberg. "This transaction would strengthen our position as the world's leading gold company by joining two of the sector's top senior gold producers and setting the new standard in safe, profitable and responsible mining," Newmont's chief executive TomPalmer said, as quoted by Reuters, after the announcement of the latest offer. Newmont first made a non-binding offer for Newcrest in February, which valued the company at $16.9 billion, but Newcrest rejected that as too low. Then the gold miner tried again, sweetening the offer. If a deal does materialize, it will bring Newmont's gold output much higher—twice as high as the output of its rival, Barrick Gold, according to Reuters. It would also constitute the third-largest deal involving an Australian company as well as the third-largest M&A deal this year, the news outlet noted. According to Bloomberg, the deal would also boost Newmont's presence in copper: the basic metal, which is essential for the energy transition, makes up a quarter of Newcrest's total output at present, but the company wants to boost that to 50% by 2030. Copper is indispensable for wind and solar farm wiring and for EV engines. Yet supply of the metal is under threat because of insufficient new mining capacity coming on stream and falling ore grades. Warnings of a looming copper shortage have been multiplying in recent months, but they have not yet made any forecasters budge on their expectations of an EV boom combined with a wind and solar boom. |
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