GOLDBUG: real glitter for gold bullion

Thursday, January 3, 2008

http://investmentpostcards.wordpress.com/2008/01/02/gold-glitters-brightly-at-start-of-2008

Gold glitters brightly at start of 2008
Posted by Prieur du Plessis under Gold
Tags: Bullion, Business, Commodities, Economy, Finance, Gold, Investment, Markets, Money

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Waving the old year goodbye with a few new records under the belt is no mean feat, but the real glitter for gold bullion is that most indicators seem to point to more good news down the line.

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With gooferment spending out of control — several ongoing “wars” — foreign and domestic, the sub-prime mess, social security ponzi, medicare costs, medicare drug costs, presidential candidate promising higher taxes — it’s hard to imagine this reversing any time soon.

About the ONLY hope is an unexpected Ron Paul win. (Then, I’d be a “buy everything — the good times are here” nut!)

But, if one assumes he doesn’t win, then I’d look for gold to have an unlimited run up.

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GOLDBUG: Gold is about to soar to new highs

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/CompanyFocus/WhyGoldsGoingStraightTo1000Dollars.aspx?page=1

Why gold’s going straight to $1,000

Gold is about to soar to new highs, and here are four compelling reasons why. Take a look at four gold-mining stocks that could make your portfolio gleam.
By Michael Brush

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Gold beat a hasty retreat after setting records by trading north of $840 an ounce earlier this month, but don’t be fooled.

It’s only taking a breather before it climbs past $1,000.

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Clearly in an accumulation phase. It’s how the little guy takes profits and puts them on ice during turbulent economic times. Though out history, a few gold coins squirreled away meant the difference between disaster and survival.

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GOLDBUG: gold will possibly never go below $700

Saturday, November 10, 2007

http://www.vestopia.com/Blogs/DirectorBlogEntry.aspx?postId=13090&piid=32

Gold as an Alternative Investment
Nov 7, 07

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Gold has had a great run lately. As I indicated in one of my previous blogs, if you look at the long term monthly close chart of gold, $700 provides a major resistance, because gold had never stayed above $700 for over a month in its entire history, neither in 1980 nor in 2006, until now. This is the main reason why it had taken over a year to overcome it, and the reason of the current explosive upward movement. Now we have expanded the chart upward beyond the $700 line into the new uncharted territory, I feel that gold will possibly never go below $700 again.

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Uncharted territory. So what is the upside? 2500/oz with a US$ collapse.

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MONEY: Bullion coins in turbulent times

Monday, October 1, 2007

I never read any stories about the Iraqi economy during the regime change process. I would believe that bullion coins would be a store of value. Better than the worthless fiat currency.

Any one see anything?

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GOLDBUG: what are the Chinese going to do with 5T of worthless green paper

Monday, September 17, 2007

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north565.html

Bernanke’s Speech on September 18
by Gary North

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“We need a return to the free market. No more central bank follies in trying to set an appropriate interest rate – any interest rate. Let borrowers and lenders work this out among themselves. Why should anyone trust a group of academic economists with tenured positions in a government-created monopoly? I can’t think of a good reason.”

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The Learned Lord North’s attempt to put words into “Helicopter” Ben’s mouth is amusing. At least, there’s no record of him advocating the Gold Standard like Greenspan and losing his mind when he became Fed Chairman. Like Darth Vader, Greenspan turned to the dark side — fiat money. Ben is just inexperienced in the obfuscation. When this Ponzi scheme runs out, maybe the people will be in the streets looking for someone’s head. I’m sure that all the FED will be “off shore”.

No, until we get honest money, we will all be poor and tempest tossed. The only humor is what are the Chinese going to do with 5T of worthless green paper.

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GOLDBUG: Russell on gold bullion

Monday, August 27, 2007

Russell on gold bullion

The central bankers believe they can control the quantity of fiat money so that the junk they create will always possess purchasing power. History tells us that the central bankers are dreaming (or lying). When it becomes obvious that the central banks are producing too much paper and are therefore devaluing their fiat currencies, seasoned investors take that fiat currency and buy Picassos or homes near some shoreline or collectibles or gem-quality diamonds — or gold Gold moves up when people worry about fiat currency, and they want to accumulate real money.

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, August 23 2007.

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GOLDBUG: The Nightmare German Inflation

Sunday, August 12, 2007

http://www.usagold.com/germannightmare.html

The Nightmare German Inflation

from a NEWS & VIEWS SPECIAL REPORT

“The ones who fared best were the small minority who had the foresight to exchange marks into foreign money or gold very early, before new laws made this difficult and before the mark lost too much value.”

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If history teaches anything, it is that government cannot be trusted to manage money. When currency is not redeemable in gold, its value depends entirely on the judgment and the conscience of the politicians. (That is the situation in this country today.)

Especially in an economic crisis or a war, the pressure to inflate becomes overwhelming. Any alternative may seem politically disastrous. Whether it be the Roman emperors repeatedly debasing their coinage, the French revolutionary government printing a flood of assignats, John Law flooding France with debased money, or the Continental Congress issuing money until it was literally “not worth a Continental,” the story is similar. A government in financial straits finds its easiest recourse is to issue more and more money until the money loses its value. The entire process is accompanied by a barrage of explanations, propaganda and new regulations which hide the true situation from the eyes of most people until they have lost all their savings. In World War I, Germany — like other governments — borrowed heavily to pay its war costs. worthless money. This led to inflation, but not much more than in the U.S. during the same period. After the war there was a period of stability, but then the inflation resumed. By 1923, the wildest inflation in history was raging. Often prices doubled in a few hours. A wild stampede developed to buy goods and get rid of money. By late 1923 it took 200 billion marks to buy a loaf of bread.

Millions of the hard-working, thrifty German people found that their life’s savings would not buy a postage stamp. They were penniless. How could this happen in a highly civilized nation run at the time by intelligent, democratically chosen leaders? What happened to business, to wages and employment? How did some people manage to save their capital while a few speculators made fortunes?

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A wake up call?

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GOLDBUG: Limiting inflation

Saturday, August 11, 2007

http://www.mises.org/story/2660

The Gold Problem
By Ludwig von Mises
Posted on 8/10/2007

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Why have a monetary system based on gold? Because, as conditions are today and for the time that can be foreseen today, the gold standard alone makes the determination of money’s purchasing power independent of the ambitions and machinations of governments, of dictators, of political parties, and of pressure groups. The gold standard alone is what the nineteenth-century freedom-loving leaders (who championed representative government, civil liberties, and prosperity for all) called “sound money.”

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Big gooferment thrives on the inflation tax for a number of reasons. Probably the biggest easiest one is that they don’t have to go on the record and vote to raise taxes. With inflation, they just spend and print. The Fed is thrown into the mix to placate the bankers who understand the scam and could lead the intellectual debate against it. Linking money to some thing, anything, limits the gooferment’s ability to inflate the money supply. It doesn’t even have gold. Anything that prevents the printing press to create counterfeits. Gold has withstood the test of time.

The redeemabliity of a paper note into gold limits the number of notes that can be printed. Hence no inflation and stable prices.

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