Posted on 03/14/2016 5:27:18 AM PDT by Citizen Zed
Summary:
The creation of global money supply will lead to an aggregate reduction in the value of global currencies relative to gold in the long-term.
The rise of the fractional reserve banking system as a model for the majority of established central banks will continue to exacerbate the money supply problem.
Gold's value to global currencies will continue to appreciate with global monetary stimulus measures on the rise.
The relative values of global currencies are driven by macroeconomic principles such as money supply, and this discussion deserves more attention.
(Excerpt) Read more at seekingalpha.com ...
True, but if ease was all there was to it nobody would store either. When the goal is profit, I look at the market and my take is there's a lot bigger payoff from storing oil than gold.
Right. I suppose you’d have to buy silver straight from the mines. If you could buy enough (and it wouldn’t take that much money relatively) industry wouldn’t get the silver they need and then the price would go crazy as they try to outbid each other in order to get it.
LOL.... I'm going to take that to the bank!
Yes, meaning gold has held up well considering the fall in oil. If gold is so great why has it lost 50% of its value since 2008?
Markets seem to be on a path of insanity. If gold and oil are forecasting a major meltdown, why are US markets doing so well?
The result is that loose monetary policy by the Fed and the ECB do not readily yield inflation. Indeed, inflation must be kept low so that interest rates do not spike upward and wreck the budgets of the developed world's governments though increased carrying costs for their massive debt loads. A significant rise in the price of gold seems implausible in such circumstances.
JP Morgan is one of the organizations that doesn’t want the price of gold or silver to go up too much. They may be buying physical silver simply to use in the future to keep the price from going up too much in the future.
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