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by Marc Davis - BNWnews

“Bigger is better” is a bit of boastful bravado that proud Texans are renowned for proclaiming, often with a genteel southern smile. After all, the ever-industrious citizens of this sprawling, oil-rich southern state like to do things on a grand scale.

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CBC News

WATCH VIDEO >>

Posted by Wealth Wire

The debt-based monetary system creates an illusion of wealth. It allows for claims on real goods to significantly exceed the actual amount of real goods. You then have a number of people believing they have wealth, since they have claims (pieces of paper or tokens) showing that they have these real assets, whereas, in reality, if everyone was to claim the real goods, there would not be enough to go around.

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Interview With Ted Butler

Ted Butler is one of the better-known silver analysts (and longtime silver bulls) in the world. The founder of Butler Research, a monthly publication focused on precious metals, Butler has been pounding the table on silver since way back when it was trading for $4/ounce.

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By Marc Davis, BNWnews.ca

With potash prices spiking higher in response to surging global foods costs, the world’s most advanced “independent” potash project is in the cross-hairs of an increasing number of deep-pocketed suitors.

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Author: Brian Sylvester

Austerity programmes across Europe, continued debt problems in the US and further political uncertainty all point to a continued uptrend in gold prices, says Brien Lundin. A Gold Report Interview.

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By Michael Brush, MSN Money

Recent dips are giving us another chance to get in on the great gold rush. The factors driving the metal higher -- broken governments and fragile economies -- aren't going away.

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Author: Lawrence Williams

Speaking at GATA's sold-out Gold Rush conference in London, Eric Sprott affirmed his strong views on gold and his even more positive thoughts on silver.

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Edmund Conway

That's right: come Monday morning we will have managed to survive four decades of fiat money – though, given the chaos in markets in recent weeks, it is anyone's guess how much longer it will last.

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By Myra P. Saefong, MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Silver has always been seen as less precious than gold, but it has certainly proved itself worthy of investors’ attention — and demand for it as a hedge against the world’s financial woes is likely to grow.

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Edmond J. Bugos

After launching the Shanghai Gold Exchange in October 2002, the exchange’s principals announced a three-part plan to liberalize trading: 1) establish a deferred delivery service (as physical transactions are settled pretty much the same day); 2) create gold-related investment products in order to promote domestic investment demand and create liquidity; 3) integrate the exchange into international markets – which includes expanding import/export licenses and allowing foreign entities to become members.

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Author: Amanda Cooper (Reuters)

Analysts believe that gold stocks could well take the upper hand after a long period of underperformance in relation to physical bullion as the flow of cheap money from the U.S. slows

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By The Economist

Striking gold is generally considered a slice of good luck. Owning it, however, is a sign that you fear the worst. Some people buy the yellow stuff because they think it looks pretty, to be sure. But the quintessential gold bug is an investor who expects every form of paper wealth to collapse, along with civilisation itself.

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By Marc Davis, www.BNWnews.ca

Though Nevada’s world-famous gold fields have historically yielded over 150 million gold ounces, they are still proving to be geologically fertile hunting grounds for exploration-minded junior mining companies. Two good examples are Auex Ventures and Fronteer Gold.

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By David Galland, Casey Research

While there are many reasons that gold and silver are going to keep moving higher as the fiat currencies trend lower, at our recent Casey Research Summit in Boca Raton, faculty member Mike Maloney pointed out a fact that, while obvious in hindsight, I had never heard mentioned previously.

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Author: Fayen Wong
SHANGHAI (REUTERS)  -

London specialist consultancy GFMS reckons Chinese gold imports could exceed 400 tonnes in 2011 with silver, too, expected to exceed domestic supply.

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By William Mbaho, BNWnews.ca

Heightened global demand for vanadium especially from China, is prompting the global steel industry to aggressively seek out new supplies, especially in the U.S. where this 21st century metal is becoming increasingly indispensible. Even U.S. President Obama is championing this metal’s promise for green energy applications.

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Author: Geoff Candy

The yellow metals performance in the face of silver's washout last week was rather impressive and an addition to the factors why UBS expects gold to continue going higher this year.

Gold's performance last week, in the face of a drop of around 30% in the price of silver was rather impressive and, could be an indicator of things to come.

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By Marc Davis, www.BNWnews.ca

The quest to commercialize one of Latin America’s last undeveloped major gold deposits is one major step closer to a prospectively big pay day for its unlikely owner – a small gold explorer named Exeter Resource.

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By Debbie Carlson 
Of Kitco News 

After a sharp drop in prices this week, the outlook is hazy for precious metals price direction, but some analysts believe the metals could see the slide ending next week, at least for gold.

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Author: Lawrence Williams

Some observers think gold is in a bubble, but silver has been rising far faster. Can this momentum be maintained or is now the time to take at least some profits as the price closes on $50.

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Author: Jan Harvey (Reuters)

Silver rose to its strongest since 1980 and Gold hit five week highs on the back of growing unrest in the Middle East

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By Marc Davis, www.BNWnews.ca

Silver promises to become the next big buzzword among investors in 2011 and beyond, according to one of the investment industry’s most prescient and successful experts on precious metals.

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Jason Hamlin


There are some bizarre things going on in the silver market at the moment, reminiscent of the supply shortages and high premiums witnessed in 2008. For starters, silver is currently in both short-term and long-term backwardation, suggesting there is higher demand for silver NOW than in the future.

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The Economist

Rising commodity prices both reflect and threaten the world’s economic recovery.

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Ryan Jordan

Cheap, Industrial Silver is an illusion

From the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008, contrarian investors began murmuring about getting into gold and short term Treasuries. It was almost a mantra: gold and Treasuries… gold and Treasuries. Something missing?

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The Economist

Commodity prices are surging at a very early stage of the cycle

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By Frank Holmes

Wall Street has been calling gold a bubble since 2005 when it hit $500. Some media naysayers remained negative even as they wrote the headlines proclaiming record highs and saw gold rise almost 30 percent in the past 12 months.

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By Marc Davis, www.BNWnews.ca

The ‘Holy Grail’ of renewable energy – grid scale power storage – appears to be finally within reach. So is the ability to make electric cars far more practical or user-friendly. 

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by Egon von Greyerz - Matterhorn AM

We now live in a world where governments print worthless pieces of paper to buy other worthless pieces of paper that combined with worthless derivatives, finance assets whose values are totally dependent on all these worthless debt instruments.  Thus most of these assets are also worth-less. 

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The One-handed Economist

The establishment argument against gold comes down to the statement that it is a collectable that earns no yield. Art, rare coins, stamps and gold and silver bullion do not earn a yield. Stocks, bonds and real estate earn yields, so the prudent investor should focus on these assets rather than gold or precious metals.

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Lawrence Roulston

With gold well into record territory, investor enthusiasm is boiling over.

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By Jerry Western with Lorimer Wilson
www.FinancialArticle
SummariesToday.com

If we continue down the same economic path that we have been following for the last four decades - and there is no indication that we won't even if we wanted to, or could, at this point - it is mathematically inevitable that gold and silver will approach infinity in U.S. dollar terms at some point in the future. Yes, approach infinity!

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Why gold and silver are breaking out

Author: Julian Phillips

Truth and consequences. Rising oil prices due to the Middle Eastern and North African unrest raises the prospect of the double dip again, while Asian buying continues to underpin gold and silver.

We have yet to complete two months of 2011 and so far we have already seen several attempted revolutions in Middle Eastern countries, with, so far, two of them successful.   All of them have been unexpected and have caught the world by surprise.   

We are on the brink of the next successful revolution [Libya] disrupting the oil market and taking prices so high that we are likely to see them negatively impact growth in the developed world.  

The prospect of the dreaded, "double-dip" recession is now back on our screens.   Should food inflation continue to hurt the entire global economy, then words like ‘stagflation' and ‘depression' will reappear in much of the financial world.  

With developed world recoveries still tenuous at best and weakened from nearly four years of financial crises, there is little capacity to absorb this new threat.   If it does come about, then the strength to resist yet another one of the many potential crises maturing in the last few years will not be there.   Our previous articles on the ‘validity of technical analysis in gold and silver markets' have already proved correct and are hopefully prompting investors to reassess their viewpoints on gold and particularly silver.

 REFLECTIONS ON WHAT COULD HAPPEN

We are living in a world of consequences, all of them unforeseen, yet caused by the faulty structure of the financial world laid down decades ago.   The ‘credit crunch' that rippled into the banking crisis, then the sovereign debt crisis was a reflection of greed and the ‘live now, pay later' way of life in the developed world.   Each of the consequences of every stage of these crises was unforeseen.   Yet each was a consequence of the sanctioning of debt leverage in all walks of financial life.  

Energy prices are much higher than pre-credit crunch levels and expected to move higher.   At the time, much was written about ensuring that oil supplies needed to accommodate both the developed world and the rapidly emerging Asian world, which accounted for half the world's population.  

Have oil supplies been expanded to accommodate such Asian growth?   No they haven't!   So there is an oil crisis in the pipeline.  

The governments of the oil producing Middle East have long been secured by the main developed world powers to protect the vital interest of oil supplies.   The fact that they were corrupt and kept their own people in poverty was ignored.   It was a matter of time before that crisis erupted.   Food and energy inflation provided the trigger.  

Will the new governments in these countries continue to support the dollar pricing policies on oil or will they accept all currencies and review their priorities concerning which customers to favor.   Will we see prices like $145 if Libya falls [they supply 2% of global oil supplies]?   If Bahrain falls, will it bring down the eastern area of Saudi Arabia?     If so, the shape of the oil world will have to be re-sculptured.  

In turn, the economic future of the developed and emerging world will change and cause pressures between the different trading blocs that have not even been contemplated.  2011 is already the most dramatic year of this century and it still has ten months to go.

 CHANGES ARE A' COMING.....

It is in our nature to want our national, political, financial and economic environments not to change, leaving us to get on with our lives in a somewhat myopic way.   Change, when it does come, is surprising every time.    It shouldn't be, but we tend to be so focused it always is.   As with the credit and subsequent crunches, we tend to feel everything will right itself eventually, it's just a case of waiting.   Well it hasn't and here we are suffering the next set of structural crisis consequences.

So what should we do?

-          We have always followed a policy of extrapolation, taking the events and structures of today and playing them forward to the future.   Hope is not part of this exercise, only realities that are present and real now.  

-         We do not wait until statistics from the past confirm our viewpoint.   We need to be able to take the factors unwinding now, knowing that statistics will confirm our conclusions later.   This takes us to the front from the back of the queue.   For instance, we were confirming central banks had turned sellers of gold nearly two years ago.   It is now being confirmed by economic statistics provided now.

-         We need the correct perspective in order to weigh the different market influencing factors in a balanced way.   For instance, we don't see gold in a ‘bull' market, but paper currencies in a ‘bear' market after their ‘bull' market last century from 1971.

-         We need to accept that the gold and silver markets are now global markets.   Asian markets are the most robust in this regard so they are now in the center of the market.   These encompass investors who do not buy for profit.   In the developed world, investors buy for profit, but are having a diminishing effect on the gold price itself.   Yet western investors continue to believe they are the main influence on the gold price.   They will sincerely believe that the level of U.S. interest rates will dictate the future of gold prices.   The average Asian buyer doesn't even know what these are.   Yet, it is the Asian buyer that is having and will have the greatest impact on the gold price.  

-         Our last two articles on technical analysis highlighted the dwindling influence of technical factors on the gold price too.   The fundamentals are the main influence with technical factors clarifying short-term moves.

-         We must accept that the world financial climate has darkened and that the storms of consequences are fundamentally destructive.   Like adjusting to winter from summer our expectation have to be tempered by this reality.   This allows us to protect ourselves from the coming storms.  Where we are optimistic, we have weighed the pertinent realities before reaching that conclusion.   We then act on that.   We may well find that the realities of crises have given us tremendous opportunities both for profit and to protect those profits.

 HOW WILL ALL THIS AFFECT THE GOLD AND SILVER MARKETS?

The fulcrum of the gold and silver markets at the moment remains rapidly growing Asian demand.   Following this is the inability of the supplies of gold and silver to accommodate this growing demand.   A factor that will grow in the days to come will be the change in the developed world to holding gold rather than selling it when prices indicate a correction.   The corrections we have seen in the last few years have shortened and become shallower than the previous one. 

 Just as central banks in the developed world have stopped selling, [but not yet turned to buying] so private investors are holding far longer than has been the case in the past.  

Asian demand is totally different in that investors there buy to hold as financial security, just as we used to buy houses.  

We expect to see this trend start to grow in the west as the developed world declines economically and the East rises.

 Julian Phillips is a long term analyst of the global gold and silver markets and is the founder and principal contributor for Global Watch - Gold Forecaster -www.goldforecaster.com and Silver Forecaster - www.silverforecaster.com