Search This Blog

June 4, 2012

Why should I Buy Britain’s #Gold Back? | The Daily Gold

The aim of the campaign is, in short, to get individuals to buy back their share of the gold which Gordon Brown sold. We hope to show that gold investment is entirely accessible. For instance, to buy back your share of the gold which Gordon Brown sold, it would cost you less than £500 (at current gold prices).
But why should you care? Why should you buy gold bullion?

Read the Comment below:

Why should I Buy Britain’s Gold Back?



Posted MAY 30 2012 by JAN SKOYLES in 

This month, The Real Asset Company announced the launch of a new campaign to Buy Britain’s Gold Back.

The aim of the campaign is, in short, to get individuals to buy back their share of the gold which Gordon Brown sold. We hope to show that gold investment is entirely accessible. For instance, to buy back your share of the gold which Gordon Brown sold, it would cost you less than £500 (at current gold prices).

But why should you care? Why should you buy gold bullion?

Well, it’s all very well saying that it isn’t our fault that 395 tonnes of gold was sold over a decade ago, and so we should get the government to buy it back. But, as one MP pointed out to me, the government doesn’t have any money. They are running around shouting about the need for austerity, so they’re not likely to see it as a positive move for them to be spending £13 billion on an asset which does not, in the short term, directly impact the electorate.
As recent events have shown, politicians and their economists aren’t great at predicting what the best remedy for this situation is. This isn’t so surprising considering that it was their policies and election friendly spending which got us into the financial crisis.
The problem is, worryingly, that the majority of politicians don’t even truly understand how the monetary system works but they believe they can fix it with yet more debt, achieved through money printing – the medicine which placed the UK as the West’s most leveraged nation in the first place.
The Real Asset Co believes it is time to start taking our money back into our own hands in placing it outside of the banking system in an asset which is tested and proven as the best store of value during financial crises.

What is money?

Money is no longer what our ancestors referred to as money. Our money today is supported by nothing except confidence in the government. Your notes which read ‘I promise to pay the bearer on demand the sum of…’ is just there as a throwback to when the British pound was backed by gold and silver. One hundred years ago, an individual knew that their paper note was a true reflection of the gold which was in the bank.
Now, our money really does grow on trees – it is paper.
The apparent ‘beauty’ of paper money, or fiat money, is that it can be created at will; a feature which is escalated by the electronic banking system.
Some argue that the strength of having a currency which is not backed by gold enables us to grow faster as a nation, increases living standards and it allows us to make huge leaps in science and technology.
Governments like this type of money as it means more can be created (in various ways) in order to fund projects such as new roads or increase benefits.
It sounds very pleasant, and like something which benefits everyone, but our paper money is unfortunately a tried and failed experiment. No money, which is not backed by gold or silver in the bank, has ever succeeded. Money has only been in its current form since 1971, before this it was pegged to gold in one way or another.
When money is pegged to a finite and rare commodity, such as gold, then there is a limit on how fast wealth can be accumulated, how quickly spending can be carried out and most importantly, a limit to how much one can spend.
When the Bank of England announced that they were going to embark on quantitative easing, the general public were left feeling confused. After all, we were all taught at school, from our history books, that the money printing in Germany led to devastating consequences.
The problem we have now is that the majority of people believe that we need more money in order to create wealth. If this were the case then Zimbabwe would be the wealthiest nation and we would be kowtowing to Mugabe’s demands.
Each time more money is printed then the value of that currency is devalued significantly. The stock of money since the link to gold was broken has increased several times over. Since 1967, the pound has lost 90% of its value, in America the dollar has lost 97% of its value.

But what does this have to do with you?

Several studies show that gold has maintained its purchasing power since the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Not only this, but in times of economic distress gold has proven itself as a far better wealth preserver than other assets one normally places their money in.
The most simple explanation for the pound’s loss of purchasing power is the continued devaluation through inflationary policies implemented by governments in the latter half of the 20th Century.
In the UK, there is now £1.1 trillion on deposit, but there are a plethora of complex and confusing products offered to savers. Sadly it is easier to apply for a credit card, with 0% interest, than it is to apply for a long-term savings account.
The quantitative easing programme currently being carried out by the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee is designed to help boost the economy and help to keep individuals spending and companies investing. The bank rate has been ‘maintained’ at 0.5% since March 2009, the same time Quantitative Easing began.
This is all very well but unfortunately it’s no good for savers. The current level of inflation means that many savers will now be experiencing a negative rate of return on their savings. £41.8 billion a year is confiscated from pensioners and savers as a result of this. The Centre for Economic and Business Research estimate the bank rate will stay this way until 2016.
At present your money whether sat in your purse, piggy bank or your bank account is subject to decisions made by politicians and bankers, who we have so far seen, do not have the interests of long-term savers at heart.
By buying back that small amount of gold which Gordon Brown sold, just 13,3g per individual you are looking after your money, it’s in your control and it’s the most precious thing in the world – gold.
You have to choose between trusting to the natural stability of gold and the natural stability of the honesty and intelligence of the members of the government. And, with due respect to these gentlemen, I advise you, as long as the capitalist system lasts, to vote for gold.” George Bernard Shaw
Buy Britain’s Gold Back!


Please Note: Information published here is provided to aid your thinking and investment decisions, not lead them. You should independently decide the best place for your money, and any investment decision you make is done so at your own risk. Data included here within may already be out of date.
About the Author
Jan SkoylesJan first became interested in precious metals and sound money when she met Ned Naylor-Leyland whilst working at Cheviot Asset Management in the summer of 2010. Jan then went on to write her undergraduate dissertation on the use of precious metals in the monetary system. After graduating from university Jan joined The Real Asset Co research desk and now contributes to the Cobden Centre, The Commentator, The Renegade Economist and Market Oracle.View all posts by Jan Skoyles →

Why should I Buy Britain’s Gold Back? | The Daily Gold

May 31, 2012

BIS may consider making gold a Tier 1 asset for commercial banks with 100% weighting rather than Tier 3 asset with just 50% risk weighting as it does today.

Dennis Gartman noted today the following:


Despite the one day, onerous and expensive bearish shift... which has been replaced by the bullish reversal yesterday... we note the following comments made earlier this week by Mr. Ross Norman, the CEO of Sharps Pixley in London, entitled: The Next Big Thing in Gold: Possible Purchase of 1700 Tonnes:


Banking capital adequacy ratios, once the domain of banking specialists are set to become centre stage for the gold market as well as the wider economy. In response to the global banking crisis the rules are to be tightened in terms of the assets that banks must hold and this is potentially going to very much favour gold. The Basel Committee for Bank Supervision (or BCBS) as part of the BIS are arguably the highest authority in banking supervision and it is their role to define capital requirements through the forthcoming Basel III rules.


In short, they are meeting to consider making gold a Tier 1 asset for commercial banks with 100% weighting rather than a Tier 3 asset with just a 50% risk weighting as it does today. At the same time they are set to increase the amount of capital banks must set aside as well. A double win potentially.


Hitherto banks have been much dis- incentivised to hold gold while being encouraged to hold arguably riskier assets such as equity capital, currencies and debt instruments, none of which have fared too well in the crisis. With this potential change in capital adequacy requirements. Bank purchases of gold would drive up its value relative to other high quality qualifying assets, increasing its desirability for regulatory purposes further. This should result in gold being re-priced to bring it on a par with all other high quality assets.
Currently banks have to have core Tier 1 capital ratio of 4% of which will rise to 6% from the beginning of next year. In addition to its store of value merits, central to the argument in favour of gold as a bank reserve is its countercyclical nature to most other assets in that it tends to be inversely correlated. Gold is ideal as it bears no credit risk. It involves no other counterparty and it is no one's liability. It is a reserve asset diversifier if you like.

This is a treble win for gold - it would be a major endorsement of its role in preserving wealth and as a store of value from the highest financial authority, it would lead to significant purchases of gold by major financial institutions and it would lead to a reappraisal of its value with respect to other Tier 1 capital such as quality sovereign debt. Under the new rules gold could become a very significantly larger proportion of a reserve pool which is about to grow very much larger.

This is very bullish news for gold... very bullish; but at the moment it matters really very little, although it shall in the not-too-distant future. At the moment, the only thing that matters is Europe and that means deflation, liquidation and cash. All else is of little interest until further notice. 

One of the finest opportunities to buy gold in the whole bull market - Embry - #GOLD ANALYSIS - Mineweb.com

One of the finest opportunities to buy gold in the whole bull market - Embry

For Sprott's John Embry the current level represents a strong buying opportunity because nothing in recent months has really been gold unfriendly.


Author: Geoff Candy
Posted:  Wednesday , 30 May 2012
GRONINGEN (Mineweb) - 

While gold has fallen significantly since hitting a peak in September last year, according to Sprott asset management's chief investment strategist, John Embry, nothing in this period has been "gold unfriendly".

Indeed, Embry believes that there has been a great deal of interference within the market with a lot of people trying to make the global economic picture look better than it actually is. And, as a result, at current levels, gold represents " one of the finest opportunities if not the finest in the entire bull market which is now in its 12th year."

Embry is nothing if not bullish about the price of gold. Speaking on Mineweb.com's Gold Weekly podcast, he said, "I think gold is going to $10,000 at some point and it's going to have nothing to do with the cost to dig it out of the ground, it's going to have everything to do with the fact that people just don't think their money is going to be worth anything."

To back up his claim he says one just needs to look at the state of global budget deficits.

"They're out of control and they [politicians] are not going to get them back in control because austerity just makes budget deficits bigger. So, I think you're waiting for that moment of recognition when people realise 'Oh my God this paper currency that I've just clung to for the last 40 years isn't going to buy me a loaf of bread in two years.'"

He adds, "Gold is the mortal enemy of the fiat paper currency system that we are operating and have been operating for 40 years. People are beginning to realise that this money is going to be turned into confetti and the authorities are scared to death that they are going to make the connection that gold is a good idea...People aren't making the correct connection that gold is what you should be holding in this environment - that will change."

For Embry, one of the major problems is that while, understandably, a great deal of attention is being currently focused on Europe, the situation in the US is equally as dire.

"I spent a lot of time studying the real US economic statistics and I don't think there's any recovery of any substance whatsoever ... I think the most shocking statistic that has come out in the last nine months is the fact that last year the US monetised 61% of its budget deficit. That's staggering. I can't even conceive of that, yet they did it and no one seems to care."

But, he does agree with other commentators, such as Ian McAvity, that if Europe were to implode or if the banking system got into a great deal of difficulty, it would go viral around the whole world almost immediately and no-one would be immune.

"The majority view, which is propounded by the US and a lot of the European countries, will prevail and austerity will go by the boards and essentially we will refinance the European banks and it will be wildly inflationary," he says.

Read the article online here: One of the finest opportunities to buy gold in the whole bull market - Embry - GOLD ANALYSIS - Mineweb.com | The world's premier mining and mining investment website Mineweb

ShareThis

MasterMetals’ Tweets