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Friday, August 13, 2010

I LOVE RICK SANTELLI

He puts all these stupid bubbleheads on CNBC in their places.Let's hope he doesn't get let go from CNBC because of that. The best from today was when he answered the bubblehead whose name I don't even care to remember- said that the Fed made money on its mortgage bonds. Rick Santelli countered with the example of buying every single Pontiac Aztec ever made and marking it to model at outrageous prices. Of course you can show a profit he said. Then he asked what happens to the prices when you try to sell one... He tied that to the Fed's holding of mortgage bonds and how they were guaranteed by the Treasury and if it was not for the treasury making them whole, they would be losing a lot of money - not to mention if they were not marked to model, but let to freely trade.

The talk was similar of the questionable Bernanke claiming they were making money on those until a senator reminded him of how the treasury was making them whole and which is why they were not losing billions on it.

Bernanke and those bubbleheads are either living in a different universe or are outright lying. I think I've seen Bernanke in DC, so he must be living somewhere on earth....

Thursday, August 12, 2010

AIG Scandal and One of the Reasons Why Fed Should Be Abolished and Geithner and Bernanke Should Go To Jail

The AIG Bailout Scandal

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

China Not Comfortable With Treasuries Mid to Long Term

Yet another negative USD articel originating from Chinese authorities:

This is from BW:

"

Treasuries Lack Safety, Liquidity for China, Yu Says

August 03, 2010, 4:08 AM EDT
By Bloomberg News
(Adds government researcher’s comment from 7th paragraph.)
Aug. 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasuries fail to provide safety or liquidity when it comes to managing China’s $2.45 trillion foreign-exchange reserves, said Yu Yongding, a former central bank adviser.
“I do not think U.S. Treasuries are safe in the medium-and long-run,” Yu, a member of the state-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, wrote yesterday in an e-mailed response to questions. China is unable to sell the securities in a “big way” and a “scary trajectory” of budget deficits and a growing supply of U.S. dollars put their value at risk, he said.
The State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which manages the nation’s reserves, said last month that U.S. government debt has the benefits of “relatively good” safety, liquidity, low trading costs and market capacity. China’s holdings of Treasuries, the largest outside of the U.S., totaled $867.7 billion at the end of May, down from $900.2 billion in April and a record $939.9 billion in July 2009.
To help cool demand for the securities, China needs to curb the growth of its foreign reserves by intervening less in the currency market, Yu said. The People’s Bank of China said June 19 it would let the yuan float with reference to a basket of currencies, ending a two-year-old dollar peg.
The yuan has since appreciated 0.8 percent to 6.773 per dollar and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg predict the currency will end the year at 6.67, based on the median estimate. China limits appreciation by buying dollars, fueling its demand for Treasuries.
Less Intervention
“China has to depend more on demand and supply in the foreign exchange market for the determination of the yuan exchange rate,” Yu wrote. “Only God knows how much value that China has stored in the U.S. government securities will be left in the future when China needs to run down its reserves.”
The cost of pegging the Chinese currency to the dollar is “intolerably high” and threatens the welfare of Chinese people, Zhang Ming, deputy chief of the International Finance Research Office at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, wrote today on the website of China Finance 40 Forum.
“The U.S. government has strong incentives to reduce its real burden of debt through inflation and dollar devaluation,” he said. “Whichever way it is, the yuan-recorded market value of Treasuries will fall, causing huge capital losses to China’s central bank.”
Sliding Dollar
The dollar has weakened against all 16 major currencies monitored by Bloomberg in the past month, sliding 5.4 percent versus the euro and 4.7 percent against the pound. The Dollar Index, which the ICE futures exchange uses to track the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, is headed for its lowest close since April 15.
Premier Wen Jiabao in March urged the U.S. to take “concrete steps” to reassure investors about the safety of dollar assets after President Barack Obama stepped up spending to help end a recession. The White House predicts the U.S. budget deficit will hit a record $1.47 trillion this year, about 10 percent of gross domestic product.
An “appropriate” policy for China would be to allocate its reserves with reference to the weightings of Special Drawing Rights, a unit of account of the International Monetary Fund, Yu said in May. China bought a net 735.2 billion yen ($8.3 billion) of Japanese bonds in May, doubling purchases for this year.
--Editors: James Regan, Ven Ram
%CNY %USD
To contact the Bloomberg news staff on this story: Belinda Cao in Beijing at lcao4@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Regan at jregan19@bloomberg.net.
"

Central Bank Of China Supporting Gold Company Takeovers By Chinese Companies

 The Central Bank of China comments on gold are tantamount for the future of gold and dollars and the monetary system going forward.

Here is the Bloomberg article:

"
Gold Takeovers Set Record to Boost Fees at BMO, HSBC (Update1)
2010-08-03 11:36:09.499 GMT


     (Adds China’s acquisition plans in fifth paragraph.)

By Rebecca Keenan
    Aug. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Global gold mining takeovers set a record this year with “chest-beating” miners chasing deals as the price of the metal surged, boosting fees at advisory banks BMO Capital Markets, HSBC Bank Plc and Merrill Lynch.
     Kinross Gold Corp.’s purchase of Red Back Mining Inc. for about $7.1 billion yesterday took the value of gold deals to $32 billion this year, accounting for 38 percent of all mining acquisitions, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s more than twice last year’s total for the industry.
     “The reason why we may have seen a pickup in activity this year is because gold prices are around $1,200” an ounce, said Greg Fournier, Hong Kong-based head of Asia Pacific region metals and mining investment banking at Merrill Lynch. “If you have a view that the gold price is strong and is going to go higher then acquiring more reserves or producing properties today makes sense.”
     Bullion advanced to a record $1,266.50 an ounce in June and is set for a 10th straight annual gain, the longest winning streak since at least 1920, attracting investment by fund managers including George Soros and John Paulson.

                         China’s Growth

     Takeovers may increase as China, the world’s largest gold producer, backs acquisitions abroad. The nation’s central bank today said it will help its bullion companies expand overseas by extending credit lines and offering loans. The bank also said it will let more banks import and export gold, and wants to spur the development of yuan-denominated derivatives trading.
     “China’s domestic production of gold, albeit being the largest in the world, cannot satisfy its demand,” Ellison Chu, managing director of the precious-metals desk at Standard Bank Asia Ltd., said in Hong Kong.
     Bank of Montreal’s BMO Capital Markets unit remains the top gold adviser, with nine deals worth $20 billion, according to the data. That’s followed by HSBC and Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Lynch unit, which wasn’t in the top 20 last year. BMO Capital is also the top mining acquisitions adviser this year.
     “There’s always a battle of the elephants with gold companies, they like to be the biggest,” Grant Craighead, managing director and co-founder of Sydney-based research company Stock Resource, said after Kinross agreed to buy Red Back yesterday. “It’s a real chest-beating industry.”
     Newcrest Mining Ltd. and Resolute Mining Ltd. are among potential takeover targets, according to Midas Fund Inc., which holds Newmont Mining Corp. and Barrick Gold Corp.

                       Depleting Reserves

     “There is likely to be more consolidation in the medium-to long-terms as gold producers struggle to grow organically,”
said Evy Hambro, who oversees about $35 billion in natural- resources funds for BlackRock Inc. “This is a global trend,”
said Hambro, whose responsibilities include Blackrock’s Gold & General Fund, which has gained an annualized 24 percent in the past five years.
     Gold discoveries have dropped by 4 million ounces a year for the past three decades, Credit Suisse Group AG’s Michael Slifirski said in November, citing a presentation from Gold Fields Ltd.
     “Gold companies have finite assets,” said Richard Phillips, managing director of merger adviser Greenhill Caliburn Pty Ltd. “Producers are under pressure to continue to buy or find gold to replenish the production pipeline and many companies look to do both.”
     Greenhill, founded by Robert Greenhill, agreed in March to buy Sydney-based Caliburn Partnership Pty for as much as $181 million. The company is advising Lihir Gold Ltd., which has agreed to an $8.9 billion takeover from Newcrest, in the second- biggest gold acquisition so far this year.

                          Biggest Deal

     KazakhGold Group Ltd.’s $11 billion bid to take over its parent OAO Polyus Gold to create the largest producer among the former Soviet republics is the biggest deal this year.
     China “will place heavy emphasis on supporting large-scale gold producers in their development and overseas expansion plans,” the nation’s central bank said in today’s statement.
     Zijin Mining Industry Co., China’s biggest gold producer, this year pulled a planned A$545 million ($498 million) purchase of Australia’s Indophil Resources NL after failing to win approval from the Chinese government. The transaction would have given the company a stake in the Philippines’ Tampakan project, Southeast Asia’s largest untapped copper and gold deposit.

                          Size Matters

     “Larger size means greater access to capital markets, geographic and metallurgical diversity, with increased options to redeploy capital,” said New York-based Tom Winmill, who helps manage $120 million at the Midas Fund, which had an 83 percent gain last year, including dividends. He said there will “definitely” be more consolidation in the gold industry.
      Barrick, the world’s biggest producer, and Newmont, the largest U.S. gold company, have both signaled in the past two months that they may consider “opportunistic” acquisitions.
Producers may generate more than $80 billion in free cash flow through to 2015, according to a Merrill Lynch report on July 27.
     To be sure, elevated valuations and restricted access to loans may damp appetite for takeovers. Europe’s debt crisis and global market volatility curbed the attractiveness of riskier asset classes in the first half, making it more expensive for companies to finance new deals.

                      Limits on Borrowing

     “Potential acquirers and operators have been continually disappointed at how debt markets aren’t functioning,” said Peter Arden, a Melbourne-based senior mining analyst at Ord Minnett Ltd., an affiliate of JPMorgan Chase & Co. “It will constrain” takeovers, he said.
     Gold will climb to $1,500 an ounce by the end of 2011, Merrill Lynch said last month, maintaining a forecast made shortly after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed in September 2008.
     “The larger companies like Barrick and Newmont and Goldcorp, Kinross in North America in particular, they are all very active consolidators,” Merrill Lynch’s Fournier said in an interview. “They will continue to be pretty active buying smaller companies and also potentially we’ll see some mergers of some of the senior companies at some point in time.”

For Related News and Information:
Today’s top metals stories METT
Global commodity prices, data GLCO
Commodity price forecasts CPF

--With assistance from Shani Raja in Sydney and Feiwen Rong in Beijing. Editors: Hwee Ann Tan, Amanda Jordan

To contact the reporter on this story:
Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at +61-3-9228-8721 or rkeenan5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Andrew Hobbs at +61-2-9777-8642 or
ahobbs4@bloomberg.net
"

Monday, August 2, 2010

Banks Giving Out Unallocated Gold Of Customers After Being Approached By BIS

There is something seriously BS about the BIS and the gold swap devised to bring down the price of gold and mask the shortages of physical gold.

Here is the FT article.

BIS gold swaps mystery is unravelled

By Jack Farchy and Javier Blas in London
Published: July 29 2010 19:10 | Last updated: July 29 2010 19:10
Three big banks – HSBC, Société Générale and BNP Paribas – were among more than 10 based in Europe that swapped gold with the Bank for International Settlements in a series of unusual deals that caused confusion in the gold market and left traders scratching their heads.

The mystery of who was involved in deals with the BIS, the bank for central banks, and what they were doing, has become clearer.
The Financial Times has learnt that the swaps, which were initiated by the BIS, came as the so-called “central banks’ bank” sought to obtain a return on its huge US dollar-denominated holdings. The BIS asked the commercial banks to pledge a gold swap as guarantee for the dollar deposits they were taking from the Basel-based institution.
When news of the swaps, which were disclosed in a note to the BIS’s latest annual report, circulated among traders this month, it caused a sharp fall in the gold price, sending bullion to what was then six-week lows. Gold has since fallen further: it was trading at $1,164 an ounce on Thursday.
Some analysts speculated that the swap deals were a surreptitious bail-out of the European banking system ahead of last week’s publication of stress tests. But bankers and officials have described the transactions as “mutually beneficial”.
“The client approached us with the idea of buying some gold with the option to sell it back,” said one European banker, referring to the BIS.
Another banker said: “From time to time, central banks or the BIS want to optimise the return on their currency holdings.”
Nonetheless, two central bank officials said some of the commercial banks also needed the US dollar funding and were keen to act as a counterparty with the BIS. The gold swaps began in December and surged in January, when the Greek debt crisis erupted and European commercial banks were facing funding problems.
Jaime Caruana, head of the BIS, told the FT the swaps were “regular commercial activities” for the bank.
In a short note in its annual report, published at the end of June, the BIS said it had taken 346 tonnes of gold in exchange for foreign currency in “swap operations” in the financial year to March 31.
In the same fiscal year, the BIS took three times the amount of currency deposits it had taken the previous year as central banks around the world became concerned about using commercial banks for their deposits and turned to the Basel institution.
In a gold swap, one counterparty, in this case a bank, sells its gold to the other, in this case the BIS, with an agreement to buy it back at a later date.
The gold swaps were, in effect, a form of collateral against the US-dollar deposits placed by the BIS with commercial banks. Gold is widely regarded as one of the safest assets, but has not been widely used as collateral in the past. Mr Caruana described the transactions as “loans with a guarantee”.
Investors have bought physical gold in record amounts during the past two years and deposited it in commercial banks. European financial institutions are awash with bullion and some are trying to pledge gold as a guarantee.
George Milling-Stanley, managing director for government affairs at the industry-backed World Gold Council, said: “The gold swaps commercial banks carried out with the BIS demonstrate the effectiveness of gold as an asset class, because even in the depths of the worst liquidity crisis in living memory, institutions with access to gold were able to make use of it to generate dollar liquidity.
“The issue also feeds right into the current debate among Asian central banks about the lack of assets suitable for use as cross-border collateral.”
Last year, CME Group, the world’s largest derivatives exchange, allowed investors to use gold futures as collateral for some operations. Other institutions, such as central banks, had begun using and requesting gold as collateral in the past two years as perceptions of counterparty risk have risen, bankers and officials said.
The gold used in the swaps came mainly from investors’ deposit accounts at the European commercial banks. Some investors prefer to deposit their gold in so-called “allocated accounts”, which restrict the custodian banks’ ability to use the gold in their market operations by assigning them specific bullion bars. But other investors prefer cheaper “unallocated accounts”, which give banks access to their bullion for their day-to-day operations.
Officials said other commercial banks obtained the gold from the lending market, borrowing bullion from emerging countries’ central banks.