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By Bill Haynes |
October 30, 2012
Despite having publicly declared his bullishness on gold when it was trading below $300, Frank Giustra is still bullish on gold at the present levels. In case you do not know who Frank Giustra is, he comes with extraordinary credentials.
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By Bill Haynes |
August 29, 2012
Would $10,000 gold be so bad if it came with a sound monetary policy? Besides, where do analysts think the price is going if controls are not put on how many dollars the Fed creates? Many critics see the official US debt rising to $20 trillion by 2016 at the...
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By Bill Haynes |
August 9, 2012
While several heads of Federal Reserve Banks have called for more quantitative easing, Boston’s Fed Head Eric Rosengren has upped the ante and is calling for “open-ended” quantitative easing of a “substantial magnitude.” No joke.
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By Bill Haynes |
July 30, 2012
Regardless of when the Fed announces more quantitative easing, it will appear to be bending to public opinion on monetary policy, not a development that makes the Fed appear to be the final answer on what monetary policy should be.
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By Bill Haynes |
July 24, 2012
If Leila Trabelsi of Tunisia did escape with the gold – and she probably did as she and hubby are living luxurious lives in Saudi Arabia – she joins a long, historical parade of gold grabbers.
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By Bill Haynes |
July 11, 2012
To make its position tenable, the Establishment ignores the history of fiat money, which derives its value from government decree but nearly always ends up worthless. Paper, although a useful commodity, is cheap and has long been governments’ preferred fiat money.
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By Bill Haynes |
June 18, 2012
Notable mainstream economists and influential policy makers are calling for more quantitative easing – so many that QE3 is a given. Officially, it will be QE3, but in actuality it will be QE4 because “Operation Twist” is quantitative easing with another name.
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By Bill Haynes |
May 7, 2012
Actually, such action in gold is – to me – proof that gold is still in the early stages of this bull market. Yes, gold is now in the 11th year of this run, but it’s still the early stages.
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By Bill Haynes |
March 7, 2012
The reactions to last week’s hammering of gold and silver further exhibits that we are still in the early stages of a long-term precious metals bull market. With the declines in gold and silver, sentiment turned bearish almost instantly, which is what the sellers wanted.