the year is sneaking up on me, and I cannot find enough time to write as much as I would like to before the year ends. I have been getting bits of information that lead me to believe that our all mighty dollar may be headed down again. It is not coincidence that gold has held up very well even as the markets and commodities collapse. I'm reprinting a piece that I found to day, it shows how gold is in very high demand and it is an indication that the world is waking up to the fact that the US is printing dollars as fast as it can.
Swiss gold bullion in huge demand as trust in banks dives
Swiss gold refiners are having great difficulty in keeping up with demand for gold bullion leading to long delivery times as investors wary of other stores of wealth.
Author: Arnd Wiegmann and Lisa Jucca
Posted: Wednesday , 17 Dec 2008
MENDRISIO/ZURICH, Switzerland (Reuters) -
Sealed off by grey concrete walls and barbed wire, the workmen in protective glasses and steel-toed boots at this smelter cannot work fast enough to meet demand from the nervous rich for gold.
This refinery near Lake Lugano in the Alps is running day and night as people worried about recession rush to switch their assets into something that may hold its value.
"I have been in the gold business for 30 years and I have never experienced anything like this," said Bernhard Schnellmann, director for precious metal services at the refiner Argor-Heraeus, one of the world's three largest.
"Production has dramatically increased since the middle of the year. We cannot cope with demand," said Schnellman, wearing a gold watch on his wrist.
Spot gold hit a record $1,030.80 an ounce on March 17. It fell below $700 in late October, partly because investors sold their holdings to cover losses in equity and bond markets hit by the credit crisis, and is now around $830 an ounce.
The trigger for the price to rise again could come from a much weaker dollar, making gold cheaper for holders of other currencies, and a renewed aversion to paper assets as governments and central banks pump large amounts of cash into the economy, stoking inflation.
And this is not an isolated incident, gold is in high demand, just try getting your hands on gold coins. You may be wondering what's next? Recently investors have been buying 90 day treasury bills for zero yields, this means that investors are looking for safety and they are happy to loan their money to the US government for free. Worry not, this will come to an end, with all the amount of debt that the US is incurring, it will soon have to pay hefty interest rates for investors to buy its debt. If you have a way to short US treasury bills, it may not be a bad bet, I feel quite confident it will pay off. Today I read on the news that Bush is considering an "orderly Bankruptcy of the auto companies," I'm not a proponent of handing out money to unprofitable companies, but the term orderly bankruptcy sounds like a "peaceful war."
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