buy gold and silver bullion

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Craig Hemke: Gold and Silver Manipulation Criminal Racketeering Charges To Reach The Top?


Craig sat down with Half Dollar to discuss the DOJ's criminal indictment of 2 current (and 1 prior) gold & silver traders, the Fed's daily repo market operations, the outlook for gold & silver, and a whole lot more.

Friday, September 27, 2019

Gold & Silver Sense America's The Last Thing On Politicians Minds?


As hundreds of D.C. politicians now spend all of their time and energy on their election or re-election campaigns, impeaching Trump or starting new wars, the US markets and economy are at great risk of burning to the ground. 

Washington fiddles while America burns? Join Mike & Half Dollar as they break-down the latest news, and participate in the conversation through the live-chat or by calling-in to the show.

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Ben Hunt: Prepare To Get Burned


Society is pretending its actions don't have consequences. It's badly mistaken. History teaches us that there is no free lunch, reminds Dr. Ben Hunt. 

And science informs us that even the most simple systems become nearly impossible to predict or control with 100% precision as time and variables change. 

But our society today is ignoring these lessons. It’s betting that the increasingly excessive distortions required to keep the status quo continuing will succeed, and come at no cost.

- Source, Peak Prosperity

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Gold hits 2 week high on growth fears, palladium scales new peak


Gold rose on Monday to its highest in over two weeks as weak economic data from the euro zone stoked global recession fears and forced investors to seek refuge in bullion, while palladium soared to a record on a sustained supply shortfall.

Spot gold was up 0.5% at $1,524.71 per ounce, after hitting its highest since Sept. 6. U.S. gold futures rose 1.1% to $1,532.40 an ounce.

“The weak German PMI numbers gave a little bit of a shock to the stock market and led investors into safety like gold and silver,” said Phillip Streible, senior commodities strategist at RJO Futures.

Gold could hit $1,550 in this supportive environment of “weak interest rates, increasing geopolitical risks, no (trade) agreement with China and weak data that shows we are slipping into recession,” Streible added.

German private sector activity shrank for the first time in 6-1/2 years in September as a manufacturing recession deepened unexpectedly and growth in the service sector lost momentum, while euro zone business growth stalled, a survey showed on Monday.

Meanwhile, better-than-expected U.S. manufacturing PMI data helped stock markets pare some losses, but failed to dent gold’s upward momentum.

Investors are also keeping a close eye on U.S.-China trade ties, after a Chinese agriculture delegation cancelled their visit to U.S. farm states, adding to the uncertainty in the drawn-out dispute that has weighed on the global economy.

Adding to geopolitical tensions, U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday approved sending American troops to bolster Saudi Arabia’s air and missile defenses after the largest-ever attack on the kingdom’s oil facilities.

Meanwhile, palladium prices soared to a record high of $1,664.50 an ounce. The autocatalyst metal has risen nearly 8% or about $115 so far this month.

“People are starting to realize that auto sales and production outside of China is actually not so bad and so demand from the industrial sector is stronger that what people thought,” said Jeffrey Christian, managing partner of CPM Group.

“In addition to that, there are a lot of investors moving in that market and in such a small, illiquid market, it doesn’t take a lot of investors to drive the price higher.”

Elsewhere, silver gained 3.5% to $18.61 per ounce and platinum rose 1.8% to $962.55.

- Source, CNBC

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Christine Lagarde: The Trade War Is Weighing on the Global Economy


For incoming European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, the U.S.-China trade war is the biggest threat to the global economy.

Lagarde, who has run the International Monetary Fund since 2011 and was selected in July to replace Mario Draghi on Nov. 1, said the tariffs that the U.S. and China have slapped on each other’s goods are set to shave 0.8% off global economic growth in 2020.

“That’s a massive number,” Lagarde said in an interview with CNBC’s Sara Eisen. “It’s fewer jobs. It’s less business going on. It’s less investment. It’s more uncertainty. It weighs like a big, dark cloud on the global economy.”

“I think trade — threat against trade at the moment — is the biggest hurdle for the global economy, yes, indeed,” she added.

Top trade negotiators from the U.S. and China are set to resume talks next month in Washington. The tit-for-tat tariff threats in the past year and a half have roiled financial markets and sparked concerns about a global recession.

“The longer this lingers, the more uncertainty sinks in. And if you’re an investor, if you’re an enterprise, whether small, medium size or big, you’re not going to invest, you’re going to wait. You’re going to sit and wonder where the supply chains are going to be organized,” Lagarde said in the interview that aired Monday on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.”

- Source, CNBC

World's Wealthiest Families Are Stockpiling Cash as Recession Fears Grow


Rick Stone, a former partner at Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, sees treacherous times ahead for family offices trying to deploy cash.

The head of Stone Family Office said he doubts the bond market will provide any real return over the next decade, that equity markets will suffer a substantial drop and then be flat, and that too much venture capital and private equity money will continue to chase too few opportunities.

“It’s a very hard time for family offices to allocate money,” said Stone, 60, whose initial wealth came from class-action litigation fees.

Stone has a good vantage point on the action, since he runs the bi-monthly meetings of the Palm Beach Investment Research Group, a network of 35 family offices in Palm Beach, Florida. “The areas to invest in are fewer, and there is a lot of money looking for those spaces,” he said.

That view of the markets is shared by many of the 360 global single- and multi-family offices surveyed for the 2019 UBS Global Family Office Report, which was done in conjunction with Campden Research and released Monday. A majority expect the global economy to enter a recession by 2020, with the highest percentage of gloomy respondents in emerging markets. About 42% of family offices around the world are raising cash reserves.

‘More Caution’

“There’s more caution and fear of the public equity markets among ultra-high-net-worth investors,” said Timothy O’Hara, president of Rockefeller Global Family Office. “That has more people thinking about private investments, alternative investments or cash.”

Jeffrey Gundlach, chief investment officer of DoubleLine Capital, said this month he thinks there’s a 75% chance of a U.S recession before the November 2020 presidential election, while economists surveyed by Bloomberg in August predicted a 35% chance in the next 12 months, up four percentage points from a month earlier. Meanwhile, the World Bank cut its 2019 global forecast to the slowest since the financial crisis a decade ago...

- Source, Yahoo Finance

Monday, September 23, 2019

Is the Big Market Cycle About to Turn?


Ron William, founder of RWA, has been studying cycles and market behavior for over 20 years. He sees great value in using cycles to drive the investment decision, but he also acknowledges their limitations. 

Fundamentals, applied to a cycle framework, provide a key risk management tool to help navigate the oncoming turn in the big picture trends

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Gold edges higher as softer dollar, Gulf tensions lend support

Gold prices rose on Friday and were headed for their first weekly gain in a month, supported by a softer dollar, tensions in the Middle East and caution about Sino-U.S. trade talks, while palladium climbed to a fresh record peak.

Spot gold was up 0.3% at $1,503.36 per ounce, as of 0800 GMT, up about 1% this week. U.S. gold futures were up 0.5% at $1,513.5 per ounce.

“A weaker U.S. dollar is giving gold a little bit of an upward drift,” said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets, adding that “prices are still very much in the middle of a trading range and pinned to $1,500 level.”

The dollar slipped on Friday and was headed for a third straight week of losses as central banks in Japan, the UK and Switzerland refrained from cutting rates.

Investors are all waiting on any further developments in the trade negotiations as they move towards October meeting and that may provide next big driver for gold prices,” McCarthy said.

U.S. and Chinese deputy trade negotiators resumed face-to-face talks for the first time in nearly two months on Thursday, trying to lay the groundwork for high-level talks in early October.

Gold prices have risen about 17% this year mainly on U.S.-China trade tensions, concerns over the global economic growth outlook and prospects of monetary easing by central banks.

The Fed cut interest rates for the second time this year on Wednesday to help sustain economic expansion but gave mixed signals on future rate cuts.

Also, giving bullion a lift were tensions in the Middle East as the United States said on Thursday it was building a coalition to deter Iranian threats following a weekend attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities.

The strategy for retaliation against the attacks on Saudi oil plants is not clear and the uncertainties are keeping gold’s safe-haven bid intact, said Vandana Bharti, assistant vice-president of commodity research at SMC Comtrade.

On the technical front, signals are mixed for spot gold as it is stuck in a narrow range of $1,488-$1,514 per ounce, according to Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao.

Elsewhere, palladium rose 1% to $1,640.15 per ounce, having hit a record peak of $1,646.81. Prices were up 2% for the week in a seventh straight weekly gain.

Platinum and silver were up 0.7% at $943.52 and $17.89 per ounce, respectively.

- Source, Reuters

Friday, September 20, 2019

The Monetary Endgame...


​It’s now official: central banks’ stated policy is to take interest rates and the value of the US dollar to zero. But not until they’ve managed to tie up the world's real estate and other hard assets, leaving the vast majority of people in poverty. 

Wayne Jett, constitutional attorney, who has argued cases up to and including the US Supreme Court, author of “The Fruits of Graft, Great Depressions Then and Now,” and founder of ClassicalCapital.com, returns to Reluctant Peppers to expound on his latest article “MONETARY POLICY END GAME - Central Banks To Fight Fake ‘Deflation’.”

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Why Government Fails...


Governments don’t work the way most people think they do. Public choice theory explores how voters, politicians, and bureaucrats actually make decisions. Prof. Antony Davies explains.

- Source, Learn Liberty

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Ten Myths About Government Debt Exposed


Myth 1 is that the government owes “only” $20 trillion. (In reality, it’s much more.) But luckily, Myth 10 is that there’s no way to fix this problem… Prof. Antony Davies explains.

- Source, Learn Liberty

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

How many quality gold deposits truly exist?



The gold mining sector faces a major challenge: overcoming dwindling economic reserves, said Brent Cook of Exploration Insights, and higher gold prices may not be what’s needed to keep miners in the black. 


“The story is that we are going to run out of gold deposits. That’s not the case. What we are running out of is economic deposits, the discovery of economic deposits. There’s no shortage of marginal deposits or sub-economic deposits, and the question is, is the rising gold price going to fix all that or not?” 

Cook told Kitco News on the sidelines of the Precious Metals Summit in Beaver Creek. Importantly, Cook noted his thesis is that 80% of deposits will be marginal at any price because they have fundamental flaws.

- Source, Kitco News

Monday, September 16, 2019

Rob McEwen: Gold price should be $21000 if you follow history


Historically, gold prices have climbed much more than what we have seen so far during bull rallies, and if we apply historical multiples, gold should be trading closer to the $8,000 to $21,000 an ounce price range, this according to Rob McEwen, chairman of McEwen Mining. 

“Gold from 1970 to 1980 went $40 to $800, so a 20x move. And then it dropped to $250 in 1999 and 2001 and ran to $1,900, that was a 7x move. If you apply any one of those multiples to the lowest low we had recently of $1,050, you could see $8,000 to $21,000 price on gold,” McEwen told Kitco News on the sidelines of the Precious Metals Summit in Beaver Creek.

- Source, Kitco News

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Will The Boneheads At The Fed Really Cut Interest Rates Below Zero?


Trump Calls for negative interest rates and the President also says if it wasn't for the "Boneheads" at the Fed, the US would have a "once in a lifetime opportunity" for super-long duration bonds at zero to negative interest rates. Let's sort out what this all means for gold, silver, the dollar, the markets and the economy.

- Source, Silver Doctors

Friday, September 13, 2019

Will the Fed Do Anything to Avoid Recession?


Lakshman Achuthan, co founder of the Economic Cycle Research Institute, takes us inside the business cycle to examine the impact of waves of QE and where we stand in terms of identifying the timing of the next recession. 

With an outstanding track record of forecasting cyclical inflexions, Lakshman isolates the signals that will lead to the next turning point. Filmed on May 22, 2017, in Orlando.

Thursday, September 12, 2019

Ron Paul: Is America Doomed? Are There Any Options Left?


Is America incapable of going back to the "good old days" where we understood what it means to live in a constitutional republic and defended our liberties against all enemies, foreign and domestic? 

A new article from Michael Snyder cites plenty of polling data suggesting a grim future for freedom lovers. But there may be hope for the future after all...

- Source, Ron Paul

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Gold Prices Continue Forward As Silver Plays Catch Up


Gold climbed up into the mid $1500s this week as we look at what is next for the precious metals. 

Silver plays catch up pushing up to above $19 lowering the gold to silver ratio. 

We review the price movements of platinum, palladium, and the US Dollar index in relation to gold & silver.

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Ron Paul: Beware and Prepare, the American Empire is Collapsing


When empires fall, they do not go down gracefully. The collapse is sudden and the consequences are permanent. 

Like the schoolyard bully who is finally defeated, his former victims and enemies revel in his fall. 

The US empire is now teetering on such a collapse. The signs are all around us. 

Aggressive US foreign policy, a self-destructive monetary policy that debases the currency and hides inflation, a monstrous national and individual debt load. 

The writing is on the wall and the wise are preparing. What can we do?

- Source, Ron Paul

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Brad Harris: The Official Warning Will Come Too Late


This is an ENCORE presentation of one of our most-watched interviews, which specifically addresses the hazards and survival lessons learned from hurricanes by a former hurricane zone resident. Our prayers go out to all those impacted by Hurricane Dorian.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

What a Prepper Uncovered at the Fed and US Mint


What insights can a prepper uncover by actually visiting the Federal Reserve, and the US Mint? To find out, Reluctant Peppers went on a road trip to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Mint.