CBDCs will make fines and civil asset forfeitures and freezes easier when your money is in the central bank. It’s one more reason to own gold—but not store it in a US safe deposit box.
Mike cites the January jobs report as an example of the good news is bad phenomenon and makes the case that we probably shouldn’t put a lot of stock on these government numbers to begin with.
Experience from Bretton Woods and the need to periodically increase the gold price suggests that Europe would target the price in the free market in order to stabilize it.
President and CEO of Fortuna Silver, Jorge Ganoza on the second full quarter of high-margin gold production from the Séguéla Gold Mine in West Africa, plus a healthier balance sheet.
Powell sounds a lot like former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke who insisted in 2007 that problems in the subprime mortgage sector were “contained.” And we know how that turned out.
In the current environment, holding some of one’s liquid wealth outside the banking system is an essential asset protection strategy. Physical precious metals cannot be digitally “lost” or canceled.
The jobs numbers are not at all to be trusted. They are the broken gauge the Fed relies upon to tighten until something in the economy, most likely banking, breaks badly.
Over the decades and centuries, the purchasing power of gold remains stable. Its higher price reflects deterioration in an inferior form of money, i.e., fiat currency.
"...imperial presidents can waste trillions of dollars and millions of lives on pointless wars, middle-class income has withered for thirty-five years while the obscenely rich get obscenely richer..."
Lower rates will cause the dollar to fall and commodity prices to rise. When positive real interest rates, which favor bond investors, turn negative, it will especially affect gold prices to the upside.