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With most global stock markets rallying and gold &
silver higher, today King World News interviewed acclaimed money manager Stephen
Leeb. When asked what he sees happening, Leeb responded, “My...
 
 
With stocks moving higher along with gold and silver,
today Michael Pento, of Pento Portfolio Strategies, explains for King World News
readers globally why the Fed has created a ticking time bomb and...
 
 
With continued volatility in all global markets,
including gold and silver, today King World News interviewed Peter Schiff, CEO
of Europacific Capital. When asked what to expect going forward,
Schiff...
 
No Longer A " Barbarous Relic," Gold Is A " High Quality Liquid
Asset"
truthingold.blogspot.com
OCTOBER 06, 2011
 
Dexia Suspended
zerohedge.com
OCTOBER 06, 2011
  
 
 
by Ryan Schwimmer
October 6, 2011
OPTIMISM BOOSTS STOCKS ECB TO ENACT BOND PURCHASE
PROGRAM
Overnight trading of gold was relatively steady, while U.S. stocks are looking at another positive day, and silver,
platinum, and palladium are benefitting from that optimism.  Investors are
hoping that eurozone policymakers will be able to work together to help out
banks in that region.  The European Central Bank (ECB) announced that it would
not change interest rates, which brought some European stocks down
overnight.
This morning, the ECB announced that they would be enacting a bond-purchase
program, which has helped the euro pare some losses.  U.S. Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner is set
to speak to a congressional committee later today regarding the European
debt crisis.  In prepared statements, he said that Europe “is so integrated with
the U.S. economy, that a severe crisis there could cause significant damage in
America.”
Supporting U.S. stocks was the slightly-better-than-expected jobless claims report released
this morning.  While most economists expected new jobless claims to rise by
19,000, in fact they only rose by 6,000.  The four-week moving average moved
down by 4,000, and is typically seen as a better indicator of trends because it
takes out the week-to-week volatility.  The stubborn unemployment rate held
steady at 9.1%.
At 8:04 am (CT) the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:
- Gold - $1,643.60 – Even $0.00.
- Silver - $30.78 – Up $0.39.
 
 
Gold eases after ECB comments, trade volatile
 
  * ECB keeps rates on hold, unveils new liquidity measures
 
* Euro, stock
markets
tick higher
* Chinese appetite for platinum lacking, says UBS
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Oct 6 (Reuters) - Gold fell in choppy trade on Thursday after the
European Central Bank held off flagging an imminent cut in interest rates,
deflating an earlier rally in assets seen as higher risk, such as equities and
the euro.
Spot gold was at $1,634.24 an ounce at 1355 GMT, 0.4 percent below levels at
which it traded late in New York on Wednesday but off an earlier high of
$1,654.55.
This week's firmer tone to equities has alleviated some earlier forced gold
selling to cover losses on other markets, though it has also dampened some
appetite for gold as gains in other markets divert investment from the precious
metal.
" The whole gold market hinges on the investor enthusiasm and that has taken
big backward step," said Nick Moore, an analyst at RBS Global Banking &
Markets. " Investors have got other places to fish at the moment, and gold isn't
the default option that it has been."
The ECB kept benchmark rates on hold on Thursday, and said it will start
buying covered
bonds
again. Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet said the ECB will spend 40 billion euros
over a 12-month period from November.
This disappointed some market watchers who had expected the bank to give
stronger hints that a rate cut was imminent. European shares pared gains after
the press conference, while the euro slipped versus the dollar.
" We are disappointed that they didn't take this opportunity to cut rates, and
that is a headwind still for the
euro zone," said Moore.
Gold saw its biggest decline in nearly three years last month as pressurised
selling to cover heavy stock market losses pulled prices more than 20 percent
from record highs and prompted a period of intense volatility.
Concerns over the outlook for the euro zone's stubborn debt crisis were a key
factor pushing the precious to a record $1,920.30 an ounce last month.
" It is extremely hard to see where the solution (to the crisis) will come
from," said VM Group analyst Carl Firman.
" I think (the euro zone authorities) will be forced into a solution, but the
volatility is based around whether it will be sufficient, or another stop-gap."
U.S. gold
futures
GCv1 for December delivery were down $3.20 an ounce at $1,638.00. Sterling
priced gold rose 2 percent to 1,082.04 pounds an ounce after the Bank of England
announced a second round of quantitative easing.
 
 
VENEZUELA REPATRIATES GOLD
Venezuela's central bank chief said it will begin repatriating its gold
reserves from Western nations by mid-November. President Hugo Chavez announced
in August that the nation would bring home almost all its $11 billion in gold
reserves held abroad.
London clearing house LCH.Clearnet said on Thursday it will accept gold
bullion as collateral by the end of this month, subject to
regulatory approval.
Oil pared earlier gains to fall by more than half a percent to $102.14 a
barrel, while base metals rose strongly as stock markets rebounded.
Other precious metals rose, with silver rising 1.7 percent to $30.92 an
ounce. Spot platinum was flat at $1,488.49 an ounce, while spot palladium was up
2.3 percent at $583.72 an ounce.
" While Chinese appetite for gold appears to be little affected by the
holidays, platinum interest out of
China has
been sorely lacking," said UBS in a note on Thursday.
" The lack of physical purchases could not have come at a worse time, given
the heaviness across industrial metals and among risk assets in general," it
added.
" This has aggravated platinum's widening discount to gold, the platinum:gold
ratio falling to fresh multi-decade lows mostly under 0.90 over the past couple
of days. This trend is likely to continue given the lack of clear drivers that
could spur PGM demand in the near term." (Reporting by Jan Harvey Editing by
William Hardy)
 
 

   

   
Apple co-founder and former CEO Steve Jobs, counted among the greatest American CEOs of his generation, died on Wednesday at the age of 56, after a years-long and highly public battle with cancer. 
Video  |  Full  Article 
 
 
by Ryan Schwimmer October 5, 2011
METALS SELLOFF ‘PROBABLY’ OVER MORE PROTESTS IN GREECE
Since the Mid-Day Gold & Silver Market Report, gold and silver are mostly unchanged, while platinum and palladium have added to gains.  One portfolio manager said, “The selling of the past two, three days has probably run its course … Gold is probably set to rally.”  The stock market closed higher as well, leading the way for gains for platinum and palladium as well.  News of the potential recapitalization of European banks supported the bullish sentiment for stocks.
More protests have broken out in Greece, as state sector workers marched against cuts needed to stave off bankruptcy for the Mediterranean country.  The Vice President of one of the main labor unions in Greece, Ilias Vrettakos of ADEDY, said, “[European Union and Greek leaders] are not trying to save Greece.  They are just killing workers.  They should get the money from the rich, not from us.”
At 4:05 pm (CT) the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:
- Gold - $1,644.80 – Up $26.80.
- Silver - $30.51 – Up $0.64.
 
Gold recovers losses to climb 0.5 pct
* Gold bounces back from early drop below $1,600/oz
* Further volatility likely to plague precious metals
* Oil, copper prices recover but platinum still under pressure
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Gold prices swung higher on Wednesday after earlier falling more than 1 percent as a firmer tone to financial
markets cut selling pressure on the precious metal, though investors remained wary after recent heightened volatility.
Spot gold was up 0.4 percent at $1,625.70 an ounce at 1251 GMT. It earlier dropped as low as $1,596.75, after falling 2 percent on Tuesday as investors sold
stocks of the metal to cover losses on other markets as shares slid.
European stocks rebounded on Wednesday, with banking equities surging on news that European
finance ministers are exploring ways to recapitalise the ailing sector amid growing expectation of a Greek debt default.
U.S. stock index futures also extended gains on Wednesday after a private sector employment report showed the
economy gained more jobs than expected last month.
" Less pressure on other, riskier assets like stock markets means there is also less pressure to sell gold holdings to compensate for losses suffered otherwise," said Peter Fertig, a consultant at Quantitative Commodity Research.
Gold fell 20 percent last month from its early record high at $1,920.30 as stock market volatility picked up, with investors shaken by the worsening
euro zone debt crisis.
European finance ministers agreed on Tuesday to safeguard banks as doubts grew about whether a planned second bailout package for debt-laden
Greece would go ahead.
The growing prospect of a Greek debt default has stoked fears of a banking crisis in Europe that would aggravate the global economic slowdown. This in turn has hurt stocks, leading to rising volatility, with a knock-on effect on gold.
" Separating itself from negative influences is by no means a straightforward endeavour for gold and volatile price action is clearly going to persist," said UBS in a note.
" Yesterday's moves highlight the difficulty of making sense of the gold market in the current shaky environment."
U.S. gold
futures GCv1 for December delivery were up $11.20 an ounce at $1,627.20.
 
 
CURRENCIES FLUCTUATE, COMMODITIES CLIMB
The
currency markets also remained volatile, with the euro falling against the dollar and vulnerable to more selling if European policymakers are not seen to be making progress on discussions to recapitalise struggling banks.
The U.S. unit fell 0.6 percent against a basket of
currencies , meanwhile, as investors locked in profits.
Among other
commodities, oil prices jumped more than 2 percent after Tuesday's slide.
Silver fell nearly 5 percent to a session low at $28.40 an ounce. It was later at $29.55, down 1.1 percent.
" My sense is that gold is a bit like silver after its collapse (in May) from almost $50 to around $35," said Deutsche Bank analyst Michael Lewis. " It was incredibly erratic but with quite a stable performance over about six to eight weeks."
" I don't think there is going to be much clear direction for gold at the moment," he added. " To some extent the market is just a bit broken, and needs to repair itself... the strength that we saw (earlier this year) is going be difficult to repeat."
Spot platinum was down 1.2 percent at $1,447 an ounce, while palladium was flat at $549.72 an ounce.
Although palladium ran into buying after prices hit their lowest in a year on Tuesday, platinum fell to a fresh 22-month low on Wednesday and rhodium RHOD-LON its weakest in two years as growth worries hurt industrial precious metals. (Reporting by Jan Harvey editing by Keiron Henderson)
 
by Peter LaTona October 5, 2011
Private Job Creation Beats Estimates but Announced Layoffs Soar –
The September survey from ADP showed the private sector added 95,000 jobs, which was almost identical to the August report. It had been expected that 75,000 jobs would be created, so although this is a modest gain, it is a gain. This news from the private sector was offset from news out of the public sector. Governments and the military in particular are reducing staff. In September, employers announced 115,730 planed layoffs, which more than doubled the August total of 51,114. This is the highest figure since April 2009. For 2011, there have been 479,064 announced layoffs, which is up 16.1% from the first nine months of 2010.
Gold prices had been bouncing up and down around $1615 per oz in overnight trading, but received an immediate lift on the release of this morning’s private jobs report. Silver prices lifted off morning lows, while platinum and palladium continue to get hammered.
Most analysts still have their eyes on Europe as the major factor driving markets. Yesterday, the U.S. stock market experienced a swing of 4% just on the headline that talks would occur to recapitalize European banks. Many analysts are skeptical of this plan
. According to Pimco CEO Mohamed El-Erian, sooner or later the bond holders of European sovereign debt are going to have to take a loss. This means that banks are going to have to take a loss and when they do it will require recapitalization and the only place to get more money is from the sovereign nations, who are in danger of credit downgrades themselves. El-Erian said in a CNBC interview, “This time around there is going to be a lot more burden sharing. I don’t think the market has quite understood that it’s not simply a matter of recapitalization, but decisions are going to have to be made about burden sharing, just like they’re being made today in Greece. This is what’s going to be different than 2008 & 2009.”
By the way, shortly after U.S. markets closed yesterday, Moody’s lowered the credit rating on Italy’s bonds by three notches, while warning further downgrades were possible.
At 8AM (CT) the APMEX precious metals prices were:
· Gold price - $1,626.90 – up $8.90
· Silver price - $29.57 – down 31 cents
 
 
Gold slides 1 pct as volatility spooks investors
 
 
* Gold extends previous session's slide, nears $1,600/oz
* Silver drops nearly 5 pct in gold's wake
* Further volatility likely to plague precious metals
* Oil, copper prices recover but platinum still under pressure
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Gold fell more than 1 percent on Wednesday, extending the previous day's hefty losses, as rising equities diverted some interest from the precious metal and as investors remained wary of buying into the market after its recent volatility.
Spot gold was down 0.9 percent at $1,605.29 an ounce at 1101 GMT. It shed 2 percent of its value late on Tuesday to dip temporarily below $1,600 an ounce, as investors sold stocks of the metal to cover losses on other
markets as shares slid.
Silver also fell 5 percent to a session low at $28.40 an ounce. It was later at $28.74, down 3.9 percent.
Gains in European shares on Wednesday, led by banks after European
finance ministers agreed to safeguard lenders, did little to reverse the previous day's losses as buyers spooked by recent sharp price swings stayed away from precious metals.
" My sense is that gold is a bit like silver after its collapse (in May) from almost $50 to around $35," said Deutsche Bank analyst Michael Lewis. " It was incredibly erratic but with quite a stable performance over about six to eight weeks."
" I don't think there is going to be much clear direction for gold at the moment," he added. " To some extent the market is just a bit broken, and needs to repair itself... the strength that we saw (earlier this year) is going be difficult to repeat."
Gold fell 20 percent last month from its early record high at $1,920.30 as stock market volatility picked up, with investors shaken by the worsening
euro zone debt crisis.
European finance ministers agreed on Tuesday to safeguard banks as doubts grew about whether a planned second bailout package for debt-laden
Greece would go ahead.
The growing prospect of a Greek debt default has stoked fears of a banking crisis in Europe that would aggravate the global economic slowdown. This in turn has hurt
stocks, leading to heightened volatility, with a knock-on effect on gold.
" Separating itself from negative influences is by no means a straightforward endeavour for gold and volatile price action is clearly going to persist," said UBS in a note.
" Yesterday's moves highlight the difficulty of making sense of the gold market in the current shaky environment."
U.S. gold
futures GCv1 for December delivery were down $8.90 an ounce at $1,607.10.
 
 
CURRENCIES FLUCTUATE, COMMODITIES CLIMB
The
currency markets also remained volatile, with the euro recovering some lost ground but vulnerable to more selling if European policymakers are not seen to be making progress on discussions to recapitalise struggling banks.
The single currency lifted from a near 9-month low against the dollar, with the U.S. unit falling 0.8 percent against a basket of
currencies as investors locked in profits.
Other
commodities rebounded, with oil prices up more than $2 a barrel after Tuesday's slide, and industrial metals like copper and aluminium climbing.
Spot platinum was down 1.5 percent at $1,442.99 an ounce, while spot palladium was up 0.9 percent at $554.72 an ounce.
Although palladium ran into buying after prices hit their lowest in a year on Tuesday, platinum fell to a fresh 22-month low on Wednesday and rhodium RHOD-LON its weakest in two years as growth worries hurt industrial precious metals.
" The precious metals appear oversold, but changes in risk appetite, with the financial markets moving rapidly from risk-on to risk-off sentiments, are helping to create volatile price swings," said HSBC in a note.
" The near-term price momentum appears lower, but in the case of the platinum group metals, lower prices could threaten mine production. This should help stabilize prices."
" Lower gold prices, in addition to stimulating emerging market demand, may encourage official sector demand," it added. " This leads us to look for prices of gold and the other precious metals to bottom out in the near term." (Reporting by Jan Harvey)
 
 
Mike Maloney: The Greatest Bubble in History Is at Our Doorstep
 
caseyresearch.com
OCTOBER 05, 2011
 
READ
 
 
There is No Plan to Fix the Economy!
usawatchdog.com
OCTOBER 05, 2011
 
SINGAPORE, Oct 5 (Reuters) - U.S. gold futures gained 1
percent on Wednesday, driven by a return to bargain hunting
after prices dropped the previous day, while a rebound in the
euro against the U.S. dollar also spurred buying.
FUNDAMENTALS
* U.S. gold GCcv1 added $16.5 an ounce to $1,632,5 by 0041
GMT, having slipped nearly 2 percent on Tuesday as investors
cashed in to cover losses in equities.
* Asian stocks rebounded from steep losses over the past
several sessions on Wednesday, after tentative signs European
leaders were stepping up efforts to stop the region's sovereign
debt woes from sparking a full-blown banking crisis.
* Spot gold rose $9.87 an ounce to $1,629.79 an
ounce.
MARKET NEWS
* The euro fought to hold gains early in Asia on Wednesday,
having been swept higher by a wave of short covering sparked by
news euro zone ministers were considering ring fencing the
region's banking sector from the sovereign debt crisis.
* Brent crude rose more than $2 on Wednesday, supported by a
drawdown in U.S. crude stocks and promises by the Federal
Reserve to launch more economic stimulus if needed.
Moody's slashes Italy credit rating
 
(Reuters) - Moody's lowered its rating on Italy's
bonds by three notches on Tuesday, saying it saw a " material increase" in funding risks for euro zone countries with high levels of debt and warning that further downgrades were possible.
The agency downgraded
Italy to A2 from Aa2, a lower rating than it holds on Estonia and on a par with Malta and kept a negative outlook on the rating.
The euro pared gains against the dollar and Japanese yen immediately following the announcement which comes after Moody's rival Standard and Poor's cut its rating on Italy by one notch to A/A-1 on September 19.
The cuts underline growing investor concern about the euro zone's third largest
economy, which is now firmly at the center of the debt crisis and dependent on help from the European Central Bank to keep its borrowing costs under control.
" The negative outlook reflects ongoing economic and financial risks in Italy and in the euro area," Moody's said in a statement.
" The uncertain market environment and the risk of further deterioration in investor sentiment could constrain the country's access to the public debt
markets," it said.
It added that Italy's rating could " transition to substantially lower rating levels" if there were long term uncertainty over the availability of external sources of liquidity support.
Italy's mix of chronically low growth, a public debt mountain amounting to 120 percent of gross domestic product and a struggling government coalition has caused mounting alarm in financial markets.
Moody's decision came as little surprise after the agency said on September 17 that it would finish a review for possible downgrade of its rating on Italy within a month.
But it highlights the growing vulnerability of the
euro zone, which is already struggling to contain the crisis in the far smaller Greek economy and which would be overwhelmed by a crisis of a similar scale in Italy.
" It's not that unexpected but it doesn't help the situation at all," said Robbert Van Batenburg, Head of Equity Research at Louis Capital in New York.
" They have already traded as if there was somewhat of a downgrade in the works, so it will probably force Italian policymakers to embark on more austerity programs. It will put another fiscal strait-jacket on them."
VULNERABILITY
Moody's said the likelihood of a default by Italy was " remote" but it said the overall shift in sentiment on the euro area funding market implied a greater vulnerability to a loss of market access at affordable rates.
Italy's relatively modest budget deficit, conservative financial system and high level of private savings had kept it on the sidelines of the euro zone crisis while countries like
Greece and Ireland were sucked down.
" Italy is being punished not because its finances suddenly deteriorated, but because investors have become more sensitive to its long-standing weaknesses," said Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London.
He said markets appeared to be focusing on the weakened center-right government's lack of progress in stimulating the stagnant economy, which many analysts expect to stall or even slip into recession next year.
" The bond markets are more concerned about Italy's ability to grow than its commitment to reducing a fiscal deficit that is already one of the smallest in the euro zone," he said.
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi shrugged off the downgrade immediately, saying the Moody's announcement had been expected and the government was committed to its public
finance target, which sees the budget being balanced by 2013.
The government last month pushed through a 60 billion euro austerity package -- bringing forward its original balanced budget target by one year -- in return for support for its battered government bonds from the ECB.
Berlusconi's center-right coalition has been deeply divided over policy and personal issues and further distracted by an array of scandals surrounding the prime minister.
Opposition leaders have called repeatedly for the government to resign over its handling of the economy and there is widespread speculation that Berlusconi could be forced out of office before his term expires in 2013.
Italy's borrowing costs have soared over the past three months and have only been kept under control by the ECB support but in recent weeks they have begin to climb back to potentially dangerous levels.
An auction of long term bonds last month saw yields on 10 year BTPs rise to 5.86 percent, their highest level since the introduction of the euro more than a decade ago.
The center-right government has been under heavy pressure over its handling of the escalating crisis and recently cut its growth forecasts through 2013.
It is now expecting the economy to expand by just 0.6 percent next year, down from a previous projection of 1.3 percent.
 
King World News is continuing to get reports from sources around the world regarding tremendous physical demand in both gold and silver.  One source out of Norway told KWN,  “What I can report from Norway, and as you know we are not part of the euro system, we are experiencing an extreme increase in physical demand for bullion, both in silver and also in gold.”  This report cam in from Martin Mesicek, Founder of Gold Source, the largest bullion dealer in Norway.
..more
U.S. gold futures rise 1 pct as euro regains strength
Oct 5 (Reuters) - The most active U.S. gold
futures contract GCcv1 jumped 1 percent to an intraday high of $1,635 an ounce on Wednesday as the euro rebounded against the dollar despite lingering fears about the debt crisis in Europe.
The euro fought to hold gains in early trade, having been swept higher by a wave of short covering sparked by news that
euro zone ministers were considering ring-fencing the region's banking sector from the sovereign debt crisis.
 
(Reporting by Lewa Pardomuan Editing by Clarence Fernandez)