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IMF Gold Sales, Fed
Rate Hike, China, Soros and Inflation
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By Jason
Hamlin Feb 19 2010
9:52AM
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Investors completely shrugged off news of the IMF gold
sales as the price advanced $20 following the announcement. There are
questions as to whether the IMF actually has physical gold to sell and
there is historic correlation of gold going up after such announcements,
not down as many would anticipate. GATA wrote about why the IMF sales
don’t mean much and the market seemed to agree. The IMF announced
their top priority was not to disrupt the gold markets, which is laughable
in my opinion. Whether the gold will actually hit the open market still
remains to be seen, but my take on the IMF sales is that it is much ado
about nothing, other than the continued attempt to suppress the gold
price.
Fed Raises Discount Rate, Investors Panic
Then, just as precious metals closed out the day with an
impressive advance, the Fed announced a surprise hike in the discount rate
from 0.50% to 0.75%, which strengthened the dollar and erased all of
gold’s gains for the day (black line). This was widely expected by
the Fed, but the timing was much sooner than most had anticipated.

Despite the Fed saying this move was not a
tightening of its monetary policy, investors reacted by selling
stocks in after-hours trade, buying dollars and pushing the gold price down
significantly. Remember, the Fed’s main policy tool, the federal
funds rate, was not changed and remains in a zero to 0.25 percent range.
Still, this move may have been an attempt to test the waters, prop up the
dollar and hold precious metals in check a while longer. I believe
investors over-reacted to the news as usual and the dollar strength will be
short-lived.
Inflation – Don’t Call it a Comeback
The Fed may also be worried about the potential of runaway
inflation, as the Producer Price Index (PPI) shot up 1.4% during January.
This was significantly more than the 0.9% expected and equates to 16.8%
annually. The St. Louis Fed also posted updated charts showing the monetary
base expansion is once again going vertical.

Inflation is also beginning to rear its ugly head in the
CPI and adjusted CPI chart provided by Shadow Stats. The
officially-reported CPI (red line) went negative for a brief period, but
now both lines are pointing straight up with true CPI reaching back towards
10%.

The Hypocrisy of George Soros?
In other gold news, SEC documents show that George Soros
doubled his gold investment during the end of 2009, while publicly calling
gold the “ultimate asset bubble.” While there seems to be some
contradiction in this story, perhaps what Mr. Soros meant by
“ultimate” was the definition of ultimate as “last,
further, farthest or ending a process or series.” All other asset
bubbles will burst and gold will be the last one standing? Or maybe George
had already sold his holdings or was trying to get lower prices at which to
buy more.
It is pointless to speculate, but for those that follow one
of the world’s most successful investors, I would say that action
speaks louder than words. As of the latest information we have available,
Mr. Soros is an aggressive buyer of gold and for good reason. Gold has been
one of the best performing asset classes over the past decade and is the
best storage of wealth during times of monetary expansion and economic
uncertainty. These are concepts that I’m sure are not lost on Mr.
Soros.
China Dumps Treasuries, No Longer Largest Holder of
U.S. Debt
Foreign owners of US government debt reduced their
holdings by the largest monthly amount ever in December, with China
offloading so many Treasury securities that it is no longer the largest
foreign holder. Total foreign holdings of treasury securities plunged by
$53 billion in December. China led the sell-off, reducing its holdings by
$34 billion, while Japan increased its holdings by $11 billion to become
the new largest foreign holder of Treasuries. You can see from the chart
below that China has increased their holdings of U.S. Treasuries eight fold
over the past decade, so this small dumping is relatively small. It is
newsworthy only in the fact that China is no longer the largest holder and
this could be the beginning of a much larger trend to divest of U.S. debt.

This news has seriously bearish implications for the U.S.
dollar and is extremely bullish for precious metals. If China stops buying
U.S. debt, the Fed will be forced to monetize a greater portion of the
auctions, creating currency at a blistering pace and sending the dollar
much lower in an inflationary tailspin. This news also calls into question
the U.S. government’s triple-A credit rating and could lend further
support to my belief that investors will stop turning to the dollar as a
safe haven in the near future and instead begin turning to precious metals.
Many believe China is retaliating against the United States
economically for the recent decision to sell $6.4 billion of arms to
Taiwan. The Chinese government was also none too pleased by Obama’s
recent meeting with the Dalai Lama. Whether or not these events were the
impetus, I believe we are likely to see more lightening of U.S. debt from
not only China, but countries around the world.
Precious Metals to Benefit
While I believe precious metals prices will continue
to be prone to short-term sell offs like we have witnessed over the past
few months, we have to keep the larger picture in mind. The Fed and
government have no other way out of the current mess than to crank up the
printing presses to the point where they can monetize their rapidly
expanding debt and offset the collapsing credit market. If you think the
amount of currency printing over the past few years has been reckless, you
ain’t seen nothing yet.
I will be looking to relieve weak hands of their gold and
gold stocks over the next few days of anticipated panic selling. I am
holding to my prediction of $1,500 gold and $25 silver before the end of
the year. I also believe we are likely to experience a double dip recession
during the back half of 2010. If you want to view the Gold Stock Bull
portfolio, receive the monthly newsletter and get email trading alerts
whenever I am buying or selling, become a premium
member. It is just $35 per month and you can cancel at anytime if you
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Jason Hamlin
Gold Stock Bull
****
All ideas,
opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or
implied herein, are for informational purposes only and should not be
construed as a recommendation to invest, trade, and/or speculate in the
markets. Any investments, trades, and/or speculations made in light of the
ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are
committed at your own risk, financial or otherwise.