Monday, April 29, 2013

Recessionary Malaise Setting In

"I see things going from bad to worse economically, and so do many others. Walmart just announced that January 2013 was a lousy month and its start to February was its worst in years. Apple's iPhone manufacturer Foxconn just announced a hiring freeze in China because of a decline in iPhone production. Italian industrial production new orders were down 15%. You can feel the recessionary malaise setting in."

- Source, The Gold Report:

Long-Term Food Supply - WiseFoodStorage.com

Sunday, April 28, 2013

When Gold and Silver Got Hit

"It’s just pure insanity. When gold and silver got hit, gold traded about 120% of its annual production in one day (in the paper market). We had offerings of 25% of the world’s mine production at one time, and who in the hell would have 25% of the world’s mine production available for sale in a minute? And who would want to sell it in one minute? It’s just ridiculous...."

- Eric Sprott via a recent King World News interview, read the full interview here:

Friday, April 26, 2013

A New Phase in the Gold Bull Market

“The recovery has been quite impressive so far. I suspect when we all look back at this a year from now when the price of gold is at record highs, we will look at this smash and say, ‘That was the bottom.’ It’s typically what happens at a bottom. Everyone panics.

The volumes were incredible, all paper by the way. But the sheer cleansing of the system, when everyone should have realized that all of the facts, all of the future prognostications of what the central planners are likely to do, and the goings on in the financial system, were screaming at you to buy gold. And at the same time everyone is panicking out of it.

I think people will rue the day they might have considered that the gold bull market was over because I think we are going to go in to a whole new phase of a bull market here.”


- Eric Sprott via a recent King World News interview, read the full interview here:

Monday, April 22, 2013

Gold Will Hit a New High

“I’ve always imagined that gold would hit a new high by the end of this year, over $1,900, so that is what I think.”

- Eric Sprott via a recent Globe and Mail interview, read the full interview here:

Saturday, April 20, 2013

A Rude Awakening In Metals


"In this tremendous interview, Patrick MontesDeOca chats with Eric Sprott, CEO of Sprott Asset management with $10 billion under management. In this interview Eric gives us his insight and wisdom as it relates to Cyprus as the "Black Swan",and how it could trigger major bank runs globally. Metals shorts are in for a rude awakening!"

- Source:

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Overleverage in the Banking System

“We have a financial system that has been chaotic for quite a long time and I think the manifestation of the Cypriot depositor raid is symptomatic of what’s likely to happen going forwards,” Mr. Sprott said. “For us, it showed we do have a template because of overleverage in the banking system.”

- Excerpt from a recent Globe and Mail article:

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Eric Sprott sells big chunk of Silver Trust units

By Darcy Keith of The Globe and Mail:

Eric Sprott has been busy offloading units in his Sprott Physical Silver Trust over the last few weeks.

It may be fortunate timing; the fund hit a record low today amid the vicious 5 per cent plunge in silver prices.

INK Research, which monitors insider buying and selling activity, points out to us that regulatory filings show Mr. Sprott sold $46,258,984 (Canadian) over the past 30 days in the trust. The sales to the public occurred almost daily in several transactions. (You can click here to see his last 10 transactions.)

The fund, which like the metal today is down about 5 per cent, has a market cap of about $1.3-billion. Ted Dixon, CEO of INK Research, notes that there has not been any indication of Mr. Sprott selling units in his Physical Gold Trust or in Sprott Inc.
When we asked Sprott for why the sudden burst of sales, here’s what spokesman Glen Williams had to say: “The shares were sold by his charitable foundation to meet some of its obligations. The rest of the units were sold to buy shares in silver mining companies, which he believes will outperform the metal itself on the next rally.”

Mr. Sprott hasn’t been shy in expressing his views recently that both physical silver and precious metals equities are undervalued.

What silver equities he may be purchasing we don’t know. But, according to fund data as of March 28, the top stock holding in the Sprott Canadian Equity fund was First Majestic Silver Corp., followed by Silver Lake Resources Ltd. The fund’s top holding overall, however, was physical silver bars.

Mr. Sprott also sold large holdings of the units in the Sprott Physical Silver Trust back in 2011. At the time, he also stated the money was reinvested in silver metal or silver equities.


- Source, Globe and Mail:

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Maybe he Has a Point

"There is more reason to own gold than ever before; Silver will be an even better investment than gold; Don’t invest in bonds – they can ultimately be worth zero if banks and countries default; Don’t hold your money in banks – banks may eventually be allowed to fail – and in any case as today’s fiat currencies are debilitated through monetary expansion policies they will devalue against precious metals. (Indeed he said as an aside that he wouldn’t be caught dead with his money in the bank!). Sprott’s financial acumen has made him a billionaire – maybe he has a point."

- Source, Mineweb:

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Silver Will be Hundreds of Dollars in Price

“If gold goes to a new high this year, I think silver is going to a new high, which means above $50. Where is it ultimately going to go? I think it will be in the hundreds of dollars. If gold goes to $3,000, silver is (already) going to be (trading) $150 to $250."

- Eric Sprott via a recent King World News interview, read the full interview here:

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Caveat Depositor

By: Eric Sprott & Shree Kargutkar

“If there is a risk in a bank, our first question should be: ‘Ok, what are you the bank going to do about that? What can you do to recapitalise yourself?’ If the bank can’t do it, then we’ll talk to the shareholders and the bondholders. We’ll ask them to contribute in recapitalising the bank. And if necessary the uninsured deposit holders: ‘What can you do in order to save your own banks?’” – Jeroen Dijsselbloem, March 26, 2013 1

A deal has just been struck with Cyprus. However, it was not the deal that Cyprus saw other countries receive. This was not the deal received by Greece, Italy and Spain. There were no bailed out banks in the aftermath. There was no transfer of risk from over-levered banks to the taxpayers. The risk was pushed back onto the banks. Their equity was wiped out. Their bondholders were wiped out. Their uninsured depositors saw their accounts raided for additional liquidity. It wasn’t just that the rules of the game had changed, the game itself changed. By raiding the depositors’ accounts, a major central bank has gone where they would not previously have dared. The Rubicon has been crossed. Going forward, this is expected to be the “template” for dealing with risky, over-levered banks and the countries which support them.

For the first time since the crisis began, we are faced with a new paradigm, or a “template”, for how a major central bank will address weakness in the financial sector. While the old template involved “bailing out” through transfer of risk from the corporate sector to the taxpayer, the new template calls for “bailing in”, whereby the risk is contained within the affected institution at the expense of equity holders, bond holders and finally the depositor.

How does the new template affect you?

This “template” is already being applied to the “too big to bail” banks in other developed countries around the world. A statement in the joint paper published by the FDIC and the Bank of England in December 2012 reads:

“An efficient path for returning the sound operations of the G-SIFI to the private sector would be provided by exchanging or converting a sufficient amount of the unsecured debt from the original creditors of the failed company into equity. In the U.S., the new equity would become capital in one or more newly formed operating entities. In the U.K., the same approach could be used, or the equity could be used to recapitalize the failing financial company itself—thus, the highest layer of surviving bailedin creditors would become the owners of the resolved firm…. Such a resolution strategy would ensure market discipline and maintain financial stability without cost to taxpayers”.2

Note the lack of the phrase “uninsured depositors” in this context, which opens the doors for both insured and uninsured depositors to be affected. In a similar vein, Canada’s recently released budget addresses the same problem. Page 144 of Canada’s Economic Action Plan 2013 reads:

“The Government proposes to implement a – bail-in regime for systemically important banks. This regime will be designed to ensure that, in the unlikely event that a systemically important bank depletes its capital, the bank can be recapitalized and returned to viability through the very rapid conversion of certain bank liabilities into regulatory capital. This will reduce risks for taxpayers.”3

Likewise, New Zealand’s Open Bank Resolution policy allows for a “bail in” of afflicted banks by wiping out the equity holders first, the bond holders second and finally forcing a haircut on the depositors.4

Over-levered banks are not a recent development. We are faced with a banking crisis, seemingly once every generation. In a majority of cases, the bad banks were allowed to fail and newer, stronger banks took their place. However, the recent modus operandi of the central banks and policy makers allowed over-levered banks to get even bigger, rewarded risk taking with bailouts and let the inherent problem of unsustainability fester.


CHART 1: BANKS ASSETS – COUNTRY GDP

 


We carried out the exercise of taking the largest banks, or in other words, the “too big to fail” banks in the G7 countries and added up their assets in relation to the host country GDP. For the layperson, a typical bank’s assets are primarily composed of the loans they have originated while the liabilities are primarily composed of deposits they have accepted. With the exception of the US, all G7 countries have banking systems that have become larger and in some cases dwarfed their respective economies.

Governments around the world are finally beginning to realize the gravity of the risk that exists in their banking sectors. The EU has decided to build upon the new template of the “bail-in” regime. The US, UK and Canada have all followed suit. This puts the onus squarely upon the depositor. The depositor is a lender to the financial institution that he banks with. However, most depositors naively assume that their deposits are 100% safe in their banks and trust them to safeguard their savings. Under the new “template” all lenders (including depositors) to the bank can be forced to “bail in” their respective banks. Several G7 countries already have provisions that allow troubled banks to be bailed in using depositor accounts. We have been vocal about our concerns over the state of the global financial system for the better part of the decade. The Greek tragedy is now being played out in Cyprus with a new twist as depositors have been unwillingly turned into sacrificial lambs. Given the size of the banking sector in most G7 countries and the burgeoning government debts, the ability of the governments to bail out their banks is severely constrained, especially considering the political headwinds that exist today. For this reason, we strongly believe that real assets trump a fiat currency in a “savings” account. It is not our intention to be alarmist here, merely to say, “caveat depositor”.

- Source, Sprott Asset Management: