by Micki » Fri 10 Oct 2008, 19:38:46
I agree and re-iterate what I said a few times earlier; action is always in reaction not as a pro-active move. We need to have crash and chaos threats before serious inflation can take place.
Given that any amount of money can be printed, and if authorities willing, distributed via helicopters, it eventually comes down to their determination until the money they spread around loses it's status as actually being money.
I actually can't remember reading Jim Sinclair talking about Weimar like this before. Normally he has talked about inflating and dropping USD but then stabilizing the situation with a new quasi-gold standard when gold is at or above $1650.
If he firmly believes his own statements he should perhaps recalculate that number. Having that said, he likes to be conservative in estimates.
Fresh from
Jim Sinclair
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')ear Friends, Stay the course or jump directly into the fire! That's the soundest advice I can give you in this highly volatile market period. I told you that you would see volatility in gold beyond your wildest imagination. That statement usually went along with my warning that by margining anything gold you were putting yourself in great financial risk.
Today has to seal the veracity of that advice. Now get a hold of yourself. There is absolutely no way governments can make a problem of this size go away over a weekend. Those that question me on this issue are the same ones that laughed in 2000 when I said the growth of OTC derivatives was going to break the world. I told the lead director of Bear Stearns at the time that OTC derivatives were going to break his firm but the profits from them was simply too intoxicating for anyone to listen. Now I am asking you to listen.
Whatever is done to resolve this global financial crisis is going to inject incomprehensible amounts of new money into the global financial system. Academics see the world as a 'Picture In Time." That means they are static thinkers who can't perceive motion. Visionaries like Harry, Monty, Trader Dan & Tony are "Dynamic Thinkers." At present, some academics are promoting the dumbest line I have ever heard. They say that all this new money going into the system is not monetary inflation because it is simply replacing all the money lost and therefore is a wash. That is part of the thinking pattern I am talking about and it's dead wrong.
Dynamic thinkers know that the outflow of these losses has existed from the time of transaction and therefore prior to truer valuation as mandated by Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).
The day the FASB mandated truer value had existed for years but was not recognized as such because it was generally accounted for off balance sheet. Just because financial institutions tried to hide their losses, those capital depletions were already a growing cancer inside their organizations.
You can be certain that a repetition of Germany's
Weimar crisis is coming soon. There is nothing that can be done to make matters better - even if done by governments unilaterally in a unified action. In fact, such action will only serve to make matters worse.
The larger the financial action, the deeper the financial fall. The G7 still thinks they run the world. That should tell you something about the degree of what they can do.
Gold is honest money that will push all crappy paper out of its way. Why do you think so much intervention took place in gold in US market hours today?
All I can tell you is to stay the course or jump directly into the fire! If the heat in the kitchen is too hot for you, there is nothing I can do for you.
Regards,
Jim Sinclair
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')ear CIGAs,
Merrill Lynch issued a big report today on the banking crisis.
Here are the main points:
Everyone is waiting for the big government solution.
Coordinated moves will not necessarily be effective, but it will be historic if it happens.
We are barely past the halfway point of the credit down cycle.
People will continue to crowd into treasuries Rosenberg (and in my opinion, gold).
Corporate profits not yet impacted will go lower.
Private sector interest rates are rising.
As Jim Sinclair has predicted in his model, Merrill Lynch’s David Rosenberg, who is their chief economist corroborates my opinion. He states “It is truly a modern day depression, in our view- what else do you call it when an entire industry vanishes (investment banks) in less than a year: the ranks of the unemployed soar more than 30%, and nearly one in ten homeowners with a mortgage are either in arrears or foreclosure?”
Like us, he goes on to say “Now let’s not confuse that with the Great Depression - this is not the 1930’s all over again.”
More points: The government will have taken over many banks before this ends. Finally, Rosenberg states that the current money supply boost may not be inflationary. His argument is that the velocity of money is shrinking in the US and Europe, and that is clearly true. Over the short term I agree with him. For this reason I stated a few weeks ago that the inflation rate would moderate for a few months.
It will moderate over the short term; long term is a different story.
Once the velocity of money resumes its normal functioning, the massive amounts of money currently being pumped into the system worldwide will create a big inflationary bubble. The inflation will not hit in the next few months, but it will be big when it does hit. As Jim Sinclair likes to say,
“Weimar on Weimar.”Respectfully yours,
Monty Guild