by FoxV » Tue 29 Jul 2008, 16:45:45
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('some_math_guy', 'E')ven so, the selling continued and today Canada has only 3.2 tons of gold remaining! In the words of one of the senior financial managers at the Bank of Canada in 2002, the decision to sell gold was made because 'gold does not generate any returns'.
wow, I knew we threw out most of our gold through the nineties, but I didn't realize we continued afterwards
I get a good laugh out of the "Gold doesn't generate any returns" argument. It comes up quite a lot as if the only value of an investment is its yield . Ya, lets throw out 25% appreciation for a 3% dividend, or a 2% bond. Good call BoC
btw, there is another argument to the stability of Loonie despite its toilet paper backing. As a general rule Canadians are financially more prudent than our American counterparts (although the gap is narrowing).
Banks are not allowed to hold a mortgage with less than 20% down without insurance. No Doc has never been allowed (as far as I'm aware) and the sub-prime market was still in its infancy here by the time the housing market in the US blew up. Most of the write downs and banking problems I've seen on this side of the border are due to issues with Commercial paper and not residential (which should hold its value a bit better)
So also backing our currency is a more stable financial system. It may not be perfect, but at least its not the basket case the US has turned into (or the farce Europe is becoming)
That being said, Mark Carney is making damn sure we won't be last in the race to the bottom
Bank of Canada injects C$475 mln into market
Bank of Canada injects C$665 mln into market
Central bank to take riskier assets as collateral
and thats just for this week and its only Tuesday
All in all, probably a Good idea to buy gold in any case