Fed ‘Currency Debasement 3’ (QE3) Sees Gold and Silver Surge 2% and 4.3%

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,772.50, EUR 1,359.70 and GBP 1,093.53 per ounce. Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,730.50, EUR 1,339.81 and GBP 1,073.64 per ounce.

Bernanke’s announcement of further money printing and ultra loose monetary policies saw gold and silver surge in all currencies yesterday. Gold rose $34.30 or 1.98% in New York and closed at $1,732.00. Silver soared to a high of $34.781 and finished with a gain of 4.34%.


XAU/USD Currency – (Bloomberg)

Gold surged to a 6 month high in dollars, to very close to new record highs in euros and importantly to an all time record nominal high in Swiss francs (see chart below). Gold climbed as much as 2.2% in the “safe haven” Swiss franc to 1,657 per ounce.

Platinum topped ,700 an ounce for the first time since March and silver and palladium also hit their highest prices in 6 months, as the Fed announced an open-ended debt buying program and promised to keep interest rates near zero until at least mid-2015.


XAU/EUR Currency – (Bloomberg)

Commodities and oil surged alongside equities. Oil rose to 0 a barrel in New York for the first time since May after the Fed news while unrest in the Middle East and North Africa fanned concern that supplies will be threatened.

Commodities are set for the longest run of weekly gains since 2010. The Fed decision is fuelling expectations raw-material use will rise.

The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24 raw materials gained nearly 1% to 692.62, the highest level since April 4. It is set for a 2.3% increase this week, a seventh weekly advance and the best run since October 2010.

Bernanke took the plunge yesterday by embarking on QE3 or what would be better described as “Currency Debasement 3”.

Improving the U.S. job market and therefore economy was the reason given for the extremely radical measures. However, the scale of the open ended monetary commitments suggests the Fed is worried about another Great Depression and an economic collapse.

The move was described as "stunningly bold" by some analysts as it is "open ended" with Bernanke pledging to print or electronically create, with no time limit, an extra billion every single month until the labour market improves.

This is the frightening vista we have been warning of for some time. It means that should the US economy enter a recession and or depression, which still seems very likely, that the Fed will continue printing money and debasing the dollar thereby leading to dollar devaluation and inflation - potentially virulent inflation on a par with or worse than that seen in the 1970's.

We had long said that QE3 was inevitable - the question was when rather than if. Indeed, we had said that given Bernanke's closeness to Wall Street we expected that QE4, QE5 etc. were likely.

The "open ended" nature of this new round of QE as enunciated yesterday means that the Fed could if it wished or believes it is necessary print unlimited quantities of dollars.

The consensus continues to be that Bernanke and the Fed's actions in addressing U.S. economic ills are bold and progressive. The same consensus holds that the ECB’s (hindered by the Bundesbank and the will of the German people) failure to print euros 'bazooka' style is regressive, negative and risky.

The consensus is mistaken again and in time the more prudent monetary policy stance of the Bundesbank, while painful in the short term, will be seen as having been the monetarily responsible course of action.

Printing money is easy with central bankers just pressing a few buttons on a keyboard and electronically creating billions and indeed trillions of dollars, euros and pounds today.

Mining for gold and other precious metals is far from easy and gets harder every year.

Miners are having to go deeper and deeper into the ground to attempt to extract the precious metal from declining ore grades. Peak gold has been reached in South Africa and may have been reached globally.

The poor miners in South Africa who are wielding machetes today will testify as to just how very hard it is to mine for the earth’s precious metals – despite the huge advancement in technology seen in recent years.

Blood, sweat and tears are involved in extracting small amounts of gold from the earth's crust.

Bernanke's 'QE3', which should be known as 'Currency Debasement 3' means that the dollar, the euro, the pound and all fiat currencies in our current fiat based monetary system will continue to fall in value versus gold, silver and the precious metals.

On a slightly more mundane and less important note, today European Finance Ministers are meeting in Nicosia, Cyprus.

The Fed action is manifestly bullish for inflation hedging assets such as equities and gold and bearish for cash in all its forms and bonds.

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Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)

News

Gold extends rally on Fed's new stimulus - Reuters

Gold, Silver Prices Soar After Fed Fires Off QE3 – Investors.com

Gold at best in nearly 7 months on Fed bond plan – Market Watch

Gold, Silver Surge on Fed Plans – Wall Street Journal

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