All the Gold ever extracted is 160,000 tons (in 2009) , The American Debt = 14 Trillion Dollars = 1.8 All the Gold ever extracted in Human History !!! The monetary mass in the US is increasing by 15% a year ! Total gold divided by people in the world gives each of us 23 grams
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Monday, December 31, 2012

Jim Rogers: Silver is a better buy Than Gold

Jim Rogers: On a historic basis, silver is cheaper than gold. Gold is down 10 or 15 percent from its all-time high. Silver is down 30 or 40 percent. So I guess I'd rather buy silver than gold. I'm buying neither at the moment. But if I had to, I'd probably buy silver today rather than gold. But again, I'm not buying or selling either.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Jim Rogers : I will Buy more GOLD , If America bombs Iran

Jim Rogers : I own gold and I own silver. I own all the precious metals, especially gold and silver. I'm not sure I would buy right now. Gold has gone up 12 years in a row, which is extremely unusual for any asset, at least in my experience. I don’t know any asset that’s gone up 12 years without a down year except gold. Gold has had only one decline over 30 percent in those 12 years. That, too, is extremely unusual. Plus, if you look at the open interest from the CFTC, the speculators have been piling into gold. The number of call options is more than twice the put options. All the signs are that there's too much speculation in gold right now. I’m not selling, by any stretch. I own it. If it goes down, I’ll buy more. If America bombs Iran, I’ll probably buy more going up. But I own it and, over the longer term, gold is going to go much higher because the world is doing nothing but printing money. And when the world economies get bad again, they're going to print even more money. But I'm not buying now. - in indexuniverse

Friday, December 28, 2012

Marc Faber : I own Gold. It's my biggest position in my life. The possibility of the Gold Price going down doesn't disturb me

Marc Faber : I have argued for the last 12 years that investors should buy a little bit of physical gold every month and put it aside without concerns about corrections. If you don't own any gold, I would start buying some right away, keeping in mind that it could go down.

For the last 40 years in my business I've seen people always lose money when they put too much money into something and then it goes down. They panic and sell, or they have a margin call to sell—and lose money. I own gold. It's my biggest position in my life. The possibility of the gold price going down doesn't disturb me. Every bull market has corrections.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Jim Rogers: Gold has had only one decline over 30 percent in those 12 years. That, too, is extremely unusual

Jim Rogers: I own gold and I own silver. I own all the precious metals, especially gold and silver. I'm not sure I would buy right now. Gold has gone up 12 years in a row, which is extremely unusual for any asset, at least in my experience. I don't know any asset that's gone up 12 years without a down year except gold. Gold has had only one decline over 30 percent in those 12 years. That, too, is extremely unusual. Plus, if you look at the open interest from the CFTC, the speculators have been piling into gold. The number of call options is more than twice the put options. All the signs are that there's too much speculation in gold right now. I'm not selling, by any stretch. I own it. If it goes down, I'll buy more. If America bombs Iran, I'll probably buy more going up. But I own it and, over the longer term, gold is going to go much higher because the world is doing nothing but printing money. And when the world economies get bad again, they're going to print even more money. But I'm not buying now.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Jim Rogers : Gold Correction may not be Over Yet - Be Cautious

Jim Rogers turned cautious about Gold in a recent CNBC interview "Just be careful, there're too many bulls, including me, but I'm very cautious," Rogers told CNBC. "Gold is having a correction— it's been correcting for 15-16 months now— which is normal in my view, and it's possible that [the] correction is going to continue for a while longer.""Most things correct 30 percent every year or two, even in big bull markets – 30 percent corrections are normal and yet gold has only done that once in the past 12 years," Rogers said. "Gold on any kind of historic market basis is overdue for a nice correction.""India's got a big balance of trade deficit – some Indian politicians are starting to blame it on gold," Rogers said. "[If they] figure out a way to cut or crimp imports of gold – if something like that happens, that will be a big shock to all those bulls on gold and who knows how low it can go.""If gold goes down – I hope I'm smart enough to buy more. If it goes down a lot, I hope I'm smart enough to buy a lot more," he said.

Monday, December 24, 2012

Peter Schiff Ultra Bullish on Gold for 2013

Peter Schiff Ultra Bullish on Gold for 2013 : “You’ve got a perfect storm coming in the future,” “Miners aren’t going to be able to produce enough of the stuff, because it costs so much to get it out of the ground.”he told CNBC.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Marc Faber : Gold and Silver will move in the same direction

Marc Faber : Gold and silver will move in the same direction, up together or down together. At times, silver will be stronger relative to gold, and at other times gold will be stronger relative to silver. My friend Eric Sprott thinks that silver will go ballistic. I don't know. I own gold.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Marc Faber :I look at Gold as a currency and not as a Commodity

Marc Faber : I look at Gold as a honest currency not as a Commodity , it cannot be manipulated or to a lesser extent by say central banks in the sense that they can't print it , Gold has to be taken out from the earth and there is a limited supply of it and when you print paper money there is more paper money units per ounce of Gold continuously so it's not necessarily that the price of gold goes up but it's the value of paper money that goes down , so I look at it as a currency and not as a commodity ...

Friday, December 14, 2012

Gold is your Best Buy before and during 2013

"Who owns the gold in the world? Central banks? Individuals? Powerful families?" The most reliable reports of gold ownership place about 29,000 tons in the hands of governments, central banks and the IMF, led by the U.S., Germany, England, IMF, France, Italy and Switzerland. The rest of the above ground inventory of an estimated 125,000 tons is owned by private individual and groups throughout the world. As to powerful families (i.e. Rothschild), they have long traded the majority of their physical gold holdings for earning assets given the worldwide irredeemable currency system. The times when the Rothschild' would keep large amounts of gold to lend to sovereign governments for interest earnings payed to them in gold ended in 1971.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

James Turk: Everyone should have a Precious Metals portfolio

GoldMoney Chairman James Turk outlines the reasons why "everyone should have a precious metals portfolio." James outlines the stark fiscal facts about government debt problems across the developed world, and why central banks' determination to devalue the currencies they issue is causing a bull market in precious metals. He demonstrates why gold remains undervalued, despite the great gains seen in its price over the last 11 years, and a means of assessing whether or not the yellow metal is fairly valued or not. James argues that we are living in "fiat currency bubble", similar though many magnitudes greater than the recent housing bubbles seen in America, Ireland, Spain and other countries, or the "Tech bubble" in NASDAQ stocks in the late 1990s. The USA is racing towards hyperinflation, courtesy of the Federal Reserve's monetisation of US government deficits.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Marc Faber: Investors Protect your Portfolio with Physical Gold

Marc Faber: Basically we are in an environment where central banks are monetizing debts and where the balance sheets of central banks are increasing, and this will continue, especially in the United States and Europe. We are also in an environment where in the long run, a lot of sovereign debts will either not be paid or will have to be inflated away. So owning some physical gold is a prudent insurance. I am specifying here 'physical gold' because one wants to protect oneself as an investor for the potential of a systemic collapse of the financial system. - in a recent interview

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