Consider
Gold & Silver Now! by Sean
Brodrick
Dear
Paul,
Our nation may
be on the cusp of economic catastrophe — call it a panic, a
meltdown, an implosion; I don't care what you call it. But it's bad.
And it's coming straight at you like a runaway bus.
In times of
crisis, people naturally gravitate toward gold, because it's the one
investment that can hold its value when the fertilizer hits the fan.
As for silver,
well, any trader will tell you that silver is gold on steroids. When
gold jumps, silver can leap twice as far, percentage-wise.
And both gold
and silver are easier to buy and store than barrels of oil (another
good bet in these trying times). I've been recommending oil ETFs
like USO and OIL for months now — they've been doing well. Now, I
think it's the time to put some of your money in something else ...
and that something else is gold and silver.
What if I'm
wrong — what if there is no economic catastrophe? What if the
government is able to stop the crises that are lining up from
turning into full-blown disasters? Well, gold and silver are STILL
good bets to ride the economic tides that are surging
now.
Today, I want
to explore five reasons why I think our country is in real trouble
... five crises that support the idea of buying gold and silver now
...
Crisis #1: Financial Markets on the Edge of
Panic
I don't have
to tell you the news in financial markets is bad ... the problem is
it's going to get much, much worse.
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U.S.
dollar in free fall! Stocks hitting new
lows! Your LAST CHANCE
to act ...
The
CRISIS: LAST FRIDAY, we warned you that
the Freddie/Fannie crisis would trigger massive new
money-pumping in Washington ...
The GOVERNMENT
RESPONSE: ON SUNDAY, Bernanke and Paulson
announced they're cranking up the printing presses ... and
flooding the world with billions of new, unbacked dollars ...
The MARKET
REACTION: YESTERDAY, the greenback hit a
new all-time low against the euro ... oil and gold took off
like rockets ... and the U.S. stock market plunged to its
lowest levels since 1998 ...
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We are seeing
financial institutions collapse like slow dominoes: Countrywide
Financial and New Century Financial last year ... Bear Stearns
earlier this year ... IndyMac last week.
Meanwhile,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are on federally mandated life support.
Since Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee about half of the $12
trillion of U.S. mortgages, they might be too big to fail. But their
shareholders are getting clobbered.
And big
regional banks are small enough to fail ... which is why National
City and Washington Mutual both saw their stocks get 25% haircuts on
Monday as terrified investors stampeded for the exits.
These are all
just stocks on the leading edge of a much larger problem that Martin
and Mike Larson have been warning us about for so long.
The mortgage
crisis has become the Andromeda Strain of financial markets,
devouring everything it comes in contact with. According to a
Bridgewater study, total financial losses from the current credit
crisis will hit $1.6-trillion — and that estimate was made BEFORE
last week's bad news.
It's not just
the losses on banks' books. A recent Bank of America study said that
the meltdown in the U.S. subprime real estate market had led to a
global loss of $7.7 TRILLION dollars in stock market values just
since October.
Now we're
seeing the damage spread into the "prime" mortgage market. Signs of
devastation are everywhere. Two million homes are vacant across
America even as tent cities of the dispossessed spring up in urban
areas. RealtyTrac, the leading online marketplace for foreclosure
properties, said that in June, U.S. foreclosure filings jumped 53%
year over year. In fact, one in every 501 U.S. households received a
foreclosure filing during the month.
Former
Treasury Secretary Larry Summers says that housing finance has not
been this bad since the Depression. And there are more shoes to
drop. In fact, there could be many more shoes to drop. More than 300
banks could fail in the next three years, according to RBC Capital
Markets analyst Gerard Cassidy, who had in February estimated no
more than 150 banks were in trouble!

Bottom line:
Your money could be at risk. The percentage of uninsured deposits
has doubled since 1992, climbing to about 37% of the nation's $7.07
trillion in deposits at the end of the first quarter, according to
an analysis of data reported to the FDIC.
So, more than
a third of America's deposits are at risk. Now would be a good time
to check and see if the balance in any of your accounts has climbed
over the insured limit of $100,000.
What to do
with your excess cash? Consider buying gold and silver
NOW!
Crisis #2: Fed Stoking
Inflation
And now some
history. The last time we saw something this bad was during the
Great Depression, and it has been burned into central bankers'
brainpans that the Great Depression was caused because The Fed stood
by twiddling its thumbs as banks failed and the money supply
imploded. They aren't going to let that happen again. In fact, as
Greenspan before him, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has vowed not to
allow a repeat of the 1930s money supply collapse.
By bailing out
financial institutions — lending liquid assets against illiquid
paper — the Fed is already pumping up the broad money supply. This
has fanned the fires of inflation that was already stoked by the
Commodity Supercycle and soaring energy prices. Just look at what
happened to producer prices through May ... ZOOM!

America is
used to single-digit inflation, and in the low single digits at
that. Is American prepared for double or even triple-digit
inflation? Heck no! More to the point: Are YOU prepared?
Inflation
makes the value of the U.S. dollar go down (since goods are priced
in dollars, as prices go up, the value of the greenback goes lower).
Conversely, as the dollar goes lower, the value of gold and silver
usually go up. This process is picking up steam.
Solution?
Consider gold and silver now!
Crisis #3: Massive U.S. Debt About to
Balloon
Fannie and
Freddie are among the largest financial companies in the world.
Their liabilities — mortgage-backed securities and other debt — add
up to some $5.3 trillion. Now, consider that total U.S. federal debt
is about $9.6 trillion. About $5.4 trillion of that debt is held by
the public (in the form of Treasury bonds, etc.), while $4.2
trillion is debt such as Social Security IOUs. This is the liability
side of America's federal balance sheet, and its condition
influences how much the government can borrow and at what
rates.
The
liabilities of Fannie and Freddie are currently NOT on this
U.S. balance sheet. (In fact, the reason Fannie and Freddie went
private, after being created as government entities in the 1930s,
was to get their liabilities off the government's books).
But if there
is a run on the debt of either company, that would put tremendous
pressure on the Treasury and Federal Reserve to publicly guarantee
that debt to prevent a systemic financial collapse. Indeed, that
seems to be what is happening now.
The Fed said
it would lend to the two companies "should such lending prove
necessary." Secretary Paulson said his department is asking Congress
for quick approval of a plan to expand its line of credit to the two
companies and to buy their stock if necessary.
Overnight,
what has long been an implicit taxpayer guarantee for both
companies seems to be becoming explicit — committing
American taxpayers to honoring as much as $5 trillion in new
liabilities. Therefore, U.S. debt held by the public would more than
double, and the national balance sheet would look very
ugly.
And that
should weigh on the U.S. dollar like a millstone. Indeed, the action
in Treasuries on Friday shows this may already be
happening.
What happened
Friday? Bonds got routed on Friday, with long bond futures falling
and 2-year Treasury Note yields soaring. Every single time BEFORE
this phase of the credit crisis, traders aggressively bought
Treasuries as a safe haven when the stock market cracked. This time,
they did not.
There are a
lot of "ifs" here, but if this trend continues, I think the U.S.
dollar could be heading for a breakdown — one for the history
books.
Again, this
argues for buying gold and silver now!
Crisis #4: Energy Markets Going
Ballistic
Oil pulled
back nearly $7 yesterday — but that pullback is probably short-term
only; nothing goes up in a straight line. The longer-term forces
driving oil higher are still in place and getting
stronger.
I've explained
to you week
after week
after week
about the dire confluence of supply and demand, geopolitics and
geology in the oil markets — problems that are combining to send oil
prices to $150 a barrel, $200 a barrel and beyond. So I won't go
over old news. But here is the latest ...
- Brazilian Oil
Strike Begins. This week, Brazil's Oil Workers
Confederation began a five-day strike against Petroleo Brasileiro
SA, an action that could cut the country's daily crude production
by more than 50%. Yes, it's short-term, but if labor troubles
worsen in Brazil's oil fields and the strike extends, it could
really squeeze global supply. The last time Brazil's oil workers
went on a protracted strike, Brazil ended up importing
oil!
- Russia bids
for Libyan oil. While the U.S. dithers on whether to
drill offshore or whether to buy oil from "bad" countries, Russian
oil companies such as OAO Gazprom, the world's largest natural gas
producer, are buying up energy assets in Africa. In the latest
twist, state-run Gazprom offered to buy ALL of Libya's spare oil
and gas exports. You can see why Russia is doing it — three of
Russia's major new oil projects failed to achieve oil production
targets in 2007. But this also limits future sources of crude for
the U.S.
- IEA
Raises 2008 World Oil Demand Forecast by 80,000 bpd. The
International Energy Agency raised its forecast for world demand
for oil for 2008 for the first time in several months, and
anticipates demand in 2009 to increase by 1.1% to 87.7 million
barrels per day (bpd), driven by emerging countries. The IEA,
which had cut its forecast for world demand for 2008 for five
months running, in its June report raised its forecast for the
2008 demand to 86.9 million barrels per day, an increase of around
80,000 bpd.
This is
happening even as U.S. demand drops by over 400,000 barrels per day.
And it's happening while U.S. exports are increasing. My point is
that if global oil demand and U.S. exports are
increasing even as U.S. oil use and our economy are
shrinking, that means other countries (I'll spot you
a "C" and an "I") are NOT experiencing a recession.
And THAT means
oil prices will probably keep going higher even as Americans use
less of it.
If you think
gasoline at $4.50 a gallon is expensive, just wait until it gets to
$6 a gallon. What do you think that will do to the U.S. economy?
Just as importantly, what do you think that will do to the U.S.
dollar?
Look, the
petroleum exporting nations — Saudi Arabia, Russia, United Arab
Emirates, etc. — are poised to become the biggest creditor to the
U.S. government. Oil-rich Arab countries often wonder aloud about
de-pegging their currencies from the U.S. dollar ... and are already
working to diversify their portfolios into other investment
vehicles, including gold.
I'd say that
rising energy prices could hammer the U.S. dollar deep, deep into
the Saudi sands, and send precious metals higher on a gusher of
demand.
Solution:
Consider buying gold and silver before that happens!
Crisis #5: We Are at the Brink of War with
Iran
The U.S.,
including the Presidential candidates, are talking tough on Iran.
What's more, the Jerusalem Post reported on July 11 that
Israeli warplanes held maneuvers over Iraq, possibly preparing for a
strike against Iran.
For its part,
Iran is threatening Israel and America's Middle East bases with its
missiles ... and saying it could cut off the Straits of Hormuz,
through which a high proportion of the world's oil flows.
Of course, if
Iran thinks the U.S. is too stretched in Iraq to attack Tehran, it's
sorely mistaken. Military experts say the U.S. is quite capable of
mounting a days- or even weeks-long bombing campaign against Iranian
targets.
I sure hope
that the U.S., Israel and Iran all back away from the brink ... from
this dark path that leads to catastrophe. If it comes to war with
Iran, forget $150 oil ... forget $200 oil ... try $300 or $400 per
barrel oil!
Again, what do
you think that will do to the U.S. economy and the U.S.
dollar?
You can see
why I think buying gold and silver makes perfect sense right now.
All five of the scenarios I just outlined support higher gold and
silver prices.
What's more
...
There
Are Positive Reasons to Buy Gold, Too!
So far, I've
just covered the reasons that could send you hiding under the bed.
But there are plain ol' bullish factors for gold.
- According
to the World Gold Council, members of the Central Bank Gold
Agreement sold 297 metric tonnes of gold so far in this agreement
year (which ends in September). This suggests that the full 500
tonne quota will not be released to the markets this year. Less
supply usually means a higher price.
- Production
from the world's gold mines remains flat. The big gold price
increases seen over the past few years has not stimulated any
significant global gold production increase. Indeed, output may
well show a small decline over the next few years. Production is
already falling off a cliff in South Africa, formerly the world's
biggest gold producer.
- Jewelry
demand in India, the biggest fabrication market on Earth, is
beginning to pick up again while emerging markets like China and
Vietnam are having a sharp impact as their populations get more
money and therefore buy more gold.
- There are
more industrial uses for silver all the time, and demand from
investors is increasing along with new silver bullion funds around
the world.
- And
investment demand from gold and silver ETFs is continuing to
increase, soaking up more metal from the market, making a tight
supply and demand situation tighter and helping put a floor under
the price.

So even if
none of the bad scenarios I laid out come to pass — and I hope they
don't! — there are still good reasons for gold and silver to go up.
Two
Ways to Buy Gold and Silver Now ...
I like two
gold and silver ETFs as an easy way for investors to get a stake in
these precious metals:
SPDR
Gold Shares (GLD). Formerly known as StreetTracks Gold ETF,
this exchange-traded fund holds physical gold and tracks the metal
very closely. As inflation takes off and the value of the dollar
goes down, gold should go up.
iShares Silver
Trust (SLV). Just as the GLD holds gold, the SLV holds
silver.
Subscribers to
my Red-Hot
Commodity ETFs service already own these, and are sitting
on open gains. But I think there's more upside ahead.
The really
hard times are yet to come. But you don't have to be a victim, and
your portfolio doesn't have to be a statistic. Get smart, get busy
and consider buying ... well, you know.
Yours for
trading profits,
Sean
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