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Cours Or & Argent

La Reine dans les entrailles de la banque d’Angleterre

IMG Auteur
Iacono Research
Publié le 19 décembre 2012
177 mots - Temps de lecture : moins d'une minute
( 11 votes, 5/5 ) , 6 commentaires
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Rubrique : Or et Argent

 

 

 

 

La Reine a récemment visité les coffres d'or de la banque d'Angleterre. C’est là la dernière (et curieuse) tentative en date du Royaume-Uni de rassurer le reste du monde sur le fait qu’il possède encore beaucoup d’or.

Et bien entendu, cet or n’est pas le sien.

Seules 310 tonnes des 4600 tonnes officiellement reportées appartiennent à la banque d’Angleterre. Le reste est conservé par le Royaume-Uni au service d’autres nations qui sont de plus en plus nombreuses à s’inquiéter de la sécurité de leur métal et à en demander le rapatriement… juste au cas où.




Un site internet a organisé un concours de la meilleure tirade pour la photo ci-dessus qui, et vous serez certainement d’accord avec ça, semble ne demander qu’une chose : qu’on associe des mots à l’expression qui ombrage le visage de la Reine.

Voici ce que je suggère: ‘Je n’arrive pas à croire que j’ai pu laisser Gordon Brown vendre la moitié de notre or il y a dix ans pour 300 dollars l’once. Combien ça vaut, l’or, aujourd’hui? 1700 dollars l’once? Incroyable…’

 

 

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oui , vivement qu'ils rappatrient tous leurs or. ca mettra les choses au clair.
Evaluer :   1  0Note :   1
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question1: est-ce vraiment de l'or en barre?
question2: à qui appartient-t-il?
question3: y a-t-il double ou triple ou multiple ... allocation? Jeff Christian parle de 100x
question4: mais qu'est-ce qu'elle fout au fond de cette cave?
question5: combien d'or possède-t-elle?
question6: combien appartient à l'Allemagne, France, Suisse, etc..?
question7: combien est de pureté 995 ou plus?
question8: pourquoi envoyer la Reine et pas un commité d'audit indépendant?
question9: sont-t-ils paniqués pour faire cette opération de publicité? Message subliminal: "vous voyez, il y en a plein la cave"
merci de me répondre.
PS: voyez ses yeux briller!. je croyais pourtant que l'or était une relique barbare sans intérêt.
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"question2: à qui appartient-t-il?"

En cas de vraie crise, la détention vaut plus que la propriété...
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avec le passé menteur, pour ne pas dire "perfide albion, selon De gaulles" des Anglais, ça me rapelle une phrase de Jim Rickards dans son livre
"currency wars": en cas de crise, les USA peuvent facilement décider de confisquer l'or étranger présent dans leurs coffres pour raisons stratégiques et sécurité intérieure. Les européens se contenteront d'une lettre de crédit sans valeur.
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Silver Vaults Stuffed Mean Prices Rising 29% in ’13: Commodities


Silver Vaults Stuffed Mean Prices Rising 29% in ’13: Commodities
By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen & Nicholas Larkin - Dec 19, 2012 9:17 PM ET

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Silver Bullion Pte, one of Singapore’s largest suppliers of coins and bars to retail investors, says sales tripled since October, part of a global surge in demand that drove holdings to a record.

“Our clients are worried that a major currency crisis or mass bankruptcies would occur,” said Gregor Gregersen, the 36- year-old founder of Silver Bullion, whose sales now average about S$6 million ($4.9 million) a month. “It all has to do with falling confidence in the heavily indebted Western governments and financial institutions.”
Enlarge image Silver Bullion Founder Gregor Gregersen

Gregor Gregersen, founder of Silver Bullion Pte., arranges a stack of silver bullion bars at the company's office in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
Enlarge image Silver Vaults Stuffed Mean Prices Rising 25% in ’13

Johnson Matthey Plc 100 ounce silver bullion bars are arranged for a photograph at the Silver Bullion Pte. office in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
Enlarge image Silver Vaults Stuffed Mean Prices Rising 25% in ’13

John Tay, executive at Silver Bullion Pte., left, conducts a simple purity test on a silver bar for customer Chin Kuan Yew at the company's office in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg

Global investment through silver-backed exchange-traded products reached a record 18,854 metric tons in November, or more than nine months of mine output, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Holdings are now valued at about $19.2 billion. Prices will rise as much as 29 percent to $40.25 an ounce next year, based on the median of 49 analyst, trader and investor estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Silver almost tripled since the end of 2008, lagging behind only platinum in gains for precious metals this year as policy makers from the U.S. to China to Europe pledged more action to boost economies. That’s attracting investors betting that stimulus will stoke inflation and debase currencies. It’s also luring those wagering growth will strengthen industrial demand for silver, 53 percent of which is used in everything from televisions to batteries.
Hedge Funds

The metal advanced 12 percent to $31.09 this year, compared with a 6.6 percent gain for gold and 13 percent rise for platinum. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of 24 commodities was little changed and the MSCI All-Country World Index of equities jumped 14 percent. Treasuries returned 1.8 percent, according to a Bank of America Corp. index.

Hedge funds and other large speculators increased bets on higher prices 12-fold since the end of June, to a net 34,862 futures and options, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. That’s about 50 percent higher than the average over the past five years, a period during which speculators have never been bearish.

Equity investors also bet on higher prices. Shares of Mexico City-based Fresnillo Plc (FRES), the largest primary silver producer, rose 25 percent this year. The company will report a 22 percent gain in net income to a record $927.1 million in 2013, according to the mean of seven estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp. in Idaho, which gets about 65 percent of its revenue from silver, fell 6.3 percent to $22.63 since the start of January and will reach $31.89 in 12 months, the average of analysts’ predictions shows.
Deposit Boxes

Silver Bullion, which started in 2009 in a rented bedroom with 18,000 ounces, now has 246,000 ounces (7.65 tons) stored in vaults for customers as well as its own inventories. The company operates from the Certis CISCO Center, home to one of Singapore’s largest providers of safety deposit boxes. It sells everything from 1- to 32-ounce coins and 10- to 100-ounce bars, as well as gold, platinum and palladium.

Investors bought 1,464 tons through ETPs this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. They will probably add another 300 tons in 2013, Barclays Plc estimates. That’s less than the so- called implied physical surplus that the bank says will reach 6,441 tons in 2013. Its analysts expect silver to average $32.50 next year, from $31.20 in 2012.
IMF Outlook

The surplus may drag prices lower should economic growth slow because it would curb demand for consumer goods. A car contains as much as 30 grams and a mobile phone about 0.25 gram, according to the Washington-based Silver Institute. While the International Monetary Fund expects a 3.6 percent global expansion in 2013, from 3.3 percent this year, the forecast was cut twice since July.

The metal retreated 23 percent in 2008 as the global economy tumbled into a recession. Japan and the 17-nation euro zone are contracting again this year and the Congressional Budget Office says the U.S. economy faces the same risk should lawmakers fail to resolve more than $600 billion of automatic spending cuts and tax increases scheduled to start next month.

Investors may also be dissuaded by the metal’s price swings. Its 100-day historical volatility is almost twice as high as gold, meaning investors are subject to bigger losses as well as gains. Silver for immediate delivery reached a record $49.79 in April 2011 before tumbling 35 percent in less than three weeks.
Bullion Market

Comex silver futures are valued at about $22.6 billion, compared with $72.4 billion for the bourse’s gold contracts, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Members of the London Bullion Market Association handled an average of $34.7 billion of gold a day in October, and $3.26 billion of silver.

Investors own 18,760.34 tons through ETPs, less than 1 percent below the record set on Nov. 15. Morgan Stanley predicts they will add a further 500 tons in 2013. The bank said in a report Dec. 6 that silver is among its top commodity picks for next year, along with gold, corn and soybeans, because it will be boosted by investor demand and a weaker U.S. currency.

Central banks are seeking to boost growth through printing money, increasing investor concern the actions will debase currencies and spur inflation.

The Federal Reserve said Dec. 12 it would buy $45 billion of Treasury securities a month from January, adding to $40 billion a month of existing mortgage-debt purchases. Silver jumped about 53 percent during the first round of so-called quantitative easing from December 2008 through March 2010, twice the gain in gold. It advanced 24 percent in the second phase that ended in June 2011, about three times more than the other metal. The central bank bought $2.3 trillion of debt in total.
Subway Station

The scale of intervention is a sign to some investors that markets will be roiled once more by financial meltdowns. That’s reflected in Silver Bullion’s sales, which reached S$38 million in 2011, from S$700,000 in the first year of business. Orders were also boosted by the government lifting a goods and service tax on investment-grade gold, silver and platinum from Oct. 1.

While Gregersen’s first sale was made in a Singapore subway station, his company is now a member of the Singapore Bullion Market Association, with suppliers from the Perth Mint in Australia to the Mexican central bank.

“There’s going to be another big crash, we are really near it now,” said Chin Kuan Yew, a businessman and Silver Bullion customer who sold all his properties, including his condominium, to buy more metal. “You have on the one hand the U.S. printing money and the European Union is on the brink of collapse.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in Singapore at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net; Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net
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Dernier commentaire publié pour cet article
avec le passé menteur, pour ne pas dire "perfide albion, selon De gaulles" des Anglais, ça me rapelle une phrase de Jim Rickards dans son livre "currency wars": en cas de crise, les USA peuvent facilement décider de confisquer l'or étranger présent dans  Lire la suite
MadLock - 23/12/2012 à 08:46 GMT
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