Tuesday, 25 October 2011

International Precious Metals & Commodities Show -November 4th and 5th 2011








































All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.



Don't gamble with the grocery money

Don't gamble with the grocery money

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2011

My grandfather loved to gamble. So, it is no surprise that my father likes to gamble. I confess that even I enjoy the occasional challenge of facing an opponent when both us have a little skin in the game. But my grandfather--who didn't always follow his own advice--gave my father some advice which he has taken seriously and passed on to me, to wit: Don't gamble with the grocery money..........

I proffered that the game was a dangerous one for all but the largest players. Why? Three reasons: First, those players have access to information, connections and great gobs of capital that can move markets, and they are perfectly capable of making money when markets go down as well as up. Second, they have so much money that even severe losses will not prevent them from buying groceries and paying their mortgages and utility bills. Third, the government will step in to prevent them from going bust if it believes this means preventing a systemwide financial meltdown............

All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Eric Sprott: "Forces are at Work that can Move the Prices Down."


by on Oct 19, 2011

http://bit.ly/whenmoneydies At the Casey Research/Sprott Summit When Money Dies, Louis James spoke with Sprott Inc. founder Eric Sprott on the risk involved in holding money in banks, and the likely future of precious metals stocks.

The sold-out When Money Dies summit was a huge success, with attendees and participants alike receiving much to think about. If you missed it, you can still "be there," via a full set of audio recordings. These are available now, in CD or MP3 format for your convenience. http://bit.ly/whenmoneydies


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Eric Sprott: "There has to be a Big Unwinding"


by on Oct 19, 2011

http://bit.ly/whenmoneydies Eric Sprott speaks at the Casey Research/Sprott Summit When Money Dies.

The sold-out When Money Dies summit was a huge success, with attendees and participants alike receiving much to think about. If you missed it, you can still "be there," via a full set of audio recordings. These are available now, in CD or MP3 format for your convenience. http://bit.ly/whenmoneydies


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Macroeconomic Management: Panel on INET's Bretton Woods Conference (2 of 7)


by on Apr 9, 2011

The video shows the panel Macroeconomic Management After a Financial Crisis at INET's Bretton Woods Conference on April 9, 2011. The speaker in this segment is Richard Koo, Chief Economist at the Nomura Research Institute. The other panelists are Duncan Foley, Marco Seccareccia, Alan Taylor, Carmen Reinhart, and John Smithin.


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Richard Koo - A "Balance Sheet Recession"


by on Jun 8, 2010

Nomura Research Institute's Richard Koo says that what the world is experiencing right now, a "balance sheet recession," is different from traditional recessions. However, Japan recently experienced a similar type of recession, and Koo says we can learn a lot from that country's experiences. Interviewed by Daniel Erasmus at King's College, April 2010.


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

HERE’S WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE ECONOMY… finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker


HERE’S WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE ECONOMY… (And How To Fix It)



http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/wrong-economy-fix-181308391.html

The United States is in a very tough spot, economically and politically. The 25-year debt-fueled boom of 1982-2007 has ended, and it has left the country with a stagnant economy, massive debts, high unemployment, huge wealth inequality, an enormous budget deficit, and a sense of entitlement engendered by a half-century of prosperity.
After decades of instant gratification, Americans have also come to believe that all problems can be solved instantly, if only the right leaders are put in charge and the right decisions are made. And so our government has devolved into a permanent election campaign, in which incumbents blame each other for the current mess, and challengers promise change.
The trouble is that our current problems cannot be solved with a simple fix. They also cannot be solved quickly. It took 25 years for us to get to this point, and it will likely take us at least a decade or two to work our way out of it, even if we make the right decisions.
So it is time that we began to face reality.
THE PROBLEM: TOO MUCH DEBT
The biggest debt binge in US history, by a mile. Four years ago, when the debt-fueled boom ended and the economy plunged into recession, most economists and politicians misdiagnosed the problem.
They thought we were having just another post-War recession—a serious recession, yes, but a cyclical one, a recession that easy money, government stimulus, and a return of "confidence" could fix.
A handful of economists, meanwhile, argued that the recession was actually fundamentally different—a "balance sheet" recession resulting from a quarter-century-long debt-binge, one that would take a decade or more to fix.
In the past four years, it has become increasingly clear that the latter diagnosis was correct: The US economy is behaving exactly the way other economies have behaved after piling up mountains of debt and eventually going through a financial crisis. It is bumping along with disappointing growth, high unemployment, and, increasingly (and understandably) social unrest.
Total US debt, including households, companies, and the government. Can you say "$50 Trillion"?
So how do you get out of a "balance sheet" recession triggered by too much debt? You reduce the debt.
More specifically—and here's the critical point—you reduce the debt that is crippling the productive part of the economy. This is the part that creates most of the jobs, prosperity, and wealth. It is also the part that pays for the rest of the economy. That part is the private sector.
What debt is crippling the private sector?...........


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Europe’s Crisis May End in a ‘Violent Blow-Up’: Galbraith...finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker


Europe’s Crisis May End in a ‘Violent Blow-Up’: Galbraith

Mon, Oct 24, 2011, 9:54 PM EDT
By Stacy Curtin | Daily Ticker

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/europe-crisis-may-end-violent-blow-galbraith-161311592.html;_ylt=AmAt9zcylEXkpc6Tb2lRSrwp2YdG;_ylu=X3oDMTE2MjM4bGFoBG1pdANEVCBJbmRleARwb3MDMTEEc2VjA01lZGlhQmxvZ0luZGV4;_ylg=X3oDMTFpMm9iMzh1BGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRwc3RhaWQDBHBzdGNhdANibG9nBHB0A3NlY3Rpb25z;_ylv=3

1 - A "Crew Cut" for Greece: Basically, due to deteriorating fundamentals, it's not certain that big haircuts for bondholders are an inevitability.
2 - A larger bank re-cap: The number is now up to 100-110 billion EUR.
3 - External support for the EFSF?: There's definitely chatter about more IMF/SWF/BRIC involvement to leverage the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), which would be viewed as a market positive.
4 - Italy Holds The Keys: Italian reforms must happen right away. Berlusconi is already holding emergency cabinet meetings.
5 -Towards Treaty Changes: There's some nascent movement to treaty changes that would see more fiscal integration.
6 - Redistributing Growth: Plans are underway for new schemes, likely via the EuropeanInvestment Bank, to boost growth in the periphery.


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

Mineweb.com -Camping it up in gold and silver - SILVER NEWS | Mineweb

Mineweb.com - The world's premier mining and mining investment website Camping it up in gold and silver - SILVER NEWS | Mineweb

No metals have the divisive impact among economists, bankers and investors as gold and silver. The viewpoints of the two camps are noted and the writer's own conclusions on where they are headed.

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted: Monday , 24 Oct 2011

LONDON -

Gold and silver followers seem to be principally divided into two camps - believers and non-believers, with a batch of speculators somewhere in between who are looking to make money whether the precious metals rise or fall. It is doubtful if any other metals can generate either the rabid enthusiasm, or the opprobrium, which are the hallmarks of those who favour one camp or the other.

In trying to take a totally impartial view on the metals, logic would seem to favour the non-believers. After all gold, in particular, has few real industrial uses if one rules out adornment. Yes it is used in electronics, and dentistry (although perhaps to a lesser extent in the latter nowadays) and odd industrial uses such as a catalyst or in other sectors, but without jewellery and investment offtake global gold supply would enormously exceed demand and the price would plunge. Furthermore, as an investment, gold on the face of things is a poor choice paying no interest and incurring storage charges. So why on earth would anyone with a logical mind choose gold as a wealth and/or inflation protector? .......

http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page32?oid=138101&sn=Detail&pid=102055


All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.

October 24, 2011 Midday Metals Report


IraEpsteinFutures | Oct 24, 2011
Commodities, Ira Epstein, Linn Group, Futures Trading, Online Trading, Technical Analysis, Metals Report, Sales: 866-973-2077
All information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual trading may result in losses as no trading system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, trades, profit or loss, and agree to hold MinKL Invest harmless in any and all ways.