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    Müssen die Bullionbanken bis Ende Mai eindecken?-neues von GATA - 500 Beiträge pro Seite

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     Ja Nein
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.05.01 11:00:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1 ()
      MIDAS COMMENTARY FOR MAY 14, 2001

      By Bill Murphy
      www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
      May 14, 2001

      Gold $268.30 up 30 cents
      Silver $4.34 up 1 cent

      Here`s a bombshell from Bob Chapman that fits in perfectly
      with the information you have been getting from Midas for
      the past four weeks or so. Bob, who is a big GATA supporter
      and editor of the International Forecaster, sent us the
      following even before he published it in his own newsletter:

      Our intelligence sources have informed us that
      Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has given the
      bullion banks until the end of May to clear up
      their hedging and outstanding gold derivative
      positions. Evidentially this process has been
      going on for some time. Further, British Prime
      Minister Tony Blair will try to make available,
      at the upcoming British gold auction, additional
      gold that will go to banks designated by
      Greenspan. We were also told that AngloGold
      will sell forward a designated amount of gold to
      banks also specified by Greenspan. Our source
      for this intelligence has been very accurate in
      the past. They also said they thought that gold
      would break out over $275 an ounce by Friday.

      Subscription information for Bob`s newsletter: one year
      $79.95 U.S. Funds. Make check payable to Robert Chapman,
      Box 510518, Punta Gorda, Florida 33951 USA. Please include
      name, address, telephone number, and e-mail address. Bob
      accepts Visa and MasterCard charges. Please provide your
      card number and expiration date. Bob publishes twice a
      month by surface mail and three or four times a month by
      e-mail. His email address is BIF@gate.net.

      I can`t see how the bullion banks can cover without being
      bailed out. The weekly supply/demand deficit is too big.
      The only way for them to cover without the price going
      bonkers is for someone else to take on their shorts.

      This ought to be interesting. If Bob`s intelligence is on
      the money again and the Gold Cartel has run out of protection,
      look out.

      old was very quiet today ahead of the British Auction tomorrow
      and the Fed`s decision on cutting interest rates, also to be
      announced tomorrow.

      Of interest:

      -- The gold price action remains very constructive and is
      different than it has been the past four years.

      -- Spot bullion remains above its 200-day moving average
      and has formed a small bullish flag formation.

      -- The gold open interest on Comex has dropped to only
      105,491 contracts. This is very bullish as it is
      extraordinarily low from a historical perspective. That
      means the trade does not want to be short, possibly
      because they do not have the physical gold to hedge.

      -- The gold stocks popped late today and remained firm. It
      is my guess that gold is getting ready to rock again to the
      upside.

      I thought you might like to see some of the feedback I am
      receiving on the GATA African Gold Summit that was held
      in Durban. I think it will help you understand what a big
      success this was for all of us.

      >From Dick Trostler:

      The following information was passed along to
      me by Christine Maggiore, author of the book
      "What if everything you thought you knew about
      AIDS was wrong?" This information is in two parts.
      The first is a message from Anita Allen, who is
      apparently in South Africa. The second part is a
      letter to Business Day, the South African
      newspaper, by David Rasnick, Ph.D., who is a
      member of South African President Mbeki`s AIDS
      Advisory Panel. I had to read Anita Allen`s portion
      several times in trying to understand what she is
      saying. She writes in a sort of shorthand. But I
      think that you will find it of value.

      From: "Anita Allen"
      Date: Wed, 9 May 2001 16:58:36 +0200
      Subject: Golden Good News South Africa flash
      9 May 2001

      Dear All:

      Thought you might be interested to know that
      the Boston US Anti-Trust Men are in town just
      a stone`s throw away. Guess what they are
      doing here? Telling Big Business the game`s
      up. Expect soon the rise of bullion to somewhere
      between $600-$1000. South Africa finally has
      control of the gold price. This coincides with US
      off the Human Rights Committee, Bush jetting in
      for a private hey, Thabo, I hear HIV doesn`t cause
      AIDS....

      The Boston Boys were all over Tim Modise`s Show
      this morning. And you should have heard the callers!
      They even asked the Boston Star on his show to
      repeat everything he had just finished saying, and say
      it again from the front (so they could record it -- no
      doubt, and study what exactly the hell he is saying).
      Callers in between already knew all about it and
      asked for phone numbers to contribute to the costs.
      This is the greatest show on earth in my lifetime so far.
      I am so happy its virtually in my back yard, so to
      speak...

      >From South Africa`s Andy Brown:

      My son-in-law, a promising apprentice gold bug,
      yesterday attended a Johannesburg family 21st
      birthday, where there were about 50 friends and
      relatives of all ages and he did a small survey.
      He asked about 15 attendees if they knew about
      the cold conference in Durban on the May 10.
      Without exception, all said yes. Wow! GATA`s
      efforts in Durban are an unqualified success,
      although many sections of the mainstream
      written press seem to be worried more about
      their jobs rather than printing the truth. However,
      South African Broadcasting Co. television have
      given GATA incredible exposure. What a contrast!
      As a member I would sincerely thank all those in
      GATA for their tireless efforts over the past two
      years.

      >From Steve Munnings, responding to Business Day`s article
      today by Ilja Graulich, "GATA`s conspiracy theory."

      Dear Sirs:

      I consider myself a rational, intelligent, and
      somewhat sceptical person. For the record, I am
      not 100 percent convinced by GATA`s claims, but
      am listening with an open mind, and have yet to see
      any credible counter-evidence that which refutes
      GATA`s. Opinions galore, on both sides, but evidence
      is what counts!

      Ilja seems to be presenting a mostly anti-GATA
      opinion. His credibility (in my mind) suffers
      immensely when he states the following: "The
      group dismisses what is taught about supply and
      demand in Economics 101 that if demand drops and
      supply rises, which it has done due to central
      bank selling, the price of a commodity should
      drop." This is demonstrably untrue. They are not
      only well aware of the supply/demand theory of
      economics, but it forms a central part of their
      arguments.

      To wit: They maintain that an unusual and unexpected
      source of supply -- the unprecedented level of gold
      selling and leasing by the central banks -- is not
      only unusual but is larger than is generally held,
      and is (at least partly) as a result of a "gold
      price suppression" conspiracy.

      They maintain that gold derivatives (especially "short
      selling" and "shorting" in all forms) amounts to
      ADDITIONAL supply side pressure. And maybe
      Economics 101 does not cover that, but Economics
      201 surely supports that thesis!

      Also hurting his case is the following: "But to prey on
      the innocence of some and keep hope alive may hurt
      their cause in the end."

      Surely "preying on the innocent" is the activity of
      fraudsters, not that of people who believe in their
      cause -- even if they were eventually to be proved
      wrong. Is Ilja accusing the GATA group of
      deliberately misleading people? Their actions are
      highly consistent with those of people who believe
      in the truth of their cause, not deliberate con artists.

      Ilja states that the question "Why, if this evidence is
      so compelling, have so few joined GATA`s crusade?"
      needs answering. Does it? Does Ilja not know that
      most people do not actively join a cause until it has
      become popular or politically correct? How many
      people does he expect to join such a cause even if
      they are convinced that it has the truth? Is a
      measure of a crusade`s worth and credibility the
      number of joiners? What happened to the truth?

      By this implied standard Jesus` crusade" was not
      worthy until years after his death!

      The truth (or lack thereof) of the allegations made
      by GATA stand (or fall) on their own merits, not on
      how many people have joined! Whether they are
      effective as a political force, on the other hand,
      could very well be measured by how many people
      join the cause. Two very different issues.

      Here is a counter-question:One of the things GATA
      is urging the conference attendees to do is to ask
      some very pointed questions to some very specific
      individuals. Would it not be best to suspend
      judgment on the merits of their case until those
      questions have been answered? And, if it is within
      one`s power to do so, press for the answers?

      And finally, a response to the findings reported to the
      World Gold Council by Professor Anthony Neuberger of the
      London Business School, as reported in the Financial
      Times last week.

      I am a 1996 graduate of London Business School
      and had Professor Anthony Neuberger for a class
      in options and futures. He seemed like a nice guy,
      but my impression was that he`s a very
      mathematical, risk-immunization type of finance
      guy with no feel for the realities of the markets.

      By the way, you might be interested to know that
      one of the head professors of economics at LBS
      is Lord David Currie. From what I understand, he
      once was (and maybe still is) one of the so-called
      "seven wise men" of the Bank of England. He`s
      probably well-connected these days; I`ve heard that
      he`s a Labourite and has been an adviser to Blair
      and the Labour government in general.

      I quickly looked at the LBS website but couldn`t
      find him listed. My year 2000 Alumni Handbook
      has him listed as the deputy director of external
      relations. Anyway, my information is pretty dated,
      but that`s something that you might want to look
      into. There may be a connection between the
      BOE and the LBS study.

      I would have loved to be a fly on the wall last week
      for this one:

      BASEL, Switzerland (Reuters) -- U.S. Federal
      Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan and
      European Central Bank President Wim
      Duisenberg will both take part in a meeting of
      central bankers on Monday at the Bank for
      International Settlements in Switzerland.
      Greenspan and Duisenberg attended a dinner
      on Sunday along with Bank of England Governor
      Sir Edward George and other members of the
      Group of 10 central bankers. As he left the
      dinner, Greenspan was asked by reporters
      whether he was there to urge the European
      Central Bank to cut interest rates. He replied
      only: "I am here because I am a member of this
      group." Duisenberg, who left the dinner a few
      minutes after Greenspan, declined to say what
      had been discussed during the evening. The
      chairmen of the central banks of the Group of
      10 countries meet periodically at the Bank for
      International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland,
      to discuss the world economic situation.

      I can see Alan Greenspan now at the BIS: "Gentlemen, we
      have a slight problem. It involves a letter sent to me by
      Senator Joe Lieberman..."

      -END-
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.05.01 18:49:43
      Beitrag Nr. 2 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.05.01 20:28:04
      Beitrag Nr. 3 ()
      Aus aktuellem Anlass ;-)

      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.05.01 23:03:02
      Beitrag Nr. 4 ()
      den ganzen Schmus zu lesen
      um ein, zwei Perlen zu finden
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.05.01 00:04:48
      Beitrag Nr. 5 ()
      Danke, danke ... ;-)

      Trading Spotlight

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      JanOne
      3,9700EUR +3,66 %
      Heftige Kursexplosion am Montag?!mehr zur Aktie »
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.05.01 14:43:07
      Beitrag Nr. 6 ()
      @ R.Deutsch

      deine recherchen sind super, leider, schaffe ich es nicht, zeitlich, das meterlange zu lesen...
      wäre es möglich, vorab, in z.b. drei sätzen das wesentliche zu fassen, und erst dann den meterlangen rest anhängen? ....
      ....alle schnell-leser...wären sicher sehr dankbar....
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.05.01 15:30:40
      Beitrag Nr. 7 ()
      @bestofme

      >>leider, schaffe ich es nicht, zeitlich, das meterlange zu >>lesen...

      waren die letzten Worte des Börsenzockers.


      (sorry, aber ich kann nicht anders )
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.05.01 19:06:57
      Beitrag Nr. 8 ()
      Wer kann mir die WKN der Bank für internationalen Zahlungsausgleich (bank for international settlement)in Basel mitteilen? (Hat viel mit dem Goldmarkt zu tun).
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.05.01 20:34:55
      Beitrag Nr. 9 ()
      http://www.bis.org" target="_blank" rel="nofollow ugc noopener">http://www.bis.org


      zu WKN: was Du meinst, ist wahrscheinlich:

      http://www.bis.org/about/shareswd.htm

      SEP
      Avatar
      schrieb am 17.05.01 10:51:59
      Beitrag Nr. 10 ()
      Danke Sep,
      die haben doch tatsächlich alle Aktien von den Privaten eingezogen. Die Bank (und ihr Gold ) gehört jetzt den Zentralbanken. Die wissen also schon seit Monaten wohin der Goldpreis geht.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 17.05.01 12:14:48
      Beitrag Nr. 11 ()
      wurde viel spekuliert über die Gründe.

      Was Gold angeht:

      dow/nasd hoch, gold kann auch hoch

      Korrektur dow/nasd, Ergibt vorab-Korrektur bei Gold, 3 bis 6 Stunden vorher.

      Reuters schwenkt um, und Inflation in EU bei 2,9 %. Gut für die öffentliche Wahrnehmung von Gold.

      Aber: die Minen können nicht übermäßig steigen, wenn Gold nicht steigt. Minen laufen jetzt deutlich vor, wenn gold nicht nachzieht, wirds wieder der bounce einer toten Katze.

      BIS: interessant, es hat keine wirklich überzeugenden Gründe für die Einziehung der privaten Aktien gegeben.

      SEP
      Avatar
      schrieb am 17.05.01 16:00:36
      Beitrag Nr. 12 ()
      @Ken_meyer

      ...in der kürze liegt die würze...
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.05.01 20:10:13
      Beitrag Nr. 13 ()
      Ich glaube zwar , dass GATA in vielen Dingen falsch liegt. Jedoch sind die eingetroffenen Vorraussagen (>$275 am heutigen Freitag) mehr als bemerkenswert.

      Ciao GoldKnight (der was zu grübeln hat)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.05.01 21:24:02
      Beitrag Nr. 14 ()
      Tut mir leid Jungs. Ich wollte eigentlich nur den ersten Absatz
      von Chapman reinkopieren, aber dann stand der ganze Schmus
      drin. Ich ärgere mich auch immer, wenn sich die Leute nicht aufs Wesentliche konzentrieren.
      Asche auf mein Haupt.
      Gruß
      R.Deutsch
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.05.01 21:37:20
      Beitrag Nr. 15 ()
      Deshalb ist es auch ziemlich unbemerkt geblieben! Ein Knaller ist es trotzdem!

      Ciao
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.05.01 23:44:48
      Beitrag Nr. 16 ()
      an Deutsch

      Lorbeeren auf Dein Haupt,
      interessant ist der Artikel schon
      und eingetroffen ist es auch.

      Manche koennen eben die Zukunft sehen,
      dazu braucht es nur einen erhoehten Aussichtspunkt.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 19.05.01 00:38:23
      Beitrag Nr. 17 ()
      Danke, R.Deutsch ;)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.01 22:47:50
      Beitrag Nr. 18 ()
      Bullionbank

      was sind das für banken????


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