1.20.2013

What will happen to the oil price in 2013?

Every gold investor should watch these numbers like a hawk

Seven Ways to Tell if Your Gold is Counterfeit

I had just finished a walking tour of the Royal Canadian Mint when I saw it. Right there, out in the open, was a 400-ounce bar of pure gold. It was chained to a display table and kept safe by an armed guard. At the time, in 2005, the bar was worth $220,000. Today, the same bar is worth $667,700. In just seven years, gold prices have jumped by 203%. But it's not the eternal fascination with gold that has boosted the price. With growing levels of worldwide uncertainties, mounting inflation risks and government distrust, people are clamoring for gold primarily as insurance. According to the World Gold Council, 2011 saw gold bars and coins reach nearly $77 billion in sales, versus 2002's $3.5 billion. And in November alone, the U.S. Mint's sales of the popular American Eagle coins jumped 131% in the wake of the election.

Why Inflation is the Economy's "Iceberg" in 2013

Even though Ben Bernanke's Fed has kept interest rates close to zero, inflation hasn't been a big problem since the 2008 financial crisis. Despite what many observers have expected inflation has remained quite tame. However in 2013, that may be about to change. One factor that might cause a surge in inflation is the fiscal cliff. That's because Bernanke is already buying $1 trillion of Treasury and housing agency bonds each year ($85 billion per month) against a budget deficit that is about the same level. That means the inflow of funds to the economy from the Fed and the outflow of money to fund the government's spending are about balanced. However, if we go over the fiscal cliff the Federal deficit immediately falls to about $300 billion per annum. At that point, Bernanke would be injecting an extra $700 billion a year into the economy - which would have a corresponding inflationary effect.

The real reason Germany wants its gold back from France

China blazes trail for 'clean' nuclear power from thorium

Japan plans 'nationalisation' of factories to save industry

US lambasts China for breaches of trade rules

Fitch expects 'Bond Bubble' carnage when rate cycle turns

World Bank fears fresh credit bubble in China on hot money flows

Asia's insatiable demand for coal plays havoc with climate goals

Japan's Shinzo Abe prepares to print money for the whole world

Could this be the trigger for a sterling crisis?

Nine big predictions for markets in the year ahead

2013 Eurozone Forecast: Why A Eurozone Breakup Is Now More Likely Than Ever

S&P sees deeper house price falls in eurozone as slump engulfs core

Europe drawn into global currency wars as slump deepens

French capital flight spikes as Hollande hits business

Mario Draghi has saved the rich, now he must save the poor

ECB rules out stimulus despite record jobless and fiscal squeeze

Irish house prices to fall another 20pc, warns Fitch

Brussels fears 'poverty trap' for half of Europe as North-South gap widens

Europe's dream of toppling dollar fades as Asian Tigers dump euro

Portugal warns EU-IMF troika to back off on austerity demands

Spain's house prices to fall another 30pc as glut keeps growing

Doubts remain over Spain's austerity miracle

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