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Money Metals News Alert | March 3rd, 2025 – Gold and silver prices ended last week lower, but are rebounding today. | | |
The Federal Reserve note dollar strengthened in foreign exchange markets, and ten-year bond yields fell. Buying in retail bullion products was somewhat stronger in February than in January, as was selling. Metals investors are split. Some see an opportunity to sell with silver holding above $30/oz and gold pressing toward $3,000. | | | |
Safe-haven demand from gold bugs has been down since Trump won the election. Others consider now a good time to buy. Inflation remains persistent and higher prices, particularly with regards to gold, are attracting speculators. Gold is also in the headlines with both President Trump and Elon Musk calling for an audit of the U.S. gold reserves. | | |
Gold : Silver Ratio (as of Friday's closing prices) – 91.5 to 1 | | |
The Revenge of the Gold Bugs | | |
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There aren't too many upsides to the widespread loss in confidence currently underway. It would be far better if major institutions were trustworthy, competent, and efficiently run. But fixing these institutions first requires recognition of the problems. The people who spent all of their time marginalizing gold bugs as nutjobs and conspiracy theorists are starting to find themselves out on the fringe. | | |
It suddenly makes sense to vast swathes of Americans to question whether long held assumptions are true. It's the people who implicitly trust what they have been told by bureaucrats and bankers who look a little silly. The veil is slipping. Gold and silver investors should be ready for some interesting revelations and, perhaps, changes in the metals markets. | | | |
They should also beware of "experts" still clinging to conventional wisdom. Now is the time for questions, not blind trust. The following assumptions are foolish. Those who defend them are naive at best, or they may have some stake in preserving the status quo. FOOLISH ASSUMPTION #1 – There are no problems with decades-old audits of the U.S. gold reserves, including the bars in Fort Knox, and it's unreasonable to ask for a new audit that also examines encumbrances. The best reason to do a comprehensive audit of U.S. gold is that bureaucrats desperately want to avoid it. They resist all efforts for a new inventory and assay of each and every bar. Jan Nieuwenhuijs makes the case as to why prior accounting relating to U.S. gold is misleading, problematic, and incomplete. Readers who prefer a video can find that here. | | |
There are three possibilities with regards to the U.S. gold reserves. The worst case is that some of the gold is missing. Another possibility is that the U.S. gold has been leased, or otherwise encumbered and it is no longer 100% available to the U.S. Treasury. | | | |
The best case is the gold is all there and it is unencumbered, but much of it is in the form of coin melt (90% pure) bars which are illiquid (as the bullion markets require much higher purity). Anyone who still trusts what officials have told them and ridicules the idea of a thorough audit, in this day and age, is a moron. It is high time to go through the gold with a fine-toothed comb. Audits are never "one and done" anyway. FOOLISH ASSUMPTION #2 – Price manipulation is not a problem in the metals markets. A number of major bullion banks, including JPMorgan Chase, plead guilty to widespread price rigging not long ago. The Department of Justice nailed them, even though the CFTC had not. | | |
There are thousands of documents, chat logs, and voice recordings featuring traders colluding with their peers at other traders at other banks to manipulate prices and stick it to their own clients. That was the moment it became completely untenable for anyone to assert the gold and silver markets are free and fair. The "conspiracy theory" is now officially a conspiracy fact. | | | |
A valid question to examine is whether the manipulation that occurs is merely is situational or systemic – and who is involved... | | |
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This week's Market Update was authored by Money Metals Director Clint Siegner. | | |
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