Hunt for Dollars Sends Argentines Into the ‘Cave’

"As the government restricts access to foreign currencies, Argentines seeking hard-to-get dollars have been pushed into cuevas, or caves—clandestine operations where customers pay dearly to exchange pesos for greenbacks. Buying dollars for savings is banned, and authorities make only small amounts of foreign currency available for travel abroad. Travelers must submit an online request to the national tax authority just days before leaving. Businesses need government approval to import equipment and materials at the cheap official exchange rate. Dollar-sniffing dogs are posted at border crossings to catch those traveling with undeclared currency." Continue reading

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Bill Bonner: Argentina’s monetary and economic mismanagement

"It is always a pleasure to visit Argentina. It is a country where economic disaster stories are daily life....where economists' daffy theories are government policy...and where everyday citizens have to figure out how to deal with a monetary system that is half-mad...and half merely incompetent. When we are here, we need to spend pesos...especially out in the country, where people's math skills are not as well developed as they are in Buenos Aires. But any serious purchase - say, if you're buying an apartment - requires dollars...either on top of the table or underneath it. So, you have to be prepared." Continue reading

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Harvard Economist: ‘No Doubt, Pensions Are Screwed’

"Der Spiegel interviews Harvard economist Carmen Reinhart who has the novel idea that central banks are acting like the 'adults' in the room by cleaning up after spendthrift governments. 'Governments are incapable of reducing their debts and now central banks are stepping in.' Perhaps this argument sounds reasonable to a Martian that has not been following exactly what central banks have been doing and continue to do, but last time we looked we weren't Martian. The idea that monopoly central bankers are 'responsible' and politicians are not seems a spurious question, in our humble view. A pox on both their houses." Continue reading

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As Gold Declines Will Stocks Fly?

"We often write of directed history, the idea that powerful forces create conditions for the policies that they want to implement. When it comes to money metals, the idea would be to drive down metals prices while simultaneously affirming that these same metals are simply not a good investment. They are barbarous and whatnot. At the same time as precious metals prices are falling, stock indexes are rising – presumably at least in part because of the pump priming by central banks that are printing great gouts of money. Some of this money gets stuck in bank coffers but a fair amount is obviously finding its way into various stock markets." Continue reading

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Doug Casey: The Gold Crash Is Not What Either Bulls or Bears Are Telling You

"I don't expect it to drop much more, and I'd be very surprised at a drop below $1,000 an ounce, but there is no law of nature preventing it from doing so. All markets fluctuate. People who get panicked are overcommitted... or maybe they shouldn't be in the market because they're not psychologically suited for it. The problem is that government currency debasement practically forces everyone to be in the market, just to try to stay ahead of inflation. You can't time market bottoms, but you've got to play the odds. If I were going to sell anything now, I wouldn't think of selling my gold or gold stocks." Continue reading

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Bitcoins gain traction in Argentina

"Enter the bitcoin? The virtual currency is emerging as the latest inflation refuge – and Bloomberg reports that TradeHill, a US-based bitcoin exchange, is now planning to open an office in Argentina where demand is fastest in the region. Bitcoins are absolutely not words on everybody’s lips here and many people have no clue about how to use them. But a quick squint at the website of MercadoLibre – a kind of ebay – reveals that you can buy plenty of things, from motorbikes to apartments to an anti-slip spray for bathtubs, and pay with bitcoins. Argentina’s two centuries’ history of currency turbulence, has wired a need for financial smarts into the national DNA." Continue reading

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Bill Bonner: Is this a major change of direction for gold?

"Everyone believes the gold market has reversed direction. The bull market of the last 14 years has finally ended. It's all downhill from here, they say. But if that is true, what else will have to be true? The last bull market in gold ended when the Fed changed course. Arthur Burns was replaced by Paul Volcker. A loose money policy became a tight money policy. By the end of the bear market in gold there was hardly a single gold bug who was still sober or still solvent. But what's the Fed doing now? Has it reversed course? Has Ben 'Bubbles' Bernanke been replaced with a tough-as-nails inflation fighter? Has the FOMC vowed to stop printing money?" Continue reading

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U.S. Treasury to BOJ: Do As We Say, Not As We Do

"The BOJ will double the monetary base by purchasing about 7.5 trillion yen of Japanese government bonds per month. It plans to extend the average maturity of its portfolio from three to seven years. And it will continue such actions until it achieves its inflation target. In other words, the BOJ is doing exactly what the Federal Reserve is doing. And for this it gets a warning from the U.S. Treasury 'to refrain from competitive devaluation and targeting its exchange rate for competitive purposes'? The message came in the Treasury's semiannual report on international exchange rates, released on April 12." Continue reading

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China Takes Another Stab At The Dollar, Launches Currency Swap Line With France

"China has now launched yet another feeler to see what the apetite toward its currency is, this time in the heart of the Eurozone: Paris. According to China Daily, as reported by Reuters, 'France intends to set up a currency swap line with China to make Paris a major offshore yuan trading hub in Europe, competing against London.' As a reminder the BOE and the PBOC announced a currency swap line back in February, in effect linking up the CNY to the GBP. Now it is the EUR's turn." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChina Takes Another Stab At The Dollar, Launches Currency Swap Line With France