2011年6月8日星期三

Jim Sinclair - Gold to Exceed $12,500 to Balance US Debt

http://kingworldnews.com/



With continued volatility in gold and silver, today King World News interviewed the legendary Jim Sinclair to get his take on the markets.  Sinclair surprised KWN by discussing a price target for gold that to some would seem unimaginable.  When asked about trading for gold this summer Sinclair stated, “I think most of your analysis of secular trends will look and say no, no, summer time doldrums nothing happens.  Well we could have something very significant happen and for a very clear reason.  It’s becoming obvious even to our talking heads that this great recovery which we’ve questioned for a considerable period of time is in fact more in people’s minds than in reality.  The economy is turning down again and turning down hard, there’s no question about that.”
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Sinclair continues:

“Quantitive easing is the only tool that the Fed has had available to them.  The Fed has pumped in trillions of dollars and the result of that pump-priming in the monetary sense has been only at best a modest recovery, and certainly making trillionaires out of some bankers, billionaires out of many of them.

We’ve come to a point now where if QE were to be stopped, you would see an implosion in the general equity markets...And yes gold would go down, the market would go down hard.  The dollar would go up slightly to begin, but then fall back down again as the management of the economy was seen to have been ineffective and inefficient. 

Gold would then start moving back up again and I think if QE was to cease, the recovery on gold from a modest reaction would be multiples upon multiples of that reaction and would lead the way to Harry’s $2,400, to Alf’s $3,000 to $6,000.

You can’t stop quantitive easing.  If you stop quantitive easing the stock market will return to its recent low or lower.  That alone by its impact on decision making will cause an economic implosion.  We’re tied into this monetary stimulation, there is no way out of monetary stimulation.  If there was any attempt to get out of monetary stimulation it would cause an economic accident which would require central banks to go right back where they were.  That would be again, loss of control...

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