Why Are Chinese Leaders Rushing to Buy Gold?

Via Birch Gold Group

Why Are Chinese Leaders Rushing to Buy Gold?

From Peter Reagan

This week, Your News to Know rounds up the latest top stories involving gold and the overall economy. Stories include: Western gold is going East again, precious metals’ expert’s take on Bitcoin and gold, and gold is dead alongside crypto, apparently.

Once again, gold is flowing out of the West, into the East

You’ve heard the old saying, “He who has the gold makes the rules.” Keep that in mind as we discuss this story…

There’s a widespread, longstanding notion of Western gold being sold East, to China and India and even the Middle East. Is it true? Honestly, it’s open to debate. Some believe the world’s gold supply moves back and forth across borders cyclically, in a long slow migration that takes decades. Others hold there is a broad and ongoing flow of gold bullion, one that has been underway for years or even decades, and that net gold sellers are making a historic mistake.

This Bloomberg report mentions the cyclical nature of gold buying. When Western interest rates go up, gold flows East. But in this hypothesis, when does gold come flooding back into the West?

As always, we like to take a look at the data (although we listen to the rumors, we tend to trust data more).

It’s no secret that Russia and China are plotting to build their own economic exclusionary zone. To that point, CME reports that 527 tons of gold left New York and London vaults in the first four months of the year. At the same time, Chinese gold imports have risen to a four-year high.

China only recently, in 2021, began allowing gold imports again, presumably because domestic demand simply outstripped domestic mining supply of 6,830 tons since 2000. Did you know China has been the world’s largest gold mining nation since 2007? And that more than half of China’s gold production is managed by state-owned enterprises? Finally, China keeps the gold it’s mined – exporting domestically-mined gold is illegal!

If we turn back the clock a bit, we can see that China’s official gold reserves have increased five-fold in the last two decades (not coincidentally, during the same period where the Federal Reserve began aggressively supporting the U.S. stock market, first under Alan Greenspan, then Ben Bernanke and the rest). You’d expect gold reserves to increase when a nation doesn’t allow gold exports…

But China isn’t only the world’s largest gold producer, they’re also the world’s biggest gold importer. Records of gold imports are extremely difficult to come by, but we know that 6,700 tons of gold were sold to Hong Kong alone since 2000.

On the rumors front, well, just to spare you the math, it’s not unreasonable to estimate that China holds, as a nation, some 31,000 tons of gold. That’s about 17% of all gold in the world.

Although the Bloomberg article suggests that the nature of this movement is cyclical and that it’s based on high interest rates in the U.S., we have to question both. Personally, I’ve never heard about cheap Asian gold being prudently hoarded by the West. We have, however, heard plenty about the Federal Reserve “leasing out” its gold reserves to ease storage difficulties — thereby, losing possession of it. Considering nobody including China really finds Treasury bonds attractive anymore, I wonder if there’s more to the story. (Pro tip: buy your gold now.)

And if there is, we expect the over-leveraged paper gold market to collapse completely, obliterated by the number of demands to deliver imaginary gold…

Dominic Frisby’s take on gold and bitcoin

Not too long ago, we covered Dominic Frisby’s fairly insightful views into platinum group metals. These days, he is more concerned with governments, and how gold and Bitcoin tie into it. Frisby is anti-fiat and not a big fan of governments, having issued a blog post over a decade ago outlining the fiat fraud.

There, he talks about how the fiat monetary system is innately a top-down one: the more one moves away from the issuers of fiat, the less one benefits from it. Because governments are issuing fiat, they are the primary beneficiaries of its existence. Its purpose is to fleece the populace one way or the other, with inflation being the usual culprit as is the case now prominently.

Frisby finds investing in gold almost a necessity as a way for the average person to combat the aforementioned. He puts bitcoin in the same category, having started in the 90s with gold investment before adding bitcoin to his portfolio. There is an interesting quote from his interview with Crypto Slate, which generally praises the benefits of crypto over gold:

The problem with gold is that it is the most analog asset there is… So, in that world, do you really want the burden of gold when all the wealth is digital? And I question that.

We have a lot of good things to say about bitcoin. However, Frisby’s claim that “all the wealth is digital” is utterly misguided and completely incorrect.

Now that that’s out of the way, we can’t help but notice that everyone today is awfully concerned with reinventing the wheel. I’m reminded that, as early as 1908, we heard tell of Nikola Tesla’s “death ray” – and by the 1940s, scientists were experimenting with directed energy weapons. So soldiers should be carrying laser rifles into battle, right? Well, guess what: the U.S. Army still uses devices that launch chemically-propelled metal slugs at their enemies. From the Battle of Towton in 1461 to the Battle of Kyiv today, battles are fought with guns.

Both Tesla’s death ray and cryptocurrencies share a few key weaknesses. (I’ll leave the specifics up to your imagination, but here’s a hint: electricity.)

To someone reading about Tesla’s directed energy weapon in 1908, a Winchester repeating rifle or a Colt Single-Action Army revolver probably sounded obsolete – and, in all honesty, probably was obsolete. But you know what? Obsolete or not, the rifle and the revolver both worked. Fully-functional examples of both exist in museums across the nation, and are tucked away in gun safes and nightstand drawers today.

I do agree with his claim that gold is “the most analog asset there is.” I believe that’s a massive part of its appeal – the same way those firearms I just mentioned are, also, analog. Simplicity has an appeal all its own, and maybe it’s simply not for everyone? Regardless, gold is exactly obsolete as it’s always been.

It’s not just crypto getting funeral rites in the search engines

When crypto experiences a bear market, we’re treated to mainstream media cries in the tune of, Is crypto dead? But surely, the gold market is immune from such speculation, and investors know better by now… right?

As Frank Holmes tells us, apparently not. Perhaps rather than expecting the market to disappear overnight, those telling us gold investment is are merely dissatisfied with how it has performed in the “everything selloff.” Gold is down 9.5% so far this year, after all. Surely that means no one wants it anymore, right?

You’ll have to forget for a moment that nearly every asset class plummeted much more – there are a few exceptions, like West Texas Intermediate Crude, which is 10% higher today than at the end of the year. Does that mean the Nasdaq, the S&P 500, the U.S. Treasury market are all dead as well? Of course not. The people who say an asset or an asset class is dead are nearly always disappointed speculators whose gambles didn’t pay off the way they hoped.

If we take another look at gold’s price, we see it’s down only when we price it in U.S. dollars. The Canadian dollar, the euro, the yen, the pound, the Turkish lira… These are all currencies in which gold is in the green this year. So gold’s performance in dollar terms is, more than anything else, reasserting the tale of the greenback’s unusual and dubiously sustainable strength. (Click the link – this has happened before. When people are afraid, they look to cash first, then to gold…)

Turkey’s annual inflation rate of 80% has destroyed the lira even further, if that was somehow possible, plunging it by another 52%. As a recent survey showed, Turks very much favor gold as a store of wealth.

But why should us greenback holders care?

Whether we look domestically or globally, the question appears to be the same: how long until a recession happens? Holmes, like many, is hesitant to draw parallels to the 2007-2008 housing crisis, but does it nonetheless. A market crash brought on by recessionary conditions appears to be in the works in the U.S. and globally. When that happens, we know that the Federal Reserve is going to print money. And when that happens, we know what the USD/GLD chart will look like.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
12 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 7, 2022 6:29 pm

I don’t know, but we should make some knock-off “gold” bars and sell them to the Chinese.
comment image

cricket
cricket
  Iska Waran
November 8, 2022 8:22 am
Ottomatik
Ottomatik
November 7, 2022 9:23 pm

So if I buy gold to defend against unrestricted fiat inflation, savings essentially, how does The Powers That Be, justify capital gains tax on such?
You cannot win, for one spot gold is so manipulated/controlled that it will NOT keep pace with inflation, and two, however much fiat gain you do realize by holding it will get smacked with a 15% vig at minimum and possibly as much as 30%.
So correct me if I am wrong, but essentially these motherfuckers are taxing you on their money printing…
Stealing seems more correct.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Ottomatik
November 7, 2022 9:42 pm

obviously otto,
you are just a knave who doesn’t understand the world of high finance–

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
  TampaRed
November 7, 2022 11:30 pm

Obviously. Nor do I understand the Constitution that establishes gold as money and that these villain’s have concocted away to tax money for being money.

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
November 7, 2022 9:30 pm

In a collapse/controlled collapse scenario, in the next 3 (?) years, what do you, whoever, feel free, estimate will be the maximum gain per oz of :
Gold, 1680…..to…..?
Silver, 20…….to……?
Bitcoin, 20,000……to……?
Ethereum 1580…..to…..?

Gold and Ethereum are close to the same price per unit, which do you think will produce larger gains?

bucknp
bucknp
  Ottomatik
November 7, 2022 9:50 pm

Actually “deer corn”, at least in Texas with all the great white hunters and the multitudes of various types of commercialized “wild game feeders” etc. It’s the gun or the feeder or the ATV or the “deer stand aka blind” or this that or the other product perhaps even manufactured in China that “makes the hunter”.

Deer corn UP 75%+ from last years “market”.

Gold? Seems for 20 years or better I’ve heard the “alarms” about one damn country ot the other buying up all the gold. I thought Russia was buying it up?

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
  bucknp
November 7, 2022 10:44 pm

Well 20 years ago, 22 to be exact, I bought my first gold coins and it was around 300 an oz, dont know what deer corn was, but the gains on gold have been decent, I imagine you need some serious space and some towers, to keep a good amount of deer corn, plus you prolly need to rotate the stock more often than 20 years.
But I do get what you are saying, over then next few years the prices on all grains might be shocking….

bucknp
bucknp
  Ottomatik
November 7, 2022 11:07 pm

“Deer corn” has grown in popularity with “big game” hunters in Texas. Load the feeder with “deer corn”, sit in a “heated” stand and shoot a doe the size of a Doberman. Pay landowner $300 fiat.

People in Texas were buying “deer corn” 20 years ago no doubt.

When the $ collapses as predicted , maybe gold will be matched to “deer corn”.

ram
ram
  Ottomatik
November 8, 2022 12:52 am

My guesses are Au at over $20,000/oz, Ag at over $1000/oz.
Cryptocurrencies zero, as the methods to transact them are fundamentally insecure and also completely traceable. The claimed mathematics behind them is unsound. The real mathematics is solid, but the claims the promoters have been making are mathematically proven to be untrue, i.e. false, fraudulent.
You don’t professors of mathematics buying into crypto, although some mathematicians do game the present system. To the public, it is another “confuseopoly”, just as CDO’s were, and many financial derivatives are today. The public is not being dazzled by brilliance, but rather being baffled by bullshit.

ram
ram
November 8, 2022 12:38 am

Remember the electronic device you are reading this on has its semiconductor chips connected to the circuit board by GOLD wires. I don’t see electronics receding in use. Likewise the robots used to manufacture those electronic devices use a hell of alot of SILVER. All those mobile telephone towers and high speed WiFi devices use a fair amount of both GOLD and SILVER.

You have to have gold and silver (and copper, tin, and zinc) to mine buttcoins, but no amount of buttcoin will allow you to manufacture electronics or produce gold and silver.

Right now the physical gold price (not to mention the very much cheaper paper gold price) is well below its closest industrial and jewellery substitute palladium, which traditionally had be around 20% less costly than gold. Platinum, another semi-substitute, used to be around 10% more costly than gold. No matter how you look at it today, even just for industrial use, gold and silver are way undervalued.

mark
mark
November 8, 2022 9:41 am

I started stacking silver just after the Hunt Brother Billionaires got their clocks cleaned by the Banksters and Silver went from $5 to $50 and back down in 1983 (I was 33). I thought I would start stacking Silver for the next Bull Market. It was a smart move.

I read everything I could get my hands on about the history of PMs, what FDR did, what Nixon did, who the FED really were…and I decided to go Macro on PMs. First Silver and then Gold.

I went full retard on both in 1999 (by cashing in a 401K) at the age of 49, explained here.

One Man’s Contrarian 401K Adventure (by TBP Mark)

Gold was the trade of the decade by 2010 and the profits were past significant and helped us get debt free, while paying off a 30 year mortgage (by making extra principles payments) in 12 years. I also had built a successful Consulting company, and cash flow was at high tide for many years.

After PMs were pushed back down in2011 I started buying again (cost averaging) from 2013 to
2019.

Life was good…but when Obama was re-selected, I saw the grim future…we moved rural and went full retard on homesteading and prepping.

I actually made one big trade/profit that helped us build our dream home in 2020 at the height of Covid con. I have always used the charts below to keep my eye on the Macro big picture.

Long term Macro buying/selling PMs for 39 years has been good to us…and I see them both as our old age insurance/hedge/legacy.

Timing is everything, as it has been with Stocks, Bonds, and Real-estate we have bought and sold.

Here are the two Macro timing charts on PMs:

GOLD PRICES – 100 YEAR HISTORICAL CHART

Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) gold prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base. The current month is updated on an hourly basis with today’s latest value. The current price of gold as of November 08, 2022 is $1,671.33 per ounce.

https://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chart

SILVER PRICES – 100 YEAR HISTORICAL CHART
Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) silver prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base. The current month is updated on an hourly basis with today’s latest value. The current price of silver as of November 08, 2022 is $20.75 per ounce.

https://www.macrotrends.net/1470/historical-silver-prices-100-year-chart

Both of these 5,000 year historical sources of real money, and that fact that every fiat currency in history has always returned to its real value …ZERO make them a wise part of any long term planning. (Always in your hands of course).

Having some of your money and or wealth in them is a wise move…as TSHTF is knocking on all our doors.