2012-JUN-11
Gold and silver have also been lifted following the Spanish news, with some traders looking to lighten up on their US dollar/Treasury positions. Gold broke back above $1,600 briefly during Asian trading – suitably so given the strength of sovereign demand there at the moment – but has fallen back from this resistance point over the last few hours. Silver had an even stronger rally – up nearly 2% to $29 in a matter of minutes – but is now back around that familiar “magnet” at $28.50.
Of potentially much greater significance than these day-to-day price moves is what is currently going on with the US money supply. Economist Robert Wenzel reports that M2 is now shrinking at -1.9% on an annualised basis. This slowdown in money growth is also seen in private estimates of M3, a broader money measure.
This may simply be the lull before Bernanke and the Fed once again fire up the printing presses. It provides a helpful indicator as to why US economic data has been disappointing recently – in contrast to earlier this year and late last year, when hopes of a US recovery were growing (which followed a surge in money supply over 2010 and the first half of last year).
Simply put: the more sluggish money supply growth is, the more likely it is that we see a stock market and broader economic crash that would make 2008 look like child’s play.