Passa ai contenuti principali

Global Gold Price Markets Broken & Record U.S. Mint Gold & Silver Eagle Sales

Today, the global gold spot markets broke down as prices varied considerably from the different exchanges.  Moreover, U.S. Mint sales of Gold and Silver Eagles surged again this week.  Gold Eagle sales are so strong in March; they jumped 1,700% compared to February!!  At one point, the gold price was up more than $100 during early trading.

I was busy earlier today on Twitter when I noticed the breakdown in the spot gold prices.  I checked three different sources and found that Kitco.com's gold price was much lower than the quotes on Investing.com and the CMEGroup.  I then had a Twitter exchange with Peter Spina at Goldseek.  Peter Spina published this article on GoldReview:

U.S.-Saudi Oil Alliance Under Consideration, Brouillette Says

Peter and I both posted the same Tweet about the breakdown in the global gold spot prices that were taking place today.  Here was my tweet:

While Kitco posted gold trading at $1,576, Investing.com and the CMEGroup's April contract was trading about the same at $1,639... $63 higher.  So, as we can see, the global gold spot market is in disarray.  I imagine this is partly due to Switzerland announcing the closing of three large gold refineries in the country yesterday, UPDATE 1-Three Swiss gold refineries suspend production due to virus threat:

LONDON, March 23 (Reuters) - Three of the world's largest gold refineries said on Monday they had suspended production in Switzerland for at least a week after local authorities ordered the closure of non-essential industry to curtail the spread of the coronavirus.

The refineries - Valcambi, Argor-Heraeus and PAMP - are in the Swiss canton of Ticino bordering Italy, where the virus has killed more than 5,000 people in Europe's worst outbreak.

Switzerland is a global hub for precious metals refining. The three refineries between them process around 1,500 tonnes of gold a year in Ticino - a third of total global annual supply - as well as other precious metals such as silver.

These three Swiss refineries process about 1,500 metric tons of gold, or a third of the global annual supply.  This is a BIG DEAL.  These refineries stated that they would be reopening at the end of March and the first week of April.  However, let's see if that takes place as this global contagion continues to spread.

Even though the markets have recovered today, it was mostly due to an overdue TECHNICAL CORRECTION at a critical level and the massive U.S. Government stimulus package.  However, I wouldn't count on the stock markets heading back up much higher.  This is just a mere Bear-Market Rally.  Once the fundamentals of the supply chain and massive retail-wholesale store closures kick in over the next 2-4 weeks... the Markets are heading MUCH LOWER.

The U.S. Mint Gold & Silver Eagle Sales HIT RECORDS in March

While I have been providing updates on the massive increase in U.S. Mint Silver Eagle sales, Gold Eagle sales have also hit record numbers.  First, let's look at an update of Silver Eagle sales since my last article on March 17th:

Silver Eagle sales this past week jumped by another 1.7 million to 4,832,500 as of March 23rd.  So, it looks like the U.S. Mint has been able to access enough silver blanks to ramp up production considerably.  It will be interesting to see if the U.S. Mint will be able to continue with these elevated monthly production levels, not seen since 2015-2016.

As I mentioned, Gold Eagle sales in March exploded compared to February:

U.S. Mint Gold Eagle sales exploded to 102,500 oz so far in March compared to only 7,000 oz in February.  To give you an idea just how much Gold Eagle sales jumped in March, let's compare it to total sales last year:

In a little more than three weeks, the U.S. Mint sold 120,500 oz of Gold Eagles compared to 152,000 oz sold for the ENTIRE YEAR in 2019!!  There are so much fear and panic in the markets, and rightly so, that investors are buying a record amount of Gold Eagles in March.  Again, it will be interesting to see if the U.S. Mint will be able to keep up with the elevated Gold and Silver Eagle mintages.

I believe demand for physical gold and silver bullion is just beginning to RAMP UP... we haven't seen anything yet.  Why?  The global economic and financial system will only continue to deteriorate as the weeks go by.  With the Indian government announcing 1.3 billion of its citizens to remain home for the next three weeks will only exacerbate the COLLAPSE of the global supply chain meltdown.

Commenti

Post popolari in questo blog

Charting the World Economy: The U.S. Jobs Market Is On Fire - Bloomberg

Charting the World Economy: The U.S. Jobs Market Is On Fire - Bloomberg https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-12-06/charting-the-world-economy-the-u-s-jobs-market-is-on-fire Charting the World Economy: The U.S. Jobs Market Is On Fire Zoe Schneeweiss Explore what's moving the global economy in the new season of the Stephanomics podcast. Subscribe via  Apple Podcast , Spotify or  Pocket Cast . The last U.S. payrolls report of the decade was a doozy, beating expectations and doing its bit to keep the consumer in good health heading into 2020. That's good news given the various pressures still weighing on global growth. Here's some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week, offering a pictorial insight into the latest developments in the global economy. U.S. Advertisement Scroll to continue with content ...

Fwd: The Looming Bank Collapse The U.S. financial system could be on the cusp of calamity. This time, we might not be able to save it.

After months  of living with the coronavirus pandemic, American citizens are well aware of the toll it has taken on the economy: broken supply chains, record unemployment, failing small businesses. All of these factors are serious and could mire the United States in a deep, prolonged recession. But there's another threat to the economy, too. It lurks on the balance sheets of the big banks, and it could be cataclysmic. Imagine if, in addition to all the uncertainty surrounding the pandemic, you woke up one morning to find that the financial sector had collapsed. You may think that such a crisis is unlikely, with memories of the 2008 crash still so fresh. But banks learned few lessons from that calamity, and new laws intended to keep them from taking on too much risk have failed to do so. As a result, we could be on the precipice of another crash, one different from 2008 less in kind than in degree. This one could be worse. John Lawrence: Inside the 2008 financial crash The financial...

The repo market is ‘broken’ and Fed injections are not a lasting solution, market pros warn

By Joy Wiltermuth Published: Dec 7, 2019 9:35 a.m. ET Banks prefer to keep money at Fed instead of lending to other banks Getty Images Examining $100 bills. Getty Images By Joy Wiltermuth Markets reporter The Federal Reserve's ongoing efforts to shore up the short-term "repo" lending markets have begun to rattle some market experts. The New York Federal Reserve has spent hundreds of billions of dollars to keep credit flowing through short term money markets since mid-September when a shortage of liquidity caused a spike in overnight borrowing rates. But as the Fed's interventions have entered a third month, concerns about the market's dependence on its daily doses of liquidity have grown. "The big picture answer is that the repo market is broken," said James Bianco, founder of Bianco R...