REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

All Gold Funds are Not the Same

Some of you may have heard about how one gold fund seems to be diverging from all the others, that is, the recently launched Sprott Physical Gold Trust (NYSE:PHYS) in Canada where physical gold is held outside the purview of HSBC or any other bullion bank.

Today’s action is a bit extreme, but, then again, these are extreme times and people do extreme things, such as paying a premium for a gold fund that they believe actually has the gold they say they have and is not subject to confiscation by the U.S. government as some fear. Of course, it has other advantages too, such as a lower tax rate for U.S. buyers.

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After the events of the last week or so, if you didn’t know better, you’d think that this Reuters article was actually something from The Onion.

Markets now have that late-2008 look and feel again and, with just about every important near-term technical level already taken out for stocks and commodities, the Plunge Protection Team had better start paying attention or this could get really ugly.

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Help the Borrowers, Punish the Savers

In the decades ahead, it really will be interesting to look back at this era of economic and financial market stewardship by those with their hands on the interest rate levers and printing press controls as one of the most glaring examples of  something that is fundamentally wrong at this stage in the debt collapse is this notion that, a low consumer price index provides a green light to help borrowers and, as a result, punish savers.

This AP report on the subject covers all the usual topics.

It’s a good time to buy a car, refinance a mortgage, hit the road or shop for clothes.

Invest in a saving account? Forget it.

Consumer inflation has all but disappeared, the government reported Wednesday. The Federal Reserve may now be emboldened to keep interest rates at record lows well into next year — and possibly into 2012.

Yet for savers, the prospect of persistent record-low rates is a downer. It means no relief from puny returns any time soon. The average yield on a one-year certificate of deposit has sunk to 0.7 percent, according to Bankrate.com. That’s the lowest since Bankrate starting tracking the figure in 1983. Rates hovered as high as 5.5 percent around 2000, according to Bankrate.

Unlike everyone else, savers won’t benefit until the Fed starts boosting interest rates. Yet prospects for the Fed to start pushing up rates in the fourth quarter of the year seem to be fading. More economists now think an increase won’t happen until next year…

The very idea that domestic savings is not a crucial component of the early 2000s U.S. economy will have them scratching their heads in the future. They’ll say, “I can’t believe they really just thought they could borrow and spend indefinitely – as if it was some sort of perpetual free lunch – and then when the economy went off its rails they could just borrow and print even more money to get things working again. What were they thinking?”

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Spotted over at The Daily Capitalist, Bill Fleckenstein talks to the folks at Bloomberg about inflation, deflation, currencies, gold, and money printing around the world.

This is another good example of how the mainstream media still doesn’t really understand what’s going in the financial world vis-a-vis the slow collapse of a monetary system that, for some reason, was mistakenly believed to be an enduring one.

First, Fleckenstein is asked, “Bill, you can’t just only buy gold. What else are you going to buy these days?” and then later on he’s asked, “If you’ve got the Fed printing money, and the ECB is printing money, where do you go in the currency markets?”

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