Stephen Leeb
continues:
“What more could you want than a quote from the
Finance Minister of Japan, Taro Aso, ‘Foreign countries have no right to lecture
us ... The US should have a stronger dollar.’ And he questions whether a major
group of 20 nations have stuck to pledges from 2009, to avoid competitive
currency devaluations.
Of course they haven’t stuck to those pledges. We
can’t get our currency low enough....
“They (the Japanese) want to be the first to the
bottom because they realize exports are the only way they can grow. No one has
new ideas about starting any new industries in this world.
Now, is it any surprise that these new proposed
regulations in Basel III for banks is considering and probably will put gold as
a Tier-1 asset? That’s a very big deal because it means if banks want to
recapitalize, they have to bet on something that’s going to go up. What are the
chances of bonds going up in this kind of environment?
So if you are the Chinese and you want to
recapitalize your banks and get rid of those bad loans, you go along with gold
as a Tier-1 asset and you let gold’s value rise. And presto, you have covered
those bad loans and you’ve recapitalized your banks.
That’s reason number two for gold because there is
nobody with more money in the world and who is more capable of adding gold (to
their reserves) than the Chinese. I think China ended the year with about $3.3
trillion of foreign exchange reserves.
In a world where there is a race to the bottom in
currencies, do you really think the Chinese want to hold their reserves in
euros, dollars and yen? No. They are going to hold them in gold and let gold
go higher. This may be the year in which the Chinese really do let gold fly.
When gold starts underlying their currency, it’s game over. The Chinese have
won.”
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