Gold and What Moves it.
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Charles Hugh Smith: Is the Central State Too Big to Fail or Too Big to Survive?

Charles Hugh Smith: Is the Central State Too Big to Fail or Too Big to Survive? | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

We are currently in the relatively brief interim when systemic risk has apparently been eliminated by financial alchemy. This cannot last for purely ontological reasons.


We can summarize the Central State/Banks' "fix" to the 2008 global financial meltdown as one gargantuan expansion of debt, the risks of which have been distributed to taxpayers and what's left of the private financial system.
As noted in yesterday's entry on risk, growth and security ( The Grand Tradeoff of Risk/Innovation/Growth and Financial Security), risk cannot be eliminated; it can only be suppressed temporarily or transferred to others. The Central States and their Central Banks have suppressed the risks created by this unprecedented expansion of debt with what amounts to financial alchemy: the States issue new debt (sovereign bonds) and the Central Banks buy the debt with newly created money. The sovereign bonds then sit on the Central Bank balance sheets as assets. Presto-Magico, interest rates remain near-zero, enabling further expansion of sovereign and private debt. Risk appears to have been eliminated, since the Central Bank balance sheet is not exposed to any market influence. Theoretically, the Federal Reserve balance sheet could expand from $2.9 trillion to $29 trillion, and the risk of such expansion would not be priced into the market or economy. ...
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Russian central bank to keep buying gold, moving away from risky paper assets | Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee

Russian central bank to keep buying gold, moving away from risky paper assets | Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

By Darya Korsunskaya
Reuters

 

DAVOS, Switzerland -- The Russian central bank will continue to buy gold as it seeks to diversify its foreign reserves away from paper assets it views as risky, First Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayev said today.

 

The Bank of Russia has built up the world's fourth-largest foreign reserves, worth $530 billion, by buying oil export dollars to keep the rouble competitive. The hoard includes two rainy-day budget funds that guard against fiscal shocks.

 

The bank has also been a bullion buyer and the share of gold in its reserves is approaching a medium-term target of 10 percent, raising questions over whether it would keep buying gold. ...

Hal's insight:

Keep buying gold? Really? What do the Russians know that the West doesn't? 

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