2022 1/4 oz Red Lion Gold Coin features the red lion symbolizing bravery and strength and the Irish inscription “Cosain do Theaghlach” – Protect your family. Obverse center inset that features the Ian Rank-Broadley effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II wearing the “Girls of Great Britain and Ireland” diamond tiara, a wedding gift from Queen Mary.

Reverse features a red lion, a heraldic symbol in medieval heraldry. The lion was often used as a symbol of bravery and strength, and the color red represents ferocity or passion.

0.25 Troy Ounce, .9999 Fine Gold, Legal Tender of the Sovereign government of Niue ($5 XCD), Year of Issue: 2022, Mintage: 10,000, Quality: Bullion, Coins Sealed in Airtight Capsules, Diameter: 20 MM.

Check back often for new coin releases, rare editions and updates on the latest coin releases.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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2022 1 oz Red Lion Silver Coin features the red lion symbolizing bravery and strength and the Irish inscription “Cosain do Theaghlach” – Protect your family. Obverse center inset that features the Ian Rank-Broadley effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II wearing the “Girls of Great Britain and Ireland” diamond tiara, a wedding gift from Queen Mary.

Reverse features a red lion, a heraldic symbol in medieval heraldry. The lion was often used as a symbol of bravery and strength, and the color red represents ferocity or passion.

1 Troy Ounce, .999 Fine Silver, Legal Tender of the Sovereign government of Niue ($2 XCD), Year of Issue: 2022, Mintage: 1,000,000, Quality: Proof-Like, Coins Sealed in Airtight Capsules, Diameter: 39 MM

Check back often for new coin releases, rare editions and updates on the latest coin releases.

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The 1.25 ounce silver Sovereign coin is official legal tender of Saint Helena. The reverse of the coin features the beautiful shield with heraldic elements of England, Ireland, and Scotland. The Royal Arms of England features three lions to represent the three areas England, Normandy, and Aquitaine.

2022 1.25 Ounce Sovereign Front

The lion represents bravery and valor. Ireland is represented by the royal coat of arms the stringed Argent, a gold harp with silver strings. Scotland coat of arms dates back to the 12th century. The lion often described as “the ruddy lion ramping in his field of treasured gold. The spade-shaped shield is placed on a bed of Tudor roses. All surrounded by the inscription -DIRIGE DEUS GRESSUS MEOS – MAY GOD DIRECT MY STEPS.

2022 1.25 Ounce Sovereign Back

The obverse bears the effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II by internationally renowned sculptor Raphael Maklouf, the issuing country St. Helena, the denomination £1.25, the coin’s weight of 1.25 ounce, fineness of. 999 silver, and the year date.

Check back often for new coin releases, rare editions and updates on the latest coin releases.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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The Quarter ounce gold Sovereign coin is official legal tender of Saint Helena. The reverse of the coin features the beautiful shield with heraldic elements of England, Ireland, and Scotland. The Royal Arms of England features three lions to represent the three areas England, Normandy, and Aquitaine.

2022 0.25 Ounce Sovereign Front

The lion represents bravery and valor. Ireland is represented by the royal coat of arms the stringed Argent, a gold harp with silver strings. Scotland coat of arms dates back to the 12th century. The lion often described as “the ruddy lion ramping in his field of treasured gold. The spade-shaped shield is placed on a bed of Tudor roses. All surrounded by the inscription -DIRIGE DEUS GRESSUS MEOS – MAY GOD DIRECT MY STEPS.

2022 0.25 Ounce Sovereign Back

The obverse bears the effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II by internationally renowned sculptor Raphael Maklouf, the issuing country St. Helena, the denomination £25, the coin’s weight of .25 ounce, fineness of. 9999 gold, and the year date.

Check back often for new coin releases, rare editions and updates on the latest coin releases.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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Here is a comprehensive list of all bullion products Red Rock Secured offers depending on availability.

1-oz Silver American Eagle
1-oz Gold American Buffalo
1-oz Gold American Eagle
1-oz Gold Bar
1-oz Gold Canadian Maple Leaf
1-oz Gold South African Krugerrand
1-oz Silver Bar
10-oz Silver Bar
100-Gram Silver Valcambi Bar
1-oz Silver Round
10-Gram Gold Bar
1-oz Silver Canadian Maple Leaf
10-oz Gold Bar
Gold Bar 1-Kilo
Gold Bar 50-gram Valcambi CombiBar
Platinum Bar 1-oz
Platinum American Eagle 1-oz
Platinum Canadian Maple Leaf 1-oz
Silver Bar 100-oz
Palladium Bar 1-oz
1-oz Silver South African Krugerrand

Most people are worried about losing money, especially in their retirement accounts. At Red Rock Secured we convert that money to physical Gold & Silver so they can be worry free. Call and speak to one of our gold product experts now.

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Here is a comprehensive list of all premium products Red Rock Secured offers depending on availability.

1/2-oz Silver Canadian Red-Tailed Hawk
1/10-oz Gold Canadian Red-Tailed Hawk
1-oz Gold American Eagle Proof
1/2-oz Gold American Eagle Proof
1/4-oz Gold American Eagle Proof
1/10-oz Gold American Eagle Proof
Gold American Eagle 4-pc Set
Gold American Eagle 2-pc Set
1/4-oz Gold Rose Crown Guinea
1-oz Silver American Eagle Proof
1.5-oz Silver Canadian Arctic Fox
1.5-oz Silver Canadian Polar Bear
1.5-oz Silver Canadian Polar Bear & Cub
1.25-oz Silver Canadian Rose Crown Guinea
1.5-oz Silver Canadian Grizzly Bear
1/4-oz Gold Canadian Arctic Fox
1-oz Platinum American Eagle Proof
1/4-oz Gold Canadian Polar Bear & Cub
5-oz Silver America the Beautiful
1/4-oz Gold Canadian Gyrfalcon
1.5-oz Silver Canadian Gyrfalcon
Gold British Queens Beast 0.25-oz White Greyhound 2021
1/4-oz Gold Canadian Red-Tailed Hawk
1-oz Gold American Buffalo Proof – Current Year
Franklin Half Dollar Circulated
1964 JFK Half Dollar BU
1964 JFK Half Dollar Circulated
Silver Mercury Dime Circulated
Silver Walking Liberty Half Dollar Circulated
Silver Peace $1 – Circulated
Silver Peace $1 – BU
Silver 90% Junk by Face Value

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This stunning coin has a red-tailed hawk with its wings outspread on the obverse side. The reverse is the profile of Queen Elizabeth II, who is featured on all Canadian coins. This powerful image wonderfully depicts ten dollars worth of .99999 fine gold, making it one of Canada’s most treasured valuables.

2021-10-oz.-99.99-Pure-Gold-Coin-Red-Tailed-Hawk-Reverse

This $10 Gold Coin is an excellent addition to any collection of precious metals, adding rarity and value. Details include: – Red tail Hawk design on one side – The Queen Elizabeth image on opposite side.

This is one of three different 1/4 oz gold coins available from the RCM. Some other mints have offered other coin designs for this denomination, but the RCM is proud to be Canada’s exclusive producer of 1/4 oz $10 gold coins.

The manufacturing process used to produce these coins ensures that every detail is reproduced perfectly, making it a very fine collectible. Whether you are adding it to your collection or giving it as a gift.

The Red-Tailed Hawk design on the obverse side of this coin was created by Canadian artist Emily Damstra. The reverse of the coin features an image of Queen Elizabeth II. As with other Canadian Maple Leaf gold coins, these $10 coins are manufactured to the highest quality and purity standards in the world! Minting is very limited.

2021 $10 oz. 99.99% Pure Gold Coin - Red-Tailed Hawk Obverse

Because of the limited minting, these coins are becoming more valuable than their spot price. They may be hard to find in the market place so don’t miss out on purchasing one of these amazing pieces of history.

Check back often for new coin releases, rare editions and updates on the latest coin releases.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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The Canadian Gold Red-Tailed Hawk Coin is a stunning monetized bullion coin containing a full troy tenth-ounce of .9999 pure 24k gold and specifically produced to be used as currency and legal tender.

The obverse features Queen Elizabeth II, whereas the reverse depicts a majestic red-tailed hawk in flight.

The Canadian Gold Red-Tailed Hawk Coin is a completely private asset, devoid of serial numbers for tracking purposes, and therefore not on the CUSIP list of trackable assets. Although the Canadian Gold Red-Tailed Hawk presents a face value of $5, which simply signifies its status as a monetized asset, the metal content value itself is worth considerably more than the face value shown.

Canadian Gold Red-Tailed Hawk Coin

BONUS FACT – This coin features two different layers of security, including “precise radial lines and a micro- engraved lasered maple leaf in the coin’s field.”  This makes it one of the best-secured monetized gold bullion coins in the world.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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The Canadian Silver Red-Tailed Hawk Coin is a stunning monetized bullion coin containing a full troy half-ounce of .9999 argent pure silver and specifically produced to be used as currency and legal tender.

The obverse features Queen Elizabeth II, whereas the reverse depicts a majestic red-tailed hawk in flight.

The Canadian Silver Red-Tailed Hawk Coin is a completely private asset, devoid of serial numbers for tracking purposes, and therefore not on the CUSIP list of trackable assets. Although the Canadian Silver Red-Tailed Hawk presents a face value of $2, which simply signifies its status as a monetized asset, the metal content value itself is worth considerably more than the face value shown.

Canadian Silver Red-Tailed Hawk Coin

BONUS FACT – This coin features two different layers of security, including “precise radial lines and a micro- engraved lasered maple leaf in the coin’s field.”  This makes it one of the best-secured monetized silver bullion coins in the world.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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This .9995 platinum coin contains a full troy ounce of platinum. The American Platinum Eagle coin was first issued in 1997, it marked the United States’ first attempt at a standard platinum bullion coin. The obverse (front) is a rendition of the Statue of Liberty, designed by John Mercanti. The reverse of the bullion coin features a soaring eagle.

The American Platinum Eagle is on the CUSIP list. Available in bullion, uncirculated, and proof editions, it is also available in ½ ounce, ¼ ounce, and 1/10 ounce varieties, although they were not produced after 2008. A one-ounce coin carries a face value of $100, although the metal content is worth much more.

BONUS FACT – The reverse of the proof coins changes on a yearly basis, making the American Platinum Eagle the only U.S. bullion coin to do so.

At Red Rock Secured we are here to help educate you as an investor and inform you of the best ways to protect your retirement through strategic diversification in precious metals and gold. Call and speak to one of our gold investment experts now.

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This 22 kt American Gold Eagle coin contains a full troy ounce of gold, although the coin itself weighs a bit more due to the other metals it contains. First issued in 1986, it marked the United States’ first attempt at a standard gold bullion coin. The obverse (front) is a rendition of the pre-1933 $20 Double Eagle, designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens. The reverse features a male eagle carrying an olive branch flying above a nest containing a female eagle and her hatchlings.

The American Gold Eagle is on the CUSIP list. This coin is made with US-produced gold. Available in bullion, uncirculated, and proof editions, it is also available in ½ ounce, ¼ ounce, and 1/10 ounce varieties. A one-ounce coin carries a face value of $50, although the metal content is worth much more.

BONUS FACT – The American Gold Eagle was originally produced as 22 kt to harden the metal and reduce wear and tear on the coin itself.

American Gold Eagle Coin

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This .999 silver coin contains a full troy ounce of silver.  The American Silver Eagle coin was first issued in 1986, it marked the United States’ first attempt at a standard silver bullion coin.  The obverse (front) is a rendition of the Walking Liberty Half Dollar, designed by Aldolph A. Weinman.  The reverse features a heraldic eagle behind a shield; the eagle grasps an olive branch in its right talon and arrows in its left talon, echoing the Great Seal of the United States; above the eagle are thirteen five-pointed stars representing the Thirteen Colonies.

The American Silver Eagle coin is on the CUSIP list.  This coin is available in bullion, uncirculated, proof, and reverse proof editions.  A one-ounce coin carries a face value of $1, although the metal content is worth much more.

BONUS FACT – Normal (non-collectible) bullion American Silver Eagles do not have a mintmark, even though they are struck are various mints.

American Silver Eagle Coin

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This .9995 American Palladium Eagle coin contains a full troy ounce of palladium. First issued in 2017, this low-mintage coin marked the United States’ first attempt at a standard palladium bullion coin. The obverse (front) is a rendition of the famed Mercury Dime, designed by Aldolph A. Weinman. The reverse of the American Palladium Eagle coin features an eagle and is based on Weinman’s 1907 American Institute of Architects (AIA) medal design.

The American Palladium Eagle coin is on the CUSIP list. This coin is available in bullion, proof, and reverse proof editions. A one-ounce coin carries a face value of $25, although the metal content is worth much more.

BONUS FACT – This coin has the lowest mintage overall of any U.S. bullion coins, with only 70,000 pieces total authorized for the four years it was been produced.

American Palladium Eagle Coin

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This .9999 American Buffalo gold coin contains a full troy ounce of gold, although the coin itself weighs a bit more due to the other metals it contains. First issued in 2006, it marked the United States’ second attempt at a standard gold bullion coin. This coin was issued in response to the .9999 bullion coins issued by other countries. The obverse (front) is a rendition of a Native American from the famous Type I Buffalo Nickel, designed by James Earle Fraser. The reverse features a rendition of buffalo from the same coin.

The Gold American Buffalo coin is on the CUSIP list. This coin is made with US-produced gold. Available in bullion, uncirculated, and proof editions, it is also available in ½ ounce, ¼ ounce, and 1/10 ounce varieties, but only from 2008. A one-ounce coin carries a face value of $50, although the metal content is worth much more.

BONUS FACT – The American Buffalo coin was also available in silver in a one dollar denomination, but only in 2001.

American Buffalo Coin

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“Junk” or “constitutional” silver generally refers to 90% silver coins minted by the U.S. Government. This is generally dollars, half dollars, quarters, and dimes minted in 1964 or before and meant for general circulation. While some modern commemoratives are still made in 90% silver, they are meant for the collector market only and are thus excluded from junk silver.

Junk silver is on the CUSIP list. The designs of the coins included in junk silver vary greatly, and generally speaking the older the coin, the more significant its numismatic value. These coins are generally sold by the piece, instead of by weight. Many people consider junk silver an attractive alternative to fractional silver pieces.

BONUS FACT – U.S. coins have also been made with a 40% silver content, such as Kennedy halves and wartime Jefferson nickels, but these generally command a lower premium and lower resale value than their 90% counterparts.

Junk Silver

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by Sean Kelly

Maybe you’ve seen the parody picture that has gone viral (bad choice of words these days!) on the internet recently of Doc Brown and Marty McFly from Back to the Future.

Wearing his perpetually alarmed expression, the time-traveling Doc warns Marty, “Whatever happens, Marty, don’t ever go to 2020!”

It makes us laugh because it has been a year like no other… and it is not even half over yet!

And now there’s something new to add to 2020’s dark resume right along with everything else that has happened.

Something that made us think of silver.

We’ll get to that in a moment. But first, what happened.

On Monday (6/15), people across the US discovered their cell phones were not working. They couldn’t make calls or send texts. Family members were out of touch. Parents couldn’t check on their children. Social plans were disrupted. Business calls didn’t go through. Messages weren’t received. Call-backs weren’t made. Meetings were missed.

The problems spilled over to Facebook and Instagram. People we know were affected. Perhaps people you know were as well.

It didn’t take long for some to conclude it was a hack, a cyber-security attack on US telecommunications. The report by The Sun, a British tabloid, read, “A MASSIVE cyber attack targeting the USA was feared last night as major telecoms, internet and banking platforms were crippled at the same time.”

It passed along claims that the outages were “caused by a large-scale distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, meant to cripple services by flooding them with traffic so they are unusable.”

Millions of people on Twitter and elsewhere read that it was attack. One congressman echoed the claim. But it didn’t take long for a cooler explanation to prevail. Since T-Mobile, apparently most affected by the service problems, merged with Sprint in April, some traced the problem to an update in merging the two companies’ technical systems.

T-Mobile’s CEO said it was “an IP traffic related issue.” That sounds plausible to us. The FCC intends to investigate.

Whatever the cause of the problem, the incident should focus us on how utterly dependent we are on systems that may not be robust. In this era of pandemics and lockdowns, with closed business, and workers furloughed, to say nothing of riots, protests, looting, and arson, you need to ask yourself if you are prepared for large-scale interruptions in the things that make our modern lives work.

What happens if there is an interruption in the power grid because of mismanagement or sabotage? If public utilities fail in a lawless environment? If banks and other businesses are forced to close, if there are urban fires, road closures, or “no-go zones” in your town?

What happens if the ATM machines stop spitting out cash? What happens when solar events interfere with satellite communications.

What happens if there is a wave of bank failures, or if a foreign government dumps US treasuries?

These are sensible questions that arise, not out of alarmism, but because our digital infrastructure in 2020 is increasingly complex and fragile. That is why technology and security officials gather from around the world to discuss just these questions.

That is why this cell phone failure made us think of silver.

We strongly recommend that each family have a portion of their wealth and savings in silver. Silver coins provide a small and convenient form of purchasing power, a bread-and-butter currency for emergencies like these and in times of currency failure.

Owning physical gold and silver is the single most important thing you can do to protect yourself from Black Swans, low predictable events that carry outsize impacts. Not only is silver especially favorably priced now compared to gold, silver coins and bars are an important part of your self-protection in 2020.

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by Sean Kelly

Cities burning.  A plague on the land.  Soldiers fighting mobs.

We know it sounds like an old Cecil B. DeMille movie.

But this isn’t Hollywood.  It’s real life today.

All of these things—a public health crisis, the pandemic lockdown, civil unrest, property destruction—are an enormous drag on prosperity. They are a tax on opportunity and growth at the very least and are always met by massive government spending.

In our case that means more money printing.

The shredding of the social fabric and civil disorder are good reasons to own gold.  So is a historic economic downturn.  But there is another story that is being crowded off the front pages. Something in addition to the riots and looting.  Something more than the coronavirus, businesses that are closed never to reopen, millions unemployed.

It is not more important that our domestic chaos.  But it must not escape your notice.

We are also living in an extremely dangerous geopolitical moment.  International tensions are running higher than at any time since the Cold War—this time between the US and China.

The war of words is escalating.  China has “ripped off the United States” like no one before, says Trump.  For its part The Global Times, a Chinese government newspaper, accuses Trump of “typical international hooliganism.”

Cracking down on Hong Kong’s autonomy, China has imposed a new national security order that would allow its secret police, the Ministry of State Security, to operate in Hong Kong the way that secret police operate.

In response, the US is ending Hong Kong’s preferential trade status.  (That seems like a peculiar policy since it will hurt China, but it will hurt Hong Kong more.)

The shipping lanes of the South China Sea are growing crowed with both territorial claims and warships, making likely a confrontation even over an accident.  The Taiwan Times is reporting that China’s People’s Liberation Army is conducting drills in preparation for an assault on the Pratas Islands, held by Taiwan.  On the American side, reports the newspaper, “in recent weeks a succession of U.S. aircraft and naval vessels have patrolled the area south and west of Taiwan in response to frequent forays into Taiwanese airspace by PLA aircraft.”

Not every front of the Sino-American divide is territorial.  There are commercial fronts as well.  US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is employing maximum bluster in the direction of Israel and other countries against deepening economic ties with China.  One of Pompeo’s aims is to impede the adoption of China-based Huawei’s 5G networks.

Nevertheless, European officials are now speaking quite openly about the “the end of an American-led system and the arrival of an Asian century.”

Other charges are bouncing back and forth across the Pacific.  Legal cases are being drawn for COVID-19 claims against China.  China is signaling that it will retaliate against the US Huawei ban, with Boeing, Tesla and Apple all mentioned.  Increasingly discussed are major restrictions against Chinese students studying in the US.

Meanwhile, Republican strategists and early ads have made clear that they intend China to be central  to their presidential campaign.  Democrats won’t let themselves be outdone on the issue.

Bear in mind that as all this goes on, and as US spending soars and the national debt compounds, China remains a major US creditor.  It holds $1.08 trillion in US Treasury securities at a time the US needs all the creditors it can find.  China does not loan all that money to the US as a favor.  It needs dollar reserves for its own purposes, such as settling international trade deals.  But as Russia discovered in replacing most of its US Treasury holdings with gold, China can get by with a lot fewer dollar-based reserves.

Rising tensions carry the very real prospect—and at some point the inevitability—of massive Chinese disinvestment in the dollar and an accelerated reliance on gold –not just as an alternative, but as an upgrade to their dollar holdings.

It is a reasonable thing for China to do.  Afterall, prominent figures on Capitol Hill are making the suicidal suggestion—suicidal for the us—that the government renege on China’s US debt portfolio.

That would end the reign of the dollar, crash the stock market, and destroy the bond markets.

China has been getting ready for this moment for a long time.  Since 2006 its gold reserves have grown from 600 tons to 1,948 tons.  Bear in mind, that these numbers from the People’s Bank of China reflect official state holdings.  But many observers believe they substantially understate China’s gold position.  Most agree that there has been a tremendous flow of gold into private hands in China as well, mostly from Europe and the West.  At the same time, China remains far and away the world’s largest producer of gold.

Stated in the terms of personal financial management, China has diversified its portfolio with an emphasis on gold.  It is investing for a crisis.  It knows exactly what the Federal Reserve is doing and anticipates the dethroning of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

China has been getting ready for this moment.

We think you would be wise to diversify into gold as well, now, in this time of chaos and crisis.

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by Sean Kelly

More central banks are planning to buy gold this year.

The increase in the number of central banks buying gold in 2020 is especially significant since central bank gold buying already reached record levels in 2019.

That’s according to the World Gold Council’s 2020 Central Bank Gold Reserves survey released this month.  Twenty percent of central banks intend to acquire gold over the next twelve months according to the report.  That compares to eight percent in the 2019 survey.

Key factors in the central banks’ gold acquisition plans are no different than those of informed individual investors.

Interest rates head the list of bankers’ concerns.

  • “88 percent of respondents say that negative interest rates are a relevant factor for their reserve management decisions.
  • “79 percent of respondents view gold’s performance during times of crisis as an important reason to hold gold, up from 59 percent in 2019.”
  • “74 percent of respondents consider gold’s lack of default risk to be an important reason for holding the metal, up from 59 percent in 2019.”

The report concludes that these shifts signal an ongoing re-evaluation of gold’s role in the international monetary system and reflect “long-term concerns about fiscal sustainability as government stimulus is deployed to cushion the global economy.”

We are disappointed that the mainstream media does not feature reports on this news more prominently, since it is part of a global shift away from the dollar and will affect American living standards over time.  In any case, this “de-dollarization” is a leading financial megatrend of our times and is a very bullish development for gold, of which our friends and clients deserve to be aware.

This megatrend affects individual precious metals investors in three specific ways.  First, the central banks buy in huge quantities, last year adding 650 metric tons to their holdings.

It is a harbinger of a changing world order, a move to weaken the US geopolitical hegemony that had grown for the last century.  As central banks move to gold, they do so mostly with the dollars they once held.  Ten years ago, Russia held $180 billion in US Treasury securities.  Now Russia’s gold holdings have grown, its dollar holdings have fallen so low they are reported down in the asterisks in US Treasury listings, below the holdings of countries like Iraq and Vietnam.  This shift from dollars to gold over time removes some of the underpinnings of the dollar in global markets.

We also view gold in central bank reserves to be gold held in strong hands.  That means it is not likely to be sold in the case of market events, such as margin call selling in a stock market crash.

The World Gold Council reported earlier this year that global investment demand for gold (bullion, coins, ETFs) in the first quarter of 2020 was 80 percent higher than during the same quarter in 2019.

More central banks are planning to buy gold this year.  We recommend you do so, too.  Before they do!

 

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by Sean Kelly

We would like to thank Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell for doing our work for us Sunday night on the CBS program 60 Minutes (5/17/20).

A good deal of our day has to do with discussing the US dollar and our monetary system.  It is no surprise that so few American understand how it works.  The schools don’t really deal much with it.  And frankly, parts of the monetary system were designed to shroud the sketchiest parts of the operation.

We don’t blame people for not knowing more about it: how dollars are created and what gives them value.  People have families to provide for and work responsibilities that demand their attention.  A good mechanic knows more about our cars than we will ever learn.  A pharmacist has a dizzying array of medicines to counsel customers about.

Individual areas of expertise like that don’t leave people a lot of extra time to pay attention to arcane monetary issues like debt monetization or liquidity operations.

But Chairman Powell pulled the curtain back on what the Fed really does in his interview with Scott Pelley.

And that’s a big help!  Because in talking to our friends and clients about the importance of gold in their retirement accounts and financial portfolios, the subject almost always comes up.  And once they understand the way the Fed makes money out of nothing, money that gets stovepiped to bailout reckless banks or to crony companies and even foreign governments, the gold story starts to become more clear.

And when they learn that dollars created out of nothing take on value to the degree they dilute the value of the dollars they have been saving, the reasons to own gold come into sharp focus.

So what did Chairman Powell say that helps make much of this clear?  Just the truth.

Discussing the Fed’s response to the COVID-19 shutdown, the interviewer asked if the Fed has just flooded the country with money.

Here’s a partial transcript:

Reporter: “Fair to say you simply flooded the system with money?”

Fed Chairman: “Yes. We did. That’s another way to think about it. We did.”

Reporter: “Where does it come from? Do you just print it?”

Fed Chairman: “We print it digitally. So as a central bank, we have the ability to create money digitally. And we do that by buying Treasury Bills or bonds for other government guaranteed securities. And that actually increases the money supply. We also print actual currency and we distribute that through the Federal Reserve banks.”

Reporter: “In terms of size, Mr. Chairman, how does what the Fed is doing right now compare to the unprecedented action it took in 2008?”

Fed Chairman: “So the things we’re doing now are substantially larger. The asset purchases that we’re doing are a multiple of the programs that were done during the last crisis. . .”

Bear in mind that when the Chairman says the Fed buys assets in the afternoon, it is doing so with money that didn’t exist in the morning.  It didn’t exist until somebody hit “enter” on a computer keyboard.  And made it up.

You might think that creating “money” that isn’t backed by anything is like writing a check on an account with no deposits, or even like counterfeiting.  You would be right.

It is like counterfeiting.  But it is legal counterfeiting.

So, our hat is off to Powell.  Other Fed chairman have been obfuscatory about what they do, and for good reason.  Most people work too hard to believe that real wealth is created out of thin air.  And once they learn that there is no discipline on government spending and no limit on the dollars the Fed can create, they begin to see gold in a new light.

Actually, we shouldn’t say new light, because gold has been the shining and enduring money of the ages for thousands of years and in the far-flung corners of the earth.  People turn to gold for both protection and for profit when the authorities start doing things like making “money” out of nothing at all.

So, thank you Chairman Powell for helping us out.

For today, our work here is done.

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by Sean Kelly

Few Americans realize the US dollar is more than simply another currency, that thanks to its global dominance the dollar has also been weaponized.  It is not just a unit in commercial transactions; whether for good or for ill, it is a bludgeoning tool of US foreign policy.

President Nixon’s Treasury secretary John Connally rubbed the world’s face in this reality in 1971 when he told a group of foreign finance ministers that “the dollar is our currency, but it’s your problem.”  Connally was right.  Only weeks earlier the US suddenly repudiated its promise to foreigners to redeem the dollar they held with the gold they had been promised.

This vulnerability to US dominance is a remnant of the post-war Bretton Woods agreement.  With that arrangement, most of the world’s countries agreed to hold dollars instead of gold as their own currency reserves.  Having abandoned gold, they became hostages to US policy.

The dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency has cemented this dominance into geopolitical affairs.  Tools of this reach include the SWIFT system, a global interbank financial communications system used to settle international accounts.  By denying countries at odds with US policy access to SWIFT, the US cuts foreign nations out of international markets and thereby exerts unprecedented control over global economic activity in furtherance of its geopolitical and military objectives.

Sanctions… penalties… asset seizures:  foreign banks have been fined billions of dollars while entire countries have had their foreign assets frozen and claim to have been economically crippled by the US for violation of what they believe are promiscuous, arbitrary, and cruel US sanctions.

Although they have been biting their tongues for years, foreign governments are now openly bristling at this state of affairs and making common cause to change it.  They are racing to establish bi-lateral and multi-lateral institutions to bypass the old order, the “exorbitant privilege” enjoyed by the dollar.

The accompanying movement of central banks around the world, most notably Russia and China, to de-dollarize by repositioning the reserves out of dollars and into gold may prove to be the most significant megatrend of this decade.  It is a shift in global monetary management that can damage the dollar badly and propel gold much higher.  Since 2006 China’s gold reserves have grown from 600 tons to 1,948 tons, while Russia’s have swollen from 400 tons to 2,299 tons today.

Foreign nations aren’t ganging up against the dollar because it is in a position of strength.  The COVID-19 pandemic, with its exponential growth of US debt and warp speed Federal Reserve money printing, provides a fresh opportunity to unite against dollar hegemony.

The president of the Shanghai Gold Exchange, the world’s largest spot physical gold trading center, Wang Zhenying, used this pandemic moment to voice the common dissatisfaction with the dollar.  “When the Fed turns on the liquidity tap, the U.S. dollar will, in theory, be in a long-term depreciatory trend,” he said.  “Future global trade needs a super-sovereign currency system under which no single country has the power to freeze the international assets of another country.”

Talk of a “super-sovereign currency” may ring a bell.  Long ago French President Charles de Gaulle called for a new monetary system “on an indisputable monetary base that does not carry the mark of any particular country. . . . Yes, gold, which does not change in nature, which is made indifferently into bars, ingots and coins, which does not have any nationality, which is considered, in all places and at all times, the immutable and fiduciary value par excellence.”

De Gaulle was on to something.  A few years before dollar holders were left holding the “old maid” when the US suspended the dollar’s convertibility to gold, de Gaulle had sent the French navy across the Atlantic to pick up France’s gold reserves held in the US.

Good move.

The moral of this story is that with the old-world monetary order under growing strain and de-dollarization spreading, moving assets into the global “super sovereign currency” is especially alluring.

For nation states and individuals alike.

Gold is the super sovereign currency today, just as it has been for thousands of years.

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by Sean Kelly

As if COVID-19 weren’t enough, along with “expert” opinions that conflict with one another, and a lockdown that has given us depression-era levels of unemployment, the US government has now entered a red zone of debt that will plague us even after the coronavirus is just a bad memory.

The latest news this week is that in the current quarter (April-May-June) the US Treasury will have to borrow an unprecedented $3 trillion just to keep operating.

Altogether for fiscal year 2020, the US is on track to add $4.5 trillion in red ink.  That’s more than it borrowed in the previous five years combined!

We’re in this mess because tax revenues have collapsed thanks to shut-down businesses and record unemployment, at the same time government spending is on a booster rocket with more bailouts, stimulus checks, payments to farmers, payroll support, infrastructure spending, and other initiatives on the drawing boards that we won’t even bother to catalog.

It’s not just debt that’s in the red zone.  The Federal Reserve has stepped into the mix, too.

Let me frame it differently.  What does a government that already has $25 trillion in debt that it can’t pay do when it wants to spend trillions more?

It “prints” the money.

Here’s a chart that shows what we mean.  It’s a chart of what the Federal Reserve owns, Fed assets.  As you can see, it shows that the Fed carries more than $6.6 trillion of financial assets on its books — government bonds, mortgage and other securities, junk bonds, and other toxic assets.

FRED total assets

The Fed pays money for all these assets, more than $2.7 trillion in the past 12 months alone.  You can see that since late February, with the coronavirus shutdown, the trajectory of its purchases went straight up.

We think that justifies saying Fed money printing has gone stratospheric.

But where did it get the money?

It made it up.

The Fed just printed the money.  (Actually, since this is the digital age, it did it with a few simple computer keystrokes.  That’s even easier than printing money!)

All that new money, those new US dollars created with a keystroke, dilute the purchasing power of every other dollar.  Including the dollars you own.

And that explains why “the smart money” is buying gold.  People everywhere in the financial world are beginning to notice.  Fred Hickey writes an investment newsletter called The High Tech Strategist.  Even though his beat is technology, the other day he tweeted this:  “All the smart money: Dalio, Druckenmiller, Tudor Jones, Zell, Gundlach, Singer, Klarman, Einhorn, Mobius (and some who I know are loading up but are doing it quietly) are long gold…. Question is: What are YOU waiting for?”

Jim Rogers is certainly part of the smart money, too.  He co-founded the legendary Quantuum Fund and Soros Fund Management.  Rogers is buying precious metals for the first time in years because of the money-printing practices we described.

One of the nation’s largest banks summed it all up a few days ago, as it raised its own target price for gold by 50 percent.

It titled the report, “The Fed Can’t Print Gold!”

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by Sean Kelly

For weeks we’ve been asked to quarantine ourselves, stay indoors, social distance, work from home, wear masks, and avoid outside contact. We’ve become a restless and agitated nation.

Americans were simply not cut out for isolation. After all, we tamed the wild frontiers of the West, pioneered aviation, invented muscle cars and perfected the road trip. We even “slipped the surly bonds of earth” to send a man to the moon.

Can we go back to normal now?

In 2020, cabin fever does not adequately describe the ferment of over 320 million people who love to shop, eat out, travel and socialize. We crave normalcy. But the notion of “normal” is a consequence of conformity. It is the embrace of things considered “ordinary.” In the wake of COVID-19, however, the very word seems inapplicable. Most experts agree that there will never be a precise return to how we once were. Will folks really rush into jam-packed stadiums again? Will Americans embrace busy restaurants and shopping malls as they once did? Who, if anyone, will opt for the middle seat on an airplane? We’re in a precarious place – trapped between wellness and disease, recovery and relapse, and economic rescue and financial ruin.

Are we reopening the economy too early?

While we have segregated ourselves into ‘flattening the curve’ of infection – some states are now relaxing restrictions and others have announced phased re-openings like: Texas, Colorado, Alaska, Oklahoma, Georgia, Tennessee, Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Montana, North Carolina, South Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota, Mississippi, and West Virginia. Despite the mad dash to normal, however, concerns linger about an infection bounce-back. Have we tested enough? How many asymptomatic people are lurking about? Could the virus return in a stronger, second wave? As social interaction increases, a possible rise in new infections could send us back to solitary confinement and side-track any hopes of an economic recovery.

Is Washington fueling an epic stock bubble?

As states and businesses slowly open up, the stock market is rallying. The Dow surged over 350 points yesterday and despite a multi-week economic shut down, it is just 18% off its recent high of almost 30,000 on February 12th. Wall Street has been oddly resilient in the face of what has become the worst economic calamity since the Great Recession. Are traders perhaps overly confident about Americans getting back to work? Is market negativity already priced in? Has massive risk appetite returned? Or are investors betting on endless rounds of stimulus from Washington to make everything okay? More federal money means more risk-taking and bigtime risk, builds bigtime bubbles which almost always wreak economic havoc.

Are we entering dangerous debt territory?

The coronavirus fallout has prompted lawmakers to pass the biggest stimulus package in U.S. history. The $2 trillion Cares Act and over $480 billion dollar coronavirus relief monies have pushed federal deficits to unprecedented levels. And more cash is on the way. Our national debt could eclipse our annual economic output as soon as this year. We’re on track to grow the balance sheet by up to $10 trillion next year and our debt liability could reach 117% of GDP by 2025, far exceeding World War II levels. The Treasury can continue to borrow its way forward as long as interest rates remain low but if inflation returns and rates are forced higher, the weight of that debt could crush our economic future.

Will America’s Cities Go Bust?

With restaurants, bars and businesses suffering under stay-at-home orders, America’s cities stand to lose billions in sales and income tax revenue along with tourism and travel dollars. Shoppers in the nation’s largest municipalities are few and far between, hotels are empty, malls have become ghost towns, trade shows and conferences have all been postponed. And, the loss of these revenues along with skyrocketing pension costs could jeopardize essential city services like school funding, road repairs, sanitation, fire and police protection, medical supplies and infrastructure care. Under these pressures, cities are less likely to pay down their debt. As a result, the coronavirus will severely test finances in places like New York, San Francisco, and Seattle and threaten pensions in Philadelphia, Dallas and Chicago. Insolvent pension plans could push some major metropolitan areas into fast bankruptcy.

Confirmed worldwide cases of the coronavirus have now surpassed 3 million. Over 210,000 people have died, 56,000 in the United States. America is now the epicenter of the virus outbreak. Most of us, just want our life back – but that’s the hard part. The emotional fear and economic fallout will likely linger for a while and uncertainty about the days ahead will be one of our greatest challenges. We should prepare ourselves for anything from a new wave of infections and a broad market bubble – to soaring national debt and the collapse of our most celebrated cities. Tomorrow, however, belongs to those that understand that “normal” may very well be something we no longer recognize – so we should plan accordingly.

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by Sean Kelly

Last week, the White House unveiled Opening Up America Again, its plan to get the country back to work which is presented in three phases, each spaced several weeks apart. It features a state-by-state “Gating Criteria” that should be satisfied before restrictions are lifted in each phase of the plan.

The entire reopening process hinges on the downward trajectory of coronavirus infections, a fall in documented cases, the ability for hospitals to treat all patients needing care, and a robust testing program.

  • Phase One, for states and regions that satisfy the gating criteria, loosens the restrictions on access to public places like parks and shopping areas. It allows large venues to resume operation (e.g., restaurants, movie theaters, sporting venues, places of worship) but only if strict physical distancing protocols remain in place.

 

  • Phase Two, for states and regions with no evidence of an infection upsurge, allows the reopening of schools, daycares and camps with appropriate distancing measures. In addition, large venues can operate with only moderate distancing protocols. Elective surgeries and non-essential travel can also resume.

 

  • Phase Three, permits the return of public interactions. Employers can resume unrestricted staffing. While vulnerable individuals should still practice physical distancing, visits to hospitals and senior care facilities can also resume. Large venues can operate with limit distancing restrictions. Gyms can also re-open and bars can operate with standing room occupancy where applicable.

The plan has been criticized by some state governors as too vague and panned by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for not mandating mass testing and tracing.  A non-partisan group of 50 House members that call themselves, “The Problem Solvers” also put forth guidelines to re-start the economy called the “Reopening and Recovery ‘Back-to-Work’ Checklist” which emphasizes comprehensive testing and a science-based approach to safely bring the economy back online. It has been offered as a framework for future rounds of economic relief.

These attempts to restart American industry come amid soaring unemployment numbers and mounting “back to work” protests that are gaining momentum across the country. Rallies and demonstrations have erupted in Michigan, Texas, Utah, Maryland, Florida, Colorado, Indiana, Illinois, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Washington, Montana and even in New Jersey and California. Signs reading, “Stop the Shutdown,” “The Cure Has Become the Disease,” “Stop Killing the Economy,” “Let us Work,” and “Give me Liberty or Give me Covid-19!” capture the frustration and anger of Americans worried about their freedom and their livelihood.

Over the past, three weeks U.S. economic activity has come to a complete standstill and what protestors fear most is that the longer businesses remain closed and entire American cities shelter at home, the deeper and darker the economic chasm. The massive layoffs, cratering GDP, and crumbling housing numbers are reminiscent of the financial crisis of a decade ago – except far more severe. The speed and scope of the current financial collapse has been unlike anything experienced in modern times.

While some have accused the protestors of defying science and endangering the public good, their economic reality is fairly straightforward– they can’t pay their bills if they don’t leave the house. Civil liberties, religious freedom and government overreach are undoubtedly part of the dialogue along with something much more fundamental, the “pursuit of happiness” guaranteed by the Declaration of Independence and nearly impossible to enact without a job and a paycheck.

Experts predict that an economic recovery could take many months and depending on the development of effective therapies, treatments and/or vaccines to control the spread of the virus, it may be longer than that. Even as the pandemic fades no one knows how quickly consumers will return to restaurants, theaters and ballgames – and if they’ll ever come back in the same numbers.

As the layoffs, business closures and market losses mount, the hit to retirement and savings accounts could reach catastrophic levels. For those taking to the streets, the recovery will start when they finally return to work. For those in the shadow of retirement, it will start when they finally decide to diversify their portfolio and protect their wealth.

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by Sean Kelly

Back in mid-March President Trump declared war on coronavirus and labeled himself a wartime President. During a series of press briefings at the White House, the president called the virus an “invisible enemy” and deemed the fight against it a “medical war.”

When we think of war time presidents – Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, FDR, and Lyndon Johnson all come to mind. Each placed their trust in a team of key advisors, worked to protect the country, had a plan for victory and often warned that things would get worse before they got better.

Such has been the case in the war against COVID-19. A formidable foe also known as SARS-CoV-2, silently and imperceptibly makes its way into the human body through droplets from an infected sneeze or cough – typically lodging in the nose and throat. It can also slip into the lungs triggering an inflammatory response that causes oxygen levels to plummet, patients to gasp for air, and in severe cases respiratory ‘death by drowning.’

It is an invisible enemy indeed, as a matter of fact, it’s not even alive. The Washington Post reports that, “viruses have spent billions of years perfecting the art of surviving without living — a frighteningly effective strategy that makes them a potent threat in today’s world.” The novel coronavirus is technically a spike protein with a spherical structure that helps it gain entry into the body by binding to cell membranes. Once it hits the lungs, it divides and conquers, creating infinite versions of itself.

In terms of warfare, COVID-19 is always mobilizing. It never regroups or falls back, requires no munitions and has unlimited reinforcements. It has effectively shut down the globe in terms of business, industry, commerce, social contact and human interaction.

For our part, we’ve taken mass casualties. Worldwide coronavirus infections are approaching 2 million, with over 118,000 deaths. More than 580,000 Americans have been infected and over 23,000 have died. Our only offensive has been to retreat, hunker down, take shelter and hope the enemy withdraws. Is there a winning wartime precedent for such a tactic? Not really.

Carl von Clausewitz, a Prussian general and military theorist famously said, “four elements make up the climate of war: danger, exertion, uncertainty and chance.” There’s no doubt that we’re in a dangerous place mercilessly trapped between a killer virus and a collapsing economy. We’ve extended ourselves emotionally and monetarily. Things are wildly unclear and events are unfolding so rapidly we have little time to prepare ourselves for what happens next.

“We went from full throttle to 90% revenue loss in three weeks,’’ said the CEO of a New Jersey

car service company last month. “We’ve been through 9/11. We’ve seen recessions. We’ve never seen anything like this.’’  In just two weeks, more Americans were put out of work than in the most brutal months of the Great Recession. Slumping economic indicators and crumbling consumer sentiment have historically fallen over consecutive quarters of dismal economic news. Now, life is turning on the daily media counts of the pandemic’s relentless advance.

“The economy has never gone from healthy to disaster so quickly,” said Jason Furman, who served as an economic advisor to President Obama. “The housing bubble burst in 2006, the first financial tremors were in 2007, and the major financial events were spread out from February through September of 2008. What would take years in a financial crisis has happened in days in this health crisis.’’

As we continue to shelter in place and quarantine in our makeshift trenches, no one knows how or precisely when this will end. “We had the best economy we’ve ever had,” said President Trump. “And then, one day, you have to close it down in order to defeat this enemy.” And in our efforts to win the fight – generations of wealth, a collective lifetime of savings and the financial future of millions of Americans are being systematically destroyed.

This is our “big war” as the president calls it. We face an existential threat from the unrelenting advance of a deadly disease and the scorched economic earth left in its wake. We can endure, however, in the same way that the survivors of previous big wars have, by doubling down on the safety, liquidity and certainty of holding solid gold.

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by Sean Kelly

As we struggle to social distance, engage in frequent handwashing, don mouth coverings, and toss our delivery boxes outside until the germs dissipate – we anxiously wait for the coronavirus to weaken and fritter away. Some of us follow the daily virus tolls, others bury ourselves in remote work, still others watch re-runs of old NBA and MLB games as a distraction from the daily gloom.

America is clearly in the midst of a collective anxiety attack. We will get through this but when we finally gather, engage and exhale again – we’ll have to contend with a world that looks a bit different than the one we knew just a few months ago.

When the virus arrived in the U.S. in late January, the Dow Jones was nearing 29,000. Today it has slipped more than 21%. Unemployment was sitting at an historically low 3.6%. The latest jobs report shows up to 10 million new jobless claims and an unemployment outlook that could go as high as 32%, worse than the darkest days of the Great Depression. Back in January the International Monetary Fund projected global GDP to hit 3.3% for the year, but the latest estimates suggest that the world economy will shrink.

Jamie Dimon, the chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the only current bank CEO to weather the subprime mortgage meltdown and crisis, believes were heading into a recession similar to 2008. So do economists at Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Bank of America, Pacific Investment Management Co., and UBS. While we find ourselves in a place we’ve never been before, we’re also revisiting some financial era lingo like quantitative easing, stimulus spending, and bailout packages.

On March 6th, the federal government appropriated $8.3 billion in emergency funding for state and local health departments to use for hiring and purchasing medical equipment. On March 12th, the Fed announced it would inject $1.5 trillion worth of liquidity into the banking system. On March 18th, the $183 billion Families First Coronavirus Response Act was signed into law requiring paid leave for small-business employees affected by the virus along with tax relief for employers. On March 27th, the president approved CARE (Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security), a massive $2 trillion aid package designed to help American workers, small businesses and industries grappling with the disruption and hardship of the economic shutdown.

CNN is now reporting that this level of spending could push federal debt as a share of the economy, “to levels not seen since World War II.” And it still may not be enough. The White House and Congressional Democrats are already considering another round of stimulus as well as a massive infrastructure bill.

In terms of severity and communicability, COVID-19 has been a formidable foe that has stressed world markets, corporations, and financial institutions as well as small businesses, hourly workers, and U.S. households. The hospitality, retail, transportation, and entertainment industries – along with professional sports leagues have all come to a halt resulting in millions of furloughs, scores of layoffs, and a mountain of lost paychecks. Economic disruption is now spreading as fast as the rate of new infections.

The outlook is exasperating and while we’re doing all that we can to safeguard our lives, we must also remember to protect our retirement. The coronavirus has triggered an irrefutable and irreversible demand for gold and silver and as one analyst states, “There’s no putting the genie back in the bottle, an unprecedented shift to precious metals has begun.”

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by Sean Kelly

We’re several weeks into the federal social distancing mandate and things have gotten very quiet. Faced with new U.S. projection models for coronavirus infections in the millions and possible deaths in the hundreds of thousands, most Americans are staying home. Stores are closed, restaurants are shut, businesses are dark – and our cities and towns have slowed to a crawl.

The start of a new month presents a slew of payment due dates, however. For consumers there are mortgages, rents, credit card statements, car payments, phone and utility bills, etc. For businesses there’s operating expenses like equipment leases, fixtures, inventory, storage, licenses, tax deposits and payroll. So, what happens when the hourly worker that was recently laid off and the shuttered business that employs hundreds of workers can’t pay the bills?

Some 3.3 million Americans are now unemployed and millions more have lost pay or had their salaries cut, particularly in vulnerable industries. But months before COVID-19’s infiltration into the U.S. via ‘patient zero’ back in mid-January – Americans were struggling with debt and affordability. According to CNBC, last year U.S. households saw the largest annual increase in debt since the financial crisis, rising over $600 billion and topping $14 trillion for the first time ever. Mortgage debt also made the largest gains since 2007 while car loans and credit card debt increased by $57 billion. To make matters worse, according to a 2019 GoBankingRates’ savings survey, 70% of Americans have just $1000 or less tucked away for a crisis. The key findings of the survey concluded that: 45% of respondents had no monies in savings whatsoever and another 24% had $1000 or less. The top reason cited for not being able to put money away was ‘living paycheck to paycheck’ – while 20% named the ‘high cost of living.’

A lot of businesses are in no better shape. According to the Wall Street Journal, the restaurant industry has lost an estimated $25 billion since March 1st and nearly 50,000 stores of major American retail chains have closed. For the travel, leisure and hospitality industries, the coronavirus threatens their very existence. Airlines are flying near empty planes. TSA screening records showed just 180,000 screenings on March 29, 2020 compared to over 2.5 million on the same date last year. The International Air Transport Association is estimating that over a million flights worldwide will be canceled by June 30th with a loss of over $250 billion in revenue. The loss for the U.S. and Canadian airlines will top $50 billion. Demand for hotel rooms has also plummeted. InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) whose properties include Holiday Inn, Staybridge, Kimpton, Crowne Plaza and Candlewood Suites announced $150 million in cost cutting measures and said it expected revenues to plunge by about 60% in March. And in light of the various on-board infections, in-dock quarantines, and a complete halt in global operations – some analysts are predicting that the $45 billion cruise industry may never recover.

The domino effect of all this will be swift and severe for all consumer groups and across all categories of business. The job losses triggered by the restaurant and retail industry is a snapshot of what the economic halt can do the rest of the economy. Already mortgage companies are expecting scores of missed payments. Car dealers are fielding calls from consumers that cannot make their next lease or loan installment and commercial landlords are being inundated by companies of all sizes that cannot make their April rent. Suspending foreclosures, banning evictions and a $1200 check from the government won’t curb the damage. Morgan Stanley is projecting that job losses could hit 17 million by May and the unemployment rate could soar over 12% by June. Their analysts also expect GDP to slump by an astonishing 30.1% in the 3rd quarter of this year. But, the worst part of the forecast is the uncertainty. Dire predictions are being made about conditions that could easily worsen if the pandemic is not stopped or if governments around the world enact the wrong measures to try to prop up their economies. And we simply do not know how many jobs will be lost or how fast – or how many payments will be skipped or for how long.

What we do know is that regaining a sense of normalcy could take months, even years. The coronavirus has delivered an acute economic disruption at a rate of speed never seen in modern history. Consumers are feeling panicked and disconnected. Businesses are feeling stressed and overleveraged. And both are worried that bailouts won’t arrive in time, and the money won’t be sufficient to keep them afloat.

We are in the midst of a culture-changing journey to a place we’ve never been – and for those of us trying to ride out the unknown, we need both a short-term and a long-term financial strategy. Perhaps this is why gold, often popular with survivalists and those looking for a hedge against economic volatility is being acquired at record levels. We are, after all, in a ‘survival of the fittest’ scenario in arguably the most volatile economic moment in history.

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by Sean Kelly

Yesterday President Trump tweeted, “We cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself.” He was commenting on the trillions of dollars of economic output that has been lost as U.S. cities and states have shut down in an effort the flatten the curve of the coronavirus outbreak. While the hope is that ‘social distancing’ will dramatically dull the spread of the virus, the adverse impact on the economy is irrefutable.

In a matter of weeks, the various stay-at-home orders implemented across America which now include 12 states: California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and West Virginia – have distressed businesses large and small. The impact on airlines, hotels, restaurants, retail, travel, and tourism has been particularly devastating. U.S. unemployment, which sat at a pre-pandemic low of 3.6%, will likely explode in the coming months with some estimates projecting a jobless rate as high as 20% to 30%. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard is also warning that we could see GDP cut in half and a subsequent $2.5 trillion loss in income.

This begs the question. Are we in a Zero-Sum game? While mandatory self-isolation is the only strategy we have at the moment, the economic disruption of closing down society is decimating businesses, jeopardizing jobs, and pushing the American economy to a dramatic breaking point.

According to the Foundation for Economic Freedom, state intervention and extreme mandates can sometimes make panics worse. We’re reminded of the infamous gasoline crisis of the 1970’s when the federal government tried to reduce soaring prices at the pump by implementing price controls that triggered a national fuel shortage. Americans were faced with mile-long gas lines, gas rationing, reduced speed limits, extended daylights savings time, and even violence. The stock market also crashed during this period followed by a deep recession.

The current panic-fueled selloff on Wall Street has undone years of market gains. Since mid-February when the Dow was hitting daily, all-time highs, the index has plummeted by over 37%, the S&P 500 has dropped by over 34%, and the Nasdaq has tumbled by over 30%. When we consider those actively saving for or nearing retirement, COVID-19 has been life-altering as 401(k) and IRA holders are now reporting losses of up to 30%.

The outlook for the world economy is equally bleak. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation believes the economic destruction posed by the coronavirus has already surpassed that of the 2008 financial crisis, and it will take years for the global economy to heal. The 36-member body has called on world governments to do whatever it takes to test and treat the virus, and they see no quick recovery or post-pandemic bounce-back on the horizon.

Angel Gurría, OECD secretary general, compares the current climate of uncertainty to the dark days following the September 11th attacks, “We don’t know how much it’s going to take to fix unemployment,” he says, “because we don’t know how many people are going to end up unemployed. We also don’t know how much it’s going to take to fix the hundreds of thousands of small and medium enterprises who are already suffering.”

The world’s leading experts on epidemics including those, as The New York Times reports, “who have fought AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, flu and Ebola,” are very clear as they list the steps that must be taken to defeat the COVID-19. They’re dramatic, some may even consider them excessive and include extreme social distancing, reduced travel, minimal human interaction, and the complete isolation of infected persons outside of the home to break the momentum of the pandemic. But the question is will it also break the back of the U.S. economy and send us into a social distanced depression?

And then there’s an even larger question. Can Americans actually do what it takes to stop the spread? According to the Times, it’s “not at all clear that a nation so fundamentally committed to individual liberty and distrustful of government could learn to adapt to many of these measures, especially those that smack of state compulsion.”

Lest we forget that ‘Zero Sum’ means a gain on one side is a loss on the other (and vice-versa) which makes the heart of this struggle an existential one. Any epidemiological gains made against COVID-19 will likely come at the expense of the freedom, independence, and economic security that we so cherish. So, as we navigate the ‘game’ in the weeks and months ahead, we must do our part to stop the spread but also take critical and timely steps to preserve our wealth and secure our financial future.

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by Sean Kelly

When we think of a “perfect storm,” we can’t help but recall the three massive weather systems that collided back in 1991 off the coast of New England, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland. According to the National Weather Service, the event created a Nor’easter-type cyclone fueled by the Gulf Stream that emitted heavy rain, hurricane force winds, flooding, catastrophic storm surges and wave heights of over 60 feet.

A movie released back in 2000, detailed such an event. The story of the ill-fated Andrea Gail, a commercial fishing boat out of Gloucester, Massachusetts got caught up in the ferocity and was forever lost.

The term is now used to describe any rare or unusual combination of events that prove to be calamitous, even apocalyptic – like the current economy.

We’re living in an extraordinary economic moment. An unprecedented gathering of volatile currents, unstable air, and dense pressure systems are building up all around us. They’re upending our political system, disrupting national unity, and threatening our very way of life.

In the midst of an election year, we face the uncertainty of new leadership, dramatic policy changes, and a disruption to the world order.

More than anything, we have an unclear road map for the future which can suppress sentiment and dull economic expectations. Lest we forget that consumer confidence and associated spending represents 78% of GDP. Perhaps that’s why both the Dow and the S&P 500 tend to trend lower in presidential election years.

We’re also in a punishing political season where economic optimism and pessimism are starkly split along party lines. The animosity, disunity and discord directly impact legislative collaboration, policy making, and the forward thinking required to do the nation’s business. Partisanship has become a blood sport of allegation, denigration, and scandal where tearing down an opponent often comes at the price of undermining the economic potential of the country – even in the face of a cataclysmic crisis.

And we certainly have one. Call it a Black Swan, an inflection point, a watershed moment or a history-altering event. Pandemics are such things. The World Health Organization defines it as: “a new influenza virus that emerges and spreads around the world, and most people do not have immunity.” We also do not have a vaccine.

COVID-19 is not only a killer, it’s highly contagious and has caused dramatic changes to life as we know it – from travel, to worship, to education, to sports.

Quarantines, isolation and social distancing are now forcing the cancellation of parties, gatherings, graduations, vacations, and even trips the gym. We’ve been utterly transformed and so has the economy. The threat to the travel industry, cruise lines, restaurants, entertainment, sports establishments, small businesses, and of course the financial markets has reached dangerous levels.

The disruption, fallout, and long-term consequences of the virus could upend supply and demand, paralyze the manufacturing sector, spike unemployment, overwhelm health resources, exacerbate consumer and corporate debt, and dramatically increase uncertainty.

And to make matters worse, the Fed can do little to help after slashing rates to near zero on Sunday. They are, as many experts maintain, “Out of Ammo!”

Tele-health, tele-medicine and tele-debates are the new normal –and the coronavirus is likely to continue to infect the American psyche and weaken investor resolve long after it’s gone.

Don’t wait until the data is tallied, the damage is assessed, and quarterly GDP numbers roll in to safeguard your retirement. Adding gold to your portfolio now provides balance, risk protection, and an historic refuge from the crippling economic fallout to follow.

“The worst was yet to come, for germs would kill more people than bullets. By the time that last fever broke and the last quarantine sign came down, the world had lost 3-5% of its population.”  Charles River Editors, The 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic: The History and Legacy of the World’s Deadliest Influenza Outbreak

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by Sean Kelly

The spread of the coronavirus has sparked some extreme consumer behavior. Americans are flocking to stores and inundating online sites to purchase disinfectants, hand soap, bottled water, canned goods, powdered milk, and toilet paper. The panicked buying has produced empty supermarket shelves and “Sold Out” notifications across ecommerce sites that sell foodstuffs, cleaning supplies, daily provisions or anything that has now been deemed “survival essential” and hence, subject to stockpiling and hoarding.

CNN Business is reporting that sales of hand sanitizers increased 73% in February, thermometers jumped 47%, and surgical masks soared 319% compared to last year.

And then there’s good old fashion bleach. There’s nothing fancy about the white jug solution of sodium hypochlorite that dates back to the 17th century.  Its claim to fame has always been found in America’s laundry rooms removing stains and whitening “whites.” But bleach also functions as a strong disinfectant that can kill bacteria, fungus, and yes viruses. Needless to say, shares of Clorox have been rising right alongside Purell and Lysol.

The stockpiling phenomenon has spread across the globe as emergency hoarding is also occurring in China, Japan, South Korea, Italy, the U.K. France, and Canada. And as the citizens of the world rush to fill their “pandemic pantries,” they’re exhibiting behavior that is rooted in fear which almost always leads to panic. The same panic that has now consumed the financial markets.

On Monday, the Dow plunged more than 2,000 points on coronavirus fears and the breakdown of talks between OPEC and Russia which crushed crude prices by almost a third. The sell-off began at the opening bell and the five-minute frenzy that ensued tripped Wall Street’s circuit breakers bringing everything to a screeching halt. The reprieve was short-lived, however. After traders caught their breath, the early jitters quickly morphed into full-blown market hysteria. Stocks cratered throughout the day and logged the worst one-day drop on record.

The “fear” of missing out that fueled Wall Street for over a decade has now succumbed to the “panic” of staying in. And all of this comes at a particularly bad time for overvalued equity markets, overextended consumers, an overleveraged corporate sector, and a Fed that is far less prepared than it should be.

Panic has precedent, and it rarely ends well. In September of 2007, CNN Money published a piece called, “Panic on Wall Street: A Brief History of Fear,” where it discussed how market anxiety was fanning uncertainty.  An article in The New York Times published on May 25, 2008 entitled, “Wall Street Exodus: Fear, Panic and Anger,” summed up the anxious psychology of the unfolding market rout. And in 2010, a Forbes piece called, “Fat Fingers Cause Panics,” outlined how nerves and skepticism were prompting investors to sell.

Wall Street’s fingers were downright portly yesterday – and we’re miles beyond any notion of uncertainty, anxious psychology, or early signs of trouble. We’ve stopped traveling, excursioning, and vacationing. Events have been canceled and conferences postponed. Factories have been shut and workers sent home. Stadiums are empty and restaurants are quiet. Virtually every industry that relies on a gathering of customers or a collection of people is now feeling the impact of the quarantines, travel restrictions, business disruptions, battered nerves and economic fallout of COVID-19.

“Amazingly, the market is finally waking up to the prospects of not just viral contagion,” said Scott Minerd of Guggenheim Partners, “but also to financial contagion.” With many analysts now declaring that a global recession is virtually inevitable, it’s time to think beyond all those consumables stacked in our “pantries” to the hard assets stashed in our retirement accounts. Gold rises when everything else falls and with “business as usual” now a distant memory – it’s a critical time to hoard something that holds its value in times of extreme fear and financial uncertainty.

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by Sean Kelly

Back on January 10th, the New York Times reported the first death from a new virus that surfaced in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the capital of China’s Hubei province and a major commercial center. Chinese officials linked the “bug” to workers that sold live fish, birds and animals at an outdoor market and stated there was no evidence that the virus could spread between humans.

Within 20 days, the World Health Organization declared the new coronavirus a public health emergency. A month later, the pneumonialike illness has been reported on every continent in the world except Antarctica and the global death toll has surpassed 3,000. COVID-19, according to the CDC, is a “respiratory illness that can spread from person to person,” and there is no vaccine or antiviral treatment available to combat it. The World Health Organization says the outbreak puts the world in “uncharted territory” as doctors have “never before seen a respiratory pathogen capable of community transmission.”

The rapid spread of COVID-19 has triggered mass quarantines, shuttered schools and universities, and closed major tourist attractions. It has disrupted global manufacturing and travel – and sapped consumer spending and business sentiment. It has pushed 10-year Treasury yields to record lows and the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) to the highest level since the Great Recession. The resulting panic has triggered the Dow’s largest one-day point drop in history, pushed all three major U.S. indexes into correction, slammed global markets, and singlehandedly crimped economic growth forecasts around the world.

If that doesn’t get your attention – what will? How about this. Confirmed cases of the virus are now growing faster outside of China as Italy, Iran and South Korea have all reported more infections than the Chinese in the past week. New cases have also been confirmed in the United States where twenty-three infections were logged over the weekend. New cases of COVID-19 have been reported in New York, Florida, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Illinois, and Oregon bringing the American tally to 88. Washington State has confirmed three more fatalities, putting the U.S. death toll at six. With the expansion of local and state testing, U.S. cases of the virus are expected to soar.

We are indeed in uncharted territory — medically and economically. And as major industrial nations now grapple with the full extent of the virus outbreak, critical questions are being asked. How will we contain the spread? How bad will it get? What will the social consequences be? How will business and industry cope?

Needless to say, all of this has increased recession talk and invoked endless comparatives with the financial crisis of 2008 and the dot.com crash of the late 1990’s. With good reason. Money is cheap again, loans are easy, consumers are overleveraged, markets are inflated, and we’re in yet another bubble. And just like that – the prospect of the coronavirus damaging the U.S. economy has become very real.

What about all those IRA’s, 401(k)’s, pensions and retirement plans? History has proven there is scant refuge from speculation, risk, and all out panic.

As local and state governments scramble for virus test kits – the federal government is scrambling for monetary tools to fight what is likely to be a contagion-fueled downturn. Like the testing protocols, the government’s response is delayed, the components are faulty, and the damage may already be done.

We’re facing a global supply shock that could send the price of basic goods sky-high, radically suppress demand, and dramatically reduce output – propelling the nation and the world into a deep recession. And we’re doing it with limited monetary tools and few resources to combat the massive financial disruptions to follow.

Much like the virus itself, we’ve never been here before and there is uncertainty around every corner. The world’s largest and wealthiest companies, the safe and profitable stalwarts of industry, are issuing warnings and exuding somber tones which underscore the truth about all pandemics – that nothing is safe and no one is immune.

Goldman Sachs, however, has identified one asset class that it deems virus resistant. Gold has earned its reputation as a safe haven precisely because of its history of holding its value during the most volatile episodes in human existence which include world war, global disasters, international catastrophes, and out of control pandemics. “While so much about the current environment remains unclear,” said Goldman’s head of global commodities, “there’s one thing that isn’t: gold, which—unlike people and our economies—is immune to the virus.”

Gold continues to dramatically outperform other safe havens in 2020 and has now officially become, “the currency of last resort.”

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by Sean Kelly

The phrase “Okay, Boomer,” gained prominence last year when a Millennial member of the New Zealand parliament used it to silence a heckling older statesman. Chloe Swarbrick was in the midst of delivering a passionate speech about how climate change is threatening her generation, when a “Boomer” became agitated. The term was a flippant retort, but also a dismissal of all those born between 1946 and 1964, deeming them out-of-touch and close-minded. Indeed, it is “sticks and stones” payback for many Gen Y’ers who believe that the term “Millennial” has been similarly used to dub all young people as entitled and mollycoddled.

While not a wholly homogeneous group, Baby boomers are generally regarded as self-assured and goal-centric. They are the children of the “greatest generation,” and they’re great in their own right. Boomers are credited with developing personal computing, the World Wide Web, Rock and Roll, DNA fingerprinting, counter-culture, and the notion that “Greed is Good.” They were also on the front lines of gender equality, diversity, and booming entrepreneurship. Most notably, they were among the 400,000 young people that shut down the New York State Thruway for the Woodstock Music & Art Fair back in 1969.

Steve Wozniak, Bill Gates, and Steve Jobs are all Baby boomers. So are Oprah Winfrey, Stephen Spielberg, and Meryl Street. George Bush, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and Donald Trump are also on the list along with Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Melissa Ethridge and Jimmy Buffett.

AARP describes their Baby boomer demographic in this way:

“We’re the largest, richest, best-educated generation of Americans, the favored children of a strong, confident and prosperous country. Or, as other generations call us, spoiled brats. Born between 1946 and 1964, the 76 million boomers reaped all the benefits of the postwar period’s extraordinary economic growth.”

Financially, Baby boomers are a powerful economic force. They’re the richest generation in history and currently control more than half of all U.S. household wealth. They have, on average, quadrupled their aggregate net worth since the late 1980’s. According to Epsilon Data Management, Boomers also spend more than any other generational group, consuming over $548 billion annually in goods and services. And they can afford to. Money and the Markets maintains that Baby Boomers have captured about two-thirds of all wealth gains (about $10 trillion) recorded during the Trump administration.

Baby boomers are also hurling toward retirement at a rate of about 10,000 a day and despite their collective wealth – the Insured Retirement Institute reports that some 45% have no savings, four in ten believe that Medicare will cover their long-term health care costs, and six in ten have taken no action with respect to their workplace defined contribution plans.

For a generation that has always brimmed with overriding confidence, the prospect of retiring comfortably has suddenly given Boomers pause. They’re worried about nest eggs falling short, social security becoming insolvent, the cost of living rising too fast, and health care bills wiping out everything they’ve saved, accrued and amassed.

A recent MarketWatch feature identified the ‘seven deadly sins’ of Boomer retirement planning as including insufficient savings, the premature draining of retirement accounts, and a fundamental lack of retirement planning. Extreme portfolio risk completes the list, as Boomers are also wildly overleveraged in stocks. According to Fidelity’s third-quarter retirement report, almost 1 in 3 Boomers are heading into their golden years extremely “equity-heavy”:

“Fidelity’s Q3 analysis found that many 401(k) account holders had stock allocations higher than those recommended for their age group. Fidelity compared average asset allocations to an age-based target date fund and found nearly a quarter (23.1%) of 401(k) savers still have a higher percentage of equities than recommended, including 7% who are 100% equity. Among Baby Boomers, the over-allocation of stock was even higher – 37.6% have too much equity, including 7.9% who are in 100% equities.”

While Baby boomers have ridden the markets to unprecedented levels of wealth, they now risk the downside hazards of staying in for too long. Asset allocation is critical to wealth protection and when it comes to safeguarding retirement and savings accounts in 2020, gold is an ideal diversifier. Its lack of volatility, low correlation with other asserts, and exceedingly long history of holding value – make it part of a smart 21st century portfolio strategy.

And, there is perhaps no better asset for a self-driven, self-reliant generation like Baby Boomers than independent money that exists outside the banking system and well beyond the reach of government.

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by Sean Kelly

As the world grapples with crisis and chaos, America shrugs.

We’re living in a time of good economic vibrations.

We’re currently enjoying the longest expansion in history which started back in June of 2009 and has rumbled 128 months, smashing the previous record of 120 months (March 1991 to March 2001). We’re also sitting in the longest bull market ever which is now just a month shy of its 11th birthday.

Imagine that — we have not felt truly bearish about the stock market since 2009.

Wall Street’s run has been exasperating, particularly lately. The Dow hit 22 record closes last year, 15 in 2018, 5 in 2017, and 25 in 2016. This month alone, the S&P 500 has hit both an all-time closing and an intra-day high. And according to Fidelity, their millionaire’s club has swelled by some 441,000 as sky-high stocks have turned a record number of Fidelity retirement accounts into well-heeled ‘rainy-day’ funds.

Americans are anything but fearful. According to Gallup, U.S. economic confidence is the highest since 2000. In a recent University of Michigan survey, consumers mentioned feeling wealthier now than at any other time since 1960. And Americans rate the current economy, the best overall since the 1990’s.

As China’s economy has been besieged by the coronavirus, the eurozone has suffered its slowest growth in 7 years, Japan has been pushed to the brink of recession, and world debt has reached an all-time high — it should come as no surprise that America shrugged.

U.S. investors are not making the connection between a synchronized global downturn and the health of the U.S. economy.

The world economy is critical to the countless American corporations that operate abroad as well as foreign companies with offices in the U.S. that contribute to U.S. job growth, economic output, and market capitalization. Overseas supply chains are vital to U.S. business and foreign investment, whether in the American markets or American corporations, is very much influenced by global factors. As a result, many retirement and savings accounts are exposed to risks associated with financial uncertainties and slowing growth in countries halfway around the world.

During the 1992 presidential election, Bill Clinton’s campaign director, James Carville, famously posted a sign at Clinton headquarters that read, “It’s the economy, stupid,” as a stark reminder that America was facing a recession and that the markets, the Fed, and global conditions were contributing to the overriding economic malaise. In 2020, the same elements are in play except the financial fallout has yet to wash ashore — but when it does, only those with an aggressive risk management strategy will be prepared.

In his new book, Aftermath: Seven Secrets of Wealth Preservation in the Coming Chaos, author James Rickards warns that,

“The dizzying heights of the stock market can’t continue indefinitely–especially since asset prices have been artificially inflated by investor optimism around the Trump administration, ruinously low interest rates, and the infiltration of behavioral economics into our financial lives. The elites are prepared, but what’s the average investor to do?”

With the Europe stagnating, China stumbling, and the U.S. election sowing the seeds of deep political uncertainty — investors are taking strong positions in gold.

A world brimming with economic, political and monetary uncertainty requires a global safe haven which is why central banks around the world hold gold in their reserves. Gold is an international monetary standard and an ideal hedge against weakening economies, floating exchange rates, and global market volatility. And let’s not forget the lower-for-longer rate environment that has turned borrowing upside down and savings inside out, making gold an indispensable store of value and a critical counterweight to ever-expanding market bubbles.

Gold becomes more valuable during times of heightened market risk and rising geopolitical turmoil. Yes, “it’s the economy stupid” – the global economy, and we’re reminded time and time again why gold is the world’s most famous and most preferred crisis-resistant asset.

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by Sean Kelly

the tesla rallyWhen we think about Wall Street and the sudden rise and fall of the financial markets — words like parabolic, feverish, and frantic often describe periods of rapid speculation. These are commonly known as bubbles. Stock bubbles are anything but normal events. They reflect extreme market psychology including greed, herd instinct, and the infamous ‘fear of missing out.’ A market bubble is a surge in share prices that is not backed by fundamentals or critical corporate markers like cash flow, ROI, profit, and future growth prospects. And, it tends to feed itself.

Tesla’s current rally may well be the perfect 2020 illustration of ‘irrational exuberance,’ a term coined by former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan during the tech stock boom of the late 1990’s.  Greenspan used the phrase to suggest that the market was overvalued and that animal spirits had replaced critical financial metrics such as income statements, accounting ratios, and balance sheets. He also used it to warn that a massive bubble was forming.

Last week, Tesla’s stock shares jumped almost $130 on Monday, another $107 on Tuesday, and then dropped over $150 on Wednesday. Overall, the electric car maker’s share price has more than tripled since late September despite experts deeming the company’s valuation as ‘stretched’ and most analysts listing the stock as a solid ‘sell.’ And as share prices continue to climb — there’s no doubt that euphoria is in play.

This begs the question — is Tesla’s market mania a typical ‘high-risk/high-reward’ gambit or could it be a cautionary tale about the underlying fragility of world markets?

Tesla’s wild ride is reminiscent of several other famous bubbles that started small and rapidly spread across various funds and equity classes triggering a broad-based sell-off. In this sense, bubbles function as market disrupters. After all, they have triggered some of the most notorious recessions in history. The Great Depression was sparked by an unsustainable asset bubble. The recession of the early 2000’s was powered by the dot.com bubble, and more recently, the Great Recession was fueled by a real estate bubble.

When bubbles burst, prices plummet, paper wealth evaporates and panic ensues. What follows is typically a contraction, correction, or a full-blown crash.

Hyman P. Minsky, an American Economist and scholar at the Levy Economics Institute — was among the first to outline the key elements of a market bubble. The first is Displacement which is the disruption caused by a new technology or extraordinary financial condition like historically low interest rates. The second is a Boom where prices gain momentum and attract a rising throng of investors. Next comes Euphoria where market shares are driven to new highs that are well beyond sound data or reason. This is followed by Profit Taking, where traders sell securities to lock in their gains. The last phase is Panic where prices quickly reverse course and correct — causing a rush for the exits where investors invariably get crushed and trampled in the mad dash to avert additional losses.

Bubbles are punishing pain points and Tesla, which is being driven by the lure of renewable energy, sexy cars and the appeal of Elon Musk himself — could be the high-tech canary in the clean energy coal mine. The electric car maker’s ‘Peak Musk’ valuation has doubled in a month and risen almost 380% since May. Its market capitalization, according to NASDAQ, makes it more valuable than GM, Ford, Fiat, Chrysler and Honda combined. It is now the second largest automaker behind Toyota, and within striking distance of iconic corporate giants like Nike and McDonald’s.

It’s an extraordinary feat for a company that has had major struggles with delivery, profitability, and consumer demand. So, is the Tesla rally sustainable — or is the auto-maker the latest poster child for over-priced, over-hyped and over-pumped markets around the world?

A rising consortium of experts say it’s time to diversify and not with asset classes that rise and fall together. Holding gold is one of the oldest forms of wealth protection in existence and one of the most powerful hedges against rising bubble talk, improbable bull-runs, and single stock rallies that foreshadow massive sell-offs.

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by Sean Kelly

As the Iowa caucuses stumbled late into the night on Monday, the presidential primary process officially got under way. It was a sloppy display of dumbfounded news anchors and awkward speeches by candidates who vowed to secure their party’s nomination despite extensive reporting delays in the primary season’s first major contest.

Delegates chosen at the state level either by caucus or primary vote will decide who runs for president on the national ticket in November.

For the next four months candidates and the media will rush from state to state — invading local coffee houses, diners and fairgrounds as final pushes and closing stump speeches are made to secure as many votes as possible. And as each subsequent primary unfolds — Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, and those infamous ‘Super Tuesday’ states including delegate-rich California, Texas and Massachusetts – the field will necessarily narrow.

But as we learned on Monday, it is not a simple or straightforward undertaking. It’s messy and combative and many would say breathlessly unfair. The rules for delegates vary. Some states are winner-take-all, others are winner-take-some, and the rest go to congressional districts. Several state caucuses select candidates in an informal meeting of party leaders and there are endless backdoor maneuvers involving unpledged delegates and mysterious super delegates — those free agents of the electorate that can often make or break the nominating process.

The Council on Foreign Relations has called the U.S. political system, “one of the most complex, lengthy, and expensive in the world.” Indeed, nearly every presidential election has cost more than the one preceding it and with a gaggle of billionaires suddenly in the mix, the cost of the 2020 Presidential Election is likely to shatter the $2.4 billion spent in 2016. Several prominent ad agencies are already estimating that 2020 political ads alone could reach as much as $10 billion.

When we consider the still-cramped Democratic field, things seem even messier. After sifting through some 29 candidates, almost a dozen remain in the running with four clustered at the top of the polls: former vice president Joe Biden, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, and the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg. These candidates have prompted fierce debate over prickly issues like the Green New Deal, Raising Taxes, Free Tuition, Medicare-for-All, Universal Basic Income and LGBTQ rights.

It should come as no surprise that many voters seem as uncertain as the process itself. Recent polls suggest that they are more than willing to change their mind even up to entering the polling a lever or casting a chad. That’s a wake-up call for leading candidates with vote-switching vulnerabilities. Biden, for instance, has been dogged by questions of stamina. Elizabeth Warren has been hounded by her plan to end private health insurance. Mayor Pete has had to combat the recurring issues of his youth and inexperience. And, Bernie Sanders faces long-standing doubts about how his socialist agenda will fare in a general election against Donald Trump.

Primaries are tricky things and not knowing who will be the next president is downright beguiling. Simply stated, all of this confusion is bad for business. Political uncertainty can impact production, investment, spending, and hiring. Elections, after all, are the tools of change and America will ultimately decide whether it wants a completely new direction this November.

In the meantime, the Iowa ‘Train Wreck,’ reminds us that mayhem is alive and this raises the specter of risk, volatility, and political instability. So, while all those mom and pop stores in places like Bedford, New Hampshire; Boulder City, Nevada; and Fort Mill, South Carolina become the next proving ground for those seeking their party’s nomination, gold remains a safe haven for everyone, in every city, and every party affiliation across the country. It is the ideal political, economic and financial hedge and no matter what candidates, issues or agendas finally rule the day — holding gold is a winning platform.

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by Sean Kelly

As world health authorities scramble to contain the spread of a new coronavirus that originated in China, global economists are weighing the potential economic fallout if a full-blown pandemic develops. The fast-moving, respiratory illness which has been dubbed “2019-nCoV” or the “Wuhan Virus” has killed over 100 people, infected over 4,000, and now reached 13 countries including the U.S. and Australia as well as nations across Asia and Europe.

A deadly contagion could not come at a worse time for China as their economy has slowed, their debt has soared, and they’re still reeling from a punishing trade war with the United States. The pneumonia-like virus has prompted the lock down of entire Chinese provinces, the closing of manufacturing plants, the dismissal of migrant laborers, and the extension of the week-long Lunar New Year holiday in an effort to limit travel. Chinese transportation, tourism, catering, and retail businesses are enduring a cumulative ‘hit’ that could significantly slow first quarter economic growth. If the virus multiplies unabated, there’s increasing fear that it could infect the broader global economy.

Many estimates of the economic and social costs of modern-day pandemics are based on the effects of the Great Influenza of 1918 which also had its origins in China and killed as many as 100 million people worldwide which eclipses the casualty count of World War One. According to New York Times best-selling author John Barry, it killed “more people in twenty-four months than AIDS killed in twenty-four years [and] more in a year than the Black Death killed in a century.”

Back in 2007, the St. Louis Fed reported that, “the possibility of a worldwide influenza pandemic (e.g., the avian flu) in the near future is of growing concern for many countries around the globe. The World Bank estimates that a global influenza pandemic would cost the world economy $800 billion and kill tens-of-millions of people.” In a more recent 2018 study, the bank examined other deadly global pandemics like SARS, swine flu, MERS, Ebola, Zika, yellow fever, Lassa fever, and cholera. They concluded that the annual global cost of moderately severe to severe pandemics is about $570 billion, or roughly 0.7% of global income.

Things are bigger, faster and more consequential in 2020, however. Global trade is more robust, world travel is more commonplace, and the spread of infectious disease is more rapid than at any other time in history. According to a recent analysis by Imperial College London, “the scale of the [current] outbreak will depend on how quickly and easily the virus is passed between people. Using data collected up to 18 January, it appears that, on average, each person infected with the virus passes it to between 1.5 and 3.5 other people.”

None of this has been sitting well with world markets. On Monday, the Dow posted its worst day since October losing over 450 points as it tumbled into the red for the new year. Investors across the globe — from Europe, to Asia, to the Middle East dumped stocks on fears that the mysterious new virus will sicken the world and trigger a steep contraction. Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at AxiTrader, aptly summarized the unease stating that, “With coronavirus worries on the rise, the market continues to struggle with the unenviable task of factoring in absolute terms its implied economic devastation.”

All of this has sparked a dramatic selloff in equities and a rush to safe haven assets. Gold is now trading near $1600 an ounce and is up more than 20% over the past year. While it had already been buoyed by a host of global uncertainties, the added threat posed by the coronavirus could be a safe haven game changer.

Gold’s pandemic record is worth noting. It rose in 2002 (SARS), 2009 (Swine Flu), and 2012 (MERS). And in 2019, there are no anti-virals or broad-spectrum defenses to combat the deadly new pathogen that has now pushed beyond China’s Hubei province, infiltrated the mainland, and infected the broader global community. In a world where standard safeguards fail to protect us, gold has provided safety, security, and economic healing for as long as epidemics, pandemics and plagues have threatened the wellbeing of humankind.

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by Sean Kelly

Index funds are a form of passive investing that track a broader index, like the S&P 500 which houses the stocks of 500 large-cap U.S. companies including Apple, Microsoft, ExxonMobil, Johnson & Johnson, General Electric, Amazon and Facebook. They’re low-cost and relatively uncomplicated investments that can take the form of a mutual fund or an exchange-traded fund (ETF). They’re based upon a pre-set bucket of stocks that are aligned to an index — and for the first time in history their cumulative value has surpassed managed stock holdings.

The rise of indexing has been propelled by their one-stop shopping convenience which saves time, research hours, and the need for a portfolio manager and their associated fees. And, since most indexes include an array of diversified companies, they’re generally considered low risk. Their ease and simplicity are so appealing that, they’ve invaded Wall Street, particularly since the financial crisis and according to Reuters now control half of the mutual fund market. The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF, one of the largest funds on record, was sitting on $520 billion in assets as of December.

“The index fund is one of a handful of unambiguously beneficial financial innovations. Before it caught on, investors routinely paid sky-high fees to active stock-pickers who often delivered subpar returns. The near-universal popularity of index funds puts them up there with Social Security, Stevie Wonder, and streaming TV.” Bloomberg

Over the past decade some $1.36 trillion has been dumped into indexed mutual funds and ETF’s — while some $1.32 trillion was subsequently pulled out of traditionally managed accounts. The Wall Street Journal calls it, “the passing of the asset crown” and “one of the most dramatic transformations in the history of the financial markets.”  But while the seismic shift has increased fund access and lowered the cost of investing, it has also dramatically consolidated power within the industry as indexing goliaths Black Rock, Vanguard and State Street are now the largest shareholders in almost 90% of S&P 500 firms. Similarly, Barron’s reports that the three firms hold 80% of ETF assets in some 600 products, “that leaves another 1,600 ETFs and more than 100 firms competing like gunslingers in the Wild West.”

The Securities and Exchange Commission approved the first ETF in 1993 and according to the Washington Post there were only 124 index funds back in 1996 valued at just $100 billion. According to recent estimates, the number of ETF’s and Index Funds has now climbed to over 2,000 with a combined value nearing $7 trillion. Their growth shows no sign of slowing down as Black Rock recently estimated the total value of indexing could reach $12 trillion by 2025.

The SEC is now asking some pointed questions, however about transparency, market stability, and the consolidation of financial power. There is little regulatory oversight of the firms that create these indexes, and they’re more than ripe for conflicts of interest. And, while there is a collective upside to indexing during a rising market, the funds offer scant protection for a sudden sell-off or consolidated stampede. Further, retirement funds and life savings are subject to the amalgamated whims of the three, giant asset managers: BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street, the index cartel — subjecting millions of Americans to an uncharacteristic loss of control with respect to their money and retirement savings.

And there are other concerns. The sheer size and number of these funds could distort market prices and make the exchanges unstable. The frenzy surrounding passive investing is reminiscent of bubble behavior and that could cause a market collapse when the inflows exhale. And lastly, these funds offer no allowance for personal risk tolerance or an asset mix that reflects specific retirement needs.

Even the late, great Jack Bogle, the founder of Vanguard and the ‘Father of Indexing’ mused as recently as last year that there are too many shares in too few hands – and that could undermine investing behavior and disrupt market metrics. The truth is Index Trading is too vast to stop, too large to curtail, and far, far too big to fail. But what if it does?

Indexing can mask a multitude of hidden dangers and this is precisely where an alternative investment outside the mania of fast-shifting barometers becomes critical. Gold is private, confidential, highly liquid, and carries no counter-party risk. It is the ideal ‘check and balance’ asset to protect our money from those things beyond our control, specifically — the new world dominance of index funds and the new power brokers of Wall Street.

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by Sean Kelly

The holidays are over. As we stash away all the ribbons and bows, they look a bit less colorful than they did just a few weeks ago. We now find ourselves in the dull, gray routine of winter grappling with resolutions, rush hour, and an overabundance of Amazon boxes. Like every other year, January comes as a moment of reckoning for over-eating, over-spending, and over-promising.

The New Year Blues are actually a fairly common thing. While some celebrate the accomplishments of the old year and approach the new one with enthusiasm — others are engulfed by a sense of dread. And when the cycle of anticipation invariably fails to live up to the hype, it can be debilitating. This is perhaps even more prominent in the world of money, investing, and the markets.

As 2020 begins, we close out a decade of low inflation, low interest rates, and historic economic expansion. In the 2010’s, we not only continued to pull away from one of the worst financial crises since the Great Depression — we made economic history. We reached historically low levels of unemployment for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, and women along with the highest levels of median household income to ever grace the record books. We also achieved the longest consecutive streak of job growth and the lengthiest bull market in history. And we witnessed something most economists said was not possible — the return of American manufacturing jobs.

But as we dip our toe into a new decade, we’re faced with new pressures and the historical precedent of unexpected political and economic events. In 1980, the U.S. started the decade by entering a deep recession triggered by the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and a dramatic surge in oil prices. In 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait, which triggered the first Gulf War that subsequently crippled consumer confidence, suppressed business spending, and sparked a U.S. recession. In the year 2000, the dot.com bubble burst which precipitated the collapse of internet stocks causing trillions of dollars in market losses. In 2010, the European Debt Crisis got under way which threatened banks around the world and had adverse effects on both global trade and world economic growth.

In the first week of this new year — stocks have been volatile and there has been endless talk of powder kegs and market bubbles. Corporate debt has reached unsustainable levels and the student loan crisis has spiraled out of control. We’re also grappling with a presidential impeachment, a precarious trade truce with China, renewed rocket warnings from North Korea, hypersonic missile threats from Russia, and a highly contentious presidential election. Add the recent threat of retaliation from an incensed Iran for the killing of Qassem Soleimani, and we get a truly unnerving glimpse into global risk.

Are you tired of hearing Happy New Year yet? So, despite our private resolve to drop a pant size and pay down our debt, the tenor of the 2020’s will very much hinge on the state of the world. From the Korean Peninsula, to the South China Sea, to the Middle East, the 2010’s left behind a tinderbox of global flashpoints. And while Christmas is clearly over on Wall Street, the economic hope of the new decade will likely rest in a familiar place —- the safety, security and staying power of holding physical gold.

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by Sean Kelly

As we think about resolutions and goals for the new year – many of us gravitate to the traditional aspirations of losing weight, eating better, exercising regularly, and the perennial favorite — being better about money. With respect to the latter, that can take the form of spending less, saving more, or investing smarter.

2019 was a banner year for the financial markets. Despite a debilitating trade war, global growth concerns, and extreme political polarization — Wall Street basked in recurring record highs. For the Dow, the Nasdaq, and the S&P 500, the good times rolled unhindered and unchecked making it the best year for stocks in decades. ‘Fear of Missing Out’ paled in comparison to the ‘Fear of Not Having Enough’ as investors piled into equities head first, breakneck and full bore. So much for ending the year with a bang — the markets closed 2019 with a sonic boom.

But here’s the $85 trillion question. What will 2020 bring? Can Wall Street live up to the ‘go all-in,’ let it ride, devil-may-care attitude that dominated 2019? In order to do that, the three indexes will have to combine for some 37 new records. Possible? Anything is possible but there are a few things that could dampen the new year spirit.

The first is the over-leveraged U.S. consumer. While spending has sustained the American economy, consumer debt is rising and delinquencies are poised to hit decade highs, particularly on credit cards and auto loans. Then, there’s the question of interest rates. The Fed has been unduly restrained and rates remain at historic lows. Over 60% of current homeowners are paying mortgage rates between 3.00% and 4.90%. In 2000 the average rate was 8.05%, in 1990 it was 10.13%, in 1980 it was 13.74%. At some point, rates will have to rise and when they do, the ripple effect could crush the markets. And we cannot overlook the ever-precarious trade truce. If the ‘Phase One’ trade deal between the U.S. and China fails to hold or progress, look for global uncertainty to mount and the markets to elicit a nervous gasp.

While these risks are menacing, they’re being written off as things we merely need to worry about ‘at some point’ but not necessarily now. This type of hope-mongering, can leave investors flat-footed. YES — At some point, the markets will correct, the economic expansion will end, the economy will slow, and a recession will arrive. Until then, it’s a perilous game of market “Musical Chairs” and the critical question we must ask ourselves is where we’ll be sitting and what we’ll be holding when the music stops and “at some point” slides into a chair before we do.

So, as you hum along to another tipsy rendition of “Auld Lang Syne” and guzzle a little Moët & Chandon at midnight — keep a few things in mind. Global growth is decelerating, wealth inequality is soaring, corporate profits are sinking, business uncertainty is rising, and we have no clue who will govern the most powerful economy in the world in 2020.

All of this helped lift gold more than 18% in 2019 making it one of the few assets that not only advanced on all the many things that went right last year — but became a power hedge for all that could go wrong as we move into the next.

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Retain more of your retirement savings by investing in redrocksecured gold investment companies.

Red Rock Secured is gold investment companies that offers peace of mind to the investors. When it comes to your retirement savings, we work hard to make sure you see greater returns. We make it easy for you to invest in precious metals such as gold and silver which retain value and often increase in worth.

Here are five things that gold investment companies Red Rock Secured offers investors:

  1. Choices. What you do with the money you’ve saved for retirement is ultimately your decision. We offer you choices that meet your needs and provide you with opportunities to pad your nest egg. Looking at our website and seeing the different ways you can invest in gold investment companies. Best of all, you can opt to store your gold and silver in depository storage or have it delivered to your home where you have greater control over it personally.
  2. Security. There are no penalties or fees with Gold IRAs, meaning you get to keep more of the money you worked hard to save and invest in gold investment companies. Having a financial future that sustains you throughout the rest of your life is imperative. Far too many retirees realize they don’t have enough money saved to live on. We want you to feel safe and secure investing your hard-earned dollars with us.
  3. Convenience. A simple website search is all it takes to see what we have to offer in the way of gold investment companies. It’s something you can do from the convenience of your own home on your own schedule. We even offer home delivery so you don’t need to come to us and then transport your precious metals home. They can be delivered to you discreetly so that you can decide how to store them.
  4. Information. Providing you with the most up-to-date information concerning gold and silver is imperative. It allows you to make informed decisions about your retirement funds and gives you peace of mind by backing up opinions with facts. We’re transparent in our business practices because we know how important making money off what you’ve saved is. We want to give you the best investment options possible that help your savings grow over time.
  5. Diversification. It’s important that you’re able to see the value of building a diverse portfolio. We make gold and silver options that you’re able to add to your list of investments. That means that you have more things working together to grow your nest egg substantially. The longer you wait to retire, the more accumulated savings and earnings you have.gold investment often increase in value which is what makes them very appealing.

Get more mileage out of your investments. With Red Rock Secured, you have options that further diversify your portfolio. Best of all, investing in precious metals is tax-free and fee-free, meaning you get to keep more of the money you have saved for retirement. To learn more about the company and all we have to offer our customers, request more information or consult our Resource Center for the latest news about gold investment.

 

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60 Years Experience

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