Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Bloomberg: China May Become The Third-largest Holder Of Gold GDX, TNR.v, MUX, GDX

  

  Here it comes and a lot of people will be taken totally by surprise. Record buying of Gold by China last year will be translated in the much higher Gold holdings by PBOC. Bloomberg reports that these holdings could surpass now those of Italy and France - Jim Rickards talks about the announcement by Chinese Central Bank of 5,000 t of Gold holdings in the nearest future. It will be the game changer and puts Gold solidly into the investment game as well. Yesterday shock with Jobs numbers can be the sign of the real state of US Economy and it means that FED does not have any real exit strategy from QE permanent state. In another news Royal Mint in UK has run out of gold coins due to the exceptionally high demand.


Peter Schiff: Gold & Dollar - An Imaginary Recovery Does Not Create Real Jobs

"Huge miss in Jobs numbers with only 74k created vs estimated well north of 200k can not be just dismissed as a blip in the data. Peter Schiff discusses that FED can not really Taper now, there is no real recovery and FED does not have the exit strategy. Gold is waking up to these developments. What if this data is the real state of the economy? Once people will realise how wrong is the expectation about the recovery Gold will go straight up. COMEX data shows that Gold shorts will be in trouble very soon."


Bloomberg:


By Debarati Roy

China may have vaulted ahead of Italy and France last year to become the third-largest holder of gold, according to a Bloomberg Industries report.
Assets were probably about 2,710 metric tons, compared with the last reported holdings of 1,054 tons in April 2009, according to the report. Italy’s holdings are 2,451.8 tons, and France owns 2,435.4 tons, according to the World Gold Council data. The U.S. is the biggest holder with 8,133.5 tons.
China’s central bank probably added 622 tons last year after reserves increased 380 tons in 2012, according to the report by Kenneth W Hoffman, senior metals and mining analyst at Bloomberg Industries.
“Based on conversations with officials in China and Mongolia, it’s evident that China feels they want as much gold as much as the U.S.,” Hoffman said in a telephone interview from Skillman, New Jersey. “The refiners in Switzerland have been talking about melting gold after the selloff in London and shipping them to Hong Kong and then from Hong Kong can be traced to China.”
Assets in exchange traded funds backed by bullion fell by more than 869 tons in 2013, according to Bloomberg data, after prices fell 28 percent, the most since 1981.
“Gold has been moving from the west to the east this year,” Hoffman said
The Asian nation’s consumption of jewelry, bars and coins rose 30 percent to 996.3 metric tons in the 12 months that ended Sept. 30, while usage in India, the second-biggest buyer, gained 24 percent to 977.6 tons, according to the London-based World Gold Council."

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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Bitcoin still high risk, not yet ready for mainstream - Bitcoin Foundation General Counsel


  It is very important video to watch for everybody chasing Bitcoin right now. Bitcoin Foundation general counsel warns: "Everybody who buys Bitcoin right now should expect to lose everything". It does not mean that Bitcoin goes to zero tomorrow, but he is very honest with the presentation of Bitcoin, its potential and its risks. 
  The more we study it - the more we like the idea behind Bitcoin. The problem is not with Bitcoin - as we have wrote before, we consider it as one of the major developments in the financial industry - the problem is with the speculators driving this Bubble. Will Bitcoin survive its astronomic rise and collapse at some point to become the real alternative Currency? What will happen when 100 top holders will start cashing out? Nobody knows how high speculators can chase the Bubble, but the higher it goes the harder it will get down. For Bitcoin future it will be very important whether it can stabilise now and grow gradually presenting the real Currency alternative, otherwise its crash will expose its weakness - that it was gamed by few as usual - and crowd will chase other 60 crypto-currencies available now. But by that time nobody will be able to call it Gold 2.0 seriously.
  We will monitor the situation further, but already now the chart below will be the chart of the year for us here and shows the potential for the real FIAT alternatives like Gold and Silver.



Jeff Berwick of The Dollar Vigilante: Bitcoins for Transactions & Gold for Preserving Wealth

"We have another view on the recent stage of development of the financial system and Bitcoin and Gold place in it. The more we study Bitcoin phenomena - the more we are very positively surprised how many people understand the deeply fraudulent fractional reserve banking system based on FIAT. 
  Bitcoin is disrupting the System from within, challenging proposed Capital Controls and show appetite for FIAT alternatives. Now it is in a bubble stage - in our opinion - and whether it will survive its rise and crash remains to be seen. But it will definitely pave the way for the new monetary systems to be implemented in the future."



After Reaching Parity With Gold Bitcoin’s Success Is Putting It Under Growing Strain GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX

"We are searching answers whether Bitcoin is Gold 2.0 or just Dotcom Bubble 2.0 all over again. You know our take already, now Economist weights in with its opinion. And do not forget, please, if you were not the one left holding the bag after the Dotcom Crash, we are all benefiting from Internet revolution now. Just Do Not hold the bag this time. 
  Idea of Goldcoin crypro-currency based on Gold held in Vaults in Singapore, Hong Kong, Switzerland and clearing House in London can be Very elegant solution to the US Dollar hangover after QE abuse."

Bitcoin vs. Gold: The Future of Money - Peter Schiff Debates Stefan Molyneux GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX

"We have a great conversation about Bitcoin between Peter Schiff and Stefan Molyneux. You can find a lot of additional information on Bitcoin from Stefan's video. Everybody decides for themselves where is the Intrinsic Value and where is the Bubble. We are siding with China here - who is buying record amounts of Gold this year with Thailand, Turkey and other Asian countries."


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Friday, November 29, 2013

Jeff Berwick of The Dollar Vigilante: Bitcoins for Transactions & Gold for Preserving Wealth GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX


  We have another view on the recent stage of development of the financial system and Bitcoin and Gold place in it. The more we study Bitcoin phenomena - the more we are very positively surprised how many people understand the deeply fraudulent fractional reserve banking system based on FIAT. 
  Bitcoin is disrupting the System from within, challenging proposed Capital Controls and show appetite for FIAT alternatives. Now it is in a bubble stage - in our opinion - and whether it will survive its rise and crash remains to be seen. But it will definitely pave the way for the new monetary systems to be implemented in the future.

After Reaching Parity With Gold Bitcoin’s Success Is Putting It Under Growing Strain GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX


"We are searching answers whether Bitcoin is Gold 2.0 or just Dotcom Bubble 2.0 all over again. You know our take already, now Economist weights in with its opinion. And do not forget, please, if you were not the one left holding the bag after the Dotcom Crash, we are all benefiting from Internet revolution now. Just Do Not hold the bag this time. 
  Idea of Goldcoin crypro-currency based on Gold held in Vaults in Singapore, Hong Kong, Switzerland and clearing House in London can be Very elegant solution to the US Dollar hangover after QE abuse."


Gold Manipulation - Kissinger: "Why is it against our interest to have gold in the system?" GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX



  "We continue our research about the Gold price suppression: who is doing this manipulation and why. With Bitcoin crossing $1000 and other crypto-currencies going parabolic we can see the hunger for the FIAT alternatives. We think that despite all very positive developments introduced by Bitcoin it is in a Bubble stage now due to its unbelievable vertical rise. Its bust will bring attention back to Gold and Silver and next step will be the introduction of crypto-currency backed by Gold - it will be the real game changer.
  So far China is using all these games with Gold price suppression to accumulate Gold and this year we see the record buying. Announcement of its Gold reserves can bring the very sobering reality to the financial markets. China will not accept Bitcoin for its Treasury redemption and it is not going to increase its reserve holding any more. US Dollar is losing its Reserve Currency of choice status and all recent "flyover games" just confirm U.S. financial vulnerability in line with Sirya and Iran developments."


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After Reaching Parity With Gold Bitcoin’s Success Is Putting It Under Growing Strain GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX

  

  We are searching answers whether Bitcoin is Gold 2.0 or just Dotcom Bubble 2.0 all over again. You know our take already, now Economist weights in with its opinion. And do not forget, please, if you were not the one left holding the bag after the Dotcom Crash, we are all benefiting from Internet revolution now. Just Do Not hold the bag this time. 
  Idea of Goldcoin crypro-currency based on Gold held in Vaults in Singapore, Hong Kong, Switzerland and clearing House in London can be Very elegant solution to the US Dollar hangover after QE abuse.


Danish bitcoin exchange Bips latest to suffer cyber-breach



Bitcoin Has Reached Parity With Suppressed Gold And Crashed GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX


"We are witnessing the watershed events in the financial markets these days. Bitcoin has reached the parity with Gold today crossing $1242 before crashing to $1000, now it is back to $1178. We will repeat: congratulations to everybody who bought it cheaper and is able to sell now. Bitcoin exorbitant rise  show the future for the real alternative to FIAT currencies. Its spectacular fall will drive attention to the real value: Gold and Silver. With new revelations from Kissinger about the Gold Suppression, rise of Bitcoin demonstrates the unleashed potential for Gold and Silver free of manipulation.
  All crypto-currencies are on fire these days with Litecoin crossing $50 and we can see here the danger to this very remarkable idea. Will Bitcoin sustain its rise to $2000 and fall to $50? It is not currency at the moment, but asset Bubble chased by the crowd attracted by "unbelievable returns on investment." System is taking notice and will make all possible moves to discredit Bitcoin. Bitcoin's success will the major problem to overcome here. Now it looks like classic OTC market Pump and Dump: few insiders are controlling the flow, price is pushed up in deals between insiders and crowd is attracted at more and more higher prices with rising volume and distribution by insiders.
  Expect the "active management of Bitcoin" now: rumours about the NSA cracking the encryption, hackers stealing BTCs and compromised Exchanges. The price going to the sky will trigger insiders selling itself and then it will the question how Bitcoin can withstand it.
  In the modern age of Currency Wars and announced Financial War stage with China threatening the US Dollar Reserve Currency of choice status, we will ask very important question: Who is really behind Bitcoin? Even if it is not introduced by countries like China and Russia now - they are taking notice. People are getting out of dollars and other FIAT currencies and even Gold and Silver prices are affected by the BTC rise. The only thing BTC lacks in order to become the real Money is stability and "accepted system guarantees". Now lets imaging that somebody will introduce crypto-currency, but backed by Gold and going into the mainstream. This will be the real game changer and who knows maybe somebody is testing the grounds already.
  Next year China is going to announce its official Gold reserves and these number will be very interesting with ongoing record amount Gold accumulation this year and record high leverage in the Western Fractional Reserve System with 69 owners per one ounce of Gold at COMEX."






Economist:

Bitcoin under pressure


Virtual currency: It is mathematically elegant, increasingly popular and highly controversial. Bitcoin’s success is putting it under growing strain


ALL currencies involve some measure of consensual hallucination, but Bitcoin, a virtual monetary system, involves more than most. It is a peer-to-peer currency with no central bank, based on digital tokens with no intrinsic value. Rather than relying on confidence in a central authority, it depends instead on a distributed system of trust, based on a transaction ledger which is cryptographically verified and jointly maintained by the currency’s users.
Transactions can occur directly between the system’s participants at almost zero cost, without the need for a trusted third party or any other intermediary, and are irreversible once committed to a permanent and fully public record. Bitcoin’s mathematically elegant design ensures that the money supply can increase only at a fixed rate that slows over time and then stops altogether. Anonymity, while not assured, is possible with the right precautions and tools. No wonder Bitcoin is so appealing to geeks, libertarians, drug dealers, speculators and gold bugs.
Bitcoin began in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis, with a paper published under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. The technical design outlined in the paper was implemented in open-source software the following year. It came to widespread prominence in 2012 and has been in the headlines ever since.
Investors are backing Bitcoin-related startups, the German finance ministry has recognised it as a “unit of account” and senior officials told an American Senate committee on November 18th that virtual currencies had legitimate uses. But there have also been many cases of Bitcoin theft. Exchanges that convert Bitcoin to other currencies have collapsed or closed. Silk Road, an online forum where illicit goods and services are traded for Bitcoin, was shut down by America’s Federal Bureau of Investigation in October but has since reopened. The Bitcoin price has fluctuated wildly, hitting $230 in April 2013, falling below $70 in July, and then exceeding $600 in November, prompting talk of a bubble.
The system is now straining at the seams. Its computational underpinnings have collectively reached 100 times the performance of the world’s top 500 supercomputers combined: more than 50,000 petaflops. Bitcoin’s success has revealed three weaknesses in particular. It is not as secure and anonymous as it seems; the “mining” system that both increases the Bitcoin supply and ensures the integrity of the currency has led to an unsustainable computational arms-race; and the distributed-ledger system is becoming unwieldy. Will Bitcoin’s self-correcting mechanisms, and the enlightened self-interest of its users, be able to address these weaknesses and keep Bitcoin on the rails?
Bitcoin uses a technique called public-key cryptography, which relies on creating an interlocking pair of encryption keys: a public key that can be freely distributed, and a private one that must be kept secret at all costs. The public key is treated as an address to which value may be sent, akin to an account number. Each transaction involves the paying party signing over a portion or all of the value in one of these addresses by using his private key to perform an operation, called “signing”, on the contents of the transfer, which includes the recipient’s address. Anyone can use the sender’s public key to verify that the sender’s private key signed the transaction. All transactions are appended to a public ledger, called the block chain.
Public keys are ostensibly anonymous, because they are created randomly by software under the control of each user, without central co-ordination. But it turns out that the flow of money from specific addresses can be tracked quite easily. In a paper presented in October, academics from the University of California, San Diego, and George Mason University engaged in a series of ordinary transactions to collect commonly used addresses for Bitcoin wallet services, gambling sites, currency exchanges and other parties.
Follow the money
The researchers exploited a current weakness in most Bitcoin personal and server software, which generates single-use addresses to store change from transactions. This allowed them to follow the movement of Bitcoins across hundreds of transactions from large sums accumulated at single addresses, including ones suspected of being controlled by Silk Road and stolen funds from exchanges. One of the authors, Sarah Meiklejohn, says that the same technique could easily be used to provide the basis of warrants to serve against exchanges or other parties. Law-enforcement agencies would regard this as a good thing, but to advocates of a completely secure and anonymous online currency, it represents a worrying flaw. Ms Meiklejohn says most current implementations of the Bitcoin protocol fall short of the level of anonymity that is theoretically possible, and that her group’s efforts represent just the tip of the iceberg of what could be deduced from analysis of the public block chain.
The Bitcoin system offers a reward to volunteer users, known as “miners”, who bundle up new transactions into blocks and add them on to the end of the chain. The reward is currently 25 Bitcoins (about $15,000 at this writing). Miners pull active transactions waiting to be recorded from the peer-to-peer network and perform the complex calculations to create the new block, building on the cryptographic foundation of the previous block. Comparison of the results produced by different miners provides independent verification. About every 10 minutes, one lucky miner who has generated the next block is granted the 25-Bitcoin reward, and the new block is appended to the chain. The process then starts again.
Mine craft
The Bitcoin system is designed to cope with the fact that improvements in computer hardware make it cheaper and faster to perform the mathematical operations, known as hashes, involved in mining. Every 2,016 blocks, or roughly every two weeks, the system calculates how long it would take for blocks to be created at precisely 10-minute intervals, and resets a difficulty factor in the calculation accordingly. As equipment gets faster, in short, mining gets harder. But faster equipment is constantly coming online, reducing the potential rewards for other miners unless they, too, buy more kit. Miners have formed groups that pool processing power and parcel out the ensuing rewards. Once done with ordinary computers, mining shifted to graphics-processing units, which can perform some calculations more efficiently. Miners then moved on to flexible chips that can be configured for particular tasks, called field-programmable gate arrays. In the past year, bespoke chips called ASICs (application-specific integrated circuits) have appeared on the scene.
Your correspondent visited a miner who operates a rack of mining hardware in his modest apartment. He had purchased his ASIC-based hardware a few months earlier, and it had arrived weeks late, causing him to miss out on a bonanza, because after arrival, the kit generated Bitcoins so quickly that it paid for itself within three days. But the edge that ASICs provide is quickly eroding. Between July, when the gear arrived, and mid-November, the computational capacity of the Bitcoin network increased 25-fold, from 200 trillion to 5 quadrillion hashes per second. This was due in part to the arrival in September of a newer generation of more efficient ASICs. Hashing capacity has increased so rapidly in 2013 that the practice of hijacking thousands of PCs and using them for mining is no longer worth the effort. The average time between blocks has fallen to between five and eight minutes.
The general consensus, says Mike Hearn, one of the volunteers who maintain the Bitcoin software, is that with this new generation of ASICs, mining will have approached a point where only those with access to free or cheap electricity will continue operations, and even they will produce a relatively marginal return on investment, rather than the huge multiples (when exchanged into traditional currency) possible even earlier this year. Mining has become increasingly commercial and professional, he says. Server farms with endless racks of ASIC cards have already sprung up. But as part of Bitcoin’s design, the reward for mining a block halves every 210,000 blocks, or roughly every four years. Sometime in 2017, at the current rate, it will drop to 12.5 Bitcoins. If the returns from mining decline, who will verify the integrity of the block chain?
To head off this problem, a market-based mechanism is in the works which will raise the current voluntary fees paid by users (around five cents per transaction) in return for verification. “Nodes in the peer-to-peer network will try to estimate the minimum fee needed to get the transaction confirmed,” says Mr Hearn.
Bitcoin’s growing popularity is having other ripple effects. Every participant in the system must keep a copy of the block chain, which now exceeds 11 gigabytes in size and continues to grow steadily. This alone deters casual use. Bitcoin’s designer proposed a method of pruning the chain to include only unspent amounts, but it has not been implemented.
As the rate of transactions increases, squeezing all financial activity into the preset size limit for each block has started to become problematic. The protocol may need to be tweaked to allow more transactions per block, among other changes. A further problem relates to the volunteer machines, or nodes, that allow Bitcoin to function. These nodes relay transactions and transmit updates to the block chain. But, says Matthew Green, a security researcher at Johns Hopkins University, the ecosystem provides no compensation for maintaining these nodes—only for mining. The rising cost of operating nodes could jeopardise Bitcoin’s ability to scale.
“The volunteer programmers who work on Bitcoin’s software have no special authority in the system.”
The original paper that sparked the creation of Bitcoin has since been supplemented by layers of agreed-upon protocol, updated regularly by the system’s participants. The protocol, like the currency, is a fiction they accept as real, because rejection by a large proportion of users—be they banks, exchanges, speculators or miners—could cause the whole system to collapse. Mr Hearn notes that he and other programmers who work on Bitcoin’s software have no special authority in the system. Instead, proposals are floated, implemented in software, and must then be taken up by 80% of nodes before becoming permanent—at which point blocks from other nodes are rejected. “The rules of the system are not set in stone,” he says. The adoption of improvements is up to the community. Bitcoin is thus both flexible and fragile.
So far, it has kept going. But can it withstand the pressure as it becomes more popular? “It’s got this kind of watch-like feel to it,” says Mr Hearn. It keeps on ticking, but “a mechanical watch is fragile and can be smashed.” Perhaps Bitcoin, like the internet, will smoothly evolve from a quirky experiment to a trusted utility. But it could also go the way of Napster, the trailblazing music-sharing system that pioneered a new category, but was superseded by superior implementations that overcame its technical and commercial flaws."

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Monday, November 25, 2013

Chinese Gold Demand And The World Gold Council’s Estimates GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX



  Alasdair Macleod provides very good explanation for the difference between Eric Sprott calculations and WGC estimates, which are dramatically underestimating the real demand for Gold from China this year.

Peter Schiff: On Taper, China's Bombshell Announcements For Treasuries, Dollar And Gold GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX

 "Peter Schiff talks about the bombshell of the year - China has announced the Mother Of All Tapering -  PBOC Says No Longer in China's Interest to Increase Reserves. China is ready to reduce its balance sheet and they do not have to sell any US Treasuries - during the operation Twist they have used the golden opportunity and rolled over the long term treasuries into the shorter maturities. China can just allow US to repay maturing US Treasuries. We do not think here that they will accept Bitcoin. They have made this announcement after the record buying of Gold and some people are estimating that official Gold reserves are much higher than officially recognised today."

China, India, Turkey and Thailand Buying Record Amount of Gold - What Do They Know The Others Don't? GLD, MUX, TNR.v, GDX




Finance And Economics:

Chinese gold demand and the World Gold Council’s estimates


Alasdair Macleod – 22 November 2013
There is considerable disagreement about Chinese gold demand, with delivery figures on the Shanghai Gold Exchange and import/export figures for Hong Kong suggesting the real totals are far higher than those published by the World Gold Council and Thompson-Reuters GFMS.
Recently Eric Sprott of Sprott Global Resource Investments Limited tackled this issue andwrote an open letter to the WGC pointing out that import/export figures show far higher levels of gold demand than the WGC’s estimates for Asia, particularly China, Hong Kong, Thailand, India and Turkey. The response is not on the WGC website, though it appears to be partially quoted elsewhere.
It seems that Sprott and the WGC are trying to do two different things. Sprott is interested in how much gold is actually taken into a country net of exports, irrespective of its use category, taking the view that there can be no more accurate estimate of overall gold demand, irrespective of how it is used. The WGC is trying to identify how much gold is used for specific purposes, which given the opaqueness of the market means they will never track all of it down. Crudely put it is top-down versus bottom-up.
To see how different the results can be let’s look at the solid figures for China and Hong Kong for the first nine months of 2013 which are set out in the table below, before comparing the result with that of the WGC.
 Chinese mainland
 Shanghai Gold Exchange delivered 1,671.6
 HK exports to China 164.9
     Less Chinese exports to HK264.9  _______
Net imports into China  1,571.7
Hong Kong
Total imports1,926.2
     Less exports to China164.9
     Less re-exports to China1,077.5
     Less exports to rest of the world46.0
     Less re-exports to rest of the world78.8  _______
Net imports into HK (vault storage)559.0
Total identified imports for China and Hong Kong2,130.7
All these are published figures which we can assume to be accurate. Mainland China does not release import/export statistics for gold but we know what has been physically delivered through the Shanghai Gold Exchange, the monopoly physical market, and we know what Hong Kong imports exports and re-exports. We can also be reasonably certain that these figures exclude off-market government transactions, such as direct purchases from the mines of all China’s gold production, given that Chinese-refined bars are never seen in circulation. Exports from Hong Kong refer to gold processed into a materially different form from that imported, typically jewellery; so exported to the Mainland they are additional to SGE deliveries. Re-exports refers to imports re-exported with no material processing, and therefore can be assumed to be bullion trans-shipped and destined for the SGE, ignoring for simplicity’s sake that some may have bypassed the SGE and been sent directly to private buyers. Exports and re-exports to the rest of the world obviously must be deducted.
The conclusion is that between them gold absorbed by private sector purchases in Hong Kong and China amount to at least 2,130.7 tonnes in the first nine months of this year, or 2,841 tonnes annualised. This compares with the WGC’s estimates from their quarterly Gold Demand Trends of only 818.6 tonnes for the same period, or 1,091.5 annualised. Given the hard evidence of Hong Kong and SGE statistics it appears that the WGC’s figures substantially understate the true position. Furthermore, any analysis of gold demand will fail to account for the increase in gold ownership not constrained by national boundaries.
Estimates of China’s demand also exclude government purchases of gold in foreign markets, and gold that may have been acquired and imported by wealthy Chinese from foreign locations without going through Hong Kong or the SGE. So without taking into account these extra factors China and Hong Kong’s combined imports from the rest of the world exceeds all other mine supply by at least 580 tonnes on an annualised basis.
It now becomes clear that without significant leasing by Western central banks total Asian demand could not be satisfied at current prices, because there is no evidence of material selling by existing holders of above-ground stocks, with the exception of ETF liquidation which is minor compared with the amounts involved."

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