“Everyone should keep gold in their portfolios” as the precious metal will be able to offer value to investors even in a worst-case scenario, said Marc Faber, the publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report. “In the worst case scenario, in the systemic failure that I expect, it would still have some value,” Faber, who is also the founder and managing director of Marc Faber Ltd., said today at an event hosted by Evli Bank Oyj in Helsinki. Faber said his outlook was so bleak that he is “hyper bearish”. He joked that “sometimes I’m so concerned about the world I want to jump out of the window.”.. In response to a question from Yale University’s Robert Shiller querying the recommendation to hold gold, Faber said: “I’m prepared to make a bet, you keep your U.S. dollars and I’ll keep my gold, we’ll see which one goes to zero first.” Shiller, who is the co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values, responded “I’m inclined to think gold prices after this crisis might return to a lower level. Given the low yields of the alternatives [ie, bonds], the valuation of the stock market doesn’t look so bad.” Faber, whose advice has protected millions of investors in recent years, warned of a global systemic crisis possibly due to massive size of the global derivatives market which is now worth over an incredible $700 trillion. He warned “when the system goes down,” and only plastic credit cards are left, “maybe then people will realize and go back to some gold-based system.”
1 OZ Gold Buffalo As Low As $74.99 Over Spot At SDBullion.com!!
From Goldcore:
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,677.00, EUR 1,258.06, and GBP 1,059.18 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,692.25, EUR 1,268.84, and GBP 1,066.19 per ounce.
Silver is trading at $31.92/oz, €24.05/oz and £20.26/oz. Platinum is trading at $1,692.75/oz, palladium at $718.00/oz and rhodium at $1,200/oz.

Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
Gold fell $4.90 or 0.29% in New York yesterday and closed at $1,685.60/oz. Silver fell to $32.08 in Asia then rallied to a high of $32.47 in the afternoon in NY trade, but then it dropped off in the last few hours and finished with a gain of just 0.25%.
Gold edged down in most currencies on Thursday, easing off the one month high hit earlier in the week. More speculative players may be taking profits after the recent run from $1,625/oz to over $1,695/oz or 4.3%.
It is noteworthy that while gold is weaker in most currencies today it is again higher in Japanese yen as the yen has fallen sharply on the international markets due to concerns that the yen will be devalued in the coming months.
Gold in yen terms remains near record multiyear highs above 0.150 million yen per ounce. New nominal highs in yen terms above 0.2 million yen per ounce are only a matter of time (see charts).
Bloomberg reported that Credit Suisse says gold holders may have withdrawn gold from the euro zone due to the region’s debt crisis. They noted the Bundesbank comment about capacity becoming available in its own vaults in Germany.
The World Economic Forum is into its second day in Davos, Switzerland, and with the theme of ‘Resilient Dynamism’ it appears a good time to announce or spin positive news in Europe such as a slight growth in consumer morale and confidence.
I’m not sure what Europe the Davos attendees are living on but Ireland, Spain, Portugal and Greece’s ‘recoveries’ are bleak at best.
Spanish youth unemployment has risen again and is now nearly at 60%.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a Republican led plan to allow the federal government to keep borrowing money through mid-May.
The borrowing and money printing party can continue a little while longer but it would be prudent to prepare for the hangover.
Owning physical gold today is akin to drinking plenty of water and having a few pain killers to hand. When this party ends, those not owning gold are going to suffer one hell of a financial hangover.

XAU/JPY Daily, 2 Years – (Bloomberg)
“Everyone should keep gold in their portfolios” as the precious metal will be able to offer value to investors even in a worst-case scenario, said Marc Faber, the publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report.
“In the worst case scenario, in the systemic failure that I expect, it would still have some value,” Faber, who is also the founder and managing director of Marc Faber Ltd., said today at an event hosted by Evli Bank Oyj in Helsinki.
Faber said his outlook was so bleak that he is “hyper bearish”. He joked that “sometimes I’m so concerned about the world I want to jump out of the window.”
He wisely said that `I advise everyone to have some gold.’
Faber said that he thought there could be a flight out of cash and overvalued bonds and into equities and gold.
In response to a question from Yale University’s Robert Shiller querying the recommendation to hold gold, Faber said: “I’m prepared to make a bet, you keep your U.S. dollars and I’ll keep my gold, we’ll see which one goes to zero first.”

XAU/JPY Quarterly, 1971-2013 – (Bloomberg)
Shiller, who is the co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values, responded “I’m inclined to think gold prices after this crisis might return to a lower level. Given the low yields of the alternatives [ie, bonds], the valuation of the stock market doesn’t look so bad.”
Faber, whose advice has protected millions of investors in recent years, warned of a global systemic crisis possibly due to massive size of the global derivatives market which is now worth over an incredible $700 trillion.
He warned “when the system goes down,” and only plastic credit cards are left, “maybe then people will realize and go back to some gold-based system.”
NEWS
Gold Seen Extending Rally as Fed Sticks With QE3 for Years – Bloomberg
Strong Silver Jewelry Sales Reported During 2012 Holiday Season – The Silver Institute
Gold drifts from 1-mth high, ‘recovery’ hopes dull appetite – Reuters
Currency war talk not appropriate – IMF chief economist – Reuters
COMMENTARY
The One Chart That Explains the Massive Risk of Investing in Gold & Gold Stocks – Zero Hedge
How Far Up Could Silver Go? – Minyanville
Video: undesbank’s Thiele on Gold Relocation – Bloomberg
Central bankers should be brought to heel by elected parliaments – The Telegraph



Excuse me but we are already at the …”only plastic credit cards are left” scenario. Cash is already passe and sales people look at you funny when you use a handful of cash. Let’s face it, plastic/paper………all the same snit anyway. Our government wants a card only system and would have it already if they had their druthers. The idea is with a card only system, they have full control over individual finances and can shut you off for whatever reason they deem necessary. Another reason metals are so needed in today’s world, without them, there would be NO REAL MONEY!
“I’m inclined to think gold prices after this crisis might return to a lower level. ”
After THIS crisis….?
Which crisis is he talking about? Because I can think of about 10 that won’t be solved in my lifetime. OK, after that I’ll go all in bonds….
Sure would like to know all the fluff about the Silver shortage. Silver down going down around .75 cents an ounce and Gold,
$23.00 down an ounce. Guess all the Asians sold all their Silver back? Yeah, there is a Silver shortage alright, you can always
tell when the PRICE HEADS DOWN DRASTICALLY!
“I, however, place economy among the first and most important republican virtues, and public debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared.” “The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first.”-Thomas Jefferson — I saw this quote on SGT and thought it fit well with this story.
The two criminal elements are bankers and politicians. The bankers evolved into criminals about 2000 years ago. The real criminals just sit in awe and wonder how they got thrown under the bus. Amateurs! HAHAHAHA A former banker
Only when the Derivatives Market collapses will we see some strong gains on the PM’s only my opinion of course.
Or if silver is actually in a shortage.