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Gold and Silver • Gold ETF posts record outflow in April, US coin sales spike

Gold ETF posts record outflow in April, US coin sales spike

http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/content/ … &sn=Detail

In April, the SPDR Gold Trust posted a record monthly outflow in tonnage terms, by contrast, sales of American Eagle gold coins rose to their highest monthly tally since Dec 2009.

Gold’s historic sell-off last month has intensified a disconnect between funds that sold on dissatisfaction over bullion’s underperformance and individual investors who could not get enough physical gold coins and bars at bargain prices.

See also (Shortages of physical gold now a global phenomenon)

In April, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund (ETF), the SPDR Gold Trust, posted a record monthly outflow in tonnage terms.

In contrast, sales of the U.S. Mint’s American Eagle gold coins rose to their highest monthly tally since December 2009.

See also (U.S. Mint gold bullion coins sales soar in April to highest in 3 years)

While equities ETFs are often used by longer-term retail investors, high-profile hedge fund managers, including John Paulson and other institutional investors, are by far the biggest shareholders of gold ETFs.

"It’s been primarily the financial component that has been selling. I don’t think that we have seen a lot of small holders changing their view on gold," said Nicholas Johnson, a portfolio manager who helps manage the $30 billion in commodities at PIMCO in Newport Beach, California.

Johnson said he expects tremendous Asian buying on dips and demand by central banks there to more than offset fast-money-type selling by Western financial institutions.

Bullion held by the SPDR Gold Trust dropped by around 143 tonnes in April from March – valued at $6.6 billion at Wednesday’s prices – for its biggest monthly decline since its launch in November 2004.

It now holds 1,078.5 tonnes of gold, the lowest level since 2009, versus 1,221.26 tonnes at the end of March.

Gold prices dropped $225 per ounces between April 12 and 16 on fears of a withdrawal of the Federal Reserve’s monetary stimulus and after the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund asked Cyprus to sell reserves as part of a bailout deal.

GOLD, SILVER COINS FLYING OFF SHELVES

In contrast, gold coins and bars, favorites of longer-term individual investors who want to gain exposure to the precious metal, soared after gold’s spectacular sell-off.

Shops selling gold coins, jewelry and bars around the world reported an unprecedented surge in demand and mints and refineries were working over time to keep up.

Sale of the American Eagle gold coins, jumped 10 times year-over-year in April to 209,500 ounces, the highest level since December 2009, U.S. Mint data showed on Wednesday.

In the first four months this year, sales of the U.S. gold coins increased to 502,000 ounces in 2013 from 116,200 ounces in the same period last year.

The strong performance came even after the U.S. Mint had suspended sales of its one-tenth ounce gold coins last week as surging demand depleted its inventory.

Chris Carkner, a managing director at the Royal Canadian Mint, said demand for gold and silver Maple Leaf bullion coins increased sharply year-over-year in the first four months of 2013, and the Mint is managing its inventories closely to ensure continuous supply to its global customers.

New Orleans-based retail coin dealer Blanchard & Co said huge demand from both new and existing clients boosted its April American Eagle gold coin sales 400 percent versus sales in March.

In addition, the Mint’s American Eagle silver coin sales also climbed to over 4 million ounces in April from around 1.5 million ounces in the same month in 2012.

Dealers reported as much as $5, or a 20 percent premium per one-ounce American Eagle silver coin, partly due to a lack of coin blanks and production lag as the U.S. Mint has been rationing them after a brief halt in January.

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu May 02, 2013 9:03 pm


View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com

Gold and Silver • Re: Gold and silver coin sales more than double even as hedg

People are finally starting to see the light and bailing out of paper gold – ie ETFs and buying the real stuff ie coins?

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Wed Mar 06, 2013 1:01 am


View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com

Gold and Silver • Gold and silver coin sales more than double even as hedge f

Gold and silver coin sales more than double even as hedge funds pull money out of exchange traded products
Posted on 05 March 2013 with no comments from readers

Sales of gold and silver coins by the US Mint more than doubled to record levels in February even as hedge fund managers like George Soros pulled money out of exchange traded products for the yellow metal.

Exchange traded gold holdings dropped by 109 tonnes in February, falling to a five-month low at 2,503 tonnes. However, sales of American Eagle gold coins jumped by 283 per cent to 80,500 ounces compared with February 2012 and silver coin sales more than doubled to 3.4 million.

Why coins?

February 2013 was the third highest month for gold coins sales by the US Mint since September 2011 when gold set an all-time high of $1,923 an ounce. Why are we seeing this wide disparity between sales of coins and the ETPs?

The answer has to be in the buyer profile. ETPs are bought by the general public but large holdings are also held by the professional hedge fund traders. Coins are primarily held by smaller investors as a hedge against inflation and currency devaluation as well as economic armageddon.

Which is the better guide to the bullion price? In the short-term hedge funds are the professional traders and better able to guess forward prices. But the retail investors are an indicator of fundamental demand and arguably a better indicator of where the price is moving next.

Professional traders following the price charts know that gold is stuck in a trading band with a lower limit around $1,530. Retail buyers are less price sensitive in the short-term and taking a longer view.

Retail leadership

The fact that they are currently more than doubling up on these investments is surely very significant. If sales of anything more than doubled in a shop it would be reasonable to assume that the price would go up, unless the stock could be easily replaced.

The other possibility is that retail buyers are late to an investment party that actually ended in 2011 with an all-time highs for gold $1,923 and not quite an all-time high of $49 for silver. To believe that you have to argue that monetary expansion has stopped globally and that the world economy is set on a strong growth path this year. Neither proposition is remotely true.

The hedge funds are quinessential traders and will soon be chasing bullion prices higher again, much to the delight of coin owners.

http://www.arabianmoney.net/gold-silver … -products/

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Tue Mar 05, 2013 12:06 am


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Gold and Silver • Now Royal Canadian Mint rationing silver coin sales

Now Royal Canadian Mint rationing silver coin sales

http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/content/ … &sn=Detail

Silver demand looks to be running at particularly high levels in January as the Royal Canadian Mint follows US example and begins rationing sales of its Silver Maple Leaf coins.
Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted: Thursday , 24 Jan 2013

LONDON (Mineweb) –

Is there a shortage of physical silver available, or have the official North American mints which sell silver coins just heavily under-estimated demand – or, as GATA suggests, is this another ploy to make sure demand for bullion is kept under control as a way of helping prevent a physical shortage developing on the commodity markets by putting a choke on demand and thus suppressing the metal price? While we tend to discount the latter as GATA just finding another factor to support its gold, and now silver, price suppression position, either (or both) the former reasons would seem to fit the current halt or suppression of silver coin sales by two of the world’s largest official mints.

As Mineweb readers will be aware, the U.S. Mint announced that it had suspended sales of its Silver Eagle coins around a week ago following enormous early-year demand (see Over 6 million Silver Eagle bullion coins sold already this year) and would only be able to start supplying authorised dealers again, on an allocation (rationing) basis, from next week. Now a report by precious metals analyst Jason Hamlin in goldstockbull.com notes that the Royal Canadian Mint announced yesterday that it too was having to ration its sales of its popular Silver Maple Leaf coins.

As the U.S. Mint article we published suggests, demand for silver bullion coins has been virtually unprecedented and, we assume, it had not sourced enough silver blanks to meet new demand for this extremely popular way for the individual investor to hold physical silver on its release of the 2013 coins. It now looks as though the Royal Canadian Mint too is seeing tremendous demand – perhaps as a knock-on effect of the U.S. Mint’s sales suspension – with dealers in North America looking to source coin supplies from Mints in which its customers have full confidence. This is not to say that there are not other mints around the world which are perfectly reliable sources of premium silver bullion coins, but the North American investor obviously prefers to stick with their local official coin suppliers and it the U.S. Mint can’t provide enough to meet demand then perhaps the Royal Canadian Mint coins will do as a substitute!

Although some U.S. Silver Eagles and Canadian Maple Leafs may remain available through dealers who had built up their own stocks ahead of the suspension and rationings, naturally the premiums charged on the coins will have been rising, particularly on Silver Eagles. These should reduce again should the allocation quotas be removed if demand falters, but there are also other indications that silver demand in particular is currently running at very high levels indeed. Reports suggest particularly strong demand from areas like India and China where precious metals ownership and giving is inbuilt into the psyche and where gold prices are perhaps running too high for many individuals to buy what they see as meaningful weights of metal. Silver ETF inflows too are also seen to be at exceedingly high levels.

Even so there is, as analyst Ted Butler makes a particular point of reiterating in his commentaries, a huge short position overhang in silver on COMEX, which appears to make the market particularly vulnerable to manipulation by major financial entities with seemingly bottomless pockets. Whether the burgeoning demand for physical silver can overwhelm the potential mega-losses of the short position holders with a significant price surge remains in doubt unless, and until, these mega short positions are unwound, which doesn’t look to be likely to happen any time soon.

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu Jan 24, 2013 8:28 am


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American • If Obama Can Just Create A Trillion Dollar Coin, Then Why

If Obama Can Just Create A Trillion Dollar Coin, Then Why Do We Have To Pay Taxes?
By Michael, on January 7th, 2013
If Barack Obama can "solve" the debt ceiling crisis by printing up some trillion dollar coins, then why does the federal government need our money? As another debt ceiling showdown approaches, many in the liberal media are suggesting that if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling that Obama should just have the U.S. Treasury create a trillion dollar platinum coin and use it to pay our bills. It sounds crazy, but many notable voices (including Paul Krugman of the New York Times) are supporting this idea. But if the federal government has had the power to create trillion dollar coins out of thin air all this time, then why do we have to pay taxes? Not only that, why do we have a national debt? If the federal government can just create money whenever it wants, then why does the federal government ever have to borrow it from others? The U.S. Constitution actually grants Congress the power to "coin money", so why is the Federal Reserve doing it? Those are some very important questions. Most Americans don’t even realize that the U.S. government never actually needed to borrow a single penny from anyone else. The U.S. Congress has the authority to create debt-free money whenever it wants to. Conceivably, the entire federal government could be funded without ever borrowing a single dollar and without ever receiving a single dollar from any of us in taxes. Just imagine that – a nation without a single penny of national debt, no income tax and no IRS. What a wonderful world that would be. Of course there would be other potential dangers under such a system (such as runaway inflation), and those dangers would have to be addressed. But the truth is that we don’t have to have an income tax or 16 trillion dollars of government debt. We only have those things because we have chosen to have those things.

Sometimes, a crisis can illuminate options that most people had not considered previously. As another debt ceiling crisis draws closer, many are looking for ways for the U.S. government to be able to continue to pay its bills if Congress does not authorize an increase in the debt ceiling.

If a debt ceiling agreement is not worked out, the U.S. government will soon only be able to pay about half the bills that are coming due after interest payments on the national debt (which will almost certainly be prioritized) are made.

That is why a lot of people on the left are pushing the "trillion dollar coin" alternative. So how would this work exactly? The mechanics were recently explained by Jim Pethokoukis on his American Enterprise Institute blog…

There are limits on how much paper money the U.S. can circulate and rules that govern coinage on gold, silver, and copper. BUT, the Treasury has broad discretion on coins made from platinum. The theory goes that the U.S. Mint would create a handful of trillion dollar (or more) platinum coins. The President would then order the coins deposited at the Fed, who would then put the coin(s) in the Treasury who now can pay all their bills and a default is removed from the equation. The effects on the currency market and inflation are unclear, to say the least.

In my opinion, if anyone in the federal government is going to be creating money out of thin air, it should be the U.S. Congress. After all, according to Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, it is the U.S. Congress that has been granted the authority to "coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures".

But those that are pushing Obama to create a "trillion dollar coin" point to a law that Congress passed that allows the U.S. Treasury to mint platinum coins. The following is from a recent CNN article…

Normally, the Federal Reserve is charged with issuing currency. But U.S. law, specifically 31 USC § 5112, also grants Treasury permission to "mint and issue platinum bullion coins and proof platinum coins."

This section of law was meant to allow for the printing of commemorative coins and the like. But the Treasury Secretary has the authority to mint these coins in any denomination he or she sees fit.

But it wouldn’t quite be that easy. According to a recent ABC News article, some elements of the coin design would have to be determined by legislation…

The more difficult part comes sometime after the decision is made to coin the platinum and before the Mint gets to work in sculpting the pieces.

At that point, the American people must decide whose face will adorn the trillion dollar trinket. The process to determine the “specs” of the coin, U.S. Mint Public Affairs Specialist Genevieve Billia warns, must be “determined by legislation,” creating the potential for another congressional impasse.

So we would likely end up back at square one.

But if printing up a "trillion dollar coin" does not work out, Paul Krugman of the New York Times has come up with another option…

Don’t like the platinum coin option? Here’s a functionally equivalent alternative: have the Treasury sell pieces of paper labeled “moral obligation coupons”, which declare the intention of the government to redeem these coupons at face value in one year.

It should be clearly stated on the coupons that the government has no, repeat no, legal obligation to pay anything at all; you see, they’re not debt, and therefore don’t count against the debt limit. But that shouldn’t keep them from having substantial market value.

Of course there is a very, very low probability that any of these wild ideas will ever be tried, but this debate has raised some very interesting points.

The truth is that we do not have to have a system where more money is only created when more debt is created. We could have a system where the federal government directly creates debt-free money that is spent directly into circulation by the federal government.

In fact, this has happened before.

As I have written about previously, during the presidency of JFK a limited number of debt-free United States Notes were issued by the U.S. Treasury and spent by the U.S. government directly into circulation without any new debt being created. In fact, each bill said "United States Note" right at the top.

Unfortunately, after JFK’s presidency no more debt-free United States Notes were ever issued.

But even before JFK, there were times when debt-free United States Notes were being used. According to Wikipedia, United States Notes were first used during the Civil War….

They were originally issued directly into circulation by the U.S. Treasury to pay expenses incurred by the Union during the American Civil War. Over the next century, the legislation governing these notes was modified many times and numerous versions have been issued by the Treasury.

So why are we using debt-based Federal Reserve Notes today instead of debt-free United States Notes?

If the Federal Reserve did not exist and the U.S. government directly created money instead of borrowing it, it is conceivable that we could have a national debt of $0.00 today instead of $16,432,707,263,449.56.

Which option do you think our children and our grandchildren will wish that we had opted for?

In a system where the government directly created money, it is also conceivable that we could completely do away with the income tax and the IRS completely. The U.S. once prospered greatly without an income tax, and it could do so again.

And the truth is that our system of taxation is broken beyond repair. If you doubt this, just read this article.

So what would the downside be to such a system? Well, of course rampant inflation would be a huge danger. Allowing Congress to print up money whenever they wanted to would be playing with fire. That is why it would be imperative for there to be a hard cap on what the federal government could spend. For example, you could set the cap on spending by the federal government at 20 percent of GDP. That way we would hopefully never end up looking like the Weimar Republic.

And the current federal debt could be paid down a little at a time using newly created debt-free currency. This would have to be done slowly to keep inflation under control, but it could be done.

Of course if you wanted to continue to fund the federal government through taxation, there are other options that would still allow you to do away with the income tax. For example, one of the ways that our founders intended for the federal government to be funded was through tariffs, and we could definitely raise a lot of money that way. Plus, that would have the added benefit of making American companies much more competitive again and it would reduce the flow of American jobs out of the country.

So am I in favor of having Barack Obama create a trillion dollar coin to get around the debt ceiling crisis?

Most definitely not. If it does not violate the letter of the Constitution (which I believe it does), it sure does violate the spirit of it.

But if the U.S. Congress decided to shut down the Federal Reserve and the IRS and they decided to abolish the income tax, and instead they started directly issuing debt-free currency directly into circulation, that is something I would very much be in favor of.

Yes, that system would not be perfect either, but it would be far more preferable to what we have today.

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/arch … -pay-taxes

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Mon Jan 07, 2013 11:21 pm


View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com

If Obama Can Just Create A Trillion Dollar Coin, Then Why Do We Have To Pay Taxes?

If Obama Can Just Create A Trillion Dollar Coin, Then Why Do We Have To Pay TaxesIf Barack Obama can “solve” the debt ceiling crisis by printing up some trillion dollar coins, then why does the federal government need our money?  As another debt ceiling showdown approaches, many in the liberal media are suggesting that if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling that Obama should just have the U.S. Treasury create a trillion dollar platinum coin and use it to pay our bills.  It sounds crazy, but many notable voices (including Paul Krugman of the New York Times) are supporting this idea.  But if the federal government has had the power to create trillion dollar coins out of thin air all this time, then why do we have to pay taxes?  Not only that, why do we have a national debt?  If the federal government can just create money whenever it wants, then why does the federal government ever have to borrow it from others?  The U.S. Constitution actually grants Congress the power to “coin money”, so why is the Federal Reserve doing it?  Those are some very important questions.  Most Americans don’t even realize that the U.S. government never actually needed to borrow a single penny from anyone else.  The U.S. Congress has the authority to create debt-free money whenever it wants to.  Conceivably, the entire federal government could be funded without ever borrowing a single dollar and without ever receiving a single dollar from any of us in taxes.  Just imagine that – a nation without a single penny of national debt, no income tax and no IRS.  What a wonderful world that would be.  Of course there would be other potential dangers under such a system (such as runaway inflation), and those dangers would have to be addressed.  But the truth is that we don’t have to have an income tax or 16 trillion dollars of government debt.  We only have those things because we have chosen to have those things.

Sometimes, a crisis can illuminate options that most people had not considered previously.  As another debt ceiling crisis draws closer, many are looking for ways for the U.S. government to be able to continue to pay its bills if Congress does not authorize an increase in the debt ceiling.

If a debt ceiling agreement is not worked out, the U.S. government will soon only be able to pay about half the bills that are coming due after interest payments on the national debt (which will almost certainly be prioritized) are made.

That is why a lot of people on the left are pushing the “trillion dollar coin” alternative.  So how would this work exactly?  The mechanics were recently explained by Jim Pethokoukis on his American Enterprise Institute blog

There are limits on how much paper money the U.S. can circulate and rules that govern coinage on gold, silver, and copper.  BUT, the Treasury has broad discretion on coins made from platinum.  The theory goes that the U.S. Mint would create a handful of trillion dollar (or more) platinum coins.  The President would then order the coins deposited at the Fed, who would then put the coin(s) in the Treasury who now can pay all their bills and a default is removed from the equation.  The effects on the currency market and inflation are unclear, to say the least.

In my opinion, if anyone in the federal government is going to be creating money out of thin air, it should be the U.S. Congress.  After all, according to Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, it is the U.S. Congress that has been granted the authority to “coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures”.

But those that are pushing Obama to create a “trillion dollar coin” point to a law that Congress passed that allows the U.S. Treasury to mint platinum coins.  The following is from a recent CNN article

Normally, the Federal Reserve is charged with issuing currency. But U.S. law, specifically 31 USC § 5112, also grants Treasury permission to “mint and issue platinum bullion coins and proof platinum coins.”

This section of law was meant to allow for the printing of commemorative coins and the like. But the Treasury Secretary has the authority to mint these coins in any denomination he or she sees fit.

But it wouldn’t quite be that easy.  According to a recent ABC News article, some elements of the coin design would have to be determined by legislation…

The more difficult part comes sometime after the decision is made to coin the platinum and before the Mint gets to work in sculpting the pieces.

At that point, the American people must decide whose face will adorn the trillion dollar trinket. The process to determine the “specs” of the coin, U.S. Mint Public Affairs Specialist Genevieve Billia warns, must be “determined by legislation,” creating the potential for another congressional impasse.

So we would likely end up back at square one.

But if printing up a “trillion dollar coin” does not work out, Paul Krugman of the New York Times has come up with another option

Don’t like the platinum coin option? Here’s a functionally equivalent alternative: have the Treasury sell pieces of paper labeled “moral obligation coupons”, which declare the intention of the government to redeem these coupons at face value in one year.

It should be clearly stated on the coupons that the government has no, repeat no, legal obligation to pay anything at all; you see, they’re not debt, and therefore don’t count against the debt limit. But that shouldn’t keep them from having substantial market value.

Of course there is a very, very low probability that any of these wild ideas will ever be tried, but this debate has raised some very interesting points.

The truth is that we do not have to have a system where more money is only created when more debt is created.  We could have a system where the federal government directly creates debt-free money that is spent directly into circulation by the federal government.

In fact, this has happened before.

As I have written about previously, during the presidency of JFK a limited number of debt-free United States Notes were issued by the U.S. Treasury and spent by the U.S. government directly into circulation without any new debt being created.  In fact, each bill said “United States Note” right at the top.

Unfortunately, after JFK’s presidency no more debt-free United States Notes were ever issued.

But even before JFK, there were times when debt-free United States Notes were being used.  According to Wikipedia, United States Notes were first used during the Civil War….

They were originally issued directly into circulation by the U.S. Treasury to pay expenses incurred by the Union during the American Civil War. Over the next century, the legislation governing these notes was modified many times and numerous versions have been issued by the Treasury.

So why are we using debt-based Federal Reserve Notes today instead of debt-free United States Notes?

If the Federal Reserve did not exist and the U.S. government directly created money instead of borrowing it, it is conceivable that we could have a national debt of $0.00 today instead of $16,432,707,263,449.56.

Which option do you think our children and our grandchildren will wish that we had opted for?

In a system where the government directly created money, it is also conceivable that we could completely do away with the income tax and the IRS completely.  The U.S. once prospered greatly without an income tax, and it could do so again.

And the truth is that our system of taxation is broken beyond repair.  If you doubt this, just read this article.

So what would the downside be to such a system?  Well, of course rampant inflation would be a huge danger.  Allowing Congress to print up money whenever they wanted to would be playing with fire.  That is why it would be imperative for there to be a hard cap on what the federal government could spend.  For example, you could set the cap on spending by the federal government at 20 percent of GDP.  That way we would hopefully never end up looking like the Weimar Republic.

And the current federal debt could be paid down a little at a time using newly created debt-free currency.  This would have to be done slowly to keep inflation under control, but it could be done.

Of course if you wanted to continue to fund the federal government through taxation, there are other options that would still allow you to do away with the income tax.  For example, one of the ways that our founders intended for the federal government to be funded was through tariffs, and we could definitely raise a lot of money that way.  Plus, that would have the added benefit of making American companies much more competitive again and it would reduce the flow of American jobs out of the country.

So am I in favor of having Barack Obama create a trillion dollar coin to get around the debt ceiling crisis?

Most definitely not.  If it does not violate the letter of the Constitution (which I believe it does), it sure does violate the spirit of it.

But if the U.S. Congress decided to shut down the Federal Reserve and the IRS and they decided to abolish the income tax, and instead they started directly issuing debt-free currency directly into circulation, that is something I would very much be in favor of.

Yes, that system would not be perfect either, but it would be far more preferable to what we have today.

So what do you think?  Should we keep our current system of debt-based money, or would a system of debt-free money be better?

Please feel free to post a comment with your opinion below…

Trillion Dollar Coin?

View full post on The Economic Collapse

Gold and Silver • Art Cashin On The Trillion Dollar Coin Alchemy

Art Cashin On The Trillion Dollar Coin Alchemy

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-01-0 … in-alchemy

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2013 09:34 -0500

Art CashinDebt CeilingNew York Fed

It would appear that even the venerable Art Cashin had to rub his eyes in incredulity at the recircling of the idea of the Treasury minting a "Trillion Dollar Platinum Coin" to solve the debt-ceiling ‘problem’. His brief discussion on the idea is summed up perfectly in his final six words "anybody got an ebook on alchemy?"

Via Art Cashin: The Mayans Weren’t The Only Ones With Strange Ideas

With a debt ceiling battle about to resume, a rather bizarre idea from last year’s debate has resurfaced. It appeared on a couple of blogs and concerned the minting of a "trillion dollar platinum coin". Under section K of Federal law, the Treasury Secretary appears to have carte blanche on the design and issuance of platinum coins.

The Treasury normally writes checks against the taxes it collects. When the tax receipts run out, they borrow money (bonds) to write checks against. That borrowing can run up into the debt ceiling, resulting in the looming confrontation.

The thesis claims that Geithner should authorize the coin, deposit it at the New York Fed and write checks against it, rather than selling more bonds.

Anybody got an eBook on alchemy?

Only those who have no clue about the money creation process in a fractional reserve economy could be vacuous enough to suggest that an idiotic "fix" such as this has any hope of working. All the proposal does, in effect, is suggest a devaluation of the currency relative to an absolute precious metal asset, which in itself is nothing new, and most recently was conducted, with great "success" by FDR in the 1930s.

..

Can a $1 Trillion Coin End Debt Ceiling Crisis?
By Charles Riley | CNNMoney.com – Fri, Jan 4, 2013 12:53 PM EST.. .
.

The lights of the U.S. Capitol remain lit into the night as the House continues to work on the "fiscal cliff" legislation proposed by the Senate, in …more

..

What if the threat of a voluntary default by the United States could be erased by simply turning one tiny scrap of platinum into a coin?

That’s right. No debt ceiling problem. No bickering in Congress. No market jitters. The only thing needed is for the Treasury Department to mint a platinum coin with a face value of $1 trillion.

Of course, this is not going to happen. Creating money out of thin air is hardly a solution. It could lead to even more concerns from those worried about inflation. Critics of the Federal Reserve’s monetary easing programs would likely be apoplectic if the Treasury Department trumped Ben Bernanke’s "helicopter drop" by minting a trillion more new dollars.

The influential New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has already dubbed the talk a "gimmick." But here is why some people think this bizarre strategy could work.

Last week, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner made it official: Federal borrowing has reached the $16.394 trillion debt ceiling.

Treasury, which runs the government’s debt-issuance operation, is busy creating about $200 billion of headroom by employing what it calls "extraordinary measures." That should cover about two months’ worth of borrowing.

When the two months expire, Treasury will no longer be able to pay the country’s bills — that is, it won’t be able to borrow more money to pay for spending already authorized by Congress.

If Congress does not act to raise the debt ceiling, the U.S. will default on its debts. Not good. But this is where the platinum coin comes in. Normally, the Federal Reserve is charged with issuing currency. But U.S. law, specifically 31 USC § 5112, also grants Treasury permission to "mint and issue platinum bullion coins and proof platinum coins."

This section of law was meant to allow for the printing of commemorative coins and the like. But the Treasury Secretary has the authority to mint these coins in any denomination he or she sees fit.

With a $1 trillion coin in hand, Treasury could deposit the money into Fed accounts, and pay its debts in that manner, instead of relying on bond issuance.

And none of this requires Congressional consent. Talk about an elegant solution.

The White House unsurprisingly hasn’t commented on the idea. But Rep. Jerrold Nadler is on board. "I’m being absolutely serious," he told Capital NY. "It sounds silly but it’s absolutely legal."

Trillion Dollar Coins: The Ultimate Debt Ceiling End-Around?

http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/20 … nd-around/

With President Obama having kicked off debt ceiling negotiations by vowing not to negotiate over the debt ceiling, a new option for paying off the nation’s considerable tab is gaining momentum with cheeky fiscal and monetary wonks.

It goes like this: Should Congress fail to extend the U.S. debt limit — reached again on Dec. 31 — the president could ask the Treasury to begin printing trillion dollar coins (in a process explained mostly seriously by Jim Pethokoukis on his American Enterprise Institute blog), a number of which could then be put toward fulfilling debt obligations in the event new legislation stalls in Congress.

While there are laws in place to regulate how much paper, gold, silver or copper currency can be circulated by the government, there is nothing so clearly stated when it comes to platinum. That door open, the Treasury could have the U.S. Mint melt and mold a few trillion dollars of it, then ship the goods over to the Federal Reserve for safekeeping until the time comes to pay the bills.

The more difficult part comes sometime after the decision is made to coin the platinum and before the Mint gets to work in sculpting the pieces.

At that point, the American people must decide whose face will adorn the trillion dollar trinket. The process to determine the “specs” of the coin, U.S. Mint Public Affairs Specialist Genevieve Billia warns, must be “determined by legislation,” creating the potential for another congressional impasse.

Also to note: The likeness sculpted into its side must belong to a dead person, ruling out early favorite Ikea Monkey, but boosting the candidacies of Ronald Reagan and John Maynard Keynes.

Obama to pay US debt with trillion-dollar coins?

http://rt.com/usa/news/trillion-dollar-debt-coin-353/

Published: 04 January, 2013, 20:27
With the fiscal cliff averted for now, it’ll be a few weeks until the debt ceiling debate is the next major money issue in Washington. Luckily, some economists say that crisis can be curbed as well, and all it will take is one very valuable coin.

By February, the United States will once again reach its maximum borrowing amount from foreign nations — the debt ceiling — and the House of Representatives and Senate will be stuck deciding if it’s worth raising it once again or rallying for another solution. In recent days, an alternative approach — one that is almost all too perfectly bizarre — has been tossed around. It would involve minting a few trillion dollar platinum coins, and although it’s an unlikely answer, it’s all too legit.

The United States can’t just print paper money all willy-nilly every time it exhausts its borrowing options, but the US can, however, have a figurative field day when it comes to some types of coin.

As analyst Chris Krueger from Guggenheim Securities’ Washington Research Group explains to the American Enterprise Institute, “There are limits on how much paper money the U.S. can circulate and rules that govern coinage on gold, silver and copper. BUT, the Treasury has broad discretion on coins made from platinum.”

“Although the Treasury can’t just create money out of thin air to pay its bills, there is a technicality in the law that says the Treasury has special discretion to create platinum coins of any denomination, and the thinking is that [Secretary of the Treasury] Tim Geithner could make the coin and walk it over to the Federal Reserve and deposit it in the Treasury’s bank account,” adds Joe Weisenthal of Business Insider.

Although the idea seems outrageous, it’s been discussed repeatedly in the media since the start of 2013, and has even been brought up by an influential member of Congress.

"It sounds silly but it’s absolutely legal,” Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-New York) tells New York Capital this week. "There is specific statutory authority that says that the Federal Reserve can mint any non-gold or -silver coin in any denomination, so all you do is you tell the Federal Reserve to make a platinum coin for one trillion dollars, and then you deposit it in the Treasury account, and you pay your bills.”

More than 1,000 people have already petitioned the Obama administration to order the minting of a coin on the White House’s We the People webpage, and New York Times economist Paul Krugman considered the option himself this week. Of course, doing as much is easier said than done. Designing the actual look of the coin would be up to Congress, and asking the House and the Senate to agree on the face adorning a one-trillion-dollar coin would likely lead to all sorts of Capitol Hill bickering.

Chris Krueger adds to the American Enterprise Institute that this option has a “VERY low probability” of ever happening, and Business Insider’s Weisenthal willingly says it’s a silly route to take, in his own opinion.

“But what’s sillier is a rich nation having a debate on whether it will pay what it owes, which is what the debt ceiling fight is all about. So in the face of such silliness, this unfortunately may be required,” he says.

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sun Jan 06, 2013 10:27 am


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Gold and Silver • US gold and silver coin sales jump in August

US gold and silver coin sales jump in August
Posted on 02 September 2012

Nervous US investors are increasingly swapping cash for gold and silver coins as fears about inflation rise as the Federal Reserve remains committed to printing more and more paper money.

Sales from the US Mint of American Eagle gold coins rose 28 per cent in August to 39,000 ounces, the third gain in four months. Sales of silver coins increased to 2.87 million ounces from 2.28 million ounces in July.

QE3 promise

Investors have clearly been buying in anticipation of QE3 from Ben Bernanke. They did not get it last week but the noises from the Fed chairman about future policy were very reassuring and the promise of QE3 may prove as good as the real thing for precious metals.

Gold futures in New York rose last month by the most since January amid speculation that US policy makers would signal that further stimulus measures. The autumn is also traditionally the strongest season of the year for precious metals and both gold and silver broke out of their trading bands towards the end of August.

Coins are not a method of investment in gold and silver that the ArabianMoney investment newsletter recommends though they can be handy for small investments. They do have an advantage of being easily portable for smaller amounts and can be exchanged for money or goods almost anywhere in the world.

http://www.arabianmoney.net/gold-silver … in-august/

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sun Sep 02, 2012 1:30 am


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Gold and Silver • Keynesianism Vs. The Gold Coin Standard

Keynesianism Vs. The Gold Coin Standard

By Gary North Aug 10th, 2012

Recently, the leftist London Guardian posted an article against the nineteenth-century gold coin standard. The author, who seems recently to have begun shaving, has provided a highly useful summary of the Keynesian case against the gold coin standard. His article is a fine mixture of familiar old canards and creative new errors. His name is Duncan Weldon.

Mr. Weldon has not written a book, so it is difficult for me to know exactly what his monetary theory is. He was the unknown Keynesian in the 2011 BBC debate between two teams of economists at the London School of Economics: The Keynes vs. Hayek debate. I assume that Robert Skidelsky, his partner, thought he was an up-and-coming economist. Skidelsky is the author of a multi-volume biography of Keynes.

I think it would be a useful exercise to go through Mr. Weldon’s case against gold. Clearly, he expects people to take it seriously. While I cannot bring myself to do this, having actually read it, I do think some editor at The Guardian took it seriously, even though he also read it.

GOLD BUGS UNDER EVERY BED

He begins with an historical statement.

“Ever since Richard Nixon ended the convertibility of the US dollar into gold in 1971, there have been calls for a return to some form of gold standard. Proponents of this view, often known as “gold bugs”, want to see an end to paper money guaranteed by promises and for currencies to once more be backed by precious metal. In the last few years as central banks around the world have engaged in quantitative easing to try and support their economies these voices have become louder.”

This is surely comforting to any gold bug who is old enough to remember Nixon’s announcement, made when Mr. Weldon’s parents were teenagers. At the time, the number of gold bugs was limited to a handful of Austrian School economists and a few elderly souls who could actually remember the pre-1933 American gold coin standard.

Over the next decade, the “hard money” newsletter industry blossomed in the United States, but the number of gold bugs who had access to the mainstream media was still not much larger than a few dozen people. I may be exaggerating these numbers. I cannot think of any gold bug in a professorial position in Great Britain.

THE RHETORIC OF CONTEMPT

Having misled the readers regarding the size and influence of the gold standard’s acolytes, he gets rolling.

“The specific appeal of gold can be hard to rationalise: it might be aesthetically pleasing, but does that make it a sound basis for a monetary system?”

I see. Aesthetically pleasing. It’s a matter of taste. Nothing substantive, you understand.

Note: as a debater for over 50 years, I recognize this tactic. When a debater indulges in the rhetoric of contempt in his opening arguments, we can be sure of three things: (1) he thinks he has the judges on his side; (2) he has not got a strong substantive case; (3) he thinks his opponent has only recently fallen off the proverbial turnip truck.

“Sometimes I wonder if gold bugs just listened to too much Spandau Ballet in the 1980s.”

I cannot say that I am familiar with the Spandau Ballet. Wikipedia informs us that it was a popular rock band in Great Britain. What it has to do with gold eludes me. The phrase “too clever by half” comes to mind.

“Robert Skidelsky argued that supporters of the gold standard have an almost atavistic belief in its powers, rooted in the age-old worship of sun gods.”

I am quite familiar with Skidelsky’s work. He is an economist-turned hagiographer. Of his eleven books listed in his Wikipedia entry, five are on Keynes. None is on any aspect of economic theory, including monetary theory.

So far, in his first two paragraphs, Mr. Weldon has used three examples of rhetorical contempt, but no substance.

This strategy plays well in the debate societies at Oxford and Cambridge, but it does not play well across the English Channel, let alone across the Atlantic. Mr. Weldon is clearly uninterested in any audience beyond Oxbridge and the Labor Party.

THE “DISASTER” OF FALLING PRICES

Here, he identifies the enemy position of all Keynesians.

“What they tend to ignore is that the world has tried the gold standard before and it was, in most respects, a disaster.”

Here is a statement. It is a conclusion. It is not an argument.

The world tried the international gold standard from 1815 until the outbreak of World War I 1914, which was the greatest period of economic growth in recorded history. The world of 1900 would have been unrecognizable in its wealth for the masses by someone getting out of a time machine activated in 1800.

“At present, as the economy grows and produces more goods the central bank can expand the money supply to keep up with output. Under the gold standard, as output increases, the money supply will be fixed and with more goods but the same amount of money, prices will tend to fall.”

So, prices tend to fall under the gold standard. The horror! Why, the whole consumer price index would begin to resemble the cost of computing: ever less expensive.

We must understand Mr. Weldon’s argument in the light of economic theory and economic history since 1800. Economic theory teaches that economic growth reduces the effects of scarcity. A world without scarcity would be a world where demand and supply balance at zero price. Therefore, when there is economic growth, we should expect to see a world in which consumer prices are falling in the direction of zero prices. The gold standard fostered a world which conforms to the traditional call of economists, who preach the doctrine of salvation by economic growth.

Mr Weldon is appalled by such a conclusion. Why? Because it points to a very great advantage of the traditional gold standard: reduced consumer prices. So, he invokes falling prices as evidence of the gold coin standard’s disaster. He therefore implicitly invokes the good old days: greater scarcity, greater poverty, and the all-round economic misery, a la 1800.

I am not using the rhetoric of contempt … yet. This really is the logic of his position.

He continues.

“Falling prices might sound like a good thing, and in individual cases they often are, but a falling general price level is usually associated with severe economic strains. Why buy anything today if it will be cheaper next week? The end result tends to be falling output, rising unemployment, falling wages and a large increase in the real burden of debt.”

When he says “usually,” he means usually since the end of World War I, in which the gold coin standard was abandoned in the West, except in the United States and the United Kingdom, 1925 to 1931, when Winston Churchill unwisely re-established the gold standard at the pre-War price, ignoring a decade of mass inflation. He did this for political reasons. The fake exchange rate maintained the convenient illusion: the fact that the men – he and his colleagues – who had taken the nation into that disastrous war and then had destroyed the pre-War pound sterling as an effect of their financing of the War through currency expansion had not in fact ruined the pound.

Most economists now accept that both the Long Depression of 1873 to 1896 and the Great Depression of the 1930s were aggravated by the gold standard. In the 1930s the sooner countries came off gold, the faster they recovered.

The period of 1873 to 1896 was the single most productive economic period of comparable length in mankind’s history. In the section of Friedman and Schwartz’s book, A Monetary History of the United States (1963), which the Keynesian economics guild never cites, they proved this with respect to the economic statistics of the United States.

As for economic recovery after 1930, the main nation to recover was Nazi Germany, which used monetary inflation, price and wage controls, rationing, and violence against trade unions as the primary policy tools of economic growth. The Nazi state held down nominal prices by the threat of violence, thereby cutting real wages, so the statistics looked like recovery. The story of this “recovery” is found in Adam Tooze’s book, The Wages of Destruction.

TWO KINDS OF DEMOCRACY

Here, he raises the issue of democracy.

“A gold standard means that monetary policy and interest rates are set to defend the value of a currency against a metal rather than to reflect economic conditions in the country. As professor Dani Rodrik argued last night, this is fundamentally undemocratic.”

Here, we get to the political heart of the debate. The traditional gold coin standard transfers power over monetary policy to the broad mass of citizens, who can start a run on the banks at any time if they suspect that the central bank – highly undemocratic – is turning to inflation as a way to fund the government’s debt. It is the democracy of the free market, and the democrats of the ballot box despise this aspect of the free market. They want monetary policy controlled by an alliance of central bankers, commercial bankers, and politicians, who all want to run larger national government deficits without raising interest rates.

The opponents of the gold standard are always defenders of the autonomy of central banks from politics. This argument is correct. These banks are indeed autonomous, or close to it. The central bank is the most undemocratic official government institution in every nation. Calling for the insulation of the central bank from politics is politically comparable to calling for the secret police to be independent from politics, except that the secret police only threaten a few thousand people. The central bank’s policies threaten the nation.

“Indeed the real reason that the gold standard could not be resurrected in a sustainable manner after its suspension [in] the first world war was the extension of the franchise to incorporate the working class. Once workers had the vote they were unlikely to support politicians who continually put defending the value of money against gold over defending the number of people in work.”

The working class, through its ownership of gold coins, and its ability to cause a run on the banks by withdrawing their money in small gold coins, was in fact disenfranchised economically after World War I began. They refused to return to the pre-War gold coin standard in 1918. Politicians and bankers did not want to transfer this power back to the masses. Once the central banks in every nation stole the gold from commercial banks, who had stolen the gold coins of the depositors by breaking the contracts of full gold coin redemption on demand, the political elite never again let the masses have their coins.

THE HIRED HELP

The central bankers have long hired bright young economics graduates of Cambridge and Oxford to persuade the middle classes that fiat money creation by a politically independent central bank was just what the nation needed. The central bankers did the same in every Western nation.

“Of course the gold standard had its beneficiaries, most notably in the financial sector. Stable international prices and a very open global capital market in the era of the classical gold standard created a great environment for international bankers.”

Here, he reverses historical causation. It was the banking establishment that opposed the re-establishment of a gold coin standard. Why? Because it reduces the ability of the financial community to make massive profits through fractional reserves. Fractional reserves provide the leverage that makes large commercial bankers rich. This is why there is no such thing as a commercial bank that has publicly promoted the gold standard. The last major economist to be employed by a large commercial bank to write in favor of the gold standard was Benjamin Anderson. Chase let him write its newsletter. He left Chase and returned to teaching before the outbreak of World War II.

“Economically, the case for the gold standard simply does not stack up and yet it still finds very vocal supporters. Fundamentally the case is political rather than financial. Gold bugs want to see golden handcuffs restraining the ability of central banks to intervene and states to spend, they want to remove any vestige of political control of the monetary system and fix it an arbitrarily chosen shiny metal in order to let free market forces take over. It is therefore no surprise that most gold bugs are to be found on the libertarian right.”

Here, he finally gets to the truth. The issue is indeed deeply political. Gold bugs do indeed want to see golden handcuffs that restrain the ability of central banks to inflate. They want to substitute economic control by the masses who own gold coins for political control by an elite. So, gold bugs are usually found on the libertarian Right.

CONCLUSION

Mr. Weldon is part of a long and distinguished tradition of economists who spend their lives at the feet of central bankers, doing their ideological work for the bankers in exchange for a few scraps that fall from the table.

If you detect the rhetoric of contempt creeping in, you are pretty observant.

These men have baptized the state and the power of monetary debasement as the way of wealth.

Every political class needs its court prophets. Every banking establishment needs politicians who do their bidding. Young men who are not good in physics or chemistry or engineering see their career opportunities at Oxford and Cambridge. They major in economics. The smart ones become bankers. The less smart ones become economists.

The ones who are not smart enough to major in economics major in politics and become politicians.

The bankers hire the economists to tell the politicians what to think.

The economics graduates who are not good enough to get hired by the big banks go into financial journalism.

Regards,

Gary North

http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/keynesia … -standard/

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Fri Aug 10, 2012 2:29 pm


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Gold and Silver • Gold coin collecting a deadly business as metals prices rise

Yesterday’s top story: Gold coin collecting a deadly business as metals prices rise

http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/min … pid=110649

Criminal syndicates have discovered thefts of gold, silver and rare coins are far more lucrative and less risky. This to the detriment of coin dealers and coin collectors in North America and elsewhere.
Author: Dorothy Kosich
Posted: Tuesday , 12 Jun 2012
RENO (MINEWEB) –

As gold and silver prices have soared, thieves are now targeting rare coins, coin collections and rare coin dealers.

The Washington Post noted in a recent article, "Coin thieves are often part of organized rings, some from Colombia and others with ties to the Russian mafia, that orchestrate sophisticated, lightning-quick and sometimes ruthlessly violent heists, according to the Numismatic Crime Information Center."

Steve Ellsworth, a coin security expert, told the Post, "Why rob a bank with cameras, witnesses and a good chance your picture will end on up the evening news? Coin thefts often don’t have witnesses, and criminals can make off with far more money."

The FBI estimates only about 4% of stolen precious metals and jewelry is recovered annually.

In October 2009, coin collector and dealer Julian Leidman was having dinner after a Connecticut coin show when he became the victim of one of the biggest coin heists in U.S. history. Thieves smashed his car window and took at least five cases of coins containing more than 2,000 vintage coins and banknotes.

One of the coins taken-a 1921 Saint-Gaudens $20 gold piece-is valued at $160,000.

The stolen coins were sold for a total of $80,000 to Yan Kandinov, the son of a Diamond District jeweler, who then allegedly tried to sell the coins to a New Jersey coin dealer, who contacted the FBI. Kandinov turned over the collection, and pleaded guilty to receiving stolen goods.

However, some important pieces, including the 1921 Saint-Gaudens $20 gold piece, were still missing. Authorities went back to Kandinov, who later turned over additional coins that were stashed in the ceiling of his father’s store. Among those was the Saint-Gaudens gold piece.

On April 14 of this year, thieves stole a vintage coin and bank note collection from an elderly coin dealer, who had left his car in his driveway for only 10 minutes in Virginia. Detectives believe the elderly couple was followed home from a coin show by the thieves, and that the stolen items may resurface at a future coin show or be offered to collectors.

Miami Dade, Florida police are investigating last month’s theft of a large copper coin collection and other U.S. coins. The victim stopped after leaving a local coin show. Someone then broke into his vehicle and remove a briefcase containing the coins.

WILL MURDER FOR COINS

Five people were arrested in March in connection with the Gonzales, Louisiana, home invasion which resulted in the deaths of coin dealer Robert Marchand, his wife Shirley and her son Douglas Dooley. All three were discovered with their throats cut.

The suspects allegedly made away with $500,000 in coins that were locked away in a safe inside the home. The safe was found two days later in a park in Livingston Parish, with a single silver coin that still remained inside. Four of the suspects have been charged with murder, armed robbery and burglary.

Robert Marchand often showed his collection to relatives and friends, according to a family obituary.

Brooklyn, New York, coin dealer Steve Halfon was dragged out of his car near his coin shop on Kings Highway in Gravesend in August 2011. Three crooks beat him and dumped the unconscious Halfon about two blocks from his home. Halfon subsequently died from the beating.

On Dec, 1, 2011, two robbers waited for family members to return to their Richmond, Texas, home, tied them up, then put a gun in the mouth of a 12-year-old girl to force her father to tell them where his precious metals and cash were stored. The father is in the gold exchange business and the home invasion remains unsolved.

In December 1999, Jeannette Mestayer was found dead in her home in New Iberia, Louisiana. Her coin collection was missing. A decade later, her coin dealer, Ron Busby, was arrested and booked with one count of felony theft. But no one has been arrested and prosecuted for Mestayer’s murder.

This month Wayne Justice, proprietor of Justice Coins, in New Port Richey, Florida, shot a customer who had pulled a knife on him. The customer, Jacob Sanborn was on felony probation and died from the bullet in his chest.

In January of this year, thieves stole $130,000 in rare gold and silver coins from a New Brunswick, Canada, coin dealer at Toronto’s Pearson airport. The three suspects arrived in Canada from Bogota, Columbia.

On April 22, 2012, 600 2001 Silver Buffalo coins, half of which were uncirculated and the remainder were proof, were stolen in Wheeling, Illinois.

Coin theft is not only limited to break-ins. Former American Numismatic Association collections manager Wyatt Yeager was sentenced in April to 27 months in a federal prison and ordered to pay $948,505 in restitution for the theft of 300 historically significant coins and objects from the American Numismatic Association Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Yeager sold the stolen coins at auctions in Australia, Germany, and in St. Louis, Missouri, and Baltimore, Maryland, according to court records.

Meanwhile, six coins valued at $18,844 were stolen in June 2011 from the American Numismatic Association’s traveling exhibit on the "Money of the U.S. Civil War" at the St. Louis Museum of Transportation. It was the first theft in the history of the ANA traveling exhibits.

Ironically, the latest victims of coin theft appear to be Greeks who are withdrawing their money from Greek banks and stashing their savings at home. A number have converted their cash into gold. Police say the gangs who used to rob banks are now going after the homes of ordinary people, where there is far less risk.

Greece’s National Police spokesman Thanassis Kokklakis recently told Reuters that the unexpected bonanza is attracting foreign crime syndicates including two from the ex-Soviet state of Georgia, which are being blamed for 300 burglaries.

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu Jun 14, 2012 1:09 am


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