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When Fundamentals No Longer Apply, Review the Fundamentals
By: Eric Sprott & David Baker
This may not come as a surprise, but we're still not seeing it. We're not seeing a US recovery.
Here we are, well into 2012, and the fact remains that the US housing situation is still a bust. There is simply no housing recovery happening in the United States. US New Home Sales fell for the fourth time in a row month-overmonth in March, representing a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 328,000, down from 353,000 in February.1 Do you know what the annual rate of New Home Sales was back in 2006? About 1.21 million.2 No recovery there.
Same goes for US Existing Home Sales, which fell unexpectedly by 2.6% in March to an annual rate of 4.48 million units.3 Again - would you care to know where they were in the same month back in 2006, before the financial system fell apart? Approximately 6.92 million units.4 No recovery there either.
Then there's unemployment. Judging by all the recent earnings-release cheerleading, March's jobs numbers seem to have been forgotten, but they were plainly weak. The US Labor Department showed US hiring slowing to a mere 120,000 new jobs in March, below expectations of 200,000+.5 That's not a recovery. That's simply weak data.
Same goes for the most recent jobless claims numbers, which have been running above 380,000 for the last two weeks, above the 375,000 threshold that supposedly signals future unemployment increases.6 Again - this is not positive data, this is weak data. How high will it have to go before the economists admit that it's weak? 400,000? 425,000? We're asking - we'd like to know.
Then there are US tax receipts, which continue to point in the same direction. If the US is recovering so strongly, then why are employment tax receipts only up 2%? ($484 billion fiscal year-to-date as of March 2012 vs. $475 billion over the same period to March 2011).7 A 2% increase is explainable by inflation alone, which was last reported running at 2.7% according to the Bureau of Labour Stastics.8 Shouldn't the tax receipts be much higher than that? Wasn't unemployment down so far this year? As the Associated Press plainly states, "The unemployment rate has fallen to 8.2% in March [2012] from 9.1% in August [2011]. Part of the drop was because people gave up looking for work. People who are out of work but not looking for jobs aren't counted among the unemployed."9 Oh! Sorry,… now the numbers make more sense. There hasn't been any net new employment at all. Question: if everyone "gives up" looking for work next week, will the US unemployment rate go to zero? We're asking - we'd like to know.
Other economic indicators exhibit the same downward momentum that the pundits are loath to acknowledge. For example, the Economic Cycle Research Institute's (ECRI) Weekly Leading Indicator index, which had been rising from its 2011 lows earlier this year, has resumed its downtrend in April.10 More recently, US Durable Goods Orders were revealed to have dropped 4.2% in March, representing the largest decline since January 2009.11 To top it all off, China's most recent Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) indicated that China's manufacturing activity has now been in contraction for six months in a row.12

FIGURE 1: SPANISH BANKS - DEPOSIT AND EUROSYSTEM FUNDING (% OF TOTAL ASSETS),
1999 - FEB 2012
Note: Deposits of domestic ex credit institutions in Spanish MFIs. Eurosystem borrowing Eurosystem funding via Open Market Operations Source: Bank of Spain, ECB and Citi Investment Research and Analysis
Meanwhile, the situation in Europe continues to worsen. There's no point in mincing words: Spain is a complete disaster. This past week, the Spanish government managed to pull off two separate bond auctions, only to have the yield on their 10-year government bond shoot right back up the moment the second auction closed. Everyone's nervous because the Spanish banking system is up to its eyeballs in approximately €143.8 billion worth of delinquent loans, and the private sector is unwilling to lend Spanish banks the money to weather the potential write-downs.13 As we've seen before, the real culprit plaguing the Spanish banks is customer deposit withdrawals. It is estimated that €65 billion of deposits left Spanish banks this past March alone.14 People are taking their money out of the Spanish banking system, and without the help of the generous European Central Bank (ECB), the Spanish banks would likely be in a full collapse today (see Figure 1).15 As it stands, the Spanish banks have now borrowed a massive €316.3 billion from the ECB in order to meet the withdrawals and maintain the illusion of solvency.
Perhaps it's Euro-crisis fatigue, or maybe just plain denial, but the equity markets appear unwilling to acknowledge how close we are now to yet another round of Eurozone upheaval. Spain's economy is almost five times that of Greece. Spain also has over four times the amount of externally-held nominal debt outstanding.16 If the bond vigilantes choose to punish the Spanish 10-year bond (currently trading precariously close to a 6% yield), we could soon be back where we were this past September, only with a problem four times as large.
The rest of Europe isn't looking so hot either. Italy's bond market is in a similar situation to that of Spain, with the Italian 10-year bond trading perilously close to the 6%-yield threshold. Recent data showed the European Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) falling to 47.4 in March, well below the 50 mark which signals growth in industrial activity.17 German PMI recently confirmed this move with its April release of 46.3, down from 48.4 in March, representing the fastest rate of contraction since July 2009.18 These declines in economic activity, combined with the austerity measures most Euro countries are currently attempting to impose, almost guarantee more printed money will be pumped into the European bond markets before the year is over. It's simply a matter of time.
As expected, the powers that be are busy parading around in preparation for the next round of Eurozone panic, with the IMF using the renewed concerns as an opportunity to re-establish its relevance as a firewall provider. The IMF most recently secured $430 billion worth of new "pledges" from various G20 member countries to increase its potential lending capacity to $700 billion in the event of further problems in the Eurozone.19 Not unsurprisingly, the BRICS countries have expressed irritation at the disproportionate voting power held by Western powers within the IMF at the expense of themselves and the other developing nations. In prepared remarks at an IMF press conference, Brazil's finance minister criticized the skewed quotas that dictate voting power, stating that, "The calculated quota share of Luxembourg is larger than the one of Argentina or South Africa… The quota share of Belgium is larger than that of Indonesia and roughly three times that of Nigeria. And the quota of Spain, amazing as it may seem, is larger than the sum total of the quotas of all 44 sub-Saharan African countries."20 This unbalance used to make sense when the IMF was designed to help fund ailing third world and developing countries through economic crisis. But that is clearly no longer the IMF's main purpose.
It must be difficult for the BRICS countries today. On one hand, they continue to jockey for respect among the Western powers, insisting on participating in quasi-European bailout funds like the IMF. On the other hand, they are also clearly aware of the Western nations' continuing efforts to surreptitiously devalue their domestic currencies, and the pernicious effect that has had on them as exporters and as lenders of capital. In that vein, it was interesting to note that during the latest BRICS Summit held this past March in New Delhi, the main topic of discussion centered on the creation of the group's first official institution, a so-called "BRICS Bank" that would fund development projects and infrastructure in developing nations. Although not openly discussed, reports suggest what they were really talking about was creating a type of BRICS central bank - an institution that could facilitate their ability to "do more business with each other in their local currencies, to help insulate from U.S. dollar fluctuations…"21 Given the incredible scale of western central bank intervention over the past six months, the BRICS' increasing frustration with their printing efforts should be a given by now. The real question is what they're doing about it, and what assets they're accumulating to protect themselves from the inevitable, which brings us to gold.
Although the paper gold price has been range-bound over the past month, the physical gold market has been undergoing staggering change. Earlier this month it was revealed that Hong Kong gold imports into China totaled nearly 40 tonnes in the month of February, representing a 13-fold increase over the same month last year (see Figure 2).22 40 tonnes annualized equates to 480 tonnes per year - a massive number in a market that only produced 2,810 tonnes of mine supply in 2011.23

FIGURE 2: CHINA'S GOLD IMPORTS FROM HONG KONG
Source: Hong Kong Census and Statistic Dept, Reuters
Reuters graphic/Catherine Trevethan, Rujun Shen 11/04/12
If there's one thing we now know for certain, it's the fact that the market has completely missed the importance of the demand-side changes currently taking place in the physical gold market. China has now imported 436 tonnes of gold through Hong Kong over the past eight months.24 This compares to imports of a mere 57 tonnes over the same eight month-period a year earlier (July 2010 - February 2011). The net new demand implied by this increase is 379 tonnes, which when annualized equates to 568 tonnes of new demand in a market that supplies 2,810 tonnes per year in mine production. These are astounding numbers. Recent IMF data also shows that at least 12 countries increased their physical gold reserves by 58 tonnes in the month of March, with Mexico, Turkey, Russia and Kazakhstan making sizeable purchases.25 58 tonnes annualized equates to 696 tonnes of demand per year. We know that central banks bought 439.7 tonnes of gold in 2011, and if the pace of recent central bank purchases continues, it will equate to another 256 tonnes of net new change in the physical gold market.
The significance of this demand shift is striking. If we combine China's implied net change of 568 tonnes with the central banks' net change of 256 tonnes, we're left with a demand shift of over 824 tonnes vs. an annual mine supply of 2,810 tonnes. That represents close to a 30% net change in the physical gold market in 2012. If we remove the portion of global gold production produced by China and the other non-G6 central bank gold buyers (like Russia and Mexico - because we know they're not sellers), we're now dealing with over 824 tonnes of demand change hitting an annual global mine supply of a mere 2,170 tonnes - representing a 38% shift.26 Although we have been continually reminded that 'fundamentals don't matter' in today's marketplace, there isn't a physical market on earth that can withstand that type of demand increase without higher prices over the long-run, and the gold market is no different. There are no sellers of physical gold that we know of who can satiate that scale of new demand, and global gold mine supply has been virtually flat for over the last ten years. Even if we incorporate the estimated 1,600 tonnes of "recycled gold" that the World Gold Council insists on including in its annual gold supply estimates, the numbers above still suggest a net change of 19%.27 Who is going to give up their gold purchases to make room for this scale of new demand? Where is the gold going to come from? We ask because we don't actually know.
We have written at length about the disconnect between the paper gold price and the physical gold market. If the demand changes stated above applied to any other market, the investing public would lose their minds. Could you imagine, for example, if the demand shifts described above were applied to the global oil market? What would happen if a single country came in from nowhere and increased its oil purchases by a factor equivalent to 30% of the world's annual oil supply? We are students first and foremost of the physical market, and the numbers stated above speak for themselves. We remain confident about gold for the simple reason that the demand we are now seeing for physical is completely unsustainable without higher prices, and we do not see that demand abating in the coming months. The US recovery is not happening. Europe is poised for yet another full-fledged economic crisis, and the BRICS countries continue to aggressively convert to hard assets like gold in order to protect themselves from currency debasement. The paper market for gold can continue its charade, but demand in the physical market will soon overpower it through sheer momentum - there's only so much physical to go around, and it appears that there are some very large buyers that are eager to take it.
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Comments
Utah ready to lead Western land war
Lots of 2nd and 10th amendment folks in Utah, and the four other western states listed in the article. Cowboy/girl country. Same "don't mess with" attitude as Texas.
http://www.standard.net/stories/2012/04/26/utah-ready-lead-western-land-war
Thu, 04/26/2012 - 5:04pm
Anticipating the bitter battle to come, governors from five Western states will meet in Salt Lake City on Friday to devise strategies to persuade Washington to give them more control over federal land within their own boundaries.
Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, who will host fellow governors from Colorado, Idaho, Nevada and Wyoming, says Western states need unity in their stance against federal control of millions of acres of land.
I'm sure everyone has seen
I'm sure everyone has seen this recent interview Reuters posted with John Butler.
http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/04/26/gold-standard-inevitable-10k-oz-looms-sa?videoId=233975545&videoChannel=1
What piqued my curiosity, if you listen until the very end, the reporter signed off with, "...and appropriately enough from the Goldsmith Hall, in The City of London..." Its easy not to catch but he isn't just saying "London." Isn't THE City of London the Rothschilds power center? One of the 3 pillars of the money masters or something like that?
I'm not sure if it's important to note or if they give various interviews like this all the time but it seems like The City of London approves of this message and interview. I'd be interested to hear thoughts about this. Is it something or nothing? I think its important I'm just not sure by what degree.
Cycles/Seasons
When Fundamentals No Longer Apply, Review the Fundamentals
Guys goes out and waters his Cherry tree in the winter and throws a pile of manure on it and then
the tree doesn't do anything. He goes back and looks at the components of the water and fertilizer.
The tree still doesn't do anything.
Thank you manipulation for these glorious buying opportunities
Almost to my goal of 1,000 ounces of shiny white.
Picked up some Canadian Maples!
Stack the smack!
Santa Speaks
Not sure if folks have seen this...my apologies if this is a re-post
May edition for futures magazine...fascinating interview with Santa...a lot of good stuff...read it folks if you have not already...I almost never say that!
It explains his macro view of gold within the current monetary system and why it is performing as it is ( why it is being managed and on who's orders)...this is a wonderful article and leaves one clear headed about why we should keep the faith in the direction of PM's....it helps to see the yearly forest for all the daily trees.
http://www.futuresmag.com/2012/05/01/jim-sinclair-has-something-to-say
Fauna - Para Mi
Who is that golden man in the back seat?
Wizard
I don't know, but Utah seeks pretty big and wide open and uninviting of a state, if I can make such a statement. As opposed to Florida or California. There aren't a lot of people per square mile.
It seems desolate. It's in the middle of nowhere and they can see someone coming for miles it appears and maybe longitude/latitude gives it better satellite communications or some other advantage. There must be an advantage. They probably have their own landing strip and a private jet or military jet makes them accessible to most of the country in a short time.
Good question by you.
@johnnydow
Gainesville Coins Shipping?
Hey, sorry to jump in off topic (ish), but I'm placing a small order with Gainesville (I know, I know, someplace is cheaper
, but they have something I want).
Shipping is twice what it should be though. Anyone have a code or something for discounted shipping?
and,
Secession? Utah? Could be part of a new free country from Maine (Atlantic access), western NY state, through western/central PA (farming/coal/gas), through Appalachia and down to Texas (energy, gulf access), all of the Heartland (clear out Chicago, etc.) west to the Rockies (to the Pacific would be better if the people have the fortitude to relocate all those Pacific NW libs to their brethren in the northeast/midatlantic "old US"). Southwest/CA will be Aztlan (basically is), and deep South will be (ironically) New Liberia (Capital - Atlanta. the GA/SC/Miss/Ala demographics speak for themselves). Just a guess. Don't shoot the messenger. Until the official lines are drawn, at least.
. Oh, and no professional lawyers, clergy, or politicians allowed...those are community service part-time jobs in the new Republic.
Fred: i think his point was
Fred: i think victor's point was the opposite of what you state, rather that the Euro system values gold at the free market price, with no 'strict backing' actually. Currently the market value of the gold held by ECB and Euro central banks IS greater than the monetary base and Euro reserves at the ECB, and it is accounted as such on their balance sheet.
I don't take his to mean that Europe won't endure harsh recession or depression, just that they hold the aces to prevent the US from taking advantage of the rest of the world by looking like good guys and going back to a 'backed' gold standard, then continuing to expand credit and live beyond their means by importing real goods for cheaply printed dollars. This can't happen if the Euro system, which has more gold than the US, values gold at the free market price and allows it to trade freely in Euros.
This also suggests the Europeans are happy to see the price of gold rise.
I think it's a fascinating idea and worth evaluating. I wonder why Rickards has not considered this.
I think Rickards believes that the US's secret card and strength is that European gold is still mostly in USA, while Victor says there is good reason to believe Germany, Italy And France ended their leases and got their gold back around 1999 and shortly thereafter. Perhaps this was what forced Gordon Brown had to sell half of Britain's gold to bail out Bullion banks who had to make good on paying back their gold leases.
lol
Yeah Zzz, lol
f.o.a.d.
Or is that "fuk off en sterven" ?
Sprott is deliberately skewing data
Guys much as I believe in the PM story Sprott's arguments above comparing the gold and oil markets are comparing apples and oranges and he is deliberately misleading the gullible. He says:
" Could you imagine, for example, if the demand shifts described above were applied to the global oil market? What would happen if a single country came in from nowhere and increased its oil purchases by a factor equivalent to 30% of the world's annual oil supply? "
This kind of analysis is irritating because he is highly intelligent and knows very well how he is misleading people here. Nearly all oil production is consumed every year. Annual gold production is just 2% of the amount above ground - all of which is available to buyers at the right price. A country coming along and buying up 30% of that 2% equates to an increase in demand in the gold market of 0.66% and is not even remotely comparable to a country deciding to buy 30% of world annual oil production.
After reading this line of argumentation Sprott has made his agenda clear to me. He is ready to make fallacious arguments to talk his book.
U.S. Government's Monty Python.....
Fresh Debt... it does a Body good!
Oh..... and sorry.... you can't discharge this debt..... the government and the banks made sure of that.... too bad they don't live by the same rules.
Not Suprising....A Little Bribe will do ya!
71185208
Nice of you to explain what victor meant. But you write:
"Currently the market value of the gold held by ECB and Euro central banks IS greater than the monetary base and Euro reserves at the ECB, and it is accounted as such on their balance sheet."
What is this supposed to mean? As bbacq has patiently explained on previous threads, the fact that those banks claim to have 20% gold in reserve (where did you get the greater than number?) does not 'back' the currency if it is not redeemable.
Why you think the ECB and european central banks are somehow going to share their gold with the populace is bizarre. And that you believe they have the gold is also odd. Where is it held? I know victor said they had the gold because they told him! And how big is the monetary base?
btw - there is a comment tab at the top - if you are worried you have missed any of victor's posts just type in his name and they will all come up. He also has his own blog - which you might like to go to.
You state as fact things that are not fact - like your comment about all coins being minted with less than face value content of metal - and when challenged you said 'off the top of your head' - come on - in the age of the internet?
Don't bother clicking on the link for the video....
.....it's already been removed.
April 27, 2012
If Only the Romans had the EPA to Crucify the
Dissenters
Oleg Atbashian
A recently surfaced video of an EPA official's rant confirms what many of us already knew about the Obama Administration: they imagine themselves to be the rulers of conquered territories populated by restless barbarians who must be subjugated at any cost, complete with indiscriminate and severe exemplary punishments.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/04/if_only_the_romans_had_the_epa_to_crucify_the_dissenters.html#ixzz1tKkBLRFd
And good morning to most of you!
RE:- Goldsmith Hall, in The City of London
What piqued my curiosity, if you listen until the very end, the reporter signed off with, "...and appropriately enough from the Goldsmith Hall, in The City of London..." Its easy not to catch but he isn't just saying "London." Isn't THE City of London the Rothschilds power center? One of the 3 pillars of the money masters or something like that?
I'm not sure if it's important to note or if they give various interviews like this all the time but it seems like The City of London approves of this message and interview. I'd be interested to hear thoughts about this. Is it something or nothing? I think its important I'm just not sure by what degree.
I wouldn't read too much into their choice of location.
Goldsmiths Hall is the historical home (for almost 700 years since the 1330's) of the Medieval Guild for goldsmiths, silversmiths, and jewellers AND of the main/original London branch of the UK "Assay Offices" responsible for the Official Hallmarking of Gold & Silver items in the UK (==> a HIGHLY renowned & respected system for proving the Quality AND Maker's Name AND Exact-Year/Age of Silver & Gold objects ... which has been in existence for several hundred years, but which the UK govt. [under European pressure] is currently trying to do away with or "water down", which would be a GREAT loss)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worshipful_Company_of_Goldsmiths
&
http://www.thegoldsmiths.co.uk/about-the-company/
&
http://www.thegoldsmiths.co.uk/assay-office/
&
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallmark ..... (General Hallmarking info)
&
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_hallmarks
Don't Drink The Purple "Cool"-Aid
It's Cool To Be In The Tank For Obama
Reporters normally cast a jaundiced eye at a political campaign's PR strategy. Yet they are eagerly parroting the Obama campaign's talking point about how "cool" the president is.
In early February, Politico reported that the Obama campaign, hoping to rekindle enthusiasm among young voters, was "looking to revive the cool appeal." Then, suddenly, news stories started popping up about Obama's alleged coolness, in contrast to that drip Romney. A sampling:
• President Obama: The cool factor
• 'Cool' Obama Returns GOP Fire on Gas Prices
• Obama: The new King of Cool
• Barack Obama is cool. Mitt Romney is not. What does it mean for 2012?
• Campaigning for the 'Cool' Vote
• The Obama-Romney 'Cool Gap'
• The Ned Flanders of Politics: Romney Isn't Cool
• Obama On Late Night Too Cool For Cool?
• Obama, Jimmy Fallon and the race for cool
read more:http://news.investors.com/article/609561/201204271858/mainstream-press-parrots-obama-pr-talking-points-.htm
@Xty
Mornin' to you too. Great song, and it's good to see you have "something to laugh about" after the near miss of the Sens:)
re the 'cool vote'
It will backfire if the 'youth' I know are any indication. Nothing is more appalling than an adult trying to be cool - just try using their language and they will change it. Now I worry more about the baby-boomers wanting a cool president - the meatheads who vote around here vote on things like - 'he looks mean', or 'I don't like his eyes'. And the disgusting enthusiasm for Obama in Canada before the previous election made my skin crawl. I actually met a woman at a Christmas party and she was going on about how neat it was that some friend of hers had gone to the States to help with his campaign. I asked her how she would feel about Americans coming to Canada to campaign for the Conservatives. Kind of ended the conversation - her husband laughed (in a good way) and I probably went to get more wine. I just cannot hold my tongue anymore.
Maybe I never could.
Xty
"does not 'back' the currency if it is not redeemable"
Ding. Ding. And there it is. At the core, it's a trust issue (citizens to .gov, and between .govs). Giving me a new piece of paper that is "backed" by gold that is not 'in' the paper, is not 'on' the paper, and cannot be had (or even seen) for the paper, doesn't help.
Why even bother with small fractional amounts? Why can't they tell me my new paper dollar/euro is 'backed' by a an eight pound chunk of gold? Why not a whole Leprechaun pot-full (of something they'll never give me or allow me to confirm)?
If I'm not willing to accept that, might there be some role for silver?
IRB
Yes :)
A request! (really)
cool version - just found it - top ten favourite albums - at least morning albums
XTY yes!!
and Thank You , my love heart icon is missing, but anyway, where does the time go?...
Xty
This is not just the traditional 'cool'. This is a 'cool' that can only be appreciated by (condescendingly)guilty (damaged) White people. It's the 'cool' that lets mediascum deride a White ticket as too "dull and boring",a White town too "safe and boring",a White nation too "prosperous and boring". It's a self-hate and "other-worship" kind of 'cool' endemic to post-modern Western society. Well, at least for those with the luxury of a safe distance from 'die-versity'. Those "left behind" when White-flight "raptured" all the people who could afford to move far away; they seem to feel differently and are cursed as sub-human haters for seeing through the fine, egalitarian myths that ring so true (and feel so nice) when packaged for TV.
It's why Biden is so enamored of the _resident's "Big Stick", and it's why Chris Matthews gets a stiffy (excuse me, tingly leg)everytime the mocha messiah graces us with his critique of our society.
Speaking of Biden
Maybe Romney is meant to win - if sending out Biden to attack him is really the strategy. This really is the opening line of the otherwise seemingly supportive article:
"Joe Biden is the Rodney Dangerfield of modern American politics.
Republicans mock his tendency toward verbal excess while many Democrats pine for him to be replaced as the vice presidential nominee in 2012 by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. (For the billionth time: That ain’t happening.)
But, to assume Biden is simply a bit player as President Obama ramps up his 2012 re-election bid is to drastically underestimate the role he is, can and almost certainly will play in helping to shape the race.
On Thursday, Biden delivered his fifth speech of the campaign — this one on foreign policy — aimed at simultaneously framing the stakes of the election and taking some off the bark off of former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.
It’s not by chance that the Chicago braintrust chose Biden to set the terms of the debate in the race, to serve as a slow burn start to the campaign, which will start formally next week when Obama does rallies in Richmond, Virginia and Columbus, Ohio.
“He’s the President’s partner, most visible surrogate and a great spokesman on key issues that will define this campaign,” said one campaign official of Biden’s role.
So, what specifically can Biden do to help Obama win reelection? Two things stands out....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/post/what-joe-biden-can-do-f...
@ Xty--And Then There's This...
Krauthammer: Biden 'Holds the American Record for Wrong on the Most Issues in Foreign Affairs Ever'
Conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer strongly rebuked comments Vice President Joe Biden made Thursday regarding Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's foreign policy positions.
Appearing on Fox News's Special Report, Krauthammer said, "The Vice President has been over the last 30 years holds the American record for wrong on the most issues in foreign affairs ever...He is the Herbert Hoover of American foreign policy" (video follows with transcript and absolutely no need for commentary):
Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-sheppard/2012/04/26/krauthammer-biden-holds-american-record-wrong-most-issues-foreign-aff#ixzz1tLFDcFXG