The Latest From Sprott
If you'd like to receive these updates directly from SAM, use this link:
http://www.industrymailout.com/Industry/View.aspx?id=361480&q=455589875&qz=ae0935
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.
Support TF Metals Report with a donation or by purchasing something from the TurdMart Store.








Comments
@ SilverRunNW--Re zil's LOL Statue of Liberty Toon...
...I remember when zil thought that "cartoons were stupid", the day before he started posting them himself. Reminds me of a "Dutch date".
ClinkinKY
"Reminds me of a "Dutch date".
Doesn't that involve a booth of some sort?
But I'm OK with mocking that statue.
"Give us your wretched refuse?" Screw that. Keep 'em.
Cool Obama
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.
Yeah, Right! ... He's really "Cool for Cats" :-
I think I prefer Ron Paul's message :-
Just for the Weekend
http://cpnscarlet.kodakgallery.com/
Added some more (current and historical) photos - -
A cool president
I have one word: pandering!
Re zil's LOL Statue of Liberty Toon
Re zil's LOL Statue of Liberty Toon... ...I remember when zil thought that "cartoons were stupid", the day before he started posting them himself. Reminds me of a "Dutch date".
Better than a "Dutch Cap", I suppose
...
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=dutch%20cap
Gold Backing for the euro
Hi Victor, XTY and others.
I see a lot of speculation about gold backing for the euro. Why not just go straight to the horse's mouth?
http://www.ecb.int/press/pr/wfs/2012/html/fs120306.en.html
Here is the latest ECB balance sheet and a few things strike me about it:
- Total gold reserves are 423 billion euro (marked to market).
- Not all the gold is in house. Note that gold reserves include "receivables". As we know receivables are probably a large part of the pie.
- All the rest of the assets are basically paper promises, and probably mostly governmental debt which would quickly become worthless in a meltdown
- On the liabilities side there are about 3 trillion euro, meaning that gold reserves are about 15% of liabilities.
Now let's add in the real wild card - the real funny money: Bank credits. The ECB has about 1.1 trillion euro of bank deposits. Those banks have leveraged this debt approximately 22 times. In other words - there is 22 trillion euro of bank deposits out there. This is backed by the ECB balance sheet which in a hyperinflation would basically be the gold.
22 trillion euro in today's money would need to be covered by 423 billion euro of gold (or at least the gold which can be recovered - much of it probably cannot). This is a 1.9% coverage ratio. The euro is just as much a trash currency as the US dollar, and just as much at risk of a vacuum-implosion collapse (and a subsequent hyperinflationary attempt to "do something").
The upshot here is in a meltdown scenario that gold is undervalued relative to the euro by a factor of 50.
Watch this closely
It will be VERY INTERESTING to see how O'Bomney handles this one:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/28/world/asia/chen-guangcheng-blind-lawye...
Black-Scholes: The maths formula linked to the financial crash
.
It's not every day that someone writes down an equation that ends up changing the world. But it does happen sometimes, and the world doesn't always change for the better. It has been argued that one formula known as Black-Scholes, along with its descendants, helped to blow up the financial world.
<SNIP>
But for Ian Stewart, the story of Black-Scholes - and of Long-Term Capital Management - is a kind of morality tale. "It's very tempting to see the financial crisis and various things which led up to it as sort of the classic Greek tragedy of hubris begets nemesis," he says.
"You try to fly, you fly too close to the sun, the wax holding your wings on melts and you fall down to the ground. My personal view is that it's not just tempting to do that but there is actually a certain amount of truth in that way of thinking. I think the bankers' hubris did indeed beget nemesis. But the big problem is that it wasn't the bankers on whom the nemesis descended - it was the rest of us."
REST OF THE ARTICLE :-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-17866646
TF
I'm not sure what's going on with all of that.
I posted the original story last night from Bloomberg where they talked about the blind guy 'escaping'.
I almost laughed at that but it's a serious thing, all in all.
Now I wake up and saw that story you posted at Bloomberg about him being in US custody.
Uh oh...but this has all the makings of a stick in the eye diplomatic moment.
Stay tuned!
ttyl....breakfast calls
A big stick you mean
but seriously the timing is tight - meetings next weekend with Hillary and Timothy (or Clinton and Geitner is you prefer - I am that much of a feminist) - and about the economy to boot.
@ Turd--Watch This Closely
Comment/question deleted because I wouldn't ask John Bolton what he thinks about the prospects of gold and silver:)
@worldend666: Does gold have the euro's backside?
Interesting how sanity again seems to prevail once outside the working week. Hmmn.
Worldend: Thank you. For all those who are biting on the "Euro is backed, USD ain't" meme, bite the data. If we accept cooption of language (euros are "backed" are they?) we are a massive step closer to enslavement. I am so happy my 17-year-old son finally read Orwell's 1984 recently.
There are, I think, several ways we could return to sound currency.
1) Gold rises in price as measured by fiat until we are somewhere close to 1-1 reserves again - against a broader money measure, not just base! The (vastly expanded) narrow base isn't the only problem, it's also the incredible leverage that has been allowed to be built on top of it. I think this is unachievable, as the derivative exposure is just too big.
2) Monetary contraction occurs to get reserves back in line. This is the implosion scenario, I think, in which the banks blow up, and the paper is largely all worthless. Probably quite ugly, and *probably* every PTB effort will be expended to avoid this.
3) A combination of 1 and 2.
4) We don't return, at least in my lifetime.
5) Someone (ie a large social organization, perhaps a country) with sense and balls (I do not exclude female participation in our salvation, it's a colloquialism, ok?) actually creates and trades in a sound currency, and the broader market recognizes and adopts it.
Of these, I fear 4) the most.
bbacq
Silver Eagles $2.25 over spot
Providentmetals.com has Silver Eagles for $2.25 over spot in any quantity using promo code ASEsale. You can mail them a check or ACH them the payment to get the cash (non credit card fee) price and not incur a wire fee. I have made most of my stacking purchases from them due to the way you can pay them (going to the bank to wire money is a hassle and costs $15 for me, so I like to keep it simple and save a few dollars). I ordered some eagles yesterday (and got some Canadian silver maples from there last week for $1.75 over spot......no longer at that price on site).
As far as miners go, the longer the metals prices stay at current or higher levels, their cash flows will explode....which will cause money to flow into their stocks. This money flow into the sector will raise their prices. It should already have happened, but will have to sooner or later. I have moved my work retirement account into a gold mining fund (the best choice of the 25 or so funds that we can pick from within our plan). I think that the market will tank after the election, so I am not big on paper stocks in general, but think the miners are the lesser of the stock evils. Ultimately I believe that the government in one way or another will wind up with all funds that are currently in our retirement accounts.
Lastly, yesterday I got my two Mosin rifles from budsgunshop.com that Big Buffalo pointed out on this blog in the recent past. I took a quick peek at them and they look very nice. I can't wait to run some rounds through them (also got my surplus ammo for them a couple of days ago from the-armory.com.
A good week for me.........I ordered some Maples and Eagles for my stack, some Russian lead for my new (old) rifles, and added some firepower to my homefront. Keep stacking and take possession. If you don't hold it............it is really not yours. Thanks TF for all you do. If you have not signed up for an auto contribution to help cover the costs of this site, I suggest you do. The information one can get from this community is priceless.
Maximum frustration
My wife and I talked this morning and agreed that with an upcoming move (new job looks like it will come through) we cannot buy any more metals for a while. Dang! the stacking will never be cheaper and a potential move higher is building ... and I am out of dry powder.
I know that feeling, Dr. J.
I know that feeling, Dr. J. I am about to make a move out of the country, assuming that a potential job prospect doesn't pay out. The thought of SELLING silver each month rather than BUYING it is just painful.
Congrats Doc!
Was really pulling for you in that interview, great to hear you knocked 'em dead! And don't worry about the tight fiat situation, who knows, you may just miss up and down headaches like the last year. Perhaps when you are in position again to buy more we may be even lower- and if not, you still have your stack.
Doc
Congrats on that!
Being out of dry powder is never a good feeling but at least you already have stack in hand (or lake bottom) and this move and the opportunities to get closer to family are worth their weight in gold/silver.
So in that sense, your stacking karma points by just moving. Just keep on making lemonade out of everything you can and keep stacking those karma points. You seem like a totally nice person and you'll never be out of 'goodwill' powder.
@Cpn; Just for the Weekend
That train set-up in the upper left looks awesome! What a lay out it must be to see live!
Good for you Doc J. The new
Good for you Doc J. The new job and getting closer to family are more important than the stack.
These people shoulda solved their problems a different way..
The problem still exists...they took care of a part of the symptom not the cause. Need to get rid of cause of problems..
Just say'n
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/28/us-greece-election-suicide-idU...
Victor the Cleaner, Mediums of Exchange & Puking
I find myself both mesmerized by Victor’s arguments and on the verge of retching when I read this stuff. Apologies in advance if reposting these items violates any of TF’s rules; VTC’s thought provoking posts have elicited a lot of responses. I thought it might be useful for myself and others to see some of his ideas together.
I think for me the part I can’t really reconcile is his view that the medium of exchange (Euros, Silver, <insert whatever other convenient medium of exchange here>) is almost arbitrary. This endorsement of a fiat system chafes my nether-regions to no end, but I can’t construct a good argument that refutes it. Medium of exchange does seem arbitrary as long as people universally accept it. If, for whatever reason, people wanted to conduct their short term transactions in USD rather than JPY, or tulips rather than EUR, so be it.
I feel dirty even considering Victor’s logic on this. I guess I personally don’t want to accept a central bank’s chosen medium of exchange. After all Fiat is Evil and central banks are the worst type of Enemy. The thing is, if Victor’s ideas were adopted on a large scale - if everyone truly did keep their wealth locked up in physical gold, the Central Bank’s power would ultimately be as arbitrary as their medium of exchange; whether they decided to debase their fiat over the long term or not would not matter in Victor’s end state.
I do tend to disagree with Victor about the legitimacy of Silver, or Platinum or Palladium being solid long term stores of value along with gold. With Silver, particularly, the historical significance and and global acceptance as something precious and valuable, trumps other arguments against its validity as a store of value.
I also disagree that the Euro is somehow a better medium of exchange than the USD. Claiming that using USD is risky and somehow less legitimate than fiat-inflated-cousin Euro (quote 3 below) seems to contradict his argument that medium of exchange is arbitrary, but I guess Euro is just his preference in this land of arbitrary medium of exchanges.
Anyhow, after typing this and thinking about these tough concepts, I think I’ll go vomit.
Seriously though, Turd, Victor & fellow turdites, thanks for the great discussion. Not sure I agree with this arbitrary medium of exchange concept but you guys have certainly given me something to think about.
Victor nuggets:
"If you want to store your savings for the future, buy gold with it. Yes, you! Everyone of you! If you need to make a quick transaction, some pastries from the bakery, the next paycheque, some internet shopping, use the Euro. If you want to borrow something to buy a new car, borrow Euros. That's exactly the point. Separation of medium of exchange (Euro) from the store of value (gold).”
“In this case, since the ECB does not back the Euro with gold, the Euro would circulate for transactions only, but everyone who wanted to save something, would simply buy the real stuff: physical gold.”
“If I want to shop for groceries, I will use the Euro (because paper is convenient and because I may want to use my debit or credit card which involves electronic money). If I want to save for my retirement, I will buy physical gold. I won't buy dollars because in the long run, the value of the dollar will depend on what the U.S. government does with it, and I don't want to take that risk.”
“You see that the medium of exchange, i.e. the Euro that you use in transactions, needs to be stable only for just under a month because everything long-term is safely locked away in the form of physical gold. Reasonable stability over a month is easy to do. Even the U.S. have usually managed that.”
The Body
Hope you have cleaned up. One may want to spend Euros, or use one's debit card, but someone may not want to accept them or it, especially if that arbitrary medium of exchange is only good for a month. A hollow promise or a real good? And what if the baker or butcher wants to save for his or her retirement?
Terrorizing, Smuggling, And Assault: All in a TSA Week's Work
By Becky Akers, Forbes
.
The TSA’s had a banner week. It began with former Head Cheese, Kip Hawley – the guy who foisted the liquids-in-baggies nonsense on us – bleating that the agency is “broken” and it’s no wonder Americans hate it. As if to prove him right, screeners beat up on little girls – twice. And it was only Monday. By Wednesday, cops had arrested four screeners at Los Angeles International who took a break from pawing passengers to smuggle illicit drugs through checkpoints. Meanwhile, a Congressman alleged assault after a “very aggressive … pat-down.”
Hmmm. Seems there are several clues here that perhaps we might want to, oh, I don’t know, abolish this vile agency.
Four-year-old Isabella Brademeyer was flying out of Wichita, Kansas with her mother, brother and grandmother after a stint as flower-girl in her uncle’s wedding. Isabella successfully negotiated the checkpoint’s charade, but her grandmother wasn’t as fortunate, and the TSA ordered her aside for a groping. Isabella offered the lady a child’s best comfort: she ran to her and hugged her for a “few seconds,” according to her mother’s account on Facebook.
Or, in the TSA’s words, Isabella “had completed screening but had contact with another member of her family who had not completed the screening process.” Uh-oh. That shot across the Homeland’s bow galvanized the Warriors on Terror. Thank Heaven for their practice in neutralizing cupcakes and strip-searching octogenarians: these crack troops knew exactly how to protect us from affectionate grandkids.
REST OF THE (EXCELLENT) ARTICLE :-
http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2012/04/27/terrorizing-smuggling-an...
.
I'm damn glad I took my lad to experience America just after 9/11 BEFORE it deteriorated so badly ... My idealistic side weeps for what the USA has lost & is rapidly losing at an even faster pace.
Heads up... Game change on the 2nd amendment attack
Dale Letcher
Industrial Recycling Solutions
Subject:
Fwd: From the Owners of McMillan Mfg. in Phoenix, AZ
This
is happening all around us and we are allowing this socialist
government to keep growing. McMillian Mfg in Phoenix, Arizona, was contacted by Bank
of America and informed that they will no longer be allowed to
use their services ( Bank of America ) because they are in the
firearm business and support the second amendment.
Please
read the letter written by the CEO of McMillan
Mfg.
Mike
Ross
Subject:
From the Owners of McMillan Mfg. in Phoenix, AZ
I am fine with you
re-posting it. Thank for your support.
Kelly D.
McMillan
Director of Operations
McMillan Group
International, LLC
623-582-9635
1638 W Knudsen
Dr
Phoenix, Arizona 85027
McMillan
Integrity-Global Vision
www.mcmillanusa.com
Become a fan of
McMillan on facebook
http://www.facebook.com/McMillanGroupInternational
McMillan
Fiberglass Stocks, McMillan Firearms Manufacturing, McMillan
Group
International have been collectively banking with Bank
of America for 12
years. Today Mr. Ray Fox, Senior Vice
President, Marlet Manager, Business
Banking, Global
Commercial Banking ( Bank of America ) came to my office.
He
scheduled the meeting as an "account analysis" meeting in order
to
evaluate the two lines of credit we have with
them.
He spent 5 minutes talking about how McMillan has
changed in the last 5
years and have become more of a
firearms manufacturer than a supplier of
accessories. At this
point I interrupted him and asked "Can I possibly save
you
some time so that you don't waste your breath? What you are
going to
tell me is that because we are in the firearms
manufacturing business you
no longer want my
business."
"That is correct", he says.
I replied
"That is okay, we will move our accounts as soon as possible.
We
can find a 2nd Amendment friendly bank that will be glad
to have our
business. You won't mind if I tell the NRA, SCI
and everyone one I know
that BofA is not firearms industry
friendly?"
"You have to do what you must", he
said.
"So you are telling me this is a politically
motivated decision, is that
right?" Mr Fox confirmed that it
was. At which point I told him that the
meeting was over and
there was nothing let for him to say.
I think it is
import for all Americans who believe in and support our
2nd
amendment right to keep and bare arms should know when a
business does not
support these rights. What you do with that
knowledge is up to you. When I
don't agree with a business'
political position I can not in good
conscience support them.
We will soon no longer be accepting Bank
of
America credit cards
as payment for our products.
Kelly D.
McMillan
Director of Operations
McMillan Group
International, LLC
623-582-9635
1638 W Knudsen
Dr
Phoenix, Arizona 85027
McMillan
Integrity-Global Vision
www.mcmillanusa.comS
http://www.ammoland.com/2012/04/20/bank-of-america-refusing-businesses-t...
"This
may be our last chance to turn this government gone wild
around. Be
sure to vote early and vote
often."
Bobbejaan
Thanks for your thoughts and info on Goldsmith Hall. I wasn't aware of its function so that makes a lot of sense. I had read a few posts which paraphrased the interview as being from London and noticed its actually The City of London and wondered if this misconception held any meaning.
Agree with 666--nobody talks
Agree with 666--nobody talks their book as much as Eric Sprott.
If you guys want to read something worthwhile, check the link to Sinclair's stuff on PTC. He is also a self-promoter, but at least he gives the reader something worthwhile about the situation in the world today.
Xty Re Gold
Just a quick comment on gold as a commodity...it trades as a currency, this was the bombshell that caused some to be shocked when the LBMA first published volume in 1997. Since then physical settlement transfers have declined and trading volume has increased.
Roadhouse Blues
"No asset is safe now. The only choice to hedge risks is to hold
"No asset is safe now. The only choice to hedge risks is to hold hard currency — gold."
This quote is from Zhang Jianhua of PBoC... http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-golds-value-today
Here, in India, also something is up. While the Indian government has been doing its mightiest to rein in the people's interest in pm's by raising taxes, duties etc. demand continues. At least one national TV channel and newspaper are reporting increasing gold prices...
Something is up...I can't pin it but I can sense a kind of panic...Iran, NK, currency wars, escalating debt...