Welcome to The Daily Reckoning

Brought to you by Agora Financial.com
Read The Daily ReckoningRead The Daily Reckoning ArchivesRead The Daily Reckoning Media SectionRead The Daily Reckoning Events SectionRead The Daily Reckoning ColumnistsDaily Reckoning Gold PageThe Daily Reckoning Disscussion BoardSearch ButtonFri Aug 29, 2008
Sign Up for The Daily Reckoning - it's Free!

 

For Immediate Release
January 3, 2006
Contact: Kate Incontrera, 410 454-0417 or kincontrera@dailyreckoning.com

www.dailyreckoning.com: The World's Central Banks Must Keep Buying Gold

Baltimore, MD - As central banks around the world consider bolstering their gold reserves, one analyst says their only choice is to buy more. And prices will continue setting records as a result.

Gold prices have already soared thanks in part to rumors and announcements from central banks. Last week the metal jumped $6 an ounce in a single day after China Galaxy Securities Co., China's largest brokerage firm, suggested the Chinese government should add as much as 2,400 tonnes to its reserves. This follows announcements that the Russian and South African central banks would like to increase their gold reserves as well.

According to Justice Litle, a commodity market analyst and frequent contributor to The Daily Reckoning, this trend will continue for some time. And it has nothing to do with the supply-and-demand fundamentals of gold.

"Central banks around the world are sitting on mountains of U.S. dollars," Litle explains. "While Americans might consider that a pile of assets, foreign leaders can only see it as a giant pile of liabilities."

As he points out, the U.S. government alone faces a $331 billion budget deficit while Americans are sitting on $2.1 trillion of debt.

"The deeper into debt America goes, the less value its currency becomes," says Litle. Faced with a large supply of a wasting asset, countries "would be crazy not to shovel it into gold as fast as they can."

Litle believes we can expect to see more central banks adding to their gold holdings in the months ahead. And since the world's central banks have such a big influence on the gold price, we can expect the gold price to shoot up as a result.

"This gold rally could have some very long legs," Litle says.

For more from Justice Litle, see http://www.dailyreckoning.com

Brought to you by Agora Financial, and written by the NY Times bestselling authors, Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin, The Daily Reckoning is a daily, free e-letter that weaves information about the financial world, investing and everyday life into an educational and entertaining format that has been engaging their readers for over six years.

SOURCE www.dailyreckoning.com

####

Sign Up for The Daily Reckoning - it's Free!

The Daily Reckoning is Global 

The Daily Reckoning Bookstore

Empire of Debt - A Top Ten Must-Read of the Year

Empire of Debt 
A Top Ten Must-Read Book of the Year

"
tells you what's really going on."
- The Economist

Check out the Recommended
Reading List for more Great Titles!


HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.

The Daily Reckoning Marketplace

The Best Advice
and Commentary Available.


Free E-letters

The Daily Reckoning Market Place
 
Podcasts Now Available!
The Daily Reckoning Podcast Library
Subscribe to The Daily Reckoning Podcast on iTunes

Subscribe to RSS Feed
What is RSS? 
RSS via FeedBurner Try our News Feed!

The Mogambo Guru News Feed


  The Daily Reckoning RSS Feed  
My Yahoo! - Add The Daily Reckoning
               Add to Google Homepage               
Bookmark The Daily Reckoning with Del.icio.us
Add The Daily Reckoning To MyMSN
Add The Daily Reckoning to MyAOL
   

Take Our Web Site Survey

~~~~~~~~~~

Agora Financial

Home    |   Who We Are  |    Reader Services   |   Resources   |   Whitelist Us    |   Contact Us   |  Privacy  |  Search  |  Site Map

Customer Service: 1-888-897-9576  
Copyright © 2000-2007 Agora Financial LLC.  All Rights Reserved.  The content of this
site may not be redistributed without the express written consent of Agora, Inc.  Individual essays on this site may be republished,
but only with full attribution of both the author and The Daily Reckoning and the inclusion of a URL to http://www.dailyreckoning.com.