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>First, as we noted recently, despite the recent price slide in paper precious metals markets, physical demand (and prices) remain extremely high...

https://pic8.co/sh/7Gx9cV.jpeg

>But, as we detailed earlier today, central banks bought 399 tons of bullion in the third quarter, almost double the previous record, according to the World Gold Council.

https://pic8.co/sh/999lse.jpeg

...

>Simply put, the analysis on duration shows that gold is a relatively safe place to be in the currency cycle... and maybe the whales are moving Or, more ominously, perhaps the mystery whales know something (or fear something) that western nations prefer not to consider about the new world order?

>>First, as we noted recently, despite the recent price slide in paper precious metals markets, physical demand (and prices) remain extremely high... https://pic8.co/sh/7Gx9cV.jpeg >>But, as we detailed earlier today, central banks bought 399 tons of bullion in the third quarter, almost double the previous record, according to the World Gold Council. https://pic8.co/sh/999lse.jpeg ... >>Simply put, the analysis on duration shows that gold is a relatively safe place to be in the currency cycle... and maybe the whales are moving Or, more ominously, perhaps the mystery whales know something (or **fear** something) that western nations prefer not to consider about the new world order?

(post is archived)

[–] [deleted] 2 pts

It’s funny how US Twitter users complain about $8 per month to be verified on Twitter yet every US taxpayer pays $10,40 in interest payments per day on US Govt debt.

That’s just for interest payments. That’s not even paying to reduce any of the rapidly increasing debt.

[–] 2 pts

My bet is on the chinamen.

Glad that I bought a lot of gold when it was $32~$36 per ounce, back in the day. Plus the gold that my dad brought back from the Pacific Theater after WW2. Took a while to melt down over 3,000 gold teeth from dead japs.