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IMF or Chinese Gold?
Research for Online Investors
by John Dalt
3/12/10
Has China bought the IMF
gold?
On March
9th, Pravda carried
the headline “IMF sells 191 tons of
gold.”
The gold market did not
respond.
This was the remainder of the
‘mother-lode’ of gold that needed to be removed from the
marketplace and supply. India bought most the first half of the
403.3 tonnes of gold the IMF had to sell in the fall of
2009. News of the
India sale sent gold higher on strong
buying. Is the
headline correct? Or is it as accurate as the “news” that
appeared in Pravda during the dark ages of
communism?
We don’t know, as there is no
other confirmation available. We checked China Daily and Global Times
but found no mention of the
purchase.

China inflation hit a 16-month
high last month at a 2.7% year-over-year
increase.
China’s National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) tried to reassure markets, “…price rises this
year will be moderate and
controllable.”
The government has set a
target of 3% for consumer inflation in
2010.
The NBS showed fixed asset
investment rose 26.6% in the first two months of the
year. Exports jumped
45.7% in February over February last
year.
Industrial output was up
20.7% since the beginning of the year. You can read the complete news story
“China’s CPI rises 2.7% in February on seasonal
factors.”
China is building a high-speed
rail system inside the country and coordinating with 17 other
countries to extend the lines into Europe and
Asia.
The international rail network
will eventually tie 81,000 kilometers of railways
together.
Discrepancies in technical
standards of different countries must be addressed before the
new “silk road” becomes a
reality.

The U.S. budget deficit for
February was $220.9 billion, the largest monthly total in
history.
Larger than a handful of years
during wars and economic upheaval. We did it all in one
month.
Last year the U.S.
government borrowed one dollar out of every two dollars
it spent. Last month the U.S. borrowed two
dollars out of every three dollars
spent!
Revenue was $107 billion,
expenditures $328 billion. Where are the violin
players? We might as well have music while the
ship sinks.
Maybe today's article is a
synopsis why our government is rushing to
socialism.
China is growing, has a trade
surplus, and building bullet trains to Europe while trying to
hold back growth with tighter lending
standards.
The U.S. is borrowing more and
more money every month, and trying to pass laws that will
require more spending. We are pumping money into banks so they will
loan it to business. Business doesn’t want to go in debt with a
cloudy future. Who knows what the next government
restriction, regulation or tax will be on
success?
This may make sense, if you are a
world improver
bureaucrat.
''Life's
tough... it's even tougher if you're
stupid.''--John
Wayne
The information presented in this
newsletter is based on generally
available news releases, corporate filings, current events,
interviews and the editor’s
opinions.
It may contain errors and
you should not make investment decisions based solely on
what you believe you have read here. Do your own research, it is your
money.
If you lose it, it is your
responsibility, not ours or your
grandmothers! The editor may or may not have a
position in any securities discussed. The editor may have held a position in a
security earlier, or in the
future.
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