Saturday, March 28, 2015

Paul Craig Roberts – The United States Is Broke And Europe Looks To China As Insane U.S. Policymakers Push For War

With people around the world worried about the escalating conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, today former U.S. Treasury official, Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, warned King World News that the United States is broke and Europe is looking to China as insane U.S. policymakers push for war.
Eric King:  “Dr. Roberts, the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has made tremendous inroads (with the Europeans).  As you know, the UK, France, Italy, etc, joined.  Countries are leaving the United States in droves here and looking to the East and saying, ‘Look, we understand you are protesting Washington DC, but we don’t hear you because we have to be part of this (AIIB) — your thoughts on that.”

Dr. Paul Craig Roberts:  “That’s another example of where the world has decided that serving Washington doesn’t pay.  And so the kind of enslaved, vassalage behavior of other governments toward Washington seems to be drawing to an end….

“The Chinese will succeed in this, primarily because they’re the ones who have the money. 
KWN:PENTO - Have Governments & Central Banks Bankrupted The West (sorry we're broke)
The Fed Just Prints Money
The United States is broke.  The only way the United States has any money is the Fed prints it.  And the only reason that they can do that and get away with it is because the dollar has been the (world’s) reserve currency.
But it looks like the United States has so abused that role that we increasingly see movements away from the dollar.  We have the BRIC’s, representing 40 – 50 percent of the population of the earth, settling their trade balances between themselves in their own currencies.  We see the Chinese and the Russians settling in their own currencies, with energy trading no longer (being traded between them) in dollars.  This movement will continue.
KWN Roberts II 3:28:2015
China To See Strong Growth For At Least Another 50 Years
People look to China and they see it’s got by far the largest reserves in the world and that their economy on a purchasing parity basis is now larger than the American one.  And this has just begun.  China has hardly begun developing its own internal domestic market.  So the growth of China can go on for another half century.
"These People Are Insane"
So the world sees that the United States is a bully, that serving the United States doesn’t pay, the power is shifting and the world is going to move with it.  The trouble with Americans is that we have these crazed neocons in office and in control of foreign policy.  These people are essentially insane and they are capable of producing a nuclear war. KWN has now released the incredible audio interview with Dr. Paul Craig Roberts where he discusses the conflict in Yemen, the war in Ukraine, one of the greatest crises the world has ever faced, and much more. You can listen to it by CLICKING HERE OR ON THE IMAGE BELOW.
***ALSO JUST RELEASED: Andrew Maguire – Letter Exposes HSBC Vault Closures As War In Gold Continues To Rage CLICK HERE
KWN Roberts mp3 3:28:2015

Andrew Maguire – Letter Exposes HSBC Vault Closures As War In Gold Continues To Rage

With continued turmoil around the globe, today London metals trader Andrew Maguire spoke with King World News about a letter from a sub-custodian exposing the HSBC vault closures as the war in gold continues to rage.

War In The Gold Market Continues To Rage
Andrew Maguire:  "Eric here we are once again witnessing the collusive commercial game of rigging options expiry price levels.  We saw this rigging yesterday, with additional rollover gaming today, that is flying completely in the face of very strong safe haven physical demand.  There are significant profits to be made for the bullion banks at options expiry, so these banks simply disregard the strong physical market and jam paper gold prices to whatever price benefits them. 
This is the sort of short-sighted synthetically-driven behavior that has allowed gold to flow out of the West and into the East at bargain prices.  We have now reached a point of divergence in the paper markets that they are no longer credible.  Everything we see now evidences this….

"The cobasis and backwardations also confirm what I am seeing on our wholesale platform, with very large non-traditional physical interest that wasn't there just one year ago.  All other inputs indicate a very tight physical market and ultimately futures prices will have to factor these in.
So what’s different about these conditions?  Why won’t this paper tail wagging the physical dog continue as it has in the past when we have had also strong physical demand?  The key thing here is that the physical markets are now changing continents and are increasingly out of the control of the Western bullion banks.
King World News - Serious Questions Surround Germany's Alleged Repatriation Of 120 Tonnes Of Gold
German Gold Repatriation
Long before Germany sought to repatriate its gold reserves, China knew the Western central banks had rehypothecated their reserves.  China was aware that the related bullion banks, who have gold accounts at the Bank of England, were grossly mismatched to the underlying physical assets.  So the Chinese knew that by employing a strategy of stealthy accumulation, not just though the LBMA, they could rely on the Western central banks' continued interventions in the gold market to cap the rise of the price of gold. 
This gave China the perfect opportunity to accumulate large amounts of physical gold without disturbing the market, while at the same time quietly divesting U.S. assets, without driving the price of gold higher.  Eric it’s this simple:  Selling gold means you are long the dollar, so the recent dollar strength has given the People's Bank of China (PBOC) the perfect window to divest these worthless dollars for real gold.
China's Grand Strategy
China has now accumulated enough physical gold that they are nearing the point where they will seek to revalue the price of gold significantly higher.  This is now obvious as they are openly putting up billboards about a gold-backed global RMB currency (see below).  
KWN Maguire II 3:27:2015
Eric, you and I talked about this 2 years ago, but now we have reached the inflection point where China is close to revaluing gold significantly higher, which will be an earth-shaking event.  They will do this by surprising global markets when they announce their real reserves.  This will be the knockout punch that floors the Western paper market game, run by the LBMA Ponzi participants.  
There is only one backdoor for these Western bullion banks and that is a cash settlement.  The only question is:  Are investors properly positioned for this earth-shaking announcement?  I have been warning everyone I know to allocate aggressively into physical gold, outside of the LBMA bullion banking system.
China Now Making The Rules
The western central banks have cornered themselves, realizing too late that the PBOC have stealthily dislodged the western central bank's golden anchor.  The PBOC has already gained this major victory and is already implementing the next phase of a divide and rule strategy, drawing in non-U.S. Western central banks such as Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Australia, Luxembourg and several others, into the new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).  The Chinese are now setting the rules, and the U.S. is demonstrating how it views China as an enemy by opposing this Chinese initiative, viewing it as a shot across its hegemony bow.  Well, that's exactly what it is.
The PBOC has established China as the global hub for trading gold bullion.  As soon as the Chinese fix is launched, it will challenge the paper-centric markets such as London and the United States.  The new physical facing exchange is also going to be launched next month.  This new exchange will both influence and be influenced by the Asian physical market fixes, unlike the joke of a London dilutive paper settled fix.
Trouble For The LBMA And Comex
The bottom line here is this arbitrage will force the LBMA/Comex exchanges to either become obsolete, or radically alter their platforms.  I still see a cash settlement as the only way out, to save the mismatched too-big-to-fail Western bullion banks from collapse.  Of course this will reset the price of gold significantly higher, as gold seeks to establish its true market price, free of Western price suppression.  Sentiment will see as few specs invested in gold as possible when this cash settlement is effected, so we are most likely closing in on this historic event now."
KWN Maguire I 3:10:2015
Silence From HSBC
Eric King:  "Andrew, King World News has made 5 phone calls to HSBC, but so far HSBC has refused to issue any public statement or press release regarding the closure of their 7 vaults in London.  If you look at the letter below, it was made public by an individual at Quilter Cheviot, one of the largest asset management companies in Europe, with roots dating back to 1771 (see below):
KWN Maguire I 3:27:2015
Eric King continues:  "That letter was from a sub-custodian storing gold bullion for clients in HSBC vaults.  In the letter they state that 'HSBC Bank Plc are closing all their vaults,' and that the vault closures are forcing them to relocate their gold stock.  From the letter:
"We wish to inform you that HSBC Bank Plc are closing all their vaults including 31 Holborn, London EC1N 2HR.  Therefore we shall be moving all the above-mentioned stock by Secured Delivery to new vaults in April 2015 to the address below."
Maguire:  "There was some misinformation released this week by an individual who acted as a mouthpiece for HSBC.  We already covered the correct HSBC information in our March 10th KWN interview.  Regardless, as you can see from the letter, clearly this has to do with HSBC vault closures, not just 'retail safe deposit boxes.'  Also, faced with only two months notice, some clients did in fact choose to sell their gold, rather than face the logistics and expense of moving it."

Santelli Stunned As Janet Yellen Admits "Cash Is Not A Store Of Value"

Intended warning or unintended slip? After Alan Greenspan's confessional admission that
"Gold is a currency. It is still, by all evidence, a premier currency. No fiat currency, including the dollar, can match it,"
we found it remarkable that during the Q&A after her speech today that Janet Yellen, when asked about negative rates, admitted that
"cash in not a very convenient store of value,"
seemingly hinting at Bernanke's helicopter and that there will be no deflation in The US ever...  
Rick Santelli then sums it all up perfectly...  
"deflation is clearly the boogeyman... and the only thing that will save the middle class."
*  *  *
Yellen: "cash is not a convenient store of value"
* * *
So if cash is not a very convenient store of value... what is? Biotechs? As Rick Santelli explains... this is the scariest thing she has ever said...
Santelli: "deflation is the boogeyman... and the only thing that can save the middle class is lower prices"

Default Risk Soars After Ukraine's 'American' FinMin Suggests Severe Haircuts For Creditors (Including Russia)

When money managers talk outside their narrow field, nonsense is guaranteed to ensue. No better example than this Bloomberg piece on Ukraine’s ‘debt restructuring’ plans, which are as much a political tool as they are anything else at all. Ukraine’s American Finance Minister has announced a broad restructuring plan with a wide range of severe haircuts for creditors, and she – well, obviously – wishes to include Russia in the group of creditors who are about to get their heads shaved.
And despite all obvious angles to the issue that are not purely economical, Bloomberg presents a whole array of finance professionals who are free to spout their entirely irrelevant opinions on the topic. If you didn’t know any better, you’d be inclined to think that perhaps Russia is indeed just another creditor to Kiev.
As Ukraine begins bond-restructuring talks, it finds itself face-to-face with a familiar foe: Russia. President Vladimir Putin bought $3 billion of Ukrainian bonds in late 2013. The cash was meant to support an ally, then-President Yanukovych.
That is, for starters, a far too narrow way of putting it. Russia simply wanted to make sure Ukraine would remain a stable nation, both politically and economically, because A) it didn’t want a failed state on its borders and B) it wanted to ensure a smooth transfer of its gas sales to Europe through the Ukraine pipeline systems. Whether that would be achieved through Yanukovych or someone else was a secondary issue. Putin was never a big fan of the former president, but at least he kept the gas flowing.
While his government fell just two months later, Russia was left with the securities. Now, those holdings take on an added importance as Putin’s stance on the debt talks could affect the terms that all other bondholders get in the restructuring. Russia, which is Ukraine’s second-biggest bondholder, has maintained that it won’t take part in any restructuring deal. Here are the three most likely tacks – as seen by money managers and analysts – that Putin’s government could pursue.
Here’s the biggest issue here, one which Bloomberg conveniently omits. Not only was Russia left with the securities after the Maidan coup (or revolution if you must), but the money provided through them to Ukraine began to be used to organize and fund various battalions and other groups, thrown together into a Kiev ‘army’, that started aiming for and at the Russian speaking population in East Ukraine. 6000 of them did not survive this.
The same would have happened in Crimea (Moscow is convinced of this) had not Putin made it part of Russia before that could happen. Do note that one of the very first decrees issued by US installed PM Yatsenyuk and his ‘cabinet’ was one that banned Russian to be used as an official language by millions of people who speak only Russian. That Yats withdrew the decree within a week didn’t matter anymore, the game was on right then and there.
Ukraine, after gaining a lifeline from the IMF, included Russia’s bond among the 29 securities and enterprise loans it seeks to renegotiate with creditors before June. Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko has promised not to give any creditor special treatment. The revamp will include a reduction in the coupon, an extension in maturities as well as a cut in the face value, she said.

Russian Deputy Finance Minister Sergey Storchak said March 17 that the nation isn’t taking part in the debt negotiations because it’s an “official” creditor, not a private bondholder. If the Kremlin maintains this view, it would be “negative” for private bondholders as “other investors will be more tempted to hold out as well,” according to Marco Ruijer at ING. He predicts a 45% chance of a hold out, while Michael Ganske at Rogge in London says it’s 70%.
Here’s where we get into la-la land, with money managers speaking out on things they don’t know anything about. Which can then be used to lead up to a goal-seeked conclusion, as we will see. Because of the situation I painted above, Russia cannot and will not take part in the ‘debt negotiations’ the west tries to shove down its throat through Jaresko’s restructuring plans.
If only because as soon as the restructuring has given Kiev some financial breathing space, is will use it to reinforce its troops and go after its Russian speaking compatriots again. It’s a not a finance issue at all, it’s life and death, and that makes percentages thrown around by money guys behind desks in high rises not just futile, but positively inane.
There is little precedence of sovereigns and private bondholders taking part in the same talks, given that a nation’s debt considerations include a “foreign-policy dimension,” according to Matthias Goldmann at the Max Planck Institute in Heidelberg, Germany. Ukraine and Russia may need to find an “appropriate forum,” such as the Paris Club, for separate negotiations, he said.

Holding out can lead to two outcomes: Russia gets paid back in full after the notes mature in December, or Ukraine defaults. The former option is politically unacceptable in Kiev, according to Tim Ash at Standard Bank, while the latter would likely start litigation and delay the borrower’s return to foreign capital markets, which Jaresko expects in 2017. “Russia will be holdouts, to try and force a messy restructuring,” Ash said by e-mail on March 19.
No, Russia is not interested in a ‘messy restructuring’.

It will simply refuse to throw Kiev’s aggression against its own people a lifeline, and it will insist on finding that “appropriate forum”, instead of the one Jaresko tries to force it into. Russia will demand to be paid in full, and if that means a Ukraine default, it is fine with that. Don’t forget that the $3 billion in bonds is by no means the only debt Ukraine owes Moscow. There are many billions in unpaid gas purchases, and undoubtedly many other bills.
If Russia holds out and litigates, there is a “real threat” that Ukraine will deem the Eurobond an odious debt, Lutz Roehmeyer at Landesbank Berlin said.

This refers to a legal theory that a nation shouldn’t be forced to repay international obligations if they don’t serve the best interests of the country and its citizens.
Nice theory. Why don’t we have Greece use it too? Russia would obviously never accept this. At the very minimum, gas would stop flowing through Ukraine to Europe.
The chance of Russia joining the talks is about 10%, according to ING’s Ruijer and Rogge’s Ganske. If Russia joins it would be “somewhat positive as all investors will be treated equally, and then it can be resolved quicker,” Ruijer said.
These guys really have no idea what’s going on. They see the planet exclusively in dollar terms. And they have no idea why they said 10%, might as well have been 5% or 25%. Hot air.
Bank of America said in a note last week that Ukraine will seek a principal reduction of about 35% in its opening salvo, which may be rejected by creditors. It said that bond valuations around 40 cents on the dollar, indicate a probability of a 20% reduction in principal as well as a reduction in interest rates.

Ukraine’s benchmark 2017 dollar notes traded at 37.8 cents on the dollar on Thursday.
Sounds like things in the real world are already much worse than in BoA notes.
“By participating in the talks, Russia would have a better chance of getting a deal it wants,” Liza Ermolenko at Capital Economics, said. “However, it seems that politics, rather than economics, will be behind whatever Russia decides to do.”
No kidding, Liza.
There is no collective-agreement clause which could make any deal binding for Russia, Anna Gelpern, a Georgetown law professor, said.
And there we get to the core of the matter. If Jaresko wants to force anything on Russia, she’ll have to move outside of the law. Which I’m sure she, and the US cabal that rules Kiev, would be more than willing to do, but it would mean a default no matter what happens, simply because time is of the essence, and the issue would drag on for a long time.
The restructuring of each bond must be agreed to by a majority of its holders, according to Olena Zubchenko, a lawyer at Lavrynovych & Partners, a legal adviser to Ukraine during the bond issue to Russia in December 2013. The Eurobonds are governed by English law and traded on the Dublin Exchange. The Russian bond has a covenant allowing the holder to call it if Ukraine’s public debt tops 60% of economic output, which the IMF said took place last year.
Another noteworthy detail: Russia could have called the bonds quite a while ago, but has so far decided against that. They could still do it at any moment, though. And since the IMF has approved another loan to Ukraine recently, and Capitol Hill has agreed to send deadly offensive weapons to Kiev, they have good reason to do it. The Jaresko idea of ‘we will saddle you with losses, so we can go kill more Russian speaking people’ will certainly not appeal to Moscow, not will it be condoned.
“It’s a kind of nuclear option, evaporating their leverage,” Rogge’s Ganske said. “If Russia accelerates, then Ukraine has to pay or default on it — i.e. game over.”
This bond issue is of course just one of many ways in which the west seeks to aggravate Russia. If and/or when the US starts shipping arms to Kiev, and the internal civil war restarts, Russia will have to take measures. Which is exactly what the west has been trying to provoke it to do for at least a full year now. It is therefore Russia’s task to find those measures that take ‘the other side’ by surprise and leaves it scrambling for answers.
Over the past year and change, after the Kiev putsch and the subsequent aggression on the side of the newly installed ‘government’ against its own citizens in East Ukraine, Russia has always insisted on talking about the EU and US as its ‘partners’, even as the language thrown at it deteriorated at a rapid clip. It must already be about a year ago that Hillary Clinton first referred to Putin as Hitler. As for the anti-Moscow utterances by the Kiev ‘government’, let’s not even go there.
The Russians have shown recently that they understand very well what the intentions are behind the NATO build-up and all the hollow accusations and innuendo in the western media. They have also made clear that they are ready and prepared to activate any and all defense systems, including nuclear, at their disposal.
Russia sees the world as one in which multiple major powers can govern together. The US sees Russia as a power that must be defeated by any means necessary, and subdued. One of these worldviews must prevail in the end. Perhaps we won’t know which one that will be until the third power, China, raises its voice. What we do know is that Russia will back down only so far, and then it will no more.

Peak Gold? Goldman Calculates There Is Only 20 Years Of Gold Supply Left

Late last year, when looking at a Goldcorp slideshow, we noticed something surprising: the gold miner had forecast that 2015 would be the year when gold production would peak among the mining industry.

To be sure Goldcorp was really just pitching its own balance sheet, and was more focused on its far more levered gold-mining competitors going out of business...
... and hence facilitating "peak production" this year as one after another producer is forced to file for bankruptcy, than actually making a statement on how much gold remains to be mined in the ground. Because the last thing even the most healthy gold miner, with the lowest production cost wants, is to face a world in which their primary commodity is running out.
Which may just be this world.
According to a report issued by Goldman's Eugene King looking at commodity scarcity, the chart below "shows that there are only 20 years of known mineable reserves of gold and diamonds."
Some futher observations on gold and scarcity in general from Goldman:
The combination of very low concentrations of metals in the Earth’s curst, and very few high-quality deposits, means some things are truly scarce. Perhaps unsurprisingly, these are the so-called precious metals (and diamonds), and that their value is derived from the fact they are rare.

Their relatively scarcity, and the market’s belief that new discoveries will be limited, is what drives the price of these super rare commodities. Take diamonds as perhaps the most extreme example. A diamond has very little intrinsic value. Its value is determined by a belief that it is rare and, for a natural diamond, unique.

Gold has been used as a measure of wealth for more than 4,000 years, as the ancient Egyptians soon worked out that gold was not only shiny and heavy, but rare.
Of course, this analysis is meaningless in a vacuum: if the "known reserves" of gold plunge in the coming decade, no matter how many gold futures and GLD short sales are conducted by the BIS, the price will have to go up, and it will go up high enough to where a new surge of gold miners will come online and find thousands of new tons of gold reserves around the globe.
Unless they don't, and Goldman is correct that "peak gold" may have arrived. This will be even more true if over the coming years the long overdue fiat economic panic finally washes over the globe, and a revulsion toward central bank policies forces a scramble into gold whose value (if not price since fiat currencies will be redundant) soars.
The answer is unclear, but what is certain is that like the price of oil over the past decade and until last fall when price discovery finally became somwhat credible, what happens in the physical realm has absolutely zero marginal impact on the price of commodity which has about 100 ounces in deliverable paper contracts for every ounce in underlying. It will be only after the gold price distortions via the derivative market are eliminated that such trivial price-formation forces as supply and demand are once again relevant.

Hans-Werner Sinn Fears Europe's "Very Messy" Easy-Money Endgame

The euro has brought a balance-of-payments crisis to Europe, just as the gold standard did in the 1920s. In fact, there is only one difference between the two episodes: During today’s crisis, huge international rescue packages have been available.
These rescue packages have relieved the eurozone’s financial distress, but at a high cost. Not only have they enabled investors to avoid paying for their poor decisions; they have also given overpriced southern European countries the opportunity to defer real depreciation in the form of a reduction of relative prices of goods. This is necessary to restore the competitiveness that was destroyed in the euro’s initial years, when it caused excessive inflation.
Indeed, for countries like Greece, Portugal, or Spain, regaining competitiveness would require them to lower the prices of their own products relative to the rest of the eurozone by about 30%, compared to the beginning of the crisis. Italy probably needs to reduce its relative prices by 10-15%. But Portugal and Italy have so far failed to deliver any such “real depreciation,” while relative prices in Greece and Spain have fallen by only 8% and 6%, respectively.
Revealingly, of all the crisis countries, only Ireland managed to turn the corner. The reason is obvious: its bubble already burst at the end of 2006, before any rescue funds were available. Ireland was on its own, so it had no option but to implement massive austerity measures, reducing its product prices relative to other eurozone countries by 13% from peak to trough. Today, Ireland’s unemployment rate is falling dramatically, and its manufacturing sector is booming.
In relative terms, Greece received most of Europe’s bailout money and showed the largest increase in unemployment. The official loans granted to the country by the European Central Bank and the international community have increased more than sixfold during the past five years, from €53 billion ($58 billion) in February 2010 to €324 billion, or 181% of GDP, now. Nevertheless, the unemployment rate has more than doubled, from 11% to 26%.
There are four possible economic and policy responses to this state of affairs. First, Europe could become a transfer union, with the north giving more and more credit to the south and later waiving it. Second, the south can deflate. Third, the north can inflate. And, fourth, countries that are no longer competitive can exit Europe’s monetary union and depreciate their new currency.
Each path is associated with serious complicationsThe first creates a permanent dependence on transfers, which, by sustaining relative prices, prevents the economy from regaining competitiveness. The second path drives many debtors in crisis countries into bankruptcy. The third expropriates the creditor countries of the north. And the fourth may cause contagion effects via capital markets, possibly forcing policymakers to introduce capital controls, as in Cyprus in 2013.
European politics has focused so far on providing public credit to the crisis countries at near-zero interest rates, which eventually may morph into transfers. But now the ECB is attempting to break the impasse through quantitative easing (QE). The ECB’s stated goal is to reflate the eurozone, thereby reducing the euro’s external value, by purchasing more than €1.1 trillion worth of assets. According to ECB President Mario Draghi, the inflation rate, which currently stands at just below 0%, is to be raised to an average of just below 2%.
This would offer southern European countries a way out of their competitiveness trap, because if prices remained unchanged in the south, while the northern countries inflated, the southern countries could gradually reduce their goods’ relative prices without feeling too much pain. Of course, in that case the north needs to inflate faster than by just 2%.
If, say, southern Europe kept its inflation rate at 0% and France inflated at a rate of 1%, Germany would have to inflate by a good 4%, and the rest of the eurozone at 2% annually, to reach a eurozone average of slightly less than 2%. This pattern would have to continue for about ten years to bring the eurozone back into balance. At that point, Germany’s price level would be about 50% higher than it is today.
I do expect QE to bring about some inflation. Given that an exchange rate is the relative price of a currency, as more euros come into circulation, their value has to fall substantially to establish a new equilibrium in the currency market. Experience with similar programs in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan has shown that QE unleashes powerful forces of depreciation. QE in the eurozone will thus bring about the inflation that Draghi wants via higher import and export prices. Whether this effect will be sufficient to revitalize southern Europe remains to be seen.
There is a risk that Japan, China, and the US will not sit on their hands while the euro loses value, with the world possibly even sliding into a currency war. Moreover, the southern EU countries, instead of leaving prices unchanged, could abandon austerity and issue an ever greater volume of new bonds to stimulate the economy. Competitiveness gains and rebalancing would fail to materialize, and, after an initial flash in the pan, the eurozone would return to permanent crisis. The euro, finally and fully discredited, would then meet a very messy end.
One can only hope that this scenario does not come to pass, and that the southern countries stay the course of austerity. This is their last chance.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Gerald Celente: “COLLAPSE: IT’S COMING! ARE YOU READY?”

Gerald Celente: “COLLAPSE: IT’S COMING! ARE YOU READY?”

Trend forecaster Gerald Celente of the Trends Journal advises subscribers of his quarterly newsletter that the collapse is on it’s way and will become apparent to the population of the entire world in short order.
While pundits argue over whether or not a double dip recession is coming, many on the street have finally begun to realize that another recession is the least of our problems.
Via Gerald Celente’s
Everything is not all right. And things are going to get worse … much worse. The economy is on the threshold of calamity. Wars are spreading like wildfires. The world is on a razor’s edge.
Not so, say world leaders and mainstream media experts. Yes, there are problems, but the financiers and politicians are aware of them. Policies are already in place and measures are being taken to correct them.
Whether it’s failing economies, intractable old wars or raging new wars, the word from the top always maintains that steady progress is being made and comforts the populace with assurances that the brightest minds and the sharpest generals are in charge and on the case. On all fronts, success is certain and victory is at hand. Only “patience” is required … along with more men, more time and more money.

 As far as these “leaders” and their media are concerned, the only opinions that count come from a stable of thoroughbred experts, official sources and political favorites. Only they have the credentials to speak with authority and provide trustworthy forecasts. That they are consistently, if not invariably, wrong apparently does nothing to diminish their credibility.
How can any thinking adult possibly imagine that the same central bankers, financiers and politicians responsible for creating the economic crisis are capable of resolving it?
Yet even in the face of their proven failures and gross incompetence, anyone daring to challenge the party line or the conventional wisdom is dismissed as an “alarmist,” “fear monger,” or “gloom-and-doomer.”
…with the Dow on a down trend and the economic data increasingly pointing in the direction of Depression, Washington and Wall Street remain in denial. The only debate among the “experts” is whether or not a “double dip” recession is likely.
However, for the man on the street – pummeled by falling wages, higher prices, intractable unemployment, rising taxes and punitive “austerity measures” – “Depression,” not “recession,” and certainly not “prosperity,” is just around the corner.
Trend Forecast: The wars will proliferate and civil unrest will intensify. As we forecast, the youth-inspired revolts that first erupted in North Africa and the Middle East are now breaking out in Europe
Given the trends in play and the people in power, economic collapse at some level is inevitable. Governments and central banks will be unrelenting in their determination to wring every last dollar, pound or euro from the people through taxes while confiscating public assets (a.k.a. privatization) in order to cover bad bets made by banks and financiers.
When the people have been bled dry financially and have nothing left to give, blood will flow on the streets.

We’ve been saying it for over two years, and we maintain our position today – this is a depression. No amount of government machination is going to fix the fundamental problems within the financial, economic, monetary and political systems of our country. Nature will force balance one way or the other. And nature, as we have come to learn in recent months, can be very brutal.
Make no mistake. We are in as serious a time today as any in the last century. While we may not be directly engaged in a World War, it is not that far off. Analysts often speak of the engagements in the middle east as four separate wars (Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, and now Yemen). We may be engaged in conflict across four different borders, but there is only one war – and it will soon expand. It’s only a matter of time before China and Russia get involved. Look at the middle east and you’ll clearly see this is a battle for resources and regional dominance. Chinese state owned companies have had to withdraw 30,000 employees from the Libyan oil fields. Ownership, it seems, has now been granted to the “rebels.” Similar activities, though hidden from the view of the masses, are occuring all over the world. How long before the Chinese, the Russians and others take a real stand – a military stand?
Even if we were to avoid global war, which is doubtful in the long-term, the fact that the super majority of the world’s population is broke and going hungry means that rioting, revolution and bloody civil wars cannot be avoided. If you still believe that the powers that be, those politicians who are in bed with the very financiers and military industrial complex that is robbing us blind and pushing us towards war, have your interests at heart, then you need to have your head examined. It’s time to be blunt. You either get it, or you don’t.
The United States of America, as well as the world, will be unrecognizable as it exists today within the next decade.
We offer the same advice that Mr. Celente has offered:
…it has to be treated as if you are preparing for battle; expect the unexpected and prepare for the worst, which in these perilous times could be a declaration of economic martial law. Banks may close, currencies may be devalued and deposit withdrawals may be imposed. Remember Gerald Celente’s basic survival strategy, “GC’s Three G’s: Guns, Gold and a Getaway plan.”

http://beforeitsnews.com/self-sufficiency/2015/03/gerald-celente-collapse-its-coming-are-you-ready-2488300.html