China’s Master Plan To Create A New World Order Amidst The  Global Chaos-
Today you decide. Find the truth vs  facts that there really is a widespread series of "race to the bottom" &  China appears to be ahead in this race too.
Since September 21, 2012 we knew of  the 'planned event' to bring on . . 
“In fact, I believe more money will be  lost (and  made) in the 18 months following September 21,  2012, this coming event, than ever before.  “
                                                                                                                           ~ James Dale Davidson
 
I am talking to them, they, us,  him, she, & you! Talking about money, money, money, money. Life happens & money is the one need that is up there next to oxygen. Poor people  cannot buy anything when they want it. Millions & millions of investors are  in the 'race to the bottom' & the Bonds-Pensions-Retirement Plans are to  bottom at -70% to -90%. Most do not have a clue what I am teaching you. 
Let's get our minds right! Try a  little message in music. Listen while you are reading . .  .
Money's too tight to mention  - This will bring your mind up to where I am this Barry  moment . . .
Get it right! THIS IS HOW MONEY WORKS FOR YOU & AGAINST YOU?  Know & understand this!
China’s Master Plan  To Create A New World Order Amidst The Global Chaos
Today  a legend in the business sent King World News a powerful piece  that warns amidst the global chaos, China is aggressively moving to create a New  World Order.  John Ing, who has been in the business for 43 years, also  discussed everything from the “Death Cross,” to flash crashes and China’s plans  for gold in their move to dominate the global monetary architecture.
August 28 (King World  News)  – Is China’s surprise move to weaken its currency a  step towards market reform or does it presage a widespread series of “race to  the bottom” devaluations reminiscent of the Great Depression? China joins the  Swiss National Bank (SNB) who earlier this year let the Swiss franc float freely  to protect its exports….  
Continue reading the John Ing piece  below…
Brazil too has been weakening the real for months.  China’s neighbor, Japan weakened the yen after another dose of Abenomics. And  what about the devaluations of the euro and yen as a consequence of the  quantitative easing (QE) by the European Central Bank, and the Bank of Japan  emulating of course, the Federal Reserve’s three rounds of QE which flooded the  world with cheap currency. Everywhere paper currencies are under  attack.
Money  has never been so cheap and easy to obtain. Around the world, interest rates are  near-zero and among the lowest in recorded history, much to the delight of  homeowners and investors. The easy money printed over the past eight years  fueled bubbles abroad as well as at home with speculators borrowing cheap  dollars, investing the proceeds in higher yielding securities and property from  Shanghai to Vancouver. Wild currency swings are playing out in those economics  that are strongly dependent on commodities. As a consequence, central banks have  had difficulties holding their currencies down against the dollar and  overflowing with liquidity, governments have cheapened their currencies in a  series of ‘beggar thy neighbor’ devaluations, shifting the cost for other  neighbors to bear.
We  believe that the Fed’s reluctance to pull back on the throttle, made more  cautious in an election year, increases the risk of a last stage surge in asset  prices and of course, further distortions of currencies. The Fed has a serious  problem with the deficits and an overvalued dollar. China’s devaluation does  make the much talked about Fed rate hike questionable. That prospect means that  nothing significant can be done about these global imbalances, until the United  States attacks its own problems.
Printing a  Recovery
America  enjoys the privilege of printing the world’s reserve currency which allows it to  pay its bills with its own currency and to finance its deficits by merely  generating extra dollars. Valery Giscard D’Estaing, the French finance minister  under Charles de Gaulle once called the US dollar position an “exorbitant  privilege” in describing the dollar as the central player in global trade. The  US dollar has dominated the world’s financial system since the end of the World  War II seemingly enjoying a virtual unlimited line of credit denominated in  its own currency. 
However,  today the United States has serious financial problems, owing more than they  produce, resorting to printing money and debt monetization as a means to keep  their economy rolling. Since 2008 the Federal Reserve has created more than $5  trillion from out of thin air. Over that same period, America’s debt has jumped  98 percent to $18.2 trillion from $9.2 trillion. The Fed has now created a  bubble in Treasury bonds comparable to the housing bubble a few years ago.  Worse, there is a lack of political will to take the necessary steps including  raising interest rates, boosting savings or cutting deficits. Unlike the Greeks,  America was able to bail out its financial meltdown with printed dollars instead  of hand outs and debt.
Greece’s  problem caused a rush into the dollars. Similarly, when America needed oil, it  convinced the Middle East players to take dollars. Laden with dollars, China has  recycled their hoard of Treasury certificates by buying assets, commodities and  gold after they discovered the dollar purchasing power and liquidity  problematic. With the world choking on an avalanche of dollars, other countries  too are looking for alternatives. America’s nightmare is that one of these days  those dollar holders will decide there is an alternative, another place to put  their money.
China  Challenges the Greenback
We  believe China has woken up to the risk of holding $1 trillion of overvalued  Treasuries. They have a diminished confidence in the United States running its  financial affairs, after the unprecedented financial crisis in 2008 followed by  six years of economic stagnation which required them to borrow billions of  dollars a day from abroad. In printing trillions of dollars, the United States  cheapened not only the value of the dollar but also of their mammoth debt.  America simply has become the biggest debtor in the world amounting to more than  100 percent of its annual domestic production. That dependency on outside  financing is its Achilles heel. If one includes entitlements and off the balance  sheet items, that debt rivals that of Greece with the bulk owed to  foreigners.
Instead  the Chinese believe that the dollar’s privilege is no longer “exorbitant” but  “extortionate”. Financial history is a roller coaster of ups and downs, booms  and busts, manias and panics, shortages and excesses. Today we have an excess of  leverage, a deluge of paper money, asset price bubbles and record consumer and  government debt, all financed by derivatives. To be sure we live in an  overvalued world. 
China  too has gone through its ups and down and while its stock market only makes up  less than 10 percent of its economy, China’s leaders know the value of wealth  creation and preservation, worrying lately about the renminbi and their  diminishing $3.6 trillion stockpile of foreign reserves. While the Chinese  devaluation is a warning of an impending serious crisis, the precarious US debt  position has not bothered the markets. However the Black Monday intraday 1,000  point, decline as a result of worries about China, may be the beginning of that  recognition.
China  Is Moving Aggressively To  Create A New World Order
While  the dollar is the keystone of the global monetary system, China’s growth and  rising impact on emerging markets has resulted in a dramatic decline of  cross-border transactions denominated in dollars to only 45  percent.
China’s  position as the world’s largest trader, consumer, producer and importer has  resulted in them laying the foundations for a Sino-centric financial system.  China has lately been exercising their financial firepower underlining China’s  ambitions to make the renminbi a key player in the global monetary architecture.  China is the world’s second largest economy and the devaluation was a move to  let market forces rather than “a fixed peg” decide levels. 
Toronto  was the first in North America to have convertible swap facilities allowing  direct access to the renminbi’s liquidity and a counter balance to the US  dollar. China too has created alternative institutions to mirror Western  organizations such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), Asian  Development Bank and set up free trade trading zones (FTZ). There is even talk  of building a parallel institution to the IMF. The Silk Road plan, for example,  is China’s version of the Marshall Plan.
Dollar  Power
There’s  also a strong belief of the need to build an alternative to the American  financial hegemonic banking system, which clears the payments of the world  allowing it to spread its tentacles worldwide. The dollar’s reserve position has  been Washington’s primary weapon in the past couple decades. Every institution  must use their clearing facilities and thus American law has become preeminent  in the world of finance, extending well beyond US borders. 
Last  year, American regulators have meted out over $100 billion of fines to banks,  many of them international. The Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 gave the Fed huge powers  giving it leverage over big international players. However, like most things the  once “independent” system has become politicized and abused. America’s hegemony  has allowed it to use this as a financial weapon, useful for imposing crippling  sanctions on Iran, Iraq, Cuba and Russia and even closing tax havens in  Switzerland and Cyprus.
Tied  to the US dollar for the past two decades, the renminbi has soared more than 20  percent since mid-2014 in sync with the greenback, hurting China’s economy and  exports. Hence, a correction was long overdue. The RMB’s strength was made even  worse against its Asian trading partners like Japan and Indonesia. No doubt,  China views abandoning the dollar-peg as an assist to its exporters but a more  practical reason is that a great many Chinese companies borrowed more than a  trillion dollars offshore to avoid stringent domestic lending curbs. In  defending the fixed dollar exchange rate by buying renminbi with its huge  foreign exchange reserves, China shrinks its money supply. However a devaluation  helps avoid a liquidity squeeze, keeping its money supply  flush.
China’s  ambitions to make the renminbi a reserve currency would allow it to settle their  international trade obligations with its own currency, making it easier for  payments and investments beyond the control of the United States. At one time,  Great Britain’s pound sterling was the world’s global reserve currency. Then  Britain wrote its own trade of commerce rules. London was the centre of the  world. 
However  the World Wars sapped Britain’s financial strength paving the way for the  emergence of the dollar as the replacement which saw the Fed act as the world’s  central bank. Currencies, particularly the dollar were no longer backed by gold  and the value was decided by the underlying confidence or faith in the currency.  For almost half a century, this “faith-based” greenback has survived various  booms and busts, until now. The main centre today is Beijing that now sells and  lends dollars.
China’s  Currency Ambitions
Thus  the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) consideration to include China’s  renminbi in the currency basket that makes ups its Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)  is particularly important. China has been pushing for the renminbi’s inclusion  as part of a move to internationalize the renminbi and make it acceptable as a  global currency alongside the dollar, yen, euro and sterling. The decision  however was rife with politics. The IMF reviews the currency composition every  five years and the deferment for one year gives all parties time to renegotiate  the renminbis’ entry. Politics again rules the day. The United States has  quietly blocked China’s moves asking for additional reforms despite support from  Germany and others.
Against  this backdrop, many point to the immaturity of China’s financial system and  their needing a Chinese-style plunge protection team to prop up the Chinese  stock market. Yet, we forget their efforts are similar to the policies amid the  trading halts of 2008, like the TARP and ZIRP programs and the intervention of  America’s regulators were a large part of the bailout of 2008. Just recently the  New York Stock Exchange invoked “Rule 48” which altered their rules in the face  of a big decline. The Hong Kong stock market Asian collapse in the nineties too  was bailed out by the Hong Kong Authority and securities subsequently were sold  at a profit.
Gold  Exists Outside America’s Purview
The  wild card is that gold has a role as a protection against devaluation. Gold has  moved up almost $100 an ounce since China’s devaluation and spiked further on  the global rout in stock prices. Nonetheless, there remains “mainstream”  skepticism over the “barbaric metal”, and gold’s role as an alternative to paper  money. However, as long as everyone believes that it has some value, it has  value. Today, that could not be said of the dollar. Without “trust” in the  dollar, the world has no valid reserve currency. To be sure, under the new rules  of engagement with the renminbi chipping away at the dollar’s status, there is  no question that an alternative such as gold holds  attraction.
Gold  is backed by thousands of years of history, universally held by all countries,  and in fact is already a reserve currency, as part of the SDR basket. The  languishing gold price tends to make us forget that gold is quietly emerging as  the linchpin of a handful of initiatives in Europe, Asia and Middle East. Russia  and China continue to stockpile gold. In Europe, Germany, amongst others, is  repatriating their gold holdings. In the Middle East, wars are being fought,  financed by gold. And most importantly, gold exists outside America’s  purview.
In  redrawing the world’s financial system, China, the world’s largest gold consumer  recently disclosed it boosted its gold reserves by 60 percent to 1,658 tonnes  making it the fifth largest holder of gold after US, Germany, Italy and France.  In July, China added another 19 tonnes as prices reached five year lows. We  believe gold is an important part of China’s reserves, and while last month’s  gold announcement was the first in six years, Chinese holdings are still less  than 2 percent. China may be looking at ways to insulate itself from America’s  profligate policies. Rather than peg the renminbi to the dollar, China might  prefer to peg to gold, preferring it to the dollar as a store of value. Move  over dollar, there’s a new sheriff in town.
An  Ashley Madison–like Comeuppance
Over  the past fifty years, when gold was freely traded, gold proved to be a good buy  as a hedge when all looked bleak. In the seventies, gold moved up because of  fears of inflation, doing better than stocks. In the eighties, stocks did better  and gold went down. In the last three years, gold has been in decline while  stocks have been going up. However, at a time when central banks have tried to  foster growth by aggressively printing money and racking up public debt, gold  has become an alternative investment to the dollar for central  banks.
Surprisingly  in the bubble-like market environment created by zero interest rates and zero  risk, there was not much investor anxiety. Further as the Greek negotiations  unfolded, like the other time, the can was again kicked down the road, albeit  with more debt. Noteworthy was that gold in euros was the best hedge during the  turmoil in Greece. Year to date gold has actually outpaced markets. However,  while everything looked rosy, the world changed. The Dow Jones recorded a 1,000  point decline after a “death cross”, Greece once again faces an election, the US  dollar has peaked and of course China devalued. We believe that gold has  bottomed as the dollar’s hegemony comes to an end in an Ashley Madison – like  comeuppance.
The  Chinese devaluation underlines America’s weakened financial powers to such an  extent that the US is now severely constrained in its ability to finance its  debt at home and abroad. This time it took the shock of a drop in the value of  the renminbi to remind investors of geopolitical risk. Gold is a hedge against  devaluation. There is no coincidence that gold bottomed after the Chinese  devaluation. We feel that gold’s positive fundamentals always remained. Today it  is fashionable at dinner parties to talk of condo prices. Investors will soon  talk of a weaker, not stronger dollar. That will be good for gold but bad for  the dollar. When that happens and gold then becomes the topic du jour, it will  be a sign of gold’s top. In the interim with so much fear lurking in the  investing world, gold’s second up-leg has only just begun.
Recommendations: More Bounce  for the Ounce
For  much of this year, clients have asked us, “why gold?”. The first reason is  positive supply and demand fundamentals. There is less gold coming to market  amid deepening geopolitical uncertainty. The second of course is the  aforementioned worldwide currency debasement. The third is the lack of trust in  markets, currency and the ability of central banks to manage our affairs.  
The  fourth reason is that there is a growing distinction between paper gold and  physical gold. Comex is the futures exchange where for every ounce of gold held  for delivery in the warehouses, there are 124 paper ounces or claims against  that ounce. If one wants physical gold they must line up and it is interesting  to note that Comex physical deliveries are a mere fraction of what is delivered  on the Shanghai Gold Exchange. We believe this dichotomy allows the bullion  dealers the opportunity to manipulate the gold price through their algos and  flash crashes.
Simply,  paper gold is someone else’s liabilities. Physical gold on the other hand is no  one’s liability, has no counterparty risk, nor is subject to the shenanigans on  the Comex market. For that reason, physical gold is desired by central banks and  investors alike, subject only to supply and demand. The problem is that less  gold or supply is being mined with Chinese demand increasing, acquiring physical  metal as a store of value. As a result, we’ve been in backwardation for  months.
Taking  that further, we believe that the gold miners’ in-situ gold reserves are the  miners’ major asset. And when the inevitable squeeze between physical and paper  comes, due to either questions about the bullion counterparties or in fact more  demand for physical gold that can be supplied from the Comex warehouses, the  price of gold will skyrocket. And the shares of course will be a leveraged way  to play this. We thus believe that the shares represent real value here,  particularly since the valuation of the market cap for in situ reserves are at  record lows. We also believe that some sovereign funds will want access to the  only unallocated gold in the world. Gold stocks are buys.
For  most technicians and chartists, Fibonacci’s measured moves are a useful  indicator of direction. In August, gold retraced to $1,088, the Fibonacci 50  percent support level. The age old Fibonacci sequence retracement often, but not  always occur at three levels: 38 percent, 50 percent and 62 percent. The 50  percent support level is usually key support and a level from which there is a  tendency for a reversal after retracing half of the previous move. When gold  bottomed in 2001, it took less than 2 months for the turnaround. This time the  reversal was only days. In our view, gold is a buy technically and  fundamentally, with a measured move to $2,000 an ounce.
***ALSO JUST  RELEASED: Chaos In The Markets, The Dow Theory  Sell Signal, Flash Crash And What People Should Expect Next CLICK  HERE.
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