On the heels of the recent panic selloff in the gold market, today the top trends forecaster in the world warned King World News that the panic that's happening right now is much bigger than just the gold market. Celente also went on to discuss the shocking truth about what is really happening in countries around the world.
Eric King: “Gerald, since gold first broke below the $1,200 level in June, 2013, you stated that the downside risk was $100 – $150, and you consistently repeated that message. That has proven to be incredibly accurate in light of the recent plunge in gold. What made you believe that there was going to be one final shakeout in the gold market? How did you know?”
Gerald Celente: “Because
the markets are rigged. That’s not a conspiracy theory; that’s a
fact. We already know that LIBOR and forex are both rigged and we also
know there have been investigations about the rigging of the gold
market. And it’s not in the best interest of central banks, who are
printing trillions of dollars of fiat money in order to prop up global
equity markets, to see their currencies devalued….
“I
have always bought gold as a safe haven in a world where currencies are
being devalued right in front of our eyes. To me the purchase of gold
was not for the purpose of protection against inflation, because I have
always believed that the economies of the world were going to
dramatically slow down on the consumer and manufacturing end. This
means an oversupply of products and less demand, which creates
deflation. And we are seeing that deflation in iron-ore, copper,
nickel, aluminum, oil and even agricultural commodities, as demand
continues to recede.
Commodity Producing Nations Now In Serious Trouble
So for
me gold has always been a buy because of its protection against the
devaluation of global currencies. We now see that the Australian dollar
is at a six-year low against the U.S. dollar. What are Australia’s
biggest exports? How about iron-ore and other metals.
If
we look at Canada, their currency is also now at a six-year low vs the
U.S. dollar. Well, Canada is a big oil exporter, particularly some tar
sands oil, which is expensive to produce.
We
also now have the Brazilian real at a 10-year low vs the U.S. dollar.
Why? Because it’s a natural resource rich country and they don’t have a
strong market to sell their natural resources to.
Meanwhile,
the Indian rupee is at a 17-year low vs the U.S. dollar. This is
because manufacturing is slowing down and there is less development. If
the Americans aren’t buying, the Indians, the Chinese, the Vietnamese —
they’re not making things.
The Panic That's Happening Right Now Is Much Bigger Than Just The Gold Market
So
it’s bigger than gold, Eric. Canada is in a recession, Australia is
also heading into recession and Latin American currencies of commodity
producing nations are getting crushed. By every measure, these are the
conditions that we would expect to see before a massive global
meltdown. The panic is on. Remember, the IMF has just downgraded
global growth to the lowest level since 2009, the depth of the Great
Recession.
So
this is a global slowdown at a time when global currencies are being
devalued. The only reason why the U.S. dollar is strong is because all
the other currencies are beating them in the global currency race to the
bottom. The dollar isn’t strong because of our great productive
capacity and economic growth. Anyone can see the weak retail numbers
being released, and now they can’t blame it on a cold winter. Remember,
some two-thirds of America’s GDP is consumer-based.
So
there is no recovery and at some point this global Ponzi scheme is going
to collapse. We just saw it with China. The Chinese just pumped in
over $200 billion to prop up their failing markets, and even with that
the Shanghai Index is just flatlining.
So
the attempts to prop up the global Ponzi scheme are no longer working.
This is why I’ve always said that gold is for my golden years. I’m not a
day trader of gold; I’m a long-term holder. The bottom line is that I
believe that the gold market has now seen the worst. Could it go just a
bit lower? Yes. But compared to an upside potential of well over
$2,000, the downside risk is low.”
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