Gerald Celente Issues Trend Forecast For Gold As Global Economy Falters
30
March, 2016
With
the U.S. dollar continuing to struggle, today the top trends
forecaster in the world issued a trend forecast for gold as the
global economy falters.
Gerald
Celente: For several days, gold prices fell on hawkish comments from
a number of regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents signaling
support for an interest-rate rise, pointing to a possible increase at
the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee meeting in late April.
They reasoned, as has President Obama and the establishment business
media, that anyone questioning the strength of the US economy was
“peddling fiction,” and that a Fed rate hike, the second since
2006, was in order…
Gerald
Celente continues: Subsequently, a strong dollar and higher interest
rates were bearish news for gold since the great criticism from the
financial world has long been that gold yields no interest. Thus,
with US interest rates expected to rise, it was more profitable to be
in dollars than gold.
Speaking
at the Economic Club of New York Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairwoman
Janet Yellen not only tamped down expectations for a rate rise in
April, but whether, in fact, there will be any interest-rate increase
for the rest of the year. Indeed, when the Fed ended the zero
interest-rate policy it had in place since 2008 when it raised rates
just 25 basis points in December 2015, it left The Street with the
impression that four more rate hikes would follow throughout the new
year.
However,
citing concerns of a slowing Chinese economy, emerging market
instability, turbulent equity markets and falling commodity prices,
the Fed chairwoman cautioned that a stronger dollar would worsen
conditions while further depressing US exports and damaging the
manufacturing sector.
The
longer Yellen spoke, the higher gold prices spiked and the lower the
odds for the long-awaited normalization of interest-rate policy to be
implemented. The Dow, down over 100 points in early trading, closed
up nearly 100 while the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF jumped 1
percent on the relief of a strong dollar further battering their
already depressed currencies and economies.
Following
the facts, the fundamentals of the economy are not sound. Corporate
profits in the US for 2015 fell 5.1 percent, the largest drop since
2008. Worldwide, after falling $23.1 billion in the third quarter,
profits declined $6.5 billion in the last quarter of 2015. In the US,
where some two-thirds of GDP is consumer-driven, consumer spending in
February increased only 0.1 percent while January’s was revised
down from a 0.5 percent gain to 0.1 percent.
And
with existing home sales down 7.1 percent in February, Yellen’s
stated concern Tuesday that the housing sector needed to make a
larger contribution to US output was evidenced in the weak numbers.
Gerald Celente on PRN
Gerald Celente on PRN
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