Rob Kirby - Amount of Money Fed Into System Now Too Hard to Hide
The
gold and silver market being flooded with paper shorts is yet another
sign that time is short. Kirby says the elite want people to think
gold and silver are bad investments, but he says don’t believe it,
and “do not sell it.” Macroeconomic analyst Rob Kirby goes on to
warn, “Gold and silver are historically alternatives to a failing
fiat currency regime. The U.S. dollar is failing in front of our
eyes. We know that because we know that $21 trillion extra (on top
of the $23 trillion national debt) was created, and we know what they
are doing with it. Part of that $21 trillion is being used to knock
the price of gold and silver down with paper contracts. This is not
a winning strategy, and this will ultimately blow up in their face
too. They are being done to buy time and make the dollar appear
strong. . . . The way this has to end is the U.S. dollar will go to
its real intrinsic value, which is zero. That implies a
hyperinflationary experience at some point in time, and it could be
soon. . . . The amount of money being fed into the system is soon
going to be too hard to hide.”
Join
Greg Hunter of USAWatchdog.com as he goes One-on-One with Rob Kirby,
founder of KirbyAnalytics.com.
Global Supply Chains Imploding As Quarter Of German Firms Plan To Leave China
15 November, 2019
The Bussiness Confidence Survey 2019/20 published by the German Chamber of Commerce in China, in cooperation with KPMG in Germany, finds that almost a quarter of German companies operating in China are preparing to relocate production facilities.
The
survey was conducted from late July through mid-September and had 526
member companies out of 2300 respond. Out of the 526 member
companies, 23% of the respondents said their factories will be
transferred out of China or are contemplating the move.
Among
the German companies leaving or actively planning to leave China,
about 71% blame increasing labor costs; 33% cited unfavorable policy
environment; 25% said the US-China trade war, and 22% said market
access barriers.
Of
the respondents who've resorted to relocation, 52% have chosen
Southeast Asia, 25% India, 19% Central/Eastern Europe, and 17%
Western Europe. Only 5% of respondents said they were going to move
operations to the US, contrary to President Trump's claim that
companies exiting China will be rushing to the US.
Respondents
said the US-China trade war had created a toxic and "gloomy"
business outlook that has contributed to the global synchronized
slowdown.
About
83% of German companies said the trade war has directly or indirectly
affected their operations. "Business expectations have dropped
to their lowest level in years with only 27% of surveyed German
companies expecting to reach or exceed their business targets in
2019," the survey warned.
Jens
Hildebrandt, Executive Director of the German Chamber of Commerce in
China, said: "2020 is likely to be characterized by uncertainty,
stemming from an unresolved US-China trade dispute related with a
decelerating Chinese and global economy."
German
firms also said market access barriers and regulatory hurdles stunted
their growth in China, with 66% of firms saying they've encountered
either direct or indirect market access restrictions.
The
key finding in the report is that the business environment in China
remains downbeat into 2020. The disruption of complex supply chains
in China means the global economy will likely not bottom in early
2020 as equity markets have already priced in.
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