Senators Demand Answers About Biden's Illegal Ammunition Delay to Israel
The Pro-Terrorism Freaks Just Defaced a U.S. War Memorial
About That Ceasefire 'Agreement' Hamas Accepted...
Oh, So That's Why TikTok Says It Can't Be Sold
The Biden Admin Bows Down to China. Again.
Macklemore in His New Song Praising Pro-Hamas Students: 'F**k No, I'm Not Voting'...
Boy Scouts Unveils New 'Inclusive' Name
Biden Campaign Co-Chair Mitch Landrieu Reminds Us How Awful the Response to Pro-Hamas...
Biden Remains Historically Low on This Key Issue
Beyond Parody: Here Are the Insane New Demands of Chicago's Teachers Union
One School Does Away With 'Diversity Statements' From Prospective Faculty
Fani Willis: This Investigation Is 'Messing Up My Business'
Do Abortion Bans Influence Where Young People Choose to Live? A New Poll...
New Data Should Have Team Biden Sweating
Here’s How Harvard University Will Respond to Pro-Hamas Student Protesters
OPINION

Gold, Oil Trade Lower

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

The dollar came back hard against the euro sending commodity prices into a tailspin in early trading.

Gold was down $10.68 to $1,760.40 and silver was off $0.30 to $34.31, for a silver/gold ratio of 51.3. 

Advertisement

It was a rough night for commodities as the dollar surged against a basket of overseas currencies.  Joining silver and gold lower were platinum, palladium, crude oil and copper. 

While it may be a bit premature to call the end of the bull run triggered by the stimulus announcement from the Federal Reserve, we don’t seem to be getting much of a rally for our $40 billion a month. 

Part of what’s influencing commodity prices is a slowdown in Chinese manufacturing.  That comes at a time that China and Japan are feuding over the ownership of some disputed islands in the East China Sea.  The real source of the dispute is the oil under the islands, which has prompted “spontaneous uprisings” by the Chinese people which they’ve taken out on Japanese factories in China. 

For China, reminding the Japanese that having factories in China leaves them vulnerable to this kind of trade dispute, may not have been the best tactical move.  If the Japanese decide to bring that manufacturing back home it’s only going to exacerbate the economic situation in China. 

Advertisement

While the Chinese and Japanese duke it out for some uninhabited islands, unemployment remains stubbornly high in Europe and the housing market in the dumps in the U.S., despite the availability of record low mortgage interest rates. 

All these seemingly unrelated factors combine to make the United States the cleanest shirt in the economic hamper.  Investors are continuing to buy our bonds because we look so much more reliable than other countries. 

This is building to a point about gold and silver as a strong dollar depresses prices on commodities, at least in the near term. 

Currency dilution has a dark side and that’s inflation.  There are already troubling indications that the Fed’s current action is stimulating inflation and that will ultimately be good for silver and gold prices. 

Chris Poindexter, Senior Writer, National Gold Group, Inc

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos