Archive for October, 2010

Capital Gold Group Fights 1099 Reporting Requirement on Gold

October 28, 2010

Source: Capital Gold Group, Inc.
October 28, 2010

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 28 /PRNewswire/ — Jonathan Rose, RFC, President and CEO of Capital Gold Group, Inc., one of the nation’s premier providers of gold bullion, numismatic gold coins and Precious Metals IRAs, has joined forces with a former U.S. Mint director, other rare coin and bullion dealers, and state and government relations experts to form the Gold and Silver Political Action Committee. The PAC is challenging Section 9006 of the health-care legislation requiring U.S. bullion and coin dealers to file a Form 1099 with the Internal Revenue Service whenever they make transactions paying out $600 a year to another party beginning January, 2012.

Section 9006 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is a portion of the healthcare legislation which has been opposed by U.S. bullion and coin dealers due to the tremendous reporting burdens created by the legislation on dealers as well as collectors and investors. The creation of the Gold and Silver PAC was prompted by the enactment of the IRS Form 1099 reporting requirements included in the bill.

The first official meeting of the committee occurred this past September, and the PAC has made Section 9006 one of its significant objectives according to Philip Diehl, former director of the U.S. Mint. Mr. Diehl stated that the committee is seeking to have the reporting requirement overturned in the next year before it takes effect, as there are very few sellers of products that are going to escape the new reporting requirement and the increased costs of collecting and reporting the data.

Mr. Rose, a founding member of the PAC, agrees that the reporting requirement of Section 9006 is extraordinarily burdensome, both on dealers and individuals. “We are supporting the efforts of the Gold and Silver Political Action Committee because we feel it is in the best interests not only of numismatic and precious metals coin dealers nationwide but also of individuals.”

There are currently two amendment bills in the House and Senate calling for the repeal of Section 9006, however, because of the significant revenue the new law is expected to generate amounting to $17 billion by the year 2020, some are doubtful about the chances for reversal. Capital Gold Group will be providing updates on the progress of the PAC under the Industry News tab on its website, www.StartWithGold.com.

Investors interested in learning more about the benefits afforded by holding physical gold in their possession or in a Precious Metals IRA can receive a free Gold Guide by calling Capital Gold Group, Inc. at 800-510-9594, or by visiting its website, www.StartWithGold.com.

Jonathan Rose, RFC, is a sought after commentator on gold markets worldwide, and helps educate listeners on the impact of global economic news on “The Gold Show”, his syndicated radio program which airs nationwide. Listeners can also download a podcast of The Gold Show at www.AskMrRose.com.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: Any Price Correction In Metals Post-Fed Announcement To Be Short-Lived – BMO

October 28, 2010

Kitco News
28 October 2010, 9:35 a.m.
By Debbie Carlson

(Kitco News) — Even if the Fed announces a less-aggressive quantitative easing policy, most base and precious metals prices should be able to rebound from any correction, says Bank of Montreal. Fundamentals are likely to strengthen along with a China-led global economic recovery and slight supply growth. Copper, palladium, platinum, silver and should rally well into 2011 and investor demand will also support those markets. Gold’s price outlook is also bright given investor demand, improving fabrication prospects, tightening supply, heightened systemic risk, QE and long-term concerns surrounding western world debt monetization, the bank says.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: Fed Easing Will Likely End Bond Bull Market, Gross Says

October 27, 2010

October 27, 2010 (Bloomberg News)

Bill Gross, manager of the world’s largest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., said a renewal of asset purchases by the Federal Reserve will likely signify the end of the 30-year bull market in bonds.

“Check writing in the trillions is not a bondholder’s friend,” Gross wrote in his monthly investment outlook posted on Newport Beach, Calif.-based PIMCO’s Web site today. “It is in fact inflationary, and, if truth be told, somewhat of a Ponzi scheme. It raises bond prices to create the illusion of high annual returns, but ultimately it reaches a dead end where those prices can no longer go up.”

The Fed, led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, will announce another round of large-scale asset purchases when policy makers meet next week after deploying $1.7 trillion to pull the economy out of the financial crisis, according to a survey of the 18 primary dealers that trade debt with the central bank. Fed officials, who already cut interest rates almost to zero, are discussing more purchases of Treasuries to flood markets with cheap money as well as strategies for raising inflation expectations to prevent stagnating prices from undermining the recovery.

Gross, a founder and co-chief investment officer of PIMCO, said in March that bonds may have seen their best days while making an argument for investors to own fewer. He reduced holdings of government-related debt in the Total Return Fund for the third straight month in September, after the securities accounted for 63% of assets in June, the highest since it held an equal amount in October 2009.

Less Government Debt

The $252 billion Total Return Fund’s investment in government debt was cut to 33% of assets in September, from 36% the previous month, according to the company’s website. PIMCO doesn’t comment directly on monthly changes in portfolio holdings.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note dropped from a 2010 high of 4.01% in April to a low of 2.33% on Oct. 8, according to Bloomberg data, as investors purchased Treasuries in anticipation of further asset purchases by the central bank. The record of 2.04% was set in December 2008.

“Having arrived at its destination, the market then offers near zero% returns and a picking of the creditor’s pocket via inflation and negative real interest rates,” Gross wrote. “It will likely signify the end of a great 30-year bull market in bonds and the necessity for bond managers and, yes, equity managers to adjust to a new environment,” Gross wrote.

Deflation Threat

Treasuries have returned 8.3% this year after losing 3.7% in 2009, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes.

The Fed is driven to further easing due to low inflation and a threat of deflation, where falling asset prices, including home values, result in consumers and businesses that are less willing to spend and invest. Inflation, a rise in the prices of goods and services, would enable more value, production and consumer activity.

“This is not a Bernanke scheme, because this is his only alternative and he shares no responsibility for its origin,” Gross wrote. “I call it a Sammy scheme, in honor of Uncle Sam and the politicians — as well as citizens — who have brought us to this critical moment in time. You and I, and the politicians that we elect every two years, deserve all the blame.”

Volcker Fed

Policy makers have historically focused on containing inflation rather than preventing deflation. Core consumer prices, which exclude food and fuel, were little changed in September, capping a 0.8% increase in the past 12 months, the smallest year-over-year gain since 1961.

Inflation climbed to a 14.8% annual rate in March 1980, driving 10-year yields to 13.65% that year and to an all-time high of 15.8% the following year. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker broke the back of inflation by raising rates as high as 20%, even as the economy slipped into the longest post-World War II recession to win back confidence among investors.

By the time Volcker stepped down from the Fed in 1987, inflation slowed to 4.3% and benchmark borrowing costs were 6.75%.

‘Liquidity Trap’

“We are, as even some Fed Governors now publically admit, in a ‘liquidity trap,’ where interest rates or trillions in QEII asset purchases may not stimulate borrowing or lending because consumer demand is just not there,” Gross wrote. “Escaping from a liquidity trap may be impossible, much like light trapped in a black hole.”

Under what PIMCO calls the “new normal,” investors should expect lower-than-average historical returns with heightened regulation, lower consumption, slower growth and a shrinking global role for the U.S. economy.

“If QEII cannot reflate capital markets, if it can’t produce 2% inflation and an assumed reduction of unemployment rates back towards historical levels, then it will be a long, painful slog back to prosperity,” Gross wrote.

As part of adjusting to a new normal, PIMCO began offering equity funds in April, and had inflows of about $1 billion, PIMCO said in September. The firm moved into stocks to allow customers to diversify their holdings as the global economy changes and areas such as emerging markets outperform developed regions.

PIMCO added to its mortgage holdings in September to 28% of assets, from 21% the prior month. PIMCO also expanded its emerging-market debt to 12% last month, the highest since at least September 2006. Non-U.S. developed debt was unchanged at 6%.

The Total Return Fund, also the world’s biggest mutual fund, handed investors a gain of about 11.78% in the past year, beating about 76% of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. PIMCO, a unit of Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, managed $1.236 trillion of assets as of September.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: China Should Buy More Gold to Diversify Reserves, Newspaper Says

October 27, 2010

Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) — China should buy more gold to diversify its foreign exchange reserves, International Business Daily, a newspaper affiliated with the Ministry of Commerce, reported.

China should increase its gold holdings if the country aspires to “internationalize” its currency, the paper said on its website, citing Meng Qingfa, a researcher at the China Chamber of International Commerce. The 1,054 metric tons of gold reserves are inadequate, compared with the 8,133 tons held by the U.S. and 3,408 tons by Germany, he was cited as saying.

China has $2.6 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves, mostly in dollar assets, Meng said. Such holdings will put China at a disadvantage when the U.S. dollar depreciates, as is inevitable amid a worsening U.S. debt problem, he said.

China and India will continue to drive demand for gold jewelry going into the fourth quarter, Bank of China International Holdings Ltd. said in a report on Sept. 27.

India enters a peak season for weddings and the Diwali festival in October-November and Chinese people typically increase their purchases of gold before the Lunar New Year.

Gold demand in China, the world’s largest producer, already gained in the first half of this year as government measures to cool the property market and falling equities spurred investment, the Shanghai Gold Exchange said July 7.

Gold climbed to a record $1,387.35 an ounce on Oct. 14 as investors sought to protect their wealth amid concerns about the global economic recovery, and is headed for a 10th consecutive annual increase.

Sales of gold products such as bars and coins by China National Gold Group Corp., owner of the country’s largest deposit of the metal, jumped as much as 40 percent in the first half, Song Quanli, deputy party secretary at the company, said July 7.

Gold Output

China’s gold output may rise to 340 tons this year, from 314 tons last year, solidifying the nation’s position as the world’s largest producer, Zhang Fengkui, section chief of the raw materials department at the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said on Oct. 16.

To increase physical gold supply, the central bank also said on Aug. 4 that it will “increase the number of commercial banks who are qualified to import and export gold, based on the market demand situation.” The central bank also said it will support overseas investment plans by “large-scale” bullion companies by backing them financially.

Still, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which manages the nation’s reserves, said in July that U.S. government debt has the benefits of “relatively good” safety, liquidity, low trading costs and market capacity.

Gold is unlikely to become a major holding in China’s foreign reserves because of the metal’s big price swings and lack of interest payments, SAFE said then.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: Bernanke Asset Purchases Risk Unleashing 1970s Inflation Genie

October 26, 2010

By Craig Torres

Oct. 26 (Bloomberg) — For the second time since he became chairman in 2006, Ben S. Bernanke is leading the Federal Reserve into uncharted monetary territory.

Bernanke next week is likely to preside over a decision to launch another round of large-scale asset purchases after deploying $1.7 trillion to pull the economy out of the financial crisis, comments from policy makers over the past week indicate. This time, with interest rates already near zero, the Fed will be aiming to increase the rate of inflation and reduce the cost of borrowing in real terms. The goal is to unlock consumer spending and jump-start an economy that’s growing too slowly to push unemployment lower.

Estimates for the ultimate size of the asset-purchase program range from $1 trillion at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch Global Research to $2 trillion at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., with economists at both firms agreeing the Fed will likely start by announcing $500 billion after the Nov. 2-3 meeting. The danger is that once the Fed kindles price increases, inflation will be difficult to control.

“By reducing real interest rates and trying to break the psychology of ‘Why spend today when I can buy goods cheaper tomorrow,’ they are hoping to drive growth that would be more commensurate with a pickup in employment,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York. “The risk is a late 1970s type of scenario where the inflation genie gets out of the bottle.”

The U.S. Treasury Department yesterday sold $10 billion of five-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities at a negative yield for the first time at a U.S. debt auction as investors bet the Fed will be successful in sparking inflation. The securities drew a yield of negative 0.55 percent.

‘Unacceptable’ Inflation

William Dudley, president of the New York Fed and vice chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee, yesterday repeated that current levels of inflation and a 9.6 percent unemployment rate are “unacceptable” and said the Fed needs to take action, even though expanding the balance sheet isn’t a “perfect tool.”

“To the extent that we can do things to improve the economic environment, we certainly owe it to the millions of people who are unemployed to do so,” Dudley said in response to audience questions after a speech in Ithaca, New York. Policy makers haven’t yet decided whether to buy additional assets, he said.

A second jolt of monetary stimulus would expand the Fed’s $2.3 trillion balance sheet to a record and likely work through the exchange rate as well as interest rates, said former Fed governor Lyle Gramley. A weaker dollar would boost U.S. exports and push prices higher as the cost of imported goods rises.

Competitive Exports

“It is a channel that works not only from the standpoint of encouraging more growth and making exports more competitive, but if you’re worried about inflation getting too low, this tends to put a little upward pressure” on it, said Gramley, a senior adviser at Potomac Research Group in Washington.

An index of the dollar versus six major currencies is down 5.2 percent since Sept. 20, the day before Fed officials concluded their last meeting by saying inflation measures were “somewhat below those the Committee judges most consistent, over the longer run, with its mandate to promote maximum employment and price stability.” The Standard and Poor’s 500 Index is up 3.8 percent since then.

A 10 percent decline in the dollar in the first six months of next year would push the economy above estimates of trend growth, moving indicators on inflation and employment more rapidly toward the Fed’s policy goals, according to a simulation run by Macroeconomic Advisers LLC on their model of the U.S. economy.

Effect on GDP

Gross domestic product would rise 1.1 percentage points more than the St. Louis-based firm’s baseline forecast for next year, to 4.8 percent. In 2012, growth of 5.7 percent would exceed the baseline forecast by 1.3 percentage points.

Unemployment would fall to 7 percent by the end of 2012, 1.4 points lower than the firm’s baseline forecast. The consumer price index, minus food and energy, would rise 0.4 percent and 0.7 percent more each year.

A continuing rally in stocks could also provide an added lift to growth, the firm’s simulation showed.

The firm, co-founded by former Fed governor Laurence Meyer, predicts the Wilshire 5000 stock index will jump 14 percent next year and 16 percent in 2012. The index tracks the impact of rising asset prices on household net worth. An additional 10 percent gain in the stock index in the first half of 2011 boosts growth by 0.1 percentage point and 0.3 percentage point more than the firm’s baseline forecast.

‘Transmission Mechanism’

“The transmission mechanisms are risk assets and a lower dollar,” said Steven Einhorn, who helps manage $5 billion at hedge fund Omega Advisors Inc. in New York. “Exports will respond over the next six to 12 months, and a further lift in risk assets will have benefits in more consumer spending as it lifts households’ net worth.”

A weaker dollar won’t be welcomed by U.S. trading partners concerned about the danger of competitive devaluations as nations seek to boost exports and growth.

Bernanke received “criticism” at a meeting of Group of 20 central bankers and finance ministers in South Korea last weekend, said German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle.

“It’s the wrong way to try to prevent or solve problems by adding more liquidity,” Bruederle told reporters. “Excessive, permanent money creation in my opinion is an indirect manipulation of an exchange rate.”

$500 Billion

Economists Jan Hatzius at Goldman Sachs and Ethan Harris at Bank of America predict the Fed will spread an initial $500 billion in asset purchases over six months. That is the figure mentioned in the Oct. 1 speech by Dudley, who said $500 billion in purchases could have the same effect as cutting the benchmark federal funds rate by as much as a 0.75 percentage point.

The FOMC’s meeting next week could be contentious, with regional bank presidents such as Charles Plosser of Philadelphia and Richard Fisher of Dallas expressing concern in public remarks about a second round of asset purchases. Neither is a voting member of the FOMC this year.

Plosser told reporters Oct. 20 that high unemployment may not be “amenable to monetary-policy solutions” and added that he was “less inclined to want to follow a policy that is highly concentrated on raising inflation and raising inflation expectations.”

Fisher said central bank officials must be mindful of the effect their actions are having on the dollar.

Dollar Impact

“We need to be aware of the impact whatever we do has on other variables, and one of the variables is the dollar, the value of the dollar against other currencies,” Fisher said in an Oct. 22 interview in New York.

The prospect of an easier policy for a long period could prompt foreign investors to use Fed purchases as an opportunity to unload longer-term Treasuries, said Vincent Reinhart, former director of the Fed Board’s Division of Monetary Affairs.

“This might put more pressure on the exchange value of the dollar than the Fed is willing to tolerate,” said Reinhart, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

Some commodity prices have already started to move up in anticipation of further Fed stimulus. Gold futures traded on the Comex in New York have risen 22 percent this year to $1,338.90 an ounce, while silver is up 40 percent.

“The Fed would like to talk up as many asset classes as it can,” said Scott Minerd, the Santa Monica-based chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners LLC, who helps oversee $76 billion.

Asset Bubbles

“The history of the Fed, over the last 20 years, is one of bubble to bubble: one bubble deflates to create another bubble,” Minerd said. “We are certainly heading into the mother of all bubbles with commodities and gold.”

Another danger for the Fed is that its policy fails to have the intended effect, damaging the central bank’s credibility, Reinhart said.

“What happens if they bulk up the portfolio by another $500 billion in the next six months and there is no material change in markets or the outlook,” he said. “Presumably, the Fed will double-down and buy some more, but at some point, people will ask, ‘Is that all there is?’”

U.S. central bankers cut the benchmark lending rate to zero in December 2008. Seeking more stimulus, they launched a $1.7 trillion program to buy mortgage-backed securities, housing agency debt and U.S. Treasuries. The purchases ended in March.

Jackson Hole

Bernanke told central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in August that those purchases “pushed investors into holding other assets with similar characteristics,” lowering interest rates on a broad range of debt.

While a second round of Treasury purchases would also lower nominal rates, the FOMC has been explicit about the need to lower real interest rates through higher inflation, minutes of its Sept. 21 meeting show.

The personal consumption expenditures price index, minus food and energy, rose at a 1.4 percent annual rate in August. That’s below the Fed’s long-run preference range of 1.7 percent to 2 percent. The year-over-year increase in consumer prices jumped as high as 14.8 percent in 1980 during the administration of Jimmy Carter.

Even moderate rates of inflation can shift wealth through the economy. Companies can make more money because their prices rise faster than wages. Households can also benefit as incomes eventually rise while costs on fixed-rate debt stay the same.

Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. chief financial officer John Hartung told Bloomberg Television Oct. 22 that he expects inflation to be in the low-single to mid-single digits next year. “We would welcome modest inflation along with the continued pickup in consumer demand,” Hartung said.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: Comex Gold Solidly Higher as U.S. Dollar Slumps Following Lackluster G-20 Meeting

October 25, 2010
Posted 10/25/2010 8:16 AM by Jim Wycoff from Kitco

Comex gold prices are posting solid gains Monday morning, on a corrective bounce from last week’s selling pressure and amid fresh weakness in the value of the U.S. dollar against the other major currencies. December Comex gold last traded up at $18.50 at $1,343.60 an ounce. Spot gold was last quoted up $15.60 at $1,344.00.

The U.S. dollar index is trading lower Monday following a weekend Group of 20 finance ministers meeting in South Korea that produced no decisive, actionable language regarding the currency markets. That suggests to traders the major economic powers are still content to continue to let their currencies deflate, led by the U.S. dollar. That is fundamentally gold-market-bullish. The weak technical and fundamental posture of the U.S. dollar index remains a significantly bullish underlying factor for the precious metals.

The gold market has also seen bargain-hunting buyers on Monday step up and “buy the dip” after last week’s selling pressure. Such has also been the case during previous price setbacks in gold.

Price rallies in the crude oil and most other commodity markets on Monday are also supporting buying interest in the precious metals markets.

U.S. economic data due for release Monday includes the Chicago Federal Reserve national activity index, existing home sales and the Texas manufacturing outlook survey business index. Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke also speaks at a banking meeting Monday.

The London A.M. gold fixing was $1,345.00 versus the previous London P.M. fixing of $1,322.50.

From an important technical perspective, last week’s price action did produce some near-term technical damage in gold. December Comex gold Friday hit a fresh three-week low and produced a bearish weekly low close. Also, a 2.5-month-old uptrend on the daily bar chart was at least temporarily negated last week. However, gold bulls do still have the overall near-term and longer-term technical advantage. If the bulls are able to hold on to Monday’s strong price gains and then show some follow-through price strength on Tuesday, the near-term chart damage would be mostly repaired and the near-term price uptrend would likely be re-established.

Gold bulls’ next near-term upside technical objective is to produce a close above solid technical resistance at $1,366.00. Bears’ next near-term downside price objective is closing prices below major psychological support at $1,300.00. First resistance is seen at the overnight high of $1,349.50 and then at $1,356.00. Support is seen at $1,340.00 and then at the overnight low of $1,329.30. Today’s near-term Fibonacci support/resistance level: $1,343.00.

December silver futures last traded up 66.7 cents at $23.785 an ounce Monday morning. Prices are seeing a solid corrective bounce from selling pressure last week that did produce a bearish weekly low close on Friday. A two-month-old uptrend on the daily bar chart was at least temporarily negated last week. Silver bulls do still have the overall near-term technical advantage, and would repair most of last week’s near-term chart damage by showing and holding good price gains early this week. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid technical support at $22.35. Bulls’ next upside price objective is producing a close above solid technical resistance at $24.50 an ounce. First resistance is seen at $24.00 and then at $24.07. Next support is seen at $23.50 and then at the overnight low of $23.30. Today’s near-term Fibonacci support/resistance level: $23.88.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: New Precious Metals Committee to Challenge Reporting Requirements

October 25, 2010

22 October 2010, 6:00 p.m.
By Daniela Cambone
Of Kitco News

(Kitco News) – A newly formed committee, comprised of a former U.S. Mint director, rare coin and bullion dealers and state and government relations experts, is looking to challenge Section 9006, a portion of the health-care legislation which has drawn objections from U.S. bullion and coin dealers due to its cost implications.

The Gold and Silver Political Action Committee (PAC) has made Section 9006 one of its significant objectives, Philip Diehl, former director of the U.S. Mint told Kitco News.

“There are a lot of industries that are opposed to these new reporting requirements, so we will be working with a lot of industries to get those new reporting requirements reversed,” said Diehl. He noted the PAC is looking to have the reporting requirements overturned in the next year.

The provision is Section 9006 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. As of January 2012, it will require entities, including U.S. bullion and coin dealers, to file a Form 1099 with the Internal Revenue Service whenever they make transactions paying out $600 a year to another party.

The PAC’s first official meeting occurred this past September. The creation of the committee was prompted by the enactment of IRS Form 1099 reporting requirements and other proposed legislation that could create tremendous burdens on dealers as well as collectors and investors, said Diehl.

“They are extraordinarily burdensome, both on dealers and on individuals because they require strict reporting by any individual organization that has sales of numismatic or precious metal coins of only $600 a year. There are very few sellers of products that are going to escape this new reporting requirement and that applies across a wide range of products,” said Diehl.

The provision has drawn protests from a wide range of business groups who object to their increased costs from collecting and reporting the data. This includes shop owners, truckers, farmers and self-employed Americans.

The PAC is an effort to support candidates that are supportive of our issues, said Diehl. “Issues relating to precious metals and numismatic coins and also when necessary to oppose members of Congress and other federal elected officials, who are hostile to our causes,” he said.

For more information on the Gold & Silver Political Action Committee: http://www.goldandsilverpac.com/

Section 9006 Repeal Unlikely: New York Attorney

(Kitco News) – New York- Repealing Section 9006 will be difficult since it is expected to generate $17 billion in tax revenue by 2020, said Elaine Papas, a Manhattan attorney with her own firm who is following Section 9006 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

There are currently two amendment bills in the House and Senate calling for the repeal of Section 9006 said Papas in a phone interview with Kitco News.

“People who are repealing this know that in this economy it will be difficult to find something to substitute that amount over the next ten years,” she said. Papas is admitted to Practice before the United States Supreme Court and is an arbitrator for the Securities and Exchange Commission, NYSE and the National Futures Association.

Papas is not optimistic on a reversal. “From what I am reading in the legal environment, I tend to agree it is more likely that 1099 will remain than it being overturned. “

Since the likelihood of repeal is low, Papas said the industry needs to find ways to make the burden of 1099 more manageable.

Some Senate democrats are asking the IRS to look at ways to reduce the burden by consolidating the forms that will be required, said Papas.

She noted that little has been said about the legislation that passed as part of the health care reform bill.

Papas said, “ICTA (The coin industry government watchdog) released a statement stating ‘As of January 2012, you will be required to report all goods and services in excess of $600 on a 1099 form.’ This is not merely proposed – this provision is already law as part of the massive Health Care Reform Act,” she said.

Papas noted that under this legislation rare coins are no longer exempt from reporting. “This is far worse than the current regulations which require a minimal amount of records on certain bullion items to be filed. Eagles and Buffaloes are currently exempt under the old rules,” she said.

Overburdening smaller traders in the bullion industry with administrative forms will make it difficult for them to profit, she noted. “They would have to raise the cost of the bullion, pass on the cost, or go out of business,” she said.

“There are a lot of industries that are opposed to these new reporting requirements, so we will be working with a lot of industries to get those new reporting requirements reversed,” said Diehl. He noted the PAC is looking to have the reporting requirements overturned in the next year.

The provision is Section 9006 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. As of January 2012, it will require entities, including U.S. bullion and coin dealers, to file a Form 1099 with the Internal Revenue Service whenever they make transactions paying out $600 a year to another party.

The PAC’s first official meeting occurred this past September. The creation of the committee was prompted by the enactment of IRS Form 1099 reporting requirements and other proposed legislation that could create tremendous burdens on dealers as well as collectors and investors, said Diehl.

“They are extraordinarily burdensome, both on dealers and on individuals because they require strict reporting by any individual organization that has sales of numismatic or precious metal coins of only $600 a year. There are very few sellers of products that are going to escape this new reporting requirement and that applies across a wide range of products,” said Diehl.

The provision has drawn protests from a wide range of business groups who object to their increased costs from collecting and reporting the data. This includes shop owners, truckers, farmers and self-employed Americans.

The PAC is an effort to support candidates that are supportive of our issues, said Diehl. “Issues relating to precious metals and numismatic coins and also when necessary to oppose members of Congress and other federal elected officials, who are hostile to our causes,” he said.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: 11 State Pension Funds That May Run Out of Money

October 21, 2010

The Business Insider
By Gus Lubin – Mon Oct 18th, 2010 3:00 AM EDT

Here’s a shocker: The most immediate state pension crises aren’t in New York or California. They’re in Middle America.

When it comes to state pensions in the most trouble, do places like New Hampshire come to mind? Probably not, unless you live there, and maybe not even then.

After all, it makes sense that the biggest, most populous members of the union, where budget follies are fairly common, would be facing the most urgently needed fixes. The truth is considerably different. The Granite State claims the No. 11 slot, and it’s not the only unexpected name facing pension woes.

Hawaii, Kansas and others made their way on to the list. Now, these pension plans aren’t going to be obliterated tomorrow — New Hampshire, for instance, is estimated to see its plan run out of money in 2022, so they’ve got 12 years to rectify the situation.

For some other states, the matter is more pressing, and no more so than for the Land of Lincoln. Illinois is just 8 years away from exhausting its pension fund and creating a yearly $14 billion hole, according to data from Joshua Ruah an associate professor of finance at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. That’s a projected 32 percent of the state’s revenue going to fill a pension hole. Every year.

Indiana, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Colorado are among the next pension funds to fall. The rest of the union is just around the corner.

But wait. Just to make sure the list is not a complete surprise, know that the New York City suburbs of Connecticut and New Jersey made it on board. They have until 2019 to sort it out.
And Now, 11 State Pension Funds That May Run of Out Money

#1 Illinois
Year pension fund runs out: 2018
Bill in the following year: $13.6 billion
Share of state revenue: 32%

#2 Connecticut
Year pension fund runs out: 2019
Bill in the following year: $4.9 billion
Share of state revenue: 27%

#3 Indiana
Year pension fund runs out: 2019
Bill in the following year: $3.6 billion
Share of state revenue: 17%

#4 New Jersey
Year pension fund runs out: 2019
Bill in the following year: $14.4 billion
Share of state revenue: 34%

#5 Hawaii
Year pension fund runs out: 2020
Bill in the following year: $1.7 billion
Share of state revenue: 24%

#6 Louisiana
Year pension fund runs out: 2020
Bill in the following year: $4.3 billion
Share of state revenue: 27%

#7 Oklahoma
Year pension fund runs out: 2020
Bill in the following year: $3.7 billion
Share of state revenue: 30%

#8 Colorado
Year pension fund runs out: 2022
Bill in the following year: $7.8 billion
Share of state revenue: 54%

#9 Kansas
Year pension fund runs out: 2022
Bill in the following year: $2.5 billion
Share of state revenue: 23%

#10 Kentucky
Year pension fund runs out: 2022
Bill in the following year: $5.3 billion
Share of state revenue: 35%

#11 New Hampshire
Year pension fund runs out: 2022
Bill in the following year: $1.0 billion
Share of state revenue: 30%

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Capital Gold Group Report: A Spooked Economy in October

October 20, 2010

by Congressman Ron Paul, R-Texas

Last week we received worse than expected unemployment numbers, challenging recent claims that the recession has come and gone. Also, as the economy continues to suffer the after effects of the Federal Reserve-created bubbles of the last decade, there is renewed interest in gold. Fears that the Federal Reserve will pump even more money into the system had caused the price of gold to reach new highs. Also contributing to enthusiasm for gold is continued instability in the banking industry, symbolized this week by fraud allegations that have caused many banks to halt foreclosure proceedings, thus further destabilizing the housing market. Yes, October has a reputation for being a scary month economically and this month is shaping up to be frightening, as well.

The Fed has been wreaking havoc and devaluing our monetary unit steadily since 1913, and greatly accelerating it since the collapse of the Bretton Woods agreement in the 1970s. This severing of the dollar’s last tenuous link with gold allowed the Fed to create as much new money as it pleased, and it has taken full advantage of this opportunity.

In 1971, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was $1.29 trillion. Today it is $14.6 trillion, nominally. But adjusted for all the inflating the Fed has been doing, it is only $2.73 trillion, which constitutes only a 1% real increase per year! So with all this extra money going around, we may appear nominally wealthier, but the reality is, we have barely moved at all. This is unfortunate especially for the prudent, conscientious savers, whose nest eggs are constantly being devalued. Unless of course, they have saved in something out of the Fed’s reach, like gold. While the economy has basically been in a holding pattern against the leeching of wealth by the Fed for 39 years, gold has seen an inflation adjusted increase in value of over 5% per year, if measured in 1971 dollars. This is due to the Fed’s ability to make dollars plentiful. And yet, this is the only tactic the Fed can come up with to rescue an economy already devastated by “quantitative easing”, as they call it.

The turmoil in the housing market demonstrates how disastrous it is to flood the economy with fiat money. Latest events with foreclosures are good examples of mistakes made in the market, in this case, by the banks, in the rush to soak up manipulated currency. This is why the truly free market depends on sound, honest money, free from false signals of artificially low interest rates.

The government finds ways to spend money even faster than the Fed can create it, bringing our national debt well past the point of the taxpayers ever being able to pay it off. Other nations who, in the past, have eagerly bought up any amount of debt we produced are now starting to resist. We are reaching a crucial point at which the dollar will no longer function, and in the absence of a functioning dollar, restoring sound money will be the only alternative.

The truly scary notion is that those in power might allow our system to collapse so chaotically to the detriment of so many people rather than simply obey the Constitution.

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Capital Gold Group Report: Gold price could easily rise beyond $1400/oz as investor anxiety, central bank buying and more US quantitative easing continue

October 20, 2010


AMANDA COOPER
Published: 10/20/10 07:18:09 AM

THE gold price could easily rise beyond $1400/oz as investor anxiety, central bank buying and more US quantitative easing continue, JPMorgan Asset Management Fund Manager Ian Henderson said yesterday.

“I just feel for the time being, the trend is your friend. There may be a correction, but despite jewelery demand perhaps being weak, that is more than offset by lack of mine supply, by central bank buying, so I don’t think $1400 is too hard a level to cross over the next six months or a year. It doesn’t sound too dramatic .”

Mr Henderson, who manages JPMorgan’s $7.5 billion Natural Resources fund, said he has roughly 30% exposure to gold through gold mining companies but also invests in silver and the platinum group metals (PGMs). “I know people talk about $2000 (an ounce) and I’m prepared to say I don’t see any reason why it can’t hit $1450 and it could go anywhere. And that will drag silver up and will drag up the PGMs ,” he said.

JPMorgan’s Natural Resources fund is up about 24% so far this year, according to fund monitor MorningStar, compared with a 2.3% fall in the S&P global natural resources index.

Spot gold was down nearly 2% yesterday, to about $1342/oz after a surprise rate hike from China boosted the dollar and battered the commodities complex. But investor concern about global growth has pushed up the gold price by more than 22% so far this year to record highs.

One of the main driving forces behind the 16% rise in the gold price over the past three months has been anticipation of the US Federal Reserve buying government bonds and pumping billions of fresh cash into the financial system as it strives to breathe life into the flagging economy.

This triggered a 7.4% fall in the value of the dollar against a basket of major currencies over this same period of time, which has proven beneficial to gold, as it becomes cheaper to non-US investors when the greenback drops.

Also, pressure on China is growing to allow its yuan currency to appreciate to make its exports more competitive.

That in turn would boost the dollar and could mean Beijing may resort to using its vast foreign exchange reserves to increase its official holdings of gold, which stand at about 1,504 tons, the world’s sixth largest.

“The Chinese may see quantitative easing as potentially reducing the value of their assets, so they are more inclined, I would guess, to increase the gold within their basket, which is also supportive,” Mr Henderson said.

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