Today
billionaire Eric Sprott told King World News, “I’m sure we’ll be seeing
$100 and $200 prices for silver.” Sprott also said that despite the
advance in global stock markets, “There is no doubt that the path we’re
on is not sustainable both for the economy, and for the financial
system.”
We had a negative print on GDP in the 4th quarter. The fact is I think we are on shaky ground. The shakiest part of the ground is the new numbers put out by the Department of the Treasury showing under GAAP what the true deficit was last year.
“It includes both the cash
deficit, which I think was around $1.2 trillion plus the increase in
the present value of known obligations. Together those two added up to a
deficit of $6.6 trillion for the year. Shadowstats suggested this
year, 2013, the numbers could be pushing close to $10 trillion.
“We’ve seen with various countries when
they’ve had to impose austerity, had to cut pension payments, cut civil
service salaries, and I’m using Greece and Spain as my two examples, you
immediately had unemployment go to 25%. You had retail sales fall by
double-digits. I think that has to happen.
“When you throw numbers like that around, Eric, what about the sustainability of the financial system?”
Sprott:
“There is an impact. If people someday have to face the fact that they
are not going to receive a pension, or some benefit they are receiving
the amount is going to be cut, you cause a serious economic slowdown.
This then impacts everything financial because the ability to pay the debts off is diminished because everyone’s income is down.
I’ve always worried about
the leverage in the financial system. It will come to pass. There is
no doubt that the path we’re on is not sustainable both for the economy,
and for the financial system.”
Eric King: “Eric, we have to bring up silver as well for the silver bulls. Your thoughts on that market?”
Sprott: “I’m
quite impressed by the (US) Mint sales in January, even though they
only sold it for about half the month. It’s obvious from all of the
discussions here from various coin dealers that demand is very brisk.
The
beauty of silver of course is there is not much inventory in the world.
The buying at the Mint, as a proxy, suggests that people are putting as
many dollars into silver as they are putting into gold. So they are
buying 50 times more silver than gold.
The piece we did a couple of months ago suggested that for investment
purposes you can only buy about 3 times more physical silver than
gold. Well, if you are buying it at 50 to 1, and I see it in our Trust
issues that we have, we’re buying 50 times more silver which is an
absolute impossibility (to sustain), I think silver will by far
outperform gold. And needless to say I’m incredibly bullish on gold, so
I’m sure we’ll be seeing $100 and $200 prices for silver.”
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