Long Term GOFO Rate Hits New Low

If you really think that gold is going to crash, I need to point out one thing and that’s the GOFO rate.
Recently, the 12 month GOFO rate has hit a new low we have never seen since 1989.

Let’s zoom in to 2009-2014: We have a new solid low here.

So not only the short term GOFO rates (1 month to 3 months) are negative now, also the long term GOFO rates are hitting new lows. So there is a tremendous stress building in the gold market. Historically negative GOFO rates are bottoms in the gold price.

This makes me very bullish in gold at this moment. Because gold lease rates are now much higher than the interest rates/bond yields. This indicates to me that the bond market is about to collapse, bond yields will be going higher, because gold lease rates cannot be higher than the corresponding bond yields. Either bond yields will be going up, or gold has to go up. It’s one of the two.

On another note, we see that the Federal Reserve tapering, is actually just talk. Because some entity is buying U.S. bonds via Belgium at a rate of 30-40 billion USD a month, which is exactly how much tapering we have had. The Federal Reserve is throwing sand in our eyes, don’t be fooled. They are propping up the U.S. bond market, artificially lowering the bond yields below the gold lease rates.

U.S. debt held by Belgium (Billion USD)

Belgium Buys Another Load of U.S. Treasuries

Thanks to Econoblogger Martin I was reminded that today we have another update on the U.S. foreign debt holders and surprise surprise. Belgium keeps on buying more than $50 billion of U.S. debt, much more than any other country is doing now. If Belgium keeps buying like this, it will hold even more debt than China in a year or so. I’m just wondering where they get the money from.

Foreign U.S. debt holders

Look how much they bought, starting from November 2013.

U.S. debt held by Belgium

I have no idea why they are doing this. That the ECB would buy U.S. treasuries to get the euro down, maybe. But why is Belgium buying so much U.S. treasuries? $50 billion accounts for 10% of Belgium GDP. Can they support this?

We see Belgium’s own public debt has been rising since the crisis. Instead of using the money for servicing its own debt, they buy U.S. debt.

Debt to GDP Belgium

Let’s look at Belgium’s treasury yields. The 10 year is at 2.2%, which is below the 2.7% of U.S. Nothing much to see here, but look what happens in November 2013. Yields on U.S. treasuries are going up. Do you remember what happened then?

Yes, the Chinese came out saying they will stop buying U.S. debt. So who goes to the rescue? Belgium.

Belgium 10 Year Yield

U.S. 10 Year Yield

Probably Belgium is the heart of Europe as Europe started from Belgium. These European people want to support the U.S.

But actually, I think being in U.S. treasuries isn’t such a bad idea at this moment. When stocks collapse, U.S. treasuries are pretty safe.What I’m worried about though, is that the U.S. dollar is now starting to collapse. The dollar cash index is moving towards 70, when Belgium holds all of these U.S. treasuries, it will realize losses on the U.S. dollar currency value. A 10% loss in currency value, means at least a $30 billion dollar loss for Belgium and I heard that they even bought U.S. treasuries that the Russians dumped in March 2014. These are dangerous things to do.

For more info, here is a link to Zerohedge.