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Podcast

by Chris Martenson

The silver market continues to send urgent signals that supplies are very tight, an often bullish condition sometimes associated with rapid price rises.

For those not up on the lingo of the futures market, there are two ways to describe the prices of commodities in the future as compared to today. One describes a condition where commodities cost more in the future than they do today, and it is rather non-intuitively termed contango. If a commodity is “in contango,” it is priced higher for delivery in future months than it is for delivery today. Oil is an easy example, as it is nearly always in contango, and for perfectly intuitive reasons: There are carrying costs associated with storing oil (such as interest, storage fees and insurance) and those costs assure that future oil is almost always more expensive than present oil.

The other term describes the situation where the future price is less than today’s price, a rare condition for practically every commodity, and it is called backwardation. A commodity that is “in backwardation” is priced lower for delivery in future months than it is for delivery today.

Silver is in backwardation and has been for a while now.

Silver Shortage Looming?
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

The silver market continues to send urgent signals that supplies are very tight, an often bullish condition sometimes associated with rapid price rises.

For those not up on the lingo of the futures market, there are two ways to describe the prices of commodities in the future as compared to today. One describes a condition where commodities cost more in the future than they do today, and it is rather non-intuitively termed contango. If a commodity is “in contango,” it is priced higher for delivery in future months than it is for delivery today. Oil is an easy example, as it is nearly always in contango, and for perfectly intuitive reasons: There are carrying costs associated with storing oil (such as interest, storage fees and insurance) and those costs assure that future oil is almost always more expensive than present oil.

The other term describes the situation where the future price is less than today’s price, a rare condition for practically every commodity, and it is called backwardation. A commodity that is “in backwardation” is priced lower for delivery in future months than it is for delivery today.

Silver is in backwardation and has been for a while now.

by Chris Martenson

Guide to Navigating the Coming Crisis

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Executive Summary

  • Here we provide a detailed summary of the complete analytical framework that has delivered double digit investment gains (2004-2010)
  • Why this ‘recovery’ is false
  • Why the Fed is stuck between a rock and hard place
  • Why the US Treasury market is vulnerable
  • Asia is the most likely trigger

Part I

If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.

Part II – Guide to Navigating the Coming Crisis

Illuminating the future is our job, and we take it seriously.

The unfolding Egyptian situation provides a perfect analogy for what I see coming to the developed world. During times of massive change, it is most important to have a clear-eyed view, few limiting beliefs, and a reliable framework to help you decode rapidly emerging events.

What we do here at Martenson Central is deliver both up-to-the-minute information-scouting services and a framework through which those events and information can be interpreted. 

Knowing what is likely to happen and having a solid framework for understanding those events provides emotional relief, removes uncertainty, and allows for crisper and more effective decisionmaking that can make you safer and even wealthier. These benefits are not speculation on our part; they are directly drawn from comments and feedback we’ve received from our members over the past several years.

The Crash Course is the foundation of that framework, which illuminates the main predicament as an inherent conflict between the currently evolved types of economic and monetary systems and looming resource scarcity, especially of oil.

Guide to Navigating the Coming Crisis
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

Guide to Navigating the Coming Crisis

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Executive Summary

  • Here we provide a detailed summary of the complete analytical framework that has delivered double digit investment gains (2004-2010)
  • Why this ‘recovery’ is false
  • Why the Fed is stuck between a rock and hard place
  • Why the US Treasury market is vulnerable
  • Asia is the most likely trigger

Part I

If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.

Part II – Guide to Navigating the Coming Crisis

Illuminating the future is our job, and we take it seriously.

The unfolding Egyptian situation provides a perfect analogy for what I see coming to the developed world. During times of massive change, it is most important to have a clear-eyed view, few limiting beliefs, and a reliable framework to help you decode rapidly emerging events.

What we do here at Martenson Central is deliver both up-to-the-minute information-scouting services and a framework through which those events and information can be interpreted. 

Knowing what is likely to happen and having a solid framework for understanding those events provides emotional relief, removes uncertainty, and allows for crisper and more effective decisionmaking that can make you safer and even wealthier. These benefits are not speculation on our part; they are directly drawn from comments and feedback we’ve received from our members over the past several years.

The Crash Course is the foundation of that framework, which illuminates the main predicament as an inherent conflict between the currently evolved types of economic and monetary systems and looming resource scarcity, especially of oil.

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