[ home / board list / faq / random / create / bans / search / manage / irc ] [ ]

/n/ - News

Catalog

Name
Email
Subject
Comment *
File
* = required field[▶ Show post options & limits]
Confused? See the FAQ.
Embed
(replaces files and can be used instead)
Options
Password (For file and post deletion.)

Allowed file types:jpg, jpeg, gif, png, webm, mp4
Max filesize is 8 MB.
Max image dimensions are 10000 x 10000.
You may upload 1 per post.


8chan News Board Ring: /pn/ - Politics and News - /politics/ - Politics

File: 1457095146474.jpg (176.72 KB, 1404x839, 1404:839, canada official reseres_1.jpg)

 No.327628

One month ago, when looking at the latest Canadian official international reserves, we noticed something strange: Canada had sold nearly half of its gold reserves in one month. According to the February data, total Canadian gold reserves stood at 1.7 tonnes. That was just 0.1 per cent of the country’s total reserves, which also include foreign currency deposits and bonds.

As we noted, the decision to sell came from Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s office.

“Canada’s gold reserves belong to the Government of Canada, and are held under the name of the Minister of Finance,” explained a spokesperson for the Bank of Canada on Wednesday. “Decisions relative to gold holdings are taken by the Minister of Finance.”

Reached by Global News on Wednesday evening, a spokesperson for the finance department said the sale “was done in the normal course of business for the government. The decision to sell the gold was not tied to a specific gold price, and sales are being conducted over a long period and in a controlled manner.”

This latest sell-off is indeed part of a much longer-term pattern of moving away from gold as a government-held asset. According to economist Ian Lee of the Sprott School of Business at Carleton University, Ottawa has no real reason to keep its gold reserves other than adhering to tradition.

"Under the old system, (gold) backed up currencies,” Lee explained. “The U.S. dollar was tied to gold. One ounce was worth US$35. Then in 1971, for lots of reasons I won’t get into, Richard Nixon took the United States off the gold standard.”

Gold and dollars were interchangeable until that point, he said, but in the modern financial world, the metal is no longer considered a form of currency. “It is a precious metal, like silver … they can be sold like any asset.”

The amount of gold the Canadian government holds has therefore been falling steadily since the mid-1960s, when over 1,000 tonnes were kept tucked away. Half of those reserves were sold by 1985, and then almost all the rest were sold through the 1990s up to 2002.

By last year, Canada’s reserves were down to just three tonnes, and the latest sales have now halved that. At the current market rate, the value of 1.7 tonnes of gold comes in at just under CAD$100 million, barely a drop in the bucket when you consider the broader scope of federal finances.

According to Lee, there may soon come a time when Canada’s gold reserves are entirely a thing of the past. There are better assets to focus on, he argued, calling the government’s decision to dump gold “wise and astute.”

Lee was right, because fast forward one month when earlier today Canada's Department of Finance released its latest official international reserves and as of this moment it's official - Canada has fully "broken away with tradition" and has exactly zero gold left.

http://archive.is/JvfKM

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-03-03/its-official-moment-canada-has-no-gold-reserves-left

 No.327771

File: 1457106475672.gif (987.95 KB, 540x228, 45:19, ....gif)


 No.327776

Dude. Weed. LMAO


 No.327777

>>327776

Also checkem


 No.327778

>>327777

checked


 No.327786

mismanagement like this will turn around and bite Cancucklandia in the ass someday. you have my condolences cananons.

>>327777

chkd


 No.327789

>>327786

Please, just let Trump Annex western Canada and the northwest territories, please.

I'd move, but I'm stuck here.


 No.327794

>>327777

checked m8


 No.327795

File: 1457107746663.jpg (7.63 KB, 261x216, 29:24, f57.jpg)

>According to Lee, there may soon come a time when Canada’s gold reserves are entirely a thing of the past. There are better assets to focus on, he argued

>Lee was right, because fast forward one month when earlier today Canada's Department of Finance released its latest official international reserves and as of this moment it's official - Canada has fully "broken away with tradition" and has exactly zero gold left.

So…

"According to [someone], if you do [discard your ace in the hole], you'll get [a reward]"

"And [someone] was right, because we did [discard our ace in the hole]"

It's like there's a missing bit in that statement to make Lee right. Not sure what… hmm…


 No.327802

Happened before under Harper. Apparantly we got plenty of unmined gold.


 No.327806

So this is the trick they'll use to make it look like their deficit isn't as bad as it actually is?


 No.327816

>>327786

it doesn't actually matter

canacuckia is now a hotel for "refugees"


 No.327823

>>327806

Yep. In a nation that closes down military bases and reopens them as refugee centers, the concept of using gold as a currency benchmark is too "old fashioned," grandpa.


 No.327827


 No.327892

>>327789

I'm okay with this C:


 No.327937

>>327827

>>327892

Canadians use the cutest emotes.

I dunno why. They're like the opposite of Ozzie shitposters.


 No.327952

Shalom, Weed Goys!


 No.327978

>>327806

They don't even need to worry about the deficit. Trudeau got elected on a promised deficit of 10 billion a year and has since upgraded that to 18 billion. Why would they bother trying to make things look better, when apparently nobody cares how much money we lose?


 No.328254

File: 1457137472678.jpg (46.98 KB, 564x451, 564:451, 6621bb16de2aa59307678c3da5….jpg)

>>327789

Grab Ontario too: we'll want their mineral wealth


 No.328285

>>327789

Asset loss is horrible specifically because it makes it easier for the USA (or China, or any foreign interest ever) to annex our land. Why do you keep calling for it in every thread?


 No.328288

>>328285

Just become a protectorate already.


 No.328306

>>327978

>deficit

>18 billion

That's adorable.


 No.328311

LYNCH TRUDEAU


 No.328313

>>327802

Too bad mining requires investment and highly skilled workers

School is too expensive and refugees are retarded and useless

Nobody is investing in ANYTHING


 No.328322

Is this a good thing or a bad thing?


 No.328327

>>327789

Your just asking for fallout to happen ? don't you ?

http://fallout.wikia.com/wiki/American_annexation_of_Canada


 No.328335

>>327776

Best part is, he didn't even legalize weed.


 No.328341

Highway robbery.


 No.328379

>>328322

It's terrible.

China will go mine more Canadian gold like they did the oil, probably keeping the vast majority of it, like they did the oil.

This whole thing smells like a scam to get more Chinese in Canada before they buy it outright, Canucks were sold the fuck out.


 No.328382

>>328379

*before they buy it outright with capital from Canadian resources.


 No.328498

>>328327

I could see it happening, if Canada ends up being unable to control refugee population and thus becomes a genuine threat to the northern US borders.


 No.328502

File: 1457158330076.jpeg (642.99 KB, 690x1886, 15:41, 2a1.jpeg)


 No.328531

>>327628

>According to the February data, total Canadian gold reserves stood at 1.7 tonnes. That was just 0.1 per cent of the country’s total reserves

In other words, it's fucking nothing.

If the global economy goes tits-up, 1.7 tonnes of gold wasn't going to do shit for them anyway.

And that's a tiny fraction of what they have in the ground.

http://mining.ca/sites/default/files/documents/Facts-and-Figures-2015.pdf

Ah, wait, but I forgot we were supposed to freak out about this news. Excuse me.

This is IT, people! IT'S HAPPENING!!!! Third World Canada!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11 I hope your prepped.


 No.331244

>>328531

>And that's a tiny fraction of what they have in the ground.

Little do people like you realize just how much it costs to *mine the gold out of the ground… dumbass! The time and effort is immense too. If they're economy fumbled they would never have the money to dig up those resources. They'd likely just sell off the mineral-rich land to offshore firms instead.


 No.331260

There money has no value.


 No.334180

File: 1457594069530.png (95.16 KB, 248x298, 124:149, Maddow1482-2.png)

Now if only they could break with the tradition of having white cis male prime ministers too.


 No.340070

anti-slide


 No.340075

>>328313

>mining requires investment and highly skilled workers

>mining requires highly skilled workers

lol


 No.340094

File: 1458098140811.jpg (10.31 KB, 410x230, 41:23, 23-air-aa-1-force.n.jpg)

Canada needs fiat money to pay for all those hovering piece of shit F-35s they will be buying.


 No.340108

>>327628

The Bronfmanns are behind this, they bankrolled trudeau.

thats my guess.


 No.340109

>>334180

the /intl/ shill!


 No.340933

>>340075

If you don't want your mines to collapse on top of you, yes. Or did you think that they could just send monkeys with pickaxes out there?




[Return][Go to top][Catalog][Post a Reply]
[]
[ home / board list / faq / random / create / bans / search / manage / irc ] [ ]