Thursday, January 7, 2016

I'd like to take a moment to congratulate you on taking the first step towards protecting your retirement account using gold & silver.

I'd like to take a moment to congratulate you on taking the first step towards protecting your retirement account using gold & silver. 


Today’s financial world can be overwhelming. It’s constantly changing. There’s so much to learn, and so many risks and scenarios that affect your investment decisions. 

There’s a lot of information out there - some of it good, some of it not so good. How can you possibly educate yourself to make the right choice that will secure your financial future?





We’re here to help!
Goldco Precious Metals prides ourselves on being a trustworthy, reliable source of information on the physical precious metals IRA industry. Every day, we provide our clients and prospective clients with information to help them better understand their existing investments. We explain the fundamentals of how physical precious metals can protect our clients’ existing retirement accounts from the threat of inflation, economic uncertainty and the coming market crash.

That’s why we've earned and maintain the highest ratings in the entire precious metals IRA industry:

And why we've received so many accolades in 2014 alone:

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Best regards,
Trevor Gerszt, CEO Goldco Precious Metals
Toll Free: (855) 465-3472 Fax: (866) 589-0768

At the same time Beijing must addresses other weaknesses emerging from China’s economy. There are two main sources for growth in a modern economy: domestic demand and global demand. China has historically been an exportbased economy, but it is attempting to transition towards a more effective growth model that takes advantage of China’s massive population. As urbanization continues to transform China into a more developed economy, it can tap into more reliable and sustainable growth conduits from within its own economy. However, the near-term outlook for domestic demand isn’t good, particularly given recent soft import data, stagnant inflation numbers and persistent disinflation in producer prices. While China can still largely rely on its robust export market for growth, it cannot seek long-term sustainable growth from this area. This puts even more focus on the strength of domestic demand in China. As is evident from figure 6, consumer price growth has flatlined and imports are declining; some of the weak import data can be attributed to falling commodity prices but some is clearly the result of softening domestic demand.  

What Kind of Response Can We Expect from Beijing? Beijing has been carefully managing China’s slowdown since it began, and nothing is expected to change in this regard. Throughout 2014 the PBoC was using targeted stimulus to support the financial sector by injecting liquidity into the nation’s biggest banks and small lenders, either through direct injections or by lowering funding costs. Later in the year China’s central bank cut its one-year lending rate by 40 bps to 5.6% and its one-year saving rate by 25 bps to 2.75%. As 

we stated earlier, this signaled to the market that the PBoC is primed to use its big guns once more to spur demand. Yet more monetary easing may be needed in China, although the decision to ease further must be weighed against the advancement of structural reforms and local government debt management. Deposits at China’s major banks are suffering as people seek out other investment alternatives, so now these banks are pressuring the PBoC to cut its 20% RRR, thereby allowing them to lend more of their deposits. Given the ineffectiveness of the first interest-rate cut in two years, the threats to growth, the fact that inflation is well below target and the PBoC’s apparent alacrity to pull out its big guns, we believe the bank may cut interest rates again as well as banks’ Reserve Requirement Ratio (RRR). 

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