"Canadian GDP number masked a renewed contraction in real final domestic demand— slipping in 3 of the past 4 quarters. Bank of Canada won't be on the sidelines for much longer. Sell the loonie! Consumer spending may be strong but the fundamentals supporting it are not. Real personal incomes actually dipped 0.1% in July and the broad trends are visibly cooling off. Pending home sales fell 2.5% last month. More pushing on a string. The Fed will cut rates to zero, but the failure of the bond market rally to elicit a pulse in the most interest-rate sector is rather telling." David Rosenberg "At gold’s most recent peak in 2011, it only took 135 ounces of gold to buy the average-priced home in the US. It took just 85 ounces in 1980. Today it takes 272 ounces. Because unlike the 1970s, most major asset classes are in a bubble today, something history has rarely witnessed. The global financial system is also much more precarious, particularly when you include widespread negative rates and money printing that wasn’t present then. And debt loads are at all-time highs for most segments of society — government, corporate credit, global credit, student loans, auto loans, and derivatives, not to mention unfunded liabilities for both federal and many states. Add it all up and it is hard to imagine a scenario where gold and silver don’t soar in the upcoming fallout. So yes, a gold/real estate ratio below 85 is possible, even if that means house prices rise like they did in the 1970s." Jeff Clark, GoldSilver.com