Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Ohh nooo!!! Gold so low!


Another day, in another time, gold had plunged to a 20-year low, plumbing the depths of $250 an ounce at the same time as the Dow was hitting a new all-time high of 11,300, even as astute followers, just like some that I have today, were then following Another and FOA. Some threw in the towel in disgust, some turned on the messenger, and everywhere you could cut the tension in the air with a knife.

I was following the thread of a particular (unrelated) discussion in the old USAGOLD forum archives (I do that occasionally) and I came across a few comments that reminded me of some of the recent comments here. So I picked out a few of them that I thought you might find interesting.

I want to note a couple of things. The first is that I don't think we are seeing quite this level of desperation yet. I think another $100 lower and we might start seeing more of this kind of towel throwing. Also, note that these few days below marked the last time that physical gold would ever be that cheap. So the very time at which some who had been following A/FOA in real time were throwing in the towel was perhaps the best buying opportunity in all of history. If you understand why I, personally, welcome the recent decline, then that's something to keep in mind if the falling price of gold ever starts playing tricks on your mind. If you don't understand, then please feel free to ask in the comments and I'm sure that someone will direct you to some of the posts that explain my view.

All of these comments came from this page, and they are just a few selections that I picked out especially for you today. :D

Skip
Overcoming discouragement
#11907
8/23/99; 22:59:27

I've avoided posting for some time because of discouragement. As of right now, I am regretting that I ever invested in gold or gold stocks. Something that is worse than losing hope and cutting your losses is losing hope and capital and then to have someone lift your hopes...only to have those hopes trashed, again and again and again and again and again and...endlessly trashed.

If I think of all the growth I could have had in the stock market rather than the losses in gold and gold stocks, it is almost sickening and totally depressing. Somehow I know that I'm not alone in feeling EXTREMELY depressed at this latest attack against the POG by the rich big boys. Somehow it seems very unholy to keep getting financially bled to death simply for making the right decisions at what SHOULD be the right time. Maybe I'm over-reacting, but I sure hope that GATA can help bring the POG back to at least its 20-year average. This current price level of gold and gold stocks is totally absurd and complete discouraging.

Long have many of us ardent goldbugs waited and waited and waited, witnessing almost every reason possible to trigger an upturn in the price of gold...only to see apparent collusion drive it down further.

I'm in too deep to sell, and too scared to buy anymore. Somehow I can't help but wonder whether I'll someday die in my old age with tens of thousands of worthless gold stocks and many ounces of worthless gold coins. Am I being somewhat paranoid? ...actually, I'm just plain TIRED of losing!!!

Can someone out there provide some GENIUNE hope for us disillusioned gold bugs? I'm so tired of the misinformation that prevails on both the internet and the news media that it's impossible to know WHO OR WHAT to believe anymore. Some of us would love to start overcoming discouragement, and I'm one of them.

--Skip

The Stranger
Skip
#11909
8/23/99; 23:09:10

Boy, are you going to get a whole wave of responses on this one. I, for one, would be happy to address your predicament in the morning if you like, but, right now, I have to go to bed. For starters, however, let me suggest this: tell us more about what you have been through. Just how bad has it been? What do you own, and how long have you owned it? Don't worry about giving yourself away. Nobody here knows who you are. When I get up tomorrow, I hope to hear more about what you have been through. You will get lots of help here, but first, you need to talk.


Aristotle
Response to FOA
#11917
8/24/99; 4:22:15

[…]

Some people prefer to disregard the fact that the Gold market has spent 20 years coming to this point in time and price--a price that could NEVER exist now except under the special circumstances that have been put forward in many carefully considered posts. Some of these same people might suffer a bruised ego because their own careful and astute choice of Gold as an investment has yet to pay off huge in a timely fashion. Or else they might feel that Gold should be performing for them with obvious gains each and every day. Don't these people ever go home from work and sleep, or must they always be on the job and getting paid? My point is that "productivity" need not be an around-the-clock affair. As ANOTHER has said, "Gold will be repriced once in life, and that will be much more than enough." The bottom line is that you will either HAVE Gold when events turn, or you won't. It's that simple. As Beesting recently reminded us (or was it Turbohawg or ET?), this isn't just a showdown between the dollar and Gold. There's a whole world of currencies that have been suffering at the hands of their national dollar-debts.

[…]

Gold. Get you some. ---Aristotle

PS. for Skip: I don't know if this will help you out. Maybe it'll make you smile if nothing else. I had a chat with a friend the other day who was second guessing his Gold bullion investments after watching the price fall while the DOW powered upward in half frustration. He asked "What if I die with a drawer full of coins before the price of Gold goes higher?" (He's under 50 years) I laughed and said, "Then, congratulations!" I suggested to him that anyone who checks out with Gold coins remaining in his drawers (at any price) obviously had adequate means with which to meet his life's needs. Only a deathbed ego would consider any distinction between the remaining Gold weight and the Gold price during one's last breath. He laughed loud and hard and said that was for sure.

Aristotle
Skip, another thought for some additional perspective
#11932
8/24/99; 8:43:41

You said, "If I think of all the growth I could have had in the stock market rather than the losses in gold and gold stocks, it is almost sickening and totally depressing."

I don't believe a particularly infamous trader who was actively IN the markets had a single Gold investment. His name was Mark Barton, he lost half a million, and killed a dozen people. Just because you see the DOW index climb is no guarantee that your particular choice of stocks will be gaining too (unless you bought into an index fund.) I can't even begin to recall the vast number of times that I've heard the financial reporters announce decliners outnumbering advancing issues despite a higher DOW on the day.

Further, try to recall your original rationale for choosing your current suite of Judy's. (As in "Punch and Judy" shows...taking a beating. A term-use I coined to lighten my own dismay over a mistaken purchase of a mining stock years ago that went south and now vies with postage stamps in value.) Chances are that whatever compelled you to make those decisions would constantly act to sway you to do so again, and are probably more compelling now than they were then. If you couldn't resist Gold or Gold stock purchases before, could you resist them now? Hopefully, as time has passed, you've come to see a distinction between owning a world class asset (Gold) versus stock in companies that try to earn a paper profit by mining for this world class asset. Don't get me wrong...I love mines (I have a professional attachment to them), but I'll never again make the mistake of investing in a paper generator when there is real money (Gold) to be claimed. As a productive person, I invest in myself and make (earn) my paper directly. Then I cash it in for Gold, month after month. It's a One Way Street for an enjoyable life. I never did enjoy fretting over whether IBM or AT&T would be the better performer. I AM the performer, and all that I ask of my money is that it really be money--payment-in-full.

Unlike some people that are fully invested in stocks, with Gold you actually have real savings. You are a sovereign individual, immune to the fiscal mismanagement of your nation's leaders. Also, think of the sector of the population that lives paycheck to paycheck, unable to dabble in the stock market, and unable to save either paper or Gold. Is their life for naught because they aren't "in" the stock market? Wouldn't they be thrilled to have an all-Gold savings? Travel to some other countries and your perspective will change in a hurry. Adopt the larger view, my friend.

Gold. Don't work for anything less. ---Aristotle

FOA
Reply
#11935
8/24/99; 8:57:04

[…]

From my standpoint, most of the gold paper market will revert to forced cash settlement at the last trade! That's for long investors only because it's the inability of the shorts to deliver that will precipitate this. They will be taken out and shot because the CBs will be clearing the deals. If it's dropped to $100 and established trading markets halted worldwide because of sudden delivery demands, everyone will settle at $100 cash and walk away! People that are waiting to sell their hedged gold into their counterparties (mines included ABX?? to the BBs) would have to sell their gold at the new settlement price. Remember, when big international bankers are in trouble on this grand of a scale, the rules are changed into the banks favor. Always has been, always will be.

Understand, that the BIS clears all trade in CB gold. If that gold is tied up in private Bullion Bank deals, it will come under their rule. The BIS tells the Government what needs to be done and the Governments tell the mines. In perspective, this will be happening in every industry, worldwide, not just gold. Everyone will lose some skin…

FOA
Comment
#11943
8/24/99; 9:47:21


---CoBra(too) (8/24/99; 9:08:34MDT - Msg ID:11936)
Endgame among not so clearcut adversaries?!?---


CB2,
Good point. I have one view for what you write:


-----So why hold on to bad debt paper scrip if the endgame between $/IMF and Euro/Bis was so clear-cut policy as FOA feels, all along.---------

There is no possible way that the CBs could ever sell or unload all of those dollars. Presently they are held in the form of US treasury debt. It's owned by the CBs not their public / private interest. So, the CBs would not be looking to "spend" these reserves in the usual sense. They obtained these reserves as their local economy generated excess sales to the US (for them a trade surplus) and their private citizens wanted to hold local currency assets, not dollars. The Cbs printed Marks (example) and traded with their citizens for these excess dollars. Then they traded these dollars for US debt so as to earn interest.

Now, exactly what good are these debt holdings as long as their country continues to carry a trade dollar surplus? Not much, if the locals don't want to hold dollar assets. In the end, if the CBs were to sell these treasury holdings it would crater the US debt markets long before any value was received. And, to add further, that value could only come from using the dollars to buy something. Now what does a Cb use its reserves to buy, cars, TVs, other currencies??

No, the only avenue to balance currency value is through the age old asset of gold. Indeed, if you already hold enough gold, one just uses the dollars to bid for gold until the dollars become worthless (price of gold spikes to the sky). Usually only the intention to bid is enough?

Yes, No? FOA

FOA
Reply
#11947
8/24/99; 10:20:59


---- Al Fulchino (8/24/99; 9:12:26MDT - Msg ID:11939)----
------what I was grasping for is the connection with this analogy to the gold industry is how the industry wasn't wary like OPEC with their own product. This manipulation could have been prevented had they OPEC'ed themselves. Do you agree?------


Al, it's true that the mining industry could have done a better job of managing their product. But, would they have been allowed to? Just prior to OPEC and the 1971 gold window close, all the major nations were still trying to work out a common ground with respect to gold. The price was so low that few mines were making anything more than subsistence. The governments were finding that they could no longer use gold as money because they needed to cheat on the currency. The US wanted the price of gold to run up so as to spike the oil price and obtain more local production. Something they couldn't do competing against the nickel a barrel ME producers. As gold rose, the mines didn't need any production agreements so no one sought one. Throughout the 80s everyone was expecting gold to regain its trend, so again , no need for collusion. It's only been in the 90s, especially during and right after the gulf war that the industry began to smell a rat. Hell, even two years ago, Another's Thoughts about manipulation were dismissed as crazy. Now, the industry sees they are in a battle for their lives as their asset is at the center of a realignment of world currencies.

Truly, if gold is repriced high enough, as a competing currency, the falloff in jewelry demand will negate the need for any additional supply. At extreme prices, the CBs could supply the market for years to come without impairing their asset reserves. Production curbs on the mines could again restrict them to minimal profits even if gold was in the tens of thousands. A mess indeed.

FOA


Canuck
Sorry to all, I quit.
#11987
8/24/99; 18:40:45

Sorry to all, FOA, Aristotle, Aragorn, ET, Steve H., Gandalf, Peter A., The Scot, canamami. I'm done.

We talk of an upward swing that I don't think is going to happen. We endless surmise on the possibilities, Sachs is 'working' 15 mt. and BOE is selling 25 mt. in 4 weeks, yadda,yadda. The USA gas 7,500 mt., BOE still has 680 mt., the IMF, the Swiss, many other CB's. The 'overhang' is monstrous compared to this 15mt. and 25mt here and there. Who is really going to control gold?? I don't understand the 'paper' end of it but I will take your word for it that it will blow up, and then 'physical' will rule. So then, you controls the 'physical', the holders with thousands of onzes or the one with thousands of tons? Did the 59 page article not allude to the fact that CB's WILL sell down the price of physical. Gold has been dropping for 20 years, if I am a country in need of quality, value-oriented reserves, given that it is 1999, do I want gold or do I want the currency of choice. Fifty years ago, gold was a 'reserve currency', today it is not. With today's global infrastructure I can 'switch' my reserves very quickly. Investors are 'switching' investments into Japanese equities, and tomorrow it might be England or Germany. Tell me why a federal bank needs to hold gold? Why does a central bank hold gold? For a few years now CB's WANTED USD as reserves because it represented stability and wealth.
And it is as plain as day that CB's want out.

In regards to the message above, I have read it 10 times and two phrases stand out, "all that I ask of my money is that it really be money--payment-in-full." I'm investing in gold and I'm not getting paid in full, I feel brutally sorry for for the folks who have been investing in golds for years and years. I wish gold a turnaround for their sake. Secondly," Adopt the larger view, my friend" confuses me. I think the CB 'overhang' is the larger view.

Again, I apologize to all, I am throwing in the towel, I wish all gold investors multitudes of luck and fortunes, I won't be there; perhaps I am scared, short of time, impatient, 'fiat' hungry, I don't know. But again best of luck, sincerely.

Canuck

SteveH
Canuck
#12003
8/24/99; 20:58:06

You will be missed. We all feel your pain. I would offer that the pain is most always the greatest before change, but we all live our own lives to our own rythm.

Good luck. Keep in touch.


FOA
I'll be back later.
#12004
8/24/99; 21:06:47


----Cavan Man (08/24/99; 20:06:51MDT - Msg ID:11996)
FOA
I see there are a couple of posts here this evening that are not pro-gold and perhaps for good reason(s). Do you have a repartee?-----


CM,
Yes, it is sad when someone gets hit without a clear knowledge of why. Unfortunately there will be more of this because investors are unprepared for the times ahead. We could see gold go through tremendous swings as this is unwound.

Long term booms (20 years +??) always die with major losses inflicted on the most leveraged positions. Add to this a once in a century destruction in the most popular currency, and we produce an economic earthquake the likes of which no one has ever seen.

Most investors retain their life savings in a fully invested mode and would not get off these train tracks if they saw two engines coming. They will stay there because it's impossible for them to believe they occupy the wrong position! Who can lay blame or call them fools? These typical western savers have been educated to believe in a money system that serves no purpose, except a medium of exchange. Yet, they perceive that all of their assets are correctly valued by this system.

The gold market suffers the same fate. The same ideals that hold us in bank accounts, using credits to indicate what is on deposit, also drive us to invest in gold assets that must be sold to realize a profit. Modern gold bugs travel from bank accounts into paper gold and back into the same bank accounts. All the while pointing out the weakness of the system, yet needing the same system to keep score. Without the modern paper gold market, gold bugs, as we know them are lost to place a value on their holdings. That is why they gravitate into familiar gold holdings. Ones that still retain some connection to their paper currency. Mine stocks (and various option / futures) are a likely choice as they sit squarely upon the financial system we know most.

Great swings in asset preference always bring monumental profits. However, these profits will be shared by only a very few. And those few will have to endure gut wrenching blows to their assets when this storm hits. Gold will by no means be safe and it will not be secure. But in comparison to every other form of wealth, it will be the most well-known and sought after asset on the planet.

I think, many will be weeded out from this market as events unfold. Most of them never expected the fluctuations occurring now and they would be horrified at what may come. However, what they retreat into will be completely cleaned out. Completely! As for those that are sharp enough to buy when the proverbial blood is running in the streets? Time and events will prove that they were not as smart or quick as they thought.

Having said that, paper gold may rally, gold stocks could storm up and physical could just sit there. But that won't be the end of it and such an action would simply draw more into the fire. I remain steadfast to what Another once said:

"when a thousand hungry lions fight over one scrap of food small dogs should hide with what's in their belly"

This dog is well fed with gold and hidden deep in its history. Thanks FOA


The Stranger
The Post With No Name
#12005
8/24/99; 21:34:29

Last night, somebody calling himself Skip posted a sad commentary of his experience in the gold market and issued a plaintiff call for reassurance from this Forum. Tonight, Canuck, in an act hardly anybody could fault him for, suddenly jumped up and made a run for the exits. The last time we were at these price levels (and after years of pie-in-the-sky forecasts) ANOTHER and FOA suddenly reversed themselves and announced that the POG was very likely to collapse. And now, just to be sure we are all scared as hell, Farfel shows up tonight to remind us that the world economy is about to slip down a blackhole, taking gold with it, of course. (Needless to say, I think such pronouncements are as looney as they are facile.) But there must be something about $250/oz. that brings out the fear in even gold's most devoted enthusiasts.

Forgive me for being presumptuous, but I think times like these are apt to be hardest on those who have the least confidence in their own research. I doubt anybody here has a higher proportion of his own assets in gold or gold-related investments than I do. Yet, I have absolute confidence in my position. There is a worldwide reinflation taking place. It is quantifiable here in the U.S. It is, in fact, quantifiable in many countries around the globe. It is the very reason, in fact, the FOMC raised rates today (despite having committed three coupon passes in the last month). One doesn't need to be a PhD. in economics to understand the meaning of these things. But, because it takes time for the masses to come around, one needs to have patience.

I think it was Ben Franklin who advised never putting all of one's eggs in the same basket. But somebody else must have said, if you ever want to get rich, putting most of your eggs in one basket is just about what you're going to have to do. The trick is to watch the basket. I don't know who might have said that, but, whoever he was, he convinced me. Apparently, he also convinced Bill Gates, Aristotle Onassis, Michael Dell, J. Paul Getty, etc., etc. etc... None of those guys ever gave a darn about classic portfolio theory, and, frankly, neither do I.

I have always been a "plunger". When I find the right thing to do, I just can't bring myself to do much of anything else. But, over the years, my efforts have paid off handsomely. That's why, as much empathy as I feel for someone like Skip, I also feel respect. No, I don't know what he owns or when he bought it. I also don't know how much homework he did before he risked his money. But I know this: Skip had a dream once that I can relate to. He wanted to be rich and he had the courage it takes to get there. Now, that's my kind of guy.

Skip, if you are still out there, remember these simple words: If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. You may be having a low moment, buddy, but the future belongs to people like you. You will learn from this and go on to do great things with your investments. Believe me.

And as for you, Canuck, get a good night's sleep, my friend. Tomorrow is another day!

Skip
The Stranger
(08/24/99; 21:34:29MDT - Msg ID:12005)
#12020
8/24/99; 23:26:52

I'm still out here, and have frequently lurked on this forum although I rarely post.

True, gold approaching the low $250 range struck fear in my heart, as I've been bleeding financially all the way from the high $300 range down to the present pits of despair. Nonetheless, my concern is how much lower gold will go before it finally turns, and whether or not I can hang onto what stocks and coins I currently own before the POG returns to at least normal levels. I'm building a cash account through working two jobs and very long hours in case such a slush fund is needed to get me through the next few months without having to liquidate at great loss.

I'm sorry for Canuck that he threw in the towel. Also, I do appreciate your praise of my courage... and I once heard that the TRUE test of courage is having the ability to do the right thing during a time of fear. Right now, I believe that keeping my gold and gold stocks IS THE RIGHT THING TO DO.

My thanks to all who have responded to my posting from last night.

Sincerely, Skip


FOA
Comment
#12064
8/25/99; 11:29:26


---------The Stranger (08/24/99; 21:34:29MDT - Msg ID:12005)
The Post With No Name
Last night, somebody calling himself Skip posted a sad commentary of his experience in the gold market and issued a plaintiff call for reassurance from this Forum. Tonight, Canuck, in an act hardly anybody could fault him for, suddenly jumped up and made a run for the exits. The last time we were at these price levels (and after years of pie-in-the-sky forecasts) ANOTHER and FOA suddenly reversed themselves and announced that the POG was very likely to collapse. And now, just to be sure we are all scared as hell, Farfel shows up tonight to remind us that the world economy is about to slip down a black hole, taking gold with it, of course. (Needless to say, I think such pronouncements are as looney as they are facile.) -------------

(to see the rest, read his post)


What do we conclude from the above post? Stranger, I appreciate your presenting your thoughts and perceptions. They validate my own perceptions of how westerners feel about gold. I also used to read Another's Thoughts as an observer when they were presented by someone else. The one common thread in all of them was his council to buy only gold, physical gold. Yet, it never failed to impress me that every time those considerations were given, all discussion immediately turned to buying gold options, futures and mine stocks. It was like an automatic response that was ingrained in investor psychology from years of indoctrination. Your conclusions fit the same pattern.

Why is it that professional brokers and investment councilors in this country lead the public to this end? Is it because they have no depth of history to draw from or is it that they have "no fear" of losing others' money? Mention that gold may rise and could become a bedrock for your life savings and not one paper pusher tells his clients to buy real gold. Yet, we let the facts speak for themselves. The gold price having fallen from manipulation has literally destroyed a large percentage of portfolios invested primarily in gold stocks. Some of these mine stocks have gone to zero and are in bankruptcy, never to return.

All the way down Another (and later myself from association) said to buy gold for the long haul because in the long term it may go very high. Then in typical like form, traders said buy gold stocks for the long term also. Don't listen to Another, it will never go that high and with these paper items you will get rich if it only goes up $100 bucks! Indeed, leverage ruled the day all the way down with little regard to the fact that the "little guy" could lose it all with no hope to run for the final payoff. Now, here at $250 gold, Another presents a case for the destruction of the pricing market mechanism and still says, buy gold for the long haul. A concept, I might add that fundamentally offers the most bullish case for physical gold, while posing a worst case scenario for mine stocks. Yet, intelligent thinkers and admitted white collar investment professionals, such as yourself, lay the blame of loses to mine stock investors at the doorstep of physical gold advocates.

The whole philosophical reasoning for buying physical gold was always to negate the possible total loses to ones assets from a breakdown of the world's modern derivatives pricing system. A system that spans our entire financial structure, not just gold. Even with this risk in mind, I submit that it is still the current system advocates that present a "pie in the sky" council to new, unseasoned savers. Just as you use Bill Gates and other "risk takers" to portray an "American Spirit" of "plunging in", it hides the hideous failure rate inherent such accomplishments. Had Skip not listened to the sirens song of great wealth, he would still have had a chance today to benefit from a centuries old investment, real gold. So consider this, the next time you drum the march for the average person's savings to the tune of "paint your wagon and come along". For myself and many others, long term playback and asset safety are more important to our family than the bragging rights of day traders.

Please continue. (frown) FOA


The Stranger
Sorry, FOA
#12068
8/25/99; 13:46:23

I didn't make the point to offend you. My intent was merely to share my confidence in the gold market at a time when people were obviously getting nervous.

As to your comments about white collar professionals and "westerners", I suppose you mean well. I would emphasize, however, that, out of respect for our host, I have specifically avoided discussing the merits of stocks vs. coins. I intend to keep it that way.

Finally, as to who is misleading whom, all of our (your's and mine) posts are a matter of record. I hope I need say no more.

Farfel
Five Lessons I Have Learned Late in Life as a FORMER Goldbug
#12069
8/25/99; 13:47:35

1) With the exception of Barrick Gold, ALL gold mining companies are run today by maleducated, sub-moronic, good ol'boys from Hicksville. After all, just take a look at all the formerly unhedged gold producers who finally decided to hedge today some $200 an ounce below Barrick's hedges. True idiots! Talk about shooting yourself in the golden foot! Oh, well, what the hell, might as well tank the gold price another 100 bucks or so.

[…]

2) Unlike other commodity producers (like OPEC), there is ZERO co-operation amongst gold producers... and so they are doomed to die their own individual respective, deaths (except for Barrick Gold).

These guys couldn't get together to throw a birthday party, let alone figure out how to coordinate a de facto cartel designed to curtail gold production and enhance the gold price...

3) All Gold mining company managements operate on automatic pilot, following a pre-determined path to oblivion (excepting Barrick Gold)…

4) There is NO notable difference between South African golds or North American golds or Antarctica golds, for that matter. They all share one thing in common: a plunging gold price below 200 will ultimately bankrupt the entire lot of them (except for Barrick Gold)…

5) There are NO gurus in the gold market (except Peter Munk). It is impossible for any single technician, chartist, fundamental analyst, astrologer, etc. to predict the arbitrary path of gold in the short-term with any scintilla of success, although it is a usually a pretty safe bet to say "It's going down!"

Gold's arbitrary behavior stems from its oligopolistic control by the Central Banks. Upon any given day, there is at least a 50% chance that some Central Bank will pre-announce its decision to dump its entire gold reserves in order to MINIMIZE its profits on the sale.


FOA
Comment
#12083
8/25/99; 16:45:26


------The Stranger (8/25/99; 13:46:23MDT - Msg ID:12068)
Sorry, FOA I didn't make the point to offend you. My intent was merely to share my confidence in the gold market at a time when people were obviously getting nervous.------


Sir Stranger,
no need to be sorry and your post did not offend me. I felt the offense was directed towards intelligent physical gold advocates. When you publicly interpret my posts as a reversal of thinking, you are wrong and send a false signal. To say that I expect the (physical) price of gold to tumble, is a misleading statement that subordinates my reasoning by talking out of context.

I understand how our gold market presently trades as a paper derivative and in physical form. Every day, new evidence comes out to confirm this concept. TownC offered the excellent work of John Hathaway to further explain this evolution. When Another pointed out that the derivative side could fail and be discounted in price from the effects of that failure, you obviously did not grasp it. Others did. If you had then you would have noted that I expect the physical gold price in the dealer community to explode as its supply falls. A process of rejecting the current price setting methods.


--------As to your comments about white collar professionals and "westerners", I suppose you mean well. I would emphasize, however, that, out of respect for our host, I have specifically avoided discussing the merits of stocks vs. coins. I intend to keep it that way.-----

Again, I present a balanced observation that helps to account for the much larger percentage losses to investors that have followed the "established paper rout". Nervous people have a more pressing need to learn why their strategy has failed. Without balanced input, we often repeat our mistakes. I learn from my mistakes also.

As for merits of stocks vs. coins? There is no valid comparison. Apples and oranges have never had the same taste. The percentage of loss for one or the other is but a function of the risk one takes when placing savings into that vehicle. Coins will never be as risky as stocks of any kind. Nor will gold bullion in one's hand. The very simple laws of nature dictate that gold cannot fall to zero as stocks have and often do.


-------Finally, as to who is misleading whom, all of our (your's and mine) posts are a matter of record. I hope I need say no more. ------

I believe we come to this forum to offer our Thoughts for everyone to view and discuss. No one is right, wrong or misleading as only events can and do prove all things. To date, cash invested in gold bullion has lost value much less than if it was placed in mine stocks. All of us can grasp that fact. Indeed, no more need be said.
Thanks FOA


AEL
ha ha ha
#12085
8/25/99; 17:07:52

did anyone catch the unintended double entendre in FOAs latest? --- "... the much larger percentage losses to investors that have followed the "established paper rout"

i.e. rout, or route?

:)


FOA
Come what may?
#12506
8/31/99; 16:15:01

ALL:
I do thank everyone that have voiced support for the continued sharing of my insights. Anyone of you that have been alive for a while must also understand the frustration of explaining a difficult topic. Truly, I (like all of you) am not a machine and the process of walking a fine line between two worlds of thought is a major energy drain. This unique forum gives all readers an opportunity to expand their viewpoints by observing the "real world of money" through different eyes. As such, I deplore any direction that takes us into the ego world of "traders calling the market". It is an accepted fact that many aspire to make that role their life's work as there are plenty of other net sites and forums to confirm it. As popular as this may be, it offers little in the way of gaining insights to the perspectives that drive world investments. As a group, the trading society often loses the concept that feelings and viewpoints are the driving forces that shape those little chart patterns so many follow. Because many give up in trying to decipher the meaning of these forces they degrade themselves to a level of "follow the leader investing". True, it works sometimes, but one's spirit of understanding develops little from the process. As a result, when a major change does impact world thought, people are lost to grasp why the trend reversed, and more importantly, cannot change their strategy with it. Perhaps, something we have seen in the gold market these last many years? So, "let the world have its way, come what may", I will try to present my insights as seen through others. I hope many will join us on this journey.

Further:

I completely understand (as do you) that many people become upset when someone attacks the validity and purpose of their favourite investment strategy. Indeed, if most of your savings are installed in said discussed vehicle, the urge to find a flaw in the reasoning becomes overwhelming. Often one does not have a factual explanation, but we do have the ability to "think out loud" in the form of a rambling discussion. Perhaps, this is how many view my posts? I offer that this form of "rebuttal" is preferable to just stating "he/she is faceless and doesn't have the facts"??? If I do this, I apologize and will try to change. I think Mr. "PH in LA" had it very right when he observed how some internet writers, "come wading in with both barrels blazing" as they present their thoughts! I add that this could be an offshoot of our modern society. Hope we can get past this, soon! Thanks PH.

Onward:

Most investors that have assets in this broad arena called the gold market, have also come to appreciate just how large an "impact area" gold has had. Not only throughout history, but right up to today. The ongoing battle over the "gold concept" has won and lost fortunes, built and destroyed empires and in general has warped the human senses about what money and savings should be. This conflict continues today, even onto the pages of this forum. As the stress builds on our world financial system, the lines of thought concerning gold are becoming more clear. Let's examine some of what I perceive to be some of those lines.

Of course there are those that do not even consider gold as a viable contender on the world money / investment scene. The have lately been a major vocal class that have prospered in the realm of the current financial system. Myself nor anyone else should blame them, as they follow their reality in a world that presently benefits their ideals. I think few of them have given themselves a full study of how world currencies have come and gone throughout the years. If they had, the fact that they "have lived in a period of little change" should hold for them that things can reverse without notice. History is full of recounts that describe the rise and fall of entire social groups at the hands of a sudden rethinking of what has economic value and what doesn't. In any event, ingrain monetary ideals usually do not change during one's lifetime, so the past lessons may be worthless for some. As a result, a large mass of society must always return a great portion of their wealth into the hands of some "historical event".

Also included in the "gold perspective" are the true "physical gold advocates". They have seen through history how the destruction of various "money systems" always leads to the destruction of the "economic system" built upon the fiat concept. The efficient money system present in those fiat times, help to create the need (and therefore increase the value) for many real assets. The ensuing breakdown of the money always destroys the "efficiency" factor that society used to up-value the assets. Usually, any enterprise built upon the current functioning money contract system is impacted as it cannot change quickly enough to the evolving money system. It's hard to grasp that even real assets like houses, land, equipment, vital necessities and even food, can lose value as their trading pipeline is disrupted because no medium exists to fairly create "market value"! We have seen, time and time again, that real gold can gain value against "everything" during true money destruction. During these times, the human spirit need for using a familiar process is all consuming. The exchange of goods and services continues, with or without a valid medium of exchange to express it. Still, values become so conflicted and lost during this process that the marketplace reaches out for the most tradable of things that can act as a medium. In that need to replace "efficiency", lost with the medium value of paper money, it upvalues any store of value thing as the new "medium of exchange". Yes, within a large marketplace, the human need for trade gives any "efficiently" attribute more valuable than food.

This is why I smile when someone says, "how will anyone be able to know if the gold is real and what will they value it as"? I say, that the marketplace dynamic will ram this education home very quickly. The above question is asked by someone that accepts and uses paper dollars every day. Yet, these dollars are paper (how do you know they are real? as often they are counterfeit) and hold value only because the marketplace is using them. During a money breakdown, you will observe trading in the marketplace and quickly come to accept anything, ANYTHING, that even could be gold. Believe it!

Finally, we also have the "in-between gold advocates" in the "gold perspective". Usually, their view of the market is such that it is an industry built within the confines of the present monetary system. They do not hold an extreme view about paper money, and believe that today is different and our currency will only fail "somewhat"! So far, in concept they have been right for many years. Yet, in investment practice, their "gold perspective strategy" is failing. I say this in contrast, in that by holding physical gold, the "physical in your hand money insurance factor" is never lost, even as the quoted gold price falls. Especially, in today's new market dynamics we require the question:

"does the paper security in your hand give you an absolute claim to physical gold, or does it more so give you a "right" to receive dollars that match the increased value of gold?"

This "in between gold perspective" strategy, calls for placing money in various forms of paper gold. All based on the convenient factor of holding paper that gains in price as the demand for gold increases during a controlled slow burn of the world money systems. These paper investments are expected to all gain because their value is "derived" from the quoted price of gold on established major exchanged, London, Comex, etc. Whether you hold "gold certificates" , mining stocks, gold options or gold loans, an observer can readily correlate their increase and decrease in value to the world quoted gold price. They are derivatives by nature, because their very worth requires the observation of another price setting market.

It is here, in this "in-between market" that I believe most gold investors will first see the breakdown in the world money system. Yet, for them, this breakdown will bring the loss of performance to their paper holdings, because, from necessity, our financial structure cannot allow the established quoted price of gold to rise. To honour the present contracts, would require the supply of millions upon millions of ounces of gold that simply does not exist. In as much as these players expect a huge payoff on their holdings as the gold market must run skyward to balance delivery, the opposite action will most likely be delivered. Because all of their holdings are valued upon a marketplace that establishes a price with even more derivative trading, the expected failure of those contracts will crush the quoted price. Just as most men will not hang themselves with a rope, the shorts that actually create the quoted price of gold today, will not trade it higher. In fact, I believe they are trying to gather physical gold (taking delivery everywhere) while it still trades in relation to the low derivatives price. Unless you are a major entity in world affairs, holding something the world must have, I doubt any form of gold paper securities will escape the burn. Indeed, over time, in a up and down fashion, most of the paper gold holdings will be destroyed first, then the physical gold price will zoom in a matter of days if not hours!

How will mining shares respond to this "POSSIBLE" event?
More (sometime?) later. FOA


______________

I included portions of Farfel's comment above because I thought it was funny. In fact, gold mining stocks were sucking so horribly on 8/25/99 that I thought it would be interesting to take a look at how some of them are doing today after having almost 14 years to recover alongside a gold price that has risen 550%. Barrick (ABX) appears to be the worst of the bunch (at least of the ones that I looked up). It is one of the largest gold mining companies in the world, yet its share price is the same today as it was at gold's lowest bottom in 34 years. Barrick was $18.52 on the day that Farfel wrote that comment, and today it's $18.90. Why's that, you ask? Well, for one thing, in 2009 Barrick diluted its shares in order to essentially spend $5B of its shareholders' money to buy back those hedges that Farfel was raving about. ;D

Sincerely,
FOFOA


653 comments:

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Anonymous said...

You may be happy about being able to buy gold cheaper but you must also be pissed off because the gold you bought before is worth less now.

Did I have to spell it out for you?

Yes, I did.

Because you're a Freegolder=moron

tEON said...

the gold you bought before is worth less now.

Less? in what? USD?
ART'S A PAPERBUG EVERYONE - HE JUDGES EVERYTHING IN FIAT DOLLARS!
ART=BULLSHIT!

the gold you bought before is worth less now.

I guess it would be worth less IF I sold it... but I am still a net saver, not a net spender... yet. That comes after the transition, for me, or my children or my grandchildren.

Anonymous said...

Who are the happiest people on earth when the price of gold goes down?

Why,

FREEGOLDERS of course!

Because Freegolders are happy that the price of real money is UP in terms of gold.

Who is happiest when FOFOA mocks them (“Ohh nooo!!! Gold so low!”)

Why, FREEGOLDERS of course!

Because who could ask for more than waiting another 100 years before the price of gold goes up in terms of REAL money?

Who buys put options on gold whilst believing that gold is the most valuable asset in the world?

Yes, that’s right!

God bless Freegolders and their messiah FOFOA.

They preach that the value of gold stays the same when the price of gold goes down.

FREEGOLD=FREEBULLSHIT

Anonymous said...

GARY,

I mean,

you Freegolder moron;

God forbid you needed to sell your PHYSICAL gold because you had to pay for your medical expenses or your children's college education;

You big fat moron;

When you sell your PHYSICAL gold, do you receive the price quoted for "paper gold" or the fantasy figure in your head?

Moron (related search: FREEGOLDER)

Sam said...

One of the hardest concepts to grasp (unless you read the blog) is simply what money is. To me complicated issues are made easier to understand when they are made simple. For instance:

If you have two apples today and your neighbor has two oranges today you could barter trade 1 apple for 1 orange and enjoy a nice variety of fruit and a better standard of living. However if your neighbor, whom you deem a credible person, wasn’t going to have his oranges for a week, you could still give him 1 apple on the promise that he will give you 1 orange down the road. The recording of that promise is money. Because of the money concept trade doesn’t have to come to a screeching halt for a week. To expand your “economy” you could later trade that promise for an orange from your neighbor for a pear from the guy down the road and now a lively bustling economy is born. It is superior to barter and every society will gravitate towards it since the beginning of time.

So you see, any dissenter that says that "fiat money" is bad and "gold money" is good sounds like a fool once you know what money is. His statement makes no sense. Money is credit. It doesn’t matter what you use to record it the credit because money is not for saving. Nobody here is advocating for fiat savings or fiat wealth. In fact we are warning against it.

Sam said...

Though many topics have been discussed over the course of this blog some of the basics will always get lost on those that don’t take the time to read the whole thing and instead just want to pontificate through the comment section. This is unfortunate because the comment section should be a place where new comers can ask questions so they can be pointed in the right direction or helped with clarification on a complicated point. It’s not that dissent is unwelcome; (in fact I used to check the comments often just in case someone has come up with a good counter argument for FOFOA to tackle) it’s just that for those of us that have read the entire blog, the dissenters come off as ignorant when they don’t have a basis in the concepts taught here. They simply cannot argue against something that they do not understand.

For those that want the great joy that comes from the deep understanding of this blog I recommend that you read it. You will gain insights not found anywhere else. Then make up your own mind. Heck, become a well-informed dissenter and I think I can speak for everyone that you would be respectfully debated not chastised or deleted. But let me tell you though many have tried there are no cliff notes version to Freegold. It is complicated to the point that it is actually not very marketable to the common man and so those selling newsletters and seminars will avoid it even if they are sympathetic to it. Once you finally do “get it” you will realize that almost nobody else does.

For instance a very sad troll comes on the blog from time to time and says, “fiat bad, gold good. Freegolders like fiat, that mean freegolders bad” I think I actually improved his argument for him but you get the point. We have obtained too deep of an understanding on complicated subjects like, wealth, money, human nature, and history to be hard money socialists. Long ago I came to this website as a proponent of a Gold Standard for the simple reason that Ron Paul said it was a good thing and I like and respect Ron Paul. I thought fractional reserve banking and soft fiat currency were evil things and the primary reason for our troubles. It was easy black and white thinking and didn’t take much hard critical thinking. Then I read the blog. There was so much I didn’t understand. There is no short cut. If you want to understand you will have to read the blog.

Roacheforque said...

If Martenson is correct that a "vicious cycle of rising interest rates" will accompany a 2008 style deflationary "collapse" (in other words, an unwelcome intrusion of REALITY) then by all means please explain how such rising interest rates come about?

This is entire system is predicated upon complete control of interest rates through the derivative price control grid.

Interest rates cannot rise except and unless by purpose and intent. Just as QE cannot end except and unless by purpose and intent.

An end to QE ... and an end to ZIRP? By mere chance? I think not, or haven't you "heard" the BIS speak.

Prepare Ye the way of FREEGOLD (and stop wasting your time with that useless ARTifact).

Anonymous said...

Sam,

You're a dishonest liar. I told you before that I'm against FORBIDDING the use of gold as money. I'm not against using fiat as money. Stop putting words in my mouth.

And also you are an arrogant disingenuous fool who thinks he knows what money is better than the quintessential banker, JP Morgan himself, who famously said, "Gold is money, everything else is credit."

Anonymous said...

Wil,

You're an idiot.

tEON said...

But Freegolders are FORBIDDEN to spend their gold, right?

Okay guys, the jig is up, okay. I don't see any point continuing the lie. He's got us dead to rights. It's true... according to the stone tablets carved by Another, maintained by FoA and the 'keeper of the flame' FoFoA, if we sell our Gold we must return our FG decoder ring and promise to forget the secret handshake. Arthur's figured it out.

We are fat (directed at me) morons, liars, idiots and I, for one, apologize for making you sick, Sir.

You've cracked it - now you may depart with the knowledge that your, high intelligence, deductive reasoning, strong knowledge of economic law and never-give-up attitude have bested us. You've exposed Freegold. We are shamed. Bravo, Art! We bow to the better man...

Unknown said...

Actually, I thought Sam's last comments were insightful, and fitting.

When there's nothing even there, there isn't really even anything to take pity upon.

I could wish the air well on its quest to find confrontation, but that would be to personify a wisp of foul smelling air.

To do that, I certainly would be an idiot.

Sam said...

For the record, JP Morgan said gold was money when gold was...in-fact...money, at least in the United States. I (arrogantly I suppose) understand and agree with JP Morgan's statement. We recorded our credit promises on coins of gold. Not the best use of gold (as some wise men have made me understand.) Today gold is NOT money....but ofcourse...again...you would have to know what "money is" in order to know what is money.

Lisa said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Lisa said...

Sam - regarding your comments at 6:05 and 6:13..... +100 on so many levels

milamber said...

@Alex,

Regarding your questions concerning the Euro (the currency) and the Eurozone (the political construct), Nothing is guaranteed.


“"The euro, probably more than any other currency, represents the mutual confidence at the heart of our community. It is the first currency that has not only severed its link to gold, but also its link to the nation-state. It is not backed by the durability of the metal or by the authority of the state. Indeed, what Sir Thomas More said of gold five hundred years ago – that it was made for men and that it had its value by them – applies very well to the euro."


http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2011/07/euro-gold.html


The Euro is a currency that no one country controls (not even Germany). So consequently no one country can manipulate it for their own advantage. It is a supranational currency that has been proven credible in gold, but not standardized to it by weight. The Euro itself doesn't really have any problems.

What is problematic, and these are BIG problems in the short term, and may ultimately doom or radically change some of the countries that are in the Eurozone,is that the Euro (the currency) structure does not allow Eurozone govt’s to devalue their way out of bad decisions and profligate spending. It forces the various political states to make tough choices about their spending and taxing priorities.

This by design.

Did you notice that with all the “talk” of Grexit, Spanic, or whatever cute word play that the pundits come up with, the structure is still the same? The only changes that they have made is ECB supervision and allowing the ECB to participate in OMT to maintain 2% inflation so that no country slips into a deflationary depression.

Does Freegold require the Euro? No, but it makes it a hell of a lot easier & potentially averts kinetic war between various powers.

The Euro is the creation of old world money interests that were betrayed by their "ally" Nixon in 71. Back then (and throughout the 70's, 80's and 90's) when the choice was the USSR or the US, there was no real choice.

As Another said, the Euro is the best way to transition from the current $IMF based IMS w/o war:

http://www.usagold.com/goldtrail/archives/another4.html

5/5/98 ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!)

**Who does BIS really represent?

"old world, gold economy, as viewed thru modern eyes" or " way to move from US$ without war".

Milamber

Michael dV said...

Sam:
"you would have to know what "money is" in order to know what is money"
great quote...is that yours?

milamber said...

@ Gary,

If I can, I would like to add to your comment slightly, primarily for any newcomers reading these comments.

You wrote (I assume in response to someone who has been banned),

Who are the happiest people on earth when the price of gold goes down? is not the correct question.

Who are the happiest people on earth when the paper price of gold goes down?

Freegolders, or PGA (Physical Gold Advocates) or people who save in Gold (and can increase their nest egg more substantially).


I would submit that that answer can be rather confusing (especially for a new comer to the comment section) because it depends on when you are giving the answer.

Right now, the PGA is waiting patiently (not advocating) for the paper gold market to implode. This will happen sooner rather than later with a falling price, thus the quiet cheering for lower prices.

But once it has happened and the dust has cleared and its safe for gold to come out of hiding, then there will be a physical only price for a physical only market. At that time, the PGA anticipates a revalued Gold price many multiples higher than today. And if printers continue to debase their currency, the price of gold will keep rising. And this will be welcomed by the PGA.

Why do I write the above?

Currently, from a market perspective there is no difference in price between physical and paper gold in open, public transactions. And since that is true, a market for paper gold by its very nature suppresses the price of physical gold.

Why?

Because paper gold can be created in any amount at will to increase the supply of available product. As FOFOA wrote:

”The mere existence of a commodity-like paper market for gold suppresses the price naturally, systemically. Long term systemic suppression of gold is something totally separate and different from short term price manipulation or distortion which can occur in any commodity or paper market. “

http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2012/07/fallacies-1-paper-gold-is-just-like.html

So right now, as I sit and patiently wait for the end of the current paper gold markets (IE the fractionally reserved Bullion Banking system), I am not worried that the price is dropping. Because I know that in a world where paper gold and physical gold trade for the same price, the paper market, by simply being, will naturally suppress the price of physical gold.

But once that market implodes and the punctuated equilibrium resets, then the PGA will be ready and waiting for the rest of the world to finally understand the value that is locked up in his gold.

And if they would like to convert some of their deferred savings into current consumption or maybe invest in a productive enterprise, then he (or she) will certainly sell some of their gold, if the price is high enough and stable enough.

Milamber

gull_mann said...

An interesting article that I have seen making its rounds around the internet. Found this one on ZH. Interesting. Won't post the whole thing, as you can use the link to read the whole article. But wanted to paste this small section:

A Crucial Gold Support area is now Being Tested

I fear that there is something much worse in the future however as the complacency demonstrated by the bubblevisions and our political elites is almost identical to the 2007-2008 time period. The S&P 500 is about to break major technical support areas and through June I expect a shattering or at a minimum a test of the 1500 price area. After a summer of digging, bouncing and floating along the declining 50 day moving average, a crash like 2008 appears imminent this autumn.

If that scenario holds true, a total deflationary collapse will occur creating precious metals shortages and causing a 1937 style economic decline which will forever change the economic and political landscape of Europe and the United States as well as putting us on a path to a major world war.

http://johngaltfla.com/wordpress/2013/06/24/a-crucial-gold-support-area-is-now-being-tested/

Sam said...

@Michael

I honestly just came up with it in response to Art but I spend so much time reading A/FOA/FOFOA that if the quote wasn't stolen it was 100% put in my mind by reading this blog.

Sam said...

@Lisa

Thank you

Sam said...

@ thin air

Have you read moneyness and moneyness 2. Read them with an open mind. Your anger and obsessiveness with this blog tells me that from a psychological perspective you really wish to understand.

@Alex.

I would venture to say the answer to your question lies in what truly gives a value to a currency. Is it the economy of the euro zone members or whether or not the currency functions regardless of the members.

Anonymous said...

Dear Sam,

You and your fellow Freegolders are full of shit for the following reason.

You say that money is credit.

What is credit? Quote: "Credit (from Latin credo translation. "I believe" ) is the trust which allows one party to provide resources to another party where that second party does not reimburse the first party immediately (thereby generating a debt), but instead arranges either to repay or return those resources (or other materials of equal value) at a later date."

In order "to repay or return those resources (or other materials of equal value)" VALUE OF BORROWED RESOURCES MUST BE DETERMINED.

The value of the fiat money you use IS NOT DETERMINED. Hence your beloved Euro or the US dollar ARE NOT EVEN FORMS OF CREDIT.

It just says 'legal tender for all debts public or private' on the US dollar. It doesn't say what a dollar is WORTH in terms of credit towards any goods or services. (It doesn't even say anything on the Euro, does it? Frankly, I haven't even looked at Euro notes closely even though I used them before. They're so bland.)

So,

Freegolders,

Even though you claim to know what money is, namely, that money is credit,

What you think of as money and use as money (dollars, euros, etc.) IS NOT money according to your own precepts. Because dollars and euros are not credit. What they are is UNSPECIFIED AND INDETERMINATE. VALUE of credit must be DECLARED at issuance of credit; otherwise, credit CANNOT be issued because it refers to nothing!

So all this talk of dollars and euros as being IOUs or credit is nonsense. But even the sheeple who are not freegolders regurgitate the bull that fiat notes are IOUs. What are they IOUs for? NOTHING. They are 'I owe you nothing's at best!

Sam, did I tell you that you are full of shit?

FOFOA, I never actually told you that, did I, even though you called me names unprovoked?

FOFOA, you are full of shit, too.

Woland said...

Luke. 8. 26. 39

Lisa said...

Woland

Legion?

Motley Fool said...

Alex Hillock

Fwiw, we do not expect the euro to fail, dire media propaganda to the contrary.

But sure, we can cross that bridge if we come to it.

TF

Indenture said...

A wise man held out his hand and in it was a piece of gold.
A young impetuous student quickly reached for it yelling, "Money!"

The wise man simply closed his hand, tight and still.
"Today gold is NOT money....but of course...again...you would have to know what "money is" in order to know what is money.

Tommy2Tone said...

Alex-
"I understand that. But I was questioning more what happens if/when the Euro is no longer with us. "

Then "oil bids directly for gold".

And what's wrong with that?

"At the same time, the Europeans began discussions (secretly at first) of creating the Euro as an alternative to the dollar, in case the Middle East attempted to bid directly for gold again. Such a bid would drive gold through the roof and disrupt the supply of oil to both Europe and the US. Thus, it appears that one purpose of the Euro was to be a possible replacement or alternative for the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency."

http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2008/11/have-you-been-tapped.html

gull_mann said...

@ Motley Fool: as M and Alex said, the Euro has already failed. Nothing propaganda about that.

Woland said...

According to John Dominic Crossan, the word had a double meaning,
both with regard to posession by multiple demons, and also the name
of the occupying force in Judea at the time, equating one with the other.

Sam said...

The EURO is fine. A currency has not failed until it no longer functions. Many people thought the dollar would fail on many different occasions for many different reasons. It was severed from gold, endless deficits, ect. They were always wrong because they weren't looking at what makes a currency function.

Indenture said...

A currency functions so bullion can transact.

milamber said...

Woland,

That was priceless! Let me try!

Uh,em....

Sometimes I open up my email client, and think that my computer is possessed because I see a hundred copies of the exact same post. 

And then I realize it is just the prattling paranoia of a perverted preprubescent punk puking paltry platitudes. 

Poorly.

Pilamber

Sam said...

currencies are always competing for usage. They do this so as to expand the base from which they can gather taxes through inflation. Inflation is KEY. There is not but a few average Joes that can figure out how inflation really works.
US Bankers designed the Open Public Markets so that not only the price of commodities were listed in dollars, but, in case of default, settlement would occur in dollars. The bankers took advantage of the fact that there was confidence in the dollar due to gold banking that currency.

IMHO, this is what established the key function for the dollar that has persisted up to today.

-Ender

Ender goes on to explain how the US Strong dollar policies created a market in gold giving the illusion that "strong dollars" could buy cheap gold anytime in the future. Any time speculators jump in the market long in paper gold and making the dollar look weak, they are liquidated. Seems like exactly what we see today. You can find the whole conversation in the comment section between FOFOA and Ender in the September 2008 piece titled FREEGOLD

Dr. Octagon said...

Sam said @June 24, 2013 at 6:05 PM

One of the hardest concepts to grasp (unless you read the blog) is simply what money is. To me complicated issues are made easier to understand when they are made simple. [...]

Excellent comment Sam! Very well stated.

milamber said...

@gull_man

You use the word fail to describe the Euro (the currency).

I do not think the word means what you think it means (smile).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2y8Sx4B2Sk

Go read about some real currency failures like When Money Dies

http://www.amazon.com/When-Money-Dies-Devaluation-Hyperinflation/dp/1586489941

It is an excellent book describing the Wiemar Inflation & is a great modern example of a failed currency.

If you haven’t done so already, read
http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/09/just-another-hyperinflation-post.html?


And think about Zimbabwe & what a currency failure really means.

Once you read those, then this comment that FOFOA wrote in his Hair of the dog post will make a lot more sense,

”If you think austerity riots are bad, you should see hyperinflation riots!”

http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/05/hair-of-dog.html

Hth,

Milamber


Unknown said...

I wish I could make my hemorrhoids vanish as easily as FOFOA vanishes Art, but now there is even a new, lower low:

"The total of the three major gold bullion dealers (Scotia, HSBC and JPMorgan) in their gold Comex dealer account registers only 27.76 tonnes of gold."

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

I have to mention that whenever "a crucial gold support area is now being tested." I simply wince because there is no way on EARTH to test, or determine, or divine what a "crucial gold support area" really is.

You can attempt to do this by tracking the paper gold market historically and projecting past trends into the present, but that is the process of what Kuhn would call "normal finance" (as in normal science). It will do little to prepare you for revolutionary finance (as in revolutionary science) which process begins to shift our paradigms from the old to the new.

The growing bandwagon of "2008 is about to repeat itself" has many flashing red indicators, and with it many caveats that, "it will be much worse this time, because ..." (well, why go over the laundry list again - when a structural problem is papered over the root causes always worsen)".

I believe what will happen lies in the interest rate derivative markets, if only we knew which winners were on the winning side and which losers will delta out like Lehman. Interest rate forwards are a completely different animal than CDO's and CDS's ...

But I know ... I wax Kirby-esque

As with the Lehman stress test, I would bet that the collapse ahead has been well planned in advance, and when these Lions fight they aim to spill royal blood in the sand.

Truly a battle of Giants lies ahead and it will be VERY interesting to see who is sacrificed so that the winners may claim their spoils.

In the end, the BIS will choose what debt will be cleared and what will be written off, and frankly, it really won't even have to seem credible, because once this shock and awe lays out, there will be no high authority to weigh justice on the matter.

It will simply be a matter of might makes right and those who took the "losing side" are now bankrupted in full indenture to those who took the "winning side".

It will be 30 pieces of silver and the knife of Brutus rolled into one. They had a real Ogre to scapegoat with Fuld, but who will have their throats slit this time?

Those doing God's work? Perhaps one who has always done what he's done "because we CAN"?

I hope I have the lawn chairs set up to see the final show, with popcorn a plenty, and the flower's sweet incense all about. It will be a glorious time for small dogs hiding with what's in their belly (as long as it's bullion grade).

M said...

Its a sign of the times to see the Russian hockey league being able to match the National hockey league in North America in terms of player salary.

Vezina Trophy-winning NHL goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky has held talks with KHL president Alexander Medvedev about a move to Russia’s SKA St. Petersburg, Medvedev said Sunday.

SKA has reportedly offered $10 million a year tax free to Bobrovsky.

10 million dollars a year in Russia. Just like that....

Unknown said...

M,
Enough to pay the mortgage AND buy 2 loaves of bread, with maybe even enough left over for 10 gold eagles ... after ...

Grumps LaBastard said...



http://twoshortplanksunplugged.blogspot.com/2013/06/gold-real-estate-banking-new-game-as.html

This is FreeGoldish, right?

Enjoy!

Aaron said...

That website look about as Freegoldish as your previous comments Bastard.

Quote from Fat Bastard:

Then there is an alternative site the FOFOA blog. I don't recommend it anymore. The thesis there is that gold will stay external to the system at a price of 55,000/oz. There will be no mining of gold, no gold lending, easy credit creation in a currency will be punished by a higher gold price in that currency. It is bizarre. I post there under GrumpsLabastard telling the cultists there they're full of crap. My name is mud over there.

tEON said...

Use your Gold wisely. Have a Boating accident by all means, but make the stuff work for you. Playing Treasure Island is for fools. As the toxicity circulates through the banking system those with high quality assets, especially Gold, will have sterilised portfolios (mortgages), and will be viewed as such. Work the system and make it work for you!

This sounds a lot more GabardineLacunaBactericide-ish than Freegold.

If you want to play in the Casino, or be the Casino owner - that is your prerogative. You seem unsatisfied till everyone agrees with you. You must be very frustrated.

Archer said...

Freegoldish? Yes, I suppose it's freegoldish, with the emphasis on ish. I won't ask why you keep pimping that blog as if it were the font of all wisdom? Perhaps you have some sort of relationship with Mr. Plank? Perhaps you are Mr. Plank. A few observations in case you aren't Mr. 2x4 1.) Mr. 2x4 has thrown out a reval price in the neighborhood of $125,000 an ounce. It's a tad higher than your guru's (Jim "My source tells me" Willie's) silly 7K figure. As for getting the bank's full attention, nay preferred treatment, in the future via the advertisement that one has physical gold, well, I'd just like to point out a technical detail to (you) Mr. Plank, which is, they will want to see the precious up close and personal. Being less than forthcoming about the nature of one's ownership ain't going to cut it.

In the meantime, let me cut to the chase and offer that (your) Mr. 2x4's blog is to this blog what Kenny G is to John Coltrane, what Dwight Howard is to Kareem Abdul Jabbar, what Erica Jong is to William Faulkner, what a Big Mac is to this.

Jeff said...

GLD inventory took a bit of a tumble.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIfu2A0ezq0

M said...

I've read some 2planks. He's an interesting cat that is for sure.

S P said...

In my opinion it makes sense to diversify a little in preparation for what's coming, even that means you won't benefit completely from freegold. It's easier the wealthier you are, of course. I would break it down as follows:
1) physical cash, and a basic bank account for payment
2) limit the amount of new debt taken on
3) physical gold held outside of the banking system (this should be the bulk of your savings and you should even consider liquidating some other goods to acquire gold now)
4) other physical precious metals held outside of the banking system, particularly silver, but this should just be backup
5) property owned outright and a reasonable provision of staples, survival goods, personal defense, tools, energy backup, etc.
6) after all of the above, if you still have some leftover, portable items and collectibles such as diamonds, jewelry, gemstones, art, antiques, etc.

If you can swing all of the above, in my opinion you are protected. There's nothing they can do to you, if they attempt to bring you down the whole system comes down in which case it's a mute point.

said...

GLD drops over 16 tons

GTU trades at a 6.3% discount to NAV

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

The euro is WORSE than the dollar. At least, the dollar is a FRAUD that's indigenous to its country, the United States. The euro is a FRAUD that doesn't even belong to the French or the Germans. The euro is purely international banker money; without country, without allegiance to anything but the principle of world domination by the bankers.

The euro is more anti-gold than the US dollar.

byiamBYoung said...

The source I have used for over a year is now out of stock for anything over 10grams gold. Last price for an ounce, $1480.00.

byiamBYoung said...

RE: the 1480.00 per oz... no, I don't pay those prices. But it shows that there are some who are just not selling physical at these lows.

Cheers

RJPadavona said...

GrumpsLaTard,

My dong is huge-ish.

Wanna role play? You can be the Pygmy.

#EyeOfTheBeholder

Grumps LaBastard said...

I'm merely presenting the math and how an agent would reasonably react to market forces.

byiamBYoung said...

@RJP,

How is that pronounced? Is the emphasis on huge, or ISH?

:D

M said...

A sshole
R etard
T ool

"The euro is WORSE than the dollar."

The Eurozone as a whole is a net creditor with a trade surplus and you are so hopelessly unintelligent as to suggest that the dollar is better then the Euro ?

The ECB has printed the equivalent to 3.5% of GDP

The Fed has printed the equivalent to 22% of GDP and japan 33%

Art is not only a keynesian, he is also piled onto the wrong side of the boat with the dollar lovers.

M said...

@ ByaimBeyoung

Interesting.

I went to buy more yesterday and Scotiabank was out of anything under 5 oz bars. I bought 4 oz on Friday but they were out on Monday.

This happened on the first big selloff too and it was a month before they could get more but they did get more and they are selling physical out the door at these prices.

How long can this go on for ? I mean, even a few big shrimps could just wipe these dealers clean 10 times over.

ScotiaBank had 30 1 oz bars and 8 5 oz bars on friday. $37,174 plus $50,320.

$88,000 +/- woooooweee. That is nothing to a big shrimp. I heard a guy in the cubicle beside me buy $70,000 worth in 2010.

Price is down $15 as I type. $1258. Less then $300 higher then the price in March of 2008 before Bear Sterns went under.

Aaron said...

Grumps LaBastard said...

I'm merely presenting the math and how an agent would reasonably react to market forces.

Grumps LaBastard also said...

Then there is an alternative site the FOFOA blog. I don't recommend it anymore. The thesis there is that gold will stay external to the system at a price of 55,000/oz. There will be no mining of gold, no gold lending, easy credit creation in a currency will be punished by a higher gold price in that currency. It is bizarre. I post there under GrumpsLabastard telling the cultists there they're full of crap. My name is mud over there.

M said...

A sshole
R etard
T roll

Free speech is a 2 way street. So you think that you respect free speech when you plaster the same comment 10 times ?

Lol I quote

"The Fed exists at the pleasure of the American government. The American government is elected by the American people."

The Fed is a private entity. It does not exists at the pleasure of the US government.

The Fed has primary dealers ALL OVER THE WORLD. In Canada, Japan, Germany everywhere. They use these banks to dump their debt all over the world at the gunpoint of the US military. And you think the ECB is fascist ?

Not only does the ECB not have primary dealers (to emit debt at gunpoint), it doesn't even have bonds.

"THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION DOES "

I am a Canadian and the constitution of the US of A means as much to me as the constitution of Russia. I couldn't give a flaming fuck about the constitution of your hell hole of a bankrupt socialist crony country.


said...

Gold breaks through 1250 pretty hard. I am glad I found FOFOA before this collapse or I would be questioning the pretty sound logic of the collapse the our ponzi economy. Now I am waking up each morning hoping to see a down $50 or $100 day and enjoying the panic of the paper market crowd. The silver stacker videos on youtube are great.

"I think this is the bottom, but if not, great, I will buy more at a cheaper price" is a common saying among 90% of them and they have been saying it since it broke $30.

M said...

@ Luke

At some point physical should dry up. It hasn't happened yet.

??

said...

I agree. I feel like as long as the GLD has plenty of gold we have time to accumulate, but the 16 ton withdraw today was interesting. I wonder if the withdraws will speed up. If so, I would guess we are nearing the end.

Not a bad time to go into debt to make some big purchases imo. 0% APR credit cards are still available. This certainly isn't for everyone though.

gull_mann said...

@ ByaimByoung: just curious if your dealer is local or online. I'm curious as these stories keep increasing. Rumors are customers have been waiting for close to 2 months for shipment from Tulving with no updates on shipping date or reason for delay. If Tulving is hurting, it can't be much further.

M said...

Art

The ECB will be nothing more then a clearing and transaction house like Mastercard Visa after freegold.

No savings will be recycled into currency denominated debt at interest. With no savings recycled into currency denominated debt, there is no purchasing power to draw on by printing currency.

Michael dV said...

Luke the question is how much of the remaining GLD gold is really allocated or significantly owned. If it is flowing through GLD and the reset happens then suddenly all that gold on the books may suddenly find itself gone. A sudden panic into allocated could easily eat it all up too. A billion dollars gets you 20 tons or so. 50 billion is nothing...it could all be called for tonight. One guy could want it all.
(I do not think he would get it but I'm just saying that if that is all the gold there is on the market then even at presumed freegold prices it could go fast.)

Michael dV said...

gull
Tulving has had some issues but lately they seem to be out of stuff they usually have. I doubt retail will be the way we get the news.

gull_mann said...

@Michael:

Here is the info regarding Tulving. Customers waiting +2 months. Still no word when they will get their products. Tulving probably waiting for price to drop so he can buy cheaper and then sell to those who bought at a higher price. Or, there really is starting to be a issue with inventory and getting product in a timtely manner. I would hate to be out big money with stories I have heard of Tulving.

http://golddealerreviews.com/reviews/gold-dealers/3-tulving

gull_mann said...

Trying to find the best deal on 1oz gold. Anyone find an online dealer with good (low) premiums? Cheaper the premium the better.

Archer said...

attention: gull_man

http://www.apmex.com/product/11951?utm_source=HomePage&utm_medium=FlashBanner&utm_campaign=062513product11951

ein anderer said...

M,

No savings will be recycled into currency denominated debt at interest. With no savings recycled into currency denominated debt, there is no purchasing power to draw on by printing currency.

After reading this sentences several times I do not catch their meaning (sure because of language barrier). But they are important for me. How you would phrase this if you had to explain it to an completely newbie, grandma, child?

Alternatively you could give me the headline of a FOFOA post in which he is explaining this. Since he is using many more words may be I get a chance to understand there better :D

Thanks!

Dante_Eu said...

FOFOA,

You should have some kind of countdown to the friday. MTM-party and all that. It may be some significant event if gold continues to free fall.

Suggestion:

The final countdown in Europe in 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1...

We're leaving together
But still it's farewell
And maybe we'll come back
To earth, who can tell?
I guess there is no one to blame
We're leaving ground
(Leaving ground)
Will things ever be the same again?


:-)

Agent98! said...

M @ "Worst day ever for gold miners..."

http://business.financialpost.com/2013/06/24/miners-writedowns-top-17-billion-as-roubini-sees-gold-dropping-to-1000/

http://www.skynews.com.au/businessnews/article.aspx?id=882240

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-06-25/newcrest-launches-disclosure-review-after-pre/4780090
--------------------------------------------
Sam @ - "To me complicated issues are made easier to understand when they are made simple. For instance:

...However if your neighbor, whom you deem a credible person, wasn’t going to have his oranges for a week, you could still give him 1 apple on the promise that he will give you 1 orange down the road. The recording of that promise is money...

So you see, any dissenter that says that "fiat money" is bad and "gold money" is good sounds like a fool once you know what money is.."

You've described credit, and perhaps a more general credit based 'money', but not modern post 1970's irredeemable fiat money.

It was not unknown for a _personal iou_ some British Raj official on tour scribbled on some scrap of paper out in the back of beyond to circulate in India for many, many decades as good as 'money' through many hands before being presented and honoured by an English bank in far off Calcutta or England. It was indeed a kind of money of the type you describe, but it circulated, even though obviously considered as good as a Raj government cheque (or even more clearly in that case an equivalent value in banknotes) it was worth a set weight of gold in those particular golden standard times. Why? What other money might be needed in its place?

Money in the general sense, currency, goods, chattels, iou's - hard copy or electronic, pieces of paper, etc, aren't modern fiat money whether hard or virtual. In which money do most modern governments demand payment of their taxes? Their own created by fiat, and irredeemable in any other form currency only - of which they have an infinite supply, but which every taxpayer has to get themselves some...

With no disrespect intended, simple issues are made more complicated when numerous distinct and for the purposes unrelated issues are conflated, as in hangovers in thinking about olden days gold redeemable currency/money (even nominally so) whether fiat or otherwise, and modern irredeemable infinitely producible government fiat money.

MatrixSentry said...

Let's see, 16.23 tonnes of gold left GLD. Ouch!

That would be 521,794 troy ounces of physical gold, or approximately 1304 LGD 400 oz bars, or approximately 16 pallets with 80 bars each.

Since the peak, GLD has lost 383.85 tonnes of gold. Ouch!

That is 12,340,777 troy ounces of physical gold, or approximately 33,852 LGD 400 oz bars, or approximately 384 pallets containing 80 bars each.

The Window is open. Let the fresh air in.

MatrixSentry said...

Tulving is a crime waiting to happen. Anybody doing business with him is dancing with the devil.

Een Ander said...

The question posed by 'Ein Anderer' is a question that goes straight to the heart of the mechanism of the transition to Freegold. I never really understood the step-by-step mechanism by which eventually no savings will be recycled into currency denominated debt at interest and Freegold becomes a reality.

I would really welcome efforts to share insights in this step-by-step process.

Roacheforque said...

This week, the paper does as predicted, right on que.

As for the air-troll, when we observe a mania so tragic, we might ask ourselves why there is so much angst and animosity toward a group who has done no one any in the least of harm?

There is a lesson here about human nature.

Greed without purpose is like an engine without fuel, it lacks the "mania", the drive, to fully express itself.

What the air troll covets so dearly my friends, is our PEACE of MIND. He lusts after it with a vengeance, because he desires so much, and yet cannot obtain it (simply because he refuses to RTFB).

As his mania grows, he lashes out at us uncontrollably, insults us, stabbing and flailing away with each new pass into a peaceful forum where all are considerate, respectful and at peace with the world.

Our peace of mind is priceless to him purely because it is the one thing he cannot have, try though he might, the one thing he covets to a degree that he tragically lashes out at us again and again for want of it.

Can you not see that the value of anything as "useless" as gold lies in the power of covetousness?

Know this. If Giants could overcome their own human nature, and secretly, pragmatically, stoically, DIS-HOARD ALL THEIR GOLD to supply the covetousness of the 3rd world markets, its TRUE value would plummet to the dirt.

Understand this in terms of ART. His only satisfaction is the ability to disturb, to disrupt our "peace of mind" (the thing he covets most about this forum) and to steal a little bit of it away by eliciting a disruptive response.

Likewise, with gold, if half the world owns ALL of it, and the other half WANTS NONE OF IT it is worthless my friends. Worthless.

As a collector of rarities I have been shown this time and time again. A rarity has NO intrinsic value beyond the desire of others to possess it, the covetousness that drives greed, gives it purpose, gives it meaning.

To think like a GIANT, know that GIANTS do covet what their peers possess, at a level far beyond what we shrimp comprehend. It gives them purpose, and it gives their lives meaning. It fuels their greed.

Where does GOLD lie in this matrix? Understand human nature first then understand gold.

Like the rarities I collect, and possess, with the "mania of a collector" it is only a matter of time before I show the inner value of their provenance, their manufacture, their history, their comparative rarity, their uniqueness, their character, their boldness, their beauty as a comprehensive collection and the boldness of their craftsman, that the novice develops an UNDERSTANDING of value ... then comes the covetousness, the fuel, the desire.

I am a market maker in this tiny world of a particular rarity. They come to me asking "what price should I pay?" as if my knowledge and understanding is a solid guide to the limits of their own desire, and the governorship of their own earnings as to "how much to spend" on these things.

I would tell them that the answer lies in their own understanding, as in "spend as much as your understanding allows" (sound familiar?) but they do not understand.

Most people in this world are followers. Giants are leaders. Market makers. And in their own human condition not only determinants of value, but definers of wealth.

Otherwise ... the PAPER, my friends, is goin' DOWN.

ein anderer said...

Nice piece, Wil. With a kind of ANOTHER style …

Een Ander (we are "the other family", right? Oops, "the other cult", sure!),

heaving read M’s post again my question ends in a simple resulting question:

Why no savings will be recycled into currency denominated debt at interest anymore?

IMHO this can only be true out of technical reasons, not because of a changed human nature. FOFOA always said that the whole thing is automatic, inevitable. Changings of human nature occur, but can’t be predicted very well.

So the "technical reason" MUST be (1) that interest rates of fiat will always be lower then the growth of gold’s value. And (2): Speculation and betting will not happen again.

Right?

If I am right I wonder what the reason is. In some very few words?

Thanks!

Roacheforque said...

It is all about TIME and the definition of savings in that context. There are long term savings for long term needs, medium term savings for medium term needs, short terms savings for short term needs and immediate "cash in hand fiat" for real time, immediate "purchase" needs.

Each vehicle has a purpose.

What will change is the understanding that FIAT entails RISK.

Remember it is not an INTEREST rate, it is a RISK rate to hold fiat.

But all these understandings are skewed todat by centralized control and coordinated stability of that centralized control.

When the REALITY of FREEGOLD crashes through, people will understand credit as debt, and interest as risk.

And debts will no longer be seen as assets, but rather the liabilities they always truly were.

byiamBYoung said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Roacheforque said...

A simple equation from above ... FIAT is CREDIT, CREDIT is DEBT, DEBT entails RISK, DEBT is a LIABILITY ...

FIAT is a LIABILITY.
(a useful liability shorter term, risky long term from inflation)

Roacheforque said...

The paper will be in that 1230-1250 tunnel for another week (or 3), then finally another rolling dip to $1200, perhaps even a peek below.

It cannot go down too far or too fast. It must go down gradually, but with a purpose, to cool demand.

It is not so much a coordinated manipulation as it is a consolidation of interests.

Sorry to repeat myself ...

ein anderer said...

Wil,

so to get it clear: You are with FOFOA, and you say that there are TWO changes:

- a "technical" one (GLD drains, collapses, gold market freezes ("hiding"), derivativ markets collaps, Dollar goes into HI, CBs are revaluing gold);

- a "psychological" one: people will understand credit as debt, and interest as risk, and debts will no longer be seen as assets, but rather the liabilities they always truly were.

Well, I am far away from doubting this second thing. But I seem to be also far away from believing it. I am only open minded.

You see: There were many many horrible events in history--and man did NOT learn. Right? In contrary: He made things still worse and worse.

Some examples?

World War I
World War II
Hiroshima
Nagasaki
Biafra
Ruanda
Three Mile Island
Contergan
Tschernobyl

I AM a believer in human growth, definitely. But I think a little breakdown of money structures will not yet do the trick. This will not be enough to change the human mind. Not for very long.

And that was my question actually: What will hinder man to bet again? To speculate again? Because: As soon he is starting this again, we have a market for futures, for options, for derivatives again. And the whole story could just start again.

Will man be contented after FG? No running anymore to always higher gains? Only because this modern paper market chrashed?

Yes, a US-Europe crash (1929/1933) is one thing. A global crash is something else. We have media! We are looking in every corner today!

And yet: We can experience directly only our nearer surrounding. The family, block, town, region. It’s horrible to see the whole world crashing. But it is only television, radio, web, right?

Note:

That the ongoing crisis will end up in a "paper crash" and therefore it is wise to put one’s wealth into the best asset for storing wealth: no doubt! Also no doubt that afterwards gold’s price will be manyfold higher than today.

But how long this will last? And why?

You see: FOFOA was writing about »thousands of years«! And I wonder if I have missed any *technical* (inevitable) argument.

Roacheforque said...

SL, back again?!
And yet the Chinese do SO covet the Western way of life, the Louis Vitton, the Burberry's, the Marlboro. Look at their paper cities and tell me about it.

Ein. As you know from "Just Another Hyperinflation" HI is purely a psychological (not monetary) response. Loss of confidence.

So YES, there will be substantial psychological changes -- toward the DOLLAR ... but NO, deep seated human nature, as you have shown above, will never change.

There can however, be substantial long term REACTIONS to things like war, which brings us to today, a world built from the ashes of war such that the notion of "debt" as a long term wealth reserve holding comes about - through which 'hope" springs from the rubble, and generations of despair are prevented by this notion.

And an exorbitant privilege grows from this.

But people will always covet. WHAT they covet is what will CHANGE. Such is the game of Giants, they are "market makers" in covetousness.

That is the warning of what unknown lies ahead.

Roacheforque said...

What power is there on earth, greater than the power to control or manipulate the desires of another? The power to channel, attenuate and redirect covetousness?

Ask any woman. Ask Helen of Troy.

Giants do seek and wield this power. Can you not see the frenzied lust for gold as it's "price" moves upward, and the corresponding loathing as it tumbles downward.

See the trend of desire following "dollar price", as the media darlings mimic the redirection of covetousness orchestrated by the consolidation of interests among Giants.

To control the desires of the masses, to redirect their risk, their debt, their credit towards it, then pull the plug and skim the cream ... it is a very inhumane thing this power of Giants.

I don't think any of us here are heartless enough to do it.

We are more inclined, morally, to simply hold gold and wait it out.

Agent98! said...

Everything in life entails risk, assets and liabilities included. What will change is understanding how and why the sucking financiers got so freaking big, to dominate and way lay the economy by their size, to big to fail etc, from the 70's on. A change in understanding the economic misunderstandings that have led to such. Misunderstandings in particular to do with an inappropriate carry over of old gold related fiat thinking into modern ungilded fiat money. Misunderstandings that see sovereign governments misdirected by beliefs that taxing is for spending (taxation regulates aggregate demand), or that they must run a low deficit or even a surplus when there is an infinite supply of their modern fiat available. All they have to do is issue it appropriately.

Anything to do with gold, like old time fiat money economies, or saving in gold, are other understandings (largely valid) than for that required to understand sovereign issued fiat in a post gold standard world.

Jeff said...

Wil,

Your fount of wisdom doth runneth over. Perchance unclog the drain?

Giants aren't manipulating us. And the troll's belief that freegold depends on all westerners saving in gold is laughable.

FOFOA: I think most people cannot put themselves in the thinking-shoes of a Giant no matter what. They carry too much baggage. Perhaps they think the Giants are like evil Rothschild Bilderberg illuminatis or something, so they put on those shoes and start thinking about how to plan the next false flag to keep the masses enslaved in their own filth. Or maybe they think that there’s not really any old money “super producer” Giants per se, but that all old money was earned the old fashioned way, it was stolen. Those types don’t even think of the Saudis as Giants in the sense that they are super-producers because they are too obsessed with their own judgment of the morality of original acquisition.

(...)

Gold’s value really comes from intergenerational Giants who have no need to ever sell it. They really just net-produce and net-produce and they do it willingly for more and more gold, and then just sit on that gold until they die and pass it on to the next generation. And they will keep doing this no matter what the $PoG does. They're not buying it for its weight, but for proven long run currency exchange value! But if there’s no flow for them to get some, then they have to buy things like extra castles and cars and stuff that drives up prices and drives down everyone else’s purchasing power.

Roacheforque said...

We can do it with currencies (1997) new technology (2000) or home equity (2005) but we do it by forming booms and busts, misdirection of covetousness cloaked in the desire for yield.

I both respect and detest the power of Giants. But at least to understand it gives one the advantage over hundreds.

Was gold ever in a bubble? Can it ever be in a bubble? Of course it can. It is but a means to an end. The end is to control the masses, to control their desires, to manipulate that control to increase the true wealth of land, jets, limos, beautiful women at your feet, the envy of your peers.

That is real power.

I have little taste for it. It bothers me deeply to even think about the control or manipulation of others, and to see others do this, as I see every day.

But there are people who thrive on it, and go far.

What a wonderful shit-hole at times, this planet earth.

Jeff said...

So who is manipulating whom? Cui bono, Wil-o?

FOFOA: Are you enjoying high unemployment yet? The $IMFS is, even though its leaders will never admit it. One of the Fed's (quote-unquote) "mandates" is full employment and Obama touts (quote-unquote) softening unemployment while the number of PhDs on food stamps has tripled.

Everyone would enjoy full employment, right? The debtors, the savers, the economy as a whole? Well, maybe everyone except the welfare junkies. And who's the biggest welfare junkie of them all?

Roacheforque said...

Jeff,
I am ambiguous on the morality of Giants, I can only speak to my own, but they do manipulate and control, not just produce.

This is partly because in a world of population growth, debt expansion and limited resources, we have already over-produced past the limits of debt satisfaction and now derivative debt financialization is mostly what we "produce" in the "developed" world of Giants. Saudis are a notable exception, not the rule.

I do understand that FOFOA has adopted an attitude of Stoicism toward the inevitability of FREEGOLD, and I do not see all Giants as naked old Creepers, sipping absinthe and dancing around a fiery pentagram with nubile, drugged adolescents licking their cheesy toes.

But they are what they are, and I know that I am not one of them, as I have no penchant for rigging a derivative casino and wagering upon bets of another's demise knowing that I am the house, and I always win.

I agree with you, and FOFOA's perspective above. But there are Giants who produce, Giants who enslave and Giants who manipulate and steal.

To pigeon hole them all into this admirable "super producer" role is naive, and the evidence of power corrupting, and absolute power corrupting absolutely is all around you in the absolute abandonment of rule of law we are all familiar with here, too numerous in violations to list.

I can sleep at night, yes, but I don't deny it. I'm just not a part of it, therefore I sleep well enough.

Roacheforque said...

Who's manipulating who? Why all of us ... we are all manipulating one another at some degree or scale.

Even I am guilty. I manipulate somewhat more honorably (IMHO) by increasing the understanding of those who would purchase my rarities. I admit it, as I find it a somewhat more honorable manipulation, one I believe in.

But as others do not believe, the notion they are "stuck with a dog of a deal" can always come back to haunt their thoughts.

I do not manipulate the value of home equity with fraudulent securities, based on bad debt triple A rates in collusion with ratings agencies, to have fraudulent valuations bailed out by (ultimately who?) on my balance sheet so I can pay my best scammers a bigger bonus.

Such is life. No big deal. Used to it.

gull_mann said...

@ Archer: Thanks for the heads up on the PAMP Suisse bar. Good deal at $29.99 over spot. That is an option as well as OPM at $12.95 over spot. The PAMP Suisse bar is definitely nicer looking bar, but ultimately an oz of gold is an oz of gold and they both melt the same. I already have all the bullion coins I would want, so finding oz for low premium is what I have been trying to do lately. Any reason not to go with something like the OPM bar for the next purchase instead of paying a little more for a PAMP bar?

Biju said...

Freegolders,

Just imagine for a minute , paper price of GOld crashing through $1200 and settling at $800 and then you look at APMEX and still see them selling for this paper price. This would be dreadful to see. oh, the horror! the horror!

M said...

Jeff.

I said 50% would save in gold. Possibly. That's the way it used to be.

What do you think 50% of Western ppl will save in after the bond market grenades? And the usd either hyperinflates or loses half its value?

Mortgage backed securities?

said...

Gull

13 over spot? Where?

M said...

@ SL

Yep. We got conned into acquiring the most marketable good on earth.

This 8000 year old sham is finally coming to an end.

gull_mann said...

Here is an interesting article over at ftense: http://www.ftense.com/2013/06/precious-metals-panic-liquidation.html. As with FOFOA's posting, helps place things into perspective. The fundamentals are still strong. Keep stacking.

@ Luke: It was over at Provident Metals. Best price I have seen so far for 1 oz gold. OPM is a fairly generic bar, but gold is gold I guess.

http://www.providentmetals.com/1-oz-ohio-precious-metals-opm-gold-bar-9999-fine-in-card-iso9001-certified-with-qr-code.html

Archer said...

gull_mann asked:

Any reason not to go with something like the OPM bar for the next purchase instead of paying a little more for a PAMP bar?

As you said, gold is gold. If you can acquire gold in reasonably good condition for a better price, do so. I suggested the PAMP bar because it is a bargain relative to gold in other one ounce forms.

In the meantime:

Here gold sits in the low 1200s. And one can now see the light at the end of a tunnel that says, "Yearly global mining production vastly reduced." How, one wonders, will they be able to get the necessary flow, in a world of very still stock, in a world where even the scraps are apt to be hoovered up and held in resolute hands? How, indeed.

JR said...

No venison for you! And apparently we have reached the "long-term" as well. (But maybe I am misreading it, as it is above my reading level):

Gold "was a bubble," says Ken Winans of Winans International. "This is the unwinding of a bubble."

[...]

The massive sell-off of precious metals has pushed gold down roughly 40% from its high of more than $1,921 an ounce in September 2011, serving up a harsh reminder to investors commodities usually are to be traded, not bought and held, Winans says. Many of the doomsday scenarios that gold enthusiasts use to say that the metal was a long-term hold haven't materialized. "Many people out there were scared to death and loaded up with gold on the idea we will all be eating deer meat in the mountains," Winans says. "But they paid the ultimate price."

[...]

There could be more downside, Winans says. The last time gold crashed following a bubble was in 1980 and 1982. During that time, gold wound up losing 65% of its value, he says. "You're in a structural bear market for this stuff," he says.



But, he did say "structural." So maybe he is on to something - perhaps he meant there is no structural (offical) support for the current paper gold market?

Probably not, but its fun to imagine ;)

Anonymous said...

As we are watching paper gold drop and GLD inventory decline, I wonder what people think about the following:

1. Would it help the dollar if the USG started to support paper gold? (printing some dollars to buy paper gold shouldn't be that difficult for them - if the ECB/BIS can do it, they can probably do it as well)
2. If GLD shrinks and the London BBs notice that their reserves are running low, would the BoE (as the regulator of the BBs) and the USG/Fed watch these reserves after their 1997-1999 experience, would they notice the decline in reserves, would they care, or if not, would they be sent a warning at some stage?
3. Do the BoE and the USG understand the danger to the dollar system when the BBs run out of reserves?
4. Have they considered this scenario? Are they just clueless and will they be taken by surprise, or have they thought about this danger and do they have some contingency plans in the drawer?
5. Depending on your answers to the previous questions, why are neither the USG/Fed nor the BoE acting in order to protect the paper gold market?

Victor

Dante_Eu said...

JR,

It seems like long time no see no hear, where you been? :-)

When this bubble finally blows it will be with fireworks! :-)

Sam said...

@VICTOR

I am assuming they are watching the paper gold market very closely. I think their number one goal with driving the market up or down would be to shake physical gold from as many weak hands as possible. One could make an argument that in a rising market, falling market, or stagnant market people will sell for different reasons. Just depends what strategy works best. Maybe all three and different times. The latest strategy might be letting it fall to say 1100, then driving it back to 1500. That might free up a lot of physical from those that bought and held until the price "recovered"

Dante_Eu said...

victorthecleaner,

Maybe there is a failure to communicate between USA (USG) and UK (BoE)?

Or maybe, they both realize, that it is time for debt jubilee? The great reset.

Anyway, if it leads to new start, thus it really matter?

ein anderer said...

Art,

you’re right, but "they" don’t want a lower Gold price either! Because if Gold crashes what will happen to the Central Banks, not only in Europe?

So my guess (!) is that they would like to do everything (means: buying GLD shares), but they can’t! Because there is no flow of gold anymore! It’s now one big waterfall in one direction!

Too simple?

Jeff said...

Psycho troll (Qu'est Que C'est)

Yes, they will save in gold after the transition; switching their savings to gold doesn't cause the transition to freegold. It's not the cause of freegold. It's just an effect of freegold.

Troll better run run run away.

Archer said...

VtC asked,

1. Would it help the dollar if the USG started to support paper gold? (printing some dollars to buy paper gold shouldn't be that difficult for them - if the ECB/BIS can do it, they can probably do it as well)

Perhaps you'd could elaborate on how you imagine this sort of action would be potentially helpful. I see no benefits, except, perhaps, transitory ones.

2. If GLD shrinks and the London BBs notice that their reserves are running low, would the BoE (as the regulator of the BBs) and the USG/Fed watch these reserves after their 1997-1999 experience, would they notice the decline in reserves, would they care, or if not, would they be sent a warning at some stage?

I'm hard pressed to imagine how they wouldn't care, but, by the same token, I'm not entirely sure how their concern would translate into action.

3. Do the BoE and the USG understand the danger to the dollar system when the BBs run out of reserves?

The USG is a very big operation. There are likely still people about, though probably not nearly enough, in positions that matter, who have
a decent enough grasp of recent and not so recent monetary history that do understand the gravity of
the status of BB reserves. Again this does not mean that their voices are necessarily going to be heard, let alone heeded.

4. Have they considered this scenario? Are they just clueless and will they be taken by surprise, or have they thought about this danger and do they have some contingency plans in the drawer?

Somewhere, gathering dust in the very back of a large black file cabinet, or perhaps on a CD sitting inside of someone's desk, in the deep recesses of some sub department of one of the more important government agencies is something resembling a contingency plan.


5. Depending on your answers to the previous questions, why are neither the USG/Fed nor the BoE acting in order to protect the paper gold market?

Perhaps they've done a cost benefit analysis and determined that it isn't in their interest to do so.

Sherlock said...

If the USG supported the paper price of gold, wouldn't that cause "credibility hyperinflation?" Why would they support something that is potentially competing with their currency, especially when they can issue the currency at will?

Besides, it appears support has collapsed. If it were to all the sudden elevate upward hundreds of dollars, someone would recognize that a true GIANT had entered the arena and the process of liquidating the remaining physical gold would be expedited. Freegold would be upon us sooner, rather than allowing the system to limp along and crater under its own weight.

Perhaps, that would cause a quicker revaluation and decrease the potential for serious political unrest. Except, a little political unrest in the good ole US of A is desperately needed...

Anonymous said...

@JR,
Did Winans really say, re: the falling gold prices, that gold investors "paid the ultimate price"?? Seriously? The ultimate price? I thought that cliche was reserved for, you know, actual physical death in the line of duty or some noble endeavor. But I guess in an era when we are all heroes if we just keep going to the shopping mall after terrorists take down the Twin Towers, we also pay the ultimate price if we lose a several hundred dollars on our gold investment ploy. I am always glad to be informed of these new standards in the Best Damn Country in the Whole Wide World. It's hard to keep pace.

Right there the guy has zero credibility. What a maroon!

On another topic, hat tip to Wil for his observations today on the foundation of value in covetousness and not romanticizing the Giants.

Anonymous said...

Ooops, too quick on the send button! I meant to say, of course, a few hundred dollars PER OUNCE

Unknown said...

Victor,
It seems to me the wind-down is on auto-pilot. The USG plans to shake out weak hands to keep the flow going, it's always been their most obvious strategy for the price to be so low when they run out "cash settlement" will have leverage.
We are in the leg of that long decline now, I think we are nearing the final stages.

Yes Tagio, that apologist for the status quo, Winans, crafted a real tear jecker there. I feel so sorry for we Freegold fools ...

Shake 'em out USG, Shake 'em out with Winans
Shake 'em out USG, Shake 'em OUT.

I don't know why I just had that pom-pom girl flashback, it must have been triggered by the ole' cheerleading squad of 77.

But the USG has a lot of cheerleaders, like Winans (and that "Troll who shall remain nameless").

Who knows what lurks in the minds of men when the paper burns ...
... the Flower knows.

Unknown said...

After all ... what is true PRIME MOVER of "the FLOW"?

Why, the "FLOW-ER" of course.

;0)

Unknown said...

GOLD
THE ONLY "BUBBLE" THAT WON'T TAKE YOU OUT WHEN IT "BURSTS".

Cheers

The Dow Theorist said...

Wil,

Good comment about the morality of the giants. Things are not black and white, but with many shadows of grey.

I’d maybe qualify that even one specific giant can be at the same time net producer and manipulative and even robber. While net producing, he can try to make extra gains by rigging the game or taking advantage of power relations. We see this almost every day even with shrimps: One can be a net producer by being, for example, a lawyer, but at the same time try to obtain undue advantage from information gathered from clients concerning, let’s say, a distressed seller of real estate. The rapacious or the speculative doesn’t preclude a simultaneous honest net productive activity. Furthermore, this is one of the surest ways to get rich: Diversify your sources of income. Couple a "net productive" job, but keep an eye (hopefully legally) on information gaps, or when you hold the upper hand go to the jugular. Of course, this is not moral, but we see this happen every day. Same happens with many countries: the net productive and the rapacious can be simultaneously found.

Jeff said...

If buying paper gold could solve the problem, I'm sure the USG would do it. Therefore I assume it doesn't solve the problem.

We have no way of knowing but I suspect the problem is at the BBs. Those USD liquidity providers probably just don't have enough physical to fractionalize. If you want to support paper gold now, you have to bring the phyz. Just a guess.

RJPadavona said...

Hey Jeff,

You're right. There is a song for every occasion.

Run, Run, Run

byiamBYoung said...

"Have they considered this scenario? Are they just clueless and will they be taken by surprise, or have they thought about this danger and do they have some contingency plans in the drawer?"

I can't for a moment believe that there isn't a room full of people at the USG working this play out in multiple levels of contingencies. What we are witnessing is absolutely on the radar of the powers that be.

This pony ride is clearly proceeding in the attentive presence of our handlers. Whether they are in full control or not, that's quite a different matter.

Wil- 1977 cheerleaders were the best that ever shook a pom pom. I still get chills!

Cheers

Unknown said...

The USG doesn't want to prop up paper gold, it's bad for strong dollar policy at this juncture.

In the final months of the dollar, it will be stretched to the limits of its strength before it breaks.

"Oh Kyle, 4%?? It NEVER happens"

" ... and if it does?"

"Oh, price will take car of it."

Beer Holiday said...

“We’re Just Going to Kill the Dollar”

M said...

@ Sam

"The latest strategy might be letting it fall to say 1100, then driving it back to 1500. That might free up a lot of physical from those that bought and held until the price "recovered""

I fully agree with this. But no matter what the price does, physical gold goes into strong hands.
Buyers of physical at $1600 are not selling now, and buyers at these levels wont sell at 1500.

Grumps LaBastard said...

The abstract from Jim and his wee Willie's latest:"June 26th: (motive, need, developments, and hidden projects underway to bring the USDollar home for a significant devaluation of 20% to start, with powerful consequences for the USEconomy like inflation & shortage & disorder, as the foreign held USDollars refuse to cooperate, their banks and governments objecting to wealth tax, thus forcing a split into two different Dollars, the domestic devaluated Dollar and a continued foreign held Dollar..."


BRICS Development Bank as a processing plant for gold/blue dollar transactions? Where did that 120B in USTreasuries go to in April?

On another matter, I've been re-examinating the FOFOA posts concerning the hereafter. There are some serious fallacies. Please read these posts but with a critical eye and notice the assumptions at critical junctures, how certain issues are glossed over or not even addressed.

Michael dV said...

bBY
I used to assume that somewhere in DC was that roomful of those considering the vast possibilities that the future might throw at us.
I no longer do...they really are that stupid. If there are worriers they keep their mouths shut because no one wants to hear it. Think of how whistle blowers are treated...they are viewed as trouble makers. Go with the plan or get out of the way!!
I would be shocked if any one, even in the CBO is allowed to consider any scenario that does not fall within the 'assumed parameters, which at present are for 6% growtth for 7 or so years....because outside of those numbers ...well things just do not work and then the Senator's favorite bill won't get the CBO OK.

tEON said...

GullibleRetardBullshitter said...

Then there is an alternative site the FOFOA blog. I don't recommend it anymore. The thesis there is that gold will stay external to the system at a price of 55,000/oz. There will be no mining of gold, no gold lending, easy credit creation in a currency will be punished by a higher gold price in that currency. It is bizarre. I post there under GrumpsLabastard telling the cultists there they're full of crap. My name is mud over there.

said...

"On another matter, I've been re-examinating the FOFOA posts concerning the hereafter. There are some serious fallacies. Please read these posts but with a critical eye and notice the assumptions at critical junctures, how certain issues are glossed over or not even addressed."

Some examples?

Sam said...

@Archer

You addressed one of the questions that I am very curious about. I assumed a benefit of a rising price in gold was that it was making more mining projects viable. At this low and soon to be lower price how will this effect mine production? How much of the current status quo is held together by certain Giants getting an annual flow from mining? With physical demand from strong hands at all time highs and the weakest hands (miners) unable to afford to mine fresh supply at current prices the apple cart may be upset.

jeb said...

VtC,
Why doesn't the FED or BOE support paper gold?
Well, we know the exorbitant privilege is over (Jean Claude Trichet).
We know structural reforms are necessary "Draghi: New approach necessary for growth and jobs and to sustain social models without creating unsustainable debt for future generations"
Perhaps it is politically smarter to accept the process as this would allow a more drawn out, less volatile event. Resisting the process would increase the likelihood of a sudden, more volatile event.
I often think of it like this ; Why would the Euro zone hold 10,000 + tons of gold and allow that price to be meddled with by day traders and tin foil hat types? Gold is managed, both up and down, it's too political to not be.

jeb said...

Sam.
A higher gold price means less gold can be bought for the same $. Slowing down the inevitable.

Anonymous said...

Sir,
Where are we in the scheme of things for RPG? If my memory does not serve me wrong, FOFOA was of opinion it was in 2013. RS was of opinion in 2014.

Have the targets been revised by the bloggers here?

Unknown said...

Sam,
Maybe "<production$" brings us one step closer to nationalization of the mines. It seems to me that all the events transpiring from a collapsing paper price inure to the ultimate benefit and arrival of FREEGOLD.

As for the dollar being strong, yet "killing it" (always liked that KB video too) at the same time - not quite at the same time, just close - it is more a process of stretching the bubble-skin to its limits like any debt bubble.

As home prices soared, even as equities soared recently, we knew the valuations were false, but we rode that pony anyway. We do so for months, even years, before inevitable collapse.

This strong dollar (all FIAT, in fact ALL PAPER but the dollar at the helm*) is in a bubble phase of epic proportions. You must stretch it to its limits with QE and liquidity swaps (all the same crap, just different flavors) before it bursts.

Why not get the most out of a bubble by blowing it up until it pops? Have you ever seen the air let out slowly? As in "tapering".

Sure, they "talk" of this out of one side of the mouth, and blow fiercly with issuance from the other. If we were in "normal" times this tapering dollar talk would be bearish for gold, and it is meant to be so, psychologically - but not to the extent that we see the sharp deflation of paper gold today.

We have had an accelarated expansion of dollarism since QE3, and FED balance sheet expansion, with a corresponding collapse in paper gold all the while. And the FED talking down paper gold with a purpose.

When the dollar bubble pops it is "killed". And yes Kyle, that is the plan. USG knows this ... has contingencies for it ... bunkers blockaded and ready to go ... Fatherland security fully armed ... NSA "ears on". Pretty much the usual ... they don't know when it will pop, they just know the FED is blowing hard out of both sides of its mouth.

Unknown said...

*some would say the Euro is not. Time proves all.

Unknown said...

In DC is a room full of sycophants like Pelosi and Dodd, who owe their Corporatist lifestyles in the Hamptons and thier little Irish isles to the Giants they serve.

Their only concern is how to continue gaining favor from Giants without being strung up by the mob.

Thus, their cheif concern, I'm afraid, is the same as for all of us ...

"What's in it for ME!!"

Robert said...

Panduranghari, I think your memory serves you wrong. FOFOA made no such prediction, but has repeatedly stated his view that timing is a fool's game. FOFOA identified a few things to watch for that might be indicators, and which might develop in 2013, but did not predict that they would.

As for the "bloggers" in the peanut gallery, I am sure you can get a wide range of opinions. Personally I think that this can play out for much much longer than many here suspect.

Beer Holiday said...

@Wil

I didn't mean to disagree with you with the "kill the dollar" quote.
Just puttin' some thoughts out there...

Rather, I think the US plan is very simple and doesn't really consider the PoG.

They want to keep the $IMFS going as long as possible. The way to do it is to kill the dollar - to inflate there way out. More government spending --> bigger deficits --> Bigger QE --> lower exchange rate and/or increased demand for the safe haven reserve currency.....until the the dollar is dead .

So it's a strong dollar, in the sense that the dollar continues to function for as long as possible.

It's a separate story to gold IMHO.

Archer said...

Sam asked:

How much of the current status quo is held together by certain Giants getting an annual flow from mining?

I'm not in a position to quantify it, but if I can work within parameters other than strict percentages, I would say a substantial portion of the status quo is maintained by mining output. As you know, the stock to flow ratio for gold is very high. Gold sits very still, especially in the vaults of those who have no need to sell it except when it is to their advantage to do so. To my way of thinking this means gold is especially sensitive to being priced, as they say, at the margin.

JR said...

Hi Dante,

"I'm not gonna sit here and blow sunshine up your ass, Lieutenant."

I like fireworks - "Boom, boom, boom."

But I really like the riding down the Kings' Highway.

No you can't hide out
In a six gun town
We wanna hold our heads up, but we gotta stay down
I don't wanna end up
In room all alone
Don't wanna end up someone that I don't even know

[Chorus:]
Oh, I await the day
Good fortune comes our way
And we ride down the Kings Highway


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdqDeBzqlP0

Dante_Eu said...

JR,

I understand, not so many unresolved issues anymore.

Nice lyrics and sound there. :-)

Here one back at ya':

Popular swedish band, litterally meaning:
Golden age(s) - It's over now (Gyllene tider - Det är över nu)

;-)

ein anderer said...

Poll: Long term investment in Germany

Most people over 18 would prefer Gold (chart).

"Anleihen" = bonds
"weiß nicht/keines davon" = don’t know/none of these

farmersteveg said...

Jesse seems to have new perspective on what brought on this recent collapse in price of paper gold.

http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/

Roacheforque said...

There's no disagreement at all Beer, we are exactly on the same page. It keeps getting stronger till it bursts, then it burns. We could call it the Boom BURN cycle of the USD.

I thought it bore mentioning, as Newbies might be confused at the dichotomy of increasing strength up until the moment of greatest weakness.

ein anderer said...

Jesse:

How remarkable is it that Germany, at the urging of their citizens and despite the objections of their central banks, has requested the return of its sovereign gold from its custodial storage in New York? And that the Feds said, no. You can't have it, but we will be in position to return your own property in seven years time.

He didn’t catch the fact that Fed will not return the property "in seven years". And also not later on.

They return 674 tonnes only. Afterwards (2020) 37% of the german gold will remain in NYC (today: 45%).

Source: http://www.tagesgeldvergleich.com/deutsches-gold-rueckholung-zeitplan

ein anderer said...

Correction:

They (the Fed) return only 300 tonnes. The other 374 tonnes come from London and Paris. After 2020 round about 1390 tonnes remain in the Fed’s vaults.

Roacheforque said...

I respect and admire Jesse, but I think he's off target. There is no single bellwether event, it is all cumulative: MFG, Best, German repatriation, Cyprus, ABN Amro, Comex disclaimer ... I could go on and on, forwards and backwards. It's like a monetary Bolero.

But, interest rate derivatives are the key.

Intreest rates CANNOT rise unless the ESF, USG, Treasury and it's US TBTF intermediaries capitulate and allow it to happen.

The only way they can and will do this is to finally KILL the dollar.

After all, if interest rates rise, the dollar is dead anyway, so if we're going to kill the dollar through hyperinflation all we have to do is have our forward rate swaps timed for the event, and then NOT intervene with another 7 trillion dollar forward rate swap for which NO counterparty can post bail anyway.

And the BIS will come in and say, "this claim cannot be paid" even as counterparties caught on the wrong side cry FOUL, and in the end it won't take 1.7 quadrillion to default this IMF$. Remeber Another. When debt defaults FIAT shits its ever-lovin drawres (in so many words).

I mean really, it doesn't take 14 times global GDP to announce "game over" it just takes the amount on the losing side of that trade, 80 trillion or so should do it nicely. Far less than what the US bailout queens have in nominal "protection" in interest rate derivatives alone.

And we don't know for sure which TBTF banks (if any) will be hung out to dry, because any kind of insistance that the claims be met with gold will crater the whole shebang. This paper game is a farce and they can play by the rules as they make them up, but when the paper dies and claims are demanded in gold it is GAME OVER.

I keep reading these articles where the writers are trying to explain what is happening in terms of the old paradigm.

You might as well explain the Copernican Universe using Ptolemaic assumptions.

We are transforming from a DEBT BASED WEALTH SYSTEM to an ASSET BASED WEALTH system.

Diametric opposites, a COMPLETE paradigm shift. Nothing they pull out of the old playbook can prepare them for what lies ahead.

Another knew.
And the Flower knows.

Dante_Eu said...

@M:

I am writing new post for you, only 7$ left... :D

Roacheforque said...

It's more like finally allowing the dollar to die, rather than actively "killing" it. You just stop intervening.

And the 'Nank was a "a bit surprised" by rising rates??

My A$$ he was.

gull_mann said...

Hmmm, letting dollar die.... Reminds me, early October of this year the "new" $100 USD bill is to be released into the market after a 3.5 year "delay."

said...

Will, how would higher interest rates kill the dollar? I can see it killing the economy, which is coming through hyperinflation anyways, but if debt starts to default then people will be wanting dollars more. Only through hyperinflation will the chains to fiat be broken for the masses.

Dante_Eu said...

And now we breached 1.200 $...1.199 $ as I type...

Any takers for 1.100 $, 1.000 $...900 $? :-)

Or 900 €, 800 €...700€?

M, never say never... ;-)

Edwardo said...

Luke asked:

How would higher interest rates kill the dollar?

Suffice it to say that it is hugely deflationary as the burden of interest payments becomes too much to bear for, among others, Uncle Sugar. However, Uncle's response is not to shrink itself accordingly. Oh, no, it simply directs an increase in ye olde front lawn dump, and The Fed expands its balance sheet to ensure that Uncle only has to make modest adjustments to the size and scope of its operations. Well, now that "the network effect" is running in reverse, the dollar is quite vulnerable to a condition that is the currency issuer's worst fear, a loss in confidence. Ya folla?

Anonymous said...

Wil (from another account) said...
“Interest rates CANNOT rise unless the ESF, USG, Treasury and it's US TBTF intermediaries capitulate and allow it to happen.

The only way they can and will do this is to finally KILL the dollar.”

I used to think that these were the only two paths to the same outcome thus it didn’t matter to me how we arrived there, gold to +50K either way, sold. Then Cyprus happened. Cyprus shows us a third path to a different end that that oligarchy may use in order to deflate the bubble that ‘doesn’t’ result in hyper-inflation (i.e. social collapse)

In this scenario the 90% living hand to mouth don’t experience any significant pain, important safety tip if you want to stay in power. The 0.01% in the Oligarchy (i.e. the system) is also protected. That leaves the 9.99% in the middle as the ones who take the brunt of the pain. They represent the largest pot of money with the least amount of collective or inside political power.

Bottom-line, it’s awfully hard to have hyper-inflation if nobody has any ‘excess’ fiat.

So here is how this third scenario plays out. Some financial meltdown occurs; both bonds and stocks go to down significantly; those that panic early have bank cash. This cash, like all other assets, is largely in the hands of the 9.99%. This cash is then stolen in order to backfill the derivatives collapse thereby ‘saving’ the system (i.e. the 0.01%).

Prest-o- change-o, excess cash is gone, the EBT cards still work, and the common man that has a job keeps showing up for work keeping the gears of society turning. The government is now free to start puffing up the next ponzi scheme.

The last little bit is that all the various pension plans for the common man are ‘also’ now insolvent (8% CAGR assumptions from the current base) thus setting up the ‘need’ to introduce the Guaranteed Pension Act which will be ‘mandatory’ and yet indistinguishable from Social Security in terms of ‘assets’ and I use that word loosely. What remains of the 401K and pension assets are transferred to the 0.01% and the common man gets IOUs. Or if the oligarchy is feeling generous they will allow some liquidation if you pay a large tax.

What will be interesting though is what the 9.99% do with their excess cash after the events above? Will they just wander back into the next wealth roach motel or not? After all net producers generate excess fiat by definition they must do something with it. My guess is that wisdom of using Gold as SoV vs. paper will resonate with them. Keep in mind that it’s what the 9.99% do with their excess fiat that drives the existing fiat ponzi system right now. My guess is they will be twice shy at putting this excess cash in the bank, bonds or stocks. It also won’t take more than a fraction of this cash flow from the 9.99% to drive the physical price of gold to 50K. The last number I saw was that less than 1% of the wealth of this class is held in ‘physical’ gold.

Perhaps this is how we get to Freegold? Not via hyper-inflation, but post deflationary collapse?

Gold becomes the currency of 'net' producers, former to current. Fiat is the currency of slaves and fools.

Roacheforque said...

Luke,
You have answered your own question.

HI is the death of the dollar. USG needs HI to inflate it's way out so letting rates rise won't really matter, they are all worthless anyway and we print quadrillions to satisfy debt.
The cause is the effect and vice versa. It's really quite elegant the way the whole thing plays out. I admire the design.

But needing more dollars IS the death of the dollar, the death of their worth - is there any other death they could have?

It sure won't be the death of printing them :)

Dante,

Even I was surprised by the paper punching through the 1230-1250 tunnel so quickly.

That dollar bubble sure is strong before it bursts, or is it just that Giants are burning paper gold with both fists??

Hmmmm ... time to consult the FOU.

Tony said...

Found this 1967 quote interesting. From former Secretary of Agriculture, Ezra T. Benson (you'd think he penned it last week):

"The pending economic crisis that now faces America is painfully obvious. If even a fraction of potential foreign claims against our gold supply were presented to the Treasury, we would have to renege on our promise. We would be forced to repudiate our own currency on the world market. Foreign investors, who would be left holding the bag with American dollars, would dump them at tremendous discounts in return for more stable currencies, or for gold itself. The American dollar both abroad and at home would suffer the loss of public confidence. If the government can renege on its international monetary promises, what is to prevent it from doing the same on its domestic promises? How really secure would be government guarantees behind Federal Housing Administration loans, Savings and Loan Insurance, government bonds, or even social security?

"Even though American citizens would still be forced by law to honor the same pieces of paper as though they were real money, instinctively they would rush and convert their paper currency into tangible material goods which could be used as barter. As in Germany and other nations that have previously traveled this road, the rush to get rid of dollars and acquire tangibles would rapidly accelerate the visible effects of inflation to where it might cost one hundred dollars or more for a single loaf of bread. Hoarded silver coins would begin to reappear as a separate monetary system which, since they have intrinsic value would remain firm, while printed paper money finally would become worth exactly it's proper value--the paper it is printed on! Everyone's savings would be wiped out totally. No one could escape.

"One can only imagine what such conditions would do to the stock market and to industry. Uncertainty over the future would cause the consumer to halt all spending except for the barest necessities. Market for such items as television sets, automobiles, furniture, new homes, and entertainment would dry up almost overnight. With no one buying, firms would have to close down and lay off their employees. Unemployment would further aggravate the buying freeze, and the nation would plunge into a depression that would make the 1930s look like prosperity. At least the dollar was sound in those days. In fact, since it was a firm currency, its value actually went up as related to the amount of goods, which declined through reduced production. Next time around, however, the problems of unemployment and low production will be compounded by a monetary system that will be utterly worthless. All the government controls and so-called guarantees in the world will not be able to prevent it, because every one of them is based on the assumption that the people will continue to honor printing press money. But once the government itself openly refuses to honor it--as it must if foreign demands for gold continue--it is likely that the American people will soon follow suit. This in a nutshell is the so-called 'gold problem.”

Tommy2Tone said...

SpaulLaTard-

Wrong flower. Put that down.

Roacheforque said...

Spaul,
That's an interesting scenario, but the middle class always gets screwed for sure, that observation holds true in any event. Collectively they have the biggest pot to steal from, or did, but that seems to be changing.

Ergo, why we need a new system, the US Consumer host is dying in the old. There's a lot of gold down that yellow BRIC road and it needs to flow.

Robert said...

Wil said: "It's like a monetary Bolero."

Bahahahaha! That was a good one. (Wiping beer off the computer screen).

Roacheforque said...

Tony,
That certainly was the thought in that time, before the Nixon shock and we were ALL shocked to find this incredible baked-in USE VALUE as a global means of exchange.

Probably why I think the movie WATCHMEN has such a deeper meaning than what most see in it. An incredible movie about the death of our iconic Heros at the hands of "the greater good".

The onlky thing missing was to have Paul Krugman cast as Adrian Veidt.

JR said...

Sir Tagio,

Re: the ultimate price.

"I thought that cliche was reserved for, you know, actual physical death in the line of duty or some noble endeavor."

Excellent observation. As my bodhisattva (a heroic minded, enlightened being) taught me a some years ago:


"If you want the ultimate, you've got to be willing to pay the ultimate price. It's not tragic to die doing what you love."

Sam said...

@will and jeb

What you both said makes a lot of sense. The political choice of prolonging for as long as possible and risking a sudden reset or allow a slower death and a less dramatic reset....such choices to ponder for those with power.

M said...

@ Daunte

Im waiving the white towel as far as $1200 paper gold goes.

So what next though ? What else can we look at to indicate that this is it for paper gold ?

Anonymous said...

Wil,

Your Kung FOU is getting stronger.


Gold said to paper gold - Weep Not Child


gull_mann said...

To buy now or not? To wait for price to drop or not? Will physical still be around next week? Next month?

Bjorn said...

Dante and JR
It´s spooky how you guys post my favourite songs! Well perhaps not Gyllene Tider, but I would say the title is certainly apt so I will let it slide. :-)

M said...

gull_mann

If I recall, somebody was saying that this is the price range where physical starts to dry up.

As of this morning, Bank of NovaScotia Toronto was stocked up. BNS Edmonton was out of everything except a hand full of 10 oz bars.

tristramboris said...

Good folks, has anyone here read or conducted a study of Freigeld theory? Interested in the blog's thoughts and grateful for links.

TB

gull_mann said...

M

I agree. There is going to be a price when the physical starts drying up. I don't know that number and I'm not sure anyone else really knows. I know we are very close to the price of production, if not already below it. Miners are hurting. Can the pain keep going? In paper market sure. Just questioning myself if I should wait a little longer to see how this plays out. If the price keeps dropping $30-40 a day, might be worth taking a small risk before my next purchase. Hard to know.

Sam said...

@M

A rising price was causing a physical gold rush. A falling price was not seen as a bubble like before, but instead caused....wait for it....a physical gold rush. The paper gold market has served its purpose. It seems quiet likely that it is being allowed to drop, liquidating unsuspecting paper gold bulls on the way down, and finally cashing out with fiat the remaining longs by closing the market. There will never be a giant naked short covering in this market. Only those with the real thing will get to enjoy a nice payoff in gold. It is likely that many of those that own physical gold are the same people shorting the paper market down to zero.

Anonymous said...

Wil (from another account) said...
"Spaul,
That's an interesting scenario...."

Define the middle class? I define them as everyone the oligarchy doesn’t need the vote of in order to stay in power (hand raised). In short this is the group that has the most to fear in terms of various forms of wealth confiscation (both current and accumulated) in order to feed the ponzi scheme.

The US Consumer will live as long as the ‘net’ production can be tricked/forced into the ponzi scheme. Even former net producers eventually become parasites (because their net wealth was stolen) and ultimately die poor (ie you can’t take it with you) with a new crop of ‘net’ producers behind them. The cycle continues as long as a proper balance between net producers and parasites is maintained.

The system I perceive at present has three basic groups; parasites, net producers and oligarchs. The parasites keep the oligarchs in power provided a portion of their theft of the net producers is sent to the parasites thanks to democracy. Not to be confused with a Constitutional Republic with limited, separated and clearly enumerated powers in which the individual and not the government is sovereign, but that was a long long time ago.

Now I agree that at some point there may be insufficient net production to keep both the parasites and oligarchy happy even if most net producers remain oblivious to all the above and keep putting their excess production into the roach motel. The demographic headwind confronting the US, Europe, Japan and even China are clearly pushing us this way right now (% workforce vs population). In fact we may have already crossed the Rubicon already. Exhibit A; the need to for financial repression (i.e. interest rates below the effective inflation rate) which effectively steals past accumulated private wealth. Basically the polar opposite of capitalism.

The question is what does the system do if a significant portion of the 9.99% wake up to the theft that is occurring? In short what is the counter move of the oligarchy? My guess is they place ever ‘higher’ capital gains taxes on precious metals in order to keep the net producers on the fiat ponzi plantation if too many net producers figure this out and move that direction?

I wish I had a better scenario, but the concept that the current crooks running the show are just going to toss their hands up and go to something as liberating to the net producers the world over as Freegold out of the goodness of their heart seems like magical thinking.

Some other force significantly more powerful than the crooks running the show at present will need to happen, what is that force? Otherwise I have no reason to rule out a global Cyprus event being used to reset the monetary system as the path we will go down ‘rather’ than hyper-inflation.

Bear in mind the government can collapse bond prices and equities with the same move (ie a spike in interest rates). Ending QE at anytime would do the trick nicely. The Central banks then purchase these assets (bonds and equities) at fire sale prices with fresh CB cash. This fresh cash will then race towards hard asset exits (like physical gold) but most will be lost in the subsequent over leveraged banking collapse (ie bail in). That in my mind is the missing piece that prevents saving debt at any cost become hyper-inflation.

Think about it, the oligarch now owns most companies and the government is debt free, what’s not to love. Asset prices are pretty much the same, EBT cards keep running and the equity market has a new low floor to climb from. Heck even bonds come back into being again. Why not loan money to a government with a 5% debt to GDP ratio? This sounds a heck of a lot more likely and significantly less painful than some kind of global French Revolution 2.0. If I remember my history correctly it didn’t turn out too well for the French oligarchs.

Let see, lose my head or own everything while the slaves remain on the plantation? Decisions decisions.

Knotty Pine said...

@gull mann

Here is a ZH article regarding gold production costs. FWIW I probably placed my last PG order yesterday.

Crzy Joe said...

Been reading and following the trail for sometime now, still trying to grasp the basics. While busy sifting through other blogs, two very contrasting concepts on Gold and the presumed definition of FIAT currency, one from FOFOA and the other from Armstong Economics. I was wondering what FOFOA's thoughts are in regards to his multiple June 27th posts regarding Deflation and his view of Gold and the Goldbug Mentality, it sounds like he throws even the Freegolders into the Goldbug group.

CJ

M said...

@ tristramboris

"Good folks, has anyone here read or conducted a study of Freigeld theory? "

Yep. Just go to a banana republic country or central bank and see what they are saving in.

Sam said...

@spaul67

You have always been a critic of freegold on this blog. I think I understand your perspective a little better now from your last post. I think you overestimate the power of the debtor oligarchs and underestimate the power of the saver oligarchs. One has been in power for a very long time and the tools at their disposal seem all powerful. It seems they can buy every business, control every market, buy or convert enough voters in every country, even buy all the gold if they wanted to. But this is not true. All fiat currencies die eventually and an abused currency dies much sooner and much more painfully.

I would say that instead the power of the current debtor oligarchs is quiet limited and that most of their control and stability is an illusion. Our current global monetary system cannot mathematically live forever. It was never designed to. In fact it has found itself in the emergency room on more than one occasion. It was curiously saved more than once by the very nations that will step in to power after. We now understand that this was both a brilliant trap and because they decided they weren't quiet ready for their reign. But make no mistake. The death of our current system was baked in from the beginning and a suitable heir has been planned, born, groomed and occasionally tested for decades now.

If you were born into and only know the long summer, you may not understand the consequences of the coming winter. But I tell you now that the current $IMFS are the knights of summer.....and Winter is coming

Jeff said...

Joe, I don't read Armstrong but if lumps PGA's with gold bugs he must not know much about freegold (maybe even less than people mumbling about illuminati deflationistas).

It's funny watching the price of gold drop faster than the TA boys can draw new charts. Most of them have given up, gone on hiatus, gone golfing, choked on their hats, stopped bringing Xmas presents, if not promises. Quick, somebody find me another support line. Draw it extra thick, in red this time.

Are you out there Woland? I need chapter and verse for these failed theories. Daniel 5:27?

Sam said...

by the way it was bit inaccurate for me to write "saver oligarchs" but I hope you get what I mean. I was writing quickly on a small break at work and my mind was wandering on the more important desire of how I was going to incorporate a Game of Thrones reference.

Anonymous said...

Sam said...
@spaul67

You have always been a critic of freegold on this blog

Actually, I believe strongly in Freegold as a concept. At the same time I’m well aware of how dependant the current system is on the cycle of theft described above. I think a few at the top understand full well what the arrival of Freegold would result in even if we fellow net producing shrimp were shouting from the mountain tops, free at last.

Literally billons of people would starve if the were immediately forced to live off of their own productive capacity, that is a fact. Not going to happen, at least not without major social breakdown which in turn leads to even further breakdowns in perfectly viable essential and productive activities. It’s hard to get to your power plant job with riots in the streets.

In addition, the social disruption and current mis-allocation of capital, labor and production is just astounding when you step back and take it all in. It’s amazing the amount of damage that can be done in the absence of real markets and legitimate ‘non-crony’ based private capital formation for decades on end. A financial, welfare, government, legal, military system that is approaching 80% of the GDP is completely bonkers. Seriously, I doubt if more than 10% of the global workforce is actually generating stuff we all would consider ‘actual’ durable wealth anymore. We might be able to push through this if the demographics were set to double the workforce but instead it’s going to be cut in half in the first world nations.

I agree with you that $IMF days are nearing an end, but the power of the system to destroy IOUs is just as strong as the power to create them. Those who think hyper-inflation don’t understand the equally significant power to destroy.

Now on the positive side perhaps a new Freegold dollar is issued, exchangeable at a floating ‘market’ gold price capital gains tax free. Given the Americas' and China’s history with silver I could see the same being true.

Regardless, the key is the tax code treatment and stock to flow which most certainly favors gold over silver. Anyway the old $IMF can be exchanged for these ‘new’ Freegold dollars at say 100/1. So gold does in fact absorb the over leverage with those that holding physical gold in front of this turn of events as the clear beneficiaries. Then again they could just steal the money like Cyprus and keep $IMF going.

Granted, good luck on running a trade deficit or net producers saving in paper after this event, but then that sets up a more gradual movement to a Freegold world as all net production going forward is placed into an ever increasing price for gold.

So why don’t you think $IMF version of Cyprus could happen? The pile of leverage derivatives is more than large enough to encumber all paper assets held within the system many times over at this point.

Tommy2Tone said...

+10 for doing so Sam :)

Biju said...

Jeff :

said - Quick, somebody find me another support line. Draw it extra thick, in red this time.

Funny take on TA boys. A big Red line will do for me :-)

Archer said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Archer said...

A number of interesting comments on mining here.

Archer said...

My apologies, the link isn't working exactly. Here's a reprint of some portion of an interview with John Kaiser (with whom I am not familiar) on mining.


Western Mining Industry in Serious Crisis
Bullion banks extracting physical gold from COMEX, GLD
By FS Staff06/19/2013

Two months ago, resource analyst John Kaiser made perhaps the call of his lifetime on the Financial Sense Newshour when he warned that gold investors should be prepared for a coming washout and correction in the gold market.

His prediction came true and within a week, as many of you probably remember, gold plunged by its largest recorded amount in 33 years. The Gold Miners ETF (GDX), which tracks the price of gold mining companies worldwide, similarly lost around 25% of its value in the weeks following.

Picking up where he left off in the last interview, he now says that if gold and commodities don't start to turnaround in the next 2-3 years, the western mining industry is facing a serious crisis:

The situation has become extremely dire. On Kaiser Research Online we cover about 1800 companies that are involved in the resource sector. As of June 12th, 738 have less than $200,000 left. That’s barely enough money to exist as a publicly listed company…and the inflow to these companies, it’s not happening. In May, we had the lowest financing activity for the resource sector since early 2003…there is no money whatsoever available except in very unusual situations, and then typically on very dilutionary, predatory terms. In the absence of higher real prices, in the case of gold, and a rebound in the global economy, in the case of base metals and specialty metals and so on, we have a serious crisis facing the mining industry, especially the western mining industry where the profit margin is the basis for everything. It’s not going to be a problem for Chinese state-owned entities who stand to basically inherit the mining industry unless there is a turnaround in the next 2-3 years.

In terms of gold itself, John doesn’t believe that it’s entered a long-term bear market, saying instead that he believes the recent large declines are due to bullion banks desperately attempting to extract physical gold out of a tight market through the COMEX and major gold ETF, GLD.

lola said...

From page 20 of http://static.safehaven.com/pdfs/stoferle_2013_06_27.pdf

"The renaissance of gold in classical finance continues. OMFIF 32 a global think tank for central banks and sovereign wealth funds, in a
sensational report 33 argues in favor of a remonetization of gold. In their view, gold should once again play a central role in the international currency framework. Due to its history, gold is said to be predestined to restore the structure and maintenance of trust and stability in international monetary
relations. 34 Gold would be of mutual benefit for all countries as an anchor for currencies and could put an end to the currently escalating currency wars.
OMFIF however doesn't recommend a return to a classical gold standard. Gold should primarily settle balance of payments transactions. The report shows strikingly that fundamental changes to the currency system are already being discussed at the highest levels. 35"

Anonymous said...

So if the concern is a lack of demand for paper savings, as those savings rush into gold, why not solve both problems at once using the existing tools of the state?

Raise taxes and recycle that money into social programs. Or force savings into bonds or stocks through 401k/IRA confiscation and new "social savings" accounts as described above? Both approaches conveniently reduce demand for new dollars to buy gold.

This would all be an easy sell following the meltdown leading up to freegold. The beneficiaries of social programs continue getting dollars that don't die immediately because there's a guaranteed market for them, by way of the shrimp producers whose excess production is siphoned off before it has a chance to escape from paper form.

And it will all be billed as Right, Just, Fair and the only obvious solution that Serious People can consider. The larger narrative of asset prices crashing in terms of gold will fall into the background as simply one aspect of the brave new world in which we find ourselves.

Roacheforque said...

Spaul,
After consulting wih the flower, I came back to your first comment and still couldn't quite follow it, I just don't know who's who among these actors you've presented as in oligarchs NPs and crooks in relation to, say, Giants and Shrimp... but the second cmment seemed more cohesive and I followed it up until you said,

"I agree with you that $IMF days are nearing an end, but the power of the system to destroy IOUs is just as strong as the power to create them. Those who think hyper-inflation don’t understand the equally significant power to destroy.

I don't get what you're saying here. How is hyperinflating IOU's (fiat) different from destroying them?

In the direction you were headed, I would have thought your argument would rest more upon the resilient global use value of dollar betting chips which all this Ponzi debt is denominated in - the same betting chips that are a transactional currency used to acquire hard assets.

We have seen that no new amount of increasing the supply of these virtual betting chips has a diminshing return on that "special use value" of global wealth confiscation. (ExPriv Tax notwithstanding).

I could see you asking, "how does the transactional currency MoE use value ever diminish, since that is now the new definition of a hyperinflation"?

Now that bears discussion. Maybe tomorrow.

M said...

@ Spaul

"Those who think hyper-inflation don’t understand the equally significant power to destroy"

This is akin to saying that there is a choice between austerity and spending. There is no choice with hyperinflation/currency crises.

I think what you mean by destroy is the same quantitative argument that deflationists use. Just issuing a trillion dollar coin or getting the Fed to buy all the debt to retire it doesn't work. If you do that then who will buy the new debt and feed the welfare industrial complex ? Nobody.

It doesn't matter how bad it will be, the bond bubble will come to an end.

Anonymous said...

Wil (from another account) said...

“I don't get what you're saying here. How is hyperinflating IOU's (fiat) different from destroying them?”

Hyper-inflation is increasing amounts of money and at higher and higher velocities chasing the same or usually less and less real goods and services. So yes, the purchasing power of the fiat/credit/debt is being destroyed in hyper-inflation.

Ask the next question though; most people are ‘also’ disparate to pay for food and other necessity with whatever fiat they can scrap together in a hyper-inflationary environment. In addition, business shutdown, people lose their jobs, welfare doesn’t keep up or stops altogether, asset prices dependant on cheap credit collapse, etc. So where does the excess fiat come from in order to bid up the price of gold? The answer, those that still have some ‘excess’ fiat left over yet disparate to save what purchasing power it still has and those that even in a hyper-inflationary environment can still generate excess fiat.

So to stop hyper-inflation in its tracks all the government needs to do is steal the money from those giants with excess fiat, i.e. Cyprus. The net result is a massive transfer of purchasing power from the paper giants to the oligarchy. So rather than the purchasing power of future labor being reduced for the 90% or the need to 10x everyone’s EBT card and welfare benefits just to maintain social order, the 9.99% foot the entire bill, just like Cyprus.

The ECB is also no longer floating Cyprus as a one time thing anymore. It’s now a template for how the overleveraged banking system will be unwound ‘without’ more tax payer backing in Europe. Not to be out done the FED is not far behind for the US Banks on floating this very same concept when the next crisis happens. I don’t think the Obama phone lady will shed a tear that someone with $10 million dollars now has 100K, do you? Her vote counts as much as theirs.

As I said it’s hard to have hyper-inflation when most of the cash that could drive it is effectively stolen before it can enter the market. Now the more honest way to do this is to absorb ‘all’ the excess paper via a significantly higher price for gold. Thus everything devalues ‘relative’ to gold. But I don’t think we can rule out a global Cyprus event now that Cyprus has happened either. I could also see various complex and chaotic combinations of inflationary and deflationary forces in combination with Freegold. Some nations may lean one way or the other.

So we may get to Freegold quickly or via a more gradual trajectory in which paper giants are given a once in life time lesson about the importance of physical gold. Something the older gold giants have learned over many generations. While they can’t do anything about the past most net fiat going forward will be ‘immediately’ placed in gold and not bonds thus shutting down the ability of any new ponzi scheme to restart. This will be true for nations and individuals alike. In short the world will have a pre 1922 monetary system with ‘physical’ gold as the international exchange reserve.

Anonymous said...

M said...

“It doesn't matter how bad it will be, the bond bubble will come to an end.”

I agree, all it takes is a spike in interest rates at this point followed by a panic into cash. Equities will also collapse. All the FED needs to do is just end the current version of QE. The CB then switches to cashing out those attempting to flee the burning building buying debt and equities at fire sale prices with freshly printed cash, everything must go we won't be undersold.

Once things settle down a bit what we will have is mega ton of cash in banks just in time for wouldn’t you know it a derivatives collapse covered by these giant depositors cash, gee wasn’t that convenient.

Good luck exchanging physical gold for paper that manages to make it through this gauntlet of purchasing power destruction I might add. Most gold giants and shrimp alike will be sitting as tight as they can.

See the collapse of the banking system is what shuts down the hyper-inflation. Freegold arrives all right but not with a bang but as the foundation upon which the new system rebuilds from. A lot like how the house foundation remains after a tornado.

Thus owning gold now is forward position on real future wealth not past phantom paper wealth in this Cyprus variant on the path towards Freegold.

Either way, there are old giants and there are paper giants but no old paper giants.

gull_mann said...

I know there is a lot of discussion regarding inflation vs. deflation (not just here but elsewhere on internet). I think I am starting to become more of the mindset that we are seeing/will see more of a biflation scenario. I think we are already starting to see that personally.

J said...

"I cannot find a place for transporting gold on Emirates, on BA on Swiss Airlines this weekend," Mr El Mdaka said. "I am shipping in one-and-a-half to two tonnes of gold every day and it is going straight out."

http://www.thenational.ae/business/industry-insights/markets/gold-rush-2013-style-has-dubai-scrambling#ixzz2XTAh0M1K

M said...

@ Spaul67
"I agree, all it takes is a spike in interest rates at this point followed by a panic into cash. Equities will also collapse. All the FED needs to do is just end the current version of QE. "

The Fed can do nothing once the run on the bond market starts. Hyperinflation not only is the loss of confidence in the currency but its also the loss of ant control by the manager of the currency. This is what happened in the Asian financial crisis.

SE Asia had a credit boom.The resulting large quantities of credit that became available generated a highly leveraged economic climate, and pushed up asset prices, mainly real estate, to an unsustainable level. These asset prices eventually began to collapse, causing individuals and companies to default on debt obligations. The resulting panic among lenders led to a large withdrawal of credit from the crisis countries(this hasn't happened in the US yet), causing a credit crunch and further bankruptcies.

In addition, as foreign investors attempted to withdraw their money(this hasn't happened yet), the exchange market was flooded with the currencies of the crisis countries, putting depreciative pressure on their exchange rates. To prevent currency values collapsing, these countries' governments raised domestic interest rates to exceedingly high levels (to help diminish flight of capital by making lending more attractive to investors) and to intervene in the exchange market, buying up any excess domestic currency at the fixed exchange rate with foreign reserves.
Neither of these policy responses could be sustained for long. Very high interest rates, wreaked further havoc on economies in an already fragile state, while the central banks were hemorrhaging foreign reserves, of which they had finite amounts. When it became clear that the tide of capital fleeing these countries was not to be stopped, the authorities ceased defending their fixed exchange rates and allowed their currencies to float.

M said...

^In other words Spaul, they gave up because they had to. Nothing will stop the run out of the US debt market. They will lose all control. It will be left to market forces only. Nothing else.

lola said...

gull_man are you alan2102?

alan2102 wrote: " It is called "biflation" -- a useful concept. Prices of food, fuel and most consumables goes up, while financial "assets", real estate, luxury goods, etc., go down. I've put together a few notes about it, here: Inflation? Deflation? or Biflation?"

Stoneleigh responds, "In my opinion, biflation is not at all a useful concept. It just muddies the waters. The dynamic you are pointing to is essentially what we have been predicting at TAE all along, but you are couching it in needlessly confusing terminology. To review our position, inflation and deflation are monetary phenomena. The money supply is either expanding or contracting. Price changes are lagging indicators of monetary expansion or contraction, but are also impacted by many other factors such as local scarcity or glut, international arbitrage, input availaiblity, transport potential etc. For these reasons, looking at prices alone is not very useful. It is more important to understand causes than to look at effects, particularly when those effects are subject to confounding factors. It is also more important to understand affordability (ie prices in real terms) than to look only at movements in nominal prices."

Anonymous said...

I think it very possible that we are seeing a bifurcation of inflation.

Prices increasing in things we need such as food and fuel

Prices dropping in things we want or consumer items like TVs, sneakers and so on.

Hyperinflation is a concept often thrown around without much understanding about what it actually is. 1% a week would probably constitute Hyperinflation although that definition is a slippery slope.

Pray tell hard core AU stackers what is the price of gold measured in oil ? Just some food for thought on this Friday afternoon here in Eastern Asia.

sayonara minasan

Beer Holiday said...

There is a quote I like that comes from Le Metropole Cafe. It goes, "we will have deflation in everything we own, and inflation in everything we use". This is partly true. It is true during the run up to the rubber band snapping. It is true until we hit the waterfall. At that point I have my own version of the quote. "We will have hyperDEflation in everything measured against real money, GOLD, and we will have hyperINflation in everything measured against paper dollars."

From Deflation or Hyperinflation and
The Waterfall Effect

Sam said...

Managing a currency is very complicated. If the privilege is abused the privilege is lost. A privilage more valuable than gold. A reserve currency must behave differently. Blatently open theft will not be tolerated. 99.99% of dollars are held digitally in our fragile banking system. This digital money is backed up by the Feds promise to ship cash. What do you think would happen if these digital promises of dollars sniffed possible confiscation and tried to flee the system? Painfully fast loss of confidence in the system. Painfully fast systemic collapse

M said...

It looks like finally a few gold bugs own all the mining shares.

Gold stocks were up sharply today.

ein anderer said...

$POG is beating about the 1200-bush

Dante_Eu said...

Oh man, it just struck me: Consolidated financial statement of the Eurosystem will be reported at 4th of July!

That's some funny coincidence, maybe there will be fireworks on both sides of the Atlantic. :-)

tintin said...

Also in July according to China Daily:

the BRICS — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — will decide on coordinated action related to the global appreciation of the US dollar at a July meeting in Russia.

In a phone conversation with his Brazilian counterpart Dilma Rousseff on Monday, President Xi Jinping noted that some new and complex elements have occurred in international financial markets that deserved the BRICS nations' close attention.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2013-06/26/content_16658613.htm

Roacheforque said...

OK Spaul, so you're not saying these are different, you are saying that HI and destruction are the same, I get that now.

But were you following where I was ging with the rest?

I.E. why does any FIAT issuer need to steal when they can just print?

Some would say that only the FED has this unique power, but ... not so. Any Fiat currency can be exchanged on the FX markets for dollar betting chips on the wealth redistribution casino of all time.

And NOBODY has the power to do anything about it.

And we can hyperinflate ALL these currencies (as all G7's currently are) and still never get the general price inflation that free markets used to produce.

So how do we get this purchasing power destruction when all the new FIAT is flowing into the hands of the 1% to make million dollar bets with?

All these betting chips are not chasing after one loaf of bread my friend.

This is what the dollar is telling us today, "I am STRONG in USE VALUE for GIANTS across the GLOBE as an immensly valuable tool to increase their wealth ... print me, print me all you can, you cannot catch me, I am the Gingerbread man."

JoyOfLearning said...

A germanarticle here http://blogs.faz.net/fazit/2013/06/21/fur-den-euro-gegen-monetaren-nationalismus-2152/ (google translate to englilsh: http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=de&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=de&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.faz.net%2Ffazit%2F2013%2F06%2F21%2Ffur-den-euro-gegen-monetaren-nationalismus-2152%2F&act=url ) that I thought might be of interest to freegolders in that it presents a view to the hard money crowd long foreign to places other than hear in that the euro might at the very least be a good step towards a gold standard, and maybe in some ways even better than it. Reassuring to see articles like this pop up around the web.

Roacheforque said...

The derivative casino is a universe apart from the general goods and services world of Shrimp.

What the Fed has been furiously monetizing (for the most part) since 2008 are fraudulent bubble valuations of derivative debt - leveraged wagers which enrich the banks of generational wealth dynasty's (Oh yes, they do see them as "their" banks).

The "winnings" do discretely re-enter the realm of transactional currencies to acquire hard assets, but not the kind that shrimp compete for.

So if you look at luxury items you will see them inflating quite nicely as new money flowing into the 1% competes (relative to distribution) for them.

It never trickles down into the working class to compete for general goods and services, so we never see this purchasing power destruction of a hyperinflation.

We must see a VAST amount of dollars flooding into the physical plane of general, staple goods and services to create that phenomenon.

And this my friends is why we steal from that class, to protect them from the dangers of what we so gloriously enjoy at the level of Giant.

We keep them "humble" and "struggling" among one another to maintain the status quo of "we get richer - they get poorer".

It's quite ghastly frankly, but this is what the flower telepathes lately ...

farmersteveg said...

This article I found at the tail end of Harvey Organ's Daily Report yesterday. I believe it explains exactly what has happened recently and if true, things are gonna get interesting pretty quickly.


Fed Can’t Taper No Matter What – Count de Monet

June 26, 2013By Newswires
by Count De Monet



TMSM & most economists have it wrong. The FED CAN’T taper no matter what Lacker says for public consumption. Why? Because the jig is up. How so you ask?
If you are familiar with TIC flows you will understand. TIC flows measure the amount of UST buying from foreigners.
We all know that the FED has embarked on QEternity and this is what drove rates down to historic lows but looking at the TIC data below one can see a trend developing where foreigners are pulling money out of USTs let alone not buying. The FED is committed to buying $45B a month of USTs to make their rate scheme work supposedly for the benefit of the economy while truly a mechanism to reliquify the banks. This also comes on top of the latest auctions that had low bid to cover ratios including the most recent one which had a bid to cover that was lowest since 2008.
TIC Data:
February: Expected inflows of $40B and instead there was an outflow of $17.8B, a-$57B swing
March: Expected inflows of $43.4B and instead there was an outflow of $13.5B, a-$56.9B swing
April: Expected inflows of $35B and instead there was an outflow of $37.3B, a-$72.3B swing
As you can see the outflows are growing & April suffered a nearly $24B increase in outflows over the prior month.


John said...

Spaul, your posts here are some of the best I've read on this site. Great quality and I agree with everything you say. Do you by chance have a blog or anywhere else one can read your thoughts?

Beer Holiday said...

The original count du monet :-)

ein anderer said...

JoyOfLearning,
you’ve seen this also? From today, the Reporting day of the ECB …
http://www.handelsblatt.com/video/handelsblatt-in-99-sekunden/verkauft-euer-gold/v_detail_tab_comments/8408592.html?pageNumber=3&commentSort=debate

This speech is so dull and dumb that I would like to transcribe and translate it, but no time until night today …

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