Sunday, November 14, 2010

FOA on Currency Styling, Currency Management, Dollar Hyperinflation and End Game Scenarios


Somewhere out there, FOA is walking this trail alone. He told us as much: "I will walk this trail in silence." :( <--That's me sad.

FOA (11/12/01; 16:31:28MT - usagold.com msg#132)
There comes a time

There comes a time in all things when one must do nothing and simply wait. This is an ages old truth that crosses all the boundaries of life's endeavors; for everything is not always in the doing, but also in the watching. Any good farmer knows that he does not grow a crop; he only prepares his field so the growing he knows is coming can take nature's course.

My friends, we have crossed time and space, while plowing these fields of understanding, and the unfolding drama before us must now sprout its own life. For now, it is my time to watch the trail and let the crop develop. Indeed, it will and it will do so for all to see.

Enough has been said to prove our reasoning is true, especially when the fields become full and in a shade of physical green only our seeds will produce. And planted them, we did, by hand, one at a time, over many years.

Enough has also been said about myself as this story was never about me; perhaps too much untruth was also said by others?

I am going to travel for a while and watch the trail from a distance. It won't be long before the rains come and the ground begins to open; in that time I will return. Until then; this farmer will rest from this work.

Thank you USAGOLD and all the fine people that make this media the best gold site in the world! Another time, we WILL hike again.

Sir Douglas
Your Trail Guide


FOA was the master at answering people's questions. And I often see the same questions and comments today that he was getting back in early 2001. It's almost as if we've been held in a state of limbo since then and little has changed. But much has changed. The euro has risen 60% against the dollar and gold has rocketed an astounding 425% since the posts below were written.

Also, today we can view the clash of currency styling in stark relief, which Costata illuminated in this comment:
In one sentence:
"Bondholders will discover burden-sharing. Debt relief will be enforced, either by interest holidays or haircuts on the value of the bonds. Investors will pay the price for failing to grasp the mechanical and obvious point that currency unions do not eliminate risk: they switch it from exchange risk to default risk."

Angela Merkel consigns Ireland, Portugal and Spain to their fate

FOA:
"Basically, this is the direction the Euro group is taking us. This concept was born with little regard for the economic health of Europe. In the future, any countries money or economy can totally fail and the world currency operation will continue. What is being built is a new currency system, built on a world market price for gold."

8/10/98 Friend of ANOTHER

IMO the key word in the AEP article is "mechanical". This is why the ECB politics are a "sideshow" (Another). This is the effect of severing the Euro's "ties to the nation state" (Duisenberg) and marking gold to market. A mechanism will now perform its sole function.

Stability (the sole mandate of the ECB) isn't a "fixed" price target. If the exchange rate of a currency is too high (demand exceeds supply) then more currency can be issued. Conversely currency can be withdrawn if the exchange rate is too low (supply exceeds demand).

The Euro Freegold architecture isn't a Utopian dream. It's a Grandfather clock. Tick tock!

I wish we had FOA (Trail Guide) here to answer a few questions today. But since we don't, I thought it would be fun to repost some of his answers from 2001 that are, perhaps, as timely today as they were when they were written. I can see that some of "auspec's" questions are still on the minds of many today.

It should be interesting to watch the comments that will follow. We should easily be able to distinguish between those who are only here to discredit FOA, and those who are able to glimpse the very deep wisdom that he shared with the help of his friend, Another.

I can tell you that, for me, it was only after reading the archives all the way through TWICE that I was able to go back a third time and see deep enough to find the "infinite resolution" that has powered this blog for two years now. Following the train of thoughts present in these posts, through the different links to which they lead, takes a lot of effort. Hopefully this post turns out to be a small capsule of one such train of thought.

In any case, it should spur an interesting conversation for us all to read this same excerpt at the same time. The archives contain thousands of pages and are always enlightening to read. But one can easily get lost, walking alone through the past. So let's do it together and see if there's anything in these 9 ½ year old posts that is still relevant today. Actually, that's the way I like to read them: as if they were written today. Please tell me what you think…

auspec (4/19/01; 08:48:52MT - usagold.com msg#: 52175)
ANOTHER And FOA

Thank you, wise men, for your trail illuminations, much appreciated! Please forgive my persistent questions in posts #s 51479, 51935, and 51992 and this summary of these questions, once again. Little in my life has been accomplished without an uncommon level of persistence so I must "return to my roots" and give the maximum effort, as it is all I know. Still hoping and trusting that these perspectives will be addressed by you. Thanks in advance!

From USAGOLD post #51479 {with a few additions} "In Defense of the DOLLAR"

This is your humble correspondent, trying to make sense of our rapidly changing currency world. Please bear with me as explanations for the "end game" scenario are sought. Am I really going to defend the US Dollar? Only relatively speaking, because I can't see the hyperinflation script coming to pass that we so readily toss about on this Forum. No problem whatsoever in visioning the rise of the EURO, just in what degree of demise of the dollar. The USD will get its "just desserts", the EURO is clearly a "comer".


FOA, your 3-10-01 piece, "On the Road", is classic excellence so I would like to take excerpts from it as this "Defense of the Dollar" takes format. My questions/comments are surrounded by *s.


Trail Guide: Well,,,,,,, things are not as before,,,, are they? (smile)

In my last post USAGOLD Forum post (#48858) we noted that the paper gold game was reaching its limits. The BOE was almost asking "what do you want us to do"? The answer came as plain as day as the paper price was driven a little lower in return for a gold sale reduction. Yes, clear as a mountain stream,,,, the unwinding has begun! It will continue until the big event when the gold rules are officially changed. Not much different than when the dollar hit its credibility limit in 1971. As Randy has often pointed out; the US printed gold contracts back then until they (dollars on the gold exchange standard) lost their mathematical ability to be converted into gold.


Auspec: *If the dollar's status is now so similar to what it was in 1971, why would we see the Brazil type hyperinflation now as opposed to the simple ongoing degradation of fiat that we have all come to know and hate? Why the extreme portrayal of the dollar? It's clear the dollar is an old toad and there are young stallions waiting in the wings, but it's hard to see this as an all-or-none issue where the dollar {banana} goes from being the world's reserve currency to being "nada". Where's the middle ground with dual and competing reserve currencies in common use?*

Trail Guide: What's in process now??:

The Washington Agreement placed in context where the Euro system is going with gold. That pronouncement drove home the fact that our Dollar gold pricing system was going to die with the dollar reserve function. The WA placed us "on the road" to high priced physical gold and low priced contract gold. It could have been the end of the LBMA pricing structure, right then and there, except that it would have clocked the global financial structure too fast.

Indeed, our Euro friends helped the system out by giving it some more of the same poison, more paper gold inflation. Yes, all the while since the WA, people have been falling all over each other trying to explain why so much new European gold has entered the market through lending. Yet, all that was mostly lent was more paper credits built upon a failing dollar gold pricing system. You see, they left the maintaining of system credibility [supplying token amounts of physical] to the dollar faction. Kind of strange how gold keeps showing up as part of the US trade deficit? Even if it's only a trickle.

Gold bugs cry that the paper market is not free because government endorsed inflation in this arena is killing its price structure. Almost as if they want fiat gold that less inflated? Well, that's great if your "gold" money is in our modern gold producing industry that's hip deep in committing its product to satisfy these same paper contracts. Yes, this mistake of "hard money" allocation by Western savers is the result of ignoring history and how currency systems evolve. Gold industry investments work if the current fiat system is remaining "in use" but showing price inflation. However, when currency systems fall "out of use" while moving into super price inflation,,,,, the next competing system will side with physical gold! It doesn't happen often, but when it does real wealth in one's hand becomes worth many times investments in "almost gold". Truly, the dollar price of physical gold is going higher than anyone expects. END

*Comments: Again it is easy to see the dollar as losing a large piece of the action, but hard to see its total demise or its falling out of use. The US as the largest military force in the world certainly has its overriding benefits. The US has enormous resources; physical, financial, and spiritual. American creativity and "know how" has changed the world. This country will not turn over and simply give in! Let's look forward to the next 5 years and place probabilities on what is likely to happen as far as the dollar/euro is concerned. I will rank these various scenarios in what I see as their most likely odds of happening:

1} Ongoing MODERATE debasement of US Dollar. {Brisker} Business as {than} usual.

2} Gold and/or Oil breaks away from the dollar.

3} Dual and competing reserve currencies. "Co-Currencies" in Reserves. The currency war that is in clear sight {thanks to ANOTHER and FOA}.

4} Status quo.

5} All-out war that distracts/rescues the dollar and extends its life. Wag the dollar.

6} Dollar merged with euro/backed by euro.

7} Brazillian or Weimar style hyperinflation of the USD, the Big Banana, or the 'little banana'.

What ranking would you give these possible scenarios? And yes, we all know the DEBT is a monster lurking closer and closer! Debt is designed for default as fiats are for debasement. Looking for a catalyst to get the EURO kick started a bit? All that is necessary is for ECB to get rid of a % of dollar reserves about the time the common coinage comes into play. Ouch! But still, "death" of the USD?? At $30,000 POG the US as we know it will be no more, agreed?

Another question comes to mind: What advantage would it be to the Power Elite to destroy the dollar. Yes, a one world government and currency would suffice as a legitimate reason, but the old guy likely has many deeds yet to perform. Do you respond to questions in regards to mentioning the "Power Elite"? Some won't "go there" and that is their free choice, no problema.

The dollar has defaulted twice to date, yet chugs along. What "history lessons" best show us the endline that awaits the dollar? The end of a currency's lifetime always ends in gold debasement? By "super price inflation" are you referring to something much worse than the US in the 1970's? You must be, as that fiasco was "successfully" negotiated. The 13% mortgage wasn't a world stopper. Are we looking for a low probability event that has only happened a few times in history, or a high probability event that has happened EVERY time in history as a currency reserve ages? Odds or the END?

As per gold "industry" investments, they will do just fine at your $360 POG from today's level [gold was at $260/oz. when this was written]. The Romanian deposit that contains 8-10 million ounces should fare well regardless of what currency is "reserve". You stated: "Gold industry investments work if the current fiat system is remaining "in use", but showing price inflation." Are you talking all or none with the dollar as reserve currency of the entire world or reserve currency of none? The dollar will remain in use, imho, until there is a one world currency, even Brazil "uses" their currency of old. So we have the dollar and we have the inflation, and we get gold stock appreciation. Yes, a gold stock is a problem if it must sell gold in dollars and the dollars are TOTALLY worthless, but I'll take those odds, thank you. Please don't misunderstand me, as I have a greater current appreciation for physical {thanks to the brain trust of this fine establishment} than stocks, but just can't see this as 'all or none'.

Maybe a lesson is needed in "how currency systems evolve". The waiter replies: "Sorry sir, we're out of the hyperinflation, but there is ALWAYS plenty of inflation available in the kitchen."

There are many on the Forum that struggle to see a USD "cataclysm" as a high probability event and it does seem to be a KEY question to address if you would. These questions are, or possibly ought to be, in the minds of all of us as we make our financial decisions.

Thanks, ANOTHER & Trail Guide, for your many and fine efforts. I remain, on the trail.*

au{in}spec{tor} Clouseau

FOA (4/19/01; 17:50:29MT - usagold.com msg#65)
Reply

Hello again everyone,

I thought it would be a good idea to make some clear comments and replies regarding my perceptions. Using some questions and thoughts from the main forum will also help. This may make it easier for us all as we "follow in the footsteps"!

Auspec makes several points and contention for me to address. Please read his complete post first (and all the others I'll address). Hello auspec, you write in reference to my hike #61 here on the trail:


auspec (4/19/01; 08:48:52MT - usagold.com msg#: 52175)
-------*If the dollar's status is now so similar to what it was in 1971, why would we see the Brazil type hyperinflation now as opposed to the simple ongoing degradation of fiat that we have all come to know and hate? Why the extreme portrayal of the dollar? It's clear the dollar is an old toad and there are young stallions waiting in the wings, but it's hard to see this as an all-or-none issue where the dollar {banana} goes from being the world's reserve currency to being "nada". Where's the middle ground with dual and competing reserve currencies in common use?*
--------------------


Well sir, I'm going to try and reply in context to the way you asked these questions. Considering well all your prefacing stated before asking for info.

Using the 1971 dollar incident is a perfect way to engage common ground thinking about our contract gold market today. No it's not a perfect analogy, but it's real, real close, and sharpens our understanding and ability to see the subject clearly. Especially considering the tremendous number of different hard money people that read this Centennial Forum. But we must not confuse the point by thinking a similar break today will cause the coming price inflation we speak of.

Yes, after the 71 dollar gold break, we did see some good price inflation. But was that caused by the wholesale cancellation of international dollar convertibility into gold? No! That price inflation was not gold backing related because we had already, years before, been printing dollars far beyond our stated gold to dollar conversion ratio. That spell of price run ups was the result of too many dollars being printed before and after the 71 gold breaking event.

Sure, the gold price run up after that didn't help the dollar's image. But, by then it didn't make any difference what the gold price was. Even if it went back to $10/oz. we were never going back to governing the volume of dollars in supply. Not by using gold, not by silver, not in any way that would fix or slow the presses! We couldn't. Any long term slowdown, then or now, in such an established fiat was well past the politically survivable stage. This is the way fiats work, whether gold backed or not, they always break from strict printing discipline. The history behind us says so and the future before us says so. As an example in dollar terms, look at any five year average of money supply growth from 71 till now. Truly, we were and are printing our way towards the end time of dollar use. The only question was how long would the world keep using dollars? How much longer would the timeline extend?

Some hard money people thought that the world would simply convert to gold itself, in place of dollars. But, the simple fact, as I and most especially Another have said so often, is that the modern world must use a fiat form of currency to operate. And, considering that point, after the 71 gold break, there was no other strong, fluid currency for us to revert to. It wasn't until the end part of the 70s that the Europeans started down the long road of creating something else.

There were times when our foreign trading partners were thinking of breaking away. This is when the US spiked rates. Again, we confuse this action with stopping the inflation presses. Quite the contrary, the killing rise in rates was just a signal that we would not go completely hyper. On our side, the only reason we could afford to take this economy-killing gamble was because oil was still priced and settled in dollars. But that is a whole Another book.

The prestige of many international dollar holders took a real bath because they held dollars in place of gold. When they tried to initially bid for gold, the US and London made sure the price rose fast enough to tell a story to these dollar converters. That is; "bid for gold and it will soar" cutting off your conversion. Sure the US made all sorts of noise about how awful and incorrect the rising gold price was. Even showed their hand at managing the price a little so it didn't go up too fast. All the while saying they were fighting for all they were worth to keep it down! Truly, the last decade shows naive Gold Bugs just how much in control they were and are of this so called "free commodity market in gold". Oh well, back to your point.
---------

You see, the dollar is going to fail now because a good alternative is available now. All this has something to do with the coming new gold valuation, but that new price level is not related so much to gold backing a currency again. (more on that in a min). The dollar is toast because most of the world doesn't like the management policy. They didn't like it in 71, but tolerated it because gold was supposed to keep flowing in repatriation payments. And if they didn't like it back then, they god awful hate it now!

We like to think that the dollar is what it is because we are so good. (smile) But the truth is that for over a two decade period +, none of our economic policy, our trade financing policy, our defense policy or our internal lifestyle policy has pleased anyone outside these borders. We managed the dollar for us (U.S.) and the rest could just follow along.

Our fiat currency has survived all these years because others have supported our dollar flow in a way that kept it from crashing its exchange rate. We talk and think like we are winning the tug-of-war when, in fact, they just aren't pulling to hard. Waiting for their own system to form up.

Truly, most of the world likes the most conspicuous aspect of the euro that we describe as its biggest weakness; its management by several varied nation states. All supporting different thoughts, cultures, backgrounds and perceptions of government policy. Some compare it to the many nationalities in the US, but it's much more competitive than that. It's thought that this mixture will produce a "more good for all" management of a Euro world reserve currency. Truly, because gold plays no part in today's dollar management or the Euro, then political styling is all that's left.

My friends, a national fiat in our modern world only functions if the whole world uses and supports its flow and most importantly likes its management (political styling is the catch word). This support and use of our dollar can and will change faster than many think possible once the Euro is finished. Our dollar is not going to become a "banana" or "nada" in the future, as auspec notes. It already is and has carried this trait for some time now as does every fiat today. The only thing that keeps them from cascading away is world support and use.

Point:
When most of the major players that styled the Euro decide to swing even 1/2 support toward that new money, the exchange rate for our dollar will plunge to its true worth! That dollar value is there now, you just don't see it yet. The price inflation that many (auspec) don't / can't see happening, will be the result of our currency management changing to confront the nature of all the above. The world economic financing, pricing, saving, settlement and opinion is shifting toward the Euro. As this happens the US will have to raise rates ever higher, even as it massively prints more currency to support our internal economy. Our entire economy will slow and fail as this price inflating process moves on. Some will call it stag / flation, but will change that description as it becomes more of a crash / hyperinflation.

Right now, the actions of our fed is telling this truth. We must inflate while we watch the Eurozone enjoy its basically internal trade economy. As other nation blocks embrace that zone, they will pull economic function from us.

You write:

------

*Comments: Again it is easy to see the dollar as losing a large piece of the action, but hard to see its total demise or its falling out of use. The US as the largest military force in the world certainly has its overriding benefits. The US has enormous resources; physical, financial, and spiritual. American creativity and "know how" has changed the world. This country will not turn over and simply give in! Let's look forward to the next 5 years and place probabilities on what is likely to happen as far as the dollar/euro is concerned. I will rank these various scenarios in what I see as their most likely odds of happening:

-------------------


Auspec, before I list your most likely odds, I would like to comment on your above.

We must not confuse a currency's "total demise" or "falling out of use" with a "loss of identity". In our time there have been few major moneys that went away. Today, we have a whole world of national fiats "in use" and "not demised" that still carry their nation's identity. They lose value at an incredible rate, are mismanaged to the highest degree, are laughed at and despised. But, still they are "in use" as they function for their governments and economies. Usually, they function alongside whatever major reserve currency is in vogue. Today the dollar, tomorrow the Euro. Make no mistake, the entire internal US sector can and will function as its currency runs a price inflation just like these third world countries. We will adapt as they have by dropping our living standard accordingly and adopting the Euro as our second money. Also:

The prestige that we have the largest military force in the world does not help our money problem. We talk as if we will let any country die that does not use our money or support our currency. I point out that the British also made such comments and it didn't stop their downfall. Nor the Russians. Also:

I point out that many, many other countries also have the same "enormous resources; physical, financial, and spiritual" that we have. But the degrading of our economic trading unit, the dollar, places the good use of these attributes in peril. Besides, the issue beyond these items is our current lifestyle. We buy far more than we sell, a trade deficit. Collectively, net / net, using our own attributes and requiring the use of other nation's as well. Not unlike Black Blade's Kalifornians sucking up their neighbor's energy supplies (smile). We cannot place your issues up as example of our worth to other nations unless we crash our lifestyle to a level that will allow their export! Something our currency management policy will confront with dollar printing to avert. Also:

NO, "this country will not turn over and simply give in" as you state. But, we will give up on our currency! Come now, let's take reason in grasp. Our American society's worth is not its currency system. Around the world and over decades other fine people states have adopted dollars as their second money, only to see their society and economy improve. Even though we see only their failing first tier money. What changes is the recognition of what we do produce for ourselves and what we require from others to maintain our current standard of living. In the US this function will be a reverse example from these others. We will come to know just how "above" our capabilities we have been living. Receiving free support by way of an overvalued dollar that we spent without the pain of work.
--------

Your "various scenarios" with mine notes added :


1} Ongoing MODERATE debasement of US Dollar. {Brisker} Business as {than} usual.

----Near term, yes.-----

2} Gold and/or Oil breaks away from the dollar.

---- Oil is already doing so for a year now. The gold market is in the process of self-inflating its paper side of the function. The first minor lease rate signals are already behind us. [March 9, 2001] The ECB and BIS are coming more in control as the dollar faction must either sell its gold also or begin to fold. If they want the game to continue a little longer, the US must not put its gold on the market or the BIS and ECB would bid it with their dollar reserves. Ending it all then and there.------

3} Dual and competing reserve currencies. "Co-Currencies" in Reserves. The currency war that is in clear sight {thanks to ANOTHER and FOA}.

----- I would add that the vision of co-currencies is just a passing function as we get from here, dollar reserve, to there, Euro reserve.-----

4} Status quo.

----- We have not been here in our life times (smile).--

5} All-out war that distracts/rescues the dollar and extends its life. Wag the dollar.

------ As we enter the down side of our economic function (like we are doing now) the massive money printing by the Fed will risk the dollar's slow slide to becoming a super slide if a war breaks out. People run to the best managed world money in a war, not just the one with the current best exchange rate value. In the past the dollar was the one, today the Euro would receive the flow. The US would be risking killing its last bit of dollar timeline with any war today. [unless, perhaps, A) it wasn't an "all-out war" and B) it has the backing of Europe and the Saudis in pursuing the war?]---------

6} Dollar merged with euro/backed by euro.

------ I know a few people that made a lot of sudden money wealth and gave almost all of it to the church (or charity). Others are much more smarter and support the church (or charity) for the rest of their life. Retaining some control over how the charity is used. This is how the EuroZone would handle us. Actually, it's the same way we handled them after the war. We didn't just merge our checkbook into theirs, did we? Net / Net, they will have the wealth to be offered, not us.-----

7} Brazillian or Weimar style hyperinflation of the USD, the Big Banana, or the 'little banana'?

------- Full on, wide open, in your seat, flat out! It's in the pipeline!------

You write and I comment:

Debt is designed for default as fiats are for debasement.

--- My friend, debt is the very essence of fiat. As debt defaults, fiat is destroyed. This is where all these deflationist get their direction. Not seeing that hyperinflation is the process of saving debt at all costs, even buying it outright for cash. Deflation is impossible in today's dollar terms because policy will allow the printing of cash, if necessary, to cover every last bit of debt and dumping it on your front lawn! (smile) Worthless dollars, of course, but no deflation in dollar terms! (bigger smile)

What advantage would it be to the Power Elite to destroy the dollar.

-------- Wrong context. What advantage does the Power Elite gain by expending assets to save an already failed currency. Better to do what major players have done for centuries and are doing now, buy gold and evolve your power base to use the next reserve.-----------

The end of a currency's lifetime always ends in gold debasement?

---- In almost every case. Sometimes in the open, sometimes hidden.------

Ok, this is going overtime (smile). I will try to cover more (and others) in a day or so. Also, the question of Another at his keyboard? I reword things from him quite a bit for bare readability. But, his delivery is pure. I don't always pretend to understand it. Then, that's a whole other story (smile)

Thanks
TrailGuide

_______________________________________________________
Sidebar:

The above reference to ANOTHER was because he resurfaced with a series of comments just prior to FOA's post. Here are those comments…

ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) (04/14/01; 18:08:54MT - usagold.com msg#: 51887)
Thoughts!

To this USAGOLD Forum and Mr. Kosares, good evening.

Thank you FOA for your time and work.

We talk once again my friends. This forum, it grows strong for all ages and nature of peoples. Read they do, from all places on earth. I read and see the knowledge as written, but it be the knowledge we still must see that speaks with greater strength.

Walk the gold trails of my good friend, do I. On my feet are "strong sole" of thick leather, purchased with much knowledge of physical gold. These shoes not go bare before our journey is done. On trail I see your "thin sole" gold investments cast aside and scavenged by beasts. Their owners walk no more as these investments took not this hard road of dollar transition. Many more will wear paper gold wealth thin before this walk be done. Only physical gold will see sun after this storm.

Some say dollar strong and holds much value still. It bends not and is strong and worthy. I say their vision is limited to see only post supporting roof. Not what on roof already or what must be placed on roof. When new Euro currency is done, full weight of dollars will return as your wet snow. In that day, we check curve of this good post, not before.

Some say dollar buys much gold and is strong in metal. I say, paper gold be not metal! We have more dollars than gold in world. As long as your system works, you sell gold to gain real dollars and we sell dollars to gain real gold. All be well in your world and mine, yes? Soon, dollar return in bank and Euro return in bank be equal, no? More later, dollar return become even less than Euro. Tell me about your paper gold value then, my friend. Perhaps, dollar then seen strong in this lesser gold only. You think long and hard on this before end of year?

I think Euro buy much more oil then. We shall see. I will return often now. Discuss our future then.

We watch this new gold market together, yes?

Thank You
Another

ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) (04/15/01; 18:58:39MT - usagold.com msg#: 51943)
Mr Gresham

Welcome Mr. Gresham. We talk for a time, yes?

You write:

"We who read here generally buy the coins, one ounce and less. The "Giants" you speak of are usually buying the large bars (100 ounce?), yes?"

I ask you, how many of your bars in tonne? This is the small purchase size.

"Is there a limited supply for them to get, and only through the large brokers with their "private wealth management" programs?"

I would say the BIS is best broker, always. It best to sell dollars for gold when gold is offered.

"I am trying to understand why this knowledge you bring is not being acted upon by some others with "deep pockets", such that the markets would be moved, or shortages occur, even before the dollar is seen in weakness."

My friend, you see the gold with "Western eyes". In mind, it be always, "how much currency does my gold bring". In this world of much paper gold, it bring not much dollars yes. In such matter, your currency makers do make your wealth lay low. This dream of much dollar currency for gold is the illusion in the "Western Mind". Your men of "deep pockets" do probe for shortages, however, their wish for low supply is not to be found. Their pockets are full with "credit gold" and sad are they at currency price this brings. It is the fools game to corner paper gold printing press, no? Sir, I stand with no fools!

Days and nights do pass and one morning will bring a dollar price for gold you have never known. In that day, I will cast this currency down and walk with real wealth. In this day, the gold will trade in Euros and no bribe of credit gold will be needed to mark this new money.

Today, I my world it be how much gold does dollar currency bring. A difference in understanding from yours, I think. Today, amount of bullion available for dollars no longer the reflection of bullion dollar exchange, it be now the most terrible bribe for world dollar use. An acceptable deal in most of world, such is real world outside your laws, no?

But, it is here, in act of making extra credit gold, where the "shortage" you speak of, is measured my friend. A good man with one eye does see this time as of but few years and short days. Aside from our Euro political changes, history alone does show all great currencies end with this overselling of credit gold as last of era. This paper gold credit is always for the fools first and last. It value is later reduced to same as currency, along with holders of no gold.

It be our good fortune (and yours) that bullion is offered still. For the simple man, such as I, this wealth is that for kings but more so for his people. For all peoples, gold will be again the wealth of ages.

In this day, at end of dollar era, all do see real bullion sold for sake of market credibility, only. Perhaps too, bank credibility, I think. In this world, the lower this dollar paper price, the more bullion becomes available for credibility sake. It is the good thing for men of "small pockets" and the curse against traders and fools.

I bid you the good fortune of "small pockets" with much physical gold! We watch this new gold market together, yes?

Thank You
Another

ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) (04/18/01; 06:19:54MT - usagold.com msg#: 52086)
Reply

USAGOLD (04/16/01; 19:15:36MT - usagold.com msg#: 51997)

----- I would also like to take this opportunity to welcome Another back to this Table. The circle is now joined in continuity again -- all around. Already I have added to my own file of vintage "Another (Thoughts!)" with this shrewd observation:

"This dream of much dollar currency for gold is the illusion in the "Western Mind". Your men of "deep pockets" do probe for shortages, however, their wish for low supply is not to be found. Their pockets are full with "credit gold" and sad are they at currency price this brings. It is the fools game to corner paper gold printing press, no? Sir, I stand with no fools!"

The smile of recognition returns to my face as this point is made in these few, short sentences better than I have seen it made in entire articles on the subject. Welcome back, my friend. --------

Mr. Kosares,

Thank you for your welcome and acknowledgment. I add that within this circle many feet have walked and the prints of the Kosares show most lasting impression. I see the stature of this man as American, however no Western mind is found within him. One day all will rush and follow your path before strong tide washes the deepest heal mark from sand.

It be true, my friend, in history no man does corner printing press. Many have taken this path before. Even declare themselves "leaders" of "financial knowledge" and "sophistication", do they. The Gresham does make wonder about such things and asks for reason no one does claim gold from printer?

Such demand be as 100 men with contract asking Spanish farmer for 100 basket of olives where clear examination in field display only 10 basket. Such good reasoning have these men, demand delivery and illusion of wealth to others be none! None ask full collection for fear of illusion to become reality, no? Perhaps, take what offered and wait next year. Better, sell claims for olives to Western investors with little eyes and clean shoes? Perhaps financial knowledge and sophistication of these paper sellers is more considerable than average fool. In the days that come,

"better one olive in house than six blooms on tree"!

We watch this new gold market together, yes?

Thank You
Another

ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) (04/18/01; 06:41:33MT - usagold.com msg#: 52088)
Reply

Mr Gresham (04/17/01; 10:33:51MT - usagold.com msg#: 52041)
ANOTHER: WA, BIS
Was the Washington Agreement the most significant event in gold since you were last posting in 1998? Do you have any reflections on those events?

Mr. Gresham,

One must weigh the mind of this Randy. It be heavy, yes? Do read the thoughts of the BIS for these same are printed review as #52046. Hold a mirror to these events for reflection. Such descriptions I discuss come next day.

Thank You
Another

[And here are Mr. Gresham's and Randy's posts referenced by ANOTHER]

Mr Gresham (04/17/01; 10:33:51MT - usagold.com msg#: 52041)
ANOTHER: WA, BIS

Was the Washington Agreement the most significant event in gold since you were last posting in 1998? Do you have any reflections on those events?

Who were the players that made the price spike upward so quickly in 1999, and how was it managed back down? (How were so many "fearless" shorts recruited so quickly?)

What is the BIS' role in the "currency war"? Is it somewhat trying to walk the middle of the road? Did the US members take their seats recently as an attempt to manage BIS' involvement, or does this express any measure of US control over BIS?

Randy (@ The Tower) (04/17/01; 13:37:02MT - usagold.com msg#: 52046)
Mr Gresham, nice question

--- "Was the Washington Agreement the most significant event in gold since you were last posting in 1998?"---

If I may be so bold, let me anticipate ANOTHER's answer with an answer of my own.

The most significant event in gold since the dollar's gold default in 1971 has been the successful launch in 1999 of a long-awaited new currency system built upon neutral (meaning, multi-national) management and, more importantly, a floating gold reserve structure that finally abandoned the now obsolete "fixed" gold legacy of the failed Bretton Woods structure.

With this new reserve structure, the prevailing institutional incentive, from '71 to the end of the millennium, need no longer be one of "price suppression" for the perceived market value of gold.

In this light, the most significant element of the Washington Agreement is seen to be NOT the amount of pre-announced gold sales, but rather, the self-imposed curb on gold lending operations by these European central banks. And if you think about it, this action with the Washington Agreement was nearly just a predictable inevitability from the moment the eurosystem committed to provide for freely floating gold reserves. The "tools" of the prior suppression are on the outs. Believe it. The WA simply announced the foregone conclusion in a package suitable for newspaper headlines.

Just as the value of the post-'71 paper dollar has long been propped by the international yet artificial "mandate" to hold these dollars almost exclusively as reserves (acting in tandem with the dollar settlement for oil and the overhanging debts of the "Third World"), through this new currency structure gold (and its price/value!) has now been "officially" set free to replace these dollar reserves (savings).

The reason this full transition has not already occurred is that institutional interest still exists to foster the smoothest practicable transition until that unknowable moment where the final remaining *SNAP* in the adjustment occurs.

Speaking for The Tower and personally, I continue to buy gold with excess funds because I prefer the real wealth of gold over managed paper (and digital) contract currency. As a bonus, the real wealth value of same gold will provide a pleasant benefit upon full completion of the transition in world currencies' reserve structures. (An understatement, to be sure.)

End Sidebar
_______________________________________________________

FOA (04/21/01; 21:12:52MT - usagold.com msg#66)
Of Money and Men

Hello again!

Continuing along with our discussion, clarifying some points and positions, we once again offer some straight talk. Elwood has some points in his Elwood (04/19/01msg#: 52225). Sir, you referenced our last full hike on the GoldTrail #64, quoting first this portion:

FOA: "Many hard money philosophers have pointed their finger at others for the fiat situation we use today. It was the bankers and governments, the kings and cohorts, big business and robber barons or some communist manifesto that forced us to use this type of money. Well, you may not like the process and consider yourself above or apart from it all. You may even declare all of them evil. But, in the end, one fact remains; society may govern itself in many ways over thousands of years, but it has never stopped the evolution that corrupts the use of real money as official money."

Then you write:


------ Thank you, sir, for sharing your deep thoughts. True, your words are, but why is this a reason to abandon the fight for sound money? Surely you must be aware of the massive inefficiencies that will accompany a system with two moneys. There will be two prices for every good, one stable, the other not. Would not the timeline of such a system be extremely short compared to that of a system of sound money even though the sound money eventually becomes corrupted? How is this system better (or even different) than what we have today?---------

Hello Elwood (smile),

The fight for sound money is not dissimilar from the ages old fight for peace in the world. Mankind has been striving for peace over our entire existence and still it does not come. Countless lives and fortunes have been lost and the same battle continues. Perhaps we should reexamine our collective needs and try something different. Truly, what is to be lost? This is the same mind set our new political styling is shooting for. It's a good effort because history is on their side.

Yes, it's a noble effort to try and get the world on a sound money program, but after failing at it for centuries, a little side trip cannot hurt. (smile) Most people, like yourself, say sound money and think sound currency. Usually it's some form of gold backing that makes the currency sound. The trouble is it cannot be maintained. The logic in my words above are evident and the last part of the statement demonstrates the self-replicating nature of our dealings with "sound money". Again, in a restructured form:

""""Society has never stopped the evolution that corrupts the use of real wealth (gold) as it strives to use it as official money""""

Elwood, I don't care if all of it is legal or illegal, moral or not, right or wrong, because the larger issue overwhelms these arguments. That being; we have never been able to control our power structures in a way that disciplines the printing of currency. The Romans alloyed other metals into their gold in a form of modern day paper printing. Even in the so called wonderful days of the various gold standards, be they actual coins or paper substitutes, the world debased the system from the start. Also you write:

----Surely you must be aware of the massive inefficiencies that will accompany a system with two moneys. There will be two prices for every good, one stable, the other not.-----

We never intend to have two moneys. The concept is better seen as the Euro and a wealth reserve. Still, to defend against your thrust, what do we have now? Travel the world, my friend, and mingle in the world of currency. In almost every country of the planet there are several prices for every good sold! All depending on what nation's currency you choose to use. Today's system is working with perhaps hundreds of moneys!

------Would not the timeline of such a system be extremely short compared to that of a system of sound money even though the sound money eventually becomes corrupted? -------

My goodness, we have used a dollar system that has been debased and on the way out for 40+ years. Well before our 1971 gold break, this country was printing IOUs as if they were currency. Yet, the thinkers of our time, the same ones that employ two week trades on the stock markets, all ask for guarantees of decades before considering a new currency? Planners simply cannot employ the logic of a group that trades options, futures, strips and swaps, then asks for longevity before the fact.

-----How is this system [euro-Freegold] better (or even different) than what we have today?---------

The real issue is our misunderstanding and misuse of the term "sound money". That thought has been bantered around for hundreds of years. Truly it does not exist except in the minds of men.

Money, the term, the idea, perhaps the ideal,,,,,,, is something we dreamed up to apply to one of our chosen units of tradable wealth. Usually gold. We could take almost every item in the world and use it in this same "money fashion". Still, this form of trading real for real is just exchanging wealth. It isn't exchanging money as we understand money.

Gold is no different than anything else you possess as your wealth, it just so happened to be the most perfect type of tradable wealth in the world.
So it evolved to be used the most and eventually labeled in the same function of what we consider to be "sound money".

Now, consider that all wealth is represented in and of itself. You cannot reproduce wealth through substitution, like giving someone five pieces of copper for one piece of gold and then have them think they now have five pieces of gold! This is the process we try to perform within the realm of man's money ideals. We have always debased trading wealth by duplicating it into other forms and calling all of it, collectively, "our money".

This duplicating, this replicating, this debasement is the result of taking the concept of a credit / contract function (paying in the future) and combining it with the concept of completing a trade at the moment. Think about that for a moment.

As an example, I'll give you a paper contract to pay you later for some oranges and you give me the basket of oranges. Better said, I just gave you modern man's actual concept of money.

Or… I trade you a basket of apples (or gold) for those same oranges and the deal is finished, done! We have been taught to think that this is also the concept of money trade.

The first uses what our currency system has evolved into, what is really money in our mind. Where the second uses no credit form at all and is more comparable to trading real wealth as the ancients traded using gold.

Contemporary thought has always blurred these two notion; saying that these two methods of trading are one in the same and both forms use the same idea of what we think money is.

Further refined; we evolved our money ideals into a perception that credits and contract payments can be used as if they contain the same value in payment as trading real wealth. They could and can if managed correctly. But we have never managed credit money to match the same proportions as existing real wealth (gold). We have tried to manage this combination of wealth trading and money credit for as long as we have been seeking "peace"!

So:
We use, today, many forms of wealth holdings, all standing right beside our dollar use. Many of these wealth items have and do perform much better than our fiat currency. One has but to use one stock holdings as an example.

You may have $5,000 in cash in hand and in a checking account, while also owning $200,000 of, say, Microsoft? Obviously, the stock is a competing, dual form of currency wealth. Its value rise has overshadowed the gain on your fiat. But, is it driving your currency out of circulation? Seen anyone recently using this superior form of competing wealth to pay for a fill up at the station? No?

We all need and must use some form of fiat currency to operate in this modern world. It makes little difference if MSFT went to $10 or $10-billion, you would still use the currency system in trade as a more efficient form of modern trade. Society now uses these "money" systems without any form of gold backing, not because they are "strong" or "stable", but because they work more than they fail.

Still, over the last several decades, we now have come to expect an attempt at "political styling" our fiat money that benefits more than one nation block. Further, we expect a wealth asset to not so much stand behind the system but to measure its speed of failure or success. Knowing full well we will accept and expect some loss of value as payment for this use convince of Fiat Euro.

This is the road ahead. A fiat no different from the dollar in function, yet a universe away in management. A wealth asset that also stands beside this money, yet has no modern label or official connection as money. In this way modern society can circle the earth, to once again begin where we started. Having learned that the concept of wealth money and man's money were never the same. We shall see.

Thanks
TrailGuide


FOA, you need not walk alone any longer. From where I sit, it sure seems like the rains have come and the ground is beginning to open. I, and many others here, would give anything for you to share your latest thoughts in proper posts or simple comments. You can email me at fofoamail@gmail.com if you want. How wonderful that would be. :) <--That's me happy!

Sincerely,
FOFOA

(All emphases and [brackets] in the above posts are mine)

257 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 257 of 257
sean said...

My personal feeling is that silver is a surfboard that has been held under-water for many years, and is about to explode up and ride the waves of dollars, and so it is interesting for some short term profits. Gold, however, is the life-boat that will float to the top above all and never sink. When the tsunami hits, I'd rather be in the life-boat with FO/FO/A than on a surfboard with the vigalantes.

Desperado said...

RE: gold vs silver

IMO, it is a question of diversification. I would not bake a PM pie out of 100% gold. There are certain risks that apply greater to gold, such as tax treatment, market freeze, public PM preferences, reduction in GSR ratio, and of course seizure. Some of these also apply to silver, and both metals could be treated exactly the same within the borders of individual nations. I don't have a crystal ball, so I just try to compare relative risks.

Portfolio theory indicates than many of these risks could be reduced or even eliminated by some silver and even other PM posession.

I certainly wouldn't say that one should have more silver than gold, but my PM portfolio is currently about 70% gold, 25% silver and 5% platinum and paladium. The proportion of silver in my PM porfolio has probably increased several percent in the last couple of months because of the drop in the GSR. If gold takes off and leaves silver in the dust, I will do just fine. If silver does better so be it, I will be a winner too. I Switzerland seizes my gold (as Faber has alluded to), I will still have silver. Since silver is so bulky, most of my silver is in the ZKB silver ETF. This ETF shares also allow me to own silver without paying the 7.5% Swiss VAT (that doesn't apply to gold). I can also exchange these ETF shares into 10 kilo bars. I do have a few rounds of 1oz silver coins and some old Swiss silver coins from the 60's. I made all these purchases over a year ago, so I am nicely in the black.

@fredquimby, do you live in Switzerland?

Greyfox "It's the Debt, Stupid" said...

@ Costata
All very good points and well espoused. I'm sure your next point will be that CB's and the "Giants" back/hoard/accumulate gold and not silver as per FOFOA/FOA/A.

Silver in the future should be much, much higher in value that the current price due to price suppression over decades. I am a firm believer that J6Pack will bid silver well beyond it's intrinsic value when they realize the future of fiat. Gold is a wealth reserve and silver is more for speculation and the transition period to Freegold.

After Freegold there will then be a major correction in silver to the downside verses gold.

Dave Narby said...

@ David

Nice takedown? What is this, some sort of game for you?

Please ignore everything I post here from now on.

And if you and Greg would do us a favor, please do the exact opposite everything Beck says to do. Clearly, that's the rational response since everything Beck says comes from a corporate shill.

Dave Narby said...

@ Costata

Agree the GSR is the critical indicator.

IMO, TPTB are herding the morts into silver before the event takes place. You see people like Max Keiser encouraging everyone to buy silver to crash JPM, and while I agree this would be a historic display of civil disobedience, IMO these people would be much better served to pony up 2x as much fiat and buy a gram of gold.

So, the question is how to trade out of our speculative silver positions...

I mentioned in the past that I expect the GSR to go to ridiculously low levels before this is over, perhaps as low as 10:1. My reasoning is that to insure the maximum amount of wealth transfer, they need to push J6P into silver, not gold. This will result in historic distortions. Myself, I'll be scaling out (sell some at 50:1, 40:1, 30:1, 20:1 etc.).

So... APMEX and Kitco buy silver, and are probably good choices if you have a lot, aren't trying to be too nimble in your trading, and want to exchange it for gold.

It might be a good idea to research the local metal dealers in your area and find those that keep an inventory on hand, this way you could do a local exchange w/o having to wait for items to ship.

I'll probably keep a few coins around for sentimental reasons, but that's it. It is a beautiful, lustrous metal... : )

Dave Narby said...

@ Sean

Well said.

Bright aurum said...

@julian, FOFOA and all
As I previously commented http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/11/dilemma-2-homeless-dollars.html?showComment=1289066373843#c5346711955621533643 on the subject of silver, it is obvious that people a stirred away from gold, as well as from silver into copper, diesel fuel in tanks (oil drums etc.), stainless steel et al. In doing so the masterminds (power elites/TPTB) are opening a Pandora`s box. So in my mind they are clueless of their actions and do not know what are they actually wishing for.
I am free as a “supperproducer” to store my forgone consumption in whatever I like (anything of the above mentioned items) and I am actually doing this (black market ops under the radar of the welfare state) but by doing this I am actually bidding resources from the productive side of the economy thus killing those producers who operate on the margin, causing their death, loss of production and I am ushering hyperinflation in the process – see the historical part here http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/chris-marchese/the-road-to-ruin .
P.S.
I have no moral objections of doing so. Hyperinflation will kill the societies as we know them and may kill me and my family in the process too, but I will still try to do it none the less. I am sick of this stressful, hustling and wolfish way of live and my wish is to give nature a breather, a breather without men.

Bright aurum said...
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Bright aurum said...
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Anonymous said...

Will Freegold spare a few from this fate?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=peX4dBEF0Vg&feature=player_embedded

Desperado said...

Hello Fofoa,

I thought you might provide us with a comment on this: The Story Behind Obama’s Remarks on FDR

"What really went on in the first few months after FDR was elected?

“We didn’t actually, I think, do what Franklin Delano Roosevelt did, which was basically wait for six months until the thing had gotten so bad that it became an easier sell politically because we thought that was irresponsible. We had to act quickly.” - President Obama
...
The bottom line is this: Hoover and a substantial bloc of New York bankers wanted Roosevelt to commit to staying on the gold standard and US participation in the upcoming London Economic Conference. These commitments would have meant continued austerity and completely destroyed any chance of fundamental reform — which was why the banks and Hoover were so insistent. In effect, they were hoping to continue with Hoover’s policies, if not Hoover himself.

Roosevelt exchanged some messages with them, but finally refused the whole package. He and his advisers correctly concluded that the idea was to suck them into a foolish set of commitments. FDR was simply not willing to make the kind of arrangements with bankers that President Obama was. That’s the heart of the matter."


I had never heard of the London Economic Conference until now.

"When the Great Depression devastated the world economy in the years 1929-1932, it was generally assumed that the United States would serve as a hegemon, providing leadership for a program to bring about recovery. President Hoover in 1931 called for a conference to decide how to reduce tariffs and also revive prices (i.e. reverse the deflation associated with the Depression). The agenda for the Conference was drafted by representatives of six major nations who met in Geneva in 1932. The agenda asserted that intergovernmental debts should be settled as they represented a major obstacle in the road to recovery.

The Europeans believed that “the settlement should relieve the world” of the crushing debt burdens.[1] But most of these debts were owed to the U.S., and Americans were reluctant to write them off. Senator Borah held that “the troubles of the world were really due to the War, and to the persistence of Europe in keeping great armaments, and to the mismanagement of money”; therefore, he was not willing to postpone, reduce, or cancel the payment of debts “and have Europe go ahead with a programme which has practically sunk the world into its present economic condition.”

Other events indicated that the U.S. would not support the Conference agenda as outlined. Roosevelt declared during his inaugural speech that “I shall spare no effort to restore world trade by international economic readjustment, but the emergency at home cannot wait on that accomplishment.” This was a clear signal to the in the Conference that Roosevelt would carry out his program to revive the American economy regardless of or even in opposition to international plans to revive the world economy.[3]

The next day, Roosevelt took the U.S. off the gold standard. In May, the Thomas Amendment to the Agricultural Adjustment Act “required the President to pursue a policy of inflation through the issue of paper money.”"


The first quote is from the newdeal2 website. What I find amazing is that with the world heading into the dark mists of depression V2, we see Obama and the modern day progressives, just like Roosevelt and the progressives from his period, are far more concerned with domestic politics than actually addressing the key issues. Obama is as obsessed with blaming Bush as Roosevelt was Hoover. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Cheers,

Desperado

miked said...

>>So, the question is how to trade out of our speculative silver positions...

Dave, if you are determined to play the silver game but save in gold why don't you just buy paper silver with leverage? you need less money to play and you can convert 50% of your silver to gold right now without losing the upside (if that is your wish).

miked said...

>>I am free as a “supperproducer” to store my forgone consumption in whatever I like (anything of the above mentioned items) and I am actually doing this (black market ops under the radar of the welfare state) but by doing this I am actually bidding resources from the productive side of the economy thus killing those producers who operate on the margin, causing their death, loss of production and I am ushering hyperinflation in the process

You can invest in many tangible things which aren't commodities and won't restrict production. Diamonds, art, real estate for example. In fact you can stimulate production by investing in some fine wines or spirits and not drinking them.

Gold is the best non-destructive store of value from a system-wide point of view because of its industrial uselessness, but for us as individuals on a micro-scale there are many investment choices without the need for a moralistic trade off.

Dave Narby said...

@ Miked

There's an issue using paper with metals, listen here from 2:35-4:10 http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/Broadcast/Entries/2010/11/6_Jim_Rickards.html

And when I initially bought the silver, Sprott's PSLV didn't exist.

Also, in a SHTF scenario, silver will be very useful, so having a little on hand is prudent.

Matt said...

hey everyone, could not help but chime in when i saw a mention of Max Keiser's buy silver campaign. I agree that people would be better served in the long-term by scraping together more fiat for some grams of gold. The reason he's advocating silver so strongly is because it is indeed the weak underbelly of the entire PM paper market manipulation scheme. He was quite shocked to hear that a $5 move in the price of gold buys the entire silver market, quite a staggering statistic if i may say so myself.

Looking at what is going on over in COMEX land, it seems like there is major stress on the silver side and this is unwinding at an increasing rate. Mint sales of bullion 1oz coins is consuming almost 100% of domestic mine production in the US alone. This is not a silver sales pitch, but in terms of a viable campaign the general public can get behind that already has huge momentum, buying silver provides by far the most leverage over the PM price supression schemes.

Personally and like some of you I own both gold and silver (more gold in nominal value) with a mind to cash out of silver and into more gold at the most optimal moment. If i can't time it perfectly so be it, but it seems silver is ready to shoot up in % terms before any transition to freegold or the like. A healthy window of opportunity, providing the whole fiat collapse doesn't happen too fast, that you'd have to be rather greedy to entirely miss.

LeGrand said...

@Narby.  

No, dude. You misunderstood. *Beck* is the corporate shill. Your problem is that you think he deserves a pass even when you freely admit he puts out half-truths. 

Also regarding half-truths, as Craig already explained:

"This is like a "friend" telling you about your wifes indiscretions without disclosing to you that HE is the one screwing her!"

You can ignore me if you want. 

Your friend,
David

P.S. Regards to your wife.

Dave Narby said...

@ David

I love it when people reveal themselves to be the douchebags we all suspected them to be.

costata said...

Hi Desperado, Dave Narby, miked, Grey Fox et al,

Interesting points. Glad to see that we can have a civil and constructive discussion about silver. I should point out that if I lived in the USA I would definately want some physical "silver for spending" as Ender wisely advises.

For speculating (which I don't often do) I prefer paper silver that I can roll quickly (no margin for this shrimp).

I would love to see the Max Keiser silver campaign succeed but as Jim Rickards points out the CFTC can put a stop to the physical flow of metal anytime they wish.

I'm going to put up a comment on the "lack of an official market" issue. I look forward to everyone's observations.

costata said...

A few more thoughts on silver. After the GSR in my opinion the next most important issue for silver in a Freegold context is the following:

2. The lack of an official market for silver.

The notion that standing for delivery of 25 m/t of gold could bring down the gold Comex (without official sanction) is ludicrous IMHO. That's loose change in the gold market. However, the silver Comex may be quite a different animal.

Extract from a recent blog post by Eric King about a London source in the PM markets:

“The industrials, when they see that there is tightness or delays in shipping, will then go out and stockpile silver so their assembly lines are not shut down. We would then be talking about potentially tens of millions of ounces required for delivery to these industrial users in a short period of time. The banks have told these industrial users for years that there is no problem with silver supplies. When these industrial users lose faith in the banks, they will move right away to secure stockpiles.”

http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2010/11/4_KWN_Source_Confirms_Goldman_Sachs_Long_Gold_for_Years.html

Hoarding by industrial users could drive the silver price to record nominal levels at the Comex.

Obviously if the spike in demand for silver is mainly being driven by industrial users the gold Comex could be unaffected by their demand. Gold could even trade in the opposite direction to silver.

Continued/

costata said...

\Continued

Let's assume that at some point the CFTC declare cash settlement only and render the physical spot market opaque.

Demand from the industrial users would drop off sharply once they have adequate stockpiles. Their purchases might be limited to topping up their inventory rather than increasing them. Some of the Mints might also suspend sales of fabricated silver product in response to the price hike while they gauge whether the new price levels will hold. Let's assume that the jewellers cut back as well while they gauge the reaction from the retail market to the price hikes.

The Comex/LBMA is the mechanism that allows silver buyers and sellers to be plugged into international demand and supply and the (admittedly manipulated) price signals. This network has collapsed now that these markets are cash settled.

Physical silver holders are now reliant on their local markets. Only the dealers can arbitrage the national market via their contacts in the trade.

At this point what if it emerged that silver was only manipulated for one reason - to influence the price of gold. If so, the rationale for manipulating the silver price may have just ended and silver is now completely disengaged from gold. It must trade on its own merits (like copper?). Once the CFTC members observe a physical oversupply they allow physical settlement again.

Will silver investors step up to the plate and fill the shortfall in demand needed to maintain prices?

Bright aurum said...

Here is a thing or two from the good ole BG.
It came to me three years ago to seek value storage in gold. At that time the exchange rate was 13€/gr.(14caratGOLD). I was using the local coin dealers and the jewelers to acquire the stuff. At that time there was a government sanctioned police action upon them which resulted in several kilos of coins and jewelry being confiscated from them on the presumption that there was no legal trace them having it. And once again these were the guys that actually served as middlemen proto freegoldstyle between those of us who want to move into/out of savings (wealth exchangers of a sort). And as they got pinched out of say 10 years of profits, their profit margin (spread between put/call) increased so I got in my mind “fleeced” when I had to move from saving into investing (a foolish move I have to admit and never to be repeated until the culture that favours the debtors end). Now, of course freegold is completely underground (many of the coin dealers closed shop and do their thing “freestyle” in the parks – welcome to your future western westerners) others trade only jewelry and are thus lost for the cause (for their spreads are even larger than by the coin-dealers).
Continued ….

Bright aurum said...

My observations of the gold jewelry market are that it is dying. Just window shopping only a few years ago, I could see really heavy stuff - bracelets, chains etc. and people were wearying them as a status symbol. Now wealth has gone into hiding not so much out of fear of robbery then out of fear of provoking the tax collectors (welcome to your future again western westerners, for when the knife comes to the bone it is every man for himself). Nobody wants to be seen here in the good ole BG to enjoy the good life now when the tax revenues had collapsed and the gmen pack is on the rampage.
Now it is kinda` trendy for the teenagers to wear silver (and steel = no clear perception of value) jewelry. And being bullied in school for no other reason than having highly educated parents (and being borne in Germany where they studied at the time), called Nazi, Hitlerist and so on, I would rather think no one in school will wear gold anymore out of fear of being sidelined. So I dread heaving my children marginalized in a such a system where only the compliance with the canaille pack matters.
I never traded silver until a year ago when I first started pouring savings in it. At first it was traded 20% below bogus spot (LBMA) - 34€c/gr. pure equivalent and I bought gluttonously virtually every kind (in comparison I buy only standard gold coins) starting from material (scrap jewelry), to electric contactors (little bars and “buds” used where the electricity sparks), to coins of the realm. Now silver is traded for more than 50€c/gr. and I don`t buy it. I just wait for the critical mass of jewelry buyers to topple the LBMA and by the way I have no problems expecting silver to stand on its own ground once the paper charade is over.
Be healthy and stay so,
Dimmed

Desperado said...

Hey Dimmed,

Great post, thanks. I can imagine that one would not feel comfortable walking around with and trading a 1oz gold coin in the park, is this true? I also think that Silver will hold its own, for this reason and because, like you say, taxes. If gold goes as high as some people are saying, silver will definitely have a place. When these western welfare states start starving and eating their own, the people will demand that the "rich" pay more taxes and corruption will start to permeate, just as you describe. Anyone flashing gold coins around is going to raise eyebrows.

I spent a week in Bulgaria and skied Bansko and Borovets 4 years ago, we had a fantastic time except when some gangsters in 3 BMW's almost ran me over in Varna. I also remember the antique stores in Bansko had lots of Hitler memorabilia from WWII. It sounds like things have degraded since then. One thing I noticed when I was there was that there seemed to be a very strong Russian influence, and I can imagine that they are even more predominate. Is this true?

miked said...

>>At this point what if it emerged that silver was only manipulated for one reason - to influence the price of gold. If so, the rationale for manipulating the silver price may have just ended and silver is now completely disengaged from gold. It must trade on its own merits

I don't follow this logic Costata. Why would the end of manipulation uncouple silver from Gold?

costata said...

miked,

"Why would the end of manipulation uncouple silver from Gold?"

If there is no GSR, as anything other than a mental construct, then perhaps gold and silver have been uncoupled since NO two countries (one on a gold standard and one on a silver standard) desired to trade.

If silver and gold have been manipulated in tandem then their respective "fates" have been artificially conjoined. If the artificiality is removed I imagine both metals will trade on their own merits.

I'm still thinking this through. (To be honest I'm still thinking most things through, including just about everything I believed when I was a boy.)

miked said...

In decline ever since the 1740s, it looks as if the industrial age has been bad for silver. So much for the argument for all those uses silver can be put to.

http://goldinfo.net/silver600.html

One thing is for sure. Real silver prices are more volatile than ever they have been and it's getting worse.

julian said...

:(

I just left a top quality comment that would have changed the world

lost forever in cyberspace

I will remember to Ctrl+C my comment before pressing the publish button from now on

:(

Hopefully it's like a lost puppy that will eventually find its way back home

Bright aurum said...

@ Desperado
Hi,
Things have definitely deteriorated and those guys with the BMW`s are still there although keeping a somewhat lower profile for the greater population desires some scapegoats kind of “the rich cry too” and there is MSM propaganda every night showing police actions named “the killers”, “the smelters” (-the PM guys like us), the “brazen ones” etc. (shear lack of imagination about those police ops names really); and tax collectors flying helicopters over the McMansions of the unjustifiably rich tax evaders et al. There is a war between those on government dole or the debtors (60% of the population) and the taxbase or the savers (the other 40%).
And don`t get me wrong I do prefer gold over silver, its only that I don`t trust those “giants” walking with us as much as we – the little gold holders, want to walk/follow them. I can only imagine myself squeezed out of gold one way or the other – as that welfare state of mine sees fit.
As far as freegold is concerned it is a real mess so far. A play of trust I presume – that’s why those coin dealers are needed as insulation between oneself and the “sneakers” (gov. agents etc.). One is sent to their (coindealers`) mercy especially when they sense that one is in dire need for “currency”.
In short I don`t see freegold ever taking off without trust among savers (I don`t see how savers will be left alone by the government in fact) and without rules of exchange (rendering those coindealers useless).
Another thing is that expected explosion of demand (scrapping one`s entire paper reserves to but a gram of gold LOL) and the relative “price” explosion that will follow. Obviously gold in purer form in lesser denominations than 1/10oz will not be a practical thing (cannot be made forgery-proof) so it has to be alloyed and with what – naturally silver comes to my mind.
BTW I bought a brilliant golden necklace for my wife for just 30,-EUR. Could not find a 9carat one because it if forbidden by law to sell gold jewelry in less than 14 carat gold. And even if I could find one it could have been 5 carat or less no matter what is written on it.(I cannot see myself carrying a set of acids, although I do carry electronic scales.)
Cheers.

Bright aurum said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

I've found this on ZH and it exactly expresses my worries.
by Alienated Serf
on Sun, 11/21/2010 - 09:46
#744239

"We know there are swap lines and the ECB seems really down with QE2 despite Germany screaming about it." Really, seems likes it has been nothing but bitching if you ask me, but I guess you have a unique ability to decode the truth.

Now, are you seriously insinuating the the ECB/EU wants to revive some type of gold standard? Why would a heavily socialized, highly taxed regime want to institute a constraint of any kind on fiat? How will they keep the natives sated?

Also, unless I am mistaken, a very large proportion of the worlds monetary gold is sitting in the basement of 33 Liberty. I found this blurb to be informative: "The gold is owned by many foreign nations, central banks and international organizations. The Federal Reserve Bank does not own the gold but serves as guardian of the precious metal, which it protects at no charge as a gesture of goodwill to other nations."

Haven't the Germans asked for that gold back and were given a firm no? You seem to know more about gold then me, so tell me, what percentage of EU gold is at the FBRNY? Because if the EU wants to go gold and destroy the dollar, I don't think there will be a very good chance we will ship it over there.

Didn't tricky Dick close the gold window b/c France and the A-rabs were taking too much of it? But this time we will just hand it over? SO hasn't this been attempted before?

Furthermore, you make gold so valuable once again, you fan the flames for another world war, which would not auger well for the EU. Did not Germany do this after having every ounce of gold squeezed from the after the treaty of Versailles? From gold fillings to central bank reserves to antiquities, the Germans grabbed it all. After we won, we took it ourselves.

Gold would become the object of a resource war in which the EU would be decimated, not a good choice for them.

You have framed this as being in the interest of states, states need fiat now more then ever. Fiat may well blow itself to hell and gold is king again, but I don't think the EU, the IMF, the Fed want that.

The US desperately needs the dollar to maintain reserve status, any threat to this will defended with force. Watch what happens if too many nations try to price oil in EUR or RMB. The ability to print/borrow money at a low price is the only thing the US has left, otherwise it is game over.>
I wonder if someone wants to address this...

Dave Narby said...

Greg, David, please put me on permanent ignore. Nothing to see here, just move along, it's that crazy neo-con who thinks Glen Beck might have a point regarding some things.

@ Julian

Here's a handy way to insure against Google eating your comments: Use Firefox with the Lazarus add-on https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/6984/

Dave Narby said...

@Fauvi

I think it comes down to whether the US is bigger than the rest of the world, and the Fed-Banker cabal is bigger than the market.

I'm betting neither, but exactly how this plays out is going to be fascinating.

Desperado said...

@Fauvi,

IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn urges leaders to cede more sovereignty to EU

The comment you ask about seems to work on the assumption that Germany PTB really want to end the current $IMFS. I am not so certain. TPTB seem to be desperate to make certain that all the sovereign countries considering default are forced to keep assuming ever more debt in order to keep the big EU and US banks from going under.

Alienated Serf is only partly correct that all these world wars started over gold possession. The issue was really making good on the debt. Savers vs debtors. The naval arms race on the eve of WWI was really about a bunch of western loan sharks making sure that the colonies in ROW kept paying on their debts. Check these out:

The First U.S. Armored Cruisers

The French Navy, 1850-1916

The Imperial German Navy, 1869-1919

Royal Navy Battleships, 1860-1910

That was the era of mercantilism and the gold standard. The cost of making the dreadnoughts almost bankrupted England, but they had to keep the system going. My question is what is modern equivalent to a dreadnought?

Unknown said...

This may be completely unrelated to the issues discussed on this blog

Watch bying guide

but there is something about that guide that has relevance to the relationship between value and money.

PRICE is NOT IMPORTANT -- "What?" you say? Price not important? That's right--it is not!! Price is only one measure of the value and deal you are getting. What good is a low price alone when the dealer is unable or unwilling to resolve a problem and you have no recourse with the manufacturer because you bought through an unauthorized cut-price dealer? What good is saving an extra few percent on a very expensive purchase if the product never arrives, lacks good warranty coverage, or otherwise will disappoint you or cost you more money in the long run? So always choose your watch over the value you will receive for your money, not simply the lowest price for something that looks like what you wanted.

Replace "watch" above with "savings" and you may get a nice impression of the relation of value to money.

Dave Narby said...

@ Desperado

That would be the Battle Carrier Group.

Desperado said...

@Dave Narby,

I don't have the answer, but I think that the carrier battle group is as obsolete as heavy knights after agincourt. They depend on control of the air and space. China has already tested satellite destroying missiles, carrier destroying ICBM's, has a new UAV ready for deployment, and apparently has fired a sub launched ICBM from 30 miles off shore of LA. One thing is certain though, maintaining a dozen carrier battle groups is bankrupting the US faster than the dreadnought program bankrupted England on the eve of WWI.

I actually think the biggest enemy to the west is internal, and IMO the US seems to at least have a a strong constitutional movement that may keep the banks and government in check.

Oath-Keeper Stewart Rhodes on the Rise of Authoritarianism and How US Law Enforcement Can Take a Stand for Freedom

...
Once a people are disarmed, they are nearly defenseless against oppression. That is something our forefathers understood, and it was the attempt to disarm them that finally led to the fighting that kicked off our Revolutionary War. Add to that example the many examples since of disarmed populations being tyrannized or even mass-murdered. It is a critical line in the sand that must not be crossed, and not just because our Second Amendment says so, but because it is a violation of the inherit, human right to self preservation, and because the lessons of history show what happens to people who allow themselves to be disarmed. And the wholesale disarmament during Katrina shows that it can, indeed, happen again, right here in America.
...
We think it is absolutely essential that those of us within the freedom movement in the U.S. have in place a sound-money alternative system to the fiat money system so that when it crashes, we have something else to fall back on. In addition to sound money at the local and state level, we must also have physical security at the state level (that means a posse in support of the sheriff, state defense forces and a true citizens militia, starting with county militia units), and food and fuel security at the state level.


Sure enough, Beck is on the right side of this issue...

Edwardo said...

We have an answer, a tentative one, to the question of whether or not The Irish will save civilization, and the answer is no. Gold and silver and a whole lot of other "risk on" plays should do well tomorrow as Ireland succumbs to the German commercial banksterz. It is left to the Irish public to take a stand against this, but I won't be holding my breath in expectation of massive civil unrest against the financial of prison rape.

Edwardo said...

Financial equivalent...

Dave Narby said...

@ Desperado

I misunderstood you when you asked for the 'Dreadnought' of our era, as I assumed you meant the apex of military technology that was soon to become obsolete.

If you meant what is likely the most powerful military power projection weapon today, I would say it is the Ohio class submarine.

Interesting MM link, thanks. As I said before, while he gets it 80% right, he does seem unaware of significant parts of the problem. Whether that's intentional or not remains to be seen.

Paul I said...

The ECB and IMF are playing with fire in Ireland. I hope they've read up on their history.

"Resentment has grown after one European Commission official described tough conditions attached to the EU-IMF bailout as the “Oliver Cromwell package” a reference to the Lord Protector of England, still hated by many Irish, for his bloody re-conquest of Ireland in 1649"

And Dec 7th is rapidly going viral.

http://www.google.com.au/search?q=december+7+bank+run

http://www.bankrun2010.com

If people start front-running this from fear or for profit, it could really snowball.

Matt said...

Adrian Douglas hits Peter Schiff with a $56,000 estimate for the fair price for gold. His response and attempts to rationalise this are quite amusing.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoztjUbIRxk&

Anonymous said...

Struss-Kack echo: Never waste a crisis…
It’s exactly what I’ve expected. He is a thug and that are all the EU-politicians.
Embrace for New feudalism.
Sorry, all freegold-disciples, I love it too, but I think something went terribly wrong in the last six years and that could be the Merkel (-Ferkel) and Sarc.

I keep coming here because I love hope in our Dark Ages, I need a bit of support but the situation is so dire, the interpretations of A/F/Fofoa are so scarcely embedded in our present that it only has a palliative effect on me.

From the point of logic Costatas arguments are perfectly right, but, but the above says to me to stay diversified as I have to revalue my intentions. The one in a life may never come but at least I still have an insurance and leave the natural greed aside. I take the risk – maybe until A/F show up and EXPLAIN to idiots like myself why, what, who, how, when….

Last thoughts for now: does Freegold make greedy or addicted or both? Sorry for my not well documented rant, today the Ireland story has quite affected me even if I expected it to end up like it did.

enough said...

hello Fofoa....I have never before posted but I watch and learn. I have a question as just tonight we are hearing of a massive bailout of the Irish banking system by the E.U. and IMF. Do you believe that Another and Foa forsaw the massive fissures in the Euro area that we are now seeing? Do you think it would have changed their/your view on the euro being the successor transactional currency? Do you think these fissures bring us closer or set back the timing of a freegold float against the euro? It seems to me that it would bring us closer as citizens of "core" europe are buying gold at a manic pace out of fear (rightly or wrongly) of a euro collapse. Therefore it seems to me the time is fast approaching where in order to bring stability and faith to the euro the freegold concept/ reality is close at hand. Thank you for all the time and education you empart.

ShamefulPath said...

FRBNY Gold

Does anyone have current numbers on this? I see numbers listed from 06 but I seem to remember reading that gold had been shifted out of there over the past few years and the number of nations holding gold there is reduced.

Granted I'm 90% sure Germany never got their gold back and never will. But I'm not sure about the rest of the EU counties.

David said...

Thanks for the Youtube link Matt....

Greyfox "It's the Debt, Stupid" said...

Did the U.S. just recently give China 3,000 metric tons of gold not to fire any more ICBM’s off the coast of California? I was under the impression that China had a total of 1,054 tons of gold.
Wikipedia s says China now has 4,216.4 tons as of September 2010. At this rate the U.S. won’t have a “pot to piss in” by the time Freegold arrives. Must be a typo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Official_gold_reserves

Greyfox "It's the Debt, Stupid" said...

@ Fauvi

A year ago Irish Green Party politician Paul Nicholas Gogarty told Irish Labor Party TD "With all due respect, in the most unparliamentary language; Fuck you, Deputy Stagg, fuck you!... We Are Screwed As A Country Because Of The Wrongdoing Of Others."

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/irish-member-parliament-foresaw-truth-we-are-screwed-country-because-wrongdoing-others

ShamefulPath said...

Greyfox,

Wiki can be edited so the last official number was around 1000 tons. Though having said that expect the US to have closer to 8 tons then 8000. Going to tell me the gold for oil program as pointed out on this blog, 50 years no audits, multiple suppression schemes and still have 8000 tons? Call me crazy but I find that hard to swallow. Plus anyone with any brains would have looted it from the inside decades ago, and with no audit who would know where ownership really lay?

Paul I said...

There does seem to be some angst around the unfolding events in Europe, and some worries that these events are not following the A/FOA play book. It makes me nervous too, but don't forget A/FOA’s contention that it was only the promise of Euro Freegold that stopped Oil bidding directly for Gold all those years ago. If the Euro project fails (and I think failure of TBTF banks is a very different dynamic than Euro failure), or Euro Gold revaluation is suppressed, then we just jump back to the future. Oil will bid for Gold, and we get Freegold anyway.

Anonymous said...

Paul,
have you heard what happens in Germany?
They say we are under threat of a terror event. Nobody believes it, people speak of inside job some laugh about their stupid manipulations, nonetheless there is plenty of propaganda in the MSM, police displayed everywhere in the bigger cities, etc.. They even say the Reichstag is the target and have raised special protection around it! Remember? They even know how many terrorists came to G and their nationalities! They have been warned from over the big pond from their best friends, CIA, FBI. Ha! And then they say “Don’t panic!” They want us to panic, to pull more police in the streets, but why? Should we be afraid of their intentions or are they afraid of us? There has been plenty of BS in ALL MSM. The Spiegel, which many Am. respect a lot is their main organ. The whole language reminds me of authoritarian regimes. Every day I reflect if I could leave the damn EU but the world has become a village
And I am not (yetJ) that rich to make that step.

oldinvestor said...

Re; Silver pricing,

Costata said:


“Let's assume that at some point the CFTC declare cash settlement only and render the physical spot market opaque.

Demand from the industrial users would drop off sharply once they have adequate stockpiles. Their purchases might be limited to topping up their inventory rather than increasing them. Some of the Mints might also suspend sales of fabricated silver product in response to the price hike while they gauge whether the new price levels will hold. Let's assume that the jewelers cut back as well while they gauge the reaction from the retail market to the price hikes.

The Comex/LBMA is the mechanism that allows silver buyers and sellers to be plugged into international demand and supply and the (admittedly manipulated) price signals. This network has collapsed now that these markets are cash settled.

Physical silver holders are now reliant on their local markets. Only the dealers can arbitrage the national market via their contacts in the trade.

At this point what if it emerged that silver was only manipulated for one reason - to influence the price of gold. If so, the rationale for manipulating the silver price may have just ended and silver is now completely disengaged from gold. It must trade on its own merits (like copper?). Once the CFTC members observe a physical oversupply they allow physical settlement again.

Will silver investors step up to the plate and fill the shortfall in demand needed to maintain prices? “






If I were a large industrial user of any precious metal, I would think that the obvious way to secure supply would be to negotiate long term contracts with mines and refiners. I have been a businessman my whole life, and if I were a biggie such as Kodak, et all, that is the way I would go.

This would side-step volatility in the paper markets.

So the more volatile this market becomes, the more supply is locked up by off-take agreements. So this “oversupply” would get less and less the more volatility went up don’t you think?

Desperado said...

@Dave Narby,

I don't think an ICBM could be used to force the people of Ireland to keep paying the interest on the bank debt that the EU forced the government to take on.

I was thinking in terms of what methods or tools does the EU/IMF have to force Ireland to behave. Coercing the elites only takes you so far, at some point you have to convince the populace. How about internet excommunication?

Dave Narby said...

@ Desperado

Good question. I'm not sure they really have anything they can force the Irish with, except perhaps British troops, and I'm not sure they want to go there.

AFA cutting them off from the 'tubes, not a chance.

costata said...

oldinvestor,

IMHO valid points. Thank you.

I was making a few assumptions. Firstly that the LBMA fix and/or Comex spot silver pricing has some relevance to off-take agreements and wholesale purchases. I tend to think that the rising price of silver over the last few years would have influenced how the deals are structured. I think the miners etc would have attempted to keep some exposure to the upside over time. I may be completely wrong about this.

I don't know how much, if any, industrial demand is satisfied through Comex.

Just to clarify I should have said temporary oversupply. Basically an "air pocket" caused by the build up in inventories shifting future demand into the present.

Either way unless demand for the industrial silver users end products changed their purchases should normalise over time and any "oversupply" would likely disappear.

I realise that the silver market is in shortfall, at minimum in terms of mined output, if not overall.

It's funny you mention Kodak I knew some guys there quite well in the distant past. At one time they owned silver mines for the reasons you discuss.

Paul I said...

Hi Fauvi

No I hadn't heard about the terrorist threat to the Reichstag, but you could argue that the biggest threat to the $IMF is Merkel's insistance on financial rectitude.

Unknown said...

tHERE PROBAably is a reason to think that value may be separate from price even if the definitions are rather circular in this argument. My son has a twenty ounce silver coin and a twenty dollar bill. When he has a choice he will spend the paper and keep the coin. It seems to have more value to him than it is actually worth in dollars. Otherwise he would be indifferent to spending twenty dollars of silver or a twenty dollar bill. I suppose even adults, crows, and monkeys like shiny things as much as children.

Unknown said...

I mean silver coin worth twenty dollars. Not a twenty ounce silver coin! I'm new to this internet thingy. I've always preferred my porn the old fashioned way.

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