SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Mongolia Gold Resources -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: d:oug who wrote (3758)8/8/1999 11:25:00 PM
From: d:oug  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4066
 
from gold-eagle a view with some possible explainations (rumors)

25-Year Chronology of Gold

Gold only seems to have lost its luster because prices on gold have gone
down for 18 years. It is understanding why gold has gone down for 20
years that changes the tune of the gold story quite dramatically and may
make it the only smart choice for one's money at the top of this
historical, unprecedented equity bubble. Here is gold's true story.

•Saudi Arabia, Europe, and the Far East believe in gold and always have.
•Saudi controls 60% of the world-oil supply.
•In 1971, President Nixon removed the dollar from the gold standard. Had
he not done that the US would have been left goldless.
•President Nixon took that unprecedented step to protect the dollar from
severe devaluation, but he defaulted all US debt at that time, as it was
guaranteed by gold for dollars.
•In 1976, at the IMF (International Monetary Fund) Jamaica Accords, gold
was demonitized in order to keep the price of dollar denominated gold
cheaper.
•This cheaper dollar against gold enabled the Saudi's to purchase gold
with their profits in oil sales so they would have lasting value for
their depleting oil reserves.
•Saudi's believe that once their oil is gone they don't want dollars
rather gold.
•Saudi's have taken the long view on gold and continue to accumulate
physical gold with their oil profits.
•Today Saudi is in fear that the dollar will again default on gold
contracts on the COMEX (NY Gold Exchange) and on the LBMA (London
Bullion Market Association) as they did in 1971.
•This fear of delivery of gold on contract to the Saudi's is the alleged
yet non-public reason why the Bank of England publicly pre-announced a
gold auction that effectively drove the price of gold from $292 to $253
recently. The Bank of England was the provider of last resort of
physical gold to an unknown bullion bank member of the LBMA who owed
physical gold to an unknown party (Saudi?).
•IMF and Swiss gold sales are intended to free up additional physical
gold in large quantity in order to continue honoring gold contracts to
the Saudis.
•The LBMA was founded in 1988 in order to handle inter-country oil for
gold contracts.
•Recently Frank Venerasso and Bill Murphy discovered and announced that
in the COMEX and LBMA the Bullion Banks are short up to 14,000 metric
tons of gold, which is a little less than 50% of the gold contained in
the Central Bank vaults around the world.
•The CFTC, a governmental Commodity investigative body, is currently
investigating the gold market bullion banks for market manipulation for
suppressing the price of gold on COMEX and the LBMA.
•The short position in gold is so large that the only known guarantor of
physical gold is the Bank of England had to undergo severe embarrassment
world-wide in order to save a few of the LBMA bullion banks. They
continue under sever political pressure today.
•If COMEX gold future prices were to rise above $300 it is quite likely
that several very large bullion banks would go into receivership.
•Physical gold of any large quantity is in such short supply that the
Euro may be the only form of accepted payment for some of these
gold-short contracts.
•Were that to happen, the dollar would be instantly devalued against the
Euro and gold. Gold would likely rise to over $3,000 per ounce (making
gold rise more than the 500% that the stock market rose in the last ten
years per this morning's report).
•COMEX and LBMA futures trading in 'paper' gold would cease to function
as no physical gold would be available to honor any contract.
•Confidence in the dollar would be lost if COMEX and the LBMA failed.
•The Euro would become the World's default reserve monetary currency
(Euro is 15% backed by gold at $290 gold, at $3,000 gold it would be
over 90% backed).
•Hedge funds who are into swaps, spreads, swoptions, and other forms of
derivatives are coming under closer scrutiny recently because Long Term
Capital Management (LTCM) and now the Tiger fund had or or having
massive redemptions. Each of these were allegedly short gold to the
amount of over 300 metric tons each. It is believed that the LTCM was
allowed to pay dollars in order to get out from under their gold-short
contracts.

From my viewpoint, this is what is playing out in the world of hedge
funds, bullion, and Central Banks. What is really going on is that the
Euro is in the throes of replacing the dollar as the world's reserve
currency. It all centers around gold continuing to play a prominent role
in international oil trades.

Another factor worthy of thought is that when gold went from $35 in 1971
to $852 in January of 1980 before the G-7 nations managed to get it back
under control, that represented a 20 times rise in the price of gold -
far greater than the 500% rise in the stock markets in the last 10
years.

What makes the situation worse for the dollar today is that it is not
backed by gold, the hedge funds have and are seriously jeopardizing
world currencies with gone-awry computer currency models, and nobody,
absolutely nobody, suspects that this is really what is going on.

Steve Hickel

9 August 1999

Back to Editorials

     Copyright  ©  1997 - 1999  vronsky  and  westerman