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To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)8/15/2001 12:45:44 AM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
<<What do YOU make of the new weak $ policy? >>

Is it really a "weak $ policy" or only a less interventionist stance? One which refuses to sacrifice gold to assure an ever higher dollar? Does the market again rule the day?



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)8/16/2001 2:25:54 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
gold_tutor,

I'm hoping you can enlighten me on this matter:
: the Euro hard currency conversion is coming like a freight train, 1Q02.

What change in policy would you be referring to here? I'm sorry to be asking what appears to be a stupid question, but I'm conjecturing you are referring to the retirement of the FF, DM etc. from circulation. Please advise.

Best, Ray :)



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)8/16/2001 6:52:47 PM
From: Alex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
Norman, Strong, and Greenspan

by Sean Corrigan

[August 14, 2001]

Confronted with a slumping economy that threatens to get worse, Alan Greenspan, like his predecessors in the 1920s, is making all the wrong choices and failing to learn from history.

Back in July 1927, Governor Montagu Norman's problems at the Bank of England were mounting. Great Britain was stripped of its assets in the Great War and of its entrepreneurial vitality by the political shift to the welfare state. Universal unemployment insurance was introduced in 1920. Norman was struggling to cope with the high parity at which it had stabilized the pound in 1925.

Under the classical gold standard, such as prevailed before the Great War, if Britain were to suffer an external deficit, the bank would have been forced to raise rates and restrict credit until domestic costs had adjusted and a new equilibrium was established.

Under the bastardized gold-exchange standard, which was instituted in the '20s, the bank enjoyed a deal of flexibility, reducing the gold cover by persuading foreign creditors—in particular the Banque de France—to leave the money unconverted in sterling balances deposited in London. Thus, as under Bretton Woods' de jure and today's de facto arrangements, the reserve currency nations could expand credit almost beyond limit.

Norman was a man like our beloved Mr. Greenspan, always talking a tough fight against inflation, but ever wedded in reality to finding excuses for keeping money cheap. By 1927, though, he was increasingly desperate to maintain his policies and, knowing French accommodation was becoming exhausted, turned for help, as he habitually did, to his soul mate, Ben Strong at the New York Fed.

That summer, Strong and Norman summoned Schact of the Reichsbank and Rist of the Banque de France to a conference at which it was proposed that they all increase credit together, so avoiding the foreign exchange limitations to the desired inflation. The continentals, however, demurred, promising only to buy any gold they required in New York, rather than London; but before they had even embarked for the journey home, Strong and Norman acted in their despite.

Strong blithely told Rist that he was going to administer a "little coup de whiskey to the stock market." He bought sterling bills (i.e., sold the dollar), engaged in a hefty series of open market purchases of Treasuries, and lowered first the acceptance credit buying rate and finally the discount rate (this last not without a struggle against the Chicago Fed).

Adolph Miller of the FRB subsequently testified to the Senate Banking Committee in 1931 that this episode constituted "the greatest and boldest operation ever undertaken by the Federal Reserve System and, in my judgement resulted in one of the most costly errors committed by it or any other banking system in the last 75 years."

From this point on, the asset inflation of the New Era intensified, the imbalances and overexposure were increased, and the crash of '29 was written in the stars. Having declined 5 percent in June to touch back upon the previous year's highs, the Dow powered onward for the next twenty-six months to peak out on Labor Day 1929 at 381 after a gain of 130 percent, largely ignoring the 150 bps tightening in the discount rate the following spring.

As Benjamin Anderson, the highly influential chief economist at the mighty Chase Bank from 1920 to 1937, said of that belated and ineffective attempt at restraint,

"the Fed . . . were using measures which on the basis of their past experience should have sufficed to stop the stock market boom, but the boom went on. There was a new factor in the situation. The public had taken the bit between its teeth. The rise in stock market prices and the lure of stock market profits had caught the public imagination. The change in Fed policy met with an overpowering increase in the demand for money."

Industrial production took until October to respond—after a decline from March's highs—but then rallied 25 percent to its peak in July 1929, topping out just before the Great Bull Market itself would expire and embarking thereafter on a sickening decline.

Now skip to autumn 1998, when the world economy, still racked by the problems of the Asian credit bust over the preceding year, then had to cope with the Russian default and the implosion of the mighty Long-Term Capital Management.

Once again, a Fed chairman—acting in camera and, not for the first time, with no regard to due process or constitutionality—flooded the U.S. with money in order to help foreign countries, rather than setting rates in the best interests of his own nation (a futile task anyway, but we will here let that pass).

In this, Greenspan, like his predecessor, was lulled into complacency by the appearance of broadly defined price stability in the market for goods and labor (partly due to enhanced productivity and partly due to depressed import prices), and he was supported in this with enthusiasm by both the White House and the U.S. Treasury.

Over the next eighteen months, the Fed added $55 billion to its portfolio of Treasuries and swelled repos held from $6.5 billion to $22 billion (it has added another $21 billion in outrights since). Given vastly reduced modern-day reserve requirements and banks' technologically enhanced reliance on nonreservable liabilities, this translated into a combined money market mutual fund and commercial bank asset increase of $870 billion to the market peak, of $1.2 trillion to the industrial production peak, and of $1.8 trillion to date—twice the level of real GDP added in the same interval.

Notice that, like in 1928, though the Fed eventually reversed its initial rate cuts, the expansion went on unchecked for some time. Credit may have been dearer, but it was certainly no less plentiful. In the 1920s, broker loans grew 110 percent in the twenty-seven months to the market peak: in the 1990s, with near-perfect resonance, NYSE margin debt rose 114 percent from October 1998 to the March 2000 zenith. Irrational exuberance is not a modern phenomenon.

Of course, we should only look for history to rhyme, not repeat, but while many people have sought to superimpose the stock market charts for 1929 America or 1989 Japan on last year's Nasdaq, it is perhaps the similarities in production that should arrest us now that the Bubble has popped.

Since the Fed's bailout of Mexico in 1995, and against the backdrop of Japan's ongoing generation of unprecedented levels of central banking liabilities to help support its profligate recourse to deficit finance, combined with the ECB's utter incomprehension of its role in the wider world since EMU, the whole sorry history of the last six years is one of building up huge new swathes of debt on the top of older ones. All the while, we deluded ourselves that the composition of growth stimulated by this and the concomitant rise in asset prices were supportable.

Once this was revealed as a massive, almost worldwide miscalculation, rather than confess the error and work diligently to overcome it honestly, the same old prescriptions of monetary effusion have been administered everywhere, in a vain attempt to forestall the correction.

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

mises.org



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)8/16/2001 9:34:46 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116762
 
US decision on weaker mining rules seen in Sept.
8/16/01 1:09 PM
" At issue is the fate of a regulation finalized by the Clinton administration Jan. 20, the day President George W. Bush took office.

The rule lets the U.S. government block mining for gold, silver and copper on publicly-held lands if the activity would result in "substantial and irreparable harm" to the land. "
Full story >>>
investor.cnet.com



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)8/20/2001 11:46:10 AM
From: Ken Benes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
Sorry it took so long to respond, I have been busy with my business and the questions you asked are not easy to answer. After a bit of thought, it appears there is a market dichotomy forming around the dollar. First, as you pointed out, the dollar has become the closest thing to a world currency that exists with many people coveting dollars rather than their indigenous notes. On the other hand, you have the astute market watchers who cannot avoid some serious question concerning the dollar: 1) the trade balance cannot continue indefinitely at current levels, 2) the decline in the nasdaq and the dow is not likely to reverse in the near future, 3) if the US budget slides into deficit, it will compound the negatives of the trade deficit, 4) the continuing downsizing of the military cannot be underestimated. Since 1990 the world has been confident in the US prowness to maintain order in a world suffering the collapse of communism and investors have been willing to pay for the protection by supporting the dollar, and finally a declining dollar compounds loses suffered by foreigners in the stock market and reduces profits by foreign corporations in the US.
The big positive for the dollar, there are no alternatives, and I do not believe that the worlds bankers will allow a currency crisis to develop during the advent of Europe's conversion to the Euro in 2002. A controlled retreat of the dollar agreed on by the industrialized countries is the most likely scenario. To protect stability in the currency market, the bankers will utilize every tool at their disposal to prevent gold from rising in price thereby offering an alternative to currencies. For the new world order to continue, the euro must have a successful transition. That is my take. There may be pitfails along the way, but the bankers are not underestimating the import of maintaining stable markets.

Ken



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (75008)9/6/2001 6:05:00 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
Speaking of "magic" & perhaps the magic it will take for a true gold rally:
Harry Potter in the Money with Coin Fans

September 06, 2001 08:21 AM ET



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Reuters Photo
By Paul Majendie

LONDON (Reuters) - Harry Potter is in the money -- and Queen Elizabeth approves. The teenage wizard has cast a spell over his fans -- more than 25,000 Harry Potter coins sold out in under five hours.

It was billed as the world's first official legal tender coin based on the JK Rowling books, which have sold more than 100 million copies worldwide. The first Potter film comes out in November.

"It has gone manic here. People are going crazy buying them. We sold more than 25,000 in five hours on Wednesday," Taya Pobjoy, managing director of Pobjoy Mint, told Reuters on Thursday.

On one side, the gold, silver and cupro nickel coins feature Harry casting a magic spell. On the other, there is an image of the British monarch, who had to give clearance for the sale.

The coins are legal tender on Britain's Isle of Man but their main attraction is as a collector's item.

Pobjoy, who runs what is billed as Europe's largest private mint, got the idea for the coin when reading the first Potter book in which the teenage wizard goes to a magic bank and withdraws coins left to him by his parents. "When I heard the movie was coming out, I thought what a wonderful idea it would be to make wizard money. So I approached the (local) government on the Isle of Man and they are very pro-filming.

"They asked me to come up with designs and we worked with Warner Brothers, who licensed us. They were sent to Buckingham Palace for approval as her majesty has to give the go-ahead for any images of her," she said.

The bespectacled Harry, a quaint boarding-school throwback in the era of PlayStation and Pokemon, has been hailed for singlehandedly teaching a whole new generation of children the joys of reading in an electronic age of short attention spans.

The publishing industry has been astonished by the universality of the books written by a single mother in an Edinburgh cafe in between school runs.

The stories have topped best-seller lists around the world from Argentina to China and have been translated into 42 languages from Albanian to Zulu.

The release of the first Potter movie in November is certain to stir even more Pottermania worldwide.

reuters.com