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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Federal Reserve Bank was Manipulating Gold Prices back in 1975


The Fed On Gold Price Manipulation

Verbatim Copy of Zero Hedge article dated 30th July 2012 - original HERE

Lately various media outlets have been swamped with stories and allegations of precious metal manipulation ranging from the arcane, to the bizarre to the outright ridiculous. At issue is not that these claims of price fraud are unfounded - they very well may be completely true - but without a notarized facsimile of an actual trade ticket signed by Brian Sack, or his replacement Simon Potter, or any of the BIS traders confirming they are indeed selling gold on behalf of the Fed, BOE, ECB, SNB or BOJ simply to keep the price of the metal down, what such constant factless accusations (and no, sorry, a chart showing that the price of gold may go up or go down sharply indicates merely that and nothing about the underlying factors for such a move) do is to habituate the broader public to the real issues surrounding precious metal, and other asset class, manipulation.

So instead of searching for circumstantial evidence which one can easily find everywhere, we decided to go straight to the source. To do that we go back to a post we wrote back in September of 2009, based on an internal previously confidential Fed document, which conveniently enough explains everything vis-à-vis gold manipulation and leaves nothing to speculation or misinterpretation. Zero Hedge presents the smoking gun that may provide responses to all the various open questions regarding the Fed's Modus Operandi in the gold arena which answer the core question - motive - courtesy of a declassified memorandum, written by none other than the then Fed Chairman, and addressed to the President of the United States.

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From Zero Hedge, September 27, 2009.
Exclusive Smoking Gun: The Fed On Gold Manipulation
Zero Hedge has recently presented several declassified documents from the pre-1971 "Nixon Shock" days, that endorse the case for gold as a major historical factor in US monetary and foreign policy, as demonstrated by State Department and CIA disclosure. Gold's special status in policy and administrative decision-making was a direct factor in Nixon's choice to abolish the gold reserve at a time of an exploding budget deficit.

Yet what about the days after 1971, and specifically, how did that critical "behind the scenes" organization, the Federal Reserve, perceive and manipulate gold in the post Bretton-Woods world? Was gold, freed from its shackles to the dollar, once again merely a symbolic representation for money?

Zero Hedge presents the smoking gun that may provide responses to all the various open questions, courtesy of a declassified memorandum, written by none other than the then Fed Chairman, addressed to the President of the United States.

On June 3, 1975, Fed Chairman Arthur Burns, sent a "Memorandum For The President" to Gerald Ford, which among others CC:ed Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and future Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, discussing gold, and specifically its fair value, a topic whose prominence, despite former president Nixon's actions, had only managed to grow in the four short years since the abandonment of the gold standard in 1971. In a nutshell Burns' entire argument revolves around the equivalency of gold and money, and furthermore points out that if the Fed does not control this core relationship, it would "easily frustrate our efforts to control world liquidity" but also "dangerously prejudge the shape of the future monetary system." Furthermore, the memo goes on to highlight the extensive level of gold price manipulation by central banks even after the gold standard has been formally abolished.

The problem with accounting for gold at fair market value: the risk of massive liquidity creation, which in those long-gone days of 1975 "could result in the addition of up to $150 billion to the nominal value of countries' reserves." One only wonders what would happen today if gold was allowed to attain its fair price status. And the threat, according to Burns: "liquidity creation of such extraordinary magnitude would seriously endanger, perhaps even frustrate, our efforts and those of other prudent nations to get inflation under reasonable control." Aside from the gratuitous observation that even 34 years ago it was painfully obvious how "massive" liquidity could and would result in runaway inflation and the Fed actually cared about this potential danger, what highlights the hypocrisy of the Fed is that when it comes to drowning the world in excess pieces of paper, only the United States should have the right to do so.

Another notable observation is that despite a muted antagonism between the Fed and the US Treasury persisting for decades, the fuse is and always has been short, and the conflict can promptly hit a crescendo, with the Fed ultimately always getting the upper hand. In the case of the Burns memo, the Fed's position was diametrically opposed to what the Treasury proposed was the proper approach. The result: full-on assault by the Federal Reserve over the Treasury's credibility and even then, more than three decades ago, a veiled threat by the Fed involving escalating problems if the recommendation of the Treasury was picked over that of the Fed. "Severe criticism on the part of prominent and influential financiers would inevitably follow if the Treasury's present position prevailed." It is not surprising that the Fed's modus operandi has not changed one bit since 1975: it is our way or virtually assured destruction/embarrassment way.

Additionally, a curious tangent of the Burns memo is the fact that gold was explicitly used as an engine to enact political doctrine: "If the United States took a stand on the gold question that failed to satisfy the French in current international negotiations, would there be adverse economic or political consequences? I doubt it... If we do ever accede to French views on gold, we should at least use our bargaining leverage to achieve some major political advantage." And while gold as a policy mechanism was unable to satisfy its role this time, one wonders on how many subsequent occasions was global democracy trampled over in order to placate the US Federal Reserve:
"I have consulted Henry Kissinger as to whether there is some political quid pro quo we might want to extract from the French in exchange for acceding to some part or all of their desired position on gold. But Henry tells me there is none at this time."

At some point governments of advanced nations will say "enough" to the covert domination of their controlling bodies by the Federal Reserve, which through manipulation of its gold and money interests, effectively has control over not just the French, but every government which has a monetary basis to its respective economy and a relationship to the US "reserve" currency... Which means virtually every country in the world. The backlash, if and when it occurs, will be memorable.

Lastly, the memo presents a useful snapshot into the cloak-and-dagger, and highly nebulous world of Central Bank negotiations and gold price manipulation:
"I have a secret understanding in writing with the Bundesbank that Germany will not buy gold, either from the market or from another government, at a price above the official price."

So to all conspiracy theorists claiming that gold is being manipulated on a daily basis by the Federal Reserve: when it occurs over and over, and is so well documented, it is no longer a theory, it is merely sad. And the fact that the US government goes to great lengths to hide the illicit dealings of the Federal Reserve, which through its monetary tentacles, has prima facie control over not just US policy but also over sovereign governments, is an unprecedented failure in the checks and balances system that the founding fathers had planned when they created the United States of America. Yet saddest is that the United States no longer pursues strategic goals that are in the best interest of the majority of its citizens, but merely manipulates other, less powerful nations into a servile existence that only provides gain to a very limited subset of the American financial oligarchy. It is time for the Fed's unprecedented control over affairs, both global and domestic, to end.
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As a post-script to all those complaining about gold, silver and other PM price suppression, here is one simple question: can one buy more gold at $1,600 or at $16,000? This is not a trick question.
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Full memo from Arthur Burns presented, compliments of Geoffrey Batt who collaborated in the creation of this post.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Close to the Edge


RBS Bank Run Prevented by "Shutting the Doors"

The recent RBS ATM "software glitch", which stopped so many people making vital payments and withdrawing cash, was a deliberate move to prevent a run on the bank, which had run out of money. By metaphorically "shutting their doors" for a week or so, RBS and the Bank of Ulster managed to keep hold of £73Billion which stopped them from being wiped out. How safe is YOUR money tonight?

RBS/ULSTER ‘GLITCH’: Slog survey of users plus analysis of the numbers raise further doubts


Mouse Trap

The corrupt banking/money system, built upon trillions of electronic bank credits whose value was created out of THIN AIR (and a little bit of paper currency for immediate pocket money), is running only on fumes now. The deception is so poorly hidden today, and the way the system is unravelling is becoming so noisy, that even nice people like you are beginning to suspect that, well... you are being LIED to.

None of us are ever taught about what money is and how it operates: we're just encouraged to get a bank account as young as possible and join the game. As with most games, if you don't know the rules, you're unlikely to be a winner. And if the game should self-destruct with your money trapped inside it - who do you think could possibly help you?




Normalcy Bias

“Normalcy Bias” – the firm conviction that everything is going to be OK and the only things that can happen are the ones that you already understand and are expecting.




It Never Rains...

The best time to buy an umbrella is BEFORE it starts raining...


What Happens When There's a Run on the Banks?

Most banks operate with very little cash on hand (there's normally no real demand) - everything's done electronically. So a bank can run out of cash very quickly - especially if everyone suddenly wants to be careful at the same time.




A Quantum of Solace

Items which can protect you during times of trouble often become more expensive (or impossible) to buy once the trouble has started.

You can buy a gramme of gold for just over £30, and a gramme of silver for about 50p.

The Genius of China

Why should China sell its $3 Trillion US Treasuries when there's a much better alternative?

If you don't understand this the first time, please re-read it until you do. The Chinese strategy is pure genius.

China obtains charters from US Govt to operate banks in the USA

China capitalises these banks with Chinese-held US Treasuries (several trillion available...)

Through the diabolic magic of Fractional Reserve Banking, they then create a mountain of credit 9 times the size of their original reserves and go on an asset purchasing spree in the USA.

Any hanky-panky from US Govt, and they threaten to redeem their US Treasuries.

Utter genius!

Check out the formal announcement for Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, and the Bank of China (CLICK HERE, HERE, HERE).

You May Feel a Little Discomfort

If you're getting to the point where the whole Money Thing is depressing you, I suppose you could argue that all corrective surgery is depressing - if you were to focus upon the discomfiture, the inconvenience and the fear of the unknown. If you took a step back and reframed the experience as a time of learning, a curative procedure and period of recuperation, it becomes a totally different story.

If our complacently "stable" Western consensus, our "way of life", is totally based on unending bank credit and unbounded expansion of fiat currency, then we are all blind fools and the sooner this money system is replaced by something less susceptible to abuse (to the creation of illusory "false value"), the better. All fiat money systems in history have failed; the longer such a collapse is postponed, the bigger it will be. In 1949, Ludwig von Mises put it like this:

"There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved."

The #1 question is: in what form should your wealth be kept to survive such a transition without losing its value? All other questions are increasingly trivial, as the imminent transition is getting so close now, that the feeling that "something is wrong" is starting to dawn in the minds of many ordinary people. This is supported by stories in the press and on the BBC which are based on the premise that our money system isn't working, it has been abused by its custodians, and our investments aren't safe.

The alternative to our current system - that of privately-owned Central Bank monopolies, issuing interest-bearing debt money from thin air in the form of fiat currency and bank credit - is taking shape between major players like China, Russia, Germany, Japan and Iran. It is a decentralised system of value exchange via bilateral swap arrangements (not denominated in $US dollars), which will operate using a small number of formally defined "barter" levels, from the Sovereign right down to the Personal level. There will be an element of gold support.

What will this do to the value of gold, do you think?

Watch this space.

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

CNBC host Andrew Sorkin states that silver manipulation is a fact, not a conspiracy theory

CNBC invited Chris Whalen of Tangent Capital onto Squawk Box to discuss JP Morgan’s Q2 earnings report July 13th, the widening LIBOR scandal, and the European debt crisis.

Shockingly, at 9:26 into the clip, the CNBC host Andrew Sorkin (not Whalen - the CNBC host, Sorkin!) brings up Barclays’ manipulation of LIBOR rates, and states: ‘You hear about these things and you used to think these are conspiracy theories! You used to hear things that people are manipulating LIBOR, people are manipulating the silver markets-

CNBC’s Michelle Caruso-Cabrera: ‘And they are!!

Sorkin: ‘And they are!!

Chris Whalen: ‘It’s because these markets have become so concentrated that a few players can do it.

It appears Blythe Masters and JP Morgan’s Commodities Desk have a serious issue on their hands, as now even CNBC hosts are openly admitting that silver is manipulated and that silver manipulation is a fact, and NOT a conspiracy theory.