Where
Is America's Gold?: The Mystery of Ft. Knox
by
Chris Weber
Recently
by Chris Weber: The
Great American Disaster: How Much Gold Remains In Fort Knox?
What Do
They Have to Hide?
In a few months
we'll "celebrate" the 40th anniversary of the day when the US Government
declared bankruptcy. Oh, they didn't call it that at the time. But
what happened on August 15, 1971 was that the US defaulted on its
promise to pay gold for dollars. It is now clear that they didn't
have very much gold left to pay.
My new book,
Good
As Gold? is now available. I've tried to make it a clear
and readable history of what happened to the gold confiscated from
Americans and put into Fort Knox in the 1930s. I've used the government's
own words and statements to paint a picture I think is shocking.
There has never been an accounting of this gold. There has never
been a real audit of it. (I know people say there was one in 1953,
but after reading my book, I wonder if anyone really can believe
this.)
At every turn
when the government was asked to provide proof of either the amount
of gold they have left, or the quality of it, they have answered
with lies and evasions. They have been acting like they have something
to hide.
What we do
know is that until August 15, 1971 any foreign central bank could
go to the US Treasury and buy official US gold at $35 per ounce.
It was the last link to the international gold standard. Before
then, all currencies were defined in terms of the US dollar, and
the US dollar was defined in terms of gold. A dollar equaled 1/35th
of an ounce of gold; $35 equaled one troy ounce of gold.
But on that
day the gold window closed. Since then, no more US government gold
has been exchanged for US paper money. In my book, I uncover a 1975
letter from the Washington DC director of the General Accounting
Office. Quoting US Treasury sources, the GAO director pretty much
comes out and says that there was almost no more "good delivery"
gold left. This means that the gold that would be acceptable on
international markets and have a purity of .995 or better was almost
gone by the time Nixon closed the gold window. They knew that there
was almost nothing left that was of a purity acceptable to foreign
central banks.
We can only
guess at what remains, and the purity of it. In fact, we could do
more than guess, if the government only let sunlight in. The technology
now exists to scan each bar of gold and see how much gold it really
contains. There could be independent accountants and a generally
public procedure to show how much the US government has.
To be sure,
the US government puts out a report each year detailing the official
numbers of what they have. Here is the latest one from a few weeks
ago:
|
Department of the Treasury – Financial
Management Service
STATUS REPORT OF U.S. TREASURY-OWNED GOLD
January 31, 2011
|
|
Summary
|
Fine
Troy Ounces
|
Book
Value
|
|
Gold Bullion
|
258,641,851.485
|
$10,920,427,976.14
|
|
Gold Coins,
Blanks, Miscellaneous
|
2,857,047.831
|
120,630,844.95
|
|
Total
|
261,498,899.316
|
11,041,058,821.09
|
| |
|
|
|
Mint-Held
Gold – Deep Storage
|
~
|
~
|
|
Denver,
CO
|
43,853,707.279
|
1,851,599,995.81
|
|
Fort
Knox, KY
|
147,341,858.382
|
6,221,097,412.78
|
|
West
Point, NY
|
54,067,331.379
|
2,282,841,677.17
|
|
Subtotal
– Deep Storage Gold
|
245,262,897.040
|
10,355,539,085.76
|
| |
|
|
|
Mint-Held
Treasury Gold – Working Stock
|
~
|
~
|
|
All locations
– Coins, blanks, miscellaneous
|
2,783,218.656
|
117,513,614.74
|
|
Subtotal
– Working Stock Gold
|
2,783,218.656
|
117,513,614.74
|
| |
|
|
|
Grand
Total – Mint-Held Gold
|
248,046,115.696
|
10,473,052,700.50
|
| |
|
|
|
Federal
Reserve Bank-Held Gold
|
~
|
~
|
|
Gold Bullion:
|
~
|
~
|
|
Federal
Reserve Banks – NY Vault
|
13,376,961.126
|
564,804,727.98
|
|
Federal
Reserve Banks – display
|
1,993.319
|
84,162.40
|
|
Subtotal
– Gold Bullion
|
13,378,954.445
|
564,888,890.38
|
|
Gold Coins:
|
~
|
~
|
|
Federal
Reserve Banks – NY Vault
|
73,808.979
|
3,116,377.47
|
|
Federal
Reserve Banks – display
|
20.196
|
852.74
|
|
Subtotal
– Gold Coins
|
73,829.175
|
3,117,230.21
|
| |
|
|
|
Total
– Federal Reserve Bank-Held Gold
|
13,452,783.620
|
568,006,120.59
|
| |
|
|
|
Total
– Treasury-Owned Gold
|
261,498,899.316
|
$11,041,058,821.09
|
Deep Storage:
Deep-Storage gold is the portion of the U.S. government-owned Gold
Bullion Reserve that the U.S. Mint secures in sealed vaults, which
are examined annually by the Department of Treasury's Office of
the Inspector General. Deep-Storage gold comprises the vast majority
of the Reserve and consists primarily of gold bars. This portion
was formerly called "Bullion Reserve" or "Custodial Gold Bullion
Reserve."
Working Stock:
Working-Stock gold is the portion of the U.S. government-owned Gold
Bullion Reserve that the U.S. Mint uses as the raw material for
minting congressionally authorized coins. Working-Stock gold comprises
only about 1 percent of the Reserve and consists of bars, blanks,
unsold coins, and condemned coins. This portion was formerly listed
as individual coins and blanks or called "PEF Gold."
So this is
what the US government says they have, and where they have it. In
fact, by their own words, nearly all of it is in what they call
"Deep Storage". The gold here is not examined annually. Instead,
the "sealed vaults" are examined annually. But what this means is
that they just do a cursory check to see if the seal has been broken.
By the way,
the "book value" of this gold is absurd. It is officially valued
at $42.22 per ounce. This is because that was the last "official"
value of the US dollar. A few months after the August 15, 1971 closing
of the gold window, Nixon devalued the US dollar. This was on December
17, 1971. The official gold price was raised from $35 to $42.22.
But this new
price meant nothing. They still weren't going to sell gold at this
new, slightly higher rate. It was really a sham. Other countries
had long been after the US to raise the official gold price, so
Nixon finally did it. But what good did that do when this was the
price at which the US would not – repeat, not – redeem its paper
dollars into gold?
As I hope my
book shows, there has been the atmosphere of a sham – even a fraud
– about the US policy toward gold for generations. The Nixon fraud
was only one in a series of sham acts.
I don't understand
why today's government would be afraid to open the vaults and publicly
count and assay the gold. After all, if a lie was revealed they
could say that it wasn't their fault: they weren't even born when
these policies were put into place.
Officially,
the US has by far the largest government reserves of gold in the
world. Here are the top eight nations and the amount they have in
millions of troy ounces:

So, officially,
the US has much more than twice its nearest rival, Germany. It has
nearly eight times as much as China – again, officially.
But China
has quietly become the world's largest producer of gold, and the
Chinese central bank buys 100% of all production at the market price.
I'm sure they make certain this gold is of the utmost purity. I'm
suspicious of the "official" Chinese total, which I really
believe is a state secret, and may be much higher than they state
here.
In any event,
it is the US gold this article is all about. We need to finally
see what is left of the gold that was confiscated from the American
people in 1933. We need to know how much is left from the 702 million
ounces the US had in 1949, when this was by far the most gold held
by one owner in history.
There are
elected members of Congress, in both parties, who are ready to try
to open the vaults. One of them, Ron Paul, wrote the forward to
my
book.
Even if a
person doesn't understand the importance of gold as an investment,
this is a sort of mystery story: What Happened to the Gold? Why
have they been acting as if they had something to hide?
April 7, 2011
Chris
Weber [send him
mail] writes the Weber
Global Opportunities Report.
He has been an investor since 1971.
Copyright
© 2011 Chris
Weber
|