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Gold:
Get Some
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: Losing
Your Mind: Is Modern Civilization To Blame?
I can recall
listening to radio broadcasts over the past two or three decades
where a purveyor of gold bars or coins came onto the broadcast to
say the world faces economic gloom and doom and we had all better
buy some gold.
Typically,
as the sales spiel would go, radio listeners would hear that the
market for industrial gold and silver is opening up in China and
that if just one more ounce of gold or silver was used by every
person in China, why there would certainly be a shortage of these
precious metals. Based upon limited supply and increased demand,
the spot price is sure to rise.
Gold for
the day of reckoning
If the day
comes when the US dollar becomes confetti (it
could any day), US gold and silver coins would likely be the
only medium of value that US citizens and shopkeepers recognize
as an alternative to paper money.
However, today,
with obvious worldwide
debt that cannot be repaid and the printing of fiat money to
meet the government’s obligations, and predictable hyperinflation
to follow, a worldwide
economic crash is imminent. Marc Faber, publisher of the Gloom
& Doom Report, confirms that this time the "gold bugs"
(investment counselors who are bullish on buying gold) are
not "crying wolf."
You can
play with the big boys
You may perceive
the sale of gold bars and coins as a relatively small market compared
to another commodity such as oil. But actually, the London Bullion
Market Association "over-the-counter" (OTC) gold market,
which trades approximately 90 percent of the world's physical gold
trade, averages 2100 metric tons @$1150 per ounce = $21.8 billion
in sales a day, compared to 82 million barrels of crude oil per
day @$77 per barrel, which totals just $6.3 billion a day. The
gold market is 3.5 times greater than crude oil! So you can
fully understand the big buyers control that spot price of gold.
You can also understand, while you aren’t a big enough player to
buy oil, you can buy gold!
Not only do
central bankers and gold distributors influence the price of physical
gold, but super-wealthy individuals can also influence the spot
gold price. George Soros, the billionaire trader, actually attempted
to sucker holders of physical gold to sell their holdings as he
drew news media attention for his statement that gold represented
"the ultimate asset bubble." However, it was Soros
himself who was swooping up all the gold he could buy.
And there are
bigger buyers of gold than Soros. If you think Bill Gates and Warren
Buffet are the wealthiest people in the world you are falling for
the propaganda the world news media delivers. Some investigators
report the hidden wealth
of the Rockefeller family in 1998 was ~$11 trillion, and the Rothschilds
in England $100 trillion.
Price of
gold is deceiving
The price
of gold and silver have long been manipulated, particularly
by the central bank of the United State (the Federal Reserve). However,
I will demonstrate here how this manipulation has created a deceivingly
low price for gold in the face of news bulletins saying gold has
reached an all-time high spot price of $1226.56 in December of 2009.
First, the
selling price of gold (called the spot price) is a bit deceiving
because this is the speculative price. It is largely influenced
by the large buyers of gold, ranging from central banks and sovereign
nations to gold distributors, who control the demand market. Whereas
the typical reader of this column would be a middle-to-upper class
American with limited funds to buy gold or silver coins, not for
speculation, but as a survival strategy to pay bills should the
US dollar eventually be devalued or hyper-inflation make the dollar
worth less and less.
What is
the demand for gold?
Just what is
the current demand for gold, and how many available dollars are
chasing gold and silver coins?
The amount
of available dollars to purchase US gold coins by the masses is
much smaller than realized. Consider that the top 1 percent of Americans
own 42% of the wealth, the top 10% own ~71% of the wealth. Lower
income groups won’t likely be purchasing gold and are expected to
turn in their gold jewelry to melt down and make a profit as the
price of gold soars.
It is more
likely that the middle and upper classes will be buying gold, probably
US gold and silver coins (1-ounce silver and gold American Eagles)
that are legal tender inside the nation’s borders. As a percentage
of the population, maybe only 14% of Americans own physical
gold (i.e. own just one gold coin). If maybe 6 million Americans
(2% of the population) become new buyers of just one 1-ounce gold
coin @$1175 each, that would come to $7 billion of new sales. Of
course, should this occur, the US Mint would have to halt sales
mid-year because of inability to meet such a demand. The US Mint
could be backordered for an indefinite period of time. The US Treasury
Department continues to print paper money ad libitum, elevating
the value of gold even further. Look
what happened to sales of gold and silver coins in 2009.
US Mint Gold
Eagle 2009 Sales Totals:
2009: 1,315,500* 1-ounce gold eagles (794,000 in 2008)
US Mint Silver
Eagle Sales Totals
2009: 28,766,600 1-ounce silver eagles (19,583,500 in 2008)
*Sales of
gold eagles were temporarily suspended by the US Mint in 2009
for lack of gold blanks.
It’s obvious,
from these sales figures, that a tiny fraction of the population
is buying newly minted gold and silver coins. Even if sales of all
1-ounce gold and silver eagles were combined (~30 million coins)
and each purchase was for just ten coins, that would represent 3
million purchases, many probably being return customers. So maybe
1 in 300 Americans buy newly-minted coins from dealers, or from
the US Mint directly. That’s not even one-half of 1-percent of the
population.
Reticence
to invest in gold
My amateur
survey of people I have nudged to think about holding physical gold
and silver coins reveals few have heeded this advice. Humans are
creatures of habit. Most are happy to relinquish management of their
money to others in communal pension plans (virtually all which are
either insolvent, such as social security, or under-funded, like
private and government worker pension plans).
Instead of
buying gold, Americans, about 73 million of them, have chosen to
place their money in tax-deferred 401k plans which have
fallen in value by 31% from the end of 2007 to the end of March
2009.
Most teachers,
truck drivers, nurses and law enforcement officers in this country
have relied upon a communal fund to grow their money for retirement.
The public has been lulled to sleep, believing others were managing
their money responsibly. Many people feel money management is for
professionals and is beyond their skill level. But most of these
retirement plans have become nothing more than Ponzi schemes.
To buy gold
is to invite fear. Why live with financial doom in the back of your
mind? So people pass on the idea of gold and wait to hear if anyone
else gives a buy signal before they jump into the gold buyer’s pool.
People say
there is nothing they can do about what happens in the future, so
they remain paralyzed like deer crossing a highway at night, frozen
by the glare of oncoming automobile headlights. They unwittingly
have chosen to see the value of their 401k accounts erode by 30%
rather than risk making another bad decision.
For most Americans,
gold and silver are as foreign as an overseas currency. This generation
has completely lost track of the historical fact that the Constitution
spells out in Article I, Section 10, that government cannot "make
any thing but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts,"
and that the nation once backed paper money with gold. Paper money
was only issued as a convenience to carrying gold as a paper
IOU redeemable for gold or silver. Now paper money is an IOU for
nothing.
How much
of your investment portfolio should be in gold?
You need a
personal strategy to preserve your finances rather than rely upon
government or financial counselors. Most people cannot fathom that
bankers working in league with government are plundering your money.
But that is precisely the current state of affairs.
While gold
is growing in popularity in investment circles, according to Marcus
Grubb of the World Gold Council, current gold investment allocation
stands at less than 0.6% of total global wealth.
How much of
your investment portfolio should be in gold? Here is what investment
funds have invested in gold.

Source: Moneyweek
Harry Schultz,
noted European investment advisor, says 40% of a person’s portfolio
should be comprised of physical gold.
The folly
of waiting for the price to drop
If you are
waiting for the price of gold to drop from its current $1100+/ounce
range to its 2003 price of $350/ounce before you buy some, you may
not understand why there is a growing need for you to own some precious
metals, preferably in the form of US coins. You may mistakenly reckon,
as many now do, that gold is risky while money in the bank, even
if it only draws a low rate of interest, is safer than gold.
Buying gold
when the price is low, and selling when it is high, means you want
to play speculator. Certainly, buy low and sell high is always
in order. But, to be repetitious, the marketplace for gold is largely
influenced by large buyers, such as purchases by central bankers,
sovereign countries. For example, in 2008 the International Monetary
Fund approved gold sales of 403.3 metric tons, representing
one eighth of the Fund’s total holdings of gold at that time. World
Gold Council also indicates a great deal of the demand for gold
is exercised in ETFs (exchange trade funds), where, by the way,
profits are often taken in cash rather than physical gold.
Profit-taking
by selling gold in return for continually worth-less paper money
would be folly. Don’t expect others who own gold to sell you some
even if prices soar. Gold owners would be trading an asset that
is rising in value for a piece of paper of diminishing purchasing
power. Gold is going to become very scarce in the coming financial
and currency crisis.
What is
the true value of gold?
There IS a
crystal ball. It is not difficult to see the immediate economic
future. Almost all countries of the world are in debt that cannot
readily be repaid. They are printing more fiat money to pay their
bills but suffering the consequences of dilution of the purchasing
power of their currency in doing so.
When the rate
of expansion in the supply of money exceeds the rate of growth of
goods and services in an economy, there will be inevitable hyper-inflation
(e.g., $10 loaves of bread).
So it was not
surprising to learn that gold, for which there is a limited supply,
appreciated
more over the past decade against all of the world’s currencies,
for which there is, via the printing press or creation of electronic
money, an unlimited supply.
If you are
holding money in the bank, or hoarding paper money under a mattress,
it is currently being diluted in value as the money supply continues
to grow (see chart below), or nations may decide on political suicide
and officially devalue their currency. Examination of the following
chart shows the U.S. has chosen the former.
Advisor Gary
North says the U.S. continues to "kick the can"
and print money instead of truly dealing with the crisis.
The problem
is that impending hyper-inflation is not realized immediately when
government first dumps it into the economy as it hasn’t had time
to go beyond the banks into the marketplace. The Federal Reserve,
fearing hyper-inflation, has chosen to freeze bailout billions in
the banks and pay bankers to park this money rather than loan it
out to grow the economy and overcome unemployment. This is because,
once bailout money has gone through the fractional-banking system
and becomes ten times more money, it will massively dilute the value
of existing money.

Data: Federal
Reserve Bank, St. Louis
Use the increased
supply of money to gauge the true value of the dollar.
The World Gold
Council has published a report entitled "Linking global
money supply to gold and to future inflation," which says
for every
1% increase in US money supply there tends to be a 0.9% increase
in the price of gold. So examine the above chart and see how
much the money supply has suddenly increased.
Ned Schmidt
of the Market Oracle has documented that the money
supply has risen by an annualized rate of 1200% from June of
2008 to November of 2009. But the spot price of gold hasn’t risen
in a parallel fashion, which is evidence of continued manipulation.
If the World Gold Council formula is correct, gold should be trading
at over $10,000 an ounce today!
How
much gold is available for investment?
Of course,
it would be wise to know how much gold actually exists, and how
much is actually available as investment gold, so you can ascertain
the true value of gold on a supply and demand basis.
How much gold
is there in the world? The World Gold Council estimates, at the
end of 2009, that all the gold ever mined amounted to about 165,000
tons. But the majority of it is not available for investment.
First,
central
bankers own gold as reserves. The World
Gold Council reports that the international average is about 10.2%
at current market prices but, in the European Union it is over 50%
and the USA holds around 75% of its reserves in gold. This gold
is not in play for investment.
While
it is true that the US is the largest single holder of gold at 8135
tons, at the time EURO banknotes and coins were first put in circulation
(2002) all the central banks in the Eurosystem
held gold that aggregately totaled 12,574 tons
(or 404.3 million troy ounces), considerably more than the US. Of
course these numbers have changed since that time. According to
the March 5, 2010 European Central Bank (ECB) report, the ECB held
268.1 EURO-billions of gold. While gold reserves
of the national central banks remain in their possession, all gold
and foreign exchange reserves are, under the terms of the Maastricht
treaty, at the disposal of the European Central Bank.
Second,
the International Monetary Fund holds tons of gold. At the
end of January 2010 the IMF
held 96.6 million ounces (3,005.3 metric tons) of gold at designated
depositories, valued at $6.9 billion. By February of 2010 the IMF,
attempting to build its cash reserves to aid in lending to needy
countries, had reduced it holdings of gold to about $105.0 billion
at current market prices.
Third, gold
is also held by nations. The International Monetary Fund publishes
a list of how
much gold each country holds. A more readily accessible list
that compares gold holdings by country on a single page can be found
here.
|
Official
World Gold Holdings
WORLD GOLD COUNCIL June 2009
|
|
`
|
Tons
|
%
of reserves
|
|
1. European
Union
|
12574.0
|
-
-
|
|
2. United
States
|
8133.5
|
78.3%
|
|
3. Germany
|
3412.6
|
69.5%
|
|
4. International
Monetary Fund
|
3217.3
|
-
-
|
|
5. Italy
|
2451.8
|
66.1%
|
|
6. France
|
2450.7
|
73.0%
|
|
7. China
|
1054.0
|
1.8%
|
|
8. Switzerland
|
1040.1
|
37.1%
|
|
9. Japan
|
765.2
|
2.1%
|
|
10. Netherlands
|
612.5
|
61.4%
|
|
11. Russia
|
536.9
|
4.0%
|
Gold is also
used for industrial and medical purposes and to make jewelry. According
to The World Gold Council, the demand for gold in 2009 was as follows:
| Jewelry
consumption |
1747
tons
|
| Industrial
and dental |
367
tons
|
| Investment
gold |
1270
tons
|
| Source:
World
Gold Council |
| Ton
= 1,000 kilograms (2.2 lbs) or 32,151 troy oz of fine gold (2009
lbs) |
In the investment
gold category, 594 tons were swooped up by exchange-traded funds,
and only 234
tons went for coin making (Source: World Gold Council)
Maybe only
about 79% of gold is available to make bars and coins.
And now for
the big kicker question – how much physical gold is actually in
the vaults of the gold exchanges? It has been estimated that just
one ounce of gold backs 20 ounces of gold sales. The banksters
have done it again. They have sold more gold on paper than is actually
being held in the vault.
There
are irregularities and delays in the delivery of physical gold by
the New York Mercantile Exchange and Commodity Exchange, Inc (COMEX)
which is the world's largest physical commodity futures exchange.
It
appears that COMEX vault doesn’t have all the gold it claims on
its books. Some holders of gold IOUs are being offered cash
instead.
You’re going
to miss the major significance of all this fraud because you probably
aren’t an investor in gold and think these developments will not
touch your financial nest eggs.
On a supply-and-demand
basis, if gold is not in vaults, then the gold supply has been artificially
inflated. If it is revealed that gold supplies are in fact much
lower, then physical gold will rise in value beyond comprehension
and the value of paper money will crash. Investors will rapidly
move to gold and out of the stock market, which will crash pension
funds, etc. Such a collapse could cause a complete loss of confidence
in paper money, which has no backing whatsoever, no more than the
phony gold IOUs. It is no wonder these phony gold IOUs are such
a guarded secret.
Investment
advisor Marc Faber argues the price of gold today at $1100 an ounce
is comparatively less than when it was sold for $300 per ounce a
few years ago because it is in greater demand and far more scarce.
Read
Faber’s remarks here.
As the price
of gold soars, don’t get distracted with invitations to buy into
start-up gold mines. You need to
think twice about startup gold mine stocks.
Whether you
are interested in selling your gold jewelry, or interested in learning
about gold for investment purposes, a good source is The
World Gold Council’s online list of frequently-asked questions.
Gold
is scarce. You read here about tons of gold, which is deceiving.
Gold has a specific gravity of 19.3, meaning that it is 19.3 times
heavier than water. So gold weighs 19.3 kilograms (42.46 lbs) per
liter. The world produces a cube of gold that is about 4.3 meters
(about 14 feet) on each side every year. In other words, all of
the gold produced worldwide in one year could just about fit in
the average person's living room! If you could gather every scrap
of gold that man has ever mined into one place, you could only build
about one-third of the Washington Monument.
In summary:
- Gold should
now be a part of every American’s investment portfolio.
- Most Americans
feel investment decisions should be delegated to others and often,
when they have decided to invest their own money, don’t have the
gumption to stand up to their stock brokers and investment counselors
to pull out of their eroding 401k plans Americans have lost nearly
a third of their wealth in 401k plans in the recent economic downturn.
Americans will not be able to rely upon Social Security checks
in their retirement and most private pension plans are under-funded.
- While the
public can only participate in commodity markets by investing
in futures and stocks, the public has opportunity to participate
in the physical gold market even though it is many times larger
than the market for crude oil.
- There is
evidence that gold exchanges have issued more gold IOUs than gold
in their vaults, which if discovered, would dramatically raise
the price of physically-held gold.
- In a currency
crisis, US gold and silver coins would be the most recognized
and accepted alternative to paper money.
- While there
is an increased demand for US gold and silver coins, the number
of Americans who purchase gold coins for investment is still very,
very small.
- In the event
of a currency crisis, individual holders of physical gold are
not likely to make their stockpile of gold coins available for
sale.
- Newly issued
gold coins are in greater demand than realized because (a) so
little gold is directed for use in coinage and (b) the US mint
can only supply a limited quantity of newly-issued US gold eagle
50-dollar pieces.
- The spot
price of gold is both a speculative price and a manipulated price,
and is certainly not its true value in a currency crisis.
- The barometer
of the increased value of gold is the increase in the supply of
money, which has reached unprecedented heights.
- In light
of the fact the government will soon not be able to pay interest
on its overwhelming debt and has decided to print more and more
money to meet its obligations to the public, it behooves every
American to become their own banker with gold.
- Gold is
scarce and far more valuable than imagined.
- Get some.
March
11, 2010
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
He is the author of You
Don’t Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
His latest book is Downsizing
Your Body.
Copyright
© 2010 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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