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How does the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee know that central banks
are working with bullion banks and other financial houses to suppress
the price of gold?
We
know because of the painstaking research of our consultants -- Reg Howe,
James Turk, Andrew Hepburn, Mike Bolser, and Bob Landis. They have gone
through the official reports and the footnotes of the Bank for
International Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, the Federal
Reserve, the U.S. Treasury Department, central banks and government
agencies, mining companies, and financial houses, and have amassed
enormous evidence.
But
that's the complicated stuff, and we also know for a very simple reason.
We
know that the central banks and their intermediaries are working
together to suppress the price of gold because time and again they
have TOLD us so.
After
all, what was the Washington Agreement of September 1999 if not a
proclamation that the 15 participating central banks were colluding to
regulate the gold price?
Of
course in the Washington Agreement the central banks affected to be
SUPPORTING the gold price; they pledged to limit their gold sales to 400
tonnes per year for five years -- lest, they said, the gold market be
flooded with metal and the gold price collapse, taking with it the
economies of gold-producing countries.
Of
course GATA has put a different construction on the Washington
Agreement. We consider it the device by which central bank gold LOANS
are written off as SALES at discounted prices, rather than be called
back and cause a short squeeze in gold.
That
is, far from supporting the gold price, the Washington Agreement was how
the central banks kept gold from rising and prevented the bankruptcy of
the financial houses that, at the invitation of the central banks,
eagerly joined the gold carry trade of the 1990s. In that carry trade
gold was, in effect, loaned by the central banks for next to nothing and
sold by the financial houses to depress its price, strengthen the U.S.
dollar, reduce interest rates, and inflate the price of paper assets,
which were purchased with the proceeds of the gold sales.
But
no matter how you want to construe it, the Washington Agreement was
admittedly a coordinated action by the central banks to regulate the
gold price. That central banks get together to discuss and unify their
policy toward gold is a matter of ordinary public record. Anyone who
really believes that this collusion is always benign, in the public
interest, and without ulterior motives shouldn't go even grocery
shopping alone.
The
Washington Agreement wasn't the first coordinated intervention of the
central banks in regard to gold. It was at least the second and probably
much more belated than that. How do we know?
Because
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told us. In fact, he told
Congress too. As usual, no one in the financial press seems to have been
paying attention.
But
on July 24, 1998, Greenspan told the House Banking Committee:
"Central banks stand ready to lease gold in increasing quantities
should the price rise." He repeated that statement a few days later
to the Senate Agriculture Committee:
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/testimony/1998/19980724.htm
Of
course, like the central banks that participated in the Washington
Agreement, Greenspan was disguising the true purposes of the policy he
described. He was explaining why he didn't think that the derivatives
market needed federal regulation, and suggested that central bank gold
leasing was a safeguard against a private corner on the gold market, a
safeguard that made derivatives regulation unnecessary.
GATA
maintains that, as with the Washington Agreement, the purposes of the
central banks were the opposite of what Greenspan was suggesting. Far
from working together to prevent a private corner on the gold market,
the central banks were using gold leasing to maintain a corner on the
gold market themselves.
Construe
Greenspan's testimony as you will, but there it is again -- central
banks admitting that they work together to regulate the price of gold.
And, more than that, Greenspan told Congress, if inadvertently, that the
purpose of gold leasing was not really the purpose long maintained by
the central banks involved in it -- to extract a little income from a
supposedly dead asset -- but rather to keep the gold price down.
Central
bankers aren't the only ones in the gold business who acknowledge
collusion to control the gold price. The biggest hedger among the
gold-mining companies, Barrick Gold, has gone so far as to confess, in
federal court in New Orleans, to participation in this scheme. Sued
along with its bullion bank, J.P. Morgan Chase, by Blanchard & Co.,
the New Orleans coin and bullion dealer, Barrick filed a surprisingly
candid motion in court on February 28, 2003.
Barrick
moved for dismissal of Blanchard's lawsuit on grounds of sovereign
immunity. That is, Barrick claimed that, in borrowing gold from central
banks through Morgan Chase, Barrick became the agent for central bank
gold policy; that, as the agent of central banks, the company could not
properly be sued without also suing the real parties in interest, the
central banks, as well; and that, since the central banks, as the
agencies of sovereign governments, have immunity and could not be made
party to the Blanchard suit, the suit should be dismissed:
http://www.lemetropolecafe.com/img2003/memoformotiontodis.pdf
Fortunately
Judge Helen Berrigan dismissed Barrick's motion and so Blanchard's
lawsuit has gone to the evidence-collecting phase. The suit is similar
to Reg Howe's federal lawsuit, which was brought in U.S. District Court
in Boston, underwritten financially by GATA, included government
defendants, and failed on the very issue of sovereign immunity -- the
issue that is now out of the way so that, in the Blanchard case, the
world yet might get a close look at how the gold market really works.
Just
as the true purpose of gold leasing is to suppress the gold price rather
than earn a little interest on a "dead asset," some central
banks even acknowledge that the only purpose of holding gold reserves at
all now, in the absence of any currency's formal convertibility, is to
rig markets.
GATA
is grateful to its researcher in Amsterdam, Milhaly Schroth, for
locating the following admission from the Reserve Bank of Australia,
which, on Page 31 of its annual report for 2003, says this about its
reserves:
"Foreign
currency reserve assets and gold are held primarily to support
intervention in the foreign exchange market. In investing these assets,
priority is therefore given to liquidity and security, in order to
ensure that the assets are always available for their intended policy
purposes."
The
Reserve Bank of Australia's admission can be found here: link
All
this shows that while the formal convertibility of currencies into gold
has been ended by the articles of the International Monetary Fund, gold
continues in its nature and function as money and as the independent
international currency, the competitor of the dollar and the euro -- and
that central banks recognize as much, however grudgingly.
Central
banks often acknowledge intervention in currency markets -- direct
intervention, as with the Bank of Japan's printing yen to buy dollars
and the People's Bank of China's enforcing a fixed exchange rate with
the dollar; and indirect intervention, as by the heavy purchases by many
central banks of U.S. government bonds. Meanwhile the Federal Reserve
intervenes in and supports the U.S. bond and equity markets every week
through the strategic purchase and sale of U.S. government bonds.
Maybe
you've heard the joke about the lawyer who, asked by a potential client,
"How much is 2 and 2?" replied, "How much do you WANT it
to be?" These days that is even more the premise of central banking
than of the practice of law. What do the markets say? What do you WANT
them to say?
Far
from being the mechanisms of steady development and democracy we tout to
the developing world, markets now are, in the eyes of central banking,
considered to be usually INEFFICIENT and WRONG. And so bailouts and
interventions and the issuance of price-capping derivatives have
followed constantly on each other's heels so that no big financial
interest might ever suffer the consequences of its mistakes or venality.
National and even world economic objectives are now set by unelected
overlords, gods of the market whose power is almost completely
undemocratic.
Amid
all this intervention, why should it be so hard to accept that central
banks might be more involved in the gold market than they make plain?
Indeed, to believe that central banks are NOT deeply involved in the
gold market, one almost has to believe that it is the ONLY market they
are not deeply involved in.
GATA
is in the free-market advocacy business, not the investment advice
business. But we can draw a few conclusions.
First,
because of gold leasing and the deceptive accounting for it, central
bank gold reserves are far less than what is claimed.
Second,
amid worldwide currency debasement, the gold price will be largely a
matter of how much more gold the central banks are ready to lease and
then sell, a matter of how far down the central banks are willing to run
their gold reserves and whether they think they may need gold again to
restore confidence someday when currency debasement gets out of hand.
The evidence of the gold price of the last few years -- rising steadily
despite constant selling or talk of selling by the central banks --
suggests that the central banks are attempting a controlled retreat with
gold. The increase in official anti-gold propaganda supports suspicion
that the central banks are running out of golden ammunition.
And
third, and most important, far from being Keynes' "barbarous
relic" or a quaint antique, gold remains not just basic to the
world economic system but, in fact, the secret knowledge of the universe
-- the substance and mechanism by which everything else financial can be
revealed and measured. If gold ever escapes the distortions that so
laboriously have been imposed on it, we may see how everything we have
considered normal has actually been distorted grotesquely -- may see, to
our shock, that, as Kipling wrote in "The Gods of the Copybook
Headings":
"...
all is not gold that glitters, and two and two make four."
When
that day comes and the real world reasserts itself with a vengeance,
people will need the real thing -- or the real things, ANYTHING that is
real. Kipling foresaw it this way:
Then
the Gods of the Market tumbled,
and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew,
And the hearts of the meanest were humbled
and began to believe it was true
That All is not Gold that Glitters,
and Two and Two make Four --
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings
limped up to explain it once more.
As
it will be in the future,
it was at the birth of Man --
There are only four things certain
since Social Progress began: --
That the Dog returns to his Vomit
and the Sow returns to her Mire,
And the burnt Fool's bandaged finger
goes wabbling back to the Fire;
And that after this is accomplished,
and the brave new world begins
When all men are paid for existing
and no man must pay for his sins,
As surely as Water will wet us,
as surely as Fire will burn,
The Gods of the Copybook Headings
with terror and slaughter return!

© 2004 Chris Powell, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, Inc. (GATA)
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