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We have a battle on our hands. It’s the Battle for $700, and it is
just the latest clash in a long war being fought between gold and its
perennial antagonist – the gold cartel.
I
feel like an old soldier, having already endured so many of these
battles. They happen because gold is undervalued, which means that it is
being exchanged for dollars at too cheap a price. So gold tries to
correct this imbalance in a normal market response by climbing higher,
but is prevented from doing so by the gold cartel. It is these
confrontations that have led to the recurring battles.
I
think we can learn from these head-to-head clashes. There are lessons
from the past that can be heartening at times like this when gold gets
repeatedly repelled from $700. It is important to recognize that every
time gold and the cartel have battled in the past, gold eventually won.
For
example, back in March 2001, I wrote the following about the Battle for
$272:
“Open interest on Comex calls in the last few days has risen by 16,000
contracts. That’s 1.6 million ounces, or nearly 50 tonnes. Who would
be willing to take the risk of selling these calls with gold so cheap?
Probably the same central banks who have been manipulating the price.
They are still trying to keep the gold price under their thumb. Will
they succeed yet again? There’s the rub. No one knows. The markets may
be getting ready to ‘throw away the key’, but maybe not. While we
know that gold is unbelievably cheap and eventually going higher, we
just don’t know when.
Watch
the $272 level. Gold probed that level today, but backed off, though
still closed up over $5 on the day. If $272 is hurdled, the long awaited
rally may be finally underway. And it also may be the rally in which
those who have been manipulating the gold price are finally forced to
throw in the towel, just as they were forced to do so the last time the
price of gold was being manipulated, which was in 1971.”
Gold
eventually broke through the lines the gold cartel had mobilized at
$272, and climbed higher. But the gold cartel staged a retreat, and
eventually we got the War for $325. So significant was $325 that I wrote
the following in March 2002
“If you are old enough to remember when President Nixon closed the
‘Gold Window’ on August 15, 1971, you have an advantage over those
who did not experience that event and the subsequent rise in the gold
price. We are at I believe a similar moment in time. Maybe we are only
at the equivalent of January 1971, or perhaps as close as August 1,
1971. We just don’t know for sure how close we are to the launch date,
but the important point is that the launch date is indeed coming.”
It
took another 6 months, but $325 was indeed hurdled, on December 6, 2002.
So important was that battle that I continued to write about $325 for
months. For example, I penned the following in February 2003:
“For
the past six years of this 20-plus-year consolidation, gold traded under
$325. During this period gold moved out from weak hands into the strong
hands that were accumulating it at those bargain basement levels. To
make that base even more convincing and technically significant, we had
a selling climax in the middle of that base when gold was dumped after
the Bank of England announcement, causing it to reach a low of $252 in
July 1999. As the BoE began its dishoarding, those who recognized that
gold was undervalued (us included) were buying while the BoE was
selling.
Then
with the breakout above $325, gold’s base was firmly in place. This
base defines the bottom in gold. Time will tell of course, but I don’t
think we’ll ever see those prices again. Just as gold never looked
back when it started its final break away from $35 in the early
1970’s, gold is again not looking back. $325, $330, $340 and probably
even $350 – those prices are history and won’t be seen again. Again,
only time will tell, but my scenario from here is quite clear.
Because
gold is moving higher from such historically undervalued levels and
because so many people have been left standing on the platform when the
gold-train started pulling away from the station with the break above
$325, it is onward and upward for gold from here.”
And
so it was. But then came the battles for $420, $450, $500, and since
last May, we have been fighting the Battle for $700. Gold will win this
time too, but again, we are frustrated and irritated that there is even
a battle at all.
Who
is the gold cartel? And what are they trying to accomplish? The gold
cartel is an alliance of governments and a few bullion banks. This group
is led by the US government. Though their aims are different, their
congruent interests put them on the same side. Here’s what they are
trying to do.
The
US government wants the US dollar to continue as the world’s reserve
currency. But the dollar is no longer worthy of holding this privileged
position. It is not sound money that can be used reliably in
international commerce. It is being inflated and debased, which are
actions that erode its usefulness as currency. It is also being used as
a political tool, which again makes it unreliable money for cross-border
commerce.
So
the US government has a problem. Gold has always held the position of
international money, and currencies only became reserve currencies
because they were “as good as gold”, which is what the dollar used
to be. Now, however, gold and the dollar are competitors, with the
result that a rising gold price shows how badly the dollar is being
managed. This reality decreases the demand for the dollar, making it
more difficult for it to remain unchallenged as the world’s reserve
currency.
Consequently,
the US government wants a low gold price to make the dollar look good.
Its strategists believe that a low gold price will make people think the
dollar is being well managed, which obviously is a necessary
precondition for anyone to continue using it. After all, if people truly
understood how vulnerable the dollar is to a collapse, the demand for
the dollar would decline even more rapidly than it is already declining.
Most
other governments within the US orbit work toward the same objective.
Though they may be envious of the dollar’s privileged position, in the
end they accept it because these other governments are also fiat money
advocates. By keeping the dollar-monetary system functioning, they can
also perpetuate the myth of fiat money by creating their own currencies
‘out of thin air’, thereby enabling these governments to do what all
governments want, namely, to use newly created fiat currency to preserve
their own position of privilege and power.
Their
aims are clear, but governments don’t directly trade in the gold
market. They enlist the help of the bullion banks, but not all of them
of course, just the 2 or 3 largest ones in order to keep the cabal as
small as possible. After all, the bullion banks stand to make fortunes
by working with the government, and they obviously don’t want to
spread this profit around needlessly to other banks that are not needed
in the price manipulation scheme.
The
bullion banks make money in two ways. First, they earn the contango. In
other words, by being short at all times, they earn the interest income
available from gold. It works like this.
Because
gold is money, its future contracts always trade at a higher price than
the spot price. This is called contango, and is the opposite of every
other commodity. Because they are not money, other commodities trade in
backwardation, meaning their future contracts always trade below the
spot price, except in abnormal circumstances, for example, where supply
is disrupted by an unforeseen event.
So
by being short the contango, bullion banks are always selling gold for
future delivery above the spot price. If the spot price is unchanged or
lower when those future commitments come due, the bullion banks make
money on the difference between the price at which they sold and the
spot price on the due date. But if the spot price is higher, they lose
money, so clearly the bullion banks do not want a rising gold price.
The
second way bullion banks make money is by what I call “picking the
market’s pockets”. There are a number of ways they do this. For
example, because they execute the government’s trades, they know when
large amounts of gold are going to be dumped into the market as part of
the gold’s cabal’s price manipulation scheme. So the bullion banks
“front run” those trades by selling first, and then profit from the
price slide that occurs when the big government order is dumped on the
market. So in essence the bullion banks are strapping on a feed-bag by
working with the government.
It
can be discouraging when viewing this state of affairs. However, we
should instead focus on the important parts, which are that gold is in a
bull market that is now more than six years old and that notwithstanding
this fact, gold remains undervalued. Or to put it another way, the
dollar is overvalued.
So
sell the dollar and buy gold because the Battle for $700 will end the
same way the other battles have ended; gold will win the battle.
The
gold cartel is losing the war.
In
the end, the market is bigger than the government.

© 2007 James Turk
Editorial Archive
James
Turk is the Founder & Chairman of GoldMoney.com. He writes The
Freemarket Gold & Money Report, and his latest book is The
Coming Collapse of the Dollar.
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