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“The First Casualty of War is Truth” [1]
Abstract
President
Roosevelt confiscated all of the people’s
gold under the Trading With The Enemy Act, which comes from The War Powers Resolution.
At the time, the United States was not
at war with any foreign countries, which by process of elimination
leaves only one other party mentioned in the act: We The People. See Presidential
Executive Order 6102.
Subsequent
legislation: Emergency
Banking Relief Act of 1933 US Statutes at Large
also made it illegal for private
citizens of the United States to own gold.
The
so-called dollar price of one ounce of gold increased from $20.67 to $35
dollars per ounce. This is a 69%
devaluation of the dollar in one swell swoop. See Presidential
Proclamation (no. 2072) of Franklin D ...The Gold Reserve Act.
The
above referenced Emergency Acts and the other various proclamations
regarding banking and gold, along with The Federal Gold Reserve Act of
1934, are all arguably unconstitutional according to the fifth amendment
of the Constitution.
The
Bill of Rights speaks to the issue of private property within the fifth
amendment, which in part says, “nor be deprived of life, liberty, or
property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be
taken for public use, without just compensation”. See: Amendment
V: Individual debt and double jeopardy.
Anomalies
On
December 31, 1974, the restoration to legal ownership of private gold
holdings became the law of the land once again. It is true that private
citizens may now own gold. However, are there extenuating circumstances
that remain hidden in the shadows?
Why
does a one ounce gold eagle coin have stamped on it $50 dollars, yet in
the market place it sells for $550 dollars? Why is the gold on the
government’s books registered at just over $42 per ounce?
Why
all the discrepancies – could it be that there is a silent war against
gold being raged? Is there a covert operation in full swing behind the
scenes, a futile attempt to reign in the sovereigns of sovereigns? If
so, who is it that perceives gold to be the enemy?
"All
of the government's monetary, economic and political power, as well as
its extensive propaganda machinery, will be enlisted in a constant
battle to drive down the price of gold - but in the absence of any
fundamental change in the nation's monetary, fiscal, and economic
direction, simply regard any major retreat in the price of gold as an
unexpected buying opportunity." [2]
Gibson’s Paradox
Lord
Keynes, in one of his more lucid moments, coined the term “Gibson's
Paradox”, in an attempt to explain the correlation between interest
rates and the general price level observed during the years of the
classical gold standard.
The
reason it was a paradox is that Irving Fisher suggested that interest
rates should move with the rate of change in prices, i.e., the inflation
rate or expected inflation rate, rather than the price level itself.
Mr.
Summer’s has the following to say on the matter:
“The
price level under the gold standard behaved in a fashion very similar to
the way the reciprocal of the relative price of gold evolves today. Data
from recent years indicate that changes in long-term real interest rates
are indeed associated with movements in the relative price of gold in
the opposite direction and that this effect is a dominant feature of
gold price fluctuations.” [3]
The
above translates into English as meaning that gold prices move opposite
(inverse) to real interest rates – in a free market that is. Although
free markets are doubtful, the rest of the thesis remains plausible, at
least for a while.
The
Theory of Linkage
Others
have done similar work. Professor Fekete has written rather extensively
on the theory of linkage between the price level and the interest rate
level. Fekete references the 1947 work of Gilbert E. Jackson regarding
such linkage as follows:
“In
1947 the British-born Canadian economist Gilbert E. Jackson studied the
behavior of just two economic indicators, that of the price level and
the rate of interest. He found that the two are linked. Sometimes the
price level leads and the rate of interest lags; at other times, the
other way around.” [4]
GATA’S
WORK
The
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee: www.gata.org.
led by Bill Murphy, has done enormous amounts of work on the Gold War,
and the price manipulation scheme orchestrated by the powers that be.
With
an army of dedicated freedom fighters behind him that include Reggie
Howe, Frank Veneroso, and Chris Powell, GATA has turned the tide. The
unparalleled interventional analysis of Michael Bolser has the Fed
studying their next move in a real live game of chess.
In
one of my earlier papers: Silver
IS Money, Behold A Pale Horse - Part IV I showed the
following chart:
Gibson’s Paradox

[Chart Courtesy of GoldenSextant
& www.sharelynx.net]
Gibson
Revisited
On
the chart, the 30-year U.S. Treasury bond yield minus the annualized
increase in the Consumer Price Index (calculated as the sum of the
monthly CPI increases for the preceding twelve months) defines real
long-term interest rates.
The
chart clearly shows that the inverse relationship between long term
interest rates and the price of gold remained fairly intact until
something funny happened around 1995, as the relationship suddenly diverged
in the opposite direction of what it had been.
Interest
rates and the price of gold are no longer running inverse to one
another, but in the same direction – and the direction is down.
As
real rates declined from 4% to 2% the price of gold dropped from
$400 an ounce to around $270 an ounce. According to Summers and
Gibson’s Paradox, the price of gold should have moved in the inverse
direction – or up in price. So what happened?
The
Fix
From
the transcript of the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee on
March 26, 1991, the following exchange took place between Fed Governor
Wayne Angell and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.
“Chairman
Greenspan: "Is there not any mechanism by which we can
create swaps or RPs or something of that nature in which essentially we
have fixed the exchange rate of our holdings?"
Fed
Governor Wayne Angell:
“You could have an exchange of puts. In effect, you could swap puts
and thereby assume that somebody would ultimately want to exercise that
added advantage."
Mr.
Greenspan:
“Well, the point at issue is that it's a [forward] exchange
transaction that has a date on it. ... And effectively that gets
factored into the market and neutralizes your position. What I'm
thinking of -- and I just thought of it at this moment, so there might
be plenty of reasons why not -- is an open-ended fixed-price mutual put,
to put it in the terms that Governor Angell stipulated, so that we can
eliminate part of the problem that is on the negative side of the
current”.
Mr.
Angell:
just prior to the end of the meeting said: “There's one slight
addendum to this discussion: We have a reserve holding that costs us
more money than what is reasonably in prospect to happen on foreign
exchange rates and that is that we really are not a small reserve
holding currency country.
I
think we actually have official reserves of $85 billion, Sam, compared
to Taiwan's $75 billion. And if you mark our gold to the $358 price,
we end up with something like $170 billion. There are opportunity costs
because we don't get interest on that gold as we do on our foreign
exchange holdings.
That
cost is out there also. I would hesitate for us to have foreign currency
holdings that have swap puts that just sit there, which is now becoming
the case for our gold.” [5]
Did
You Catch That?
He
said, "swap puts that just sit there" on the U.S. gold
reserves. Couple the above with the Fed's general counsel, J. Virgil
Mattingly’s 1995 statement to the FOMC:
“It's
pretty clear that these ESF (exchange stabilizing fund) operations are
authorized. I don't think there is a legal problem in terms of the
authority. The statute [31 U.S.C. s. 5302] is very broadly worded in
terms of words like 'credit' -- it has covered things like the gold
swaps -- and it confers broad authority.” [6]
Gibson’s
Paradox and The Gold Standard
III.
Real Interest Rates and the Relative Price of Gold, 1973-84
“Figure
4 displays the inverse real gold price and our estimate of the expected
pretax real interest rate. The strong co-movement over the longer cycles
is reminiscent of Gibson’s paradox. Variation in the real interest
rate appears to be responsible for much of the year-to year movement in
the relative price of gold.”
After
1980, inflation exhibits increased volatility, and the ARIMA forecast is
less satisfactory...Yet, the impression that real rates were high after
1981 and that these high rates were associated with a low Relative price
of gold vis-à-vis the 1980 level is unmistakable.” [7]
V.
Summary and Conclusion
“The
Gibson paradox has proven to be an especially stubborn puzzle in
monetary economics. We believe that taking account of the role of gold
as an asset contributes significantly to our understanding of the
anomaly.
Our
model accounts for the historical coincidence of the Gibson’s paradox
and the gold standard, an observation made by Friedman and Schwartz
(1982) but not incorporated in previous attempts to rationalize the
Gibson phenomenon.” [8]
I
Believe
Obviously,
these guys believe that there is a direct association between changes in
interest rates and movements in the price of gold – in the opposite
direction, nonetheless.
However,
our chart does not show that. It shows that such was the case up until
about 1995, and then suddenly the relationship reversed.
Interest
rates started coming down AND the price of gold came down as well.
Presently
interest rates have been going up along with the price of gold. What
gives?
What
gives is there is no such thing as a free market – if there ever was.
In today’s paper fiat land of make-believe, the wizards of finance
hide behind the curtain, controlling the appearance of the Land of Oz.
Moreover, things are not as they so appear to be.
So
what’s the big deal – gold’s going up in price, the stock market
is going up or holding up, the dollar stopped falling out of bed for
awhile, and bonds are doing O.K.
Did
you catch that – Bonds are doing O.K.
Interest Rates
Bonds
can only be doing O.K. if interest rates are not rising too fast on the
long end of the curve. The short end of the curve the Fed is not worried
about. In fact, the Fed wants the short end to invert above the long
end.
Why?
Because they want to give the appearance, the illusion that everything
is O.K. They want it to seem as if they are at their watch, protecting
the economy by raising interest rates, ever so methodically, to ease the
patient down off its high.
The
Fed is trying to raise the short end of the curve above the long end. If
they raise long-term rates, the long bond is in trouble. If the long
bond is in trouble, then the real estate market is in trouble.
The
real estate markets, and its new age debt instruments of mass
destruction, have been the glue holding together the paper house of
cards we call our financial system. If real estate goes the game is
over. The emperor will be naked – exposed in the true perversion of
his ways.
The
largest market is the debt or bond market, especially if one considers
the derivative debt market. This is what scares the Fed, and that gold
is the ever vigilante sentinel that loudly speaks when anything is amiss
with the monetary system of a country.
Derivatives:
Potential Benefits and Risk-Management Challenges
”Perhaps the clearest evidence of the perceived benefits that
derivatives have provided is their continued spectacular growth. As a
consequence of the increasing demand for these products, the size of the
global OTC derivatives markets, according to the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS), reached a notional principal value of $220 trillion
in June 2004.” [9]
Concentration
in Derivatives Markets: The Case of U.S. Dollar Interest Rate Options
”Financial
consolidation has reduced the number of firms that, by acting as
dealers, provide liquidity to the OTC derivatives markets. Two years
ago, I expressed particular concern about the implications of dealer
concentration for risks in derivatives markets. Among the markets
identified as appearing to be especially concentrated were the markets
for U.S. dollar interest rate options. Those markets have become
increasingly large and important as the U.S. markets for fixed-rate
mortgage-backed securities (MBS) have grown and as an increasing share
of those securities have come to be held by investors that manage the
prepayment risks associated with those instruments.
Concentration
in the OTC options markets raises at least three specific concerns.
First, market illiquidity may result from a leading dealer's exit and
that illiquidity has the potential to adversely affect Fannie and
Freddie and other hedgers of mortgages and MBS. Second, meeting the
demands for options by mortgage hedgers involves market risk to dealers;
a concern that has been heightened by the fact that the notional
value of options sold by dealers significantly exceeds the notional
value purchased. Third, the failure of a leading dealer could
result in counterparty credit losses for market participants.
However,
only about five or six of them have direct access to the supply of
options from debt issuers; the others must depend on the inter-dealer
market for a substantial portion of their supply. The exit of one of
these five or six may or may not adversely affect market liquidity,
depending on the reason for the exit and on the way in which other
dealers react.
If
a dealer is forced to exit because of a credit problem unrelated to its
options dealing, other dealers are likely to take its place quickly. If
the exit is the result of losses from options dealing, possibly in
difficult market conditions, other dealers with similar positions are
likely to be pulling back as well, which could leave the options
markets quite illiquid. [10]
Conclusion
The
boys seem to be getting a wee bit nervous over interest rate derivatives
and other instruments of structured finance – as they might not be
quite as structured as they originally thought. Paper derivatives may
very well carry the seed of their own self-destruction within. Warren
Buffett seems to think so.
The
Governor of the Bank of England was so frightened at one time that he
stated:
“We
looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further.
A
further rise would have taken down one or several trading houses, which
might have taken down all the rest in their wake.”
“Therefore,
at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold
price, manage it. It was very difficult to get the gold price
under control but we have now succeeded.” [11]
In
other words, the Fed is most concerned with the ten-year and thirty-year
bond yields. This is their line in the sand. They do not want the long
end of the yield curve to rise.
Towards
the ultimate goal of protecting the debt market the Fed and Treasury
want to keep gold under wraps, and if they can – down and out for the
count. They have many weapons at their disposal. Do not underestimate
your opponent.
We
think we here the sounds of a rider in the distance – the one raging
war against gold. Heed the sounds. A battle may be on the horizon of the
gold market. It is often times good to retreat and lose the battle, to
live to fight another day – to win the war.
The
opponent is most dangerous when he appears the weakest and weakest when
he appears the strongest. Let him make the first move that starts his
downfall.
“Behold,
a pale horse, and its rider's
Name
was Death, and Hell followed him.” [12]
© 2006 Douglas V. Gnazzo
Editorial Archive
All
rights reserved. Any republication without written permission
of author
and Financial Sense prohibited.

New Website and Read
The Honest
Money Gold & Silver Report:
Open Letter to
Congress
[1]
Aeschylus.
[2]
Irwin A. Schiff
[3]
Summers & Barsky - Gibson's
Paradox and the Gold Standard
[4]
Fekete - Causes
and Consequences of Kondratiev's Long-Wave Cycle.
[5]
FOMC Meeting March 26, 1991 (2.8
MB PDF)
[6] J. Virgil
Mattingly’s 1995 statement to the FOMC
[7]
See 5
[8]
See 5
[9]
FRB:
Speech, Greenspan--Rik
Transfer
and Financial
Stability--May
5 ... 2005
[10]
See 9
[11]
Edward A. J. George, Governor of the Bank of England and a director of
the BIS
[12] Revelations of the Bible
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Douglas V. Gnazzo
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report, LLC
Canton Center, CT USA
Email
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About
the author: Douglas V.
Gnazzo is CEO of New England Renovation LLC, a historical restoration contractor
that specializes in restoring older buildings that are vintage historic
landmarks. He writes for numerous websites and his work appears both
here and abroad. Just recently he was honored by being chosen as a Foundation
Scholar for the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
(FAME).
Disclaimer:
The contents of this article represent the opinions of Douglas V.
Gnazzo. Nothing contained herein is intended as investment advice or
recommendations for specific investment decisions, and you should not
rely on it as such. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not a registered investment
advisor. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and
using methods believed to be reliable, but Douglas. V. Gnazzo cannot
accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result
of your reliance on this analysis and will not be held liable for the
consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein
or any omission. Individuals should consult with their broker and
personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
Do your own due diligence regarding personal investment decisions. This
article may contain information that is confidential and/or protected by
law. The purpose of this article is intended to be used as an
educational discussion of the issues involved. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not
a lawyer or a legal scholar. Information and analysis derived from the
quoted sources are believed to be reliable and are offered in good
faith. Only a highly trained and certified and registered legal
professional should be regarded as an authority on the issues involved;
and all those seeking such an authoritative opinion should do their own
due diligence and seek out the advice of a legal professional. Lastly
Douglas V. Gnazzo believes that The United States of America is the
greatest country on Earth, but that it can yet become greater. This
article is written to help facilitate that greater becoming. God Bless
America.
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