Is
a Central Bank Gold Run at Hand?
by
Charles Goyette
Money and Markets
Recently
by Charles Goyette: Presidential
Debates, Round 2: The Third-Man Theme
On learning
that French gold was being held by the U.S. Federal Reserve, French
President Charles de Gaulle is reported to have said, I could
hardly sleep easily with such an arrangement. So in 1965 he
ordered French navy ships to cross the Atlantic to pick up $150
million in gold held in the Feds New York vaults and deliver
it to the Banque de France in Paris.
It was a prudent
move by de Gaulle. And it was consistent with the advice I have
long given: Do not leave your gold in the care of somebody else.
Take physical possession of your gold.
De Gaulle realized
the United States was running an international con. It had promised
that holders of U.S. dollars would always be able to redeem them
for gold at the official rate of $35 per ounce. But like someone
writing bad checks, it was clear that the U.S. was printing more
dollars than it could possibly redeem at that rate.
De Gaulle was
ahead of the pack. But before long other nations figured out the
same thing and began demanding gold for the dollars they held. Soon
Washington began to hemorrhage gold as it faced demands to redeem
tens of billions of its paper dollars.
It was nothing
less than a run on the U.S. gold bank
On a single
day in March 1971, 400 tons of gold were taken from the exchange
mechanism, the London Gold Pool, forcing it to close. By August,
President Nixon closed the gold window entirely, essentially defaulting
on Americas explicit promise of dollar convertibility.
Germany
Demands Accountability
Like France,
Germany has had bitter national experience with the hyperinflation
of fiat currency. It should not be surprising if both nations are
sensitive bellwethers when funny money business is afoot. Now we
are beginning to learn about steps Germany has been taking consistent
with troubling questions today about the worlds central banks
and the gold entrusted to their vaults.
In the (U.K.)
Telegraph, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard reports a German court
has ordered an inquiry into gold purportedly held for Germany in
London, Paris, and New York:
The German
Court of Auditors told legislators in a redacted report that the
gold had never been verified physically and ordered
the Bundesbank to secure access to the storage sites.
It called
for repatriation of 150 tons over the next three years to test
the quality and weight of the gold bars. It said Frankfurt has
no register of numbered gold bars.
The report
also claimed that the Bundesbank had slashed its holdings in London
from 1,440 tons to 500 tons in 2000 and 2001, allegedly because
storage costs were too high. The metal was flown to Frankfurt
by air freight.
It may be that
an audit will prove all of Germanys gold in foreign central
banks can be accounted for. It may have been that Frances
gold would have been safe for decades in the hands of the Federal
Reserve. But an environment like ours, toxic with monetary risk,
demands good stewardship.
What Have
Central Banks Done with the Peoples Gold?
Recently I
wrote an article questioning whether or not central banks have the
gold they say they do. Even if the bullion is in inventory, there
are pressing questions about who may hold actual title to the gold,
whether it has been loaned, pledged, swapped, or sold.
The Telegraph
alludes to the issue of title as well, reporting the German courts
action follows claims by the German civic campaign group Bring
Back our Gold and its U.S. allies in the Gold Anti-Trust Committee
that official data cannot be trusted. They allege central banks
have loaned out or sold short much of their gold.
Asking if gold
bars are actually in place is a question of inventory. Questions
about title are issues that should be answered by a thorough audit.
But there remain equally justifiable concerns about the authenticity
of the gold held by central banks, and other depositories for that
matter.
Another concerning
topic is fake gold. It is by no means a marginal issue, but one
that is serious enough that this year, for the first time, some
of the U.S. gold held by the New York Fed has been subjected to
being drilled for assay samples to test for purity. No results have
been released.
Closing
Thoughts
Those who showed
up after August 15, 1971 with U.S. dollars they hoped to exchange
for gold were too late. But de Gaulle knew there was something fishy
about U.S. monetary practices well before Nixon defaulted on Americas
gold promises. In todays troubled environment, Germany is
acting like its monetary senses are tingling.
There are warning
signs aplenty for Americans that monetary conditions are growing
more fragile by the day and that the fiat dollar will not last.
It would be nice to know that at least the peoples gold assets
are secure.
In any case,
remember this lesson:
Do not leave
your gold in the care of somebody else.
Take physical possession of your gold.
Reprinted
from Money and Markets
with permission of the author.
Copyright
© 2012
Money and Markets
The
Best of Charles Goyette
|