Gold Reserve Mysteries
by Alasdair Macleod
GoldMoney.com
Previously
by Alasdair Macleod: Shadow
Banking: The Next Landmine
Last Wednesday
the Bundesbank released
a statement to the effect that 300 tonnes of Germany's
gold will be moved from New York and 374 tonnes from Paris. This
should be a simple operation: rail or trucks from Paris, and a
few military planeloads (or ships) from America – as soon
as they have somewhere to store it.
Instead they
plan to do it over the next seven years, which is a postponement.
This tends to confirm suspicions that the gold does not actually
exist. As a side issue, along with the Bundesbank statement is a
PDF
download with slide number 14 entitled "Storage at the
Federal Reserve Bank New York". It looks like a photomontage
rather than real gold, and the come-on is to believe it's
the Bundesbank's. This gives the game away: the whole exercise
is a public relations stunt.
Why hold
any gold in New York nowadays? The Soviets are no longer menacing
the Fulda Gap. Yes, New York is obviously still a critical trading
venue, but not for physical gold – the Bundesbank apparently
withdrew 940 tonnes from the Bank of England in 2000, where the
physical market is actually located.
The reason
this matters is that independent deductive analysis has concluded
that the central banks have been supplying the market with physical
bullion in order to suppress the price, all of which is either
officially denied or goes unanswered. The origin of price suppression
actually go back to the 1990s, and was exposed by Frank Veneroso
in a paper published in 1998, confirmed by detective work from
our own James Turk, and triply confirmed by the evasive responses
on this issue given by central banks and the IMF to the Gold Anti-Trust
Action Committee (GATA). The public are unaware of this issue
because the mainstream media, with the
occasional exception, refuses to investigate the subject.
But here
is something that joins up a few more dots. We know that Gordon
Brown sold half of Britain's gold at the bottom of the market
from 1999-2002. We commonly assume that he was just incompetent.
What is not commonly appreciated is that he learned his economics
from Ed Balls, the current Shadow Chancellor. As his economics
advisor, Balls was the puppet-master and Chancellor Brown the
puppet. Ed Balls was also a close friend of Larry Summers, who
was US Deputy Secretary of the Treasury from 1995 and then Secretary
of the Treasury from 1999 to 2001 – the time of Britain's
gold sales. As Treasury secretary Summers was head of the Exchange
Stabilization Fund, the US government's mechanism for supplying
bullion to the markets. In the light of these deeply Keynesian
relationships from the mid-1990s, it is unlikely that Brown acted
in isolation. More than likely Washington was also supplying the
market through swaps and leases that were never recorded as changes
of ownership.
The net result
is that there is not enough physical gold left in the vault to
deliver to Germany, which is why they are stalling for time. What
was presented to us last Wednesday was just a desperate attempt
to stop the whole issue becoming more public.
Reprinted
with permission from GoldMoney.com.
January
21, 2013
Alasdair
Macleod runs FinanceAndEconomics.org,
a website dedicated to sound money and demystifying finance and
economics. Alasdair has a background as a stockbroker, banker and
economist. He is a Senior Fellow at the GoldMoney
Foundation.
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© 2013 GoldMoney.com
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