Monday, February 11, 2013

Think like a Giant 2



"Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.?
You will think much on this in the future."
-ANOTHER


"Something that Big Trader or Another said a long time ago about trading gold off market in the thousands. Trust me, it's there somewhere way back in the pre USAGOLD days. It seems that gold was then and is today traded between countries, CBs, special accounts,,,,,,, at not only contract prices but in the "perceived prices" that would exist in a non-dollar world. Hard to believe? Don't be so quick to laugh. We are talking about gold traded in large amounts on the "possibility" of a no dollar reserve world,,,,,, gold moved from "under the skin" to "under the skin" so to speak. […]

Today, gold is worth far more than its traded contract price,,,, and has been for some years. […]

Listen to this and listen closely: "the real value of gold today is based squarely on the probability of whether the US dollar can survive as a reserve currency"! No problem, you say? Well, you may think a little different in a few weeks or years. […]

In some cases more than a few people have "done the math" and come up with some startling probabilities and possibilities. In some perceptions, it's a political certainty!"
-FOA


In Legs there was a quote from Another that mentioned the "discount trade" in gold: "If gold rises above its commodity price it loses value in discount trade." In the comments under the post, Woland asked about it:

Woland said…

I have a question about the specific meaning of a phrase quoted in a paragraph by Another;

"[Central] banks do lend gold with a reason to control price. If gold rises above its commodity price, (me: cost of production) it loses value in discount trade".

My reading of this is that "discount trade" refers to oil sold BELOW the currency price OIL would otherwise demand, in return for gold being made available to OIL at a price far lower than would otherwise be possible, without the CB leasing/intervention. Is this the correct interpretation of the phrase?

(I am reminded of the old example by Another of $30 oil plus X amount of gold, then later the same $30 plus XX amount.)


January 18, 2013 at 11:08 AM

I responded to Woland with this comment:

Hello Woland,

My reading is that "discount trade" refers to the BIS deals in physical gold at a "discount" to the "future reset price", deals that kept the really big money wanting real gold from blowing up the paper markets and the "plan" to make it to the euro's birthday party. In the 90s, the "discount price" ranged (according to ANOTHER) from $1,000 per ounce up to $6,000 per ounce. This was a big discount on the "future reset price" of $10,000 and the real future dollar price of $30,000.

Of course he may have simply meant the low commodity price of gold when he wrote "discount trade." But I put the emphasis on the word value: "…it loses value in the discount trade." The value was the control it gave the CBs in managing the Giants. The wider the gap between gold's "price" and its obvious "value" the more room the BIS had to negotiate deals that would keep the Giants happy. Here, I'll try to make my case using ANOTHER's own words! ;D

First, let's look at the deal the Saudi's cut for themselves in the early 90s which you mentioned above. Here's how ANOTHER explained it:

Date: Sat Oct 18 1997 21:04
ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60253:

The Deal:

We ( an oil state ) now value gold in trade far higher than currencies. We are willing to use gold as a partial payment for the future use of "all oil" and value it at $1,000 US. ( only a small amount of oil is in this deal ) And take a very small amount of gold out of circulation each month using its present commodity price.

If the world price can be maintained in the $300s it would be a small price for the west to pay for cheap oil and monetary stability.

The battle is now between CBs trying to keep gold in the $300s and the "others" buying it up. In effect the governments are selling gold in any form to "KEEP IT" being used as 'REAL MONEY" in oil deals! Some people know this, that is why they aren't trading it,, they are buying it.

Not all oil producers can take advantage of this deal as it is done "where noone can see". And, they know not what has happened for gold does not change in price! But I tell you, gold has been moved and its price has changed in terms of oil! For the monthly amount to be taken off the market has changed from $10 in gold ( valued at $1,000 ) /per barrel to the current $30 in gold /per barrel still valued at $1,000! Much of this gold was in the form of deals in London to launder its movement. Because of some Asians, these deals are no longer being rolled over as paper!

First of all, they said they valued gold at $1,000/oz. in this deal and took $10 worth of physical off the market per barrel for a "small amount of oil." This was in the early days of the deal (c.1991). $10 is 1/100th of $1,000 so they were taking 1/100th of an ounce per barrel. In the early 90s the Saudis were producing about 9 million barrels per day. ANOTHER said that starting in 1991 they were taking about 20 million ounces of gold per year off the market through this deal. 20M ounces X 100 = 2 billion barrels of oil per year. Divide that by 365 days and it looks like the "small amount of oil in this deal" was 5.5M barrels per day, or about 61% of their production.

20 million ounces at $360/ounce would have cost $7.2B. At $1,000/ounce it would have cost $20B. 3.3B bbls of oil sold at $30/bbl would have brought in $100B per year. So let's say that they came to the negotiating table in 1991 saying that 20% of their production was "net-production" or surplus for which they needed a real wealth reserve (gold) in return.

There were two options on the table. To use ANOTHER's first example, they could lower the dollar price of oil from $30 to $25, but also price oil in gold at 1/400th of an ounce per barrel. Here's how ANOTHER put it:

What if the oil states offered to buy gold with oil, OUTRIGHT? No currencies involved. " We will produce flat out, all the oil you want. And, we offer this oil as payment, per barrel, to buy ( say? ) 25US dollars or gold priced by us, at ( say? ) $10,000oz.!"

The answer is very simple, the world would sell them gold for oil. I tell you now, this almost happened!

If that had happened, as ANOTHER said, anyone with gold would have gotten oil really cheap. And the gold arb would have immediately taken gold to $10,000 per ounce. The Saudis could easily exchange gold to cover their overhead costs and save their 20% excess without a problem. The problem for the CBs would be that the world would be off a fiat standard and back on a gold standard a decade before the euro's birthday party.

The other option on the table was, let's not rock the boat just yet. At $30/bbl, you want to save about $20B in gold each year. At current prices that would be 50 million ounces or 1,555 tonnes per year. But you saw what happened in the late 70s. Obviously you can't just go to the market and get that much—in other words, obviously the price of gold today is bullshit. Obviously it's going to have to reset at a much higher level someday, we'd just prefer that day not be today.

So let's see if we can figure out a way for you to take, say, 20M ounces, or 622 tonnes per year off the market as long as we can keep the price of gold low so as not to rock the fiat currency boat. We'll even underwrite (guarantee) this deal with our own gold (and we have lots of it!). From what you, the Saudis, obviously understand, this is an excellent deal for both of us, especially if the gold you get comes from someone else and not from our vaults. But either way you're covered. Deal done!

I guess we will never know the exact deal, but ANOTHER sure spilled a lot of details in his early posts if you look closely!

Now let's see what ANOTHER said about the discount trade in gold:

"As long as there is an open market for gold, it will not be allowed to trade above its commodity price! It has far too much value for that to happen. You see, in much the same way that a zero coupon bond trades at a discount to face, gold is traded for its discount of "money value to commodity price! Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.? You will think much on this in the future.

[…]

With gold discounted to its production cost and below, those that have it can trade it for its monetary value. Make no mistake, the BIS knows gold in the many thousands. The future "reset value" of gold is the key. "support the dollar with oil and the currency system works" "fail the currencies and the dollar will come off the oil standard and the BIS will reset gold to $10,000+ with many conditions. That is why they continue to accept the dollar as a reserve. If Japan or any other COUNTRY sells US treasury debt it's all over!"

[…]

The selling of old dollar reserves, alone will reprice gold in US$ terms of at least $6,000/oz! Its present interbank reserve value.

[…]

The $6,000 valuation of gold can only be true if currency deflation destroys enough dollars to bring it down to that range. Without deflation, the dollar will be devalued much lower than this (higher gold price)! Once the Euro is created and begins to effect world trade (late 1999 perhaps), the gold market will begin a transition as never before! I think it will be interesting to follow the politics of this change, yes?

[…]

When the battle to keep gold from devaluing oil ( in direct gold for oil terms ) is lost, the dollar will find "no problem" with $30,000 gold, as it will be seen as a "benefit for all" and "why did noone see this sooner"?

[…]

The true value of gold, as a monetary currency, in today's current US$ values, is over $30,000. If all currencies were destroyed, and gold only was used, this value would be higher. However, currencies will be used in the future, as today, only their value in trade will change. They will no longer be held as reserves, without gold at their side!

Okay, so if you've got really big money and you want to protect a large portion of it in physical gold, you've got to pay what to us shrimps would be a big premium. But to the true Giant it is actually a discount.

Imagine, Woland, that you woke up one day and discovered that you owned an oil field that would produce millions of barrels a day for the rest of your life. Would you consider that a windfall? In fact, that's exactly what it is. And with that windfall you will be able to raise your standard of living up to the greatest standard available to mankind in 2013. You will even be able to accumulate wealth on top of your unlimited "maximum consumption" binge. What a rare treat!

But what you won't be able to do is get the full windfall profit from moving your excess into physical gold that we shrimps can get. You already got your windfall. You simply have too much money to do what we're doing. If you tried to go "all in", you alone would drive the price so high that you'd never get the windfall you were after. Go ahead, try. Approach your local Bullion Bank and see how far you get. I bet you'll eventually find yourself in a private room somewhere in London receiving an education and an offer. What seemed like a huge premium when you walked in will feel like a big discount by the time you leave.

When ANOTHER used terms like discount (and even premium) in this context, I think he was usually referring to gold, and I don't think he was talking about the 10% and 20% premiums and discounts we shrimps are used to. I think he was talking about Freegold-sized premiums and discounts. Remember this fellow from the post?

"A proposal was offered to borrow in broken lots, 3.5 and 5.5 million ozs for resale. It was turned down. The owner offered to sell only, no lease. What turned heads was that someone else stepped in and took it all, at a premium!"

I wonder what premium he got. That's the same 9,000,000 ounces I mentioned later in the post converting it to 280 tonnes. Remember ANOTHER saying:

"Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.? You will think much on this in the future."

Think now! I wonder if this guy got "thousands US an oz." when he was expecting $310/ounce. Let's see, that was a $2.8B sale offer at $310. At $1,000 it would have been $9B. Yeah, I guess that would turn some heads.

Woland, have you noticed that in ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) there are many times when ANOTHER gives brief replies to various people yet we don't always know the question that was asked or the context in which it was asked? Well, I added the link to the old Kitco archives to my list of links in the sidebar. It's called Early Kitco Forum Archive.

It's pretty easy to click over and find the comments associated with ANOTHER's answers, and I think it adds a new dimension to (THOUGHTS!). For example, here's a discussion about that 9 million ounce deal, but you wouldn't have known that's what it was about from reading only ANOTHER's side of the conversation. I included a little more of the discussion for additional context (and also just because it was interesting), so enjoy!


Date: Fri Dec 12 1997 22:18
sweat (To Anybody) ID#23782:


Is there any way to find out if the 9,000,000 oz. deal really happened?

Where might the trade have taken place?

Is this whole gold trading business really that much "cloak and dagger"?


Date: Fri Dec 12 1997 22:31
ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60253:

SW,
What is "cloak and dagger"?


Date: Fri Dec 12 1997 22:54
sweat (ANOTHER) ID#23782:


"Cloak and dagger" is an expression I would use for an action ( or trade ) done in great secracy.

My experience as a trader has taught me to value such things as
a ) time and sales - as reported on various exchanges
b ) open interest - as reported on various exchanges

The market always moves to size, you spoke of "making the turn". I would love to see documentation of a trade that size.

No offence intended, of course.


Date: Fri Dec 12 1997 23:08
ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60253:

SWEAT:
You will not see 80% or more of gold deals. If it was done with all to see the discount value would be lost as the world price would explode. This is not the relm of any public “wall street”. At one time it belonged mostly to the Barron. Now it is large with the BIS and super rich. Wars will be fought over the lack of “visibility” of these dealings.


Date: Sat Jan 10 1998 21:50
sweat (ANOTHER) ID#23782:


What quantity of GOLD, paper or physical, has OIL traditionally purchased on an annual basis? How much paper GOLD is out there ready to be squeezed? Do you think OIL will be able to collect what is owed to them?

Why would OIL not want some ownership of GOLD EQUITIES?

Date: Sat Jan 10 1998 23:13
Cmax (COMEX is only but a refernence to the value of paper gold, NOT physical.) ID#344205:


It is interesting to watch all these various reasons for gold’s fall…..but most are missing the REAL issue.

The fact is, that when we talk about the purchase of gold, we are really talking about two divergent things:
a. that of the physical metal……… ( money )
b. that of a paper derivative, an I.O.U., kind of like a dollar bill…… ( currency )

What ( and who ) determines the price every day of the gold market?

Obviously, everyone looks first to COMEX as a reference before adjusting their prices.

What does COMEX use?

Supply and demand determined by it’s participants, who trade in gold contracts ( er ah, derivatives? ) , gold leases, and options and futures ( er ah, derivatives of derivatives ) .

One point must be plainly put forward:
Gold contracts, no matter what they are printed on or HOW they are worded, they are merely DEBTS, nothing more than a simple I.O.U. There is nowhere near enough gold on the planet to satisfy all these I.O.U.’s ( debts ) that are outstanding…….. and they are the very antithesis of what acumulators ( hoarders ) of wealth find in the spirit of holding real gold ( money ) .

I find it so wildly insane that holders of physical gold, ( money ) , would allow their wealth to be sold ( or valued ) at a price that is established by the supply of FIAT gold. If this scenario was written into a novel, no one would believe it……. or one would read it only as a comedy.

ANOTHER said it quite well, in his comment that “there is no end to the amount of paper gold that can be created.” All of this FIAT supply has overwhelmed the REAL demand for physical, and most people believe that they REALLY have purchased gold, when they buy these contracts. As long as the majority of gold purchasers believe that their paper is as “real” as physical, the COMEX paper gold value reference will continue to drop.

I for one, no longer accept established paper gold values for the real value of gold. Just try and buy a substantial quantity of the yellow……and what do you see? 6 months ago, you could buy at spot. Today, one ounce coins have a premium of $14 over spot….and rising every day. Oh, and don’t forget that even when paying the “premiums”, one has to really work at finding the coins for delivery. Easier said, there is now a phenominal demand, but very little supply of physical. And yet we allow paper to determine gold prices. Gold has never had the brute demand as what we have today……yet we are told that prices are down due to lack of interest.

COMEX should now be looked upon as the animal that it really is……
A REFERENCE TO THE VALUE OF PAPER GOLD. It has nothing to do with the price of physical beyond suckering in the few ignorant to sell there physical for the price of paper.


ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60253:

CMAX: You are exactly correct! Follow your thoughts. good luck

SWEAT: What quantity of GOLD, paper or physical, has OIL traditionally purchased on an annual basis?
From 1991, appx. 20m/oz./yr., now it is more.

How much paper GOLD is out there ready to be squeezed?
Over 14,000 tons.

Do you think OIL will be able to collect what is owed to them?
It will come outright or thru the increase in value of metal owned after an oil for gold bid.


Date: Wed Feb 04 1998 20:09
kuston (followups) ID#273227:


Another - Did I misunderstand you posts last year? When you were promoting your gold theory last year - you stated silver and platinum would crash along with paper. I remember specifically asking this question just before I made a large physical purchase. Today, you are promoting world wealth will go into all physicals. I ask only for personal reasons. My physical collection has been going on for a long time, that's how I found Kitco many many months ago.

Date: Wed Feb 04 1998 20:04
sweat (ANOTHER) ID#23782:


Is it still possible that OIL will make a bid outside the BIS? If so, where might one look to follow this drama? How has the collection of physical progressed? Kitcoites have surmised RBA's 167 tonnes went to China or South Korea. ( Korean collection of 161 tonnes looks suspicious ) Any comments?


Date: Wed Feb 04 1998 23:23
ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60254:

REPLYS:

Mr. Sweat,
If oil or the BIS bid for gold, you will know it ! In your terms,

" up front and personal"??

RBA's 167 tonnes ? No comment.

Mr. Kuston,
Please understand, that wealth will move into all forms of real assets as the destruction of our debt/ digitial currency system continues. When the currencies move to a final resolution, it will be the "marketplace for precious metals" that will die first! It is well known that gold will hold it's value above everything. All other metals could lose much of the value they gained prior to this meltdown! Remember, "when the currencies go to nuclear war, all paper and paper markets will burn"! Many hard assets will lose in the public mind as confusion will rule. In the thoughts of many, gold will perform!
______________________________________________________


The discussion above sparked an email exchange with a reader, the conclusion of which I wanted to share with you:


Hello XXXX,

Okay, now I think I see where you were going with this "top level approach". Here's what I think. At the highest level of wealth, I think the giants that understand gold have a lot less than 50% of their wealth in gold at today's price. At a Freegold price it may be closer to 50%, but I doubt they would book their gold at Freegold prices now, or even at the much higher off-market price they paid.

At that level, gold is merely insurance of sorts, even if they understand Freegold, and especially if they understand Freegold. The reason it is transacted at a higher-than-market price is so that the seller of the gold gets the future Freegold windfall now at the time of the sale, and the buyer simply preserves his current purchasing power through the transition. I'm only speaking very roughly, of course, since the higher prices mentioned by Another were not the full revaluation figure, but some number in between. So essentially the "Freegold windfall profit" is being split between the buyer and seller at the highest levels.

If you have, say, $20B that you want to put into gold, you can only do so in paper unallocated through the BBs. When the revaluation happens, as Another said, you will get your $20B in real gold at the new Freegold price. In other words, you buy $20B in unallocated paper gold today and then after Freegold you will have about 11 tonnes of real physical. Alternatively, if you want to take possession of your physical now, or have it allocated now, you are taken into a private room and given a very private education on the realities and constraints of today's gold market.

Here's my guess. Perhaps you are given two choices. $20B in paper gold as above and you suffer the same fate as everyone else in paper gold but you're at least guaranteed that physical at the revaluation price (11t), or you can take 22t now for your $20B. Let's see, that 22t option would be at a present price of $28K per ounce. So you're still likely to double your wealth if you take the latter deal and believe the story. But there's no way you are going to get the 370 tonnes that today's price says you should be able to buy.

But more likely than that is they simply say, look, you can't get more than 5 tonnes if you want physical. If you want paper gold, we'll take your $20B and give you the paper gold credits, but you can't have it allocated because there's simply not enough physical to go around. So let's say this guy gives them his $20B and also gets the 5t allocated. Come Freegold his paper gold will bring him 9.9t plus he'll have his 5t allocated for a total of 14.9 tonnes. See how that outcome is right in between the two choices above? And the best part is that this way they didn't have to explain Freegold to him, they simply had to explain the realities and constraints of today's gold market.

So now let's look at this guy's net worth. Let's say in Freegold his gold is roughly half of his net worth. 14.9 tonnes in Freegold would be about $26B, so let's say this guy is worth around $50B in Freegold. Maybe he's worth $40B today (pre-Freegold) because he's going to make a little bit of a gain (~25% gain overall) through the transition because of his choice to go after some physical gold. Today he only has 5 tonnes in actual physical, but in reality he has the equivalent of 14.9t because he put half of his net worth into a combination of paper and physical gold.

So, at $1,680, 14.9 tonnes is $805M, which represents only 2% of his current net worth. This is what I mean by insurance. The really big money cannot go deep enough into physical to get a windfall anywhere near what we shrimps can. It can only use gold as insurance to preserve what it already has, and with a little foresight, make a relatively modest gain.

Now, if we apply this across the board to those elites with $35T in net worth, 2% in real physical would be $700B or about 13,000 tonnes of physical, which sounds reasonable. But perhaps some of them have much more, like, for example, the Saudis. They could easily have 6,000+ tonnes alone (according to Another's figures), but even that is small potatoes compared to what they could have bought at market prices over the years.

Here is what the USG worried about back in 1973. It's from Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, V. XXXVI, The Energy Crisis, 1969-1974:

Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait, limited by small populations, inadequate numbers of technically capable people and a dearth of non-oil resources, will not be able to increase spending on imports as fast as oil revenues mount. Nor could their gifts to other Middle Eastern nations even on a generous scale, greatly reduce this surplus of receipts over current expenditures.

Thus the foreign assets of the Middle East countries could amount to between $50–$80 billion by 1980 in constant 1973 dollars. At the upper limit these assets would be equal to about 60% of the world’s gold and foreign exchange reserves in 1972. The trends already in motion, if continued through 1985, would result in the Middle East oil producing states accumulating foreign assets that would be truly astronomical. Their assets would range from a low of $100 billion to as much as $180 billion by 1985, comparable to total gross U.S. foreign assets and to more than double net U.S. foreign assets.

Foreign assets of such enormous magnitude would inevitably be held in relatively liquid forms, such as securities and short-term instruments. The Middle East countries lack the industries and managers to make direct investments abroad on a really massive scale. Moreover, their buying up existing foreign companies would cause strong policy reactions.

In any case the Middle East oil producers would have unprecedented financial power. Discretionary use of such vast assets obviously has enormous potential for disruption of financial markets. Attempts to neutralize these assets through capital controls in producing countries might induce the producers to curtail output.

Footnote:
In an April 17 briefing memorandum, Saunders and Quandt reminded Kissinger of Yamani’s proposal for a special relationship with the United States (see Document 140), the “real purpose” of which was to develop closer strategic ties by binding the United States to Saudi oil, offsetting a short-term U.S. balance-of-payments problem by investing in the United States, and thus guaranteeing that the Saudis would not cut off the flow of oil.

The point here is that they knew, even back in 1973, that the Saudis essentially had gold cornered. The Saudis could, theoretically, have had 60% of the world's gold by the early 80s and probably all of it by the late 80s (and it's a good thing for them that didn't happen). But instead, someone worked out a deal and, by 1999, let's say the Saudis had 6,000 tonnes of physical amounting to maybe 4% or 5% of the world's gold at that time, rather than all of it or even 60% of it.

You see, the Saudi's windfall came in the 1940s when they woke up and found themselves sitting on top of the world's richest resource. Freegold will not be their windfall, they already got that long ago. Freegold will simply preserve it for them long into the future, perhaps even well past the end of fossil fuels. And that's kind of the way it is for any Giant at that level. If you're worth $40B today, you already got your "windfall" and Freegold is simply a way to lock it in and preserve it far into the future, it is not a way to multiply it many times over. The realities and constraints of today's gold market make that impossible.

There's plenty more that wealth at that level can do other than just hoard gold:









The point is that they don't hoard gold for profit. They do it to lock in the profit that they already made above and beyond their ability to spend it in their lifetime. And that's the way the gold market has been managed at this level. Sure, they will get some gain, some profit from the Freegold revaluation, because not everyone at that level is in gold.

So, yes, those higher prices are already here for the super-wealthy Giants, and always have been. That's what Another was trying to tell us. And this is my version of a "top level approach"! ;D

Sincerely,
FOFOA

Hello Fofoa:

Wow! Thanks for a really comprehensive answer. The "back room" explanation was vaguely familiar, so I'm sure you're dealing with questions already asked and answered. Your email read like a personal post, and I'm going to go back and re-read it several times until I get it all. This bit...


"freegold windfall profit" is being split between the buyer and seller at the highest levels...

is a great explanation, of a more scrambled thought I had, but this...

they don't hold gold for profit

is a Goliath idea: nothin' like that ever entered my head before! Both concepts would be very bloggable, by the way. Thanks again, and all the best!

XXXX



762 comments:

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Anonymous said...

@jojo
You are exactly what I'm talking about. A self-righteous un-intelligent idiot who feels the need to butt in when they are not asked to.

What gives you the right to pontificate? It's not your site stupid.

Write your own blog then you can answer people's comments. I guess you won't get too many comments because you have nothing to say that remotely resembles thought.

Go and douche yourself ... whatever that means.


RevolutionOfNations said...

First, you figure out it's a game.
Second, you figure out the rules of the game.
Third, you identify the players of the game.
Fourth, you realize you're not in the game.

Indenture said...

I said I feel privileged when FOFOA answers one of my questions.
"It's his blog. Why should I have to rely on other people's answers? Why do you feel privileged? What's so special about FOFOA? Other blogs answer peoples questions. He's not a God or some high priest.. is he?"

Perhaps it is the Southern Gentleman in me but when I am at a party and the host is otherwise engaged I don't throw a fit because he won't to talk to me. It's his party and if he is busy I will mingle. Wow, as I have been looking at the beer selection I have noticed that the people here are having very intelligent conversations. Now, I have a choice. I can storm up to the host and demand why he won't pay attention to me or I can listen to the conversations around me and choosing one of my liking I can introduce myself and move on from there. It continually amazes me that manners are somehow forgot in cyberspace or is it that manners in general are deteriorating. The question, "What's so special about FOFOA?" Really? There are a handful of people in the world who 'openly' discuss this topic and, in my honest opinion, because I was courteous from day one this unknown gentleman answered my questions. We are attending an historic party, not dominated by a God or priest but no matter how you look at it someone is in charge and frankly I would rather be his friend who can join the conversation than a stranger watching from across the room.

Or perhaps the word privilege is applied because I recognize that I am in the company of superiors and I am humble enough to accept it. Cause hey, I am in their company!

RevolutionOfNations said...

Indenture, god gave us language. And so the game began...

milamber said...

@JoJo

Agreed. There is no question that the magical money tree has been responsible for an increase in the GPL (and thank you ROW for graciously taking in our exported inflation).

That is not in dispute in my mind. My question for FOFOA was more along the lines of linguistics and the meaning of the word value.

His answer about it being a verb or noun and direction made it much more clear for me, and taken in that context *I think* I understand better what he meant when he said that MSFT has no value if people stop bidding on it. I think that where I was going wrong was not understanding the subtle differences on the meaning of the word value depending on the context in which it is used.

Milamber

Unknown said...

First time poster with I think some understanding of Freegold since I've read every post FOFOA has written as well as Another's Thoughts. Not the Gold Trail yet from FOA. I do not claim to understand it all and this is likely the reason I don't have a good answer for my question.

Can anyone provide some more insight into how to profit from the revaluation (which I agree is coming) when the goverment could simply decree a 90% tax on the sale of Au? I hope the answer isn't to store my Au in a bunch of different countries and hope that they all don't implement this kind of a tax.


I will take a RRTFB if somebody would be so kind as to show me which post I should look through.

Regards

DP said...

Indenture,

across the room

… like this?

Anonymous said...

Motley Fool,

You said: "My using an estimated future reset value of gold under the FG system, to determine the current day value of what they are receiving in return for their oil."

Yes I realize exactly what you are doing. So I am assuming what you are saying is true (they are being paid some FG like price, use whatever you want but it has to be some number - 30k or 55k) and then taking it to it's logical conclusion by trying to fit that assertion into reality.

If they are being paid 1.5 Trillion then the world value of Oil is 12.5 Trillion a year is it not?

If the GDP is 70 Trillion and the Oil value 12.5 Trillion that is 17% is that not?

Does 17% make sense to you? It does not make sense to me (it is far too high) which is why I think your assertion is false.

Are you following me yet?

Motley Fool said...

athrone

Yes. I have understood your words every time because I make a concerted effort to read with the intent of comprehension. You do not, so I am continually forced to repeat myself, after which you again do not read to comprehend...ad nauseum, until my screaming it many many times finally pierces the veil of your unknowing...and then we can continue with the next thing you are ignoring. Seriously, why should I expend the effort. Go reread my replies. repeatedly. until it either becomes clear or you are able to form polite questions if you are uncertain what I mean.

"Are you following me yet?"

What a joke.
Blech.

RevolutionOfNations said...

Chet, if you have something of material value, you want to hang on to that... That's about all there is to it. There is no "profit" to be made in any paper or "investment" at this point. You have to look at where you are in your life(age<=>experience), and decide when you want to die. You basically need to make a plan for what you want in life and do just that. After you accomplish your goal, the best thing is to die. That's up to you to plan though..

Anonymous said...

Again, what makes more sense, that Another was describing a 15 year worldwide conspiracy where the supply side of oil is $400/bbl and the demand side is $100/bbl (e.g.)

OR

That Another was describing some very specific Oil deals with some very specific trading partners, that only came about because both parties realized the $300 price of Gold was too low in that time frame (that both were predicting a price in the thousands to the point they were willing to accept the trade at that price).

The first is extremely far fetched (to me) the second, is much more believable. He made that claim, and it was proven. That is a fact.

Some of the other claims being made by FOFOA and others here are extrapolations that are severely deficient in evidence IMHO.

Unknown said...

Vote for confiscation?

A delicious bass.

With fries?

Welcome!

Motley Fool said...

Chet

Thank you....for your polite question.

The simple answer is, we do not expect they will confiscate or tax it, because it is not in their interest to do so.

I note the pirate has already linked two relevant posts for your consideration. I have a vague feeling there is another, but I forget atm which one. Perhaps someone else will chip in.

TF

Anonymous said...

Motley Fool,

Well you directly gave an example about Gold being traded at $55,000 an oz. Then you implied you did not claim Gold was being traded at $55,000 an oz, then you turned around and said that is exactly what you said. So I honestly have no clue what your position is or what your argument is against mine.

Anonymous said...

@Indenture
You make a nice eloquent point but once again I still wonder why you need to feel "privileged"

I you think your silken words are some sort of put down to me then you are mistaken. As for manners I believe you are also mistaken. When someone is trying to have a conversation with a person who writes a blog I think the interruption from others is bad manners. I only respond to others as they respond to me. I never go out of my way to be offensive in the first place.
Too many people on this site think they have the God given right to act superior and belittle anyone that doesn't bow and curtsy to their vast knowledge. They find it tiresome to have people ask questions that they daren't ask otherwise their superior stance would be uncovered.

Please feel free to circulate at the party that you are so privileged to be at. As for me I am entitled to react and question anyone that decides to write a blog for publication to the whole World. If this blog is for only a certain "gentlemanly" select few then it should be private.

Anonymous said...

Is Gold or is it not being traded at higher prices behind closed doors in 2013? This is an assertion.

If the answer is yes, then the real value of Oil is much higher than the demand side of $100/bbl would imply. That is a logical truth based on the assertion that "Gold is being traded for Oil at higher prices than spot behind closed doors."

So that is one counter-argument to the assertion that Gold is being traded at higher prices: it creates a large gap between the supply side and demand side for Oil prices. Because Oil is only valuable if people can afford it, I am saying this is does not fit with the world we live in.

If this is incorrect logic please indicate how/where.

Anonymous said...

I have a vague feeling there is another, but I forget atm which one.

The Gold Must Flow

Motley Fool said...

athrone

fuck me. here we go with my repeating my previous again.

"Well you directly gave an example about Gold being traded at $55,000 an oz."

NO. I estimated what the VALUE will be in the future, of what they receive today. That being some cash and some gold.

I did not say they accepted it as if it were the future value.

I did not even speculate on what the current interbank value was, except noting that I find both $1000 or 1650x4 non-plausible, and asking if you suggest those are correct.

Anonymous said...

To continue the logic, if the answer to the question "Is Gold or is it not being traded at higher prices behind closed doors in 2013?" is No, then the demand side of Oil of $100/bbl must be the real value of Oil must it not!

If that is true than Saudi Arabia in 2013 really only earns $400 billion a year, and they really only have $20k/person per capita.

Now, what makes a Giant? From this website's definitions it is someone with enough money that they experience a decreased marginal utility for it (aka they have so much they don't know what to do with). If this understanding is incorrect, please tell me!

So put 2 and 2 together: a country where the average person has $20k per person and the fact that this does Not a Giant make. Now you have just proven that Saudi Arabia is not a Giant.

If Saudi Arabia is not a Giant, then who is! That to me would prove that Giants do not, in fact, exist!

If there is an error in this logic, feel free to demonstrate where and I will gladly accept the refutation!

Motley Fool said...

athrone

I have already answered and adresed all those points in my comments again.

I am tired of repeating myself because you are too idk stubborn to actually read what is written, or to thick to understand it.

Reread my replies if you like.

I dont care anymore.

Anonymous said...

Motley Fool,

Ok let us be very precise. You are apparently saying that doesn't count because that is "Future Value." I'm sorry but I disagree.

If Gold in 1999 was used in Oil deals with a value of $1000-6000/oz (as Another said in your own quotes) **that was the price of Gold was it not?**

The same is true in our 2013 example. Anytime a bid matches an ask, and a trade is completed, that is the present price/value of that asset!

If you are going to argue shadow deals with higher value than market, you have to assign a price. Another assigned a value "in the thousands" in 1999. Well guess what, that was not future value but present value because that determined how much Gold it took to complete the trade!

Just because the rest of the world (who doesn't have access to this trade apparently) can't see it doesn't mean that is not the real price.

DP said...

Relativity: What is Physical Gold REALLY Worth?

Has the paper gold market leveraged up or down since 1998?

RevolutionOfNations said...

DP, paper gold??
Are you calling me from the 90's?
-Sorry, don't have a land line anymore..

Anonymous said...

Saudi Arabia did not need to sell Gold in 1999, so the spot price of $300 was not accurate of the value of Gold to them.

The true value of Gold for Saudi Arabia in 1999, if Another is to believed, was actually "in the many thousands"

That is present value not future value. The only reason it appears to be "future value" is because the assertion states that the deals were "behind closed doors" so they were unable to move the "present value" (spot price). Had they been transparent, obviously the price of Gold would have skyrocketed to match that "future value" instantly.

I hope I am being clear...

Edwardo said...

Chet,

I think the consensus view around here is that, whatever "bumps in the road" may occur with respect to gold ownership, any scheme that impedes the free flow of physical will be, by definition, antithetical to the new system, and won't be long for this world.

Nickelsaver said...

FOFOA,

I think Jonas would like some personal time and attention.

DOGGO TOO

RevolutionOfNations said...

Athrone, read my latest comments and tell me how "Saudi Arabia" amounts to "Anything" in these times... Ah, gold... Yes it's going to be in "safe" hands... The family of Saud, did anyone ever believe that!!!???? Trust me the Rothschild family will never fall to some turkey called "saud". The house of Saud may want to have some get away plan at this point. And by this post I have warned them officially(they read this blog).

KnallGold said...

-Linda Lovelace, lol ;-) seen that "Kulturzeit" auf 3SAT, quite lachrymatory -"Those Revolutionary Days" was the song which brought me to tears after a "split" with my Seelenverwandte (no true english word yet found) Linda B., what a flashback of spiritual-erotic Nostalgia! Hugs and Kisses to all Jews!

Bought the 2013 Panda and Australian Lunar coins Monday, absolutely gorgeous! Good Job at UBS Basel, looks like they got it!
Seen there the new Valcambi 50g "chocolate" Goldbar, 1g pieces can be split off, wow, great idea!

KG, member #1 of the all-in club(cult?) AIC,
Best Regards,
KG

The King is Dead! ....

Anonymous said...

Jonas,

I am using Saudi Arabia as a counterexample to the idea that Giants exist, because:

1. They are often cited on this blog as an example of a Giant, and

2. If an Oil exporter shipping 11 Million bbl a day is not a Giant, then who is?

RevolutionOfNations said...

Knall... You want to take on the responsibility of jews? Really?? I'm happy in case you want to shoulder that burden(It's REAL heavy). This may be something that people don't realize.. Jews suffer, for us. They have a purpose, but today that purpose is harder than ever to fulfill. Knall... You may be in over your head... But on the other hand when you find your calling and understand your purpose, only death stands in your way... And he may be an old friend...

RevolutionOfNations said...

Athrone, who made the promise?

ampmfix said...

Hey MF, of course 37 kilos is a lot for us shrimps... wish I had them... ;0)

ampmfix said...

@Indenture
Thanks for the advice but I try to choose my words carefully, "growing belief..." was already watering down the "absolute" that striked you.
@Nickel
ok, I will think about what could be that "unnoticed" level.
@PM
Interesting activity you had, thanks for sharing.
@jojo
I do the same with electronics, hoard to one day extract the gold. Don't forget about connectors, in particular inkjet cartridges have a lot of gold in them (not quite 37 kilos ahaha).

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Corb Lund said:

When the oil stops, everything stops, nothing left in the fountain
Nobody wants paper money, son, so you just as well stop countin'
Can you break the horse, can you light the fire, what's that I beg your pardon?

You best start thinking where food comes from and I hope you tend a good garden

Gettin' down on the mountain, gettin' down on the mountain
Don’t wanna be around when the shit goes down
I'll be gettin' on down the mountain

When the truck don’t run, the bread don’t come , have a hard time finding petrol
Water aint runnin' in the city no more do you hold any precious metal
Can you gut the fish, can you read the sky, what's that about over crowdin'
You ever seen a man who's kids aint ate for 17 days and countin'

Gettin' down on the mountain, gettin' down on the mountain
Don’t wanna be around when the shit goes down
I'll be gettin' on down the mountain

There aint no heat and the powers gone out, It's kerosene lamps and candles
The roads are blocked it's all grid locked, you got a short wave handle?
Can you track the deer , can you dig the well, couldn't quite hear your answer
I think I see a rip in the social fabric, brother can you spare some ammo?

Gettin' down on the mountain, gettin' down on the mountain
Don’t wanna be around when the shit goes down
I'll be goin' to ground on the mountain

When the oil stops, everything stops, nothing left in the fountain
Nobody wants paper money, son, so you just as well stop countin'
Can you break the horse, can you light the fire, what’s that I beg your pardon?

I think I see a rip in the social fabric, brother can you pass the ammo?

Gettin' down on the mountain, gettin' down on the mountain
Don’t wanna be around when the shit goes down, I'll be
Gettin' down on the mountain

Gettin Down on the Mountain


Yep

byiamBYoung said...

Geez, I have a hell of a cramp in my scrolling finger from bypassing all the Athrone crap.

I come here for information and enlightenment, and I find this spidermonkey ripping the curtains to shreds.

Athrone, I will respond to you this once, and then disengage.

It is clear that a dialog with you is unproductive.

Read the material provided here and challenge your own beliefs, for the sake of deeper understanding. Or leave.

Thanks




Indenture said...

Kind of tense today so...

Knotty Pine said...

Joy of Learning,

Before I found this blog I read a book called "Empire of Debt." It challenged my worldview in many ways. The way I thought about history (mainly U.S.) was turned upside down. The book was a chilling wake-up call for me. It revealed the almost comic insanity (and likely end) of our debt fueled empire.

In the first "Silence of the Lambs" movie (and the best IMHO) called "Manhunter" there is a scene where Dr. Lektor accuses Agent Graham of visiting him in jail to simply "get the old scent back." I think "Empire of Debt" prepared me to be open to the ideas (get the scent) when I began reading this blog.

http://movieclips.com/gSyH-manhunter-movie-were-just-alike/

Regarding the subject of trolls. I would hope we all exercise caution when assigning bad intent to any of the comments here. When I read AD comment that he was not aware of any signs of USD hegemony eroding I have to wonder if he reads the news. At some point commentors need to educate themselves. It also seems to me that when you ask the same question 26 times (and get the same answer) maybe it is time to figure out why you are not absorbing the material here. If you cannot find agreement here maybe it is time to move on.

Franco said...

I wonder if I'm the only one who finds it tiresome when one poster monopolizes these otherwise wonderful threads. Last one it was "Tyrannyofthepresent". You could compile all his posts from the previous thread and make a doctoral dissertation. Now it's "athrone". It would be cool if there were a "post count limit" for each user, per thread, unless of course you are one of the apostles of this blog and are exempted from such restriction by the gracious host.

byiamBYoung said...

Franco,

I agree. Typically, the limit is self-imposed, with no administration necessary. Rarely, we get a moonbat like Athrone who gums up the works.

The best mechanism for cleansing the pipeline is to ignore the moonbat. It's hard, because bringing the hammer down is such a cathartic action.

Instead, try walking away from the computer and kicking the dog. It's almost as good.

Cheers

Michael dV said...

Pat...confession must come before penance..
TF...your unworthy adversary just wants, after monopolizing and aggravating the board, to be able to say...'they couldn't answer my questions and they keep saying RTFB. They are a bunch of cultists"
Sometimes criminals do what they do just to see the look on your face....thus it is with trolls.

Anand Srivastava said...

athrone: you are sounding very dumb.

If you can't understand that yes only SA is being given the privilege of gold payment. It is IMO being done to keep the price of oil low. But they want gold to sell it low. The world needs the oil, and SA can supply enough oil to keep the world running. If they could not fulfill this task, the deal would break. Due to this deal the US can attack the other oil producing nations with impunity.

If USA produces enough oil for themselves then they could break the deal themselves, but I don't think that outcome makes sense.

duggo: you feel as entitled as the very young generation. They haven't seen scarcity, and they feel that they must be given whatever they want. Probably, you need to grow up a little, and understand you don't get everything you want.

And be thankful that other people reply to your questions, and you don't feel like talking in a well.

Robert said...

Think like an Orca

I appreciate the distinction between the Giants and the Shrimps, but if I may make a marine analogy, the ocean has more creatures than whales and shrimps. Obviously a whale sees the ocean differently than the smaller creatures of the sea. The whale can take a broader view, swim greater distances, live a longer life, store a lot of blubber, and enjoy a diet where the availability of plankton and small fish is relatively predictable. Smaller creatures see the ocean in much narrower terms, and may have more of a "tide to tide" or "hide in the reef" mindset. Perhaps the shrimps could learn a thing or two from the giants of the deep.

But what about the orcas? The orcas are a lot like whales, but they are different too. the orcas are savages who are not content to eat plankton. They enjoy chasing frightened seals out of the water, clenching the hapless victims in their powerful jaws, and dragging them away to a bloody and tasty end.

So it is true in the financial world. There are Giants. There are Shrimps. And there are Orcas. The Orcas are the large opportunists. They are large players like hedge funds who seek to exploit arbitrage opportunities. They are the large traders who enjoy a savage game. Their mindset is very different from both the Giants and the Shrimps.

If there really is a "private room" where massive quantity bullion buyers get a private lesson in the two tier gold market, why haven't the orcas found it yet? The orcas don't care if the gold market collapses. They are not looking for a store of value. They are looking for a trade, an opportunity to play the arbitrage, a chance to chase a frightened seal out of the water.

Why haven't the orcas shown up yet? People have been talking about the over-leveraged paper gold market for years. So far, no orcas. They are definitely out there somewhere, but why aren't they patrolling along our beach?

Beer Holiday said...

@Robert,

I don't think the Orcas see it quite like that. On George Soros' wikipedia page is a quote that he think the financial sytems is already broken.

"We witnessed the collapse of the financial system ... It was placed on life support, and it's still on life support. There's no sign that we are anywhere near a bottom."

My guess is that's how the giants see it - that it's already broken. And there are large currency moves made, we don't get to see the gold market, so who knows.

The paper gold market hasn't been broken yet, so I guess the answer is "the orcas can't brake it".

Perhaps the OTC market is insulated it's opaguness, and the freebanking structure of the bullion banks.

Anonymous said...

Robert,

So the Orca decides he wants in on some whale action. He gets in on the deal and pays some hefty premium for bullion that lower forms of sea life are unaware of. Now he has his bullion, then what? Is he going to hold until Freegold and then cash in on his 2 bagger? Remember, the buyer splits an already greatly reduced potential return on money, due to the premium, with the seller who gets his return up front. The Orca can do far better than that in leveraged paper.

Also, it is my understanding that these possible bullion deals are made at the BIS level, a very exclusive and rarefied level where hedgers are not entertained. If the objective is to maintain an artificially low gold price, it would make no sense to allow anyone to play that wasn't going to hold the gold until Freegold. No, I think Orcas are too small to get in on the deal.

Robert said...

Matrix,
My orca is not thinking like an ordinary whale and has no intention to act like an ordinary whale. He is not willing to pay the hefty premium. When they take him to the room and explain that there is not enough physical gold available, he says "Fine, I'll take all you have, but I am not paying the premium. I don't care if I run the price. In fact, I WANT to run the price." He is thinking about biting down hard on that seal. Really hard. Why wouldn't he? He smells vulnerability. He's a carnivore not a gentle giant plankton eating store of value herbivore!

DP said...

Orcas have the wrong type of temperament.

Are they in it for a better world?

MatrixSentry said...

Robert,

I think the response to "I am not paying the premium" will be a "alrighty then, have a nice day." Again, why would the deal be offered to someone who wasn't a Whale and who was going to hold the bullion until Freegold?

DP said...

Orcas are just traders. They convince lesser aquatic mammals and shrimp to park their capital in the custody of The Orca (Limited Liability) Enterprise, with the promise of great returns to come. Then the Orca churns that capital through speculative investments and skims some of the cream off for themselves. Without the capital of the lesser aquatic organisms to leverage, they're just another shrimp with a plan. If they aren't constantly churning an income, how will they stay current on the lease for the Porsche, the yacht, and the Mayfair rent? They don't have the option to just sit tight and be right.

They're a completely different beast from a Giant. Giants have to answer to nobody, they don't need anyone's help to get where they are going, and they have all the time in the world to get there.

Jeff said...

Paper trading sharks sink or swim.

ANOTHER: everyone knows that western minds don't like or want gold, but if they think you like it they will trade it up in price for the sake of "sticking it to you".

Robert said...

Matrix,
Apologies, I guess I am not being clear. The orca does not want the deal. The orca wants to thrash the seals. He wants make a bold bid to usher in freegold now by exploiting the arbitrage. He wants to start a run on a BBs to collapse the two tier structure. He is big enough and aggressive enough to strike the fear of God into a seal pup, but does not have the gentle mindset of the other giants.

We hear the warning: It is impossible to buy a lot of physical without running the price. Our orca says: "Fine, I'm an orca, that's what I love to hear: So let's get on with it and run the price!" If we collapse the two tier structure and freegold happens, we shoot into orbit and never fall back to earth. If we fail to collapse the two tier price structure, there are still giants out there ready and willing to buy large quantities of physical at a huge premium over paper spot. So let's go hunting!

Now why doesn't anyone do this? Because there is not enough money to be made?

Anonymous said...

@matrix sentry you write "I think the response to "I am not paying the premium" will be a "alrighty then, have a nice day." Again, why would the deal be offered to someone who wasn't a Whale and who was going to hold the bullion until Freegold?"

In your opinion, how come some disgruntled Orca has not blown the lid on the shadow gold market and secret deals? Why are there not whispering rumours other than on this blog.

DP said...

Those who dream of blowing up the system are not capable of doing it.

Those who are capable wouldn't dream of doing it.

MatrixSentry said...

Ant,

Actually I don't think an Orca ever gets a chance to be disgruntled. He never gets invited into the back room unless he is a Giant.

The largest Orca would be very insignificant compared to a Giant. The idea behind a two-tiered gold price is to preserve a low price of gold. Why would those interested in maintaining the status quo entertain an Orca whose intent is to bring on Freegold?

Also, a trader makes his living trading. Why would he do something to kill the paper market and destroy his ability to use other people's money? So much easier to play the game he knows.

Anonymous said...

I like the idea of gold, freegold too, but do we really need much fiat, or any at all?

Take an employment contract. If your trade is more valuable to the community than your daily living needs, then you might want a greater portion paid in gold, and only enough for your spending needs paid in fiat. Good idea yes?

To hold money (gold) during times of economic growth is to gain. It is only when we introduce the proxy of paper that we must consider (usury) interest. And in times of great economic growth, your gold money would grow in great value. But that value would be measured in the things it would buy, since there would be no paper money to measure it by.

After the collapse of the current system, whatever system rises from the ruins must rise from the bottom up, not from the top down. A government ordered fiat can only work if the majority accepts and uses it. And so will we blindly accept a new edict from our masters when their old (forced) system fails? I think we will soon find that even the average man-on-the-street is a goldbug at heart.

MatrixSentry said...

I have made a change to the 2010 FOFOA Compendium. I have incorporated this post, Think Like a Giant 2, into the compendium. It is inserted following It's the Flow, Stupid and The Flow Addendum. I believe it expands the concepts of those earlier posts and will help the reader gain a deeper understanding.

You can download the new file by clicking the Ron M's Air-Friendly PDFs link in FOFOA's link list or download it Here

JoyOfLearning said...

@Polly Metallic, @Jeff, @Michael H

Gosh, I guess I messed up giving that example as that had pretty much nothing to do with my point, which was just an opinion that troll bashing wastes precious superorganism brain power instead of harnessing it for new angles on information.

So, now that I mentioned that that's another idea from my post there, I can talk about the actual rice/gold/what-values-what: I am fully aware that rice doesn't really function as a SOV, for a ton of reasons, from perisheable to the historical element, transportability, divisibility and low price... My example was more subtle meant to just hint at the fact that sometimes some arguments which are treated as final and absolute still raise some doubts on what I call a multi-layered-view of the world. So what I mean is that while history provides unbeatable arguments as to gold's super superiority, as does the international spread and even the governments/banks' valuation, where I have some doubts is a super price rise. There are so many opposing forces that I wonder... Also sometimes I wonder if Another/Fofoa aren't/weren't incredibly right about the super rise and then relative plateau after, their theoretical reasoning is flawless... except it relatively already happened. Not saying it's like that, and to be honest i'd be surprised if gold doesn't go up at least 50% in the next years, but I'm wondering. Why? Well, because rice may not be a good store of value, or cars or houses or computers or any other thing... but what if each of them takes a slice of that rise, resulting in more like your traditional hyperinflation, except maybe with a lean on Gold.

But here again I start to have doubts: for all the reasons that make gold so perfect are also the reasons that make it a bit scary: it becomes way too easy to target politically, be it for supression, taxation, confiscations (yes, i know all the argument in past articles... i just have doubts). It all sounds so good in theory, but I can't ignore every year that's passing in relatively other ways (heck, banks planning for Basil rules for 2019 and stuff..), the decade that has gone without the fundamental crash/change, and the centuries of history that have gone in waves. Sure, all debatably in a direction... but still, I wouldn't be that surprised (though I would suffer from)if we'd have another step back into fiat/hyper/hard money and restart, with all the suffering and wars that comes from that. I come from eastern europe and now live in Germany, and every month I've lived here I was more and more saddened to see how much socialism is alive and growing here, how unwise the people are, and how it's growing both in media & people attitudes and in it's symptoms (yes, I'm even starting to see rationing). With so much un-wisdom at such high levels and in the masses... well, I'm not at all secure in gold being left alone for the people to profit from it, or even to save in it when the government really runs out of cash as I expect it to. Which brings me to another thing that just occurred to me reading the comments on this thread:
I have heard many times the argument of the diminishing marginal value of any other product but gold... however I'm wondering about that too. A simple shrimp example: a few years ago I discovered the whole global crysis, and like many people started digging into stuff, and started saving in the perfect SOV. I was expecting based on many sources, including this site the system to crash at any moment and thus pushed hard in that direction, treasuring every month. I explained all I understood to my very smart wife, and we did it togehter.And then a year passed, and nothing happened... and then again... and again... so my question is after how many years do you say you might have been wrong, or that you have to diversify?
[continued in part 2]

JoyOfLearning said...

[part 2]
Yes, it sucks that there's no other good thing to diversify into (especially love that 0% sales tax on gold which btw was for me one of the big proof of FG arguments), but shouldn't one think? Can I be absolutelly sure that governments won't give some confiscatory/taxing law? That I won't at some point be forced to cross a border and get searched/confiscated? Even if that government will hurt in the long run!Sure, govs may ignore it for now, but if there was a 10x rise, suddenly wouln't broke governments REAAALY think of all the ways they could spend the people's savings? Because it's 1-10% of the people,... for the "good of the many". My point is, there could be a diminishing marginal utility for gold too, as one realizes one may run into other risks. And if this is shrimp thinking... well, actually if I was 100x richer, well, I'd think about it even more. Because then I could afford the research and lawyers to put some of that surpluss wealth maybe into land in some distant land which I know will rise, or some productive factories in a less socialistic land...

well, just thinking out loud. I want to make it clear that I do get the stuff you're saying, and mostly I agree with the mainsteam view around here, I do believe there's a high probability of some big changes in the directions talked about here, and it's in that way that I'm organizing my life... I'm just also happy whenever counter theories arise to test the old, I'm happy whenever new data and facts are checked against the old established ideas, and if new facts would arise, I would be totally willing to reasess some of the beautiful theory. Also even on a theoretical level, I would make a distinction between long run stuff, and short term stuff. I think it makes a world of difference weather the changes we talk about here are happening in the next year or two (as was assumed initially, a credibility hit), or in ten years, and if they should only happen in a few decades... well... I think that makes a huge difference too, so I wouldn't stop at having all things cleared up theoretically.

Well, this as I feared turned into a much longer post than I was thinking, as I just wanted to make clear that I never actually proposed that gold is like any other thing, and I do believe it's the best suited for savings of all the other things. I just wonder how much can it save. How much value will humanity/governments allow to flow into one single asset? Especially when people are today so arogant as to think they can and should prescribe the values of things across the world, far beyond their borders (I'm thinking now for example of countries implementing cross border taxes, international regulations, from everything ranging from financial assets to corporate stuff and carbon pricing). I know it has been argued that this is and will be in the interest of all, and I believe and wholeheartedly hope that... however I also think free markets have been in the interest and to the profit of all for many centuries, and yet people have constantly tried to lock them up and "direct".

PS: a big reason i love the community is it's stated goals of figuring out what WILL happen and not what SHOULD happen

PS2: thank you again to all the commenters for their smart dialogues and of course especially to Fofoa for inspiring and guiding this community! Thank you!

Delusional Investing said...

Another said:

"Gold! It is the only medium that currencies do not "move thru". It is the only Money that cannot be valued by currencies. It is gold that denominates currency. It is to say "gold moves thru paper currencies"

I'm not sure that I've ever fully understood that quote.

Talk of the two tier gold market got me thinking about other markets, where there is a "kiddy" market, and a real market. I couldn't really think of one. But then it dawned on me that, on a much more continuous scale, all money markets act like this.

For example, as a retail customer of a bank, I can get (relatively) high interest rates, but only up to a certain amount. The more money I have, the lower the interest rate I can get.

Most goods trade at a discount in bulk. The more the bulk, the more the discount. Conversely, money, being the other side of this trade then must trade at a premium in bulk.

Now, consider exchanging gold for cash, or vice versa. It's gold that gets premium, and cash that gets the discount.

So, cash gets the bulk premium for all goods except for gold. Is this thought under the umbrella of what is meant by gold denominating (dominating?) currencies?

Cheers,

DI

Anonymous said...

@matrix sentry, IYO what is the weight of physical bullion that tips the balance and would likely cause market disturbance.

Jeff said...

Any trader who tried to crash the system would be crushed like an ant by the system operator. You should ask an LTCM'er about this.

ANOTHER (09/26/98;)

This LTCM, they stand in the open for all to see. This "Noble House" holds no resources above or below the ground and many now ask "how this palace of paper could stand"? To this I add "how will they deliver the real items they owe"?

byiamBYoung said...

JoyofLearning,

"how many years do you say you might have been wrong, or that you have to diversify? "

I'm not sure what post the quote came from, but to paraphrase, "Better to be 10 years early, as opposed to a day too late."

Also, your gold has appreciated nicely over the past years, so it has been a wise investment anyway!

“How did you go bankrupt?"
Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”
― Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises

Cheers

MatrixSentry said...

Joy of Learning,

Doubt is a mind killer. Doubt is important, it keeps us on our toes. Too much and it leads to the opposite, paralysis. All I can say is that doubt should drive you to learn more and refine your view of the world.

Prior to my big "a-ha" moment, I was very much in a similar state that you appear to be in. I found Freegold to be compelling on virtually all levels, but how could I know for sure? After all, I was discovering just how misguided I had been while I was dwelling with the Hard Money Socialist crowd. Could I be misguided again? Sure.

The way I dealt with it was to examine my baggage. What is it that I think I believe or have believed in the past? I have run the entire gamut, from Keynesian Uber-paper Trader to Doomer Deflationist to Hard Money Socialist, in that order. Along my trail of discovery I had doubts about the transition from one camp to the other. I took it upon myself to research and study, feeling that was the solution to doubt and paralysis.

Each step of the way I was able to disqualify possibilities as my sphere of knowledge expanded. The easiest possibilities to disqualify were the Keynesian and Monetarist dreams that we can borrow our way to prosperity. Next was the deflationist nightmare and the fall of civilization back into the dark ages. This one was easy to debunk as well, thanks to my studies of the history of money and banking. A huge tailwind was provided by FOFOA in this department as well! So that left the HMS camp and the idea of high inflation or a possible hyper-inflationary outcome.

At this point I was a believer in high inflation, perhaps hyper-inflation, but not entirely sure. Freegold is beckoning, but it is really not compatible with the idea of hard money and inflation, more like deflation and resulting hyperinflation. So what if I was wrong about Freegold, what would be the likely result? Would we continue the Keynesian nightmare indefinitely? Would we crash and burn and return to the stone age like the deflationist says? Nope, those possibilities were discarded as highly unlikely outcomes. That leaves high inflation and a full or partial return to gold as money that the HMS crowd prefers. Would gold preserve my wealth in this outcome? I said yes. So I miss the trade of the century that provides the 20-30 bagger, but my wealth remains intact.

Essentially the game for me was whether I was going to abandon paper gold and the associated potential gains in wealth in favor of maintaining my wealth in a worse case non-Freegold future outcome. Of course a Freegold outcome is the big win. I took a hard look at it and decided to make my first physical purchase. Paralysis broken because I saw that I was hedged. Later, I was struck by a bolt of "damn, I got it!" and the idea that I was hedged more or less became irrelevant.

So now I am all in physical, with the exception of money that is trapped in an employer sponsored and funded retirement brokerage. The skeptic will ask how it is that I can be so sure and go all in, naked. My response is to say that the worse case scenario is that I retain my wealth that was allocated to gold. Pretty simple rationalization really.

The answer is to convince yourself. I have a decade of study under my belt and it has brought me to where I stand today. Is this the end of the road in discovery? I doubt it, but I am closer to the end than I was a few years ago and I know enough to act. Maybe I will learn something down the road that will enable me to break my current inertia and act again in some way. The only way that will be possible is if I continue to study and advance in my understanding of wealth, money, and the human super-organism.

Like your handle suggests, embrace the joy of learning. Act as much as your knowledge will allow and be satisfied that is enough.

MatrixSentry said...

JoL,

I forgot!

RTFB and then RRTFB!

Beer Holiday said...

Who are the Orcas - given that info, lets see what they are actually up to, if possible.

To me most hedge-fund manages are small to medium sharks - feeding on the mess of fish accidents, but not causing them.

I guess my choosing Soros above is because I think gold trades as a currency today, so who are the Orcas pushing currencies, since we can't really see the gold market.

I note that Soros does some unexplained things like trading large gold volume through GLD when he could do it OTC for cheaper.

Off to RRTFB for a while :-)

Maybe I'll even take ALHLINM , we all should some time, peace :-)

OAO BH

MatrixSentry said...

Damn Poopyjim, thanks for the link!

We need a comic interlude after yesterday's cluster. Here it is!

Polly Metallic said...

Joy of Learning,

I'm on the road now and it's too tough to type on an iPhone! Will expand on some thoughts later if I have time. Since 2008 and the financial collapse I see the system as broken and being held together with tape and staples. Derivatives were out of control and it hasn't stopped since. QE is less about stimulating the economy and more about the Fed providing liquidity to the banks and taking onto their own balance sheet unsaleable securities. Even still if the banks used mark to market for assets of little or no proven value they would be insolvent. US debt growth has started growing exponentially and can never be repaid. To sum it up, the system is running full speed down the damaged track and it is inevitable that the train will derail. I don't see how, considering the progression of events, this can all continue for more than two or three years. Throw the escalating currency wars into the mix and maybe we derail even sooner.

Unknown said...

So I think we can agree, in currency terms of the "gold price", things are not as they seem, as presented for all the world to see, on the millions of monitors that scan the many gold price charts. There can be one game for giants, and one game for shrimp.

Now see the WGC "official gold holdings" among sovereigns. While I have not done any granular hardline research on the basis of this accounting, it seems to me that over the last 5 years of looking at this chart, it hasn't changed much. Combined Eurosystem has about 10K tons, U.S. has about 8K tons, eveyone else trying to catch up. Or so it seems.

In the past 16 years we do perceive much change in the world of giants in their "attitude" towards gold, in the CB world, in the sovereign world of giants. Some will say this is only a "perceived" attitude change, others will call it "real".

Many believe tha U.S. has maintained it's 8000T through a shell game of paper trickery amidst the vast flow of gold to the ME and elsewhere, and yet it is the Giants who move gold in size, and are exempt from such foolishness.

Further, if the official counting of gold reserves is as quantitatively different in reality, as the perceived price, might there not be one accounting of reserves for public consumption (shrimp) AND ANOTHER FOR GIANTS?

16 years.

Yes there are those (often scoffed at as moonbats) who believe the U.S. squandered it's reserves, and that they are truly a "paper giant" believing in the way of their FIAT as a system that will never end, a paper dollar that will never collapse, as all contenders have over the ages.

Other believe that a giant is a giant, and that the U.S. does hold the true value of gold as do other giants.

Perhaps they my friends are truly the Orca, with a small, elite school of blood sucking squid by their side ;0)

And finally, does this really matter (and how) in our prognostications about the coming changes?
I have in my mind thought "long and hard" on this one, and do not like the conclusions, but would rather hear other thoughts, because I have gone down this path here before, and some guides have pointed out a thicket and tried to steer me back.

But now that we do seem to accept the one game for giants and another for shrimp, I come again to this fork in the trail.

In every sense, things are not as they seem.

Pat said...

Wil, to amplify the point beyond our limited focus here, I find that pretty much nothing is at it seems. Every word out of every politicians mouth is a lie; all USG "data" is a lie ( one example- the constant tweaking of the CPI definition to show lower inflation ); I see false flags everywhere when you look beyond the official story; fraud and corruption in every facer of society( Lance; Bonds; collegiate payola; Pete Rose on and on in sports ); MSM controlled by 5 mega-companies that spout the same tailored script yada yada fucking yada.

Fiat is the most pervasive fraud, it affects every person. Freegold gives me hope, in some small degree.

Unknown said...

No doubt about it Pat. As Chris Hedges writes, it is an "Empire of Illusion".

But it does upset the Freegold cart a bit, to think that there is rogue giant who does not play the giant game, challenging all others.

This coming U.S. default, it is like not unlike a giant defaulting on its own game.

This Giant will fight Freegold to the bitter end if it has no skin in the world's game.

And yet they all do break bread together in Basel.

Let's have dinner with Bernanke !! There's a plate worth paying for...

Anonymous said...

Joy of Learning,

I have had similar concerns about a punitive tax on gains. I wouldn't worry. If you read Bernanke's 2002 deflation speech it's clear what the end game is. Gold operations will be used probably in concert with all CB's to delever the system. The USG will have a repaired balance sheet and less need to bleed us dry. I would expect taxes to drop and the miners to be left alone. The sweet dividends from the new monetary utilities will be needed to fix the pension crisis. So this would probably not be a Freegold scenario, but a BIS kickoff to a Kondratieff spring. The Superorganism should, but doesn't dictate how this planet is run.

Indenture said...

"Oil for gold - The more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there's a cataclysm with the dollar, the euro, the pound or any other reserve currency.
Evgeny Fedorov, United Russia Party via Rose and Tanas at bloomberg.com" h/t ol remus

MatrixSentry said...

Ant,

I have no idea what weight in gold would likely cause a disturbance. I guess it depends on the degree that bullion is fractionalized in order to make the "gold" market. I have heard as little as 5 tons tossed around in discussion and it is used as an example in the post. Regardless of the weight, it is clear that there are giant pools of money sufficiently large enough to overwhelm deliverable bullion at current prices.

This from the post:

Date: Fri Dec 12 1997 23:08
ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!) ID#60253:

SWEAT:
You will not see 80% or more of gold deals. If it was done with all to see the discount value would be lost as the world price would explode. This is not the relm of any public “wall street”. At one time it belonged mostly to the Barron. Now it is large with the BIS and super rich. Wars will be fought over the lack of “visibility” of these dealings.


As long as the USD is going to be supported, any bullion transaction that is going to blow up the dollar will not happen. Think of this, would someone with 264 million USD (5 tons) really be interested in blowing up the dollar? How about 2.64 billion (50 tons)? I would presume that any entity with this much USD has a whole lot more where that purchase stake came from, assuming he is not going all in.

I think that buyers that find themselves large enough to destroy the paper gold market understand the nature of gold and "gold". Whatever that size is, they most assuredly know what it is. So far they find it beneficial to prop up "gold" and the USD by acquiring their gold off market where liquidity is possible. Either you believe that or you must believe potential buyers of size simply decide to allocate their savings into something else other than physical gold, or that nobody of size wants physical gold in the first place. I find the latter 2 cases rather hard to believe.

Indenture said...

" Curing Deflation
Let me start with some general observations about monetary policy at the zero bound, sweeping under the rug for the moment some technical and operational issues.

As I have mentioned, some observers have concluded that when the central bank's policy rate falls to zero--its practical minimum--monetary policy loses its ability to further stimulate aggregate demand and the economy. At a broad conceptual level, and in my view in practice as well, this conclusion is clearly mistaken. Indeed, under a fiat (that is, paper) money system, a government (in practice, the central bank in cooperation with other agencies) should always be able to generate increased nominal spending and inflation, even when the short-term nominal interest rate is at zero.

The conclusion that deflation is always reversible under a fiat money system follows from basic economic reasoning. A little parable may prove useful: Today an ounce of gold sells for $300, more or less. Now suppose that a modern alchemist solves his subject's oldest problem by finding a way to produce unlimited amounts of new gold at essentially no cost. Moreover, his invention is widely publicized and scientifically verified, and he announces his intention to begin massive production of gold within days. What would happen to the price of gold? Presumably, the potentially unlimited supply of cheap gold would cause the market price of gold to plummet. Indeed, if the market for gold is to any degree efficient, the price of gold would collapse immediately after the announcement of the invention, before the alchemist had produced and marketed a single ounce of yellow metal.

What has this got to do with monetary policy? Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.

Of course, the U.S. government is not going to print money and distribute it willy-nilly"
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2002/20021121/default.htm

Indenture said...

Grumps: "I wouldn't worry. If you read Bernanke's 2002 deflation speech it's clear what the end game is." Is the end game that the Fed won't "print willy-nilly"?

Anonymous said...

@matrixsentry, my point is not about someone wanting to blow up the dollar, it is about the lack of rumour of this dealing.

There must be hundreds of people with this awareness, plus the secret oil for gold setup. All the Saudi Princes, new money Russian Giants, trading staff aware of the back room, people at the Bullion Banks, mine owners, somebody somewhere pissed off they were not allowed to play, somebody did not get the promotion promised. Russian former mafia with sudden massive riches acquire the old money Rotschild virtues when it comes to gold? Every one of them.

No peep on this, other than two anonymous internet bods and a Saudi Prince who spilled the beans to Pete T on a night out in Stringfellows (at least according to Pete T :-))

This keeps niggling in the back of my mind.

Anonymous said...

The reality is without the "trolls" these threads would only have a few comments because most of the posters here are not interested in any kind of intellectual discussion, the case is already closed and they only remain because they enjoy the low level power trip of telling others to RRTFB.

So the question of whether Another's primary claim about shadow gold prices is still true in 2013 is a dumb one?

The question of how Freegold implies a value of Oil higher officially reported $100/bbl is so dumb it doesn't even warrant a response other than to say how moronic it is for even thinking it?

If everyone here are such experts, why is there an issue answering these very fundamental questions?

MatrixSentry said...

athrone,

I guess you cannot take a hint or understand when the message is far less subtle. Nobody wants to put up with you bullshit. How do you read this transmission?

You are a clown. This is a serious blog for serious people.

You clearly haven't read the blog, so I won't tell you to RRTFB. Continuing to thump your already bruised grape against the wall is not going to impress us, nor are we going to feel sorry for you.

Kieran O B said...

an ANT and Dec, it is interesting to speculate why a rumor hasn't exploded and why we don't see more of this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBDPGkW6SCU

But then,
If you are a Saudi Prince why would you put the gold for oil deal out in the open?
If you were a Russian Giant with the knowledge, why not accumulate as much as possible without pulling the trigger? Same for people working for BB's, mine owners and whoever else.

What would it take to have this knowledge explode in a way that it could be verified as fact. A Saudi at a stripclub or some anonymous forum posters isn't going to do it.

Anonymous said...

If you don't want people to test your hypothesis, why would you put it in a public forum? That is all I am doing: testing this hypothesis.

You say a Giant is someone with so much money they have to buy Gold at shadow prices because their incredible amount of money has nowhere else to go but Gold, and the physical market cannot handle this amount of money.

Ok, so if you want to talk about how to "Think like a Giant" maybe you should start with some compelling proof (evidence or arguments) that Giants even exist.

How about a list of some indisputable Giants with explanations for why they are classified as Giants?

Why is this such an "idiotic" request for someone to make in response to a post titled "Think like a Giant?"

Anonymous said...

MatrixSentry,

Maybe it is because I read Another *before* I read FOFOA that I formed my own perspective on it.

I'm sure you have already read Another directly, but I guess it doesn't hurt to ask. Have you?

Anonymous said...

Whilst not remembering athrones comments in detail prior to this, it does seem to me that he is being dealt with harshly, aggressively and unfairly.

Aquilus said...

@an ANT and Dec

No he is not. Re-read the thread with Motley Fool from yesterday and you will find all the questions answered by Motley yet athrone refusing to consider what was being said.

No one will continue such a conversation.

MatrixSentry said...

Ant,

Take a read of yesterday's posts. He is not getting any help from this blog until he RTFB.

Anonymous said...

I read every single one of Motley's posts and considered what was being said, in my replies I was responding directly to his statements? I really don't understand that accusation at all.

DP said...

Just more-than-cursorily contemplating the content of comments specifically addressed in reply to oneself, would be a rewarding way to begin a journey of self-discovery.

Anonymous said...

"Refusing to consider" and "Disagree" are two different things. I considered exactly what was being said, and I was trying to illustrate how I disagreed and why. If nothing else, I am explaining all of my positions (right or wrong) and not attacking people or calling them dumb because of their arguments.

Jeff said...

If you can't remember his question, scroll up; it's asked 50 times. There are, in fact, no original questions. They have all been asked before, going back to the USAGold forum, usually in a better form, by people with a better grasp of the issue, and they have been answered endlessly. When someone makes a moronic statement like

'1. If Another was a whistle-blower, why did he use convoluted prose instead of simply providing a transcript with gold transactions?'

they are not to be taken seriously. It's an immediate disqualification and I feel stupid for having engaged him.

Likewise for duggo; he posts rude questions displaying his ignorance in comments, then tell people not to reply. We can only hope he holds his breath until receiving an acceptable reply.

db said...

Athrone said:

"Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.? You will think much on this is the future."

Is this a statement or a prediction?"

Athrone, it was a prediction, IT IS A FACT NOW ... Here we are some 15 yrs after, and we are still thinking much on this.

Aquilus said...

athrone,

Until you really read and understand what Motley and others were trying to convey to you in their responses, there is no need for me or anyone else to rephrase the answers for the nth time.

You can use whatever labels, taunts, etc you want, you will get no answers (from me at least) until you show comprehension of the previous comments to you.

Good day sir.

Aquilus

Unknown said...

Its strange that several people have by now indicated they consider MF's responses to athrone to present sensible answers to all of his points of query, yet athrone indicates that he has fully contemplated them (despite the timestamps on the comments implying to the contrary) and found they were devoid of meat.

One might think it was possible for some to understand the answers from MF due to their understanding of his words in the proper context. But then again, athrone is apparently very conversant with the story of Another and the concepts of Freegold.

It's a conundrum alright.

Anonymous said...

Indenture,

There are going to print to buy gold/devalue the debt. Check out the two paragraphs under Fiscal Policy in that speech. He basically says what Sinclair says that gold will be used as swing asset to correct the balance sheet. Remember years ago on BNN, Gramely, I think, a former Fed member, mentioned that the Fed can always use the nuclear option to fix its balance sheet--go to the glass case that's lettered "Break In Case of Kondratieff Debt Saturation". In there are the gold certificates that value gold at $42.
I wouldn't worry about the paper gold market crashing. The goal of gold operations will be to have as few losers as possible. We may never have the music stops and rush for physical situation. The BIS will step in & stop it beforehand by telling the Bernank or Yellen to break the case. Otherwise, the market will do it for them and then a disorderly HI will likely result, BIS loses control, Freegold possible, Superorganism in control.
I just think that the management of human livestock will continue as can be seen via the Kondratieff cycle, a tool for the priest class extract wealth from the shrimps. Give the shrimps credit to do the heavy lifting in the Spring, Summer, and Fall, then call the loans in Winter and claim the collateral.


Anonymous said...

Robert,

I think you are making a very good point with your post about Orcas. If there is a two-tier anything, as soon as anyone finds out they are going to use that knowledge to arbitrage an immense profit until the gap is closed.

This is how all markets work.

So I will have to second Robert here: if the premium is anything significant at all (we have Quotes from Another that it was in the many thousands when Gold was $300) -- so that is at least a 300% or more premium.

Even at 3% premium is enough for people to make money via arbitrage so the 300%, 600%, 1000% premium indicated by the Freegold thesis is absolutely enormous. And to persist for 15 years straight without even a single peep from anyone -- that is one heck of a Market phenomena.

Anonymous said...

db,

You said:

Athrone, it was a prediction, IT IS A FACT NOW ... Here we are some 15 yrs after, and we are still thinking much on this.

This is exactly what my point was yesterday. It was a prediction in 1999 and it is a fact today -- thus it establishes some amount of credibility for Another. So it appears we agree. What is the problem?

If you read the comments -- someone else was claiming I was an idiot because they thought it was a statement whereas I was labeling it a prediction.

Anonymous said...

If I recap the conversation with MF yesterday:

1. I was claiming that $400 billion is not a Giant

2. MF responded that is it not really $400 billion but actually $1.5 Trillion because Gold is being traded in the shadows

3. I accepted his numbers/example, and pointed out that if Oil is really $1.5 Trillion (as opposed to the $400 billion) that this increased the (present) value (price) of Oil by 400%.

4. My point was then that a supply side price that is 400% higher creates huge economic tension with the current 0% higher value on the demand side.

Then MF got angry and left. So again, what am I refusing to consider about his points and where am I mistaken? It seems like a pretty sensible debate aside from where he kept calling me dumb.

Unknown said...

You could arbitrage across open markets.

But you cannot get into a private party that you do not even know is happening and couldn't get into if you did happen to stumble upon the door by accident. No matter how much 1000% may be low-balling the benefits of your invitation, you just aren't invited.

Anonymous said...

Now, Robert has pointing out that a much higher price in either Gold or Oil (say 400%) would create a massive arbitage opportunity which is strange that nobody (Orcas) have (apparently) taken advantage of or said anything about in 15 years.

And here we are today. Am I having trouble following the conversation?

Edwardo said...

Indenture asked, perhaps rhetorically,

"Is the end game that the Fed won't "print willy-nilly"?

They will, in the end, print for the purpose of monetizing one specific asset on their balance sheet that presently has an archaic legal tender price.

Unknown said...

JR sez … price and value are two different things

Anonymous said...

Frank Pansy,

Which raises the question, Who are the Giants and how does one get invited? Also you have the problem that this information has been publicly available for 15 years. Wouldn't any major Gold player be able to Google to find this theory and test it out?

Also recall that in MF's example, the shadow payment to Saudi Arabia was $1100 billion (at Freegold prices) which is only a mere $35 billion in the open market. If these deals have to be made to prevent the price of gold from exploding because the physical is not available, $35 billion in open interest sure isn't much to rock the boat by an Orca/group of Orcas.

Unknown said...

Wow, scrolling through the comments is so much faster when you just skip over all the troll-speak and all the silly responses to it.

Some people do value their time, yet don't quite see when it's being taken advantage of.

Until another day ......

Unknown said...

You've read Another.

The BIS is the gold broker for all interbank sales/purchases. Bullion Banks are for sales to other entities.

So, round up your merry band of Orcas, with your pooled $35 billion Giant-busting fund, then get on the blower with your favourite Bullion Bank.

Step 1: Buy $35 billion of gold in the open market.

Step 2: ?

Step 3: Reap the spoils of busting the global financial system through arbitraging across the two-tier gold market.

Jeff said...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-14/gold-council-sees-central-bank-bullion-buying-at-48-year-high.html

Anonymous said...

Who are the Giants?

There was a 1965 future history about how human civilization would be structured tens of thousands of years from now. A network spanning the stars ostensibly governed by feudal lords but truly run behind the scenes by secret societies. I've come to realize by watching the shadows on the cavewall that the author was really describing how the game has always been set up.

Anonymous said...

Frank Pansy,

I have read Another, and as mentioned in previous comments, I think he was using Giants as a literary device for Central Banks and Oil producers and was only referring to some very specific Gold for Oil deals among some very specific trade partners in a very specific time frame -- Not some worldwide conspiracy among "Giants" around the globe that he expected to continue for decades.

There are two sides to Another:
1. The insider knowledge he possessed (Gold for Oil deals) which allow one to predict a Gold price in the thousands (an idea unheard of at the time) and

2. The part inside all of us which tries to predict the future based on our present day view. If you read Another you would think the world is ending by the end of the week -- that is where he was wrong. It's been 15 years.

He was right about gold in the thousands, but he was (thus far) wrong about gold in the tens of thousands.

Unknown said...

Giants operate on a different timescale than shrimp, or even Orca, like us.

Patience is a virtue they can afford.

Indenture said...

Edwardo "They will, in the end, print for the purpose of monetizing one specific asset on their balance sheet that presently has an archaic legal tender price." Monetization is the process of converting or establishing something into legal tender. I don't think that was the word you were looking for.

athrone "If these deals have to be made to prevent the price of gold from exploding because the physical is not available, $35 billion in open interest sure isn't much to rock the boat by an Orca/group of Orcas." No Sir. physical is always available. Why wouldn't it be? And I used an absolute.

Anonymous said...

Frank Pansy,

I agree 100% that "Giants" (Central Banks and Oil producers" operate on a different timescale. How else could you convince an Oil Producer to buy Gold from you for Thousands/oz at a time when Gold is $300/oz in the open market?

How do you convince a world of Orcas for 15 years not to take a 20,000% profit by blowing up the physical market and going to retire on an island somewhere?

Anonymous said...

Indenture,

If I understand FOFOA correctly, physical gold is actually NOT available (in size), hence the reason for these shadowy Gold deals amongst "FOFOA Giants".

At this point it is probably useful to define two terms:

"Another Giants": Central Banks and Gold producers in the late 90s.

"FOFOA Giants": Anyone with enough money that they cannot buy physical Gold in size in the open market without breaking the Gold market.

I'm not sure whether it's claimed that the two are one in the same, or not -- because nobody seems willing/able to provide a list of alleged "FOFOA Giants."

Anonymous said...

*typo above: should be Oil producers not Gold producers

Pat said...

Two scientists were playing chess, and one asked the other," I say, Sir Edmond, what do you consider to be man's greatest invention?"
"Well, Sir Clive, I would have to say the wheel. Locomotion, motions of any sort for that matter, components of so many other inventions, yes, I go with the wheel. And you, good sir?"
"I contend it would be the lever. The grand ability to move objects of great weight that otherwise could not be employed." As chance would have it, the janitor walked by.
"I say, Zeke, what say you?" Zeke thought for a moment and said," The Thumus" "Come again?"
"The Thermos- keep hot thing hot, keep cool thing cool"
"I see, but what is so fantastic about that?"
"Well, how do it know?"

I have to go with wheel, without we would not thave the scroll.

milamber said...

Athrone,

Were you able to read through The Debtors & The Savers 2012 & Blondie's View? Including the comments?

What's a Giant Comment

hth,

Milamber

Unknown said...

FOFOA
A Tribute to the Thoughts of Another and his Friend
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going!" -Another

I'm not sure whether it's claimed that the two are one in the same, or not -- because nobody seems willing/able to provide a list of alleged "FOFOA Giants."

Unknown said...

How could you convince a Central Bank to sell Gold to you for Hundred-bbl/oz at a time when Gold is $300/oz in the open market?

Now thats arbitrage I can believe in! But where is MY invitation?

( if one can only see value in paper currency terms then one cannot see value at all )

db said...

Athrone, the bad thing about blog comments is that irony is difficult to express ....

"Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.? You will think much on this is the future."

The "future" he was talking about was in a post gold revaluation world, the time has gone by and we're still living in a USD centric system, so the "future" Another was talking about is still yet to come, and it's somehow funny how you keep trying to debunk him or prove FG wrong, which means you're still "thinking much on this" in his future (as 15 yrs fwd), though not the "future" he was really talking about.

Please, don't reply to this post, you'll get no answer and I don't want to be the cause of more pointless posts.

Edwardo said...

Indenture wrote:

"Monetization is the process of converting or establishing something into legal tender. I don't think that was the word you were looking for."

That's an overly strict definition of monetization. The Fed has monetized all manner of worthless commercial MBS over the last four years and counting in that they have exchanged legal tender for what are, effectively, dead assets. And while the assets themselves do not become cash, their sale garners cash for the commercial banks who were able to sell it to the lender of last resort, aka The Fed.

And that is what will happen with physical gold, in time. The difference here is that gold is already on the balance sheet of The Fed in the form of gold certificates.

Tommy2Tone said...

Sorry, I disagree. This will probably elicit more troll bs but here we go:

From here

we get this quote:
"As long as there is an open market for gold, it will not be allowed to trade above it's commodity price! It has far to much value for that to happen. You see, in much the same way that a zero coupon bond trades at a discount to face, gold is traded for it's discount of " money value to commodity price! Think that I a fool, because I trade gold for thousands US an oz.? You will think much on this in the future."

I fail to see that as prediction. It reads clearly to me as Another stating that he buys gold for many thousands US an oz.
Wouldn't that mean he himself has one of the deals?

"You will think much on this in the future.""

We will think more on this in the future (like,say, today??) when things become more clear , or perhaps he meant after FG when the world would open it's eyes and look back on his words and understand everything with the help of hindsight.

I see no prediction.

I have always read that as Another simply saying he does as he's talking about, you think that's foolish ??? (gold is $300 then)
Well, you may come to see I was the smart one.

paraphrasing obviously.

Tommy2Tone said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Tommy2Tone said...

damn, just saw db's post.

Aquilus said...

So... you're an Orca that wants to buy some physical...

Has a BB refused your business at the price you where thinking of paying? No worries - just buy the stuff in the over-the-counter market (OTC).

Here's a guy that knows a few things about that: OTC Market with Bron

Soo, looks like we need to join the LBMA. Cool. Let's head that way: Joining the LBMA

Oh, before I forget, The LBMA says



The London Market
London is the focus of the international Over-the-Counter (OTC) market for gold and silver, with a client base that includes the majority of the central banks that hold gold, plus producers, refiners, fabricators and other traders throughout the world.

Members of the London bullion market typically trade with each other and with their clients on a principal-to-principal basis, which means that all risks, including those of credit, are between the two counterparts to a transaction. This is known as an ‘Over the Counter’ (OTC) market, as opposed to an exchange traded environment.

The London bullion market is a wholesale market, where minimum traded amounts for clients are generally 1,000 ounces of gold and 50,000 ounces of silver.

Unlike a futures exchange, where trading is based around standard contract units, settlement dates and delivery specifications – the OTC market allows flexibility. It also provides confidentiality, as transactions are conducted between the two principals involved.





How about about buying all of Perth Mint's physical supply directly (screw this OTC market BS you say)... Or better yet, just descend upon the miner and get it from the source. Look, there's a whole series by Bron called: How the industry works Yes, it's long. Yes, it's bushy. Yes, it does not answer everything, but email him! He might answer you.

Education. Get you some!

Aquilus

Anonymous said...

milamber,

Thank you for your link. I have read those posts/comments before as I have read almost every post and almost all the comments in real time over the last year. I did go back and re-read the discussion about Giants you linked though.

In the discussion you said:

"It is an entity that has VAST excess wealth and they save it in physical gold."

To which I agree, but I would add one more clarifying point: When Another spoke of Giants, he was speaking of people who were aware that gold was trading in the thousands/oz at a time when it was trading at $300/oz.

These "Giants" were not participating in the open market.

He also spoke of "Big Trader" who was essentially, a Giant either without this same information, or a Giant who did not necessarily care if the market would break -- he merely wanted to get his savings into Gold [in the open market] as efficiently as possible.

If we are only talking about the open market dynamics of Gold, where someone has to slowly ease into a position so as not to run up into price, what are we really talking about? That is true of money in size moving into any asset. So to me, those types of "Giants" or "small-giants" are not relevant to the insight provided by Another -- they are just the normal [open] market participants.

Here are some counters from somanyroads:

"Second to AD's pts why didnt china or any surplus country pick off 10k tons in the drop in 2008?"

"At some pt these giants need to make their move. So how long are they gonna wait, everytime there is a sell off, no can't do it now can't shake the mkt."

To which FOFOA replies:

"When you have unlimited money you'd like to move into gold, it is quite obviously a bad strategy "to make your move"."

It is true that anyone with a large sum of money would ease in slowly to a market. But is that really a convincing counterargument to explain a 15 year conspiracy about a 400%+ market discrepancy in Gold and Oil?

The other glaring thing from FOFOA's response is he says Saudi Arabia has "unlimited money." Now, is that really a convincing argument? This is the other point I am making about whether Giants exist. Looking at their economic statistics there is just no way you can claim they have "unlimited money."

This is why I am asking for some sample Giants. I don't think there is such a thing as a group of people or individuals with "unlimited money" to the extent that they need their own Gold market.

If you are going to talk about a group of hundreds or thousands of super-producers, don't forget that there are 7 billion people on this planet (one heck of a combined super-consumer).

Tommy2Tone said...

Nothing you wrote that hasn't been asked and answered in this very blog. Do you want one of us to hold your hand to go potty?

Aquilus said...

This is for the spectators, because I don't intend to start a pissing contest:

1) This is the other point I am making about whether Giants exist. Looking at their economic statistics there is just no way you can claim they have "unlimited money."

And if by money one means dollars or fiat, the answer is: NO! Why? BECAUSE THEY TRANSFORM THEIR SURPLUS INTO LONG-TERM ASSETS or otherwise they will not pump the oil out. The dollars are for expenses and budget and those wonderful cities, ski resorts in the desert, etc.

2) This is why I am asking for some sample Giants. I don't think there is such a thing as a group of people or individuals with "unlimited money" to the extent that they need their own Gold market.

Well, there you have it. If you cannot give the man a "perp list" that proves there's no one that needs inter-generational wealth. Also, just because if there actually were such entities with printing presses, key world commodities, etc, and they tried to store this wealth into the real world at today's prices there would only be a few avenues of doing so (see my previous OTC market comment above). Because as you educate yourself, you'll find those venues to be limited (again, see my previous OTC market comment above).

And in the case of physical the choice to be : buy some using the venue's rules today at a discount to the fabled $55K + hyperInflation perccentage of the future, or take your chances. But if you run the paper market, you might trigger HI before you convert your paper, and we'll go "cash settlement" as we smell a rat waaaay before that.

3) If you are going to talk about a group of hundreds or thousands of super-producers, don't forget that there are 7 billion people on this planet (one heck of a combined super-consumer).

Brilliant comment! Too bad it has no relevance to super-producers. Other than validating that consumers using debt enabled the existence of large quantities of profits for super-producers and that the super-producers would understand that currencies are not a good place for inter-generational wealth.


Really, just use some commmon sense and think of human nature... Then educate yourselves as to how these markets really work today. And do it for yourselves, don't expect someone to just drop the answer in your lap. You'll be better off for it.

Education. Get you some.

Aquilus

Anonymous said...

athrone,

The question of how Freegold implies a value of Oil higher officially reported $100/bbl is so dumb it doesn't even warrant a response [...]

Exactly. It is incredibly dumb. The question that's far more relevant is why freegold will lead to a much lower oil price, say, some E30/bbl or E40/bbl (All figures in today's purchasing power, possible inflation in the dollar block countries taken into account separately).

Re orcas, wasn't perhaps Big Trader a quite successful one? What did they do? Eventually cut a deal. Some good amount of physical after a while is obviously better than a tiny quantity and then a spectacular market failure with everyone blaming it on you. If you understand it and know it will eventually blow up, then the choice isn't that difficult, no?

Also, there were lots of shrimps in the Asian emerging economies during the late 1990 who were trying to collectively play orca. What happened? The printer was was firmly in control and shut them down in 1997. The situation today is probably rather similar with the only exception that London priced gold is now 5 times as expensive and the available flow therefore stretches five times that far.

Victor

Anonymous said...

Victor,

If what we see on the demand side is the dollar only price, and Gold was added to the trade in secret, then the price of Oil on the supply-side is higher than the demand-side price.

That is a fact not a question, much less a dumb one.

Anonymous said...


That's right. This is why Saudi Arabia is still going for it, i.e. this is how Saudi Arabia is bribed into accepting dollars.

If it cannot go on forever, it will probably end one day.

Victor

Anonymous said...

If you agree then why are you saying it is a dumb question? Don't you think a much higher supply side price is not sustainable due to economic forces, much less the level of conspiracy it would require for 15 years and counting, especially if such trades are "the norm?"

Anonymous said...


I wrote "exactly" above without challenging you about that statement much. Now is the time. What do you think is a "supply side price". There is a supply curve and a demand curve. And then the market clears (if price is free) or not (if price cannot adjust freely). So what's a "supply side price"?

Victor

TontoD said...

> DP, paper gold??
> Are you calling me from the 90's?

Another used the term "paper gold" even though he acknowledged that everything was going digital. Still... the name stuck.

Fact: the quantity of "paper gold" is much larger than the quantity of physical being traded.

A billionaire named Nelson Bunker Hunt can single handedly blow up the silver market (ok, ok, he had a couple brothers with him). Look it up. This was during the 70's. If he was buying paper silver, his demand could easily have been absorbed. However, he demanded physical delivery.

To me, this was the reason no large entity can buy physical en masse.

Central banks can simply print money. Therefore, they have unlimited amount of money. It's called Seigniorage.

I don't think this required a huge conspiracy. The CBs created the "paper gold" market by lending/leasing gold. It took on a life on its own and stayed alive even after they withdrew their support.

CBs need to buy physical. Otherwise, what would they store at Fort Knox or NY depository?

To this date, CBs don't buy gold outright in the open market... despite the fact that CBs all over the world have begun accumulating gold. So the question is, what happens when they finally do?

Anonymous said...

In an open market, the demand side price = the supply side price or else the trade wouldn't take place.

We aren't talking about a transparent market though because the refiners, consumers, people who pay at the pump do not realize Gold is being added to the trade in secret -- they think the trade is done only in dollars and price is $100/bbl.

So you have a case where everything in the worldwide economy is priced based on $100/bbl, which is what I am calling the demand side price. My argument is that if the Gold was not added, the price/bbl would necessarily be higher.

It's the same affect as when the Government subsidizes corn prices, except in this instance there is no public record of the subsidy as the Gold is swapped in secret.

Tommy2Tone said...

" My argument is that if the Gold was not added, the price/bbl would necessarily be higher."

You argument is if there was no gold for oil, the price would be (picking a number) $300/bbl or some much higher price?

milamber said...

Athrone,

Good. Since you read those posts & comments then you know that I don't know what defines a Giant. I gave my definition (that works for me in my understanding of Freegold), but I by no means am saying I am right, end of story.

You also write:

”When Another spoke of Giants, he was speaking of people who were aware that gold was trading in the thousands/oz at a time when it was trading at $300/oz.”

But earlier you wrote:

“Ok, so if you want to talk about how to "Think like a Giant" maybe you should start with some compelling proof (evidence or arguments) that Giants even exist.”

Either the FOA/Another story is real or it isn’t.

For what it is worth, I think that Giants do exist (as I define them) & they play a role in this world.

Trying to understand them & their motivations is rather important.

Just like trying to understand Super Producers Paper Savers (SPPS), printers, debtors, savers, shrimp, orcas & whatever colorful metaphor the next person wants to add.

To me at least.

Good luck.

Milamber

Anonymous said...

jojo,

Precisely. And because $300/bbl is not economically feasible, it makes no sense. That is why my argument is a counter-example to the statement put forth by Motley Fool.

Anonymous said...

milamber,

I agree the two quotes you posted are confusing (and apparently contradictory) because the term "Giant" is used in two different contexts, which is why in later comments I tried to be more specific in separating what Another defined as a Giant, and what is defined as a Giant by FOFOA/this blog.

Motley Fool said...

Yeah, because I said that $300 p/b is economically feasible. Those are my exact words, or my intended meaning. /sarc

You still are not reading/understanding/comprehending.

VtC tried helping you out by telling you that under FG oil would actually be cheaper. But you also didn't read/u/c what he wrote, and didn't bother to try and understand what he said either.

Hopeless.

Anonymous said...

Personally, I do not doubt that Central Banks and Oil Producers were trading a small amount of high priced Gold for Oil in secret (Another Giants) in the late 90s in order to most likely, prevent a perceived currency crisis or as a result of veiled threats.

To me, there is some evidence to support that idea because a man came forth in the late 90s saying he was trading gold in the thousands/oz and 10 years later Gold is thousands/oz.

Now, as for FOFOA Giants...the term really hasn't ever been officially defined despite how often it is used, so there are a few definitions floating around. FOFOA himself hasn't really explicitly posted about it or there wouldn't be this much debate.

From my readings of the posts/comments the implied meaning seems to be anyone with enough wealth to break the physical market (aka less than 500 tonnes, which is a paltry $85 billion), but if they ever try, someone steps them aside and says -- come into our private Gold club, and voila suddenly they are in the shadow market paying a massive premium for their privilege of "keeping the market together."

Given how much money there is worldwide, there would be enough of these such individuals capable of breaking the physical market. So many so that you would think it would have already happened by now. Or at the very least there would be a rumor or conspiracy theory started by at least ....someone ... sometime in the last 15 years.

Yet there is nothing, not even a peep.

Anonymous said...

Motley Fool,

You never said $300/bbl was economically feasible but in the example you constructed, Gold was being traded for $400 billion US and $900 Billion in Gold for a combined value of $1.5 Trillion. You said this because you were trying to counter my argument that $400 billion was not much money.

$1.5 Trillion for 11 million bbl/day works out to $400/bbl does it not?

Anonymous said...

To which I replied... your example is not valid because the $400/bbl it implies, is not economically feasible.

Anonymous said...

athrone,

Precisely. And because $300/bbl is not economically feasible, it makes no sense. That is why my argument is a counter-example to the statement put forth by Motley Fool.

You answered your own question: Either they will not sell the oil for $x for any x (unless they can get at least some gold), or they first try and then crash the economy, and then with a crashed economy still won't be able to sell oil for $300/bbl. So it won't happen. In other words, oil is not worth $300/bbl (in today's dollars).

This is where the fun begins. You see, the real price of gold (i.e. relative to average goods and services) can go arbitrarily high. This is its "monetary value", i.e. the value gold has because you know you will eventually be able to get absolutely anything in exchange for it. This is a currency exchange rate, but the high gold price affects the real economy only very little.

But the real price of oil (relative to average goods and services) cannot go arbitrarily high, simply because the oil price is closely linked with the general price level itself. Increasing the real price of oil arbitrarily would mean devoting a larger and larger proportion of the real economy to acquiring oil. This is happening to some degree these days, but it will have to stop at some point because otherwise it would annihilate the economy.

So the gold/oil ratio cannot remain constant forever, can it?

There is a second factor at work. If oil producers are unhappy with the dollars they receive, for example, because they cannot buy real assets including gold without running up their price, they have an incentive to reduce production or at least delay exploration and development and to leave the oil in the ground. Oil in the ground is as good as gold in the vault, but much better than dollars in the bank. This tends to reduce oil supply, driving up the dollar oil price.

Oil is the reserve that backs the dollar (at a floating price - yes, and Saudi Arabia is the corresponding central bank that implements their reserve open market operations while counterfeiters such as Iraq, Libya, Iran etc. are taken out - and the SPR is the commercial banking system, i.e. when Goldman Sachs have their clients buying oil futures, this is a repo refinancing transaction). The rising dollar price of oil is a symptom of the dollar dying because the oil price is ultimately linked to the general price level.

In contrast, gold is the reserve that backs the Euro (at a floating price). A rising gold price in Euros is "just" another exchange rate and doesn't affect the real economy that much.

The Euro zone combined the best aspects of the old dollar (pre-1933) and the present dollar (post-1971): the gold as the reserve (pre-1933), but at a floating rate, i.e. allowing open market operations in both directions, just as the oil backing the dollar since 1971.

Victor

Tommy2Tone said...

"The rising dollar price of oil is a symptom of the dollar dying because the oil price is ultimately linked to the general price level."

?

Gold should rise along with oil for the ratio to hold but if it doesn't or goes lower, this shows the leg of support having left??

costata said...

Hi All,

Part 1/2

I just managed to catch up with the comments. Quite a display of fireworks. I'm not going to engage directly with some of our fractious discussants but I do want to make a few comments on some of the subject matter they raised upthread.

Firstly I want to mention a billionaire "Giant" who was known to have a stash of gold. His name was Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer. From Wikipedia:

..in 1995 A$5.4 million worth of gold bars, and a Vegemite jar full of pink and gold nuggets, the provenance of which was never publicly explained, were stolen from Packer's personal safe..

Here's a potted history of the life and times of KP:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerry_Packer

Some of our fractious discussants might like to read this outline of his life and lifestyle and let us know if they think Packer's story indicates that "Giants" are some kind of homogeneous "class" that can be stereotyped for our convenience. They might have to settle for something as (necessarily) vague as "super-producer", "old-money" or "super-rich" because that's about as close as you can get to a catch-all definition.

Secondly, I want to make a few observations about Saudi Arabia and, in passing, the error of using the wrong metrics. The Saudi royal family is an absolute monarchy. They own that country down to the last grain of sand. So any profits they share with the populace can be assumed to be the result of their assessment of their own competing self-interests and risks (e.g. civil strife vs self-indulgence).

According to an article I read some time ago the House of Saud numbers around 3,000 members. So, in assessing their wealth pick a figure and divide it by around 3,000 for a "per capita" breakdown. And GDP will be no help to you as it measures consumption (more or less) not assets.

Continued/

costata said...

/Continued

Part 2/2

Thirdly I want to introduce some of the discussants to a concept called "reversionary yield", defined as:

Reversionary yield is the anticipated yield, which the initial yield will rise to once the rent reaches the estimated rental value. It is calculated by dividing the ERV by the valuation.

Back in the days when low inflation was the norm it was quite common for commercial property to be rented out on terms that didn't anticipate much, much higher inflation in the future. As a result rent increases fell behind the market over time. If an "under-rented" property was sold it often went for an extraordinarily low yield (e.g. current market 6% per annum while the "over-priced" property sold for a 2% yield).

Once the lease expired the potential market rent could be multiples of the current rent. Likewise there might be a substantial gain from refurbishment as the previous owner had no incentive to fund it given the low cash flow from the property. So the actual market value when the lease ended might be multiples of the current rent.

And consider also that the buyer might own adjoining properties. Securing this last piece of their redevelopment puzzle might give them huge uplift on ALL of this parcel of land. Others may think the buyer a fool for paying 3 times the market price of 6 per cent in the above example. But if your reversionary yield is 20 per cent per annum after, say, a 10 year wait for the lease to expire, and you can borrow money at 8 per cent, who is the fool? If the acquisition of this one property doubles it and 5 adjoining holdings as well then it puts a different complexion on the deal doesn't it?

If you are a "Giant" you can afford to wait. Now let's put this concept of reversion into a Euro Freegold context. If the successful transition to a post-Freegold IMFS both hedges your wealth in gold AND at Freegold prices it backs your portfolio of "bankrupt" Eurozone country bonds with gold then you could be looking at a substantial gain by making some "stupid" investments today.

If I was forced to describe the key attributes that define "Giants" from the rest of us I would pick deep pockets, staying power and a different perspective of time as their defining qualities. If any of the discussants feel compelled to construct a list of known "Giants" then I suggest they screen their list of candidates using these criteria. And lotsa luck if you intend to compile the list from publicly available information.

Anonymous said...

Victor,

Thank you for your reply. Your post is a much better summary of exactly what I was trying to illustrate. Namely:

"Either they will not sell the oil for $x for any x (unless they can get at least some gold), or they first try and then crash the economy, and then with a crashed economy still won't be able to sell oil for $300/bbl. So it won't happen."

I agree that this is exactly the balancing act that Oil producers are dealing with, and the latter half is why I was saying $300/bbl is not possible.

"But the real price of oil (relative to average goods and services) cannot go arbitrarily high, simply because the oil price is closely linked with the general price level itself."

Again, I agree. This is why I was talking about Oil consumption / World GDP. This ratio can only get so high before it no longer makes sense to burn oil to increase production.

"There is a second factor at work. If oil producers are unhappy with the dollars they receive, for example, because they cannot buy real assets including gold without running up their price, they have an incentive to reduce production or at least delay exploration and development and to leave the oil in the ground."

Again I agree with all of your positions. If I had to paraphrase what happened in the late 90s it would probably be something like this: We can give you $100 billion for your oil, or $90 billion plus 100 tonnes of Gold, which would you prefer? 100 tonnes at $300/oz is much less than $10 billion which is why Another was talking about trading in the many thousands/oz. They don't want dollars but they have a strong desire to avoid a currency crisis, so they take the deal.

If you were Another, what would you think given that information and that information alone? You'd probably lay things out exactly as he did in his Thoughts!

"The rising dollar price of oil is a symptom of the dollar dying because the oil price is ultimately linked to the general price level. "

Again, agreed 100%. The story you are weaving I believe I understand and I do accept it as being valid.

The only deviation I make is from the extrapolation of that story presented by FOFOA/this blog.

I believe the markup of Oil in the late 90s was very small (10%) vs. very large (>300%). Yes, Gold was marked up by 300% but Oil was not! I also think these trades occurred only amongst select Central Banks and Oil Producers -- it was not available to just anyone with enough money (as implied by the concept of a FOFOA giant) nor has it necessarily been the "norm" in Oil trades. Saudi Arabia has many, many trading partners after all.

Trannyofthepresent said...

If I was forced to describe the key attributes that define "Giants" from the rest of us I would pick deep pockets, staying power and a different perspective of time as their defining qualities.

My, what strong hands you have! :-*

tEON said...

Hi my name is Gary (not the troll one) and I'm a PGA.
Thanks DP I made a call today regarding conversion of some AG to Au.
In my less-than-complete understanding of Freegold I see additional benefits.
One being as a philosophy it is somewhat comforting that many 'investment' decisions have been removed - especially that of timing. Buy. Hold. Wait.
My favorite F.o.A. quote (which I won't repeat in its entirety) starts "Take the most able years of your broad middle-age to expand your skills and..."
I think I might learn a bit more by challenging some aspects of Freegold, but I have one question that I have contemplated posting for a long while. I have hesitated because, I find that those exporting the Freegold thesis can be somewhat dogmatic. This is totally understandable given the effort and reading put into comprehending and accepting the premise. Perhaps F.o.F.o.A. or some of the 'Debriefed' luminaries could respond. So...
What political or macro events could transpire (in the future) to dramatically alter your belief that Freegold is inevitable? an example might be (only an example) - if the Euro dissolved/broke-up would that change your strong opinion that Freegold is imminent? Are there other events that would taint the evolution of the Freegold analysis? Thank you for any responses.

Indenture said...

athrone: It appears you might have a problem with what was written in "It's the Flow, Stupid.
Could you please find the point in that narrative where FOFOA breaks from your version of history. Thank you. It might help all of us.

Anonymous said...

Am I reading this right but did the FED balance sheet just increase 60B this week?

http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h41/Current/

costata said...

TOTP,

I just noticed my unintentional double entendre :) For "pick" please read - nominate.

Cheers

Edwardo said...

Speaking of pick pockets.

costata said...

gary,

Over the years on this blog FOFOA and the long term contributors tried the approach you are describing. Sometimes via back channel discussions and, more often, in response to comments. We covered SDR, currency swaps, break up of the EU, renminbi as reserve currency, gold confiscation and many other scenarios. Every scenario failed to stand up to scrutiny.

Many here also investigated the possibility that the USG might change course and choose to save the US dollar. There are a few scenarios that might work but they all involve taking some very bitter medicine voluntarily. The kind of steps, such as cutting entitlements, that Karl Denninger has been demanding for years and a formal default by the USG.

The problem is that every corrective measure is the antithesis of each of the policy responses to date. If you tried to construct a policy framework that had the highest probability of destroying the $IMFS I don't think you could do better than the current regime. Likewise the personnel. The economic theories that Ben Bernanke (for example) follows are literally guaranteed to produce an economic disaster eventually. There are sound reasons why "no one saw this coming". These people are economic quacks.

But the clincher for me came from investigating the benefits to the USG from the new system. There are numerous benefits to them in the Euro Freegold architecture. I believe this was intentional. I think that is what Another meant when he described this as a way to avoid war as we make the transition from a failed US dollar reserve system to a new system. There is something in it for everyone (who matters) including the USG. But I think it will take some time for the stakeholders to identify how to capture the benefits.

So instead of revisiting the will-he-or-wont-he type analysis these days I focus instead on trying to identify catalysts and the likely timing of the transition. I'm equally engaged in attempting to identify what will and wont change in the IMFS after the transition to the new/old system.

I hope others will take up the challenge of revisiting the old arguments for the benefit of the readers and discussants.

Edwardo said...

Costata wrote,

"But the clincher for me came from investigating the benefits to the USG from the new system."

I am pretty sure that what I am about to say is not, per se, what costata has in mind, but said benefits are predicated, in no small measure, on the idea that U.S. physical gold holdings as they are purported to exist, do, in fact, exist.

FOFOA said...

Athrone wrote:

"Another Giants": Central Banks and Gold producers in the late 90s.

"FOFOA Giants": Anyone with enough money that they cannot buy physical Gold in size in the open market without breaking the Gold market.

I'm not sure whether it's claimed that the two are one in the same, or not -- because nobody seems willing/able to provide a list of alleged "FOFOA Giants."


I don't think so. See below. FOA actually says the CBs ("BIS and ECB") are today "Walking In The Footsteps Of Giants"! So are they walking in their own footsteps?

Athrone later: "I tried to be more specific in separating what Another defined as a Giant, and what is defined as a Giant by FOFOA/this blog."

And… "Now, as for FOFOA Giants...the term really hasn't ever been officially defined… FOFOA himself hasn't really explicitly posted about it or there wouldn't be this much debate."

What debate? It's just Athrone. So, I have not defined Giants, yet I am using a different definition than A/FOA? I don't think so. Athrone is baiting you. This is trollish behavior given the name, subtitle and nature of the blog. [What Is A Troll? The term derives from "trolling", a style of fishing which involves trailing bait through a likely spot hoping for a bite. The troll posts a message, often in response to an honest question, that is intended to upset, disrupt or simply insult the group.]

Athrone says I misconstrue Another:

"This is what I mean by Another's words being misconstrued.

When he was talking about Giants, was he really talking about a mysterious race of super-producers who had more money than they know what to do with, and thus have to buy Gold in the shadows, or was he using allegory to describe some very specific deals between Central Banks that were made at the time which show Gold was undervalued?"


Read these "Giant" references below and decide for yourself who is misconstruing Another. Decide for yourself if A/FOA are referring to "Central Banks and Gold producers" as Athrone says "Another Giants" are defined, or to "many world class entities" and "super rich" as Another says in his own words:

6/4/98 ANOTHER (THOUGHTS!)

Gold is held by **many world class entities**, as a capital asset. These "Giants" did understand the purpose for $350 gold.

FOA (8/3/99; 8:53:06MDT - Msg ID:10209)

There are truly many financial giants that currently walk this earth. Some "bet" on silver, some "bet" on gold, but most of them all position these "bets" to function within the framework of this present system. The giants I follow have "placed" a good portion of their wealth in a position for change.


Cont…

FOFOA said...

2/3

FOA (05/06/00; 16:45:21MT - usagold.com msg#20)

I have made it clear that I follow in the footsteps of giants **and by extension remain in Another's shadow**. We have been buying gold all through the 90s as a portion of our savings.

FOA (10/02/00; 17:03:27MD - usagold.com msg#40)

So often Western observers wonder, "why do so many "Giants" buy physical gold when it's going down"? Well, my friends, I'll use the same example we offered recently about the Euro; it's not that gold is going down so much as the dollar is being driven up in failure…

Because they and other Giants were buying all the gold our american made paper markets would supply without driving the price above a domestic US price structure comparison. Remember, the question was never "Where" is the gold going, rather always why are we selling it?

FOA (10/14/2000; 10:30:03MD - usagold.com msg#42)

So, we walk this trail to build an understanding of "gold the savings" not "gold the dollar account multiplier"! Thinking as the "Giants" walking before us think;
"we don't want more dollars as a result of gold gaining permanent long term value that will last a lifetime, we want more gold"!
Onward!

FOA (04/23/01; 20:30:04MT - usagold.com msg#67)

Elwood, they are not trying to Un-money gold! They are going to un-Westernize gold so it performs it's historic function of acting as a tradable wealth holding. No longer following the Gold Bugs view that governments need to control gold so it acts like real money in the fiat sense. Truly, the BIS and ECB are today "Walking In The Footsteps Of Giants"!

FOA (05/06/01; 20:30:52MT - usagold.com msg#69)

But after all that, one must have currency and an enduring, tradable wealth asset that places our footing in life on equal ground with the giants around us,,,,,, gold! Understanding the events that got us here and how they will unfold before us is what this GoldTrail is all about.

FOA (6/9/01; 19:32:22MT - usagold.com msg#76)

The reason these real gold advocates (Giants) buy physical gold is because they are waiting for this dollar casino of a gold currency market to shut down.

FOA (06/12/01; 11:23:21MT - usagold.com msg#77)

I know this, you know this, the government knows this and the Giants know it. Far better to just keep buying gold that will one day be correctly valued when this market's political use is done.


Cont…

Franco said...

costata:

You keep claiming that the USA would be a big beneficiary of freegold, maybe the biggest beneficiary, but I just don't see it. Sure, for years now the USA has been living large and charging it on the credit card, and the debt will never be paid back, so there's all the free shit that the USA got, but freegold means the end of the exhorbitant priviledge, which means no more living large. I don't understand how the USA can be considered a big winner in that light. I don't know, maybe there's a glaring hole in my perspective. Help me understand your position that USA = big winner from freegold. Thanks.

FOFOA said...

3/3

FOA (08/13/01; 07:24:30MT - usagold.com msg#96)

All these Giants that are holding physical gold and credible paper" are going to win big as escalating gold values displace their dollar asset base. There are a few of you smart cookies out there that "NOW" understand what we have been getting at for such a long time.

FOA (10/9/01; 10:05:48MT - usagold.com msg#117)

the leverage today will be in a physical gold position, not any other form of gold ownership. By accumulating physical gold today, we are truly walking in the footsteps of giants; advancing with them as they work thru this singular, long term political move. Truly, the oil producers also fully understand and appreciate this position.



In this comment, FOA describes a character named "Another" as a simple, quiet and patient man, one who doesn't work alone, but one who "controls whether they even have a card house to play in," and whose "actions could bring down the house." Whether he was actually describing Another or not, he was clearly defining a Giant and contrasting it against "financial giants" and traders (which includes Orcas who use OPM to churn their 2 +20).

And I'll go even further to speculate that he actually was describing Another. After all, Another told us that he, himself, trades gold in the thousands. And, by the way, that meant $6,000/ounce which he told us later, a 1,900% premium on $300, not 300%. So was Another a giant himself? If so, then perhaps this gives us a further clue as to their definition of a Giant and to Another himself:

Another: "I would say, "Old World Order" to return… "old world, gold economy, as viewed thru modern eyes"

MK: "One question that immediately comes to mind is what exactly do you mean by old world order reasserting itself? The old European aristocracy?" (No answer to that question, by the way.)

Athrone is right about one thing, I haven't come up with my own definition of "Giants". I am simply using theirs. You can decide for yourself which one of us is misconstruing Another. Perhaps Athrone should start his own blog using his interpretation. If it's better than mine, I'm sure it will be a very popular blog! ;D

Another: "You will not see 80% or more of gold deals… This is not the relm of any public “wall street”. At one time it belonged mostly to the Barron. Now it is large with the BIS and **super rich**."

Sincerely,
FOFOA

Franco said...

Who is "the Barron"?

Knotty Pine said...

Franco,
IMO peak exhorbitant USD privilege is coming to an end with or without freegold. A freegold scenario would allow the US to regain credibility.

From "It's The flow stupid"

If Congress DID decide to mark the US stockpile of gold to market today it would find it had a new stream of revenue. At today's price of $1,328 per ounce, the US gold would be worth $347 billion. Subtract the $11 billion already on the Fed balance sheet and Congress could immediately ask the Fed to credit the US Treasury with $336 billion new dollars to be spent.

And then, if they let the value of the gold float, anytime the price rises, they could issue more fancy dollar-denominated gold certificates to the Fed and be credited with new dollars to spend. In fact, at a Freegold price of $55,000 per ounce, Congress could retire the entire US national debt without giving up a single ounce of gold, merely monetizing what it already has through the Federal Reserve. But what will really happen someday soon is the additional step of opening the vault and allowing that gold to FLOW again, but at a floating price. With this one move Congress wouldn't have to retire the entire national debt because credibility would be reestablished.

You see, the European gold reserves are far better, far more credible than the US gold reserve, simply because they engage in a two-way gold market, and have for decades. The US gold has been hoarded and locked away for more than 30 years, never deployed in case of emergency. The European CB's took a lot of flak for selling gold over the past two decades, but that action is precisely what makes them so much more credible (and valuable!) than the US gold hoard. Any trading partner knows full well that if all else fails, gold will be paid.

Franco said...

I get it that the USA could be able to regain credibility, but there's still the fact that once the exhorbitant priviledge is gone, the USG won't be able to run a $1 trillion annual deficit anymore. Or it could, but not for very long before all the gold is gone. At a price of $50k/oz, 600 tonnes per year would be drained, which means that in a little over 10 years it would be all gone. Does anybody disagree with the thesis that "no more exhorbitant priviledge = no more bullshit unsustainable lifestyle"?

costata said...

Franco,

I will have try to find a couple of comments I posted on this topic in an exchange on a much earlier thread. If I can't find them I'll compose a new comment to you.

Please note I'm referring to the USG (US government) not the USA/Americans in general as benefiting from the new system in the comment above. I think there will be considerable pain for many Americans from the failure of the $IMFS.

In the years after I expect that the American economy will bounce back with enormous vigour. Like a champion athlete who regains their fitness after an illness or injury. There was significant downside for Americans in this "exorbitant privilege". Compare the benefits enjoyed by the USG versus the middle class. What did the middle class get out of it?

costata said...

Normally I wouldn't quote anything that Art writes. (By the time you read this his comment will probably have been deleted.)

FOFOA and his mob are saying that the Arabs agree (in secret) to sell their oil for gold valued at a much higher price than spot gold because they believe that gold will be much higher in nominal terms in the future.

Art is addressing athrone above. This claim is incorrect. Neither FOFOA nor anyone else here that I can recall is claiming that the Saudis, or other ME oil producers, are overpaying for gold in secret. This is simply wrong.

The original cheap-oil-for-cheap-gold deal is dead and buried. The Asians killed that deal by buying physical gold. The BOE, Fed and other CBs saved the bullion banks but that was only buying time. Through the original Washington Agreement the Europeans commenced withdrawing their support for the gold-cheap-in-US-dollars-rig that helped to maintain the ME oil producers support for the oil backing of the US dollar. This in turn helps the US$ to hold its position as the world reserve currency and primary trade currency.

To continue this discussion we have to extrapolate from the point when FOA stopped posting to the present. Some of the discussants here believe that as the price of gold began to rise the game changed. The imperative was to raise the price of oil alongside gold in order to keep the gold:oil ratio in the range it had operated in for decades.

Two reasons are advanced to support this theory. Firstly to placate the ME oil producers and secondly, perhaps, to make other more expensive oil deposits commercially viable.

However, as athrone (and, yes, even Art) correctly point out. If the price of oil rises to a high enough level it is game over for the global economy. Unlike gold there is a ceiling somewhere above the current oil price that cannot be breached for an extended period.

From memory the gold:oil ratio has been as low as 10:1 and as high as 30:1 and the average has been somewhere around 15:1 over the decades. If Jim Sinclair is right about $3,500 gold being on the horizon then the ME producers will presumably want their oil at somewhere between $116 and $233 per barrel if gold is at this level.

I welcome other opinions, but I don't think the global economy could handle $150 oil right now. I don't know how high the gold:oil ratio needs to go before the ME oil producers start complaining (and taking action). Perhaps they will lend their support to the status quo by tolerating a reset to a higher ratio than 30:1 and the $IMFS survives for a while longer. IMHO the gold:oil ratio is a potential trigger for a system reset.

tEON said...

Thank you costata for your response.
On the previous thread of 'Credibility' I recall that some of the comments referenced 'instinct' of which I am a HUGE believer. I always recall Dan Ackroyd's line to Tom Hanks in the movie 'Dragnet'; "What makes my hackles sit up and turn red..."

costata said "We covered SDR, currency swaps, break up of the EU, renminbi as reserve currency, gold confiscation and many other scenarios. Every scenario failed to stand up to scrutiny."

By 'scrutiny' I assume you mean that they are not viewed as legitimate or realistic alternatives just as:
"...USG might change course and choose to save the US dollar" is similarly as unlikely. Okay. These are discussions that I could research for further details.
OR (please excuse my ignorance)
are you stating that Freegold is inevitable regardless of implementation of a SDR, break-up of EU etc...

Where my own hackles bristle and turn crimson is with a thesis that is, essentially, un-challengeable or becoming so vested in a position that it has no irrevocable date.
If Freegold makes it ascendancy when the US reserve currency starts accounting its gold reserves to actual market price does this mean that IF the US refuses to EVER venture there (for whatever many reasons you may wish to surmise) that Freegold will never transpire?
NOTE: I am not starting a debate about whether the US reserve currency will account its gold reserves to market price. (not looking for "it will - do don't go there" or "research it - we've already covered it")

What I have been able to gather is that a number of scenarios may come to fruition prior to Freegold but the pathway has alternative routes - that may just make it take a longer timeframe. So, in essence, there is no one single, domino-toppling, event that will deter Freegold - only, certain, unlikely circumstances could delay it? So there is no 'required' event collapsing the thesis?

What I have only seen, over the years here, are economic events that are commented on initiating the inevitability of Freegold - not current events that bring into question a prolonged delay to Freegold. This bothers me a little. Admittedly timing is the most unknowable factor - although it always appears to be inching closer in this Koyaanisqatsi world we are living in. I rationalize my own PGA status by stating that I will be passing it onto my children, if I never utilize it myself. My suspicions are that most of us will see the revaluation in our lifetimes.

Thanks for indulging me - I won't post again till I have done many further hours of reading.
Regards,

FOFOA said...

Hello "gary (not the troll one)",

I remember you, and no, you are not "Gary aka FakeAnother aka SugarLover aka …"! ;D

You asked:

"costata said "We covered SDR, currency swaps, break up of the EU, renminbi as reserve currency, gold confiscation and many other scenarios. Every scenario failed to stand up to scrutiny."

By 'scrutiny' I assume you mean that they are not viewed as legitimate or realistic alternatives just as:
"...USG might change course and choose to save the US dollar" is similarly as unlikely. Okay. These are discussions that I could research for further details.
OR (please excuse my ignorance)
are you stating that Freegold is inevitable regardless of implementation of a SDR, break-up of EU etc..."


I can't speak for Costata, but I mean the latter (i.e., inevitable regardless), and I think that's what Costata meant too (because I was in on those discussions he mentioned).

Sincerely,
The friendly teapot despot you keep coming back to for more! ;D

DP said...

Grumps,

$59,250million

DP said...

costata,

Great to see you back in the comments after your vacay. :-)

I hope you are feeling relaxed and refreshed...

DP said...

To whom it may concern,

jojo: You argument is if there was no gold for oil, the price would be (picking a number) $300/bbl or some much higher price?

...

athrone: Precisely. And because $300/bbl is not economically feasible, it makes no sense.

+1

And yet, all else being equal, the market prices ratio for oil:gold must stay within the bounds of historical norm (approximately 15:1, give or take), and must deliver the physical items on the barrelhead at the time of exchange, if certain key supplies of oil are not to cease flowing.

VtC: So the gold/oil ratio cannot remain constant forever, can it?

It's a pickle alright!

MF: VtC tried helping you out by telling you that under FG oil would actually be cheaper.

Yes. Yes, I believe he did. He said oil would be cheaper in euros.

But why, oh why, did he draw a distinction for a euro price in the Freegold future?

Perhaps because the euro will still obtain gold, when the dollar ceased to function in this regard.

VtC: A rising gold price in Euros is "just" another exchange rate and doesn't affect the real economy that much.

But if you happened to already have some before this singular, long term political move revalued gold (against all other things) upwards — as a matter of political will and acceptance of reality — it will affect your own, personal, real economy quite a lot.

So perhaps you should go and invest in a big pile of silver instead. For the leverage. Green Market loves White Metal. Sure.

FOA: Far better to just keep buying gold that will one day be correctly valued when this market's political use is done.

Have. A nice. Day.










Giants demand physical gold from the paper market price. They get it or their products stop flowing. The products are worth more than mere money.

BBs need physical gold to keep the paper markets functioning and delivering physical when demanded.

CBs buy physical gold from Giants, if necessary, through the BIS and at a Freegold price - because the BIS/Giants know the leverage in the paper market, and therefore understand what value physical gold really has.

As long as the Giants and CBs have the political will for the paper gold market to continue, there will be enough physical flow to satisfy demand. Orcas need not apply.

MatrixSentry said...

There is a lesson to be learned now that athrone has been addressed by the host of this blog. If it looks like a troll, sounds like a troll, and smells like a troll, it's likely a troll.

For those who are new on this trail, you may feel a sense of urgency as you work to figure out this Freegold thing. Understand that time allocated to trolls like athrone will be lost time. That in itself is bad enough, but a more serious ramification may be that the troll gains enough credibility in your eyes such that you decide to follow him down a path that ends nowhere.

Understand this, contrary to his claim that he has read Another/FOA and this blog as well, he hasn't. Anyone who has can immediately see that he hasn't. He will be along anytime now to assert that his good name is being besmirched and he is being persecuted for being reasonable and balanced. He will again assure you that he has in fact read all the material. He is a liar and a troll, believe it. Think long and hard whether you want to give this troll a level of credibility that he certainly doesn't deserve.

Many of the long time participants here have adopted the acronyms RTFB and RRTFB. We do this because it is what we do and it produces results. Do not look for the short cut on the trail. The trail has been blazed, and like all well used and traveled trails, it represents an efficient path. It may not be the only path, or the optimum one, and it may not satisfy all that travel it. But, I think it will satisfy the needs of the most. The hope is that those who are at or near the trailhead can progress up the trail, following well laid out markers left by others. Eventually we hope to see these people way up at the edge of the frontier where their council can help determine where we go next.

I have given a bit of thought about how daunting it must be to arrive here and face a catalog of posts that goes back over 4 years and counting. It is my position that you need to read the entire blog, and many of the posts multiple times. Where to begin? I don't think there is a right answer to the question of where to begin. Everyone processes information differently. I am a very linear thinker and therefore it appealed to me to start at the beginning and work forward. This will take some time and will require patience. I think if I had to do it again now, I would start at the beginning and read 3 or 4 articles and then go to the latest article and continue in that fashion until all the articles are read. Then at whatever point that is in the blog history, I would work forward to the present.

(1 of 2)

MatrixSentry said...

This approach may not work for some or most. I am working with Aquilus on a "quick start" reading list of say 20-30 articles that will try to capture the essence of the trail. The hope is that a manageable list will break the inertia and get the explorer headed up the trail. The risk we run is that we select articles that work for us but may not work for others. So it is going to be incumbent on the reader to realize that the reading list we eventually come up with is one that works for a couple of old timers. It will be one starting place.

I think that if I were to use the "quick start" technique, I would go to the linear technique after completing the reading list. I would either start at the beginning and work forward or from the present and work backwards. Along the way when you experience an "a-ha" moment or otherwise have some sort of breakthrough, save the article in a pdf file. In this way you can compile your own reading list that can be used later to help others or to improve whatever list Aquilus and I can come up with.

I think that it is important to note that it is unlikely FOFOA will ever come up with a list of his own or endorse anyone's Freegold "digest". Nor should he IMO. There are other reading lists out there and I have a few of them in pdf format at the Ron M's Air-friendly PDFs link. The hazard here is that we run into the same problem we have with a the monster blog archive, too many quick start reading lists and resulting paralysis in regards as to where to start!

I remain convinced that a committed individual can read the entire blog in a matter of a few months. I also am convinced that after reading the blog it will be possible to make a basic judgement on the body of work presented in support of Freegold. That judgement will be either this is something that deserves serious and ongoing investigation, or it doesn't. If it does, I will be seeing you here for years to come I'm sure. If not, I hope you find a trail you can follow or that you blaze a completely new trail of your own. Either way we will not have to worry about another troll on this blog. A troll will never take the time to read the blog in the first place.

(2 of 2)

Anonymous said...

DP,

That makes 160 billion added to base money just in six weeks. Yet, we see gold react antithetically, a rash of M&A activity, and blackhawk exercises that surprise local authorities. Most of us awakened have become so inured to this neverending deathrattle of the $IMS that maybe the reset will catch us asleep at the wheel.

KnallGold said...

Just ordered two 50g Valcambi "chocolate" bars, 2608x2=5216sFr./100g Gold, Kitco shows 4791sFr./100g, we'll see what the sell prize is for 100g, maybe 4860. Hmm, we'll also see if we have widening of spreads or even starting of a decoupling (but I'm hearing the grass growing).

Removing tin foil hat and putting on the stahlhelm for the meteorite shower ;-)

DP said...

Grumps,

Yet, we see "gold" react antithetically

FYP?

DP said...

… if you were asleep at the wheel when it occurred, did the crash still happen? #BongPhilosophy

Indenture said...

Continuing what MatrixSentry just said I have a reading list compiled for friends that I have used to introduce them to Reference Point Gold. There is no shortcut, but I also believe there are different ways for different people to be exposed to this daunting body of work. This Appalachian boy has chosen these posts in this order.

fofoa.blogspot.com/2011/07/euro-gold.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2012/05/inflation-or-hyperinflation.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2012/04/peak-exorbitant-privilege.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2012/02/yo-warren-b-you-are-so-og.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/07/debtors-and-savers.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/06/its-debt-stupid.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2010/10/its-flow-stupid.html
fofoa.blogspot.com/2013/02/think-like-giant-2.html

This is just a Freegold Primer.
Nothing more. After this it's time to RTFB.

Anonymous said...

I guess things didn't go well for the US at the G20 by the looks of this gold sector poo party .

Edwardo said...

I realize that we are not near an important juncture where MTM is concerned, but it does appear as if "paper gold" has no support.

Anonymous said...

I think what we're seeing here is some serious sparring behind the scenes over the G20 communique. Threats and counter-threats.

DP said...

Oh noes!

No nose?

Indenture said...

It deserves it's own link.
Aquilus describes an Orca trying to break the two-tier gold system

Bright aurum said...

Sss_puke_y

DP said...

Indenture,

'welcome!

DP said...

Congratulations to all who are subscribed to these comments by email as they arrive - you have just enjoyed some more 'Art'. A clear testment to his total lack of comprehension of the Freegold concept, despite the MANY entirely futile hours of effort he has wasted, lovingly hand-crafting his prose to tell the world what a lot of bullshit Freegold is. Then posting it 327 times in quick succession - because, y'know, one of them might not get deleted as SPAM if he posts it enough times?

These moments are something truly special that you should cherish, because when others pass this way in future, they will read comments like this one of mine and say … who is Art? But you will not have this eternal hole in your soul.

Art - the most committed time-misallocator at this blog. I'm going to raise a glass later. Not to Art you understand, just I was going to anyway.

Michael H said...

October 13, 2012 at 6:31 PM

Anonymous said...

FOFOA,

Thank you for your detailed response. I will need more time to think upon it and respond, but in the meantime I want to address one thing you said:

"Athrone is right about one thing, I haven't come up with my own definition of "Giants". I am simply using theirs."

One thing to consider is that due to their writing styles neither of these man ever spent even a single paragraph directly trying to define the term "Giants." Another spoke in a very cryptic and prophesying manner, and FOA was speaking in a campfire storytelling fashion by utilizing parables. Neither has the direct, lengthy writing style used to clearly flesh out ideas.

This is what Another and FOA had to say about Giants:

Another Oct 97 - Sep 98

"Think now, if you are a person of "great worth" is it not better for you to acquire gold over years, at better prices? If you are one of "small worth", can you not follow in the footsteps of giants?"

"If one closely follows "in the footsteps of giants" (not the book), he will also be preparing for a "currency war"!

"These money printers, they do much and fool noone. "Follow in the footsteps of giants", as they take in real gold."

"I think, over time, the gold derivatives market did "break" the control of the BIS. Gold is held by many world class entities, as a capital asset. These "Giants" did understand the purpose for $350 gold. In this range, the gold mining industry and many capital reserve gold assets would survive."

Part 1/2

Mircea said...

So...main function of gold is to store value. But for me this is a contradiction of terms, but not an oxymoron.

You see...once you store something, that
(what you store) have no value except for you. What create value is the benefit that you and others can obtain and that happens only trough sharing.

Dynamite would've had no value if Alfred Nobel kept it for himself. Same for other discoveries of man. Anything (whether is an idea or something material) have no material value unless shared with others.

So..you see, once you store, there's no value!

Is my stream of thought flawed?

PS i can only think of one exception: you can store as much as you can food, clean air and water, because life is the most valuable for EVERY man.

Anonymous said...

Part 2/2

FOA Feburary 2000 to June 2000

"I have made it clear that I follow in the footsteps of giants and by extension remain in Another's shadow. We have been buying gold all through the 90s as a portion of out savings. It's held just like any other currency and represents a major portion of the (my) pie."

"So often Western observers wonder, "why do so many "Giants" buy physical gold when it's going down"? Well, my friends, I'll use the same example we offered recently about the Euro; it's not that gold is going down so much as the dollar is being driven up in failure"

"let me begin the long process of clarifying our (mine and the Giants I walk behind) views and understandings of the many concepts that drive our position."

"So, we walk this trail to build an understanding of "gold the savings" not "gold the dollar account multiplier"! Thinking as the "Giants" walking before us think; we don't want more dollars as a result of gold gaining permanent long term value that will last a lifetime, we want more gold"!"

"But after all that, one must have currency and an enduring, tradable wealth asset that places our footing in life on equal ground with the giants around us...... gold!"

"The reason these real gold advocates (Giants) buy physical gold is because they are waiting for this dollar casino of a gold currency market to shut down."

"All these Giants that are holding physical gold and credible paper" are going to win big as escalating gold values displace their dollar asset base."

As pivotal as the concept of Giants and Shrimp have become on this blog, Another and FOA said remarkably little about Giants.

If I were to summarize their tales, Another devotes his time to "The Deal" between Central Banks and Oil Producers, whereas FOA devotes a lot of time towards the differences between paper and physical. When I read the two, it seems clear that Another is a Giant, and FOA is, aptly, just a friend or acquaintance. Another is the one with the inside information and clear view, whereas FOA is merely trying to figure it out from what things he can piece together from having contact with this figure.

If you compare the definitions/focuses of the two, it seems that they do not have consistent or clear definitions of a "Giant." The quotes from FOA would lead one to believe that a Giant is merely a physical gold advocate with a sizeable wealth. Whereas, given the context of Another's writing, he seems to indicate that Giants are something bigger -- entities with not only sizeable wealth but immense political power and inside connections.

Just my interpretation.

Michael H said...

I found the original comment which was the source of my comment above, by wejn:

May 23, 2011 at 3:17 PM

Pat said...

Mircea, is that you Francis Coppola? You answered your own question though didn't you? If you store something that has universal value, it doesn't transmorgrify itself into something valueless, what kind of perverse reverse alchemy would this be?
Hey George c'mer, look what I have in my safe. What is it? Aw nuthin really just an ingot of metal. Pull it out. Wow, that's gold, Jerry, gold! Yeh, I know, but as soon as I put it back, it just turns back to an ingot of metal.
It is fun to see it change back and forth though.

Pat said...

Nah, Athrone doesn't know the secret handshake, and his tats, well, c'mon be serious.

TontoD said...

> Whereas, given the context of Another's writing, he seems to indicate that Giants are something bigger -- entities with not only sizeable wealth but immense political power and inside connections

I disagree about giants being mythical. My personal interpretation of Another's giant is that you are one IF you're trying to buy enough physical gold to break "paper gold". You may be a billionaire, but if you couldn't care less about pysical gold, then you're not a giant. So it seems that one's size (as a giant) depends on the quantity of physical you're trying to get.

So place yourself in a Central Banker's shoes. Everybody else is playing ball, and the other CBs are slowly accumulating physical. And now here comes some billionaire who, all of a sudden, wants to go "all-in" on gold. That's reason for concern, isn't it? They have political sway over other CBs. The private entities, on the other hand, can just go nuts and do whatever they like.

Obviously, there is no entity in this world larger than the CBs. CBs can keep printing money.

DP said...

Ugh!

"But what exactly IS 'a Giant'?" … still?

Hands up if you are thinking: "yeah, if you like, now please get to thinking about the bigger picture so you'll understand Freegold better rather than wasting your time and ours on this trivial detail?"

Or at least explain why the nuance you intend to draw out will make any difference whatsoever.

Nickelsaver said...

Art,

For all of the objections made by you about the bankers, you of all ppl should be ecstatic that in freegold, those that opt out of saving in fiat via gold due truly take the power back.

How unfortunate for us, you are too stupid to get it.

Anonymous said...

DP,

It makes a difference because how strictly you define a Giant determines the number of Giants worldwide, which in turn impacts the level of conspiracy required to have been kept a secret for 15 years.

Franco said...

All this talk about orcas and trying to break the paper gold market...Does anybody know, in the Comex (or whatever the gold market is called) what is the typical size, in weight, of a large delivery? What is the size of the largest delivery ever?

KnallGold said...

Reporter on N-TV said Soros sold more than half of his Gold in Q4 last year (didn't give details if ETF or what), said Goldbull might end if it goes like in 1980, and that would again be 20 bad years. ohh, end of Goldbull market, but we heard that before. Altough POG went below 1600 now. Fear!

Where is Prechter when you need him! (15min and ticking per FOFOA?) ;-)

What a Knalll from that meteorite, I have to give in here :-(
So far no deads, wish those with no windows warmth.

Bought me the Sysyphe CD, looks like they really made something new, couldn't listen to all songs yet in depth.

Can't beat that bassline...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtP59s6ejp4

Good Weekend,
KG

DP said...

Another: I ask you now: " Is it hard to believe or hard to understand"? When it comes to money it's usually both.

Know this: "gold transcends human valuations thru time and life". . Take your time on this one!

Gold is now caught in a crossfire of world thought. The traders are viewing it as a commodity and trying to make money on it's moves using various paper trading vehicles. Their opinion of the market is flawed because the "real value buyers" would never deal with these people or let anyone in that circle know they are buying gold as "money"! The major buying and selling is between CBs, nations, merchant banks, "the super rich" and the hordes of small buyers in forgotten places. That is one of the small many reasons wall street hates gold, they are not part of the real action. Comex is a side show!

DP said...

the level of conspiracy required to have been kept a secret for 15 years

But… there is no Freegold conspiracy, remember? It isn't going to happen, because it doesn't add up.

If/when it does make sense and you decide it clearly is inevitable, then perhaps you might decide there may have to have been some conspiracy that prevented it happening already.

But to stick the cart in front of your horse for a moment… of course there is a "conspiracy"! Another was pretty clear on this: the "real value buyers" would never deal with these people or let anyone in that circle know they are buying gold as "money"!

Move along, nothing more to see here.

Aquilus said...

@Mircea

Let's go for a little walk down this trail:

"So...main function of gold is to store value. But for me this is a contradiction of terms, but not an oxymoron."

Hmm.. Oxymoron: "An oxymoron (plural oxymora or oxymorons) (from Greek "sharp dull") is a figure of speech that combines contradictory terms"

So "store" and "value" used together, eh?

Storing=Hoarding is bad? Hoarding things that society needs, yes. But hoarding things meant to be hoarded? Like castles? Art? Gold? Who are you depriving? Afer all, to hoard them, you must pay the person/entity you aquire them from. They get to spend all that cash. You're doing good for society without depriving it of essentials!

Value? Ah yes, let's see about that...

"You see...once you store something, that (what you store) have no value except for you."

If that were true, when you stored your Lei or Euro in a shoebox at home, they would have no value except for you? Same thing with that flat screen TV you got? No value, really? Not even a little bit on EBay?

"What create value is the benefit that you and others can obtain and that happens only trough sharing."

Awww, that's heartwarming and chilling at the same time... Would you please share your savings with me? Would you, please, pretty please? Maybe if I say please again?

"Dynamite would've had no value if Alfred Nobel kept it for himself. Same for other discoveries of man."

Well, let's see: gold is found (not created by man) in many places. And unlike an invention, it cannot be "kept away" from people except through decree/force and only temporarily at that.

But dynamite would still have had value for Mr Nobel and anyone that knew about it. It just would not have had the network effect value that gold has. More lower.

"Anything (whether is an idea or something material) have no material value unless shared with others."

Either the commune is going to be proud of you as a great socialist mind, or you wanted to talk about the fact that value comes from the network effect. If the latter, yes.

"So..you see, once you store, there's no value!"

No, actually I don't. When you bring your stored Lei/Euro/etc out from the shoebox you stored them in, do they have no value? And by the way, shame on you for storing the state's currency and reducing liquidity. You should store gold because that does not constrict either industry not liquidity. And if this 5000+ year trend continues, someone might even buy it back from you later. See, you're a socialist hero already (smile).

"Is my stream of thought flawed?"

Yes. Very much so. But with a little more education, it doesn't have to be.

Education. Get you some (my motto for this post)

Aquilus

DP said...

So why has no "disgruntled Orca" ever decided to "expose this conspiracy"?

Only Giants would be able to do anything truly disruptive with the knowledge, so nobody else can prove a damn thing.

So it's all good.

Have a good weekend, everyone! :-)

Edgar said...

Euro POG at €1200. Remarkable. The year has just started.
Now I wonder if we will see FG by the end of this year already.

Anonymous said...

FOFOA,

Here are some more quotes which re-enforce my perspective:

From Another (Thoughts!):

"The Deal: We (an oil state) now value gold in trade far higher than currencies. We are willing to use gold as a partial payment for the future use of "all oil" and value it at $1,000 US. ( only a small amount of oil is in this deal ) And take a very small amount of gold out of circulation each month using it's present commodity price."

"There is only one oil state that counts! Only one! They have made it very clear how important gold is to them. If they had started buying outright, gold would have gone to $5,000+ in days. And only a very few million ozs. would have been purchased! The message has been for some years, "we will accumulate thru the back door, using paper deals if you keep the price at or below the cost of production"."

"But, how can 100million + ozs of gold be equal to all the oil in Arabia? It all depends on how it's valued, simple yes?"

Here we have Another talking about a very small amount of $1,000/oz Gold trading at a time when Gold was $300/oz. And he says that only one trading partner matters: Saudi Arabia. He also says that a mere few million oz could break the physical market (aka less than a billion in open Gold interest).

This is why I believe he viewed the market as fragile and was expecting it to collapse almost by the end of the week, by the urgency in his writings. Well I think he was right about those Oil deals and Gold at thousands/oz, after all he was privy to them! But I think he was wrong about the fragility of the market because here we are 15 years later and it is still intact!

With regards to the fact that nobody has stepped forward aside from Another in 15 years: this, and Another's words, are what leads me to believe that Giants are a very specific group (of which he was a part of) and that the thousands/oz Gold for Oil deal was a very specific thing with only very select trading partners.

If we are going to think about how secrets are kept, if Giants are a very small group and we have one of maybe a handful of people who has come forward (Another) then that makes sense!

Now if Giants are a more broad group with numbers in the thousands (as more indicated by FOA, or FOFOA), and nobody has come forward in 15 years, that is quite extraordinary.

This is why I think FOA was mistaken in his [implied] meaning of Giants. He was using it a bit liberally as a literary device in his parable.

TontoD said...

There are only so many billionaires. The vast majority of them surely have their wealth diverse set of assets. Try to imagine how many of them are sitting on billions of dollars in cash. Why sit on cash that slowly loses value over time? They can own real estate here and there, own a sizeable chunks of CompanyA to CompanyZ, hold a diverse set of bonds that generate yield, etc.

Even after a war or an economic collapse, they're still far better off than the rest of us. The assets they own outright are likely to keep its value.

So there aren't that many giants. Furthermore, how many among them understands what's really going on in the gold markets? If one billionaire wants to go all in on gold, he would first need to sell all of his assets. Then other companies and billionairs can borrow money or cough up cash to absorb his assets. Only then can this billonaire go "all in" on gold.

Even if one tries to go "all in", and they get a lecture from somebody about the limited supply of gold, do they necessarily need to know about FreeGold? Perhaps the lecture they get will sound more like the problems of a corporate hostile take over. If one buys too many shares of CompanyA, its stock price skyrockets.

So they don't need to know the history, the backstory, and the future FreeGold system. Just tell them about the Hunt Brothers, and tell them that their choice is to slowly accumulate over time or buy a large quantity for thousands of dollars per ounce.

For the oil-for-gold deal, you don't need that many people. Just the high-ranking members of largest CBs and a select few billionaires.

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