“When talking about value, for many investors it all comes back to gold. How many ounces of gold does it take to purchase an asset, whether it be real estate, equities or anything else?” Adam Katz
“Banking became a more profitable business as it devolved into a leveraged game of chicken – collecting a positive interest spread (interest paid to gold depositors vs. interest charged on loans) while avoiding the very low probability that substantially all gold claim holders would attempt to simultaneously exchange their receipts for the bullion in the bank’s vault.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“But the most controversial step, considered by many to be a dark moment in U.S. economic history, was the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 passed on January 30 making it illegal for U.S. citizens to own gold and requiring them to exchange it for U.S. dollars. The very next day, Roosevelt fixed the value of gold to $35/oz from $20.67 the day before, which instantly devalued the dollar by 69%. Without a doubt, this was the single most confiscatory act by government in U.S. history.” Matt Blackman
“The practice of issuing gold claims in amounts that exceeded actual holdings came to be known as fractional reserve banking (the number of gold receipts floating was only ‘fractionally reserved’ by the amount of physical gold). Clearly, earning interest on receipts lent that exceeded the gold on deposit enhanced their profitability – and, as we see yet again today, greatly magnified the eventual vulnerability of bank balance sheets.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“Historically, the Fed’s balance sheet counted the peoples’ gold held in member banks as assets on its balance sheet, and counted the banks’ claims against that gold as liabilities.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“In 1971, the US dollar went completely off the gold standard, meaning all paper dollar holders had no claim to the metal (still owned by the government).” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“Were the US to have a gold standard today, bank reserves held at the Fed would be strictly redeemable into gold. That is no longer the case under today’s fiat money standard.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“Nevertheless, it is argued and seems logical that a gold standard WOULD INDIRECTLY constrain excessive voluntary bank leverage to the extent that banks would rightly perceive as finite a central bank’s status of lender of last resort.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“The reason there is very little support for the gold standard is the consequences of those types of market adjustments are not considered to be appropriate in the 20th and 21st century. I am one of the rare people who have still some nostalgic view about the old gold standard, as you know, but I must tell you, I am in a very small minority among my colleagues on that issue.” Alan Greenspan
“Where there is no possibility of subjective moral hazard there would be far less hazard. Be that as it may, under a fractional reserve banking system such as we have today, where the number of claims against a bank exceeds its reserves by a factor of 10, the notion of a bank run is easily understood and indeed, seems to be a black-swan type of inevitability.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“In times of stress, waning confidence of both potential lenders and borrowers causes the money multiplier to contract sharply (debt deflation). Under a gold standard, central banks would be left relatively powerless to stimulate the monetary/lending process, as they could not create gold ‘out of thin air.’ This is no longer the case because the current fiat regime allows central banks to subjectively create ‘paper gold’ (inflate the monetary base) to counteract deflationary forces.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“Gold’s remarkable stability over time is evident in the following. A gentleman’s suit in sixteenth century England around the time of King Henry the VIII, cost the equivalent of one ounce of gold, approximately the same as a suit would cost today.” Unknown
“Nevertheless, a wad of bills and coins in your pocket amounting to $20.67 in 1929 could have been exchanged for a one ounce gold coin. A few years later, FDR officially devalued the dollar by about 70% when he confiscated private gold holdings at that price and subsequently raised the price fix of gold to $35 per ounce.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“The ‘floating’ gold price ever since has moved progressively higher than $35 an ounce, reflecting the massive devaluation of the dollar against something real (scarce and thus costly to expand).” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“[Gold] gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head.” Warren Buffett
“To identify the intrinsic value of the dollar today, we examine the corollary – the intrinsic value of gold in dollar terms, which we dub ‘The Shadow Gold Price’ (SGP). To do so we assume that Federal Reserve Bank liabilities are again exchangeable into gold (recall, FRB reserves are bank assets – the stuff that used to have to be gold). As we discussed in ‘A Not-So Modest Proposal,’ one would simply divide the dollar amount of current Fed liabilities by official gold holdings. This calculation, while simple, is intellectually honest and produces a breathtakingly large ‘equilibrium’ gold price of approximately $9500 per ounce today ($2.5 trillion divided by US official gold holdings of 8100+ metric tons).” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“The economic forces that affect the price of gold are different from, and often are opposed to the forces which determine the price of most common financial assets. This independent movement of gold to other financial assets can reduce the overall volatility and adds balance to a portfolio.” Unknown
“Between 1971 and 1981, the U.S. dollar lost more half its value, while silver prices rose nearly five times.” Unknown
“The purchasing power of gold over time has been generally stable, whereas the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar has steadily declined. Dollars invested in gold, generally provide a rate of return that is equal to inflation over time. Thus gold has the ‘hedge against inflation’ capability.” Unknown
“Over the last six months, spot gold has dropped about 20% while the Shadow Gold Price (SGP) has virtually tripled. At a minimum, this is a radical departure from historical relationships. When we last experienced a gold market frenzy (peaking in 1980), the spot market gold price traded at a sizable premium to the SGP (about 1.75 times when spot gold peaked above $800 per ounce). Today, spot market gold is trading less than 0.09 times the SGP. This is as cheap as it’s ever been by a large margin. To reach the frenzied peak today in terms equivalent to 1980, spot gold would need to trade above $16,000 per ounce. If the Fed doesn’t very quickly reverse the paper reserve growth of the last 20 years to bring the SGP back to Earth, then spot gold will inevitably blast off to the moon to join FRB reserves.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“We doubt gold will trade at $16,000, but we’re not price anchored. Would you have imagined in 1971 that gold would rise from $35 to over $800 an ounce only nine years later?” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“If the Shadow Gold Price, as an indicator of intrinsic value for spot gold (and therefore the recent diminution of absolute value of the dollar), has no basis in reality, then there can be no basis of value for anything denominated in dollars.” Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance
“Where are we today? With gold trading around $850/oz [2008-12-16] means that it now takes $41.12 to buy something that cost $1 in 1933. This works out to a 97.6% devaluation of the dollar. But I’m getting ahead of myself.” Matt Blackman
Filed under: Uncategorized , gold, silver


Matt Blackman