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Guess I'm a full-on goldbug now?? #878984, #896476, #889502, #885194
My latest for The Daily Economy:
Some extracts:
Last time this much gold crossed the Atlantic, the French were repatriating their gold reserves from New York — in the 1960s, a few years before the gold-based Bretton Woods monetary system collapsed. The time before then, in July 1940, Operation Fish had the Brits shuffle away 1,500 metric tons to Canada, to keep the treasure away from Hitler in the event the latter would capture London. The armies imminently circling London these days are of a different sort, clad in bankers’ attire rather than military uniform, their appetite for vaulted gold no less strong.
THIS is spot-on:
Gold has backstopped the global monetary and financial system for centuries — obviously so under the various gold standards (classical, interwar, Bretton Woods), but no less important during the last fifty-odd years of pure fiat money. Central banks have for the most part held on to the gold of ages past; in recent years some of them — Poland, Russia, China, India — have acquired sizable amounts. (The World Gold Council now routinely reports that the central banks buy above 1,000 tonnes a year.)
As of Friday evening, the New York and London gold prices were once more roughly in line, the golden arbitrage having rapidly closed. Lease rates, a type of gold interest rates, have come down as well from their heights above 5 percent just a few days ago. Maybe this is the beginning of gold’s new role in the global, geopolitical monetary system. Or maybe Ash is right, and it was all just a glitch in the glittering matrix that is the gold market.
PEEEAACE.
What are the silver reserves like? Do they still have those, or is it only gold?
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not sure. Good question.
The news release + the Tenth Amendment center piece on it (https://blog.tenthamendmentcenter.com/2025/02/to-the-governor-wyoming-passes-bill-to-require-state-to-hold-gold-and-silver-reserves/) both mention silver alongside gold so it would seem they both received this legal impetus this week.
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Silver is a bit harder to hold because it takes so much more space. But given that we used to use it in our coin, l would suspect we had a huge reserve of it?
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We haven't used silver in our coins since 1965, have we?
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I think it went to 69, but the usa hasnt used silver in a while. They held on to it after they melted it, right?
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That I don't know.
Was it the less common dollar and half-dollars that kept using silver for a few more years?
I know '65 was the end of silver dimes and quarters.
S2F very low, right? but yeah, go find out. I seriously doubt it.
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