U.S. Dollar Currency Collapse Within 30 Days
Oct
24, 2008 - 10:41 AM
By: Eric_deCarbonnel
COMEX gold is a form of debt. It involves one party promising to produce gold (money) to another at a future date. Like all forms of debt, a COMEX futures contract is only as good as the counterparty behind the contract. Right now, because of low margin requirements, sellers of gold futures only have enough gold to cover 10% of outstanding contracts stored in COMEX warehouses. Considering that the biggest sellers of gold futures contract are insolvent financial institutions, it is obvious that COMEX gold has enormous counterparty risks . If even a quarter of outstanding contracts asked for physical delivery, it would be enough to guarantee a default. Since a financial collapse would actually creates the risk total default (insolvent banks can't produce the gold or cash), COMEX gold fails miserably as a safe haven . This is why COMEX gold prices are falling, while physical gold is disappearing from the market place
Because of scarcity, physical gold is selling at an enormous premium to gold spot price (which is set by COMEX). How big a premium? Well, on eBay 2008 gold buffalo are trading between 300 to 400 over spot price. That is a 50% premium. The enormous premiums being paid in the physical market means that a large number of December gold contract holders are likely to request delivery. A volume, whether it causes defaults or not, is likely to change the marketplace perception of gold and cause a rush of into a physical gold plagued by shortages. Gold will skyrocket over 2000 in a matter of days.
I am not the only person who believes COMEX gold futures are on the verge of collapse. I urge you to watch this video (skip to 11 minute mark) and read the extract below to see what others are saying about paper gold.
Watch Video Now
( red emphasis mine)
Why Gold
Is Dropping When It Shouldn't
by Alex Wallenwein
- and what it all means
Why is gold dropping right now
when anyone in their sane mind
would expect it to rise? The
simple answer to this question
is, "
because Comex-gold isn't gold "
- and because it
deceptively pretends to be 'the'
price-setter for real gold.
Gold is
gold, paper is paper, and "Comex
gold" is nothing but paper
masquerading as gold while
simultaneously pretending to be
the price-setting medium for
actual gold in the world.
Now, finally, Comex-gold is in
the process of being unmasked.
The real supply and demand
determinants for Comex gold are
not actual gold investors but
fund managers . Fund
managers are inextricably
intertwined with the world of
contract-based credit
instruments. They use bet on
Comex gold contracts to hedge
their other (currently
horrendously losing) bets with
something they all, in their
in-bred belief in paper markets,
believe will 'go up' in value
while everything else is going
down.
However,
these very same fund managers
and their paper-bound investment
psychology are the exclusive
reason why Comex gold is
dropping in these times when
everyone (including fund
managers) expects gold to rise.
As already stated, though, and
as they now finally realize to
their own dismay, Comex-gold
just isn't gold - and that
causes even further selling.
Two Losing Bets, Compounded
Fund managers' other bets are
losing money fast, now, so they
need to raise cash to keep up
the overall value of their
respective funds, so they can
earn their management bonuses
and avoid getting booted for
lack of relative performance.
Guess what they cash in on? The
very same Comex paper-gold they
mistakenly bought as a 'hedge',
of course.
Meanwhile,
real investors in real gold are
enjoying their shopping spree -
except that the spree turned
into a treasure hunt as the
shelves and display cases of
gold dealers look more and more
like the supermarket shelves in
the old Soviet Union - bare
.
This is the only 'bare-market'
in real gold the world will see
for a long, long time to come.
With this
split, this disconnect, between
Comex illusion and gold reality,
one thing or the other will have
to give, and it won't be
physical gold that gives.
My reaction: I am
certain the US is less than a
month away from a currency
collapse. The fed and treasury
are not even taking the time to
think at this point: they are
just throwing money and
guarantees at each new problem
that pops up without worrying
about the consequence. Since no
one can imagine a currency
collapse, there isn't the
political will to take the
painful steps needed to prevent
it (reign in fed and let
institutions fail). The forces
and trends behind the financial
collapse are too powerful to
stop.
If you have wealth and don't own
gold, then you will soon be
poor.
By Eric
deCarbonnel
http://www.marketskeptics.com

