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View Full Version : Auditing the FEDs Gold by Gary North



madfranks
20th January 2012, 04:01 PM
Great read, one of the best I've read in a while:

http://lewrockwell.com/north/north1089.html

Here's a snippet:


The auditors must do two things. First, they must determine whether there is the same amount of gold as is listed on the FED's books at the fake price of $42.22 per ounce. Second, the auditors must follow the paper trail of ownership. They must make sure that the gold in the vaults is still legally in the possession of the FED.

There is a possibility that the FED has transferred ownership of this gold, through swaps, to European central banks, which have in turn leased – sold – their gold to private buyers. It is not enough to determine that the physical gold is in the two vaults. It is also mandatory to determine whether the FED has indirectly sold the government's gold, which it has held in trust for the government since 1933.

...

If the FED is fully audited, it is likely that the audit will reveal that the gold is encumbered. Foreign central banks have leased their gold. This is a phrase for "sold the gold," since the people who borrowed it at 1% per annum then sold it for money and bought government bonds paying 5% or more. They cannot sell these bonds at face value; the bonds have fallen in value. They cannot afford to buy gold in the open market to return the gold to the central banks. The price is already far above what they sold it for.

The central banks dare not demand a return of this gold. The gold is still on their books. The IOUs they received from the borrowers are counted as being as good as gold. The voters do not know that the gold is missing.

letter_factory
20th January 2012, 04:31 PM
first, the fed has already admitted it doesn't have gold. second, the chinese supposedly assayed some bars and found tungsten.

madfranks
20th January 2012, 04:51 PM
first, the fed has already admitted it doesn't have gold. second, the chinese supposedly assayed some bars and found tungsten.

When did the Fed admit it doesn't have gold? And if so, where did all the gold go that was entrusted to them? Last I heard Bernanke admitted they have the gold, and when Ron Paul asked what it's for if it's not a monetary metal, he said "tradition".