Upside Down Gold
David Morgan
The
Silver Investor
May 11, 2009
John Exter was an internationally
known banker and a gold bug in the true sense of the word. He
graduated from Harvard and was present when Keynesian economics
first came to the fore. He lived through World War I, witnessed
the founding of the Federal Reserve, the Great Depression, and
the establishment of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He
also presided over the New York Federal Reserve Bank. Mr. Exter's
work can be found on the internet with a simple web search.
One of his most famous quotes
is:
"The U.S. and world
economies are on the threshold of a deflationary crash that will
make the 1930s look like a boom. Gold will be the single best
investment to own. Buy it now while it's still cheap."
A pyramid is one of the most
stable structures ever envisioned by humans. However, Mr. Exter
is perhaps most famous for his inverted pyramid of how a debt-based
monetary system is constructed.
Logically, an upside down pyramid
implies one of the most "unstable" structures one can
imagine.
Mr. Exter believed there would
be a deflationary collapse rather than an inflationary blow-off.
He stated that creditors would move down the pyramid out of the
most illiquid debts. Looking at the pyramid, we almost have to
hold back some amuse¬ment, from the standpoint of what was
known in his day as "illiquid" compared to the casino
fiasco, presently.
When Mr. Exter constructed
his model, the top of the pyramid had junk bonds, failing banks,
failing insurance companies, and, we might add, failed investment
banks/brokerage houses. Creditors will get out of weak debts
and move down the debt pyramid, to the very bottom! Near the
bottom we find currency (dollar bills), even though they pay
no interest. Next above currency are Treasury bills, issued by
the government and backed by the Federal Reserve. They are almost
as safe as currency notes, plus they pay interest. However, you
have to liquidate the bills to get money of some sort to buy
something.
The higher debtors sit in the
pyramid, the less liquid they are, and this is why the Fed has
become the "buyer of last resort." No one wants to
buy any of these toxic assets, and furthermore, no one really
can price many of them, because in fact some are truly worthless.
According to Mr. Exter, this explains why we are headed for deflation.
Creditors will move out of debts high in the debt pyramid as
many of them will fail through defaults & bankruptcies--that
is deflationary.
At the bottom of the debt pyramid
sits gold, the asset that needs no bank, Fed, or human "blessing"
of any kind to be valued by both the individual and the banking
system (although they hate to admit it) alike.
Has the rush to gold started?
Yes, but barely, because only recently have we seen a nation
admit they are moving into gold. China and of course the gold
bugs have been buying since the recent bottom in 2000, but this
pales in comparison to what this writer sees ahead;
now that the structure is failing, more and more nations, institutions,
and individuals will be heading to the bottom for safety and
liquidity (gold).
A new e-book titled The
Great Credit Contraction has been written by a friend
named Trace Mayer, and it gives us more insights into the current
situation.
As can clearly be seen
from a more modern form of the debt pyramid below, the broadest
and most unstable "asset" class is the derivatives
at the top. This is what is causing the current worldwide financial
adjustment as the central banks continue to assure the markets
that everything is going to be just fine, and they pump "money/credit"
into the system until ??
Credit Crisis Autopsy
The Great Credit Contraction is a fine analytic work. Trace Mayer
comes to the gold community with a different slant and background.
He is a legal scholar with an emphasis on the Constitution, focusing
on gold and currency issues. In his e-book, one can read about
the historical significance of a crisis that will surely reshape
the world. The global economy is built on an illusion currency
that is evaporating before our very eyes. This book is an autopsy
of the current worldwide systems and begins with financial history,
discusses the current great deflationary credit contraction,
projects the future environment, and concludes with suggestions
on how to protect, preserve, and generate wealth in this challenging
time. An appendix analyzes important topics.
Click here
to buy.
###
-David Morgan
email: silverguru22@hotmail.com
website:
www.silver-investor.com
Mr. Morgan has
followed the silver market daily for more than thirty years. Much
of his website, www.silver-investor.com, is devoted to education
about the precious metals. To receive full access to The
Morgan Report
click the hyperlink.
321gold Ltd

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