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"I only know of two men who really understand the true value of gold, an obscure
clerk in the basement vault of the Banque de Paris and one of the directors
of the Bank of England. Unfortunately, they disagree," remarked Nathan Mayer
Rothschild, the former owner and operator of England's Royal Mint Refinery,
and the primary gold agent to the Bank of England in the early 1800's.
When the Bank of England's gold reserve was drained by the costs of the Napoleonic
wars, down to 235,000 ounces (£1 million) against note issue liabilities
of £15.5 million, it was Nathan who sent secret shipments of gold and
silver to Wellington's army in Europe and financed the defeat of Napoleon.
In 1825, it was Nathan who rescued the Bank of England and prevented the collapse
of the entire British banking system, after a run on gold caused the collapse
of 145 banks.
In
1919, the Bank of England, determined to restore London as the main gold market,
reached an agreement with seven South African mining houses to ship their gold
to London for refining, after which it would be sold through NM Rothschild
at the best price obtainable, giving the London market and the Bullion Brokers
a chance to bid.
The London Gold Fix was set at the London merchant bank NM Rothschild, from
Sept 1919 until April 2004. NM Rothschild had profound influence at the London
Bullion Market, where trading volume was 42 million ounces of gold per day
(more than twice South Africa's annual gold production), including dealings
in physical, leased, and forward sales.
The Rothschild empire helped to establish and finance oil giant Royal Dutch
Shell, cemented De Beer's control of the world's diamonds, and following World
War II, invested in vast areas of resource rich properties in Canada, and in
base metals giant Rio Tinto. Legend has it, that the Rothschild fortune measures
in the trillions of dollars. Rothschild's huge stash of gold and natural resource
shares is tailor made for the day when the public wakes up to the fraud of
fiat currency.
Nowadays, the clerks at Bank Paribas are working overtime, trying to determine
the value of sub-prime US mortgage debt sitting in their vaults. European banks
are afraid to lend money to each other, after two German banks nearly collapsed
from the toxic US sub-prime slime. Eschewing a sense of responsibility, the
Federal Reserve is expected to try and cover-up the mess, conjured-up and distributed
by Wall Street brokers, by exercising the "Bernanke Put", or lowering the federal
funds rate and flooding the world with more US dollars.
London Gold "Closely Watching the Fed"
Gathered around a table in one of the Bank of England's grand meeting rooms,
a select group of Britain's top gold traders could not believe what they heard.
It was May 1999, and the gold price was stagnant around $275 /ounce, after
a long and extended bear market. The UK's Treasury chief Gordon Brown had decided
to sell 400 tons, or more than half of the country's centuries old gold reserves.
In a move that astonished dealers, Mr Brown insisted on selling the gold in
open auctions. The first sale drove the price down to $254, the low-point of
an 18-year slide. There were 17-auctions between July 1999 and March 2002 yielding
an average of $275 an ounce. The proceeds were unwisely switched into 40% Euros,
40% US dollars, and 20% yen. Since March 2002, the US dollar has plunged 42%
against the British pound, while the Japanese yen is 23% lower against sterling.

With gold now trading at $680 an ounce, Mr Brown's decision to break
ranks with the US, Japan, France, and Germany by selling 400 tons of its gold,
has cost UK taxpayers more than £2 billion. Then, moving further away
from monetary discipline, the Bank of England oversaw the rapid expansion of
the British M4 money supply, to 13% growth in July 2007, or double its growth
rate in March 2002.
The rapid expansion of the British M4 money supply, to a 16-year high, is
fueling house price inflation, running at a annual 12.8% in August, up from
10.3% in the previous month. "Broad money is growing rapidly and that does
pose an upside risk to the inflation forecast, so money certainly matters," BoE
chief Mervyn King confessed in Nov 2006. BoE hawk Andrew Sentance added on
July 10th, "The rapid pace of money growth is a warning signal we should pay
attention to."

To regain some control of the UK's M4 money supply, the BoE hiked its base
lending rate five times, or 125 basis points to 5.75%, to its highest since
April 2001. The last rate hike occurred on July 5th, "The margin of spare capacity
in businesses appears limited, and most indicators of pricing pressure remain
elevated. The balance of risks to the outlook for inflation in the medium term
lies to the upside," the BoE said.
The upside risks to UK inflation emanate from the double-digit growth of the
British money supply. And while the BoE's baby-step rate hikes to 5.75% reined
in M4 growth to 13% in July, it still leaves the central bank far behind the
monetary inflation curve. In order to lower the growth rate of M4 into single
digits, the BoE would probably need to lift is base rate another 75 basis points
to 6.50 percent.
But newly installed UK prime-minister Gordon Brown, argues there is little
point using money supply targets to control inflation since the relationship
is not stable. "Rigid monetary rules that assume a fixed relationship between
money and inflation do not produce reliable targets or policy," he said on
June 10th.
BoE rate Hike Trumped by the "Bernanke Put"
The turf war over a quarter-point rate hike to 6%, between Mr Brown and Threadneedle
Street came to an abrupt halt on August 17th, when the Federal Reserve decided
in a hastily arranged meeting to exercise the "Bernanke Put." In an about face,
the Fed lowered its discount rate by a half-point to 5.75%, and implied it
would do whatever it takes, to prevent the financial markets from tumbling.
On August 21st, Fed chief Bernanke told Senate Banking Committee Chairman
Christopher Dodd, that he was willing to use all the tools available to him,
to calm turbulent financial markets. Then on Sept 1st, Bernanke told a gathering
of the world's top central bankers at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, "The Federal Reserve
stands ready to take additional actions as needed to provide liquidity and
promote the orderly functioning of markets" he said, hinting at lower rates.
Over the past decade, a pattern has emerged in the US financial markets. Every
time there has been a financial crisis, the Fed has opened the money spigots
and poured liquidity into the stock market to mute the impact on the real economy.
The "Greenspan put" was a bet that "Easy" Al would respond instinctively to
financial crises by lowering short-term interest rates. Greenspan's response
to the bursting of the dotcom bubble was to slash the fed funds rate to less
than zero percent in inflation adjusted terms for more than a year.
Now, Chicago futures traders are pricing in 75 basis points of Fed rate cuts
to 4.50% by year's end, starting with a quarter-point cut on Sept 18th, to
ease the pain of Wall Street banks and brokers from the sub-prime mortgage
slime. Most interesting, the upcoming exercise of the "Bernanke Put" is expected
to begin at a time of elevated inflation pressures, high oil prices, and a
weak US dollar.
"Although the downside risks to growth have increased somewhat, the FOMC's
predominant policy concern remains the risk that inflation will fail to moderate
as expected. Moreover, the high level of resource utilization has the potential
to sustain those pressures," the Fed indicated just a month ago.

The exercise of the "Bernanke Put" is putting a monkey wrench in the BoE's
plan to hike its base lending rate to 6 percent. Other central banks in Australia,
Canada, the Euro zone, and Korea also find themselves in the same predicament
- unable to lift short-term interest rates to control explosive money supply
growth. Hiking interest rates overseas, while the Fed is lowering its rates
in the US, could grease the skids under the US dollar, knocking it into a violent
free-fall.
Like most other central banks, the BoE is engaged in a game of competitive
currency devaluation with the Bernanke Fed. The BoE tolerates 13% growth of
its M4, to counter the Bernanke Fed, which is inflating the US M3 money supply
at a 13% annualized rate. Now with the exercise of the "Bernanke Put" on the
horizon, it's possible that the US M3 growth rate might accelerate into un-chartered
territory of 15% or higher, to levels that might be associated with hyper-inflation.
Already, interest rate differentials have swung by 200 basis points in the
British pound's favor over the US dollar, lifting sterling from $1.83 a year
ago to $2.02 today. Exercising the "Bernanke Put" could lift the British pound
even higher, which in turn, could persuade the BoE to put its rate hike campaign
on ice, thus allowing double-digit M4 money supply growth to kindle higher
UK inflation.

In a very interesting twist, while central banks in the Euro zone, the US,
Japan, Canada and Australia have all intervened to boost liquidity in their
money markets, the Bank of England has not injected emergency cash into the
UK banking system. European banks are afraid to lend money to each other, fearing
the other side is dangerously exposed to toxic sub-prime US mortgage debt.
BoE chief Mervyn King is reluctant to bail out banks that bought toxic US
sub-prime slime. This means there is no "King Put" option, and interest rates
in the UK Libor market have already undergone a quasi tightening. The six-month
sterling Libor rate, jumped to 6.75% yesterday to its highest since 1998. The
gap between the BoE's 5.75% base rate, and the six-month sterling Libor rate,
reached its widest point since the mid-1980's, indicating great uncertainty
over the solvency of some banks.
On Sept 2, Bob Diamond, the chief executive of Barclays Capital, called for
the BOE to inject greater liquidity into the UK money markets, to relieve some
of the upward pressure on Libor rates. "For the recovery to continue we need
to find more ways to get liquidity into the short end of the curve. That's
down to confidence, and that's down to the central banks. We've seen thoughtful
moves by the Fed and the ECB."
Hind sight is the best sight, but if UK bankers could exchange their sub-prime
slime for gold today, they would gladly jump at the opportunity. Instead, they
pray for a BoE bailout. As Nathan Mayer Rothschild was fond of saying, "I care
not what puppet is placed upon the throne of England to rule the Empire on
which the sun never sets. The man that controls Britain's money supply controls
the British Empire."
European Rate Hikes Nearing an End
"The current cycle of Euro zone interest rate tightening is nearing its end," said
EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia on Sept 3rd. "The main part
of the interest rate rise is already done. I don't think it is going to rise
much more. In the very short term, rate cuts won't be announced but for sure,
in the medium term, interest rates are going to fall because the Spanish, European,
world economies are fundamentally solid," he added.
Almunia is a mediator between the European Central Bank, which wants to push
interest rates higher, and European politicians, led by France's Nicholas Sarkozy,
who want the ECB to weaken the Euro currency. Almunia seems to be signaling
a compromise between the two warring factions, allowing for one final ECB rate
hike to 4.25%, but not immediately at the upcoming Sept 6th meeting.

A peak in the ECB rate hike cycle at 4.25% would still leave the repo rate
below its high-mark of 4.75% in 2000, when the central bank was targeting the
Euro M3 growth rate at 4.50%. Today, under ECB chief Jean "Tricky" Trichet,
the ECB is inflating the Euro M3 money supply at an explosive 11.7% annualized
rate. In fact, Euro M3 is growing much faster today, than when the ECB began
its baby-step rate hike campaign in December 2005.
The ECB lingers behind the monetary inflation curve, which provides a buoyant
environment for gold. The ECB rate hike cycle has been derailed, because two
German banks almost collapsed from their exposure to toxic US sub-prime mortgage
debt last month. German lenders IKB and SachsenLB required emergency bailouts,
and foreign banks are reluctant to lend to another bank WestLB. Bavarian state
bank BayernLB said it also is infected by US sub-prime slime.

With the German inter-bank system in turmoil, Euro zone politicians are applying
pressure for a steady monetary policy, worried that the "Bernanke Put" could
drive the Euro sharply higher, even without the help of ECB rate hikes. A stronger
Euro can act as a quasi tightening mechanism by shielding Euro zone importers
from higher costs for crude oil and other raw materials.
The ECB is also under pressure to cut interest rates, at a time of out-of-control
Euro M3 growth. "The ECB needs to restore confidence by giving the signal that
it stands ready to defend growth and jobs by cutting interest rates if necessary," the
European Trade Union Confederation said on August 30th. "To maintain robust
growth and job prospects, the ECB needs to consider a timely cut in interest
rates," said Reiner Hoffmann, deputy of the ETUC.
Calls for a steady ECB policy are gaining the upper hand over the hawkish
views of Greek central banker Nicholas Garangas who warned six-weeks ago, on
July 17th, "Risks to inflation have increased, and it is crucial that we act
in a firm and timely manner, preemptively, to ensure price stability," he said,
citing higher oil prices and high capacity utilization as inflationary drivers.
Just a month ago, ECB chief Jean "Tricky" Trichet uttered the words, "strong
vigilance," signaling a tightening in Euro zone credit costs, after the central
bank held rates steady at 4.00% on August 2nd. "Strong vigilance is of the
essence to insure that risks to price stability over the medium term do not
materialize," Trichet said. However, "When I use the word strong vigilance,
don't forget we never pre-commit," Tricky Trichet added, keeping his audience
off balance.

However, inflation psychology is bubbling in the Euro zone, with crude oil
standing above $75 per barrel, and gold climbing above 500 euros /oz in Frankfurt.
European gold bugs are itching to buy the yellow metal, with Trichet's "strong
vigilance" rhetoric to contain the Euro M3 money supply dissipating into thin
air. Gold traders will keep a close eye on "Tricky" Trichet's money pumping
operations.
The ECB added temporary funds to money markets in a series of injections in
August but has since withdrawn most of the surplus. That's put upward pressure
on the six-month Euro Libor rate to as high as 4.75% this week, it's highest
since 2001, and roughly 40-basis points higher than normal. It remains uncertain
whether "Tricky" Trichet will countenance a de-facto tightening of the Euro
Libor rate.
"Should this persist tomorrow, the ECB stands ready to contribute to orderly
conditions in the Euro money market," the central bank said on Sept 5th. Amid
all the stress and turmoil in the German banking system these days, gold is
looking like a "safe haven," immune to the toxic disease of sub-prime US mortgage
slime.
Japanese Warlords fuel Global Inflation
Next to the "Bernanke Put," the greatest source of global inflation is the
infamous "yen carry" trade. According to the clerks at Bank Paribas, the size
of the "yen carry" trade has mushroomed to about $1.2 trillion. It's estimated
that hedge funds and speculators have borrowed close to $200 billion in yen,
to trade futures and options contracts, at 8 to 10 times their margin requirements.
The Bank of Japan fuels global inflation via the "yen carry" trade, by pegging
its overnight loan rate a 0.50%, far out of alignment with the rest of the
planet. Tokyo's fuzzy math shows its consumer price index is locked at zero
percent, which in turn provides political cover for the BoJ to fuel asset inflation
worldwide. Tokyo argues that its economy has battled with deflation for seventeen
years, yet Tokyo gold traders know the CPI numbers are phony, and bid gold
100% from three years ago.

The brutal unwinding of "yen carry" trades in July-August, triggered contagion
sales of Tokyo gold from a record 83,000-yen /oz to as low as 73,000-yen on
August 17th. However, massive injections of yen into the Tokyo money markets
by the Bank of Japan, a half-point cut in the Fed's discount rate, and threats
by Japan's financial warlords to intervene in the foreign exchange market to
support the dollar, enabled Tokyo gold to regain its footing and eye record
highs again.
On August 23rd, BoJ chief Toshihiko Fukui hinted that the exercise of the "Bernanke
Put" could put Japanese monetary policy on ice. "If the Fed were to take some
kind of policy step in September, we will closely examine whether our views
match those of the Fed. There's a possibility that US growth will be restrained.
That's the point we need to watch. We do not have any preset schedule on when
to act," Fukui said, issuing a green light for "yen carry" traders to resume
their risky operations.
All Eyes on Ben "helicopter" Bernanke
Since Bernanke's nomination by Prez Bush to lead the Fed in October 2005,
the price of gold has risen sharply against all major currencies around the
world. Gold traders correctly predicted the Bernanke Fed would heavily inflate
the broad US M3 money supply, after it decided to hide the figures from the
general public in March 2006. Since then, the US M3 money supply has expanded
at a 13% annualized clip, up from 8% when the Bernanke Fed stopped reporting
the key figure.
In turn, other central bankers have greatly expanded their money supplies
to double digit rates, in a competitive round of devaluation to prevent their
currencies from rising too fast against the US dollar. Investing in foreign
currencies is akin to judging a reverse beauty contest. The trick is to invest
in the least ugly (inflated) currency.
Bernanke came to the job with a reputation of a super-dove and a radical inflationist.
In his infamous speech on November 21, 2002, he said, "Under a fiat money system,
a central bank has a technology, called a printing press that allows it to
produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing
the number of US dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to
do so, the US government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of
goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of
those goods and services."

"We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can
always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation," Bernanke said.
In February 2006, Texas Rep Ron Paul asked Bernanke to reconsider publishing
the M3 money supply. Bernanke replied the Fed staff had not found M3 as a useful
indicator of monetary policy. "Therefore, in order to reduce the reporting
costs to financial institutions, the Fed had decided to drop the calculation
and publication of M3."
During his appearance before the world's top central bankers and economic
gurus at Jackson Hole, Wyoming on August 31st, Bernanke dismissed accusations
that he is ready to bail out greedy salesman of toxic sub-prime mortgage debt,
and their clients who lost money. Justifying future rate cuts, he showed compassion
for home flippers and sub-prime owners, "developments in financial markets
can have broad economic effects felt by many outside the markets, and the Federal
Reserve must take those effects into account when determining policy," Bernanke
said.
Martin Feldstein, chief executive of the National Bureau of Economic Research,
called on Mr Bernanke to lower the fed funds by 1% to prevent house price declines
or a pullback in consumer spending from causing a recession. "Experience suggests
that the dramatic decline in residential construction provides an early warning
of a coming recession. The likelihood of a recession is increased by what is
happening in credit markets and mortgage borrowing," he said.
Speaking frankly, Feldstein admitted, "If Fed cuts rates result in higher
inflation - it would be the lesser of two evils." Thus, Americans must prepare
for a further dilution of their purchasing power, and the most evil tax of
all - higher Inflation. It's also a "moral hazard" if Fed rate cuts inspire
more reckless and leveraged speculation in global stock markets.
Is the Yellow metal Shining in Beijing? Gold bugs have been patiently
waiting for Beijing to see the light, and begin switching some of its $1.33
trillion FX stash into hard money. China's share of all US Treasury holdings
abroad had risen to 18.3% this year, up from 8.6% five years ago. Since then
however, the US 10-year T-Note to Gold ratio has collapsed from 100-cents to
42-cents on the dollar today.

Beijing recycled most if its trade surplus back into US Treasury bonds, in
return for a Bush veto against Congressional legislation aimed at its undervalued
yuan. But now Beijing sees a "veto proof" protectionist bill sailing thru the
US Congress later this year, and has been a net seller of US T-bonds for three
straight months by a record amount of $14.7 billion, the longest period of
sales by China since November 2000.
Gold demand is rising in the Persian Gulf
With black gold trading above $70 per barrel again, Saudi Arabia boosted its
purchases of gold to 42.5 tons in the second quarter of 2007, up from 32.6
tons the year earlier. Gold demand in the United Arab Emirates increased 14.6%
to 29.8 tons. Total demand in the Middle East rose 20% to 97.5 tons in the
second quarter from a year earlier. The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait hold $1.55
trillion of foreign asset holdings, dwarfing China's mammoth $1.33 trillion
of foreign currency reserves.
Kuwait might be ready to devalue the US dollar, to hold down its inflation
rate and control its money supply. Money supply in Kuwait grew at its fastest
pace since 1994, with M3 hitting 18 billion dinars ($63.85 billion) at the
end of July, up 22.5% from a year earlier, up from 17.7% year-on-year in June.

Annual inflation in the Middle East's fourth largest oil exporter topped 5%
in May, linked to the Kuwaiti dinar's peg to the US dollar, and slide to record
lows against the Euro, which is raising import costs. Kuwait pays for about
a third of its imports with the Euro. Massive money supply growth is pumping
up the local stock market, and it might encourage Kuwaiti princes to buy gold
as an inflation hedge.
Looking forward,
Is gold ready to sustain a powerful rally above $700 /oz, fueled by the exercise
of the "Bernanke Put?" What is the major psychological hurdle that gold must
overcome, before climbing to higher ground? What's keeping gold down right
now? The answers will be revealed in the blockbuster Sept 7th edition of Global
Money Trends, as well as extensive coverage on the global credit crunch,
and its likely impact on global stock markets, the US$, crude oil, copper,
and other commodities.
Until then, contemplate the following words of wisdom: "At some point, you
have to choose between trusting the natural stability of Gold, and the honesty
and intelligence of members of the government. With due respect for these gentlemen,
I advise you, as long as the capitalist system lasts, to vote for Gold," said
George Bernard Shaw in 1928.
Should you place your faith in Federal Reserve notes? "Money is too important
to be left to central bankers. You essentially have a group of unelected people
who have enormous power to affect the economy. I've always been in favor of
replacing the Fed with a laptop computer, to calculate the monetary base and
expand it annually, through war, peace, feast and famine by a predictable 2%," said
Milton Friedman.
The Global Money Trends newsletter provides insights and analysis on
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