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Gold Standard, Gold Futures and Perception Management

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"Gold is the buy for the long term. Gut-wrenching plunges in the price should be expected and ignored, except perhaps to buy more on such dips."

The apparent end to momentum in the 12-year bull market in the gold price is a carefully coordinated exercise in perception management. J. P. Morgan and a handful of the world's largest banks have been permitted the right to originate contracts for forward sales and purchases of various commodity products far in excess of what is produced of each commodity annually.

There is seldom any delivery of physical metals, and the contracts are originated on completely false premises equivalent to a casino where every game is rigged in favor of the house. Thus, the effect of real
supply has been replaced by the effect of artificial supply.

This represents a regulatory deficiency on the part of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) at minimum,
and at worst, outright criminal fraud and collusion among the U.S. government, the banks and the market operators themselves.

CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton has admitted on behalf of his agency that it is of the opinion that certain entities are engaged in manipulative and unlawful practices in the futures markets, and announced and investigation was under way. Four years ago. No results from the investigation have materialized, and that's because the apparent end to the momentum in the 12-year bull market in the gold price is a carefully coordinated exercise in perception management.

The banks will forever be able to lay legitimate claim to the pursuit of profit as the primary motivation for exploiting the regulatory aberration that permits and even abets fraud on such a large scale. The government will never admit to active collusion.

CNBC, Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal et al. refuse to extend their line of inquiry into the factors controlling the price of gold beyond superficial fundamentals such as jewelry demand and store-of-value investor demand.

This perception management apparatus has now become so finely tuned that the gold price is rather deftly handled upward and downward in movements that serve the requirements of the two parties operating the scam. For the banks, reliable risk-free profit, and for the government of the United States, the perception that the U.S. dollar is a safer haven than gold.

I think the current continuous downward pressure on gold is undertaken to create the reality of a gold price that declines below its 52-week low. That would, in the invisible deliberations of the fraud participants, end the perception of gold as a safer store of value than U.S. Treasury bills, widely understood to be a key component of keeping the U.S. dollar lie alive.

The Bloomberg headline of May 29 is precisely the objective of anti-gold dollar defenders: "Gold Set for Worst Run Since 1999 as Dollar Strengthens." The U.S. dollar lie is complete.

When you're living a lie, perception outweighs the importance of reality, and that is optimally here achieved.
The second part of the elaborate perception management ploy is that the third round of U.S. stimulus will coincide perfectly with the reemergence of the U.S. deficit and debt position at the top of the news heap once Europe has fallen the rest of the way apart. Stimulus will be required then, because the banks who are the recipients of the stimulus are subject to conditions that result in substantial proportions of that money being invested into U.S. Treasuries, which is essentially the mechanism by which the United States government counterfeits its own currency to the detriment of U.S. dollar-denominated sovereign reserve currency
positions and its own population.

Thus the objective of the perception management exercise—the condition where selling U.S. debt is just slightly more egregious in a net-net evaluation of sovereign reserve value than buying more of it—is achieved. And the U.S. can continue bullying the rest of the world around because
theoretically we are all unfortunate passengers in the same boat.

The problem with this strategy, as the perps likely comprehend perfectly, is that there is a point where the math can simply no longer support the illusion. That point is visible in a not-too-distant future. That is when all the major currencies collapse into the black hole of debt, whose traction is so strong that nothing in proximity can escape it.

Increasingly, that is the inescapable inevitability in this manufactured debt crisis charade.

For gold to fall below its current 52-week high implies a price of $1,543 an ounce (oz). That's only ~$60 from where we are today. The fact that the ongoing futures market fraud is yet unable to drive it down below that mark is evidence of the growing demand for gold in view of the inevitable outcome for currencies outlined above. As Sprott U.S.A. CEO Rick Rule so aptly points out, "gold isn't somebody's promise to pay (like currencies)—it's
payment." So China continues to accumulate gold surreptitiously to offset its U.S. dollar reserve risk, while other nations such as the Philippines, Kazakhstan and Mexico do so more overtly.

The inflection point at which gold explodes to the long-awaited stratosphere (taking silver and PGMs along with it) is exactly the moment at which it becomes apparent that what’s happening in Greece and Spain will engulf Italy, France, Germany, Britain and, ultimately, the United States.

When the largest capital positions suddenly hit that "Oh s**t" moment when they realize that they've been had, the relief valve for all that financial terror will be precious. Metals that is.

Knowing the date of that event in the future is not really that important. All a capital-preservation minded investor needs is to understand that no matter what price gold had at below $2,000/oz, there’s a 5-bagger at least waiting just round the bend.

All of the institutional analyst calls for gold heading back below $1,200/oz are not necessarily to be ignored either.

Remember, the supply of precious metals is now infinite, according to current futures law, and so the way to achieve $1,200 or even $1,000 or even $600/oz is to sell vast quantities of gold into the future at lower prices. For those with deep pockets sitting on lots of cash, pray that gold is driven below $1,200/oz because it will be the trade of the decade to scoop it up at that price.

The attention riveted on Greece and Spain is exactly the smokescreen that the banks and governments colluding to perpetuate and amplify the debt need to continue operations. The fabrication of capital in the form of loans and credit extensions, the primary source of revenue for many banks directly and for
many government officials indirectly, will thus intensify as Spain, Italy, France and finally the U.K. and Germany are dragged into the widening whirlpool.

Gold is the buy for the long term. Gut-wrenching plunges in the price should be expected and ignored, except perhaps to buy more on such dips. The entire global financial apparatus is slowly crumbling, and the collapse of investment banks and funds from Geneva to Toronto to New York is underway.

And as far as arguments go for and against gold as a standard, there has never been a time in human recorded history where whatever fiat currency was in use was not measured in ounces of gold for comparison. All those currencies have ceased to exist, just as the euro and the U.S. dollar and renmibi must one day, because mankind is incapable of responsible fiscal management. Gold is not a theoretical, or even a possible, monetary standard. It is the only true monetary standard, and always has been.

James West
The Midas Letter


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