What If Gold Is Declared Illegal?
Submitted
by Tyler Durden on
07/01/2015 17:30 -0400
The Beginning of the End
Over
the weekend, the lines in Greece stretched along the street. Around the corner.
Down the block. Lines to get cash. Lines to buy gas. Lines of people eager to
get their hands on something of value. Food. Fuel. Cash. Pity the poor guy who
was last in line …
…
the poor taxi driver, for example, standing behind 300 other people, trying to
get 200 lousy euros out of an ATM. Like a tragic nightclub customer … among the
last to smell the smoke. By the time he headed for the exit, it was clogged
with desperate people, all struggling to get through the same narrow door at
the same time.
Being
the last in line usually means you have waited too long.
Image
via archives.gov, Al Capone’s Soup Kitchen, Chikago 1931
Remember:
When a bear attacks in the woods, you don’t have to be faster than the bear.
You just have to be faster than at least one other hiker…
Likewise,
you don’t have to be the first one to get your money out of an ATM. You just
want to be sure you get your money before the machine runs out of cash. And
when a bear attacks Wall Street, you don’t have to be the first to sell. But
you definitely don’t want to be the last.
People
storming a bank in Shanghai in December 1948. The paper currency had just
crashed, and the Kuomintang decided to make a distribution of 40 grams of gold
per person. People desperately wanted to obtain their gold before the banks ran
out.
Photo
credit: Henri Cartier-Bresson
The
Dow lost 350 points on Monday – its biggest point drop in two years. On
Tuesday, Greece was expected to default on a $1.7-billion payment to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). And on the other side of the planet,
analysts are looking at “the beginning of the end for Chinese stocks.”
We
doubt it is the beginning of the end. More likely, it is just the end of the
beginning. On Friday, the People’s Bank of China cut rates to a record low,
after stocks in Shanghai slipped 7% in a single day (the equivalent of about
1,300 points on the Dow).
Analysts
expected a big rally in response to the rate cut. Instead, the Shanghai Index
plunged again on Monday, dropping 3%. Greece… China… said one commentator
interviewed by Bloomberg: “You have a potentially very ugly situation this
week.”
Our
guess: Stocks in the U.S. and China have topped out. Old-timer Richard Russell,
who has been studying markets since 1958, agrees:
“I believe the top has appeared, like the proverbial thief in
the night. The Dow has fallen below the 18,000-point level, and is now negative
for the year.
The Transports, which have led the way recently, are down
triple digits for today and are only 89 points above the critical level of
8,000. The Nasdaq has closed under 5,000. At the market’s close, gold was up
5.3 at 1,179.”
Dow
Transports Average and Industrial Average – the trannies have been declining
for months, and following this big divergence, a first Dow Theory sell signal
has now been given with the Industrials undercutting their previous reaction
low as well, via StockCharts, click to enlarge.
When Gold Is Declared Illegal …
But
wait … What about silver and gold? As regular readers know, we recommend having
some cash on hand in case of a monetary emergency. But a reader asks:
“In the same vein as your reader’s question as to what good
cash is when it’s declared illegal, what good is gold when gold is declared
illegal?”
First,
precious metals aren’t illegal, so far. Second, making something illegal
doesn’t necessarily make it unpopular. President Roosevelt banned gold in 1933.
The feds wanted complete control of money. The dollar was backed by gold. So
getting control of the dollar meant getting control of gold.
Once
the feds had the gold, they could devalue the dollar by resetting the
dollar-gold price from $20 to $35. In an instant, people lost more than 40% of
their wealth (as measured by gold).
FDR’s
infamous gold grab. Under the cover of an economic emergency, the government
executed one of the most brazen acts of theft yet witnessed in a democracy.
That
ban lasted for 42 years. It ended in 1975, largely because of our old friend
Jim Blanchard. Jim set up the National Committee to Legalize Gold and worked
hard to get the ban lifted.
Today, the feds don’t need to outlaw gold. It is
regarded as “just another asset,” like Van Gogh paintings or ’66 Corvettes. Few
people own it. Few people care – not even the feds. They are unlikely to pay
much attention to it – at least, for now.
That could change when the lines begin to grow longer. Smart
people will turn to gold… not just in time, but just in case. It is a form of
cash – traditionally, the best form. You can control it. And with it, you can
trade for fuel, food, and other forms of wealth. Lots of things can go wrong in
a crisis. Cash helps you get through it.
Generally,
the price of gold rises with uncertainty and desperation. Gold is useful. Like
Bitcoin and dollars in hand (as opposed to dollars the bank owes you), gold
is not under the thumb of the government … or the banks. You don’t have to
stand in line to get it. Or to spend it.
Yes,
as more and more people turn to gold as a way to avoid standing in lines, the
feds could ban it again. But when we close our eyes and try to peer into a
world where gold is illegal, what we see is a world where we want it more than
ever.
Buy it as long as nobody cares about it. By the time they care, you’ll want to have as much as possible.
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