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World Net Daily

BIZNETDAILY

Half of gold in central banks gone?
Watchdog: 'We want to expose and stop the manipulation'

Posted: January 29, 2008
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2008 WorldNetDaily.com


U.S. central banks may have less than half the gold they claim to 
possess in their vaults, charges a watchdog group in an ad scheduled for 
publication in the Wall Street Journal this week.

As WND reported, the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, or GATA, claims 
the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury are surreptitiously 
manipulating the country's gold reserves by participating in undisclosed 
leases, according to an advance copy WND obtained of the ad running in 
Thursday's edition of the Journal.

GATA believes much of the borrowed gold out on lease will never be 
returned to the central banks.

"With the demand for gold so strong worldwide, it has become impossible 
to return much of the leased gold without driving the price to the 
moon," said GATA's chairman, William J. Murphy III.

"Most observers calculate central bank reserves are supposed to have 
about 30,000 tons of gold worldwide in their vaults, but we believe the 
amount of gold actually there may be more like 15,000 tons," Murphy 
said. "The rest of the gold is gone."

The U.S. Treasury denies the claim, insisting the stock is accounted for 
regularly.


"We want to expose and stop the manipulation of the gold market by the 
United States Treasury and Federal Reserve right now," Murphy said.

"The purpose of this ad is to wake people up in the investment world as 
to what is going on behind the scenes in the U.S. gold and financial 
markets," Murphy told WND.

He explained GATA has decided to pay the Wall Street Journal $264,000 
for a one-time placement of the full page ad in the national edition 
because the financial press has not covered the story.

"We have had two major international conferences since 2001; the 
mainstream financial press has blackballed our message," Murphy explained.

"Anybody Seen Our Gold?" the ad is titled, charging U.S. gold reserves 
held at depositories such as Fort Knox or West Point may have been 
seriously depleted as they are shipped overseas to settle complex 
transactions utilized by the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury to 
suppress prices.

GATA further charges the U.S. government strategy to manipulate the 
price of gold has begun to fail.

"The objective of this manipulation is to conceal the mismanagement of 
the U.S. dollar so that it might retain its function as the world’s 
reserve currency," the ad copy reads.

"Gold's recent rise toward $900 per ounce shows that the price 
suppression scheme is faltering," GATA says. "When it is widely 
understood how central banks have been suppressing gold, its price may 
rise to $3,000 or $5,000 an ounce or more."

As evidence of gold price manipulation by the U.S. Treasury and the 
Federal Reserve, GATA cites Treasury's weekly report of the government's 
international reserve position that since May has listed gold loans and 
swaps as a line item in accounting for U.S. gold reserves.

The ad also cites a July 24, 1998, statement by then-Federal Reserve 
Chairman Alan Greenspan, who told Congress "central banks stand ready to 
lease gold in increasing quantities should the price rise."

The most recent U.S. Treasury statement of the U.S. international 
reserve position, released Jan. 24, lists the total U.S. foreign 
currency reserves as $71.515 trillion, of which $11.041 trillion is 
listed as gold (including gold deposits and, if appropriate, gold swapped).

The Bank of International Settlements reports the gold derivatives 
market hit a peak of $640 billion dollars in December 2006.

Murphy emphasizes that tracing the derivatives back to central bank gold 
transactions and determining precisely the degree to which the Federal 
Reserve and the U.S. Treasury are involved is not possible now, given 
the lack of public accountability and transparency built into the gold 
derivatives financial system worldwide.

Murphy said his grouip filed a Freedom of Information Act request with 
the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve "to find out what this line 
item is all about."

"What is the true status of the U.S. gold that is supposed to belong to 
the American people?" he asked. "Has U.S. gold been put into play 
without the Treasury or Fed letting the American people know?"

A statement on Treasury's website claims the agency's Exchange 
Stabilization Fund has not been used to manipulate gold prices. But no 
statement could be found on the Treasury website that categorically 
denies the agency engages in gold swaps, leases or futures contracts for 
reasons other than to manipulate the price of gold.

The London Bullion Market Association lists on its website more than 80 
members working as "bullion bank market makers" engaged in the worldwide 
gold commodities market place as principals originating and 
participating in various gold derivative products, including gold leases 
and swaps.

The U.S. members of the London Bullion Market Association listed include 
Bear Stearns Forex Inc., Goldman Sachs International, JP Morgan Chase 
Bank, Bank of America, Citibank, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley.

A legal memorandum filed Feb. 28, 2003, on behalf of Barrick Gold 
Corporation, a major gold company affiliated with bullion bank J. P. 
Morgan, admitted Barrick engages with central banks in gold leases and 
other gold derivative transactions, without specifically admitting 
whether any such transactions were conducted on behalf of the Federal 
Reserve and Treasury.

In September 1999, European central banks meeting in Washington signed 
what has become known as the "Washington Accord," an agreement in which 
the banks agreed to limit the amount of their gold sales to 400 tons per 
year and not to expand their leasing operations during the five years of 
the agreement.

Under a gold lease, a central bank loans gold to a bullion bank at a 
nominal rate of interest, typically 1 percent.

The bullion banks then takes the gold lease to a commodities market such 
as the London Bullion Market, where the physical gold is sold, thereby 
adding to the supply of gold available on the market.

Problems develop when the price of gold rises dramatically, such as it 
has in recently months, with gold currently running over $900 an ounce.

Now, when the leased gold needs to be returned to the central banks at 
the end of the lease period, the bullion banks may have to go into the 
market and buy gold at a much higher price than the price when the gold 
initially was leased.

To hedge against the risk, bullion banks typically buy futures contracts 
or gold call options to secure gold delivery at a specified future date 
for a specified future price.

In the world of gold derivatives, a wide variety of contracts exist, 
including transactions in which central banks swap gold reserves, so 
they can carry out leasing or other gold derivative transactions using 
the gold of the other central bank rather than their own.

Gold swaps make central bank gold transactions even less transparent and 
more difficult to track.

Under current International Monetary Fund rules, central banks do not 
have to disclose on their financial statements how much of the gold in 
their stated reserves is encumbered by derivative contracts, including 
gold leases and swaps.

Nor are bullion banks required to disclose to the public the contracts 
under which they lease gold from central banks.

Gold yesterday hit a new all-time high, with futures contracts for 
February delivery surging to $929.80 an ounce on the New York Mercantile 
Exchange in mid-day trading.

If you would like to sound off on this issue, participate in today's WND 
Poll.


Editor's note: The November issue of WND's monthly Whistleblower 
magazine, titled 'HOW GLOBALISM IS DESTROYING THE U.S. ECONOMY' – 
focuses exclusively on the future of the U.S. economy, and answers key 
questions like: 'If inflation is so low, how come food and energy cost 
so much?' 'What is the 'housing bubble,' and why did it burst?' 'What's 
really going on with the stock market?' 'Is America heading into a 
recession?' 'Will the dollar collapse in 2008?' and 'What will happen to 
the price of gold?'

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