IMF Gold Sales Prove Economists Aren't Great Money Managers
1. There really is a coordinated plan to suppress the price of gold 2. Economists are the dumbest money managers in the world Of course, it could be some combination of the two. This report from Reuters provides all the latest details:
Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen Jen said the Fund held 103.4 million ounces of gold worth some $92 billion at current market prices. That was up from $23 billion just five years ago.
No, the IMF is already rich - it would make itself a lot less rich with the sale of gold. Only a bunch of economists would look at an asset that has gained about 20 percent per year for the last six years and figure, "It pays no dividend and therefore provides no income, we must sell this and purchase bonds that will pay four percent." Uh... Did they ever think about selling a little of the metal this year to square the books and then maybe doing the same thing next year and maybe again the year after? In case they haven't noticed, hard assets are about the only thing that is going up in value these days (i.e,. hard assets being the stuff you have to dig out of the ground, as opposed to financial products that are created with a computer keystroke and are now causing all sorts of problems in the global financial system) . Better yet, maybe the IMF should just heed the call heard around the world over the last year and dissolve their organization - sovereign wealth funds seem to be performing IMF functions much better than the IMF ever did. Economists! Since the U.S. Congress has to approve IMF gold sales, this is by no means a "slam-dunk" as a well organized Western lobby has thwarted similar plans in the past, but, then again, you never know. Desperate times call for desperate measures and "desperate" is a word that seems to be increasingly applicable to the global system of money and credit that just doesn't seem to want to heal itself. The soaring price of gold is drawing more and more attention to this inescapable fact.
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