Fermer X Les cookies sont necessaires au bon fonctionnement de 24hGold.com. En poursuivant votre navigation sur notre site, vous acceptez leur utilisation.
Pour en savoir plus sur les cookies...
AnglaisFrancais
Cours Or & Argent en

It Couldn’t Happen Here

IMG Auteur
the moneychanger
Extrait des Archives : publié le 24 mai 2008
1920 mots - Temps de lecture : 4 - 7 minutes
( 8 votes, 4,4/5 ) , 1 commentaire
Imprimer l'article
  Article Commentaires Commenter Notation Tous les Articles  
0
envoyer
1
commenter
Notre Newsletter...
SUIVRE : Knox
Rubrique : Université de l'or





February 27, 1997
Moneychangers

"Food riots break out in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, St. Louis, & New Orleans. In Cleveland & Chicago, enraged mobs of housewives kill three Kroger store managers before police riot squads & SWAT teams can clear the buildings. In other cities, dazed shoppers are glad to find bread at $75 a loaf, but few can afford hamburger at $119.50 a pound."

"Traders briefly panic when shots are fired in the gold pit at the commodity exchange in Chicago, but calm quickly when they realise the shots come from the few remaining short sellers committing suicide."

----------------------

It Couldn't Happen Here

This article appeared first in the 2/97 Moneychanger, & has since been reprinted numerous times in places as far away as Australia. I am posting it because of the economic crises in Asia and Russia. On one day in January, 1998 the Indonesian currency dropped twenty-five percent (25%), & the Korean won dropped about 30% the week before. In Indonesia shoppers surged to buy anything they could of value, stripping stores of appliances & even cooking oil. Rioters have several times violently persecuted ethnic Chinese there. In short, Asian investors have seen a decade of saving evaporate in a few months. In Russia, the last two weeks of August and first week of September 1998 took more than 66% off the ruble's value. This is the second time in five years Russians have suffered the theft of all their wealth by a collapsing ruble. Still Americans smugly believe, "It couldn't happen here." They maintain that in the teeth of a stock market that has already given a Dow Theory signal of a primary trend change, and has dropped 18.2% in the not-quite two months since its July high. Don't kid yourself:it is already happening here. How do you think those Asian investors fared who bought gold? Sure, the price of gold has dropped this year, but nothing likethe ringit or won or rupiah. In their own currencies gold has appreciated mightily. Take warning from their suffering; sell you stocks & real estate, & buy some gold. Not tomorrow, but right now - before it happens here. In April, 1993 the Russian Rouble collapsed, losing 99.9% of its value in one week. Prices rose 1,250%. It couldn't happen here? Maybe not, but if it did, here's how it might unfold.

FRIDAY

Across America it seems like an ordinary Friday. The Dow trades nervously in a 200 point range, weaker at the day's end on reports the Japanese Finance Ministry is complaining about the high dollar & being forced to digest too many US government securities. Still, the Dow closes up 8.90 points at 6,825.35. Gold jumps strongly to finish the day in New York at $380, silver at $5.25. Experts on Wall Street Week that evening are reassuring, certain that the Japanese complaints are only one more in a series of inconsequential negotiations in US-Japanese financial relations. On the way home, millions of Americans stop by the gas station & tank up at $1.38 a gallon. At the grocery store, they buy bread for $1.25, & pick up a pound of hamburger for $1.99.

THE WEEKEND

The nation's weekend is disturbed by news that Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin & Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan flew to Tokyo late Friday to confer with their Japanese counterparts about their threatened sales of US government bonds. The Japanese stonewall, insisting that the high dollar will ruin the already suffering Japanese economy, & that they can no longer afford to absorb US government debt. Sunday's reports brings them no closer to an agreement. Finance ministers from the Asian Tigers fly to Tokyo to join the negotiations. Sunday night finds them still at an impasse.

MONDAY

By the time the markets open on Wall Street, a tidal wave of foreign orders to sell US government securities washes over the market. Panic in the bond market spreads quickly to stocks as the Dow plunges to 3,850. The dollar falls 67%, from 115 to 38-1/3 yen as gold soars to $1,140 an ounce. Silver briefly hits $18.00, but settles at $15.75. Late in the day frantic grocery store clerks, operating under orders from corporate headquarters, begin to change prices, raising bread to $3.75 a loaf & hamburger to $6.00 a pound. By 5:00 p.m. Pacific time, a gallon of gas costs $4.14.

TUESDAY

On orders from the SEC, stock, bond, & commodity markets open an hour late. The stock selling panic turns into a stock buying panic as the Dollar collapses another 75% to 9.58 Yen & investors rush to buy anything of value. Stocks close the day at 75,670 while the US treasury bond market collapses. Gold rockets to $4,560 & silver to $95. Housewives spend their day waiting in lines at gas stations to fill up at $16.50 a gallon -- for regular. Latecomers at grocery stores feel lucky to buy bread for $15 a loaf & hamburger for $24 a pound. Grocery store shelves are nearly empty. Banks nation-wide begin to call in loans. The five largest US insurance companies announce they will not honour requests to cash in policies "until further notice."

WEDNESDAY

Food riots break out in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, St. Louis, & New Orleans. In Cleveland & Chicago, enraged mobs of housewives kill three Kroger store managers before police riot squads & SWAT teams can clear the buildings. In other cities, dazed shoppers are glad to find bread at $75 a loaf, but few can afford hamburger at $119.50 a pound. Coin dealers in major metropolitan centres close their doors & sneak out back entrances, leaving lines of customers blocks long. In Los Angeles, two gas station clerks are burned alive when irate customers trap them in their kiosk, shove a gas tank hose into the payment slot, fill the kiosk with High Test at $82.899 a gallon, & throw in a lit match. The dollar drops another 80%, closing at $1.916 to the Yen. At banks, interest rates rise to 72% per day for creditworthy borrowers. Early in the day, banks began to call mortgages. At 4:00 p.m. the president declares a banking holiday. But Wall Street is booming, with the highest Dow ever posted, 168,650. Trading in the gold market becomes frantic as gold goes crazy, flashing through the $20,000 mark to close at $22,800. Two gold traders suffered heart attacks on the trading floor, but are trodden to death by frantically trading clerks before medics can reach them. Managers of three of the nation's largest pension funds commit suicide. Silver rises even faster than gold as millions rush to spend their remaining dollars & save whatever they can. The white metal closes the day at $651 an ounce. Under FEMA, the president takes control of all the nation's businesses & immediately shuts them down for seven days. National guard units patrol the streets. Martial law is declared.

THURSDAY

With grocery stores & other businesses closed, housewives panic. Flea markets sprang up in shopping mall parking lots. Bread, when you could find it, brings $600 a loaf -- or a dime in pre-1965 silver coin. The few daring farmers who bring in meat are asking $955 a pound for hamburger, $50 apiece for eggs. In Los Angeles, Korean truck farmers commandeer a US Army armoured personnel carrier & use it to hawk vegetables through Orange County. The president appoints Dr. Jocelyn Elders head of a commission to investigate price gouging in food stores. Army units withdraw from Watts & cordon off the entire area, leaving it to burn. Interstates leading from New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago & other major metropolitan areas gridlock as millions of fleeing refugees run out of gas. Tent cities spring up at Interstate exchanges, patrolled by grim armed militias. The Army, with its hands full in the cities, makes no effort to control suburban, much less rural, areas. In the Southwest, border crossings are hopelessly clogged by millions of Mexicans rushing southward. Stock & commodity traders spend Wednesday night at their desks, unable to leave their buildings on account of the mobs. When trading begins Thursday, gold opens at $182,400, while silver climbs to $7,600 an ounce. Traders briefly panic when shots are fired in the gold pit at the commodity exchange in Chicago, but calm quickly when they realise the shots come from the few remaining short sellers committing suicide. Interest rates on dollars climb to 2,880% a day, but only in the overseas markets. US banks remain closed. Brazil, Nigeria, & Mexico pay off their entire foreign debt to US banks. The dollar drops another 87.5%, & closes at $4.174 to the Yen, but the Dow posts another record high at 275,920. Advancers lead decliners by a margin of 108 to 1. The oils & retail businesses are lagging.

FRIDAY

An entire nation is in shock as the remaining millions try to escape urban areas. In Washington, police & Army units wage a pitched battle on Capitol Hill trying to defend congress against a well-armed mob. Order is restored after flame throwers are brought in, but in another part of town a mob ransacks the Federal Reserve building & leaves three hapless economists hanging on the porch. In the markets, chaos reigns. Gold reaches $2,067,180 an ounce while silver climbs through $125,000 an ounce to close at $129,129.00. The dollar is offered at $47.30 to the yen, but nobody is buying. It loses another 91.2% of its value on Thursday. Interest rates climb to 32,639% a day, but that doesn't stop the Dow, which settles at 595,805. At noon the President addresses the nation on radio & TV, calling for calm. He introduces Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, who announces that the Government is issuing a new dollar backed by the 261 million ounces of gold in Fort Knox. Government printing presses in Washington & Fort Worth will work round the clock to overprint the old notes with new denominations. The exchange rate is fixed at one new dollar ("N$1.00") for 100,000 old dollars. On Crossfire, Bob Dole replaces liberal Newsweek editor Eleanor Cliff as a panelist. In Austin, the Texas legislature, acting on the Treaty of 1848, exercises its right to declare the independence of the Texas Republic. [END]

Editor's Note:

This story explains why you own gold: not so much to make money but to protect it. Maybe it wouldn't happen this bad in America. Maybe it would only be as bad as Israel in recent decades (divide by 1000 instead of 100,000) or Bolivia (multiply by 100,000 or so) or Argentina (divide by 1,000) or Russia or Germany or Hungary or China or Nicaragua or 2 dozen other countries where the currency has collapsed one or more times this century. It can & will happen in your lifetime. Be prepared.



Franklin Sanders

www.the-moneychanger.com


Reprinted with permission from The Moneychanger. Franklin Sanders lives on a farm in Middle Tennessee by choice, deals in physical gold & silver, and has been writing and publishing The Moneychanger for nearly 26 years. In 1993 he wrote Silver Bonanza for Jim Blanchard. Last year he published "Why Silver Will Outperform Gold 400% and & The Professional Trading Secrets That Will Make the Most of Your Silver & Gold Investments," still available at www.the-moneychanger.com/order/publications.html.

You can sign up for Mr. Sanders' free daily e-mail commentary on gold & silver at www.the-moneychanger.com, and download your free portfolio calculator to keep up with your gold and silver investments.





<< Article précedent
Evaluer : Note moyenne :4,4 (8 votes)
>> Article suivant
Publication de commentaires terminée
  Tous Favoris Mieux Notés  
Dernier commentaire publié pour cet article
Or Not Lire la suite
prljr - 23/11/2013 à 13:18 GMT
Top articles
Flux d'Actualités
TOUS
OR
ARGENT
PGM & DIAMANTS
PÉTROLE & GAZ
AUTRES MÉTAUX