Monday, March 12, 2012

PELABURAN EMAS PERAK BERSAMA SYARIKAT GOLD SILVER RESOURCES (M) SDN BHD


MAKLUMAN

Blog ini telah dihentikan update dan dipindah ke website www.emasperakpower.com
 SILA KLIK pada link dibawah utk navigate.TQ














GOLD SILVER RESOURCES (M) SDN BHD

INFO SYARIKAT :
GOLD SILVER RESOURCES (M) SDN BHD atau singkatan GSR telah ditubuhkan pada tahun 2011.


TUJUAN PENUBUHAN SYARIKAT :
Mengeluar Pelbagai Produk Berasaskan Emas dan Perak
Memberi peluang perniagaan dan perkongsian keuntungan melalui lantikan pengedar SAH.
Memberi Pendidikan dan Kesedaran pentingnya menyimpan emas dan perak kepada rakyat Malaysia.

Pihak syarikat juga mengeluarkan pelbagai produk Emas Perak. Antara Produk Silver 1 oz - Bunga Raya , Harimau Malaya manakala produk jongkong dalam berat 100 gram , 250 gram , 500 gram , 1kg . Untuk barangan kemas 916 & 999 : Gelang dan rantai tangan.
Bertemakan konsep pendidikan pelaburan masa hadapan disamping mempromosikan Malaysia diperingkat antarabangsa, GSR mengeluarkan pelbagai produk berasaskan perak dengan melambangkan identiti Malaysia. Produk yang dikeluarkan merupakan produk 100% Buatan Malaysia. Diharapkan dengan tertubuhnya syarikat GSR di Malaysia dapat memberi peluang kepada rakyat Malaysia menyimpan emas perak GSR sebagai koleksi peribadi disamping ia dijadikan asset pelaburan pada masa hadapan.

Antaran Produk Keluaran Syarikat GSR:

Produk Silver :
1 Oz Bunga Raya Silver Bar
1 Oz Harimau Malaya Silver Coin
100 Gram GSR Silver Bar
250 Gram GSR Silver Bar
500 Gram GSR Silver Bar
1000 Gram GSR Silver Bar
1 oz Rhinoceros Hornbill 2012

Produk Emas Rantai & Gelang :
10 gram
20 gram
30 gram
50 gram
100 gram








Peluang Perniagaan EMAS PERAK Bersama

GOLD SILVER RESOURCES SDN BHD


Promotion Dealer : RM1000 sahaja (Yuran Keahlian)

Keuntungan Menjadi Pengedar GSR:

Produk Emas (Jewellery)

1. Emas 999 RM15.00/gram (Komisyen)
2. Emas 916 RM10.00/gram (Komisyen)
3. Emas Goldbar 999 RM11/gram (Komisyen)
4. Buy Back RM4.00/gram (Direct)
5. Komisen Direct RM1.50/gram
6. Kos Penghantaran Percuma

Produk Silver :

1.Keuntungan Persenol 2-3%
2.Keuntungan Rangkaian - 0.6-1.00%
3.Keuntungan Belian Semula : 16-21%
4. Percuma Kos Penghantaran 1kg keatas.

Setelah anda menyertai GSR apa yang anda perolehi dengan bayaran RM1000 tersebut ??:
ANDA DAPAT PERCUMA :
1. WEBSITE MARKETING Contoh : www.gsr2u.com/(nama anda)
2. Jaket GSR
3. Bisnes Card 300 keping
4. Flayer 300 keping
5. Seminar di sponsor
6. Bantuan Marketing di berikan.
7. Khairat Kematian
8. Penghantaran Percuma
9.Jaminan Belian Semula

Dan Banyak lagi yang akan diperolehi sila rujuk slide show yang diberikan.

Untuk pendaftaran sebagai pengedar mohon isi borang pendaftaran dealer kemudian fax kepada syarikat beserta bukti pembayaran yuran keahlian RM1000.00

Tel : 03-55230840
Fax : 03- 55230824

www.gsr2u.com.my/goldsilver4u
http://www.goldnsilver4u.blogspot.com/

Ibu Pejabat GSR terletak di :

GOLD SILVER RESOURCES (M) SDN BHD
6E TINGKAT 5 , BLOK 1
PUSAT PERNIAGAAN WORLDWIDE
JLN 13/50 SEKSYEN 13, 40675 SHAH ALAM


UNTUK PEMBELIAN/PENDARTARAN SEBAGAI DEALER ATAU MEMBER  DI BAWAH DEALER BERDAFTAR (ID: goldsilver4u, Dealer No: PP0001) KLIK LINK DI BAWAH


H/P: 013-4856492,
________________
PELABURAN EMAS PERAK BERSAMA SYARIKAT GOLD SILVER RESOURCES (M) SDN BHD.




10 Reasons To Invest In Physical Gold

There are many potential investors wondering what all the fuss is about concerning Gold because for the longest time it has been viewed as a past time for millionaires and Countries. The Gold we refer to here is “allocated” gold i.e. a specific, referenced, visible piece of gold bullion or a gold coin that is allocated to and owned by one person. It does not necessarily include quantities of gold held as anonymous parts of anonymous bars in anonymous vaults (“unallocated”) because this type of gold cannot be repatriated to the owners if the need arose as no-one knows which bits of which bar belong to each investor.
  • It is an investment that you own, it is your property and it cannot be lent out to a third party or used to form credit
  • It has increased in value over 440% in the last 10 years and has shown a healthy return on investment year on year
  • It is not a paper asset vulnerable to to the performance, viability, stability or existence of an intermediary
  • It is not an investment in a Bank which cares little about paying you interest and a return on investment because it is preoccupied making money for itself
  • Historically it is the only “currency” to maintain a real value in purchasing power throughout centuries

Click to enlarge
  • It is THE safe haven for wealth and used by Countries and the largest Private fortunes on the planet as a protection against inflation, currency devaluation, economic instability and ultimately pending crisis
  • Economic and financial experts the world over recognise and advise that Gold should form part of every investment portfolio
  • The price of gold has been suppressed and controlled for decades by those who seek to control global finance. Since 2008 the rules have changed and control has been lost. If the gold price was corrected by the same factors as fuel, food and currency it would be worth at least $2100 an ounce today
  • It is a precious metal available in a finite quantity that is constantly in demand the world over.It is always a good time to invest in gold because demand is extremely high and supply is dwindling. Prices will fluctuate but in the end Gold will continue to rise because it is irreplaceable, a precious metal with unique properties and it cannot be manufactured or printed
  • It is a debt free investment, not linked to the worldwide black hole of sovereign debt and spiralling deficits
After all, your wealth in gold is a lot safer than your wealth in the Banks!

8 Reasons Why Silver Will Make You Rich

  • Silver, like gold, has intrinsic value
  • Silver has been in a commodity bull cycle since 2000
  • Silver is a safe hedge against currency inflation
  • Silver is a security choice during times of financial crisis
  • Silver is rarer than gold
  • Silver is used in 90% of all electronics – and its mostly non-renewable
  • Silver inventories are very low
  • Silver investment markets are expanding thanks to the Chinese

Click to enlarge

Adakah anda tertanya-tanya & masih menunggu masa yang anda rasa sesuai untuk membeli....!!!!

Kenapa Kita Perlu Beli Dan Simpan Emas Sekarang?

Untungkah Melabur Emas Fizikal Nie.....????



Untungkah Melabur Emas Fizikal Nie.....????

Mari kita lihat secara ringkas perbezaan dengan akaun simpanan ataupun ASB!!!! BERBANDING Emas

Katakan anda ada duit sebanyak RM10,000 tunai...

Cara nak melabur :

1. Cara 1. Anda pilih ASB – dimana pulangan keuntungan lebih kurang 10% setahun (menarik, banyak juga tu!!!, sapa nak bagi…)

Anda mula melabur RM10,000 dalam ASB tahun ke-1. Pada tahun hadapan iaitu tahun ke-2 dengan anggaran keuntungan 10% @ RM1,000 maka jumlah pelaburan anda telah meningkat kepada (RM10,000 + RM1,000) = RM11,000.

Jika wang RM11,000 tadi tidak diusik & dilaburkan semula, maka pada tahun ke-3 dengan keuntungan 10% @ RM1,100 maka jumlah pelaburan anda telah meningkat kepada (RM11,000 + RM1,100) = RM12,100.

MENARIK….. pada tahun ke-3 anda telah menggandakan wang anda sebanyak RM2,100 dengan modal asal RM10,000






2. Cara 2. MACAM MANA PULA DENGAN PELABURAN EMAS NIE….

OK, katakanlah anda nak melabur dlm emas fizikal, so RM10,000 tadi kita beli emas.

TAHUKAH anda peratus kenaikan emas dlm 10 tahun lepas adalah sebanyak ~500%(lima kali ganda kenaikan).Takpalah kita just ambik secara purata kenaikan biasa iaitu dalam 30% setahun (BANYAK tak???)

So, anda mula melabur RM10,000 dalam bentuk emas pada tahun ke-1. Pada tahun hadapan iaitu tahun ke-2 dengan anggaran keuntungan 30% @ RM3,000 maka jumlah pelaburan anda telah meningkat kepada (RM10,000 + RM3,000) = RM13,000.

Jika emas RM13,000 tadi tidak diusik, maka pada tahun ke-3 dengan keuntungan 30% @ RM3,900 maka jumlah pelaburan anda telah meningkat kepada (RM13,000 + RM3,900) = RM16,900.

SANGAT MENARIK….. pada tahun ke-3 anda telah menggandakan nilai wang anda sebanyak RM6,900 dengan modal asal RM10,000 SAHAJA!!!!!


MARI KITA BUAT PERBANDINGAN keatas 2 jenis pelaburan tersebut

1. Melabur dalam ASB & pada tahun ke-3 anda untung RM2,100
2. Melabur dalam EMAS FIZIKAL & pada tahun ke-3 anda untung RM6,900

PEBEZAAN KEUNTUNGAN, RM6900 – RM2100 = RM4,800

Jadi dengan melabur dalam EMAS fizikal... anda untung LEBIH!!!!!!

Ni belum compare dengan simpanan tetap lagi!!!!!!

Pilih yg mana mau…!!! Apa!!!!! anda kata jika nak guna duit cash….
emas fizikal susah nak cair????.....emas apa nak beli!!! betul ker nie…
bukan scam or skim cepat kaya!!!!

Jumpa saya & saya akan terangkan macam mana caranya……

Nanti dulu, tak habis lagi ada banyak cara lagi nak invest…… Nak tahu macam mana cara terbaik utk ANDA????

Kenalah buat appointment!!!!!!


Hasmadi Abdul Hadi
Tel: 013-4856492





***DEALER DIPERLUKAN, bimbingan & bantuan akan diberikan

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Emas cecah RM6,140 seauns

Ekonomi (Berita Harian)
 Emas cecah RM6,140 seauns

2012/04/13
Capai harga tertinggi tahun depan kesan kemerosotan tarikan pelabur

KENAIKAN harga emas ke paras tertinggi melebihi AS$2,000 (RM6,140) seauns yang dijangka dicapai tahun depan, akan memberi petanda bahawa logam berharga itu mencapai paras harga kemuncak dalam aliran meningkat sejak lebih sedekad lalu apabila dasar kewangan di negara ekonomi utama kembali normal, kata Pengerusi Perundingan Logam (GFMS), semalam.
Pasaran dijangka meningkat kepada paras tertinggi baru menjelang awal 2013 selepas bergelut tahun ini ekoran permintaan agak perlahan di pasaran fizikal utama dan kemerosotan tarikan pelaburan untuk jongkong emas, kata Philip Klapwijk.
Harga emas mungkin melepasi AS$2,000 berikutan kebimbangan terhadap krisis hutang zon euro yang berterusan dan prospek berhubung lebih banyak pelonggaran dasar monetari AS, katanya.

“Kami menjangkakan dapat menyaksikan harga emas naik melepasi AS$2,000 pada 2013, namun begitu tahun depan mungkin menjadi sebagai petanda tertinggi untuk pasaran,” kata Klapwijk.

“Ia bergantung kepada sama ada kami melihat beberapa penyelesaian di Eropah yang mencukupi untuk mengambil beberapa langkah mengatasi isu berakhirnya langkah rangsangan di AS serta prospek normalisasi dasar monetari,” katanya.

Klapwijk berkata, emas dijangka diniagakan sekitar AS$1,530 hingga AS$1,920 seauns pada 2012, dengan harga purata AS$1,731 seauns.
Harga akhir tertinggi yang dipaparkan sedikit di bawah rekod tahun lalu iaitu AS$1,920.30 seauns yang dicatatkan pada September.

“Apa yang kita lihat adalah penangguhan berikutnya kepada kenaikan harga tertinggi,” kata Klapwijk sebelum melancarkan laporan GFMS Gold 2012.

“Paras harga melepasi AS$2,000 seauns mungkin akan melihat lebih banyak cerita untuk separuh pertama 2013 berbanding beberapa perkara yang kita akan lihat pada separuh kedua tahun ini,” katanya.

Melihat kepada unjuran untuk bekalan dan permintaan tahun ini, beliau menunjukkan kepada lebihan asas dalam pasaran yang mana dolar akan berjumlah AS$130 bilion.

Kaitan emas dengan aset lain seperti saham, dolar dan euro masih berubah secara berterusan.

Dalam tiga suku pertama 2011, kebanyakan emas didagangkan selaras dengan dolar berikutan pelabur membeli kedua-dua aset sebagai pelaburan selamat. Namun pada enam minggu terakhir, emas didagangkan berbanding dolar dan selaras dengan komoditi lain.

Walaupun kini emas kurang terdedah kepada turun naik dalam pasaran ekuiti, Klapwijk berkata, harga masih boleh jatuh secara ketara jika wujudnya satu pergerakan yang lebih rendah dalam bekalan. – REUTERS

Weekly Outlook for July 2 - 6, 2012

Weekly Outlook of Financial Markets for July 2-6

June 30, 2012




Following the decision in the EU Summit that took many by surprise the commodities prices including gold, silver and oil changed direction from Thursday and hiked on the last day of the month. The Euro also bounced back and dragged along with it many other foreign exchange rates such as the Aussie dollar and GBP.  Will this rally continue during the upcoming week or is it something that will dissipate soon after. The upcoming week will be short one due to the U.S Fourth of July celebration.  There are several important publications and events that may affect the financial markets next week including: U.S non-farm payroll report, EU rate decision, GB interest rates decision, Canada’s employment report, U.S’s manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI,  Great Britain manufacturing PMI, Australia’s trade balance and U.S. jobless claims. Here is an economic news calendar outlook for July 2ndh to July 6th regarding the U.S., EU, Canada, Australia and Great Britain.   
(All times GMT):
Monday, July 2nd
09:30 – GB Manufacturing PMI: This report will pertain to Great Britain’s manufacturing sectorstatus in June 2012. In the previous report regarding May 2012 the index tumbled down to 45.9%. This rate means the manufacturing sector is contracting; this index might affect GB Pound;
15:00 – U.S. ISM Manufacturing PMI: This report will refer to the monthly developments in themanufacturing sector on a national level during June 2012. During May 2012 the index declined to 53.5%, which means the manufacturing is growing at a slower rate; this index might affect forex, crude oil and natural gas markets;
Tuesday, July 3rd
4:30 – Reserve Bank of Australia – Cash Rate Statement: the overnight money market interest rate of Australia’s Reserve Bank declined by 0.25 percent points to 3.5% – the lowest level since the end of 2009. This was the second rate change this year; if the RBA will decide to lower the rate again this news may affect the Aussie dollar that is strongly linked with commodities prices;
15:00 – U.S Factory Orders: This report will show the changes in U.S. factory orders of manufactured durable goods during May; this report will offer some insight to the growth of the U.S economy and could affect the direction of the U.S dollar;
Wednesday, July 4th
2:30 – Australian Trade Balance: The upcoming report will pertain to May 2012. In the previous report, the seasonally adjusted balance of goods and services contracted from a deficit of $1,283 million in March 2012 to a $203 million deficit in April 2012. The export of non-monetary gold fell by $24 million (2%); if the gold exports will continue to fall May, it might suggest a decline in demand for non-monetary gold (see here last report);
Thursday, July 5th
Tentative – Spanish 10 Year Bond Auction: the Spanish government will issue another bond auction; following the recent EU Summit this auction sales is likely to go well; in the previous bond auction, which was held at the beginning of June, the rate reached 6.04%;
12:00 – Great Britain Bank Rate & Asset Purchase Plan: Bank of England will decide on its basic rate for July 2012 and the progress of its asset purchase plan; as of June the BOE’s rate remained unchanged at 0.5% and the asset purchase plan of £325 billion continues;
12:45 – ECB Press Conference and Euro Rate Decision: In previous interest rate decision the President of ECB, Mario Draghi kept the EU interest rate flat at 1%; the recent EU Summit decision to bailout struggling banks by the rescue fund might affect ECB’s rate decision; the ongoing decline in inflation rate and low growth in EU is likely to keep the option of another rate cut on the table; if ECB change the rate, it may affect the Euro to US dollar exchange rate;
13:15 – ADP estimate of U.S. non-farm payroll: ADP will publish its estimate for the upcoming U.S non-farm payroll change during June 2012 in anticipation for the upcoming no-farm report to be published by Friday;
13:30 – U.S. Jobless Claims Weekly Report:  this update will refer to the weekly developments in the initial jobless claims for the week ending on June 30th; in the latest report the jobless claims edged down by 6k to 386,000; this upcoming weekly report may affect the U.S dollar and consequently commodities rates;
15:00 – U.S. ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI: This report will present the developments in the non-manufacturing sector during June 2012. During May 2012 this index edged up to 53.7% – this still means the non-manufacturing is expanding and at a slightly faster pace than before; this index may affect forex and commodities trading;
15:30 – EIA U.S. Natural Gas Storage Update: the EIA weekly report of the U.S. natural gas market will pertain to the recent changes in natural gas production, storage, consumption and price as of June 30th; in the previous report, natural gas storage rose by 57 Bcf to 3,063 Bcf;
15:30 – U.S Crude Oil Stockpiles Report: the EIA (Energy Information Administration) will publish its weekly report on the U.S oil and petroleum stockpiles for the week ending on June 29th; in the recent weekly report for June 22nd, stockpiles rose by 2.6 million bl to 1,798 million bl;
Friday July 6th
08:00 – Swiss National Bank Forex Reserves: the central bank of Switzerland will publish the total value of its foreign currencies reserves during June;
09:30 – Great Britain PPI Input: this report will present the yearly rate of GB’s producer price index for June 2012; in the last report regarding May the input price declined by 2.5% (M-2-M); this news may affect the British Pound;
13:30 – Canada’s Employment Report: In the previous employment report for May 2012, unemployment remained 7.3%; the employment also didn’t change. the upcoming report might affect the Canadian dollar and consequently also affect the rates of energy commodities including oil and natural gas; Canada is among the leading exporters of these commodities to the U.S (see here the recent report);
13:30 – U.S. Unemployment Rate & Non-Farm Payroll Report: in the recent report regarding May 2012, the labor market didn’t grow much as it did during the first quarter as the number of non-farm payroll employment increased by only 69k; the U.S unemployment rate edged up to 8.2%; if the upcoming report will continue to show low growth around 100 thousand mark (in additional jobs), this may raise the chances of the Fed introducing additional stimulus plan in 2012; this report might affect not only the U.S dollar, but also gold and silver prices (see here my last review on the U.S employment report).

Saturday, February 11, 2012

The War at the End of the Dollar.

The War at the End of the Dollar


APRIL 13, 2012

The history of the U.S. dollar is closely linked to U.S. involvement in a series of wars. The Bretton Woods Accord and the resulting world reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar were both byproducts of World War II (1939-1945). The Korean War (1950-1953) was followed six years later by the Vietnam War (1959-1975) which led to the end of the Bretton Woods system. Unfettered by the constraint of gold backing after 1971, the U.S. dollar became a weapon in the Cold War (1945–1991) between the U.S. and the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.). Each war corresponded with an increase in the U.S. money supply. The Gulf War (1990-1991) was followed by wars in Afghanistan, beginning in 2001, and in Iraq, beginning in 2003, and, simultaneously, by the U.S.-led War on Terror that began in 2001. Like the wars that came before them, the recent staccato of U.S. wars is correlated with increases in the U.S. money supply. The Iraq war, for example, is estimated to have cost as much as $4 trillion.
The loss of value in the U.S. dollar caused by excessive expansion of the money supply, together with rising demand for raw materials from emerging economies, has led to permanently higher global commodity prices. Higher crude oil prices, in particular, have put pressure on the U.S. economy, which is putatively in a gradual recovery from the recession that began in 2007.  At the same time, international trade has begun to move away from the U.S. dollar, threatening its world reserve currency status. Given the history of the U.S. dollar, it seems likely that an eventual end of the U.S. dollar’s reign as the world reserve currency will be marked by war.
U.S. politicians are clamoring for war with Iran, the third largest oil exporter in the world. Iran refuses to sell its oil for U.S. dollars. If Iranian oil were traded in U.S. dollars, it would moderate the U.S. dollar price of crude oil and ease pressure on the U.S. economy, as well as extend the world reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar and give the U.S. economic leverage over consumers of Iranian oil, which include China and India.
The U.S. news media is preparing the American public for a war with Iran with reports about the dangers of Iran becoming a nuclear power. Television news reports have speculated that Iran would immediately wipe out Israel if it obtained a nuclear weapon, despite the fact that a thermonuclear exchange would wipe out Iran. It has also been reported that Iran might carry out nuclear strikes on U.S. soil using intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), although Iran possesses neither nuclear warheads nor ICBMs. In fact, there is no evidence that Iran is currently building a nuclear weapon. One concern that is valid, however, is that no nuclear power has ever been invaded in a conventional war.

Forged in the Fire of War

The approaching end of World War II led to the creation of the Bretton Woods system in July 1944, although fighting in Europe and in the Pacific continued into 1945. The U.S. dollar, which was convertible into gold, became the dominant mechanism for international trade settlement. The price of gold was set to the pre-war price of $35 per troy ounce, which was deflationary at the time. There was nothing in the Bretton Woods Accord, however, that prevented the U.S. from issuing more currency than was backed by gold other than the threat of a run on U.S. gold reserves.
The Bretton Woods system worked as intended for roughly 17 years. The London gold market, which had been closed during World War II, reopened in 1954. By 1961, upward pressure on the price of gold prompted the establishment of the London Gold Pool by the U.S. Federal Reserve and major European central banks (including the central banks of the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland and West Germany). The London Gold Pool defended the $35 per troy ounce price through interventions in the London gold market, but upward pressure on the price of gold grew. In July of 1962, Americans were forbidden by then president Kennedy to own gold abroad by Executive Order 11037. In a 1965 press conference, then president of France, Charles de Gaulle publicly denounced the U.S. for abusing the world reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar. The London Gold Pool collapsed in March of 1968 after France withdrew from the group setting off a surge in gold demand that caused the London gold market to shut down for a two week period.
By 1971, substantially due to the cost of the Vietnam War, the U.S. had leveraged its gold reserves to the breaking point. The expansion of the U.S. money supply caused the U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) to increase by more than 6% in 1970 and it remained above 4% in 1971. When U.S. President Nixon “closed the gold window” in August 1971 and instituted price controls, the Bretton Woods system ended and an ad hoc floating exchange system resulted. From their peak during World War II to 1971, U.S. gold holdings fell from approximately 20,205 tonnes to approximately 8,134 tonnes. In February 1973, the U.S. devalued the dollar and raised the official dollar price of gold to $42.22 per troy ounce. By June of the same year, the market price in London had skyrocketed to more than $120 per ounce.
Although CPI inflation was below 4% at the start of 1973, it rapidly accelerated, reaching 9% at the start of 1974. With the last vestiges of gold backing having been removed from the U.S. dollar, Americans were once again allowed to own gold as a hedge against inflation. Against a backdrop of runaway U.S. dollar inflation, Arab members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), along with Egypt, Syria and Tunisia proclaimed an oil embargo in October of 1974. Officially, U.S. support of Israel in the Yom Kippur War was the reason for the embargo, but it was also a challenge to the un-backed U.S. dollar’s position as the world reserve currency, i.e., as an exclusive medium for crude oil sales.
1
After the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1974, OPEC members, including Iran before the Iranian Revolution in 1979, began to accumulate hundreds of billions of devalued U.S. dollars due to current account surpluses linked to rising oil prices. Arab “petrodollars” were recycled into US Treasuries, invested in financial markets around the world and loaned to commercial banks.
By 1979, oil prices had roughly quadrupled and the price of gold was increasing rapidly. Then Federal Reserve Chairman, Paul Volcker raised the Federal Reserve’s funds rate to an average of 11.2% in 1979. Nonetheless, in 1980 CPI inflation soared to 13.5% and the stagnant U.S. economy also slipped into recession. The price of gold hit $850 per troy ounce and the price oil averaged $37.42 per barrel, more than ten times the average price of $3.60 per barrel less than a decade before in 1971.
In a desperate bid to save the U.S. dollar, Volcker increased the funds rate to an unprecedented 20% in mid 1981, pushing the prime interest rate to a usurious 21.5% by the middle of 1982. Finally, Volcker’s radical intervention slowed the rate of CPI inflation and restored confidence in the U.S. dollar. It also brought the price of crude oil down and smashed the prices of gold and silver.
2

The Committee to Flood the World

Post Volcker, the Federal Reserve’s dilemma was how to bring down interest rates while managing the CPI independent of increases in the money supply, e.g., to neutralize the Triffin Dilemma (a conflict between domestic monetary policy and the demands placed on a currency by international trade) and to support U.S. federal government borrowing during the Cold War. The first key to the solution was to look at inflation strictly in terms of its effects on prices and not as an increase in the money supply, which is a function of interest rates. When interest rates are low, prices tend to rise because the money supply expands more quickly, thus the second key was to de-couple prices and interest rates. The third and final key was to manage the psychology of the consumer in terms of inflation expectations. While altering the CPI to reflect relatively stable prices and managing consumer inflation expectations were easily accomplished, de-coupling prices and interest rates was a more difficult problem because the prices of global commodities were not entirely under U.S. control. Ultimately, managing the CPI required managing global commodity prices, especially the price of crude oil.
A crucial breakthrough came in 1988.  The article, “Gibson’s Paradox and the Gold Standard” by Robert B. Barsky and Lawrence (“Larry”) H. Summers in the Journal of Political Economy, showed that the price of gold was inversely correlated to interest rates. Since gold is not industrially consumed in significant quantities, the price of gold changes relative to the value of major currencies. Specifically, the price of gold had proven to be a barometer of U.S. dollar inflation after 1971. What was more important was that the prices of gold and crude oil tended to correlate. The implication of Gibson’s Paradox was that interest rates could remain low as long as the price of gold did not rise. If interest rates could remain low without causing an accelerating increase in the CPI, as had happened in the 1970s, the money supply could be expanded indefinitely.
3
A few years after Alan Greenspan took the helm as Chairman of the Federal Reserve in 1987, interest rates were slashed and the resulting increase in the U.S. money supply began to pull away from the increase in the CPI. For roughly two decades, beginning with Volcker’s success in the early 1980s, the price of gold declined while oil prices remained relatively stable, despite the fact that interest rates had come down.
4
The innovations in U.S. monetary policy developed principally by Summers and Greenspan helped to make it possible for the United States to up the ante in the Cold War, which ended with the collapse of the U.S.S.R. in 1991. Setting aside all other issues, the U.S.S.R. had arguably been spent into oblivion by the U.S. The fall of the U.S.S.R. seemed to guarantee the hegemony of the U.S. dollar for decades to come.
During the 1990s, Greenspan, together with Larry Summers, who was Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Treasury under Robert Ruben at the time, championed financial deregulation. Confident in their ideas, the so-called “committee to save the world” prevented regulation of over the counter (OTC) derivatives and succeeded in effectively repealing the Banking Act of 1933 (the Glass–Steagall Act).

In hindsight, Greenspan held interest rates too low for too long in the 1990s resulting in the dot-com bubble. The bursting of the dot-com bubble was a shot across the bow of the “committee to save the world” but the warning went unheeded. The Federal Reserve moderated the downturn beginning in 2000 by lowering interest rates and they remained low. U.S. banks took advantage of deregulation and low interest rates to speculate and to increase their leverage, especially in the mortgage market, while hedging the additional risks in the fast growing OTC derivatives market. As the resulting real estate bubble grew, the notional value of OTC derivatives exceeded $600 trillion on a global basis (more than ten times world GDP) and financial services industry profits expanded to 40% of S&P 500 business profits.
The price of gold had begun to move up after having made a historic low in June of 2001 and, in 2006, the price of crude oil began to rise at an accelerating rate revealing a fundamental flaw of de-coupling interest rates from prices. The flaw was that the Federal Reserve had absolutely no control over the flow of increased liquidity resulting from its policies. The “committee to save the world” was flooding the world with cheap U.S. dollars. Increased liquidity linked to low interest rates was fueling unprecedented levels of financial speculation and increasing the risk and magnitude of asset price bubbles, such as the dot-com bubble and the real estate bubble. To make matters worse, excessive monetary expansion was weakening confidence in the U.S. dollar.
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Pressured by rising oil prices, the U.S. economy began to roll over in 2007. As the U.S. housing bubble began to burst, beginning with sub-prime loans, the price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil hit an all-time high of $145 in June 2008. Roughly four months later, a financial crisis far larger than that of 1929 began to take place, i.e., the bursting of the largest credit bubble and monetary expansion in the history of the world. In October 2008 Greenspan testified before the U.S. Congress saying “…I found a flaw…in the model that I perceived is the critical functioning structure that defines how the world works…”

Quantifying the Crisis

The policy responses of the U.S. federal government and of the Federal Reserve (under Chairman Ben S. Bernanke since 2005) to the financial crisis and to the so-called Great Recession were radically inflationary. The Federal Reserve loaned $16 trillion to financial institutions worldwide and $7.77 trillion to U.S. banks and corporations. The Federal Reserve also purchased roughly $1 trillion worth of toxic mortgage backed securities (MBS) from banks and monetized a total of roughly $800 billion of U.S. federal debt, expanding its balance sheet from $900 billion before the crisis to $2.7 trillion.
In the face of the most severe economic decline since the Great Depression, the U.S. federal government embarked on a $700 billion economic stimulus plan, despite the fact that tax revenues were falling. In addition to an initial $800 billion bailout package, government sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were taken into receivership, making the U.S. federal government liable for roughly $5 trillion of mortgage debt. In 2009, the total liabilities of the federal government were estimated to be as high as $23.7 trillion by then Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), Neil Barofsky. As a result, U.S. federal government debt increased sharply and, in 2011, the U.S. credit rating was downgraded for the first time in history.
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Loss of value in the U.S. dollar, caused by radically inflationary monetary policies, set off a global currency war in 2009 and pushed global commodity prices higher than they would otherwise have been. Higher crude oil prices, despite lower demand, slowed economic recovery. At the same time, high debt levels, bank bailouts, soaring government budget deficits and falling tax revenues produced a sovereign debt crisis in Europe. Although the focus of the still developing sovereign debt crisis remains on Europe, the skyrocketing debt and unfunded Social Security and Medicare liabilities of the U.S. federal government, estimated to be more than $63 trillion, foreshadow a similar crisis in America.

The Trap of Financial Warfare

One of the key reasons why the U.S. has yet to experience a sovereign debt crisis is that the world reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar supports demand for the U.S. dollar and for U.S. federal government debt. However, the U.S. dollar is in the process of gradually losing its world reserve currency status. Global trade is fragmenting into increasingly autonomous trading blocks defined by currencies and trade relations, such as the BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China), together with South Africa.
Demand from emerging economies, particularly China, is placing steady upward pressure on the price of crude oil. Higher oil prices resulting from a combination of a weaker U.S. dollar and increased global demand threaten to push the U.S. economy back into recession. Setting aside flat to declining supplies of sweet light crude oil (Peak Oil), the fact that the price of gold has risen roughly 500% in a single decade suggests much higher oil prices in the future.
Iran, which is the world’s third largest oil exporter and a major supplier of oil to China, lies outside of U.S. control. Iran refuses to sell oil for U.S. dollars, partly as a consequence of the overthrow of the democratically elected government of Iran in 1953, orchestrated by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, and partly as a consequence of current U.S. policies in the Middle East.
In March of 2012, the U.S. unilaterally removed Iran from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) system, effectively cutting it off from world commerce. However, wielding the U.S. dollar’s world reserve currency status as a blunt instrument could be counterproductive in the current international climate. If the U.S. dollar were to lose its world reserve currency status over a short period of time, a U.S. sovereign debt crisis would be certain and a catastrophic collapse of the U.S. dollar, i.e., hyperinflation, would be possible.
Having taken a decision to act unilaterally against Iran, the U.S. may be forced to resort to more extreme measures if the world reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar begins to break down. Of course, the U.S. does not control the oil trade solely through financial means. With Israel as a close ally, Iraq and Afghanistan occupied by U.S. forces, close ties with Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and other Middle Eastern countries, Iran is surrounded by more than 40 U.S. military installations.
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A successful invasion of Iran would eliminate the largest non U.S. dollar oil exporter, delaying the breakdown of the U.S. dollar’s status as the world reserve currency. Although a war with Iran would cause a spike in oil prices, U.S. control of Iran’s oil would increase the supply of oil available for purchase in U.S. dollars, which would bring the U.S. dollar price of oil down and enhance the ability of the U.S. to manage the price of oil to meet the needs of the U.S. economy. Controlling a major supplier of crude oil to China and India would give the U.S. additional leverage to support the U.S. dollar and U.S. debt, as well as a means of influencing the policies and economic growth of the two largest nations. The option of invasion, however, may be time limited. If Iran were to eventually obtain nuclear weapons, the risks involved in a U.S. invasion would escalate.
As an alternative to invasion, a limited U.S. military action might involve surgical strikes on Iranian nuclear research and power facilities, as well as on Iranian military forces that pose a threat to the U.S. military. Destroying Iranian nuclear facilities and suppressing potential counterstrikes also suggests neutralizing Iran’s threat of disrupting the oil trade by closing the Straight of Hormuz.  Thus, a limited U.S. military action would involve military operations on a scale not seen since the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
A limited U.S. military action might leave a weakened Iranian regime in place after the conflict and reignite the moderate, pro-democracy Green Movement that was brutally suppressed in 2009. Regime change from within might restore democracy to Iran after twenty six years of U.S.-imposed monarchy and more than three decades of quasi-democratic religious oligarchy. However, regime change is unlikely to result in the sale of Iranian oil in U.S. dollars or to extend the reign of the U.S. dollar as the world reserve currency.  A preemptive strike by the U.S. could also strengthen political support for the current Iranian regime.
There seems to be no political will in Washington D.C. to change course from a U.S. military conflict with Iran, despite the fact that a U.S. attack on Iran will increase anti-U.S. sentiment in the region and amplify the Islamic extremist dimension of the U.S.-led War on Terror. The drumbeat to war in the U.S. news media is loud and clear and, if history is any guide, the U.S. will soon, e.g., after the 2012 presidential election, “cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war”.