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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

4 responses to “Dollar Supply Creates Dollar Demand, Report 2 June”

  1. Keith- I am very grateful for your analysis and enjoy pondering it. I disagree somewhat about your critique of “printing” since it appears to me that the assumption of “intention to repay” is wrong. There can be a general ‘hopefulness” to repay but not an actual ability. Debt can be glossed over with a few partial payments here and there . To create an asset that one knows (suspects) is fraudulent does not actually generate a corresponding liability. It is a pretend liability. Student loans. FDIC insurance. Pension Benefit Guaranty. Flood insurance. The liability can be buried in an unmarked grave and the asset is out there running around pretending to be valuable. Are there Maiden Lane buckets holding Fukishima toxic sludge that can never be released?
    Things work because of the sunk cost fallacy–since to change monetary systems would destroy the value this one has….I am getting ready to retire and whatever thoughts I have about forecasting the future based upon the “money” that I have accumulated is…..illusory. When my wife asks, “How much money do we need to retire?”, I ask, what is the cost of a knee replacement in 8 years or a Grand Circle tour of Spain in 5? I can “predict” a long term official CPI of 2%, real inflation of 5%, and a ROI of 4% and still be comfortable but the completely unexpected seems more probable to me…..
    What percent of the population has an actual incentive to prefer a redeemable currency? 1%, 5%, 10%? The rich are heavily invested in this irredeemable one and the poor don’t care. These reflections apply only to the few of us on the bubble….

  2. Keith, the concept covered in this post is probably the most important one in your entire series. Applied to countries rather than farmers (all world currencies are in the end, dollar derivatives ..) and one can appreciate the bind the world finds itself in. Unfortunately there seems to be no way out other than mass bankruptcies, sovereign defaults, major unemployment .. you get the picture. There really isn’t much choice either. One has to borrow and save in terms of the currency the rest of the world prefers. Sure I can save in gold, and the farmer could borrow/repay in gold too… but he would still be earning in dollars (who would ever pay him in gold?) and I too would need dollars if I wanted to use my savings for anything (no one will accept gold for that loaf of bread or exotic vacation). That choice of currency is dictated by the rest of the world’s preference! This holds equally true for nations as well as individuals. So what, other than the dollar will the world turn to? Would appreciate your thoughts on this in a forthcoming post!

  3. Recent developments to the good points that Keith has made over the years:

    Switzerland overnight interest rate = -0.95%

    Long Term Switzerland Government Bond Yields today:

    15 year @ -0.251%
    20 year @ -0.102%
    30 year @ 0.033%
    50 year @ 0.093%

    New Bloomberg Story (June 3) —- “The World’s Lowest Interest Rate Could Be Going Even Lower”
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-03/the-world-s-lowest-interest-rate-could-be-going-even-lower

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