***gold to get crunched*****, page-16

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    re: ***gold to get crunched? wrong Got gold yet??

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    THE MONETARY COLD WAR
    By Eric J. Fry

    Who is Oleg Mozhaiskov? A Russian spy? A defecting nuclear
    scientist? A gold-medal winning weightlifter? A gold-metal
    loving central banker?

    Mr. Mozhaiskov is, in fact, a central banker - that rarest
    breed of central bankers that favors buying gold instead of
    selling it. Since this particular banker's affinity for
    gold is not a fleeting fancy, but the studied result of a
    thoughtful macro-economic analysis, this particular banker
    may urge his comrades at the Russian central bank to buy
    more of the stuff.

    Meanwhile, central bankers in China and India have begun
    musing publicly about diversifying out of dollars.
    Presumably, any diversification out of dollars would
    include a diversification into gold. Is the ancient
    monetary metal, therefore, becoming the modern monetary
    metal? Oleg Mozhaiskov suspects so.

    "Gold is predominantly a financial asset," he says, "not
    merely a precious metal...the time has come to admit that
    investment demand was, and still is, the main driving force
    behind price fluctuations on the gold market. The changing
    character of demand heavily depends on what is going on in
    the international foreign currency and financial markets."

    A few months back, at the Baltschug Kempinsky Hotel in
    Moscow, Mr. Mozhaikov addressed the London Bullion Market
    Association. "I would like to thank the conference
    organizers for this opportunity to share my thoughts on
    such a complex, even mythical subject as gold," Mozhaikov
    begins. "I assume that the request was made for one simple
    reason: that I, as a senior executive of the Bank of
    Russia, should know more than other ordinary mortals.

    "In general, this logic is flawed," Mozhaikov jokes, as he
    launches into an articulate, reasoned examination of the
    gold market that reflects far more knowledge and insight
    than most mortals posses.

    "What is gold currently, and what will it be tomorrow?"
    Mozhaikov wonders aloud. "Real money with intrinsic value?
    A raw material? A cash commodity that has lost some of its
    monetary functions? If so, what are the prospects -
    complete loss of gold's role or a restoration of lost
    functions, in one form or another...?

    "There is a wide circle of leading financiers who...are
    convinced that the heads of the world's richest
    countries...have demonetized gold altogether. In their
    eyes, the existence of official gold reserves is simply a
    remnant of the past, a financial monument to the gold and
    gold-currency standards, which will ultimately be absorbed
    by the global gold market."

    But the Russian central banker takes issue with this
    conventional "wisdom."

    "The modern monetary system, although undoubtedly robust
    and long-standing, in fact has a number of flaws and
    weaknesses," Mozhaikov asserts, as he issues a scathing
    indictment of American monetary and fiscal profligacy.
    "Although there are several reserve currencies, the blatant
    lack of discipline is demonstrated by the U.S. dollar. I am
    leaving aside the main aspects of this problem, such as the
    social and economic injustice of a world order that allows
    the richest country in the world to live in debt,
    undermining the vital interests of other countries and
    peoples. What is important for us today is another aspect,
    which is connected with the responsibility of the state
    issuing the reserve currency and for the international
    community preserving that currency's buying power.

    "Given the actual behavior of the dollar on the forex
    markets," says Mozhaikov, "the problem could be more
    accurately termed the irresponsibility of the U.S.
    government in relation to the market valuation of its
    currency in international circulation. Today the net debt
    owed by the United States to the outside world (the so-
    called 'international investment position') is in the
    region of $3 trillion. To understand the scale of this
    figure, let me remind you that it exceeds the total
    official currency reserves in all the world's countries
    (including the United States itself). According to the
    International Monetary Fund statistics at last year-end,
    the world pool of foreign currency reserves totaled...about
    $2,800 billion. The volume of cash only ('greenback'
    banknotes) available outside the United States totals about
    $400 billion.

    "The world has come to a paradoxical situation in which the
    creditor countries are more concerned with the fate of the
    dollar than the U.S. authorities themselves are. Thus,"
    says Mozhaikov, "the evolution of the U.S. dollar's reserve
    role in recent years has given ground to some quite
    pessimistic forecasts, based on rational economic theory.
    No wonder that the number of people who have held assets in
    dollars and now wish to diversify them partly into gold -
    the traditional shelter from inflation and political
    adversity - is steadily growing."

    The Russian central bank, itself, is a significant dollar
    holder and - if we are to trust Mozhaikov's remarks - is
    one of the significant dollar holders that may now "wish to
    diversify partly into gold." Russia, which defaulted on its
    foreign debt in 1998, has since become a model citizen. The
    country's $113 billion of foreign exchange reserves would
    rank it seventh on the list of the world's largest central
    bank reserves. Yet its gold reserves total a mere 500 tones
    - or $7.8 billion dollars worth. In other words, gold
    represents less than 7% of its total reserves.

    Meanwhile, the People's Bank of China holds about the same
    amount of gold as its Cold War ally, despite holding four
    times the foreign exchange reserves. As the nearby charts
    illustrate, China's gold reserve represents less than 2% of
    its massive $474 billion foreign exchange reserve. By
    comparison, many European central banks hold more than 30%
    of their reserves in gold, even after unloading much of it
    in recent years.
 
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