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Money Metals News Alert | March 10, 2025 – U.S. stock indexes continue to come under heavy selling pressure last week and today, as the correction approaches 8% from the all-time highs last month. | | |
Concerns about tariffs, war, inflation, and weak earnings all factor in, with money flows moving into safer assets, including cash and gold. Gold is back in the green after pulling back in late February, a move which had ended an 8-week winning streak. The yellow metal is up 1.6% for the month, while silver is up 4%. | | | |
If the stock market correction continues or accelerates, silver and particularly gold may outperform. While both money metals have done extremely well over the past year, their big gains occurred despite strong rallies in both the stock market and the dollar. | | |
Gold : Silver Ratio (as of Friday's closing prices) – 89.2 to 1 | | |
The Gold at Fort Knox WAS Stolen from Americans | | |
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In recent days, President Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Senator Rand Paul, and some others have pressed for an audit of the US gold reserves, with a special focus on the gold at Fort Knox. This is perfectly reasonable given that the U.S. gold reserves—which are the property of the US Treasury and not the Federal Reserve—have not undergone even a partial audit in at least twenty years. Part of the reason for the audit is to discover if any of the gold has been stolen. The US Mint, the government agency that acts as custodian of the gold, has reported for many years that the official size of the gold reserve is 8,133.46 metric tons of gold. | | |
Since there has been no audit in so long, though, the Mint's position is essentially "trust us, bro." Trusting federal bureaucrats has never been a particularly wise policy, and this is why there are ongoing demands for some sort of transparent audit. | U.S. Bullion Depository at Fort Knox, Kentucky | | | | |
If the total size of the US's gold holdings is revealed to be a number below the official number, then it will just be the latest reminder that there are a great many thieves and incompetents among the people running the US federal government. After all, if there is less gold than reported in the US gold reserves, it was presumably stolen at some point. This would be a fitting destiny for the U.S. government's gold since much of that was stolen to begin with. When I say "stolen," I don't even mean in the sense that "taxation is theft" and that the US bought the gold using tax dollars. In truth, the way the US Treasury acquired much of its gold hoard is even more underhanded than ordinary taxation. | | |
Rather, it is likely that most of the gold at Fort Knox, as with the U.S. regime's gold in general, is gold stolen from ordinary Americans as a part of Franklin Roosevelt's efforts to end the gold standard and confiscate private gold holdings in the United States. That is, the U.S. gold reserves are a legacy of the way the US government reneged on its promises to redeem US dollars in gold. | | | |
Rather than pay out the gold that was owed to holders of dollars, the U.S. government hoarded it instead. That stolen gold is what the auditors will be counting if the U.S. government ever allows an honest accounting of the Treasury's gold reserves. | | |
Where Did the Gold at Fort Knox Come From? | | |
In his 1994 article for The Journal of Economic Education, economist William C. Wood writes that "the Fort Knox depository is now an artifact of gold standard days." He then adds, "The gold currently in Fort Knox came from the melting of Depression-era gold coins, from lend-lease arrangements in War II, and from government operations under the gold standard." That reference to "Depression-era gold coins" is telling. Most of those gold coins were likely the coins confiscated from private owners by the U.S. government following Roosevelt's Executive Order 6102 which outlawed the private ownership of gold. Few Americans owned gold bars, of course, and the gold that was in non-institutional private hands was mostly gold coins. | | |
Roosevelt's edict required that private citizens hand this gold over to the U.S. government in exchange for what was effectively below-market prices. And what if you would rather not give up your property to the U.S. government? Too bad. Moreover, private banks and the central bank held gold in the form of coins for dollar holders who, prior to confiscation, would occasionally present US dollars for redemption in gold. | | | |
This is, in part, the gold in Fort Knox that Wood classifies as gold held for "government operations under the gold standard." After 1933, however, banks did not need to hold onto any gold coins for this purpose since Roosevelt's effort to end the gold standard included a prohibition on banks paying out gold. So, these coins ceased to have an immediate market value among banks. Where did all these gold coins end up? Most ended up with the US Treasury after the Treasury seized the Federal Reserve's gold in 1934. Evidence of this can be found in the nature of the gold that is now held at Fort Knox. Wood further explains that the gold there is not the type of gold usually found in gold bars used for international transactions: "The gold resulting from melting of coinage has considerably lower quality than the 'fine' or 'good delivery' gold commonly used in international trade. The majority of the gold in Fort Knox is the lower-quality coin gold." The legacy of the US regime's gold theft is not limited to the coins that happened to be in private hands in 1933, however. Much of the gold that is in the US gold reserves today is gold that would have been paid out to the private sector had the US government not reneged in its promises to pay war bonds in gold. | | |
The 1934 Default on Gold-Based Liberty Bonds | | |
Every time there is a debate over the so-called "debt ceiling," various servants of the U.S. regime like Jerome Powell or Janet Yellen claim that "the United States has never defaulted." This is a lie... | | |
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This week's Market Update was authored by Money Metals Contributor Ryan McMaken. | | |
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