Rank: Chief Joined: 8/4/2010 Posts: 8,977
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guru267 wrote:hisah wrote:@Guru - if the US defaults, all fiat currencies will go into a tailspin! Unfortunately the dollar is the axis of the money sys. A 'safer' bet would be the swiss franc until it is proved they got no gold reserves...
If one can get physical bullion, the better. @hisah the SA rand and ausie dollar are backed by the gold sitting in the earth of the countries they represent and also the countries are fiscally sound.. Switzerland is one of the most fiscally sound economies out there.. But that said there is one problem.. I do not think there is any central bank in the world except maybe US that holds enough gold reserves to withstand a collapse in fiat money and the sudden burst in demand for gold that will follow this event.. But the gold producing countries on the otherhand will maintain the value of their currency and can even end up as the reserve currency.. @Guru - This is what I'm seeing with my swissie call...
marketwatch.com wrote: The initiative is part of “Healthy Currency,” a campaign sponsored by politicians from the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) — the country’s biggest — that is seeking to capitalize on popular fears about global financial turmoil and inflation to reverse the government’s current policy on gold.
“I can imagine that this will spark some sort of debate about gold and there may be some pressure to accept the parallel currency,” said Dr. Gebhard Kirchgaessner, an economics professor at St. Gallen University. “But it won’t have any real effect on the economy. It seems incredible to imagine that there are people out there willing to buy millions of these things.”
Switzerland, which in 2000 became one of the last countries to decouple its currency from gold, is not the only place to contemplate a change in the precious metal’s role amid controversy over government involvement in the economy. In March, Utah became the first state in the U.S. to legalize gold and silver coins as currency, while similar legislation was considered in Montana, Missouri, Colorado, Idaho and Indiana.
“I want Swiss people to have the freedom to choose a completely different currency,” said Thomas Jacob, the man behind the gold franc concept. ”Today’s monetary system is all backed by debt — all backed by nothing — and I want people to realize this.”
A good part of the enthusiasm for gold, which provokes strong emotion among many who invest in it, has to do with its price: the yellow metal has more than quadrupled during the last decade and now stands at more than $1,500 per ounce.
http://www.marketwatch.c...07?reflink=MW_news_stmp
$15/barrel oil... The commodities lehman moment arrives as well as Sovereign debt volcano!
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