Seven is supposedly a special number. Seven days in the week, seven colors of
the rainbow, seven notes of the musical scale, Seven Wonders of the World,
seven dwarves, 007, 7-11 and so on. So surely there must be some kind
of deep Freegold significance to this weekend, because today this blog turns
seven! ;D Coincidentally, my hit counter turned all sevens right around the
beginning of this year:
In a recent poll of 30,000 people, lucky number 7 was voted most popular. But some people
believe it's not so lucky (depending on your perspective of course); that
market crashes and economic collapses, some of which can be world-changing
events, happen about once every seven years. In fact, last week marked the
biggest point drop in the Dow in seven years, both on a weekly and a two-day
basis. Thursday the Dow dropped 358 points, and on Friday it plummeted
another 531. The weekly drop was 1,017 points, and the last time it plunged
more than that was during the worst week of the financial crisis, the week
ending Oct. 10, 2008.
Friday's point drop was gigantic at 531, putting it in the top ten of all
time (point-wise), but the largest one-day plunge ever was (get
this!) 777 points, seven years ago on Sept. 29, 2008. And the largest-ever
one-day drop prior to that was almost exactly seven years earlier, a 684
point drop on Sept. 17, 2001. Of course that one followed the bursting of the
dotcom bubble and 9/11.
Some of these people even trace this seven-year cycle all the way back to the
Great Depression and beyond. For example, seven years before 2001 was the 1994 bond market massacre, and seven years before
that was Black Monday, the global stock market crash on Monday,
Oct. 19, 1987, which included a one-day Dow plunge of 508 points (by far the
largest ever in percentage terms). In any case, seven years seems to
be a length of time in which people forget, and bubbles grow freely then pop.
Incidentally, the Dow has been going practically straight up now for 6½ years
since its low of 6,470 on March 6, 2009. No idea what all of this means, but
maybe it's just time for a global systemic reboot. ;D
Anyway, seven years ago today, right in the middle of the financial crisis, I
started this blog. And every year on this day, I put up an anniversary post
like this one. If you'd like to read about the background and history of this
blog, then I recommend reading Four!
and Six!
And if you'd like to read my candid view on a whole variety of topics covered
here, you can read my ten part series at Five!
For this one, I'm doing something a little different, because this year I did
something different.
This year I decided to focus most of my attention on a private blog called
the Speakeasy, which I secretly started 2½ years ago. And on May 10th, I made
it available to anyone who wants to subscribe. Since then, there are 11 new
posts at the Speakeasy, and only 2 here. So for this 7th anniversary, I
decided to give you an excerpt from 7 of those posts, a little teaser so you
can see what you're missing. ;D
1. Picassos, Strads, Nobels, Hondas and Bananas
190 Comments
Let me ask you this instead. Why shouldn’t Giants and shrimps buy and sell
physical gold at the same price, in the same market? What’s the difference
between a single buyer with $44B and 440,000 buyers (0.04% of the population
of Europe and the US combined) each with $100K in savings? And what’s the
difference between a 25 tonne hoard of gold (which could fit in your bedroom)
and 400,000 two-ounce stashes hidden in socks in the back of 400,000 sock
drawers?
The reason there’s a difference today (and probably for the last few hundred
years) is because of paper gold (before 1971, money was like paper gold and
had a similar effect). But that is not an “inherent aspect” or necessary
property of the physical gold market any more than paper Picassos, paper
Strads and paper Nobels are an inherent part of their markets. It’s an
aberration, a departure from the reality of physical markets. Yes, we have
people trying to start paper fine art markets today, but that’s only because
of the sheer amount of hoarded money sloshing around while it waits for
Freegold.
2. Flashback Favorites™
201 Comments
So, what is a Hard Money Socialist? Well, I think he (or she) is an avowed
anti-Socialist who expects the Socialist government to adopt his ideology
“because it is right in principle,” even though it goes against not only
their individual and collective interests, but against civilized society as a
whole. The Hard Money Socialist will object to that last part because he
believes in and needs something idealistic. As Soupintheattic put it, “I need
a hefty dose of what is right in principle.”
Freegold is elegant because it allows for the peaceful coexistence of
different ideas of “what is right in principle.” The Socialist apparatchiks
are the Debtors’ elite… the political and socioeconomic Robin Hood heroes of
societal redistribution. Not ideal having them around, right? Should we get
rid of them somehow, or try to change their minds (yeah, good luck with
that!), or suppress or control them somehow? Or might it be the ultimate
“what is right in principle” idealism to find a way to peacefully coexist
with them? That’s Freegold!
The HMS wants to fight and ultimately control the countless Socialists among
us, through their submission to a hard money fantasy that only exists in the
mind of the Hard Money Socialist (it never existed in reality!). But the
Freegolder, or “Physical Gold Advocate” (PGA for short) realizes that simply
storing one’s surpluses out of Robin Hood’s reach accomplishes so much more,
without any bloodshed or tears. That’s Freegold!
3. Special People
228 Comments
As FOA said above, even his dumb friends can understand this concept. It
takes a special person to argue that silver is a preferable or even equal
store of value because it is more affordable than gold, and, as FOA said, “it
would take a whole world full of special people buying silver to make it work
out.” Well, as it turns out, we’ve now tried this experiment and, in the
final analysis, there weren’t enough special people to make it work out.
As I said before, I don’t care about silver, and I don’t particularly enjoy
writing about it. The last time I did was in 2010. And I know that most of
you don’t really care to read these silver posts either. Those of you who
have moved on from silver, like me, don’t care about it one way or the other
anymore. And those of you who still like your silver, don’t really prefer
these kinds of posts, which is why I called it tough love. But between the
influx of new subscribers following SRSrocco’s “rebuttal” of my silver post,
and several emails I received, it was clear that some silver follow-up was
warranted.
It was actually an email from Solitary Monk (who is NOT one of the special
people) that convinced me to write another post or two. And for those of you
here at the Speakeasy who are still a little bit special yourselves, this is
not my final word on silver. I have another post I’m still working on titled
“FREE SILVER” (an idea suggested by SM), which will hopefully be done soon
and which I’m sure will thrill you all (and crush a few more silver myths in
the process)! :D
4. Free Silver
355 Comments
Many people have bought into the argument that, when the metals finally do
their moonshot, silver will outperform gold. This view, by definition,
implies a reversion of the GSR to much lower levels. And, other than a few
“spasmodic” moments along the way, that view is not consistent with what an
honest review of history reveals, even though it claims to be.
I know of one long-time gold writer who promotes buying both physical gold
and silver, who himself is betting entirely on physical silver, without
holding even an ounce of gold. And I know a few individuals who are (or were)
doing the same. I shudder at the thought.
It has been said that Freegold is the only narrative in the precious metals
sphere that argues solely for physical gold while taking a distinctly
negative view on silver’s future usefulness as a wealth reserve. I hope that
I have shown in this post that you don’t need Freegold to have a negative
outlook on silver as money or wealth.
5. Spanking Greece
267 Comments
Freegold is not a date or time that is possible to predict. It is simply an
accident waiting to happen, and at certain times the $IMFS is more
accident-prone than at other times. Maybe it’s just me, but all the swirling
uncertainty right now reminds me of the summer of 2008. The $IMFS feels
accident-prone to me right now in a way it hasn’t really felt since then.
[…]
My point here is that I don’t think there’s going to be any button pushing. I
think that in 2008, extraordinary and costly measures were taken and luckily
(or unluckily, depending on your perspective) succeeded in buying some more
time. And I think that the key measures came not from the US players, but
from the BIS. But now, at this point, given the Greek/euro crisis, I don’t
think there’s any reason to take extraordinary and costly measures anymore.
In fact, as I said above, if I was at the BIS today, I would be very quietly
discussing the advantages and benefits of having another global financial crisis
at this very moment.
Please don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying “This is it” in my best Jim
Sinclair impersonation. I’m simply saying that all the swirling uncertainty
in the global financial system right now reminds me of the early part of the
summer of 2008. And if it’s still swirling, say, a month from now, then I’ll really
be raising my eyebrows and topping off my gas tanks. ;D
6. China’s Gold
680 Comments
For the past year or so, gold bugs near and far have been predicting that
when China finally announces how much gold it has accumulated, that the
number will shock the world. I never thought that made any sense, and so the
number that came out today seems about right to me. I just don’t buy the
reasoning put forward as to why the PBOC would be lying about its reserves.
Some say they plan to launch a gold-backed RMB. That makes no sense. Others
say that revealing a super-sized hoard will rock the markets and send the POG
soaring. But like I said, if they could accumulate 10,000 tonnes on the
down-low and not affect the physical market or the price, that seems more
bearish than bullish to me, and the reasoning doesn’t make sense to me.
To me, the simplest explanation is that they are straight up telling the
truth about their official gold reserves. Why would they boast about their
unmined gold being the second largest in the world (9816.03 tonnes at the end
of 2014), and then lie about official holdings in the humiliatingly-opposite
direction? The convoluted logic behind the conspiracy theories attempting to
explain such subterfuge doesn’t seem very logical to me.
7. China’s Gold 2
232 Comments
Well, there you have it. As that “Template” was updated for June 30, it
should have had at least 19 tonnes on that line if they already had the next
month’s gold, so I think the fact that it’s blank supports the notion that
they are still accumulating rather than slow rolling a massive stockpile. It
should be interesting to watch that line and see if anything shows up there,
or if it simply remains blank. But either way, speculation about a massive
stockpile was previously just speculation that they simply weren’t saying;
now it becomes speculation that they are outright lying on the forms. This
makes it even less likely than before, and, I think, supports my view.
Now that I've done all that, I'm feeling a little bit guilty, like I should
probably give you a full post on such a momentous occasion as Seven! So I
will now roll my seven-sided
die to see which one you get. Aaaand… it says you get Free Silver.
Just so you know, this post got mixed reviews. Most of the
Speakeasy members couldn't care less about silver, so they don't like me
wasting my (or their) time on it. Plus it's an historical post with some
measure of boring mixed with way-too-long, so there's that too. But others
really liked it. For example, "Viggorish" emailed me this:
Hi FOFOA,
I just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed free silver.
It wasn't until I read it for a second time that I realized what a
masterpiece this was.
Truly you deserve to pat yourself on the back for this one.
Sincerely,
V
And in the comments, Sam wrote:
This is a great piece of work because it attacks the
matter from an angle I haven’t seen before…history. Most silver investors
that aren’t sold on the logic based arguments against silver over the years
should take note that the historical argument is also pushing against them.
Canadarob wrote:
Basically fofoa has had enough trying to slam silver with
the freegold lens so he ditched then lens and said just look at some facts
that we already know, silver still sucks. Deal with it.
It also highlights the natural economic energy that has been suppressed in
gold.
Gold really is a balloon held at the bottom of Marianas trench.
I still have about 20 ounces of silver though.
And Fred H. wrote:
Thanks to all who contributed to our previous discussion
about silver....it caused me to ponder and contemplate some more and resulted
in an even better understanding of gold... And since it has been recommended
that one should buy gold according to our understanding... I finally hauled
in monster boxes of ASE's and bags of US 90% junk halves on a dolly to my
local coin dealer.... and exited with roughly three pounds of AGE's. The
difference in weight was striking. --I did keep all of my Mercury dimes
however--I just like them for some reason.
And like I said, it was the wise old Solitary Monk who recommended this topic
as a follow-up to my Silver Dollar post. So here you go all you Silverbugs…
enjoy! ;D
Free Silver
Republican campaign poster from 1896 following the
silver panic and depression of 1893,
attacking the Democrats' Free Silver movement with
satirical slogans like
"Vote for Free Silver and be prosperous like
Mexico (where workers earned 25¢ a day)".
As promised, here is Free Silver. My apologies to those of you who thought it
would be a silver-based parody of Freegold. Instead, it is real history. How
many of you knew there was actually a real political movement called Free Silver
about 120 years ago?
It was nothing like Freegold however. The supporters of the Free Silver
movement were called "Silverites", and they were mostly Democrats
and the populist People's Party, the former left-wing Greenbackers,
inflationists in favor of easy money, socialist policy and government price
fixing. Their rallying cry was "Free Silver at 16 to 1" at a time
when the GSR (the gold to silver ratio) in the free market had reached a high
of 32 to 1.
FOA touched on this history in one comment:
Trail Guide (3/1/2000; 17:10:58MDT - Msg ID:26264)
Legal Tender,,,,,,, a long subject
After reading below, one can see that silver came into the picture more so
because it would allow "greenback" expansion. The whole context of
involving silver into the money system came about from the changing of the
"Legal Tender" laws earlier. The thrust of the argument was that
people wanted the ability to expand their fiat monetary base........ and the
Legal Tender laws were the first way such a change came about.
be back later TG
============================================================
More on the "Greenback movement"
The Panic of 1873 and the subsequent depression polarized the nation on the
issue of money, with farmers and others demanding the issuance of additional
greenbacks or the unlimited coinage of silver. In 1874 champions of an
expanded currency formed the Greenback-Labor Party, which drew most of its
support from the Midwest; and after Congress, in 1875, passed the Resumption
Act, which provided that greenbacks could be redeemed in gold beginning Jan.
1, 1879, the new party made repeal of that act its first objective. The 45th
Congress (1877-79), which was almost evenly divided between friends and
opponents of an expanded currency, agreed in 1878 to a compromise that
included retention of the Resumption Act, the expansion of paper money
redeemable in gold, and enactment of the Bland-Allison Act, which provided
for a limited resumption of the coinage of silver dollars. In the midterm
elections of 1878, the Greenback-Labor Party elected 14 members of Congress
and in 1880 its candidate for president polled more than 300,000 votes, but
after 1878 most champions of an expanded currency judged that their best
chance of success was the movement for the unlimited coinage of silver.
Notice the phrase "unlimited coinage of silver." That's what the
Free in Free Silver means—the free and unlimited coinage of silver by private
individuals, meaning you could bring an unlimited amount of silver bullion to
the government mint and walk away with minted coins containing the same
weight of silver. It's not as important that the mint charged no minting fee
or made no seigniorage as it is that there was no limit to the amount of
bullion that could be coined and turned into legal tender money, and that it
was open to private individuals. In fact, we had virtually free and unlimited
coinage of both silver and gold from 1792 until 1873, but in 1853 the
government began charging one half of one percent to cover the assaying and
minting expense of the "free (meaning unlimited) coinage" of gold
and silver.
This is an important concept to let sink in, because it makes bullion
virtually the same value as legal tender coins. If you find some raw silver
in a mine, it is worth its weight in coin, because you can simply take it to
the mint and turn it into legal tender coins that can be used to pay off your
debt, pay your taxes, etc... But if the mint is doing this for two different
metals at a fixed ratio that is different from the going ratio in the open
market, then only the overvalued metal will show up to get its new, higher
value stamp from the mint.
Just to make this simple, let's say you had "free silver at 16:1"
while the going exchange rate in the international market was 32:1. Silver
would be the overvalued metal, and therefore only silver would show up at the
mint to get its new, higher value stamp. Theoretically, you could borrow one
ounce of gold, use it to buy 32 ounces of raw silver bullion, take that
silver to the mint and get 32 ounces of silver coins, then pay off your one
ounce gold loan with only 16 of those silver ounces, keeping the other
sixteen as profit. Then do it over and over again. That's called arbitrage,
and it is the basis of Gresham's law.
Such was the bimetallic system established, soon after the
foundation of our Government, in 1792. There probably never was a better
example of the double standard, one more simple, or one for whose successful
trial the conditions could have been more favorable. There was no prejudice
among the people against the use of either gold or silver. The relative
values of the two metals had been fairly steady for a long time in the past.
At the start everything seemed fair. The real difficulty which the future
disclosed was one inherent in a system based upon the concurrent use of two
metals, each of which is affected by causes independent of the other. The
difficulty was certainly not, as some would have us believe, in the selection
of a wrong ratio. Knowing, as we now do, that the ratio between gold and
silver began to change, as if for a long-continued alteration of their relations,
at the very time when Hamilton was setting up a double standard, and
learning, as we have, that he declined, from lack of time, to ascertain the
market ratio for "the commercial world," we are prepared to find
that, as he was wrong in theory, he was also wrong in the ratio he selected
with so narrow a view. This, however, is not true. It happened that the ratio
he adopted, on the sole ground that it was near to the current relation in
the United States, was also, by a piece of good fortune, as near as could be
expected to the ratio of "the commercial world." By reference to
the Hamburg tables it will be seen that European prices during the four years
from 1790 to 1793 (inclusive) gave a market ratio of almost exactly 1:15.
Indeed, if Hamilton had taken the European market into account, it is
difficult to understand what other ratio he could properly have adopted. As a
matter of fact, his legal ratio corresponded with the market ratio when his
plan went into operation. As a matter of Hamilton's own monetary skill, it
was surely but a hand-to-mouth policy; for a ratio different from that of the
commercial world would have been wholly unjustified by correct monetary
rules.
We must now accompany the new coinage system in the course of its experience
during the first period of its history. The young and promising offspring of
Hamilton started well, but soon began to limp, and then to walk on only one
leg. We must therefore investigate the cause of this trouble. In calling
attention to Chart I it was noticed that the relative values of gold and
silver began to change soon after 1780; that relatively to gold the value of
silver fell (or, not to prejudge the case, the value of gold rose relatively
to silver) until in the last five years of the century the ratio remained in
the vicinity of 1:15.5. By continuing the table of figures from 1800 to 1833,
the period represented by the chart, it will be possible to see the extent
and direction of further changes in this season of trial for the new system.
As already observed, the market value, according to Hamburg prices of silver,
never rose after 1793 to the ratio of 1:15 (indicated by the horizontal
line), within this period which extends to 1833 (although it came nearest to
it in 1814 and 1817). After 1820 there was a lower level in the relative
value of silver to gold, indicating a more or less permanent change in the
relations of the two metals, at a rate between 1:15½ and 1:16. The decline
after 1793 was steady, broken by a rally in 1803-1805, and followed by a fall
below 1:16 in 1813. These are the simple facts, taken from the most
trustworthy sources, concerning the relative values of gold and silver in the
first period after Hamilton established his system in 1782. Thus was
fulfilled his prophecy: "The revolution, therefore, which may take place
in the comparative value of gold and silver will be changes in the state of
the latter rather than in that of the former."
Without stopping now to consider the cause of this change in the relations of
gold and silver, it will be best to explain the effects of this change—no
matter what its cause—upon the coinage of the United States. The situation
now resembles that of a man who, having balanced a lever on a fulcrum, and
then, after leaving lengthened one arm and shortened the other, should expect
the lever to balance on the fulcrum in the same manner as before. We now have
an illustration of Gresham's law—that when two metals are both legal tender,
the cheaper one will drive the dearer out of circulation. This can not operate,
however, unless there is "free coinage," and unless there is such a
divergence between the mint and the market ratios of gold and silver as will
secure to the money-brokers a profit by exchanging one kind of coins for the
other. But, as we have already seen, "free coinage" existed, and a
profitable difference between the mint and the market ratios in the United
States appeared about as early as 1810.
The operation of Gresham's law is in reality a very simple matter. If farmers
found that in the same village eggs were purchased at a higher price in one
of two shops than in the other, it would not be long before they all carried
their baskets to the first shop. Likewise, in regard to gold or silver, the
possessor of either metal has two places where he can dispose of it—the
United States Mint, and the bullion market; he can either have it coined and
receive in new coins the legal equivalent for it, or sell it as a commodity
at a given price per ounce. If he finds that silver in the form of United
States coins buys more gold than he could purchase with the same amount of
silver in the bullion market, he sends his silver to the Mint rather than to
the bullion market. By reference to Chart I, it will be seen that the market
value of silver relatively to gold had fallen to 1:16, while at the Mint the
ratio was 1:15. That is, in the market it required sixteen ounces of silver
to buy one ounce of gold bullion; but at the Mint the Government received
fifteen ounces of silver, and coined it into silver coins which were legally
equivalent to one ounce of gold. The possessor of silver thus found an
inducement of one ounce of silver to sell his silver to the Mint for coins,
rather than in the market for bullion. But as yet the possessor of silver had
only got silver coins from the Mint. How was he to realize his gain? Will
people give the more valuable gold for his less valuable silver coins? To
some minds there is a difficulty in understanding how a cheaper dollar is
actually exchanged for a dearer dollar. This also is simple. The mass of
people do not follow the market values of gold and silver bullion, nor
calculate arithmetically when a profit can be made by buying up this or that
coin. The general public know little about such things, and if they did, a
little arithmetic would deter them. These matters are relegated by common
consent to the money-brokers, a class of men who, above all others, know the
value of a small fraction and the gain to be derived from it. Ordinary
persons hand out gold or silver, when they are in concurrent circulation,
under the supposition that the intrinsic value of gold is just equal to the
intrinsic value of silver in the coins, according to the legal ratio
expressed in the coins. If, under such conditions, silver falls as above
described, the money-broker will continue to present silver bullion at the
Mint, and the silver coins he receives he can exchange for gold coins as long
as gold coins remain in common circulation—that is, as long as gold coins are
not withdrawn by every one from circulation. Having now received an ounce of
gold in coin for his fifteen ounces of silver coin, he can at once sell the
gold as bullion (most probably melting it, or selling it to exporters) for
sixteen ounces of silver bullion. He retains one ounce of silver as profit,
and with the remaining fifteen ounces of silver goes to the Mint for more
silver coins, exchanges these for more gold coins, sells the gold as bullion
again for silver, and continues this round until gold coins have disappeared
from circulation. When every one begins to find out that a gold eagle will
buy more of silver bullion than it will of silver dollars in current
exchanges, then the gold eagle will be converted into bullion and cease to
pass from hand to hand as coin. The existence of a profit in selling gold
coins as bullion, and presenting silver to be coined at the Mint, is due to
the divergence of the market from the legal ratio, and no power of the
Government can prevent one metal from going out of circulation. Like the
farmers with their eggs, under the operation of Gresham's law silver will be
taken where it is of the most value (the United States Mint), and gold will
be sold where it brings a greater value than as coin (the bullion market).
The above was written in 1885 in The History of
Bimetallism in the United States by James
Laurence Laughlin (April 2, 1850 – November 28, 1933), an American
economist who later helped to found the Federal Reserve System. At the time
he wrote the first edition, the debate over bimetallism versus monometallism
was less than a decade old, having only really begun nine years earlier:
The experience of this country has been unique. No
experiment of bimetallism has ever been inaugurated under circumstances more
favorable for its success; and no hostility or suspicion attended its
progress. No fairer field for its trial could have been found; and its
progress under such conditions makes its history peculiarly instructive. We
have had in this country a legal and nominal double standard from the
establishment of the Mint in 1792 to the present day, with the exception of
the years between 1873 and 1878; and in this period of about ninety years we
have had almost every possible experience with our system. Has it proved a
success in the past? What lessons does it offer for the future?
It will be remembered that the question of bimetallism has been actively
discussed only since the great fall of silver in 1876, and that great
animation and warmth have been shown both by its friends and foes. An
experience of bimetallism, therefore, under no attacks and under friendly
auspices, during the years preceding 1876, for more than three quarters of a
century, ought to furnish us lessons which we can readily accept, because
they are drawn from results caused by normal conditions, and not vitiated by
any suspicion of prejudice against silver. A ship which had proved
unseaworthy in fair weather would not be a secure refuge in stormy seasons.
I want to point out a couple more things here before we move on. As you may
have already figured out, the two sides of the debate were the Debtors and the Savers, the easy money camp and the
hard money camp. And both sides actually had legitimate disputes, disputes
which, incidentally, are solved by Freegold. As Laughlin said, the problem
with bimetallism wasn't that the fixed ratio was the wrong ratio. The problem
was having a fixed ratio at all. Likewise, the problem with the gold standard
or monometalism (which came later) was not that the fixed price of gold was
wrong, the problem was having a fixed price at all.
Regarding the problem with Gresham's law, that is solved by simply
eliminating the "free coinage" of one or both of the metals. Even
today, we have coins made of various metals, but because the government now
reserves for itself the right to mint coins which it will accept as legal
tender, the fact that the face value is higher than the metals' commodity
value is of no concern with regard to Gresham's law.
It was also enacted (Sec. 14)
that "it shall be lawful for any person or persons to bring to the said
Mint gold and silver bullion, in order to their being coined." These
words contain the important privilege known as "Free Coinage," by
which is meant the right of any private person to have bullion coined at the
legal rates. If the Government reserves to itself this right, there would not
be free coinage. This is a matter of importance, because through it alone can
Gresham's law have an immediate effect. If there is a profit in sending one
of two legal metals to the Mint, and in withdrawing the other, with the
result of displacing one of the metals in circulation with another, it is
necessary, of course, that access to the Mint should be free to any one who
sees this chance of profit.
[…]
The operation of the Act of 1878 has been complicated to many minds by the
absence of the free-coinage provision, which permits only the Government of
the United States to purchase bullion and have it coined into dollars of 412½
grains… It was not apparent why this dollar, which in 1878 contained but
ninety cents' worth of pure silver, could, when issued, circulate at par with
a gold dollar; nor is it understood why the silver dollar is to-day, at par
with United States notes redeemable in gold. There are several reasons to
account for this.
[…]
Another fact which maintains the silver dollar at par with gold, and which is
of considerable importance, arises from the provision of the act which
authorizes the issue of silver certificates. The important consideration,
however (and, to my mind, one of the most important provisions of the act),
is that these certificates, in the words of the statute, "shall be
receivable for customs, taxes, and all public dues."
[…]
It has been a mystery to many people that the silver dollar of 412½ grains
should continue in circulation at par, while the trade dollar of 420 grains
fell to its intrinsic value, and was not in circulation on equal terms with
the Bland dollar, which contains less silver. The coexistence of these two
silver dollars added to the complexity connected with the silver question…
At this time, it will be recalled, this coin was a legal tender for sums of
five dollars, owing to an unintentional provision of the Act of 1873.
Although this law limited its use to small payments, the mere fact of its
circulation in the United States called attention to the inadvertence in the
Act of 1873, and all legal-tender power was taken away from the trade dollar
by a section of the Act of July 22, 1876…
Here we have two silver dollars in the late 1870s and 1880s, one contains
almost 2% more silver by weight than the other yet is less valuable because
its legal tender status is limited. Both contain less than a dollar's worth
of commodity silver, but the one with full legal tender status trades for a
full dollar while the "trade dollar" (which was minted with an
extra bit of silver specifically for overseas trade in the Orient) is only
worth the metal's commodity price.
While it might have been a bit of a head-scratcher in 1885, today it is no
big deal. Take the modern quarter. Four quarters currently have a combined
melt value of 13¢, yet they trade for a whole dollar. In fact, the Sacagawea
dollar, which is 93% copper, has a melt value of only 4¢. 100 modern pennies,
on the other hand, and I'm talking about the new ones which are 98% zinc,
have a melt value of 50¢, yet we don't see Sacagawea Dollars driving zinc
pennies out of circulation.
Imagine, however, if we had "free coinage" of copper and zinc at
the mint. It's an extreme example to make a point, but you could buy $100
worth of commodity copper and have the mint make you 2,460 Sacagawea dollars,
worth $2,460. $100 worth of commodity zinc, however, would only get you $200
worth of pennies at the mint, so copper would be the way to go and we'd end
up with a surfeit of Sacagaweas and a paucity of pennies in circulation.
The problem with gold and silver bimetallism is that, over time, gold tends
to rise in value while silver tends to fall. This is probably the biggest
point of this post. We're always hearing from the silver bugs how silver is
constitutional money and the GSR is bound to return to its historic level of
16:1, but even Alexander Hamilton, Founding Father and the first Treasury
Secretary knew it was true when he set the initial fixed ratio at 15:1,
overvaluing silver relative to gold:
The establishment of a double
standard in the United States is due to Alexander Hamilton. His "Report
on the Establishment of a Mint" remains the best source of information
as to the reasons for adopting the system which has continued, with a slight
break, from that day to this. As was to be expected, the arguments urged at
the present time in favor of bimetallism had not occurred to Hamilton. He did
not enter into a general discussion of the effects of a double standard, such
as we might expect from a modern bimetallist. In speaking of gold and silver,
he was emphatic in stating his belief that if we must adopt one metal alone,
that metal should be gold, and not silver (at variance, as we have seen, with
the views of Robert Morris in 1782); because, said Hamilton, gold was the
metal least liable to variation. In fact, we find in his report thus early in
our history an expression of that preference for gold over silver, whenever
the former can be had, which has since then played no little part among the
influences acting on the relative values of the two metals.
Alexander Hamilton
"As long as gold, either from its intrinsic
superiority as a metal, from its rarity, or from the prejudices of mankind,
retains so considerable a pre-eminence in value over silver as it has
hitherto had, a natural consequence of this seems to be that its condition
will be more stationary. The revolutions, therefore, which may take place in
the comparative value of gold and silver will be changes in the state of the
latter rather than in that of the former."
This prophecy of Hamilton's was fulfilled to the letter within a few years
after the words were uttered.
But in these words also we find the excuse for the adoption of a system of
bimetallism which, after the expression of a preference for gold, might have
seemed undesirable. If a farmer is seeking for one of two pieces of land, he
will be obliged to select that which is within his means. The United States
was in the same position as the farmer. There was a general scarcity of
specie in the new country, and it was a difficult matter to perform the
exchanges with ease. Not only was there no prejudice against silver, but it
was the metal most in common use. The whole object of the Secretary was to
secure a metallic medium in abundance; silver, being in use, must, of course,
be retained, and gold brought in also, if possible. The double standard was
preferred, therefore, because it afforded a moral certainty of the retention
of silver and a possibility also of adding gold to the money of the land. It
would not do, says Hamilton, to adopt a single silver standard, for that
would act "to abridge the quantity of the circulating medium." It
was hoped to utilize the existing quantity of silver, and yet keep the gold
also. Although he preferred a single standard of gold, he must be content to
take what he could get; and silver was most easily secured for the new
currency. There is, he adds, an extraordinary supply of silver in the west
Indies,16 and this will render it easier for the United States to obtain a
supply of that metal. He had little conception of the coming effect on his
system of this "extraordinary supply" of silver from the South
American mines. The scarcity of metallic money was the fact which influenced
him in his recommendation of a double standard—a natural scarcity, too, for
the country yet felt the effects of the havoc caused by the worthless
continental paper which had driven specie out of use. Like the farmer of
limited means, who preferred the better although more expensive land, but
took the cheaper piece because it was within his reach, Hamilton naturally
adopted the poor-country plan, and, in order to secure a metallic currency,
took measures to retain silver, the best he could get (with the hope of
keeping gold also).
Having, for these reasons, fully decided to adopt a double standard, the
Secretary was obliged to face the chief difficulty in the problem—the
selection of a legal ratio between gold and silver. Here was the rock on which,
as we shall see hereafter, his system was inevitably bound to go to pieces.
Here we see that, from the very birth of the Constitution, silver was the
easy money and gold was hard money. But in the bimetallism debate leading up
to the "Silver Panic", stock market collapse and depression of
1893, silver's "superiority" (as the poor man's gold ;) was as
hotly defended by the easy money camp as it is by today's silverbugs:
Said one: "Why,
Senators, we had acquired Louisiana and Florida, we had carried on a war with
Great Britain from 1812 to 1815, when we had hardly any gold coin, on the
credit of the silver dollar." Nothing, perhaps, can be better than the
following eulogium of a Southern Senator on silver: "It enjoys this
natural supremacy among the largest number of people because the laboring
people prefer it. They use it freely and confidingly. It is their familiar
friend, their boon companion, while gold is a guest to be treated with
severest consideration; to be hid in a place of security; not to be expended
in the markets and fairs. It is a treasure, and not a tool of trade, with the
laboring people. A twenty-dollar gold piece is the nucleus of a fortune, to
remain hid until some freak of fortune shall add other prisoners to its cell.
But twenty dollars in silver dimes is the joy of the household, 'the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.'... Silver is
to the great arteries of commerce what the mountain-springs are to the
rivers. It is the stimulant of industry and production in the thousands of
little fields of enterprise which in the aggregate make up the wealth of the
nation." If anything could equal this, it was the utterance of a
well-known Northern Senator, Mr. Blaine:
"Ever since we demonetized the old dollar we have
been running our Mints at full speed, coining a new silver dollar [trade
dollar] for the use of the Chinese cooly and the Indian pariah—a dollar
containing 420 grains of standard silver, with its superiority over our
ancient dollar ostentatiously engraved on its reverse side.... And shall we
do less for the American laborer at home?... It will read strangely in
history that the weightier and more valuable of these dollars is made for an
ignorant class of heathen laborers in China and India, and that the lighter
and less valuable is made for the intelligent and educated laboring-man who
is a citizen of the United States."
The aristocratic character of the yellow metal is thus well defined:
"Gold is the money of monarchs; kings covet it; the exchanges of nations
are effected by it. Its tendency is to accumulate in vast masses in the
commercial centers, and to move from kingdom to kingdom in such volumes as to
unsettle values and disturb the finances of the world." The following
unctuous fondness for silver was put forth by Senator Howe, afterward a
delegate to the Monetary Conference of 1878: "But we are told the
cheaper metal will drive out the dearer, and gold will be banished from our
circulation. Silver will not drive out anything. Silver is not aggressive; it
is so much like the apostle's description of wisdom that it is 'first pure,
then peaceable, gentle.'... Put a silver and a gold dollar into the same
purse and they will lie quietly together."
The above excerpts all came from The History of Bimetallism in the United States,
initially written in 1885 and revised in 1896, 119 years ago and 120 years
after American independence, so roughly halfway through this monetary
experiment we call the US dollar. There's much more to the story of
bimetallism and the evolution of US currency than I included in this post,
and the entire 278 page book is now in the public domain and free to read here at the
Online Library of Liberty.
This next section of the post is an essay (lightly abridged by me) titled The
Silver Panic, written in 1978 by Lawrence
W. Reed, president of the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE). Later,
in 1993, he published an 83 page book on the same subject titled A Lesson from the Past: The Silver Panic of 1893, and in
2011 he gave a half-hour webcast seminar titled "The Silver Panic of
1893" which is available on YouTube and well worth the 27 minutes (even
though he's an HMS ;) ). You will find the video, for your convenience, at
the bottom of the essay.
The Silver Panic
LAWRENCE W. REED
June 01, 1978
"History is little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and
misfortunes of mankind," in the opinion of historian Edward Gibbon.
While it may be argued that there are numerous triumphs in human affairs to
write about, Gibbon’s observation seems to be true. If the typical history
text were to be stripped of any mention of war, depression, famine, coercion,
tragedy, genocide, scandal, rivalry, and mayhem, the remains could probably
be reprinted in a leaflet.
Strangely, the awesome Panic of 1893 seems to have escaped the careful
scrutiny and exhaustive research of historians. Though it occurred only
eighty-five years ago, it remains an obscure episode in American history. It
signaled the beginning of a deep depression. Businesses collapsed by the
thousands. Banks closed their doors in record numbers. Unemployment soared
and idle millions roamed the streets and countryside seeking jobs or alms.
And the country witnessed a spectacular display of political fireworks, now
all but forgotten.
For the believer in the free economy, the story of the Panic of 1893 offers a
treasure chest of empirical support. The lessons of this tragedy add up to a
compelling indictment of government’s ability to "manage" a
nation’s money.
Charles Albert Collman observed that "Money trouble was the manifest
peculiarity of the long, drawn out Panic of ’93." ¹ Indeed, a breakdown
of the monetary system and national bankruptcy were narrowly averted in that
year. But money is that great invention which permits the development of a
modern exchange economy. How could something so vital to commerce become so
troublesome?
Everyone knows that fingerprints are a great aid in placing a suspect at the
scene of a crime. The distinguishing characteristics of each individual’s
skin patterns make this possible. In the case of the Panic of 1893, the
tragedy is smothered with the fingerprints of politicians. "I deem it
proper at the outset to state," wrote Charles S. Smith in the October,
1893 North American Review, "that the recent panic was not the result of
over-trading, undue speculation or the violation of business principles throughout
the country. In my judgment it is to be attributed to unwise legislation
with respect to the silver question; it will be known in history as ‘the
Silver Panic,’ and will constitute a reproach and an accusation against
the common sense, if not the common honesty, of our legislators who are
responsible for our present monetary laws." ²
Early Interventions
Contrary to popular impression, government in America has never been totally
aloof from the monetary scene. Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution
grants Congress the power "to coin money, regulate the value thereof,
and of foreign coin, and fix the standard of weights and measures." In
the century preceding 1893, Congress experimented with two central banks, a
national banking system, paper money issues, and fixed ratios of gold and
silver.
America’s first cyclical depression occurred in 1819, after three wild years
of currency inflation caused by the Second Bank of the United States. When
that "money monster" was eliminated by hard money man Andrew
Jackson, the economy slumped into depression again and all the maladjustments
of the Bank era had to be liquidated. In 1857 the economy had to retrench
after a decade of credit expansion on behalf of state governments that had
forced their obligations on the state banking systems. In 1873 the post-Civil
War readjustment finally corrected the excesses of the government’s rampant
greenback inflation. The background of the 1893 debacle is equally
interventionist and has some uniquely interesting features which give rise to
the label, "The Silver Panic."
Gold and silver rose to prominence as the monies of the civilized world
through a process of free and natural selection in the marketplace of
exchange. Both circulated as money, though gold was far more valuable. The
market ratio between the metals had been roughly 15 to 1 (15 ounces of silver
trading for 1 ounce of gold) for centuries. Gold was preferred for large
transactions and silver for small ones. The free market had established
"parallel standards" of gold and silver, each freely fluctuating
within a narrow range in relation to market supplies and demands. Before
long, though, government decided it would "help out" the market by
interfering to "simplify" matters. The result was another of the
many well-intentioned blunders imposed on a populace by force of law: the
official "fixing" of the gold/silver ratio. This became the policy
of bimetallism.
Under the direction of Alexander Hamilton, the federal government adopted an
official ratio of 15 to 1 in 1792. If the market ratio had been the same and
had stayed the same for as long as the fixed ratio was in effect, then the
fixed ratio would have been superfluous. But the market ratio, like all
market prices, changed over time as supply and demand conditions changed. As
these changes occurred, the fixed bimetallic ratio became obsolete and
"Gresham’s Law" came into operation.
Gresham’s Law
Gresham’s Law holds that bad money drives out good money when government
fixes the ratio between the two circulating monies. "Bad money"
refers to the money which is artificially over-valued by the government’s
ratio. "Good money" is the one which is artificially undervalued.
Gresham’s Law began working soon after Hamilton fixed the ratio at 15 to 1,
as the market ratio stood at, roughly, 15 ½ to 1. This meant that if one had
an ounce of gold, one could get 15 ½ ounces of silver on the bullion market,
but only 15 ounces for it at the government’s mint. Conversely, if one had 15
ounces of silver, one could get an ounce of gold at the mint but less than an
ounce on the market. So silver flowed into the mint and was coined while gold
disappeared, went into hiding, or was shipped overseas. The country was thus
put on a de facto silver standard, even though it was the declared policy of
the government to maintain both metals in circulation.
Congress in 1834 changed the ratio to 16 to 1, but the market ratio had not
changed much, and this time gold was over-valued and silver under-valued.
Gold flowed into the mint, silver disappeared, and the country found itself
on a de facto gold standard.
With the end of the Civil War inflation, and subsequent readjustment in the
depression of 1873, the story of the Panic of 1893 begins to unfold. It opens
with the inflationist agitation of the 1870s.
In 1875, the newly-formed National Greenback Party called for currency
inflation. The proposal attracted widespread support in the West and South
where many farmers joined associations to lobby for inflation. They demanded
at first that the government balloon the paper money supply in the belief
that such a policy would guarantee prosperity. It was a demand that finds a
less shrill but no less potent voice among many economists today.
The greenback inflation of the Civil War era left an indelible impression on
many Americans. They were suspicious of plans to revive a policy of
deliberate paper money expansion on behalf of any special interest group. In
1875, Congress passed the Specie Resumption Act, declaring it the policy of
the government to redeem the Civil War greenbacks at par in gold on January
1, 1879. It was regarded from this point on that in order to protect the
redemption of the greenbacks, the Treasury would be obliged to maintain a
minimum of $100,000,000 in gold on reserve. The most that the inflationists
got was a government pledge not to cancel the greenbacks once redeemed, but
to reissue them so that the total number outstanding would remain the same.
Turning to Silver
The attention of the inflationists was then directed at another medium:
silver. Robert F. Hoxie, in the Journal of Political Economy in 1893, wrote
that the inflationists focused their demands on a silver inflation as a
matter of expediency. "They had no love for silver as such,"
revealed Hoxie, "but it was the cheapest and most abundant substance for
which they could gain support, its use would result in more legal tender
currency, and its metallic character would in a measure shield the advocates
from being stigmatized as inflationists." [4]
The inflationists now became "silverites" and their rallying cry
became "Free Silver at 16 to 1." Their influence was sufficient to
secure passage of the Bland-Allison Act in February, 1878—the first of the
acts putting the government in the business of purchasing quantities of
silver for coinage. The Act provided for the purchase by the Treasury of not
less than two, nor more than four, million dollars’ worth of silver bullion
per month, to be coined into dollars each containing 371¼ grains of pure
silver (which coincided with the lawful ratio of 16 to 1, since the gold
dollar still contained 23.22 grains of pure gold). These dollars were to be
legal tender at their nominal value for all debts and dues, public and
private. Paper silver certificates were to be issued upon deposit of the
bulky silver dollars in the Treasury.
The free silver forces were dissatisfied with Bland-Allison because it did
not go far enough—it did not provide for the free and unlimited government
purchase and coinage of silver at 16 to 1. The only silver to be coined would
be the two to four million dollars’ worth that the government purchased each
month, and the Treasury, while the law was on the books, rarely bought more
than the minimum amount.
Silver producers in particular had a vested interest in the state of affairs,
for the market price of silver had begun a long-term decline in the 1870s.
Securing a government pledge to buy silver at a higher price than could be
obtained in the free market was an obviously lucrative arrangement. As the
market ratio of silver to gold steadily rose above 16 to 1, the profit
potential became enormous.
Bland-Allison Passed Over President’s Veto
Bland-Allison was passed over the veto of President Rutherford B. Hayes. The
president, in his veto message, noted that minting silver coins at the ratio
of sixteen ounces of silver to one ounce of gold would drive gold out of
circulation. The decline of the market price of silver had raised the market
ratio at the time of passage of the act to nearly 18¼ to 1. If the mint
offered to pay one ounce of gold for just sixteen ounces of silver, then only
silver would be minted and the country would be on the road back to a de
facto silver standard. In Hayes’ belief, "A currency worth less than it
purports to be worth will in the end defraud not only creditors, but all who
are engaged in legitimate business, and none more surely than those who are
dependent on their daily labor for their daily bread." [5]
When money is left to the free market, its supply is restricted by its
scarcity and costs of production. Its value is thus preserved. The declining
price of silver on the free market would have erased the profitability of
many mines and hence would have prevented a drastic increase in silver
currency. But when the government stepped in and bought large quantities of
silver bullion for coinage, and paid more for it in gold than was offered in
the market, it forced the quantity of the white metal in circulation to
exceed its true demand. The government does much the same thing today when it
subsidizes peanuts or wheat. The result of this political interference is a
chronic surplus of these commodities.
The silverites’ drive for favorable legislation culminated in the Sherman
Silver Purchase Act of 1890, which replaced the Bland-Allison Act. The
Sherman Act stipulated that the Treasury had to purchase 4.5 million ounces
of silver per month [140 tonnes per month], or roughly twice the amount the
Treasury had been purchasing under Bland-Allison. Payment was to be made in a
new legal tender paper currency, the so-called Treasury notes of 1890, redeemable in either gold or
silver at the discretion of the Treasury. The 4.5 million ounces of silver
mandated by the law represented almost the entire output of American silver
mines. This continuing subsidy to silver producers meant that the government
was engaged in a full-blown force-feeding of the American economy. It was
only a matter of time before the patient would suffer the pangs of
indigestion.
U.S. Out of Step
The action of the United States government in 1878 and 1890 with respect
to silver was especially peculiar in light of world monetary events. Germany,
immediately after the Franco-Prussian War in the early 1870s, had withdrawn
her silver from circulation and adopted a single gold standard. France,
Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, and Greece followed by first restricting the coinage
of silver and then eliminating it altogether. Denmark, Norway, and Sweden
adopted the single gold standard, making silver subsidiary by 1875. In that
year, the government of Holland closed its mints to the coinage of silver. A
year later, the Russian government suspended the coinage of silver except for
use in the Chinese trade. In 1879, Austria-Hungary ceased to coin silver for
individuals, except for a special trade coin. This rapid worldwide transition
from silver to gold prompted the United States Treasury Department in 1879 to
note that "since the monetary disturbance of 1873-78 not a mint of
Europe has been open to the coinage of silver for individuals." 6 Yet
the United States government, at a time when the value of silver was falling
dramatically and when the nation’s trading partners were abandoning the white
metal, stepped in to promote silver against gold at the unrealistic ratio of
16 to 1!
One way of looking at silver’s depreciation is to consider the annual average
market value of the 371 1/4 grain silver dollar. In 1878, the bullion value
of that much silver was about 89 cents; by 1890 it dropped to 81 cents; by
1893, it was worth 60 cents and by 1895 it plummeted to a mere 50 cents.
A climate of uncertainty pervaded the world of finance. As Professor J.
Laurence Laughlin wrote, "No one could know that contracts entered into
when a dollar stood for 100 cents in gold might not be paid off in silver
which stood for 50 cents on a dollar. That was the predicament in which every
investor found himself who had an obligation payable only in ‘coin’ and not
in gold." [7]
In accordance with inexorable economic law, the Bland-Allison and Sherman
Acts caused a drain of gold from the Treasury and an inflow of silver. This
tampering with the fixity of the standard threatened the Treasury’s declared
policy of redeeming greenbacks and other government obligations in gold. And,
the disappearance of gold from circulation and from the reserves of the
nation’s banks threatened the sanctity of all contracts made in gold.
Professor Laughlin observed that no producer "could feel so entirely
sure of the standard of payments that he could, without fear or hesitation,
make his estimates a few years ahead." [9]
The Flight of Capital
The silver purchases noticeably affected the confidence of foreigners in the
American economy. Many British and French investors expected devaluation of
the dollar at the least, with complete financial collapse predicted by some.
Capital flowed out of the country as these foreigners sold American
securities. Even Americans, in increasing numbers after 1890, began exporting
funds for investment in Canada, Europe, and some of the Latin American
countries, all of which seemed stronger than the United States.
[…]
When President Harrison left office on March 4, 1893, the Treasury’s gold
reserve stood at the historic low of $100,982,410—an eyelash above the $100
million minimum deemed necessary for protecting the redemption of greenbacks.
Merchants increasingly refused to accept silver in violation of the law and
ugly threats of strikes echoed in the nation’s factories.
On April 22 the Treasury’s gold reserve fell below the $100 million minimum
for the first time since the resumption of specie payments in 1879. Bankers
and investors realized that the Treasury could not indefinitely continue
drawing upon the remaining gold reserve to redeem the Treasury notes of 1890
in the attempt to maintain their value. Banks had to brake their easy money
habits and began calling in their loans at a frantic pace. More and more
investors began to fear that before securities could be sold and realized
upon, depreciated silver would take the place of gold as the standard of
payments.
By Wednesday, May 3, tension in the commercial community triggered a massive
wave of selling on the stock market. The New York Times recorded the events
the next day:
Not since 1884 had the stock market had such a break in
prices as occurred yesterday, and few days in its history were more exciting.
In the industrial shares particularly, there was a smashing of values almost
without precedent. In the last thirty minutes the brokers on the floor of the
Exchange found the quotations on the board of little use.
Figures posted at one moment were valueless the next. In the industrials which
were receiving the most punishment prices were dropping a point at a time.
The crowds trading in them were made up of shouting men, who struggled about
the floor like football players in a scrimmage.
The Panic of 1893 had begun! On May 4 a stock market favorite, National
Cordage Trust, went into receivership. Shortly before the panic, Cordage
common stock had sold for $70 per share. The plunge was precipitous, as
Charles Albert Collman vividly explains:
In the Cordage Trust circle of the New York Stock
Exchange, hats were being smashed, coats torn, cravats ruined. Here was an
agony that meant financial life or death to many. Cordage common had gone off
18 points. The preferred had lost 22. Suddenly howls went up from the floor.
Those who could distinguish the words, heard the ominous cry: "Nineteen
for Cordage!" [17]
The shares, a few moments later, went down to $12. [18]
The Cordage Crash
The Cordage crash was taken as, in Collman’s words, "some occult signal
for the halting of enterprise." 19 Plants closed their gates and went
quickly into receivership. Unemployment rocketed to 9.6 per cent before
year-end, nearly three times the rate for 1892. In 1894, an estimated 16.7
per cent of industrial wage-earners were idle.
From January to July, 1893, mercantile failures totaled a remarkable 3,401,
with liabilities totaling $169,000,000. The bulk of the losses came after the
first week of May. 0. M. W. Sprague revealed that the "failures exceeded
both in number and in amount of liabilities those which had occurred in any
other period of equal length in our history." [20]
Bank failures and suspensions were the greatest on record. Most occurred in
the South and West, where the evils of a vicious currency expansion had taken
root far more extensively than in the rest of the country.
The economy was going through the pains of liquidation. The malinvestments
fostered by the Bland-Allison Act and Sherman Act inflation were being
sloughed off. The threat to the de facto gold standard was a factor which no
doubt complicated things, heightened uncertainty, determined the timing of
the panic, and exacerbated the depression, but the chief responsibility for
the crisis rested with the attempted force-feeding of the nation’s money
supply by government policy. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle said as
much on July 8, 1893:
The country is struggling with disturbed credit and the
general derangement of commercial and financial affairs which a forced and
over-valued currency has developed.. . . Nothing but corrective legislation
which shall remove the disturbing law, can afford any measure of real relief.
[21]
With the economy in depression, the necessity for eliminating the legislation
which precipitated the tragedy became increasingly apparent. On June 30,
President Grover Cleveland called for a special session of Congress to repeal
the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890. "The present perilous
condition," he declared, "is largely the result of a financial
policy which the Executive branch of the government finds embodied in unwise
laws which must be executed until repealed by Congress." [22] The
ensuing debate in the Congress was a splendid contest, pitting the forces of
sound, honest money against the forces of inflation, in which the sound money
men calmly answered the question, "What would you put in place of the
silver purchases?" with the single, solitary word," Nothing!"
[…]
The repeal bill passed the House on August 28 by a wide margin. President
Cleveland’s forceful leadership prompted the Senate to do likewise in
October. The New York Times heralded the occasion: "The Treasury is
released from this day from the necessity of purchasing a commodity it does
not require, out of a money chest already depleted, and at the risk of
dangerous encroachment upon the gold reserve." [24]
An indispensable pre-condition to recovery was accomplished with the repeal
of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act. The derangement of the nation’s money was
a big step closer to solution, though the road to recovery was long and hard.
Not until 1897 did depression give way to revival and prosperity. Repeal of
the Sherman Act was, by any measure, an act of congressional repentance.
Indeed, it was an open admission that the Silver Panic was the offspring of a
profligate, overbearing, and irresponsible government. Historian Ernest
Ludlow Bogart summarized the lessons of the Panic of 1893:
It must be said that the net results of this experiment of
a "managed currency," that is, one in which the government
undertakes to provide the necessary money for the people, were disastrous.
For the maintenance of a suitable supply the operation of normal economic
forces is more reliable than the judgment of a legislative body. [25]
—FOOTNOTES—
¹Charles Albert Collman, Our Mysterious Panics, 1830-1930 (New York:
Greenwood Press, 1968), p. 88.
²Charles S. Smith, " The Business Outlook," North American Review,
October 1893, p. 386.
³James A. Barnes, John G. Carlisle, Financial Statesman (New York: Dodd, Mead
and Co., 1931; reprint ed., Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1967), pp. 32-33.
4 Robert F. Hoxie, " The Silver Debate of 1890," Journal of
Political Economy 1 (18921893): 561.
5 Herman E. Krooss, ed., Documentary History of Banking and Currency in the
United States, vol. 2 (New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1969), pp.
1921-1922.
6 Ibid., p. 1934.
7 J. Laurence Laughlin, The History of Bimetallism in the United States, 4th
ed. (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1900), p. 274.
8 Isaac L. Rice, " Thou Shalt Not Steal," Forum 22 (September
1896—February 1897): 1.
9 Laughlin, p. 269.
10 D. Noyes, " The Banks and the Panic of 1893," Political Science
Quarterly 9 (No. 1): p. 15.
11 W. Jett Lauck, The Causes of the Panic of 1893 (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin
and Co., 1907), p. 80.
12 M. W. Sprague, History of Crises Under the National Banking System
(Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1910; reprint ed., New York:
Augustus M. Kelley, 1968), p. 158.
13 Robert Sobel, Panic on Wall Street: A History of America’s Financial
Disasters (New York: Macmillan Co., 1968), p. 243.
14 Charles Hoffman, The Depression of the Nineties: An Economic History,
Contributions in Economics and Economic History, no. 2 (Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press, 1970), p. 107.
15 Geo. Fred Williams, " Imminent Danger From the Silver Purchase Act,"
Forum 14 (September 1892—February 1893): 789.
16 Rendigs Fels, American Business Cycles: 1865-1897 (Raleigh: University of
North Carolina Press, 1959; reprint ed., Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press,
1973), p. 185.
17 Industrials Were Hit Hard," New York Times, 4 May 1893, p. 1.
18 Collman, p. 164.
19 p. 165.
20 Sprague, p. 169.
21 " Hoffman, p. 229.
22 Congress to Meet August 7," New York Times, 1 July 1893, p. 1.
23 James McGurrin, Bourke Cockran (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1948),
p. 135. p. 138.
24 "Need Buy No More Silver," New York Times, 2 November 1893, p.
1.
25 Ernest Ludlow Bogart, Economic History of the American People (New York:
Longmans, Green and Co., 1937), p. 693.
1893 sounds a lot like 2008 to me, if you recall how things got progressively
worse, culminating in TS really HTF mid-summer. Stocks were crashing, banks
were closing, people were panicking, railroads and other companies were
failing and unemployment was rising. By July, President Cleveland called
Congress back for a special summer session to begin on August 7 (Congress
wasn't due back until September) to repeal what many saw as the root of the
problem, the Sherman Silver Purchases Act of 1890.
The Sherman Silver Purchases Act of 1890 was meant to raise and support the market
price of silver. But it just doesn't work that way.
In his address to Congress on August 8 at the special session, Grover
Cleveland said the following:
"Values supposed to be fixed are fast becoming
conjectural, and loss and failure have invaded every branch of business.
I believe these things are principally chargeable to Congressional
legislation touching the purchase and coinage of silver by the General Government.
This legislation is embodied in a statute passed on the 14th day of July,
1890, which was the culmination of much agitation on the subject involved,
and which may be considered a truce, after a long struggle, between the
advocates of free silver coinage and those intending to be more conservative.
Undoubtedly the monthly purchases by the Government of 4,500,000 ounces of
silver, enforced under that statute, were regarded by those interested in
silver production as a certain guaranty of its increase in price. The result,
however, has been entirely different, for immediately following a spasmodic
and slight rise, the price of silver began to fall after the passage of the
act, and has since reached the lowest point ever known." Source
Grover Cleveland
The Sherman Silver Purchases Act was repealed by the House in August, and by
the Senate in October, but that was neither the end of silver's fall from
grace nor the last time our government would try to support its declining
price at the behest of the easy money camp. At 16:1, the market price of
silver should have been $1.29 per troy ounce. In 1893, it had fallen to 70¢
per ounce, but by 1932 it had declined to its all-time low of only 25¢ per
ounce. With gold jumping from $20 to $25 per ounce on the open market, the
GSR was also at its all-time high of 100:1.
Up until the London gold pool in the 1960s, the market price of gold bullion
never had to be defended by a government in either direction. Gold was simply
money (or real wealth as I like to say), and the various national currencies
were defined as a certain weight of gold. So rather than defending the price
of gold, it was the price of the various currencies (in gold) that had to be
defended occasionally, and if the currency was overpriced, gold (real wealth)
would simply flow away like it did from the US Treasury in 1890-93.
With bimetallism in the US, when there was a problematic discrepancy between
the legal ratio and the market price of bullion, they would either change the
weight of silver in a dollar (not change the weight of gold because gold was
the primary money and silver was subsidiary) as they did in 1834, or try to
raise the price of silver bullion in the open market as they did from 1887 to
1893. You can see in the following table how the market price of gold bullion
was virtually unchanged until 1931.
In 1933, however, with silver at only 25¢ per ounce and the GSR at a stunning
100:1, President Franklin D. Roosevelt did some incredible things. The Thomas Amendment to the Agricultural Adjustment Act of
1933, an amendment drafted by Senator Elmer Thomas (D) of Oklahoma
attaching silver to FDR's New Deal farm relief bill, allowed foreign
debtors to pay the US Treasury in silver coin at 50¢ per ounce, twice the
going rate. This helped boost the price of silver up to 44¢ per ounce.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Then, for the first time in more than 140 years, he changed the definition of
a dollar in gold terms while leaving the dollar in silver
terms unchanged. Here's an excerpt from FDR's "Proclamation 2072 -
Fixing the Weight of the Gold Dollar":
Whereas… the present weight of the gold dollar is fixed at
25.8 grains of gold nine-tenths fine…
…the President is authorized – By proclamation to fix the weight of the gold
dollar in grains nine-tenths fine and also to fix the weight of the silver
dollar in grains nine-tenths fine at a definite fixed ratio in relation to
the gold dollar at such amounts as he finds necessary from his investigation
to stabilize domestic prices or to protect the foreign commerce against the
adverse effect of depreciated foreign currencies, and to provide for the
unlimited coinage of such gold and silver at the ratio so fixed…
Whereas, I find, from my investigation, that, in order to stabilize domestic
prices and to protect the foreign commerce against the adverse effect of
depreciated foreign currencies, it is necessary to fix the weight of the gold
dollar at 15 5/21 grains ninetenths fine,
Now, Therefore, be it known that I, Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the
United States, by virtue of the authority vested in me by section 43, Title
III [Title III was the Thomas Amendment], of said act of May 12, 1933, as
amended, and by virtue of all other authority vested in me, do hereby
proclaim, order, direct, declare, and fix the weight of the gold dollar to be
15 5/21 grains nine-tenths fine, from and after the date and hour of this
Proclamation. The weight of the silver dollar is not altered or affected in any
manner by reason of this Proclamation." Source
He also, of course, made it illegal to hoard gold beyond a few coins and
called in all of the gold in the banking system, effectively eliminating the
domestic market for gold. All of this helped boost the price of silver
another 15¢, up to 58¢ in 1935, but by 1939 it was back down to 35¢ an ounce.
To quote Grover Cleveland, "following a spasmodic and slight rise, the price
of silver began to fall."
Of course the nominal price of silver in fiat currencies will rise
over time as governments debase their currencies for various reasons, but I
think the real story here is that the price of silver in real money (or real
wealth as I like to say), gold, is the story of a very useful metal of
declining monetary value. Even without Freegold as a premise, if you take an
honest look at real history, there is no reason to expect a "reversion
to the mean" of 16:1.
It was known even before we had the Constitution that silver was the more
useful metal of the two (more useful in industry). A 1785 report from the
Continental Congress, four years before the Constitution went into effect, said:
"Silver is not exported so easily as gold, and it is a more useful
metal." Even Alexander Hamilton knew
of "that preference for gold over silver, whenever the former can be
had," whether "from its intrinsic superiority as a metal,
from its rarity, or from the prejudices of mankind"!
I hope I am making it unmistakably clear that Free Silver was a political
movement of the Debtors' camp, not the Savers. I imagine some of you might
still be thinking: "Well, silver is still a (quote-unquote) 'precious'
metal, real, constitutional and historical money, and therefore it is harder
money than pure paper, therefore the Silverites who wanted Free Silver must
be in the hard money camp." But if they had been for hard money, then
they would have been happy with the free, unlimited coinage of their silver at
the going free market price ratio of silver to gold like it was in the
beginning, in 1792. But that's not what they wanted. They wanted Free Silver at
16:1 as a repudiation of debts. Here's Laughlin on the two camps:
The silver advocates were largely the advocates of
expansion. Said Mr. Ewing in the House: "Mr. Speaker, nine tenths of the
people of the United States demand the unlimited coinage of the old silver
dollar with which to pay their debts… not only unlimited coinage, but coinage
of silver bullion owned by citizens for immediate use in business." … An
answering echo [from the other camp] came from the Senate: "In many
sections of the country it is now questionable whether, under the most
favorable conditions we can hope for in the future, there can be any escape
from the embarrassments that surround the debtor class except through
bankruptcy.... In view, then, of the condition of affairs, it seems to me
that any measure that tends in any degree to uphold the value of property, or
to prevent its further depreciation, ought to meet the support and
concurrence of all." … But, perhaps, the coarsest expression of this
sentiment [from the easy money camp] was reserved for the lips of Mr. Bland,
who declared: "I give notice here and now that this war shall never
cease, so long as I have a voice in this Congress, until the rights of the
people are fully restored and the silver dollar shall take its place
alongside the gold dollar. Meanwhile let us take what we have and supplement
it immediately on appropriation bills, and, if we can not do that, I am in
favor of issuing paper money enough to stuff down the bondholders until they
are sick [Applause]."
Much more evidence could be cited, if more were necessary, to show that, in
the minds of a very large number of men who urged the passage of the Bland
bill, there was a hope that they might expand the currency by its provisions;
and even that silver dollars would be extensively added to the circulation
and create the same effects. …
In fact, one is struck, on every page of the debates, with the radically
different temper in which the subject of the coinage was treated in 1878 from
that shown in 1853, or even in 1792. There is not a shadow of a doubt that,
had silver not fallen in value in 1876, so that a dollar of silver had not
become worth much less than a gold or paper dollar—and so afforded a new
device for meeting existing debts, which at the same time was technically
coin—we should never have heard much of the silver agitation. It was born of
a desire for a cheap unit in which to liquidate indebtedness. And the demand
for the free coinage of a dollar containing only ninety cents of intrinsic
value received the support of all who had before marched in the ranks of the
inflationists. Silver had got into politics, and was henceforth discussed
politically, not scientifically.
[…]
The free coinage of the silver dollar would have given to each man who brought
silver bullion to the Mint the benefit of the whole difference between the
intrinsic value of 412½ grains of silver and the nominal legal-tender power
given it by its face value; and this difference was to be used by any debtor
to deliver himself from his obligations to just that amount without returning
to his creditor any purchasing power therefor. This was repudiation of debts
on a scale to the dollar marked by the descent in the intrinsic value of
silver below its face value.
Laughlin also gives us a brief summary, or what he calls "a very brief
résumé of the main arguments of both parties to the controversy." The
two parties are the Bimetallists and the Monometallists, or the easy money
camp and the hard money camp as you will see, also known as the Debtors and
the Savers. First he gives us the basic arguments of the Bimetallists who
were the easy money Silverites of the 1880s and 1890s:
I. BIMETALLISM has been proposed under two such widely
differing conditions that the following general division of arguments may
properly be adopted:
A. National Bimetallism.
B. International Bimetallism.
(A.) The selection of both gold and silver by an individual state as legal
payment of debts to any amount at a ratio fixed without regard to the legal
ratios of other states may be defined as national bimetallism. An example is
the proposal for free silver coinage in the United States, where, although no
other country of importance has the same ratio (and although the legal ratio
does not correspond with the market value of the two metals), we have a
proportion of 1:16. Such a system is not upheld by any economic writer of
repute. Whenever it is advocated in the United States it has been urged from
a strong belief that, if we do not use silver, there will not be enough of
the precious metals in existence to perform the exchanges; or with the
expectation of inducing other countries to adopt bimetallism; or to sustain
the price of silver; or to force the cheaper metal into use as an easy means
of scaling debts and of relieving debtors of a part of their burdens. The
theories of national bimetallism, as thus advocated, are widely different
from the tenets of another school of writers, who are also known as
bimetallists.
(B.) An agreement between the chief commercial nations of the world on one
given ratio (e.g., 15½:1) would, in the opinion of this other school, keep
the value of silver relatively to gold invariable, and so cause the
concurrent use of both metals in all the countries of such a league. This may
be termed international bimetallism, to distinguish it from the other body of
theories. The essential part of this theory is that the legal provision for
the use of silver in the coinage of each state creates a demand for silver;
and that, inasmuch as other states of the league have the same ratio, no
reason could exist why either silver or gold should leave one country for
another. In close connection with this argument it is urged that the
"compensatory action" of a double standard will prevent that
extreme fluctuation of the standard of prices which is made possible by a
single standard; since, as prices follow the metal which is for the time the
cheaper, the latter will feel a demand just in proportion as the other metal
loses it. The desire to use gold, it is held, should be discountenanced, as tending
not only to lower the value of silver, but to concentrate the monetary demand
of the whole civilized world upon gold; and that, as its quantity would be
alone insufficient for the needs of commerce, the value of gold must
increase, and the prices of all things diminish, to the great discouragement
of business enterprise. There would be a "gold famine" the effects
of which would be intolerable. This same school also present very strongly
the opinion that the general demonetization of silver would so increase the
value of gold, and the value of the unit in which the enormous public debts
of the world must be paid, that it would entail a heavy loss to the
taxpayers.
Other writers, still, urge that the two precious metals were designed by a
Higher Power as media of exchange, and that it is a mistake arbitrarily to
set up one of them as a standard by which other commodities are to be
measured, and to discard the other.
Next he gives us a summary of the basic arguments of the hard money camp, the
Monometallists. Maybe it's just me, but the following, which was written in
1885, doesn't quite sound like the modern HMS, and even has a hint of early
Freegold thought if I'm not mistaken:
II. MONOMETALLISM is not a belief in the sole use of gold.
Its advocates regard gold as the least variable of the two metals, as best
suited for large payments; and believe that silver, as a heavier and cheaper
metal, should also be used for smaller payments, but not as all unlimited
legal tender. Monometallists hold that "national bimetallism" is an
impossibility for any length of time, since, as soon as one metal in the
market falls slightly below the legal ratio, the other metal will be driven
out of circulation, and the country will really have only a succession of single
standards, alternating between gold and silver. They believe that one country
alone can not hold up the value of silver against the tendencies of many
countries to disuse it; and if it should try, the holders of silver bullion
would gain at the expense of the single country, which is sacrificing itself
by buying silver which will depreciate on its hands; that, if it is an object
of the United States to induce other countries to join us in a league, we can
best force that policy on them by withdrawing from our isolated and
unsupported position until the others manifest a disposition to join us; and
that the movement to force silver upon the United states at the present ratio
of 1:16 is a disguised form of the policy which a few years ago led to the
"greenback" heresy, and is intended to favor owners of silver
mines, and dishonest debtors who wish a cheaper unit of payment, at the
expense of national honor and credit.
It would be hard to say what the monometallists hold in regard to
international bimetallism, since it is largely a matter of theory and of
future potentiality. Monometallists do not—as is so often said—believe that
gold remains absolutely stable in value. They hold that there is no such
thing as "a standard of value" for future payments in either gold
or silver, which remains absolutely invariable; but that, so long as we must
use one of the two, gold is preferable, inasmuch as it has proved in the past
more steady in value than silver. They admit that a general agreement of
states to coin silver at a ratio higher than the present market value would
have an effect to raise its value; but, while it is extremely doubtful
whether this league could overcome natural forces, it is denied that such a
league is politically possible, and the experience of the conferences of 1878
and 1881 is cited to show it. As regards the "compensatory action"
of a double standard, it is denied that this can act without alternately
changing the standard from a single standard of gold to a single standard of
silver—and this is not regarded as a "double standard." There can
be no "compensation" except as one metal drives out the other.
While it may prevent extreme fluctuations of the standard of prices, it
brings more frequent fluctuations, each of which is sufficient to drive one
metal out of circulation. The tendency to disuse silver is, they claim, due
to natural causes affecting the demand, and the legislation hostile to silver
but registers the wishes of commerce. The fall of prices since 1873 is used
to prove an appreciation of gold; but it is denied that prices depend
directly on the quantity of money, and that it can not be said that because
prices fall money has appreciated. The fall of prices, used to indicate an
increase in the value of gold, is found to depend quite as much on a collapse
of credit, and lessened cost of production of the commodities against which
gold is exchanged, as on any relative scarcity of gold. As regards national
debts, it is distinctly averred that neither gold nor silver forms a just
measure of deferred payments, and that if justice in long contracts is sought
for, we should not seek it by the doubtful and untried expedient of
international bimetallism, but by the clear and certain method of a multiple
standard, a unit based upon the selling prices of a number of articles of
general consumption. A long contract would thereby be paid at its maturity by
the same purchasing power as was given in the beginning.
Far from being true that the value of any metal is providentially fixed, it
depends, on the contrary, on the power of that metal to satisfy the demands
of commerce as an artificial medium of exchange to save us from barter; as
countries grow in wealth, it is found that, as an historical fact, commercial
centers, where transactions are large, prefer gold to silver; consequently,
the value of a metal, merely as affected by its demand, can not remain the
same. Moreover, the supply of a metal can very seriously disturb its
permanent value. No commodity, not even gold, has any sacerdotal qualities which
keep its value invariable.
Maybe it's just confirmation bias, but it seems to me like he basically
said that (over time) silver depreciates and gold appreciates, "due to
natural causes" of human preference and prejudice, and that therefore
debt/credit (me: money, since money is credit) should not be
denominated in either metal. Instead, he seems to say that debt should be
denominated in some unnamed "unit" (let's call it a purely-symbolic
fiat currency unit) that strives to track "the selling prices of a
number of articles of general consumption," which is today known as a
consumer price index. Hello Freegold.
He says, "the tendency to disuse silver" (meaning the tendency of countries
to drop bimetallism, which was happening all over the world at that time) was
"due to natural causes affecting the demand," and demand, he
explained, meant "the wishes of commerce." Furthermore, he says
it's an historical fact that where wealth gathers, gold is preferred over
silver which affects their value.
He also writes that any country which tries to support silver will be
"sacrificing itself by buying silver which will depreciate."
That was written in 1885, when the GSR was 19.39:1! What about reversion to
the 16:1 mean we keep hearing about today? I mean, it's almost as if there
was no hope even back in 1885 for silver to make a comeback on its own.
Notice also that neither camp made that claim. The only difference between
the two camps was whether or not the US Treasury should try to artificially
levitate the declining price of silver.
Then, following the repudiation and repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchases
and Bland-Allison acts during the catastrophic market collapse and Silver
Panic of 1893, the Free Silver movement doubled down. You might recognize the
name William Jennings Bryan from recent silverbug articles like these:
The Perfect Crime and the Plight of the Modern Silverite
"The modern silver investor must be content with a world gone wild with
information, yet a lack of understanding.
The modern "Silverite" does not wish for imposition. And standard
imposed by the will of the few is doomed to failure. The political system, in
its current state, would never tolerate a William Jennings Bryan.
No political movement (ill-conceived or other) will move the cause
forward."
The Forgotten History (and Potential Future) of Silver as
Money
"In 1896, William Jennings Bryan gave his famous "Cross of
Gold" speech before the Democratic National Convention. The populist
orator advocated free coinage of silver at a ratio to gold of 16:1 (the
classic ratio) and a full restoration of the bi-metallic standard.
The words of William Jennings Bryan still strike a chord: "…instead of
having a gold standard because England has, we shall restore bimetallism, and
then let England have bimetallism because the United States have. If they
dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard as a good
thing, we shall fight them to the uttermost… by saying to them, you shall not
press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. You shall not crucify
mankind upon a cross of gold."
[…]
Given silver's low price ratio versus gold (currently only 1:73 versus the
classic 1:16), it makes a lot of sense to favor silver as an undervalued
monetary asset.
[…]
Silver is necessary because it's the historic, and still most practical,
basis for defining a "dollar."
William Jennings Bryan
William Jennings Bryan is a hero to silvertards, and also a three time loser
in the real world. He lost as the Democratic candidate for President three
times, in 1896, 1900 and 1908, finally settling for Secretary of State under
President Woodrow Wilson (D) (who also gave us the Fed), only to resign two
years later due to his pacifist response to the sinking, by a German U-boat,
of a British ocean liner one week after it left port in New York, killing
almost 1,200 people. Not only was he anti-war, he was also anti-banks,
anti-Darwinism and anti-fun (he spent his final years fighting for Prohibition).
William Jennings Bryan was a Silverite hero because of his Cross
of Gold speech at the Democratic National Convention in 1896, and his
championing of "Free Silver at 16 to 1" in two presidential
elections. He even earned the nickname "The Silver Knight of the West". But
notice that Bryan's "silver at 16:1" was a plea, not a prediction.
I'm still looking, but so far I'm struggling to find anyone from that period
predicting that the GSR would return to 16:1 by market forces alone.
That the GSR has any market-based reason to revert to (anywhere near)
historic levels seems to me to be pure bullshit promoted by modern day
silvertards. An honest review of history as I've tried to do in this post
tells me otherwise. So what is the core reasoning behind this
reversion-to-the-mean-ratio myth?
324 Years Of The Gold-To-Silver Ratio And $195 Silver
"Since 1687, the gold-to-silver ratio has ranged from 14.14 to 99.76…
If the ratio were to return to the pre-1900 average of 16.13, the silver
price would have to rise to about $105/oz…
Why might the historical gold-to-silver ratio have a natural average much
lower than it is today? The chart below shows that the lower ratio might have
a geological origin.
According to Jefferson Lab, silver is almost 19 times more abundant than gold
within the Earth's crust. While this doesn't necessarily mean the deposits
are accessible using modern technology, it possibly marks a natural long-run
relationship between the two metals…
According to US Geological Survey's Mineral Commodity Summaries (January
2012), 2011 reserves and production for silver was respectively ten and nine
times as abundant than gold.
To adjust to the 2011 reserves ratio between silver and gold, the silver
price must rise to about $165/oz. To adjust to the 2011 production ratio, the
silver price must rise to about $195/oz…
In addition to the natural physical abundance and production data, which
favors silver relative to gold, above-ground silver inventory is constantly
depleted because it is used for industrial purposes. In contrast, most gold
that has ever been mined exists in a vault somewhere.
Many investors that are bullish on silver buy using iShares Silver Trust
(NYSEARCA:SLV), but some prefer the more 'physical' nature of ETFS Physical
Silver Shares ETF (NYSEARCA:SIVR) and Sprott Physical Silver Trust
(NYSEARCA:PSLV).
However, anyone truly looking to get physical can't beat the real thing:
bullion."
Why Silver Will Outperform Gold 400%
"When I began musing over this article, the gold/silver ratio was
hovering around 60 (it took 60 ounces of silver to buy one ounce of gold). By
the end of this bull move, I expect that ratio to drop to 16:1 (16 ounces of
silver will buy one ounce of gold). In the meantime, the ratio will zig and
zag, and we’ll take advantage of those moves, too, by trading the ratio…
If I had a chart 45 feet long on which every foot represented 100 years of
human history, the gold/silver ratio would remain under 16:1 for all but the
last 15 inches. In fact, for the first 40 feet (until about 1500) the ratio
oscillated under 12:1, and spent most of its time between 8:1 and 12:1. Only
after the discovery of huge silver deposits in the Americas does the ratio
begin to climb above 12:1. I can only speculate about the reasons for the
ratio’s relative stability. Probably it arises from the relative ratio of
silver to gold in the earth’s crust, which geologists estimate at 17.5:1…
Our goal is to convert a sterile investment—silver or gold—that throws off no
dividend or interest into a paying investment. While we are waiting for the
price to rise, we make that sterile investment fertile by swapping back and
forth from silver to gold to increase the total number of ounces we hold at
the bull market’s end…
Worst risk: we swap too soon, and end up holding gold instead of silver when
the ratio reaches its low at 16:1…"
Apparently they think that the relative scarcity of the two metals ultimately
drives their relative value. I'll grant that it is possible (though not
provable) that this was true during the Dark Ages. But ever since then, I
think it is more likely "that preference for gold over silver, whenever
the former can be had" as James Laughlin put it, "from the
prejudices of mankind" as Alexander Hamilton wrote, rather than the
relative abundance or scarcity, is what has driven the long-term trend, which
is a decline in silver's relative value.
It was always known, as discussed above, that silver was the more
"useful" of the two metals, so it always had that industrial value
component that gold did not. But much more influential was its monetary value
component, and that has apparently been on the decline for a very long time.
The declining preference for silver's use as a monetary metal (or wealth, as
I like to say) has apparently overpowered the obvious increases in its
industrial usefulness over the years. As a monetary metal, it seems clear
that the world marketplace prefers gold. That was settled more than a century
ago.
Even without using the lens of Freegold, I can see no reason for the GSR to
decline. Unless you have a time machine, I think the direction of the long
term trend is clear. Sure, it will have its "spasmodic" moments
along the way, but if we smooth them out over time, here's how the GSR chart
looks to me:
Many people have bought into the argument that, when the metals finally do
their moonshot, silver will outperform gold. This view, by definition,
implies a reversion of the GSR to much lower levels. And, other than a few
"spasmodic" moments along the way, that view is not consistent with
what an honest review of history reveals, even though it claims to be.
I know of one long-time gold writer who promotes buying both physical gold
and silver, who himself is betting entirely on physical silver, without
holding even an ounce of gold. And I know a few individuals who are (or were)
doing the same. I shudder at the thought.
It has been said that Freegold is the only narrative in the precious metals
sphere that argues solely for physical gold while taking a distinctly
negative view on silver's future usefulness as a wealth reserve. I hope that
I have shown in this post that you don't need Freegold to have a negative
outlook on silver as money or wealth.
That said, I can imagine a comical resurgence of the old Free Silver movement
come Freegold. With gold at $55K and silver at $2.75 for a de facto GSR of
20,000:1, perhaps their desperate new rallying cry could be "Free Silver
at 16,000 to 1." ;D
Sincerely,
FOFOA
I hope you enjoyed that! :D
If you would like to join the discussion, I think we have room for a few more
subscribers. The fee is $110 for 6 months, which is only about 60¢ a day.
Just click on the flaming 7s above to subscribe. Here's what a few of the
Speakeasy members wrote when I asked a week ago if they had anything they'd
like to say to you which might be included in this post:
Jim Okefenokee wrote…
Hi FOFOA,
Let me describe how I came to The Speakeasy. It might give some of the
older waverers/fellow-travellers out there on the main blog something to
ponder, should they get to read this.
I was close to retirement and was finally getting my hands on my ‘bag of money’.
Nothing spectacular but hopefully, adequate. What to do with it? Stock
market? (no thanks). Managed fund? (no thanks). Financial advisor? (no
thanks). Trading, technical analysis etc? (no thanks). I started reading the
interwebs.
Got in with a well-meaning but bad bunch. Casey. Sprott. Morgan.
Sinclair. Butler. Willie. Keiser. King. Lewis. Hamilton. ZH. Trader Dan.
SilverStackers. etc etc. Fell in love with the silver story. Lovely stuff,
silver. Started buying some gold and shitloads of silver.
Then I stumbled upon FOFOA’s main blog (h/t DCRB on ZH :D). Intelligent
writing, superb prose, so much relevant guidance. Still had to make my own
decisions of course, but now I had a genuine intellectual framework to use.
Showed my appreciation and was subsequently invited to join the original SE,
where the quality of commentary was excellent. I’m not 100% certain if I have
done the right thing regarding my gold purchases to date but believe me, I
feel so much more comfortable than before. If any of the above strikes a
chord with you Doubting Thomases out there, then subscribe to the FGSE (about
6 grams of gold per year) – you won’t regret it.
canadarob wrote…
Thanks for another post fofoa!
Thanks for bringing us regular updates on the global economy that fit a
clear picture of what’s going on. You bring the facts and leave the
speculation out of it. It’s a pleasure to read essays clear of a heavy bias
which can become so tiresome in the mainstream news. I look forward to every
post and re-read old ones often.
The speakeasy is also a unique place to discuss many things and ideas
with like minded people from around the world in a respectful atmosphere.
As someone who didn’t donate before, I was very happy to subscribe to the
speakeasy as it pushed me to give back to someone who has given so much to
me. It was over due.
There is a lot of stuff online that is of very little value and that’s
why it doesn’t cost you anything to see. This site is definitely the
exception, its a very small price to pay for huge value.
Thanks fofoa!
MSC wrote…
This blog is simply the best place to preserve your sanity when in the
real world, no one you know can see that the IMF$ is crumbling and that gold
will once again fulfil its destiny as the stabilising force in our monetary
system.
Edwardo wrote…
The Speakeasy is a convivial, some might even say, essential locale for
those who share a particular perspective on the future of the $IMFS. At The
Speak, as it’s affectionately referred to by its denizens, one can relax in
the knowledge that when one chooses to pipe up about a certain subject near
and dear to the hearts of time misallocating, brainwashed cult members, that
they are among friends.
ein anderer wrote…
I’ve subscribed to SE because…
• It’s a handy way for supporting one of the most talented money writers
in the web. Thanks, FOFOA, for sharing your knowledge and skills!
• It’s an easy way to stay tuned to the Freegold theory. Yes, I know:
Freegold will come w/o prewarning. And yet: There are signs from which we can
detect the growth of stress and burden in the $IMFS, which could lead to the
need of Freegold. Those signs are nicely discussed at this hottest place for
pot watchers! ;D
• It’s an easy way to recapitulate and rethink the whole story again and
again—because there are quotes from old and new FOFOA posts, on a daily
basis! Thanks, Lou!
• And it’s exciting, because the BIS is almost visible for me on the
horizon—and I am quite sure that it’s them who will usher in this new
paradigm of money and its especial, long lasting store of value! Over night!
:D
svoboda59 wrote…
I found home here even if I still surf the web and do a lot of pot
watching ;-D. But for sure when I need clarity and I try to understand
history, Another, FoA and FoFoA are the one I read.
Ken_C wrote…
Fofoa – thanks for the excellent analysis. I come to the Speakeasy to get
real well researched information without all of the BS that accompanies many
of the other blogs that I have visited. I particularly enjoy reading the
responses of many of the “regulars” after a new post has been put up. With
the format of the Speakeasy we have much less trouble with trolls polluting
the conversation.
No one can see the future with 100% certainty but at least with this lens
we have less fog and more real information to make our own decisions about
what will happen. I wish that I had found the writings of Fofoa a couple of
years before I actually did. It may have saved me from making some mistakes.
The subscription fee to Speakeasy is some of the best money I have spent.
Keep up the great work.
Aurora wrote…
I really appreciate FOFOA’s Freegold Speakeasy because it is where
physical peace of mind resides like a safe harbor in a debt storm. The
friendship here is sincere and the verbal libations make everyone feel
welcome and warm inside :)
Indenture (who has a dictionary) wrote…
convivial: (of an atmosphere or event) friendly, lively, and enjoyable.
(of a person) cheerful and friendly; jovial.
Michael dV wrote…
The events we anticipate will not be once in a lifetime, they will once
in history. When I realized what was about to happen I looked for someone who
could explain it to me with the same precision that was in the math of the
coming crisis. There was of course no one who could honestly do that. Fofoa
however had a view of the problem that was consistent and over the years has
been correct. He lays the ground work for understanding our current system
and on this foundation gives us the clearest view one can expect of what is
coming.
Once I realized how obviously wrong other commentators were, I too began
to see what he was seeing. It has been a difficult 5 years as the system
sputters and then rises again. Emotionally it can be trying too. The
Speakeasy is the place where current events are examined, doubts can be
discussed and where there is a togetherness of folks who are going through
the same events as the rest of the world but with a view that is unmatched.
I have a crystal ball, but it is just a piece of glass. For ‘what to
expect’ I come here.
Jeff wrote…
Seven is the number of completion.
I haven’t seen an original argument against freegold in years. I can’t
think of an objection to freegold that hasn’t been debunked by A/FO/FOA. The
canon is closed; when there is nothing more to do you rest and wait.
Must be the year of completion.
Right Here Right
Now by Jesus Jones
(because at the Speakeasy you can embed Youtube videos in comments)
willcsoon wrote…
Ladies and Gents
I came across the SE after a little family trip. Our host had posted on
May 10 and I found this. I guess it was a revaluation moment for me!!
FOFOA is much more eloquent and the patrons are the best!!!!
I truly looked forward to the posts and the subsequent comments. I have
learned so much from the main that I didn’t want to get kicked out of school.
I had some correspondence with the the prof and I am still here to get my
continuing education credits. Our host is very true to his mission of a
tribute to Another and FOA.
I think the the tuition I paid has been well worth it!!!
we shall see!!!
Rob wrote…
I came to FOFOA’s blog a couple of years ago from a mention in the Zero
Hedge comments.
I had been spread betting the price of gold from around 2006 to 2010,
making money from the rising price and losing money from poor decisions.
Freegold was the only narrative that made sense of what I was seeing in
action with the gold price going down, demand going up and a world drowning
in debt.
I read the blog and emailed a few people.
I look at the whole thesis through the scientific method.
When the hypothesis deviates from the facts, I will leave Freegold and
look for something else to explain how the world works.
The biggest compliment I can give is that this has not happened.
My thoughts on FOFOA is that he is an excellent translator of A/FOA and
what we see going on around us.
FOFOA is a good, clear thinker.
beerholiday wrote...
This is a great place fofoa has created. I love the topic, freegold, but
also fofoas way of thinking, the other commenters, the often unrelated topics
that come up , the sometimes heated discussions, and the respect we have for
each other at the SE
I was at a scientific conference this week and I sometimes wished the
discourse was as good and respectful as the SE.
So happy birthday fofoa, the SE is easily my favourite place on the internet
Anand Srivastava wrote…
FOFOA:
I had always been a saver. Never could take risks and never invested in
stocks. I was always into Fixed Deposits. And I knew I was losing money due
to inflation and taxes. I just didn’t know that I could save in gold. I
didn’t even know I was a saver. I didn’t understand why Indians bought so
much gold. Thanks to you, now I know myself better and am at peace with my
savings.
I am a bit of a miser as well :-). Possibly goes with the territory of
saving. I have never paid for a blog. Although I felt that I should pay
something to you for the information that has changed so much for me. Still I
didn’t pay. When I got to know about Speakeasy, it was obvious for me to pay
up finally :-).
In the health world there has been no overriding influence for me except
Richard of FreetheAnimal. He keeps on coming up with new ideas, while the
others find one good idea and stay there. In this world I just got to the
best in the very beginning, and had no reason to look much around. I guess I
am not really that interested in the intricacies of the financial world. I
just understood that I was a saver and that gold was the only vehicle. The
only thing left is pot watching :-). I still don’t understand much of it, but
I am content with what I know, and hopefully you and the people here will
bring to our notice if something changes about the conclusions.
It is good to be here.
Delusional Investing wrote…
Thanks for another great post FOFOA.
Your superbly detailed analysis keeps the lens sharply focused, providing
a clear and consistent view of today’s monetary events, that is simply not
available anywhere else.
The Speakeasy is the front row seats from which to watch these events
unfold. I am grateful to be here enjoying the show with friends, and popcorn.
Regards, DI.
tEON wrote…
My appreciation of FoFoA only seems to grow. After years of wading
through the myriad of compromised Gold analysts – flogging PMs, seeking
YouTube hits or encouraging newsletter subscriptions – exposing myself to as
much as I could in a fruitless, unsatisfying cycle of repetition buried in
absurdly failed predictions and misunderstanding, I took the most important
and discerning step in my education – simply reading A/FoA/FoFoA. The more I
read, the more I appreciated the logic, the sermon-like writing style of
FoFoA and was constantly impressed by how profoundly it affected not only my
view of Gold and an acceptance about the principle of ‘time’ but my entire
world view as well. An important component of this education are those who
comment in the Speakeasy. The value of being the dumbest person in the room
is that I’m always learning – so thanks to FoFoA for creating this safehaven
of enlightenment and to all of you for your contributions and input. Next
round is on me.
This is now officially my longest post ever! Does that make up for 2½ months
with no posts? ;D
If not, consider joining the Speakeasy, where we evil gold hoarders, jerks,
time misallocators and brainwashed cult members watch the pot together, or as
Another put it, "We watch the approach of this change,
and discuss it, together, yes? It will truly be 'a gold market as none before'."
You can subscribe by clicking on the flaming (remember this is also the year
of the fire!) sevens below, or on the subscribe button in the side bar at the
top.
Sincerely,
FOFOA