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Let’s
parlay the publicity given to the recent University of Texas endowment
fund’s decision to convert all of their paper gold to physical gold
into a campaign to convince large endowments/foundations all over the country
to follow in their very wise footsteps.
According
to boston.com, university endowment funds lost a lot of their value during
the 2009 fiscal year. Harvard’s endowment fell nearly 30 percent in the
fiscal year ended June 30, 2009, to $25.7 billion. The Yale University
endowment, the nation’s second-largest, dropped 28.6 percent, to $16.3
billion, and Stanford University’s plummeted 26.7 percent to $12.6
billion. The average drop for endowments across the country was 23 percent,
based on a survey of 842 colleges and universities by the National
Association of College and University Business Officers and Commonfund, an investment firm for endowments. In 2010,
some of the top endowments recouped some of their enormous losses from the
year prior. Even so, a great, overlooked risk lurks in all endowment and
foundation funds invested in paper gold and paper silver derivative products
to which the University of Texas System recently called attention.
On
April 18, 2011, Bloomberg reported that the University
of Texas System endowment fund converted all $991,700,000 of their paper gold
derivatives to physical gold. It is believed that the University of Texas
board members took this bold action because they saw it as a necessary step
to guard against potential devastating losses in paper gold derivative
products that are backed only by a tiny fraction of the real gold that exists
in the physical market. Here’s an actionable idea by which we can break
the international banking cartel’s repressive grip on the control of
gold and silver prices and
allow gold and silver prices to move as they would in a free market.
We can encourage the largest endowment funds and foundations in the United
States to follow the lead of the University of Texas System by alerting them
to the risks of holding paper gold and paper silver. The greater the amounts
of paper gold and paper silver converted into physical gold and physical
silver, the greater the strain that is placed upon the banker’s ability
to suppress gold and silver prices.
I’ve
compiled a list of the top university and college endowments and foundation
funds in the United States below. Many of you know that I am not a fan of the
bogus modern day education system or of many of the foundations below,
especially since many of the institutions below have churned out professors
and people that are prominently involved in the effort to spread the very
anti-gold and anti-silver propaganda that has muddled the people’s
understanding of gold and silver’s real value. But what great fun it
would be if we inundated these boards with letters urging them to convert
their paper gold and paper silver to physical gold and physical silver and
forced some of the institutions that have contributed to our present global
financial disaster to partake in freeing gold and silver markets from price
suppression! What great irony there would be in this achievement.
We
don’t have to successfully convince all universities and foundations to
convert their paper gold and paper silver into real gold and real silver, but if we can convince just one of the
larger-sized endowments/funds to do so, then other institutions
will inevitably follow in a domino effect as they will be encouraged to
research the risks of holding hundreds of millions and/or billions in paper
gold and paper silver.
To
make this task as easy as possible, I have written a letter below that you
can copy and paste and mail/email to the below colleges and universities and
have slightly modified the same letter so it can also be sent to foundations.
The complete list of foundation websites, where email and mailing addresses
can be found is
at this link (http://foundationcenter.org/findfunders/topfunders/top100assets.html ).
Regarding
the universities and colleges, the links to information of the top endowment
funds, including email addresses, phone numbers, names of endowment managers,
and information for universities’ finance and treasury departments (the
department that normally communicates with the endowment fund board), are
listed below. Of course, if your alma mater is not on the below list, please
don’t let this stop you from engaging in this campaign. Just visit your
university’s website and search the directory for the Office of the
Treasury to find out who you should contact:
Harvard
University http://www.hmc.harvard.edu/contact/index.html
Yale University http://www.yale.edu/fin-bus/
Princeton University http://finance.princeton.edu/
Stanford University http://treasurer.stanford.edu/pages/contact.html
Massachusetts Institute of Technology http://vpf.mit.edu/site/budget_finance_treasury/staff
University of Michigan http://www.umich.edu/search.php?q=treasury&am...a.y=0&sa=Go
Columbia Universit target="_blank"y
http://finance.columbia.edu/treasury/
Northwestern University target="_blank" http://offices.northwestern.edu/detail/202
University of Pennsylvania target="_blank" http://www.finance.upenn.edu/treasurer/
University of California System target="_blank" http://www.ucop.edu/treasurer/
University of Notre Dame target="_blank" http://treasury.nd.edu/
University of Chicago target="_blank" http://trustees.uchicago.edu/board/
Emory University target="_blank" https://www.finance.emory.edu/external/dep...vp/treasury.cfm
Rice Univers target="_blank"ity http://search.rice.edu/?q=treasurer
Cornell Univers target="_blank"ity http://www.dfa.cornell.edu/treasurer/
University of Virgi target="_blank"nia http://www.virginia.edu/treasury/contact.html
Dartmouth Coll target="_blank"ege http://www.dartmouth.edu/~control/contact/index.html
University of Southern Califor target="_blank"nia http://www.usc.edu/directories/dept/fin...l_services.html
Here
is a list of the top 20 Foundations by asset size as of the end of the 2009
and 2010 fiscal year as compiled by the Foundation Center .
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation topped this list with more than $33.9
billion in assets under management and the number 20 foundation, the Carnegie
Corporation, managed $2.4 billion in assets.
1.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
(WA) target="_blank"
2. Ford Foundation (NY) target="_blank"
3. J. Paul Getty Trust (CA) target="_blank"
4. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (NJ) target="_blank"
5. W. K. Kellogg Foundation (MI) target="_blank"
6. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
(CA) target="_blank"
7. The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
(CA) target="_blank"
8. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation (IL) target="_blank"
9. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (CA)
target="_blank"
10. Lilly Endowment Inc. (IN)
target="_blank"
11. The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (NY)
target="_blank"
12. The William Penn Foundation
(PA)
target="_blank"
13. Tulsa Community Foundation (OK)
target="_blank"
14. The Rockefeller
Foundation (NY)
target="_blank"
15. The Kresge
Foundation (MI)
target="_blank"
16. The California Endowment (CA)
target="_blank"
17. The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust (NY)
target="_blank"
18. The Annie E. Casey Foundation (MD)
target="_blank"
19. The Duke Endowment (NC)
target="_blank"
20. Carnegie Corporation of New York
(NY)
Please
help us promote the “Break the Bankers’ Price Suppression Schemes
Against Gold & Silver” campa target="_blank"ign on twitter < target="_blank"/a>and facebook.
Furthermore, if you have ever donated money to your alma mater or are a
member of your alumni association, then you have a direct line to the people
that manage your school’s endowment funds. Use that connection, call
them up, and either make an appointment to see them or, if you live too far
away, arrange a Skype call with them. Then use the arguments laid out in the
letter to simply have a conversation with them. They have to at least be
polite and listen. This advice was kindly passed on to us by someone that
formerly worked in a college endowment office. They may not agree, but if
enough alumni call, they will eventually have to consider the idea.
Below
is the university letter that you can cut and paste
and email to university/college treasury offices and endowment funds. I
realize the letter is much longer than one normally would like, but I believe
that a letter that urges such an important decision needs to make a
compelling argument to encourage action. If enough of these letters are sent,
someone associated with the endowment funds and foundation portfolios will
eventually read one of them.
Dear
________,
On
April 18th, 2011 the official US debt figure grew to $14,305,336,580,992. The
official US debt ceiling is listed at $14.294 trillion. This means that the
US government has officially moved into default on all US government issued
debt, even if only temporarily. In response to this runaway debt problem that
is afflicting our nation and destroying the purchasing power of the US
dollar, US college and university endowments with at least $1 billion under
management, according to Reuters, have moved 61% of their assets into
alternative assets, including commodities, in 2009. I imagine that all
endowments managing assets north of $1 billion still have significant amounts
invested in commodities, particularly in gold and in silver.
However,
I remain extremely concerned that this endowment fund may be invested in
paper gold and paper silver that may conceivably collapse and become
worthless should the future bring enormous declines in the purchasing power
of any of the world’s major international currencies, which at this
point and time, seems inevitable. As more and more individuals and
institutions purchase physical gold and physical silver in response to our
global monetary crisis, it is increasingly likely that growth in physical
demand for gold and silver will continue to outstrip the growth in physical
supply. As physical supplies of gold and silver continue to shrink, the ratio
of paper gold and paper silver to physical gold and physical silver will move
from grossly outrageous at the current date and time to obscenely outrageous
in the future. I urge the board of the endowment fund to consider the
enormous risk to the survival of the operations backed by this fund that
comes from continued investment in paper gold and paper silver, derivative
products that can plummet to zero in value.
Obviously,
the board members that manage the University of Texas System endowment fund,
the second largest endowment in the world, found the above described risk to
be excessive and canceled this risk by converting its entire allocation of
$991,700,000 in paper gold contracts into physical gold bullion bars. If your
endowment fund happens to invest in the gold and silver ETFs, the GLD or the
SLV, there are additionally numerous red flags contained in the prospectuses
of both of these ETFs that suggest that neither ETF is backed by allocated
gold or silver and that multiple claims exist on the unallocated physical
gold and physical silver that back these ETFs. You may read about these
seriou target="_blank"s risks
at this link:
(http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2009/07/the-gld-and-slv-legitimate-investment-vehicles-or-not/)
Furthermore,
delaying conversion of paper gold and paper silver futures contracts into
physical gold and physical silver puts the execution of this task at risk.
Exchange Rule 104.36, a rule that governs exchange transactions of futures
contracts for physical (‘EFP’) on the COMEX Division, states that
“the physical commodity need only be substantially the economic
equivalent of the futures contract being exchanged” and that the
Exchange Rule confirms that “the Exchange would accept gold-backed
exchange-traded funds (‘ETF’) shares as the physical commodity
component for an EFP transaction involving COMEX gold futures contracts,
provided that all elements of a bona fide EFP pursuant to Exchange Rule
104.36 are satisfied.” Thus, with every passing day, the risk that a
decision to convert paper gold or paper silver into physical gold and
physical silver may not be honored grows stronger. A game of musical chairs
is now being played with the university’s endowment fund, and if other
universities move before ours, our university will find itself as the one
left standing without a chair. The same risk factors must be taken into
consideration regarding any paper silver derivatives held by the endowment
fund as well.
On
March 25, 2010, at a US Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) hearing
on position limits in gold and silver futures markets, Jeffrey Christian of
the CPM Group testified that it was his belief that 100 times more gold
futures contracts trade, on average, than the amount of physical gold ounces
actually available for purchase on the physical market. Whether this number
is the same in the silver futures markets or whether this number is 200
times, 95 times, 85 times or 80 times, and not 100 times, is not as important
as the fact that there is an enormous imbalance in the ounces of paper gold
and paper silver owned by individuals and institutions versus the ACTUAL
amount of physical gold and physical silver that exists in the real world.
I’m sure you have heard of others argue that such an imbalance is not a
fraud because all commodity markets, including oil, coffee, soybeans and corn
possess huge imbalances between the amounts traded in futures markets and the
amounts that actually exist in the physical market.
However
such an argument contains a formal logical fallacy because the premise behind
the argument is flawed. Arguing that all commodity futures derivative
products trade in a similar fashion to gold futures contracts, and thus,
there is not a problem with the manner in which gold futures contracts trade, is a fundamentally flawed argument. This does not
prove that gold futures contracts are not flawed. It only proves that the
mechanism by which ALL commodity futures contracts trade are flawed. In fact,
if you’ve ever wondered how oil can soar from $50 a barrel to $150 a
barrel back down to $40 a barrel and then soar back to $110 a barrel in very
condensed periods of time, it is the flawed mechanisms of futures contracts
that allows these crazy price movements. If more and
more endowment funds or foundations with substantial investments in the GLD
and SLV ETFs or gold and silver futures contracts decide to convert their
paper contracts into physical gold and silver, the ability to secure physical
gold and physical silver represented by all gold and silver paper derivative
contracts WILL become problematic, and eventually, impossible in the future.
When
this happens, and I believe it will, there is a distinct possibility that the
prices established in futures markets will become very different than the
prices established in physical markets. For example, paper futures markets
for silver may eventually trade at $80 an ounce and physical silver dealers
may demand no less than $90 for the very same ounce of silver. If you see
this happening, I believe that your window of opportunity to convert paper
into physical may have already passed.
As
a supporter of your institution, I urge you to discuss this very real problem
with other members of your board at the next board meeting, and enact a vote
to take physical delivery of all paper gold and paper silver contracts
currently held within the endowment fund as soon as possible. Though the
execution of such a decision will require some administration, the University
of Texas System moved on this problem quickly before they were stuck in a
corner with no way out and perhaps left with only a handful of worthless
paper. I sincerely hope that you will do the same. There is much to be gained
by deciding to tackle this problem pro-actively and everything to lose
through inaction.
Sincerely,
Your
Name
Class of ___________
And
below is the same letter, modified to send to foundations instead of
universities/colleges.
Dear
________,
On
April 18th, 2011 the official US debt figure grew to $14,305,336,580,992. The
official US debt ceiling is listed at $14.294 trillion. This means that the
US government has officially moved into default on all US government issued
debt, even if only temporarily. In response to this runaway debt problem that
is afflicting our nation and destroying the purchasing power of the US
dollar, US college and university endowments with at least $1 billion under
management, according to Reuters, have moved 61% of their assets into
alternative assets, including commodities, in 2009. I imagine that all
foundations managing assets north of $1 billion have significant amounts
still invested in commodities, particularly in gold and in silver.
However,
I remain extremely concerned that this foundation may be invested in paper
gold and paper silver that may conceivably collapse and become worthless
should the future bring enormous declines in the purchasing power of any of
the world’s major international currencies, which at this point and
time, seems inevitable. As more and more individuals and institutions
purchase physical gold and physical silver in response to our global monetary
crisis, it is increasingly likely that growth in physical demand for gold and
silver will continue to outstrip the growth in physical supply. As physical
supplies of gold and silver continue to shrink, the ratio of paper gold and
paper silver to physical gold and physical silver will move from grossly
outrageous at the current date and time to obscenely outrageous in the
future. I urge the board of this foundation to consider the enormous risk to
the survival of the operations backed by this fund that comes from continued
investment in paper gold and paper silver, derivative products that can
plummet to zero in value.
Obviously,
the board members that manage the University of Texas System endowment fund,
the second largest endowment in the world, found the above described risk to
be excessive and canceled this risk by converting its entire allocation of
$991,700,000 in paper gold contracts into physical gold bullion bars. If this
foundation happens to invest in the gold and silver ETFs, the GLD or the SLV,
there are additionally numerous red flags contained in the prospectuses of
both of these ETFs that suggest that neither ETF is backed by allocated gold
or silver and that multiple claims exist on the unallocated physical gold and
physical silver that back these ETFs. You may read about these seriou target="_blank"s risks
at this link:
(http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2009/07/the-gld-and-slv-legitimate-investment-vehicles-or-not/)
Furthermore,
delaying conversion of paper gold and paper silver futures contracts into
physical gold and physical silver puts the execution of this task at risk.
Exchange Rule 104.36, a rule that governs exchange transactions of futures
contracts for physical (‘EFP’) on the COMEX Division, states that
“the physical commodity need only be substantially the economic equivalent
of the futures contract being exchanged” and that the Exchange Rule
confirms that “the Exchange would accept gold-backed exchange-traded
funds (‘ETF’) shares as the physical commodity component for an
EFP transaction involving COMEX gold futures contracts, provided that all
elements of a bona fide EFP pursuant to Exchange Rule 104.36 are
satisfied.” Thus, with every passing day, the risk that a decision to
convert paper gold or paper silver into physical gold and physical silver may
not be honored grows stronger. A game of musical chairs is now being played
with the foundation’s fund, and if other university endowments or funds
move before ours, your foundation may very well find itself as the one left
standing without a chair. The same risk factors must be taken into
consideration regarding any paper silver derivatives held by the foundation
as well.
On
March 25, 2010, at a US Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) hearing
on position limits in gold and silver futures markets, Jeffrey Christian of
the CPM Group testified that it was his belief that 100 times more gold
futures contracts trade, on average, than the amount of physical gold ounces
actually available for purchase on the physical market. Whether this number
is the same in the silver futures markets or whether this number is 200
times, 95 times, 85 times or 80 times, and not 100 times, is not as important
as the fact that there is an enormous imbalance in the ounces of paper gold
and paper silver owned by individuals and institutions versus the ACTUAL
amount of physical gold and physical silver that exists in the real world.
I’m sure you have heard of others argue that such an imbalance is not a
fraud because all commodity markets, including oil, coffee, soybeans and corn
possess huge imbalances between the amounts traded in futures markets and the
amounts that actually exist in the physical market.
However
such an argument contains a formal logical fallacy because the premise behind
the argument is flawed. Arguing that all commodity futures derivative
products trade in a similar fashion to gold futures contracts, and thus,
there is not a problem with the manner in which gold futures contracts trade, is a fundamentally flawed argument. This does not
prove that gold futures contracts are not flawed. It only proves that the
mechanism by which ALL commodity futures contracts trade are flawed. In fact,
if you’ve ever wondered how oil can soar from $50 a barrel to $150 a
barrel back down to $40 a barrel and then soar back to $110 a barrel in very
condensed periods of time, it is the flawed mechanisms of futures contracts
that allows these crazy price movements. If more and
more endowment funds or foundations with substantial investments in the GLD
and SLV ETFs or gold and silver futures contracts decide to convert their
paper contracts into physical gold and silver, the ability to secure physical
gold and physical silver represented by all gold and silver paper derivative
contracts WILL become problematic, and eventually, impossible in the future.
When
this happens, and I believe it will, there is a distinct possibility that the
prices established in futures markets will become very different than the
prices established in physical markets. For example, paper futures markets
for silver may eventually trade at $80 an ounce and physical silver dealers
may demand no less than $90 for the very same ounce of silver. If you see
this happening, I believe that your window of opportunity to convert paper
into physical may have already passed.
As
an avid supporter of your foundation’s mission, I urge you to discuss
this very real problem with other members of your board at the next board
meeting, and enact a vote to take physical delivery of all paper gold and
paper silver contracts currently held within the foundation’s fund as
soon as possible. Though the execution of such a decision will require some
administration, the University of Texas System moved on this problem quickly
before they were stuck in a corner with no way out and perhaps left with only
a handful of worthless paper. I sincerely hope that you will do the same.
There is much to be gained by deciding to tackle this problem pro-actively
and everything to lose through inaction.
Sincerely,
Your
Name
J.S. Kim
SmartKnowledgeU
JS Kim is the Managing Director and
Foun target="_blank"der of SmartKnowledgeU, a fiercely independent investment
consulting and research firm that devises investment strategies to protect
Main Street from the fraud of Wall Street.
Article originally published
on SmartknowledgeU< target="_blank"/span> here
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