Thursday, February 11, 2010

Back and in deep freeze mode

Yeah, I am back to blogging after a 100+ day hiatus. No reason. Just found nothing exciting to blog.

A few minutes back, I read a nice piece by Greg Pytel titled “A US way out” and I almost froze. Here’s the excerpt from that chiller of a post –

“Washington Times compares the US model to Franklin D Roosvelt’s New Deal. However the current financial crisis does not resemble the 1930’s depression in its root cause. The current crisis is a result of a giant global financial pyramid collapse that left a quadrillions of dollars liquidity hole. Therefore President Obama’s actions may not be modelled on the New Deal, but on some other premise…

Considering the current US debt and its rate of increase, the US borrow and spend solution reminds an insolvent person who keeps on borrowing money, as long as there is anybody “silly” enough prepared to lend him. He knows that at the end of this process he will not pay anything back but simply declare bankruptcy, write off the entire debt and start its financial life anew.

The US, as the country, is economically and militarily powerful enough to declare that it no longer honours its debt and its currency. Effectively the dollar could be written off as a currency. As around two thirds of world reserves are held in dollar they will be written off. The US will have no debt.”


And then I read “History of Collapsed Dollar” in Commodityonline.com and Pytel’s hypothesis didn’t seem like a fictional conjecture at all. It could get catastrophically real.

“As with any fiat currency, the Continental dollar [USD version 1] later collapsed due to inflation. With politicians unwilling to fix the deficit and instead choosing to inflate the currency, the currency was left in ruins. The Continental dollar was eventually recalled by Congress and redeemed at 1/40th its face value. In a very few localities, it remained in existence for many more years, where it eventually plummeted to 1/1000th of its issuing value.

The factors that led to the demise of the first currency of the United States are the same that are leading the assault on the current US dollar. History shows us that when fiat currencies fail, precious metals remain as a standard of wealth and an accepted medium of exchange.”

And I now turn to a new asset class that I had shunned so far. Paper Gold. Gold ETF, I mean. Googled up and landed here. I will watch the price of Gold for next 4-5 months and might end up investing in this by August, 2010.

Just wish Barack Obama allows me time till then. Amen.
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