http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/deathofpetrodollar.htm
Will
oil soon be traded in a currency that is thousands of years old? What would
a "gold for oil" system mean for the petrodollar and the U.S.
economy? Are Russia and China hoarding massive amounts of gold because
they plan to kill the petrodollar? Since the 1970s, the U.S. dollar has
been the currency that the international community has used to trade oil around
the globe. This has created an overwhelming demand for U.S. dollars and
U.S. debt. But what happens when the rest of the globe starts rejecting
the increasingly unstable U.S. dollar and figures out that gold can be used as
a currency in international trade? The truth is that it doesn't take a
lot of imagination to figure that out. Demand for the U.S. dollar and
U.S. debt would fall off the map and there would be a rush into gold unlike
anything we have ever seen before. So are Russia and China accumulating
unprecedented amounts of gold right now because they eventually plan to cut the
legs out from under the petrodollar and they want to gobble up huge stockpiles
of gold before the cat is out of the bag? Of course they will never admit
this publicly, but there are rumblings out there that this is exactly what is
happening.
Not that you can really blame
any nation that wants to get into gold right now. News outlets all over
the globe are telling us that we are in the
midst of a "currency war" as central banks all over the planet race
to devalue their currencies.
So why would anyone want to be
in paper in such an environment?
And of course the Federal Reserve is one of the biggest
offenders. The Fed has been printing money like it is going out of style, and
nobody at the Fed or in the U.S. government really seems too concerned that all
of this money printing could be endangering the petrodollar.
But the truth is that the Fed is
endangering the petrodollar. Just read some foreign news stories about
the U.S. dollar. They mock us for our reckless money printing.
In the end, our recklessness
will make it very easy for the rest of the world to ditch the U.S. dollar.
At some point, it will
happen. In fact, there are persistent rumors that Russia and China
actually intend to make it happen.
Many believe that this is the
reason both nations have been hoarding so much gold recently.
Just check out how much gold
Russia has been accumulating. The following is from a recent Bloomberg article...
When
Vladimir Putin says the U.S. is endangering the global economy by abusing its
dollar monopoly, he’s not just talking. He’s betting on it.
Not
only has Putin made Russia the world’s largest oil producer, he’s also made it
the biggest gold buyer. His central bank has added 570 metric tons of the metal
in the past decade, a quarter more than runner-up China, according to IMF data
compiled by Bloomberg. The added gold is also almost triple the weight of the
Statue of Liberty.
“The
more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there’s a
cataclysm with the dollar, the euro, the pound or any other reserve currency,”
Evgeny Fedorov, a lawmaker for Putin’s United Russia party in the lower house
of parliament, said in a telephone interview in Moscow.
And Russia's gold hoarding
appears to have accelerated last year. According to one recent report,
Russia added 3.2 million ounces of gold to their
reserves in 2012 alone.
But of even greater concern is
China. Nobody really knows how much gold China has, because they do not
tell us, but all indications point to the fact that Chinese gold hoarding has
gone into overdrive. The following is from a Zero Hedge article from a few
months ago...
Because
while earlier today we were wondering (rhetorically, of course) what China is
doing with all that excess trade surplus if it is not recycling it back into
Treasurys, now we once again find out that instead of purchasing US paper,
Beijing continues to buy non-US gold, in the form of 68 tons in imports from
Hong Kong in the month of June. The year to date total (6 months)? 383
tons. In other words, in half a year China, whose official total tally
is still a massively underrepresented 1054 tons, has imported more gold than
the official gold reserves of Portugal, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and so
on, and whose YTD imports alone make it the 14th largest holder of gold in the
world. Realistically, by now China, which hasn't provided an honest gold
reserve holdings update to the IMF in years, most certainly has more gold
than the IMF, and its 2814 tons, itself. Of course, the moment the PBOC does
announce its official updated gold stash, a gold price in the mid-$1000 range
will be a long gone memory.
As I wrote about the other day, nobody produces more
gold than China does, and nobody imports more gold than China does.
Everyone agrees that China seems
to have an insatiable appetite for gold, but nobody can agree on exactly how
much gold they actually have. One recent estimate put China's gold
reserves at more than 7,000 tons of
gold, but it could even be much higher than that. Nobody really
knows.
So what are Russia and China up
to?
Well, for a long time both
nations have expressed displeasure with the fact that the U.S. dollar is the de
facto currency of the world. Leaders from both nations have suggested the
possibility of adopting a new global reserve currency, but up to this point no
real contenders have emerged to dethrone the U.S. dollar.
So for now, the U.S. dollar reigns
supreme in international trade. Sadly, even though most Americans greatly
benefit from the petrodollar, most of them do not even know what it is.
For those that do not fully understand the petrodollar, the following is a good
explanation of the petrodollar from a recent article by Christopher Doran...
In
a nutshell, any country that wants to purchase oil from an oil producing
country has to do so in U.S. dollars. This is a long standing agreement within
all oil exporting nations, aka OPEC, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries. The UK for example, cannot simply buy oil from Saudi Arabia by
exchanging British pounds. Instead, the UK must exchange its pounds for U.S.
dollars. The major exception at present is, of course, Iran.
This
means that every country in the world that imports oil—which is the vast
majority of the world's nations—has to have immense quantities of dollars in
reserve. These dollars of course are not hidden under the proverbial national
mattress. They are invested. And because they are U.S. dollars, they are
invested in U.S. Treasury bills and other interest bearing securities that can
be easily converted to purchase dollar-priced commodities like oil. This is
what has allowed the U.S. to run up trillions of dollars of debt: the rest of
the world simply buys up that debt in the form of U.S. interest bearing securities.
And all of this has worked out
very nicely for the United States. It has created a massive demand for
U.S. dollars and U.S. debt.
But what would happen if the
rest of the world rejected the petrodollar system and adopted a
"petrogold" system instead?
A recent article by Jim Willie discussed how a petrogold system might
work...
The
crux of the non-US$ trade vehicle devised as a USDollar alternative will be the
Gold Trade Note. It will enable peer-to-peer payments to be completed from
direct account transfers independent of currency, and most importantly, not
done through the narrow pipes and channels controlled by the bankers with their
omnipresent SWIFT code system among the world of banks. The Gold Trade Note
will act much like a Letter of Credit, serve as a short-term bill, and maybe
even push aside the near 0% short-term USTreasury Bills that litter the banking
landscape. Any bond or bill earning almost no interest is veritable clutter.
The zero bound USTreasurys open the door in a big way for replacement by a
better vehicle. The new trade notes will involve posted gold as collateral,
whose entire system for trade usage will bear a massive gold core that also
will include silver and platinum, maybe other precious metals. The idea is to
avoid the FOREX systems, to avoid the USDollar, and to avoid the banks as much
as possible in a peer-to-peer system that can be executed between parties
holding Blackberry devices or simple PC to complete the payments on
transactions. If Gold is ignored by the corrupt bankers, then Gold will be the
center of the new trade system and the solution in providing a globally
accepted USDollar alternative.
And Russia and China would
greatly benefit from a petrogold system.
Today, Russia is the number one
oil exporter on the planet.
China is the number two consumer
of oil in the world, and at this point they are actually importing more oil from Saudi Arabia than the
United States is.
Does it make sense that they
should remain locked into a system that forces them to use U.S. dollars for all
of their oil transactions?
And now Russia even has the
number one oil company in the world. The following is from a recent
article by Marin Katusa...
Exxon
Mobil is no longer the world's number-one oil producer. As of yesterday, that
title belongs to Putin Oil Corp – oh, whoops. I mean the title belongs to
Rosneft, Russia's state-controlled oil company.
Rosneft
is buying TNK-BP, which is a vertically integrated oil company co-owned by
British oil firm BP and a group of Russian billionaires known as AAR. One of
the top-ten privately owned oil producers in the world, in 2010 TNK-BP churned
out 1.74 million barrels of oil equivalent per day from its assets in Russia
and Ukraine and processed almost half that amount through its refineries.
With
TNK-BP in its hands, Rosneft will be in charge of more than 4 million barrels
of oil production a day. And who is in charge of Rosneft? None other than
Vladimir Putin, Russia's resource-full president.
And Russian gas giant Gazprom
supplies a huge percentage of the natural gas that Europe uses...
Gazprom,
the Russian state gas company, already has Europe wrapped around its little
finger. Russia supplies 34% of Europe's gas needs, and when the
under-construction South Stream pipeline starts operating, that percentage will
increase. As if those developments weren't enough, yesterday Gazprom offered the
highest bid to obtain a stake in the massive Leviathan gas field off Israel's
coast.
Gazprom
in control of Europe's gas, Rosneft in control of its oil. A red hand
stretching out from Russia to strangle the supremacy of the West and pave the
way for a new world order– one with Russia at the helm.
Russia and China have a
tremendous amount of leverage when it comes to energy. What if they got
together with a bunch of oil producing nations in the Middle East and decided
to set up a system where oil is traded for gold? Would not much of the
rest of the world go along with such a system?
Of course if that happened the
U.S. financial system would crash. We would no longer be able to export
our inflation to the rest of the globe and prices would rise dramatically.
Demand for U.S. government debt would go through the
floor and interest rates on that debt and on everything else in our economy
would skyrocket. Economic activity would grind to a standstill and the
financial markets would collapse.
And that would just be for
starters.
Most Americans simply don't
understand that Russia and China have the power to collapse the U.S. economy by
going to a gold for oil system. All they have to do is pull the trigger.
The other day I wrote an article
entitled "Show
This To Anyone That Believes That 'Things Are Getting Better' In America"
which discussed all of the reasons why the U.S. economy is already
collapsing. But as bad as things are now, this is nothing compared to
what things will be like when the petrodollar dies.
So pay keen attention to
anything in the news about Russia or China suggesting that oil should be traded
for gold. When Russia and China pull the trigger, things will get messy
very quickly.