It has to do with characteristic No. 5, that bit about having intrinsic value. That's the real thorn in today's U.S. currency.
What intrinsic value does a piece of paper, with some ink saying "Federal Reserve Note," truly have?
Not much, aside from being able to buy things with them.
Since 1913, the very year the Federal Reserve was created,
the dollar has lost 95% of its value.And it's getting worse...
Before the late 2008 financial fallout, the Fed's balance sheet had $800 billion in assets. Today, it has tripled to $3 trillion.
That's a lot more dollars sloshing around. How could things possibly
not go up substantially in price when there is three times the number of dollars chasing nearly the same amount of goods and services?
And here's another question.
Why does a group of Fed Governors think they know what interest rates (the price of money, really) should be? Why not let the market determine the price of money, as it does with most everything else?
The cure for all of this is gold because it is real money. Always has been. Always will be.
Gold is De Facto Money
If you don't believe gold is already reasserting its traditional role as money, consider this.
Dr. Stephen Leeb, Chairman and CIO of Leeb Capital Management, recently said, "Gold is now the de facto reserve currency."
Last week,
Reuters reported that Iran is looking to skirt U.S.-led financial sanctions by paying for wheat
using gold as payment. American grains giant Cargill said sales could still be made to Iran, particularly if they paid with
non-dollar currencies.
There are also reports that India is buying Iranian oil, and
paying for it with gold.
All of this is happening at a time when as many as 13 U.S. states want to issue their own currencies in silver and gold.
In fact, North Carolina Republican Representative Glen Bradley introduced a currency bill last year.
Bradley said, "In the event of hyperinflation, depression, or other economic calamity related to the breakdown of the Federal Reserve System ... the State's governmental finances and private economy will be thrown into chaos."
What's more, Utah has already signed a bill into law recognizing U.S. mint-issued gold and silver coins as an acceptable form of payment.
The coins are treated like U.S. dollars for tax purposes and Utah State citizens can now contract to pay each other in gold if they so choose.
A Classic Case of "Do As I Do, Not As I Say"
But back to the breaking news about the Federal Reserve bank presidents.
Thanks to the recent disclosure by regional Fed bank chiefs, we now know how some have chosen to invest.
To call it "revealing" would be an understatement.
Among others, New York Fed President Dudley owned shares of insurer American International Group (NYSE: AIG) and General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE) while the Fed negotiated massive emergency funding bailouts for the insurance and finance giants.
Even more stunning are the holdings of Dallas Fed President Fisher, one of the richest of the 12. He's an alumnus of the financial industry, having worked as a banker, broker, and hedge fund manager, accumulating at least $21 million in the process.
Fisher's inflation-hedging assets include over 7,000 acres of farmland, and $50,000 each in platinum and uranium.
He also owns some of that stuff Bernanke doesn't think is real money. Fisher is practically a gold bug with $1 million invested in the SPDR's Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD).
Can you say conflict of interest? I rest my case.
Keep in mind that Fed decisions are made at secret meetings. The transcripts of those meetings are destroyed; a procedure that began in 1970, ironically the same year the Freedom-of-Information Act was passed.
What information about the economy, interest rates, employment, and so on, is so "sensitive" that the American people can't know?
Fisher's own "access to information" is not only privileged, it probably includes a little reading on Aristotle, too.
Look, these guys are not idiots. They just happen to think that we are.
So let's learn from Aristotle, and prove them wrong by investing in gold.