The G-20âs Secret Debt Solution
By Larry Edelson on April 2, 2009
http://www.dailymarkets.com/economy/2009/04/02/the-g-20s-secret-debt-solution/
Iâm buried monitoring the markets ⦠scrutinizing them virtually 24/7 ⦠checking every piece of news I can get my hands on.
I also have three Dollar Index charts on my trading screen: A monthly chart, a daily chart, and a 60-minute chart to check the short-term moves.
Attendees at the G-20 meeting will strive to wipe the worldâs debt ledgers clean.
Thatâs because thereâs a lot going on in the currency markets. They need to be monitored closely. Miss a development - no matter how small it may seem - and it can cost you big time!
Thatâs especially true now because a very important G-20 meeting convened TODAY in London. And it has the potential to rock the currency markets.
So in this column of Money & Markets, Iâm going to give you an important, complimentary look at the recently published March edition of my Real Wealth Report, which took an in-depth look at the G-20 meeting and the history of currency devaluations.
I think itâs critically important that everyone have the info I published in my March issue.
Naturally, I cannot give you the specific recommendations I make in that issue to profit from what I believe are the next moves by the G-20. Those are reserved for my paying subscribers.
Nevertheless, the content of that issue is crucial to your future. So letâs get started â¦
April 2, 2009: The Beginning of a New World Monetary System
In recent issues, Iâve warned you about the massive forced currency devaluations and asset reflation scheme in the works at the highest levels of governments and central banks worldwide.
And judging by recent comments from international leaders, the plan seems to be picking up momentum.
Undoubtedly, the spotlight at todayâs G-20 meeting will be on what leading finance ministers and central bankers plan to do about the global financial sewage. What you wonât hear much about, though, will be the secret meetings hidden from the media to forge a radical overhaul of the worldâs monetary system.
The real goal of the G-20 meetings: Creation of a new financial order based upon drastically new units of paper or fiat money to help wipe the worldâs debt ledgers clean.
How? By systematically and progressively devaluing existing currencies, especially the U.S. dollar, and re-inflating ALL asset prices.
If the plan shapes up as I think it will, my current target for gold of $2,270 could turn out to be ultra-conservative. Depending on how the new currencies are structured, we could ultimately be looking at $5,000 gold ⦠or even higher!
Over the next few weeks, I recommend you keep your ears tuned to the media for phrases like ânew financial architectureâ ⦠ânew monetary systemâ ⦠the ârules of the gameâ ⦠âBretton Woods IIâ ⦠and other financial speak. They are essentially the cover words that will ultimately spell a dramatic change in the value of money.
And while the planning stages will occur behind closed doors, already the public cries for a seismic shake-up of the world currency structure are becoming louder and louder â¦
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... French President Sarkozy recently declared, âWe must rethink the financial system from scratch, as at Bretton Woodsâ ⦠and that itâs time to âchange the rules of the game.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... British Prime Minister Brown touts âa new global financial order,â describing this as a âdecisive momentâ for the world economy to adopt a ânew Bretton Woods.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... European Central Bank council member Ewald Nowotny calls into question the âcentrality of the U.S. dollarâ and further states that the U.S., Europe, and Asia are developing a âtri-polar global currency system to replace the current dollar-centric reserve structure with more centers of gravity.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... At the recent World Economic Forum, Russiaâs Prime Minister Putin explains that âExcessive dependence on a single reserve currency is dangerous for the global economy.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... The Peopleâs Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party and the unofficial mouthpiece of the Beijing government, warns of the threat of a âfinancial tsunamiâ and urges action. âThe world urgently needs to create a diversified currency and financial system and fair and just financial order that is not dependent on the United States.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... On March 19, the United Nations Commission on Reforms of International Finance and Economic Structures, chaired by the 2001 Economics Nobel Prize-winning economist, Joseph Stiglitz, recommended that the dollar be replaced as the worldâs reserve currency.
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... On March 23, the Peopleâs Bank of China (PBOC), Chinaâs central bank, proposed replacing the U.S. dollar as the international reserve currency with a new global system controlled by the International Monetary Fund.
Changing the value of a currency is nothing new. Government officials have talked the talk before. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan floated the idea in response to the Latin American debt crisis in 1982. The next year, when the French franc nosedived with three successive devaluations, it was President Francois Mitterrandâs turn to call for âa new Bretton Woods.â
Then, spurred by the emerging-market financial troubles of 1997-98, British Prime Minister Tony Blair opined, âWe should not be afraid to think radically and fundamentally ⦠We need to commit ourselves today to build a new Bretton Woods for the next millennium.â
In the past, whenever an international financial crisis crops up, authorities in high places have often referred to a new Bretton Woods âsolutionâ (i.e., changing the value of paper money).
This time, though, given the Great Depression II, it looks like the current generation of leaders is ready to walk the walk. Indeed, they may have no other choice.
Historical Background:
The First Seeds of Major Global Currency Tampering - The 1933 London Monetary and Economic Conference
The concept of changing the worldâs monetary system to wipe bad debts clean and to start anew with a fresh ledger or balance sheet, if you will, is not new.
It dates back to Roman times when emperors successively devalued the Roman denarius to wipe out debts and spark asset inflation.
More recently, emerging economies have engaged in chronic currency devaluations to deal with their mountains of debt. But surprisingly to most analysts, the industrialized world has also tried to âchange the rules of the game,â which is central-bank speak for altering the value of paper money.
And interestingly, the most famous historical precedent - almost an exact analogy to todayâs emergency G-20 meetings - was a little-known but critically important meeting in 1933, called the London Monetary and Economic Conference.
At the depths of that Great Depression, the worldâs leading economic ministers met to find a cure for the global depression ⦠just like theyâre doing today.
But when finance ministers, central bankers and government leaders met in London to work out a plan, President Franklin Roosevelt changed his mind at the last minute and refused to attend. By most historical accounts, he had decided that there was no time to bicker with other nations and that action needed to be taken immediately.
So instead of attending the meeting, Roosevelt declared a bank holiday for four days, closing all banks in the country - largely to stem an outflow of gold, but also so federal examiners could inspect them and declare them fit for duty. Those that failed the inspection remained closed permanently.
More importantly, Roosevelt issued the famous Executive Order 6102 confiscating most all privately-owned gold by Americans, taking America officially off the gold standard, banning gold exports, and devaluing the U.S. dollar by 40 percent against gold to stem the deflationary spiral of the Depression.
Aside from the location of the meeting, there are tantalizing similarities between that 1933 Conference and next monthâs G-20 meeting â¦
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the global economy was in tatters from an international financial crisis.
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the global economy was suffering from massive debts gone bad and deflation.
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the main thrust of the 1933 initiative was to clear the deck of debt by changing the value of paper money.
I didnât expect President Obama, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, or Treasury Secretary Geithner to put a kibosh on todayâs G-20 meeting, as Roosevelt did at the London Monetary and Economic Conference.
The reason: Back in 1933, the U.S. was a creditor to the world. So Roosevelt had the leverage to basically take the world by surprise and go it on his own.
In contrast, the U.S. is the worldâs largest debtor today. If America even thought about trying to go it alone, it would end up very alone indeed ⦠as our creditors around the world would then threaten to stop financing our debt needs, causing the U.S. economy to truly implode.
CONTINUED BELOW
By Larry Edelson on April 2, 2009
http://www.dailymarkets.com/economy/2009/04/02/the-g-20s-secret-debt-solution/
Iâm buried monitoring the markets ⦠scrutinizing them virtually 24/7 ⦠checking every piece of news I can get my hands on.
I also have three Dollar Index charts on my trading screen: A monthly chart, a daily chart, and a 60-minute chart to check the short-term moves.
Attendees at the G-20 meeting will strive to wipe the worldâs debt ledgers clean.
Thatâs because thereâs a lot going on in the currency markets. They need to be monitored closely. Miss a development - no matter how small it may seem - and it can cost you big time!
Thatâs especially true now because a very important G-20 meeting convened TODAY in London. And it has the potential to rock the currency markets.
So in this column of Money & Markets, Iâm going to give you an important, complimentary look at the recently published March edition of my Real Wealth Report, which took an in-depth look at the G-20 meeting and the history of currency devaluations.
I think itâs critically important that everyone have the info I published in my March issue.
Naturally, I cannot give you the specific recommendations I make in that issue to profit from what I believe are the next moves by the G-20. Those are reserved for my paying subscribers.
Nevertheless, the content of that issue is crucial to your future. So letâs get started â¦
April 2, 2009: The Beginning of a New World Monetary System
In recent issues, Iâve warned you about the massive forced currency devaluations and asset reflation scheme in the works at the highest levels of governments and central banks worldwide.
And judging by recent comments from international leaders, the plan seems to be picking up momentum.
Undoubtedly, the spotlight at todayâs G-20 meeting will be on what leading finance ministers and central bankers plan to do about the global financial sewage. What you wonât hear much about, though, will be the secret meetings hidden from the media to forge a radical overhaul of the worldâs monetary system.
The real goal of the G-20 meetings: Creation of a new financial order based upon drastically new units of paper or fiat money to help wipe the worldâs debt ledgers clean.
How? By systematically and progressively devaluing existing currencies, especially the U.S. dollar, and re-inflating ALL asset prices.
If the plan shapes up as I think it will, my current target for gold of $2,270 could turn out to be ultra-conservative. Depending on how the new currencies are structured, we could ultimately be looking at $5,000 gold ⦠or even higher!
Over the next few weeks, I recommend you keep your ears tuned to the media for phrases like ânew financial architectureâ ⦠ânew monetary systemâ ⦠the ârules of the gameâ ⦠âBretton Woods IIâ ⦠and other financial speak. They are essentially the cover words that will ultimately spell a dramatic change in the value of money.
And while the planning stages will occur behind closed doors, already the public cries for a seismic shake-up of the world currency structure are becoming louder and louder â¦
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... French President Sarkozy recently declared, âWe must rethink the financial system from scratch, as at Bretton Woodsâ ⦠and that itâs time to âchange the rules of the game.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... British Prime Minister Brown touts âa new global financial order,â describing this as a âdecisive momentâ for the world economy to adopt a ânew Bretton Woods.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... European Central Bank council member Ewald Nowotny calls into question the âcentrality of the U.S. dollarâ and further states that the U.S., Europe, and Asia are developing a âtri-polar global currency system to replace the current dollar-centric reserve structure with more centers of gravity.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... At the recent World Economic Forum, Russiaâs Prime Minister Putin explains that âExcessive dependence on a single reserve currency is dangerous for the global economy.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... The Peopleâs Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party and the unofficial mouthpiece of the Beijing government, warns of the threat of a âfinancial tsunamiâ and urges action. âThe world urgently needs to create a diversified currency and financial system and fair and just financial order that is not dependent on the United States.â
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... On March 19, the United Nations Commission on Reforms of International Finance and Economic Structures, chaired by the 2001 Economics Nobel Prize-winning economist, Joseph Stiglitz, recommended that the dollar be replaced as the worldâs reserve currency.
arrow_black A Sneak Peek at the Future ... On March 23, the Peopleâs Bank of China (PBOC), Chinaâs central bank, proposed replacing the U.S. dollar as the international reserve currency with a new global system controlled by the International Monetary Fund.
Changing the value of a currency is nothing new. Government officials have talked the talk before. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan floated the idea in response to the Latin American debt crisis in 1982. The next year, when the French franc nosedived with three successive devaluations, it was President Francois Mitterrandâs turn to call for âa new Bretton Woods.â
Then, spurred by the emerging-market financial troubles of 1997-98, British Prime Minister Tony Blair opined, âWe should not be afraid to think radically and fundamentally ⦠We need to commit ourselves today to build a new Bretton Woods for the next millennium.â
In the past, whenever an international financial crisis crops up, authorities in high places have often referred to a new Bretton Woods âsolutionâ (i.e., changing the value of paper money).
This time, though, given the Great Depression II, it looks like the current generation of leaders is ready to walk the walk. Indeed, they may have no other choice.
Historical Background:
The First Seeds of Major Global Currency Tampering - The 1933 London Monetary and Economic Conference
The concept of changing the worldâs monetary system to wipe bad debts clean and to start anew with a fresh ledger or balance sheet, if you will, is not new.
It dates back to Roman times when emperors successively devalued the Roman denarius to wipe out debts and spark asset inflation.
More recently, emerging economies have engaged in chronic currency devaluations to deal with their mountains of debt. But surprisingly to most analysts, the industrialized world has also tried to âchange the rules of the game,â which is central-bank speak for altering the value of paper money.
And interestingly, the most famous historical precedent - almost an exact analogy to todayâs emergency G-20 meetings - was a little-known but critically important meeting in 1933, called the London Monetary and Economic Conference.
At the depths of that Great Depression, the worldâs leading economic ministers met to find a cure for the global depression ⦠just like theyâre doing today.
But when finance ministers, central bankers and government leaders met in London to work out a plan, President Franklin Roosevelt changed his mind at the last minute and refused to attend. By most historical accounts, he had decided that there was no time to bicker with other nations and that action needed to be taken immediately.
So instead of attending the meeting, Roosevelt declared a bank holiday for four days, closing all banks in the country - largely to stem an outflow of gold, but also so federal examiners could inspect them and declare them fit for duty. Those that failed the inspection remained closed permanently.
More importantly, Roosevelt issued the famous Executive Order 6102 confiscating most all privately-owned gold by Americans, taking America officially off the gold standard, banning gold exports, and devaluing the U.S. dollar by 40 percent against gold to stem the deflationary spiral of the Depression.
Aside from the location of the meeting, there are tantalizing similarities between that 1933 Conference and next monthâs G-20 meeting â¦
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the global economy was in tatters from an international financial crisis.
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the global economy was suffering from massive debts gone bad and deflation.
arrow_half A Sneak Peek at the Future ... Then as now, the main thrust of the 1933 initiative was to clear the deck of debt by changing the value of paper money.
I didnât expect President Obama, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, or Treasury Secretary Geithner to put a kibosh on todayâs G-20 meeting, as Roosevelt did at the London Monetary and Economic Conference.
The reason: Back in 1933, the U.S. was a creditor to the world. So Roosevelt had the leverage to basically take the world by surprise and go it on his own.
In contrast, the U.S. is the worldâs largest debtor today. If America even thought about trying to go it alone, it would end up very alone indeed ⦠as our creditors around the world would then threaten to stop financing our debt needs, causing the U.S. economy to truly implode.
CONTINUED BELOW