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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Writing's On The Wall: Texas Pulls $1 Billion In Gold From NY Fed, Makes It "Non-Confiscatable" The lack of faith in central bank trustworthiness is spreading. First Germany, then Holland, and Austria, and now - as we noted was possible previously - Texas has enacted a Bill to repatriate $1 billion of gold from The NY Fed's vaults to a newly established state gold bullion depository..."People have this image of Texas as big and powerful
so for a lot of people, this is exactly where they would want to go with their gold," and the Bill includes a section to prevent forced seizure from the Federal Government. From 2011: "The University of Texas Investment Management Co., the second-largest U.S. academic endowment, took delivery of almost $1 billion in gold bullion and is storing the bars in a New York vault, according to the funds board." The decision to turn the funds investment into gold bars was influenced by Kyle Bass, a Dallas hedge fund manager and member of the endowments board, Zimmerman said at its annual meeting on April 14. Bass made $500 million on the U.S. subprime-mortgage collapse. Central banks are printing more money than they ever have, so whats the value of money in terms of purchases of goods and services, Bass said yesterday in a telephone interview. I look at gold as just another currency that they cant print any more of. And now, after we noted the possibility previously, as The Epoch Times reports, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a bill into law on Friday, June 12, that will allow Texas to build a gold and silver bullion depository. In addition, Texas will repatriate $1 billion worth of bullion from the Federal Reserve in New York to the new facility once completed. On the surface the bill looks rather innocent, but its implications are far reaching. HB 483, relating to the establishment and administration of a state bullion depository to store gold and silver coins, was introduced by state Rep. Giovanni Capriglione. Capriglione told the Star-Telegram: We are not talking Fort Knox. But when I first announced this, I got so many emails and phone calls from people literally all over the world who said they want to store their gold
in a Texas depository. People have this image of Texas as big and powerful
so for a lot of people, this is exactly where they would want to go with their gold. But isnt New York, where most of the worlds gold is stored, also big and powerful? Why does the state of Texas want to go through the trouble of building its own storage facility? There are precisely two important reasons. One involves distrust in the current storage system. The second threatens the paper money system as a whole. In a lot of cases with gold you may not have clear title to the metal. You may have a counterparty relationship that makes you a creditor. If the counterparty has a problem unrelated to gold, they can default and then you become an unsecured creditor in bankruptcy, said Keith Weiner, president of the Gold Standard Institute. This means you get whatever is left after liquidation, often just a fraction of the initial value of your holdings. This exact scenario happened with futures broker MF Global. I knew people who had warehouse receipts to gold bars with a specific serial number. But that gold had an encumbered title and they became unsecured creditors in bankruptcy, said Weiner. In Texas, two big public pension funds from the University of Texas (UoT) and the Teacher Retirement System (TRS) own gold worth more than $1 billion. Being uncomfortable with holding purely financial gold in the form of futures and Exchange-traded Funds, University of Texas actually took delivery of the gold bars in 2011 and warehoused it with HSBC Bank in New York. At the time pension fund board member and hedge fund manager Kyle Bass explained: As a fiduciary, which I am in that position to the extent you own gold and you are going for a long time, and its not a trade.
We looked at the COMEX at the time and they had about $80 billion of open interest between futures and futures options. And in the warehouse they had $2.7 billion of deliverables. We are going to own it a long time. You are on the board, you are a fiduciary, so thats an easy one, you go get it. Bass is implying that there is much more financial gold out there than physical, and that it is prudent to actually hold the physical. Taking the gold to Texas would then also solve the counterparty risk. In this case its going to be a depository, the gold is going to be there, they are not going to be able to lend it out and it wont serve as collateral for other transactions of the bank. said Victor Sperandeo of trading firm EAM Partners. Because if the bank closes, you are screwed. I think that somebody was looking at that, we better have this under our complete control, said constitutional lawyer and gold expert Edwin Vieira, of the Texas bill. They dont want to have the gold in some bank somewhere and in two to five years it turns out not to be there. So far most of the attention has focused on the part of the depository and the big institutions. However, the bill also includes a provision to prevent seizure, which is important for private parties who want to avoid another 1933 style confiscation of their bullion by Federal authorities. Poster Comment: I think the Texans could be hauled into court for being anti-Semitic because they just do not trust New York Jews. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Horse (#0)
There's that, but we realize that if we don't hold it, we don't own it.
There are no replies to Comment # 1. End Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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