Re: CHF: Safe Haven or Mirage?
Sorry GRG55 - I think all those here affecting fashionable disillusionment" with the CHF are being altogether too sophisticated. I was rummaging around last night looking for dirt on the CHF and found references to something between 32% and 38% of gold bullion backing the full volume of their monetary aggregates. That was in 1999, with gold in the $200's range!! What is that gold stash worth today relative to the monetary aggregates?
The CHF may not be directly backed by the gold any more, but correct me if I'm wrong: does any other country in the world come within a country mile of that gold to currency aggregate ratio? Their net gold reserves are I think fifth in the world after US / Germany / Italy, and the IMF, and they are a tiny country expressed per capita to their reserves?
I continue to suspect you fashionable CHF skeptics are full of hot air on this topic. How could you overlook this? It is not just a "datum", it is in fact the WHOLE STORY. I think new iTulipers browsing around these pages would read all this guff about how "weak" the new CHF fundamentals are and wind up considerably misled. Show me one other currency in the world that anything remotely like this ratio of gold bullion backing in it's vaults relative to currency in circulation.
UBS may be mired in the same crap paper that's mired dozens of other major banks worldwide - but to suggest the Swiss Govt. is on the string for the "full extent of UBS's debts" would be merely specious. If they underwrote a huge amount of UBS's liabilities outright their gold bullion to currency ratio would STILL be higher than that of 98% of countries in the entire world.
What are you guys talking about then? You consider the hard reserves of Japan outweigh it's net monetary aggregates perhaps? No. They beguile you with abstractions instead, such as their "powerful export engine". Sometimes one can get carried away by superficial sophistications. Look at the bottom line - where the solid gold is. Swiss are in the top position for hard gold relative to paper. End of discussion.
Sorry GRG55 - I think all those here affecting fashionable disillusionment" with the CHF are being altogether too sophisticated. I was rummaging around last night looking for dirt on the CHF and found references to something between 32% and 38% of gold bullion backing the full volume of their monetary aggregates. That was in 1999, with gold in the $200's range!! What is that gold stash worth today relative to the monetary aggregates?
The CHF may not be directly backed by the gold any more, but correct me if I'm wrong: does any other country in the world come within a country mile of that gold to currency aggregate ratio? Their net gold reserves are I think fifth in the world after US / Germany / Italy, and the IMF, and they are a tiny country expressed per capita to their reserves?
I continue to suspect you fashionable CHF skeptics are full of hot air on this topic. How could you overlook this? It is not just a "datum", it is in fact the WHOLE STORY. I think new iTulipers browsing around these pages would read all this guff about how "weak" the new CHF fundamentals are and wind up considerably misled. Show me one other currency in the world that anything remotely like this ratio of gold bullion backing in it's vaults relative to currency in circulation.
UBS may be mired in the same crap paper that's mired dozens of other major banks worldwide - but to suggest the Swiss Govt. is on the string for the "full extent of UBS's debts" would be merely specious. If they underwrote a huge amount of UBS's liabilities outright their gold bullion to currency ratio would STILL be higher than that of 98% of countries in the entire world.
What are you guys talking about then? You consider the hard reserves of Japan outweigh it's net monetary aggregates perhaps? No. They beguile you with abstractions instead, such as their "powerful export engine". Sometimes one can get carried away by superficial sophistications. Look at the bottom line - where the solid gold is. Swiss are in the top position for hard gold relative to paper. End of discussion.
Originally posted by GRG55
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