I read somewhere we have stored 1,500 tonnes of gold for Germany. Lets do the math:
16 ounces to a pound
2000 pounds to a tonne
Spot gold price today $1,222- an ounce
$1,222- x 16 ounces = $19,552-
$19,552- x 2000 pounds = $39,104,000-
$39,104,000- x 1,500 tonnes = $58,656,000,000-
So ruffly just over $58B US dollars. Not much Ken in the big scheme of things. But here is the thing; Germany wants "their" gold back - not re-minted gold or US paper.
Also keep in mind, when Germany asked for "their" gold back, it was around $1,675- an ounce. So lets do the math again:
$1,675- x 16 ounces = $26,800-
$26,800- x 2000 pounds = $53,600,000-
$53,600,000- x 1,500 tonnes = $80,400,000,000-
Jan 2013 vs. Jan 2014 there is a Δ of -21,744,000,000-
So with this info, lets hypothesize here: If the Federal Reserve is going to return 1,500 tonnes of newly minted gold to Germany at a ratio of 1:1 (ounce for ounce) over the next seven years it means that the Federal Reserve has to buy gold on the open market.
So will the Federal Reserve manipulate the price of gold downwards to be able to buy more gold for less money? Remember, when the Germans asked for "their" gold back gold was selling for $1,675- an ounce. Twelve months later it is selling for $1,222- an ounce.
Will gold still rise in price though because China, India and Russia are also competing for the available gold on the market? As the stock market starts to come apart will more and more investors move from it to buying commodities like gold, silver, land, etc? Will this force gold to climb too?
We all are peering into our crystal balls in order to see into the future to gauge when the collapse will happen. Rehypothecation and the German gold story is a small window into the future. Watch who lines up next asking the Fed for their gold back. Stay tuned.