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ST: US scores own goal on gold
 
We noticed a few weeks ago Iran was shut out of SWIFT, the global payments system. We may assume this happened after America had put pressure on this private Belgian company. SWIFT, The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, is the keystone of the international payments system. SWIFT said it took the action in response to EU regulations issued against Iran. This has all been part of the ratchetting up of pressure on Iran. Obama is in an election year and he faces many pressures to be decisive and proactive.

In economic terms this is a bold act. SWIFT has very much been used as the West’s weapon that they have decided to use in an apparent act of economic war.

SWIFT, gold and barter

SWIFT’s reputation as an independent mechanism for facilitating and settling global trade has been sullied by this act. The SWIFT system enables large trade deals to be settled instantaneously, usually in dollars, the world’s reserve currency. As a result of this act nations such as China and India wishing to buy Iranian oil have had to find other means of settling oil trades outside of the SWIFT system, and thus outside of the petro-dollar.

China has continued to buy Iranian oil, and India mooted buying oil with gold. Subsequently India was told by Washington in no uncertain terms that “you’re either with us or against us” and not to do business with Iranian institutions. The Chinese and Indian authorities are not compelled; this has not been well received in Asia. China has once more issued comments about its abhorrence for unilateral behaviour, coercive actions and general bully boy tactics. Nations wanting to trade with Iran for valuable resources have been impacted by Western politics.


A rising and high gold price are not in the interests of the masters of our economies. The canary in the coalmine of the global financial system was singing even more loudly, and the management of our economic masters was being even more starkly questioned. Global political and economic stability was hardly advanced.

The decline of empire but steadfast gold

Fast forward to today, and it feels like we are witnessing another step in the death of an empire; the economic empire of the USA which a range of analysts believe peaked in the two decades immediately following the Second World War. Empires do hasten their demise with acts that appear from afar to be short-sighted and dim witted. Has using the SWIFT payments system as a tool of war proved a mistake that will hasten the decline of the dollar, and thus America? Wielding the SWIFT system in this way may be a trump card that other agents to the game allow you to only play once.

We ask these questions because it appears to us that America’s greatest interest should be in the longevity of the dollar, not unrest in the Middle East and higher fuel prices. In Currency Wars, Jim Rickards expertly articulates why America’s greatest strength, and weakness, is her reserve currency privilege. If this recent action, as part of the wider Iran strategy, proves to highlight this weakness then this is poor economics and politics on America’s part. Politicians are prone to err; that’s why we hold gold. In fact, these policy actions have only served to push gold further towards the centre of the monetary universe.
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