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Videos of Recent Meetings

Opening the Mint to Gold and Silver
by Antal E. Fekete

It's in the Law!
by Dr. Edwin Vieira, Jr., Ph.D., J.D.

Ropespinner Conspiracy
by Bob Hoye
September 2007

"Fragility, Instability and Moral Hazard"
by Peter Warburton
(in PDF format)

"Economic Perspectives"
by Peter Warburton
(in PDF format)

"The Search for Stable Prices and the Role of Gold"
by Professor Forrest Capie

"The New Deal and Corporatism"
by Gene Smiley
(in PDF format)

"Back to Basics"
by Alan Brown

Audio of Fall 2006
Meeting Part I
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Audio of Fall 2006
Meeting Part II
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Audio of Spring 2006
Meeting
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Audio of Fall 2005 Meeting
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"Political and Monetary Reform"
by Bob Hoye
(in PDF format)

Speech presented by Jack Willoughby at the CMRE meeting, The Economic
Consequences of Empire
, held November 20, 2002

The Meeting of Oct. 27, 1999 - A Brief Review

"Is Globalization Sustainable?"
by
Alfred E. Eckes

"A Price Level Objective for Monetary Policy: Why it is Better than Gold"
by
William T. Gavin 
(in PDF format)

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The Next Upcoming Meeting -

Annual CMRE Fall Dinner
October 16, 2008
The Union League Club 38 E 37th Street, New York City

Is this the epicenter of the biggest financial crisis in history?
(Meredith Whitney thinks we may be there. See money.cnn/2008/08/04/)

  A distinguished medical doctor when asked if the science of bacteriology had not been of the greatest importance in modern surgery replied: “No. The principal factor now, as always, is a correct diagnosis.”  Our meeting follows that advice for the correct diagnosis of the financial troubles of 2008.

Program  - Cocktails 4:30 – 5:00 PM – Session I – 5:00 – 6:30 PM

The Record of Gold

William H. Tehan, The Third and Terminal Phase of the Dollar Crisis.

      With rare understanding of the nation’s monetary history, Tehan  views the dollar, gold and the bond market. 

Alan Brown (Aurumbank) and Sean Fieler (Equinox Partners) will interview Tehan for special insights. 

Chris Powell, Secretary/Treasurer of Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee; editor of The Gata Dispatch, a valuable service for global news, will address: How Markets Suffer from the Manipulation of the Gold Price. 

Dinner 6:30 to 7:15 PM  –  Session II  – 7:15 – 8:15 PM

The Role of the Regulators

William (Bill) Black, Associate Professor of Economics and Law, University of Missouri, Kansas City, covers markets and regulation with his speech: Unsound Theories and Policies Produce Epidemics of Fraud and Regulatory and Market Failures. His book, The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One (University of Texas Press 2005) has been called a classic. Prof. Black teaches White-Collar Crime, Public Finance, Antitrust, Law & Economics. Re his book Paul Volcker said, “Bill Black has detailed an alarming story about financial and political corruption….the lessons are as fresh as the morning newspaper. One of those lessons really sticks out: one brave man with a conscience could stand up for us all.”                                                                                                                       

Thomas Ferguson, Professor, Political Science, University of Massachusetts, Boston, considers:  Too Big to Fail?  Campaign Finance and the “Men in Black - the role of money in politics and recent regulatory and bank failures. 

 Joshua Rosner, Managing Director, Graham Fisher & Co., known for his early warning about problems in mortgage-backed securities sees rating agencies as far from passive arbitrators….the original models to rate collateralized debt obligations were created in close cooperation with the investment banks that designed the securities.

He recommends some changes be made.   /NYT 7/25/07/

Session III 8:15 – 9:30 PM

“General Motors suspended its dividend for the first time since 1922.” EWT 8/15/08

J. William Middendorf II, CMRE Chairman, will be Chairman of this Session and will open with comments from the Robert Mundell annual meeting in Tuscany with world leaders. 

 Jon Sudwischer, Crowley, La., businessman, returns after his      appearance at a 1987 CMRE meeting to tell -  what happened to America’s oil industry in Louisiana and the nation

   Antal E. Fekete, author and lecturer with in-depth understanding of the credit markets, will speak on: “The Mechanism of Capital Destruction.” Professor Fekete comes from Hungary for this meeting. He is the author of several CMRE monographs:  “Irredeemable Currency: The Destroyer of Capital”; “Borrowing Short and Lending Long: Illiquidity & Credit Collapse”; “Resumption of Gold Convertibility of the U.S. Currency”; “Deflation: Retrospect and Prospect” 

Arch Crawford, of Crawford’s Perspectives, has a remarkable record, particularly in the gold market, he traded gold for years, has consulted for some of the major market figures, has addressed the “Wealth Protection” conference by several years, was ranked #1 Gold Timer by Timer Digest in 2006, etc. His perspectives will conclude our diagnosis.      

This is an important, comprehensive meeting, with the kind of substantial
coverage required for the correct diagnosis of the markets these days.
It presents information helpful for an individual’s role in the markets
and for the nation’s well-being as we go forward.
Do not miss it and invite your colleagues to join you.
 


The Most Recent Meeting -

Annual CMRE Spring Meeting
Thursday, May 15, 2008
The Union League Club -- 38 East 37th Street, New York City

Cocktails at 4:30; Program at 5:00

Securitization – Insolvency – Stagflation

On The Program

James Grant, “Grant’s Interest Rate Observer”, the man who has brought financial reporting to a high art. In politics, James recently praised Grover Cleveland as president. (We agree and if your knowledge is incomplete regarding Cleveland, check the Mackinac Institute for the article by Lawrence Reed,* fellow supporter of sound money.)

Charles Peabody of Portales Partners, reports on the world’s banks and economies. In January, Charles had this provocative coverage, “Is China the Next Disease? We think so!” His list of what a collapse in Chinese markets could produce for US financial companies is not to be missed. Can the bubble burst before the Olympics?

Walter J. “John” Williams prepares Shadow Government Statistics, an extraordinary service for sound analysis that he started when a client asked for his assistance as he could not depend on Department of Commerce GDP figures. Williams found the government figures faulty. His corrections lasted until… GNP methodological changes eventually made the underlying data worthless. His outlook is a deteriorating but still inflationary recession.

Stanley Sporkin, known for his uncompromising work as a lawyer and a judge, he distinguished himself as a legal critic. Sporkin was SEC Chief of Enforcement during the Carter Administration. President Reagan appointed him to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. He retired as a federal judge in January 2000.

Chairman for the Evening

Richard L. Hanley, CFA
Richard L. Hanley Associates; Hambletonian Partners, LP
CMRE Director

Following the formal program there will be ample time for Q&A, your comments, Bill Laggner of Bearing Asset will add his, and by special request Alex MacDougall will present once again the history of the destruction of the German mark in 1923.

Background - The Program of May 15, 2008

For an educational Committee, there is always valuable background for a meeting. For example, in his book, The Bankers, The Next Generation *(1997) Martin Mayer included this statement by Lowell Bryan of McKinsey & Co. in 1991. “The force of securitization is driven by fundamental economics. Bluntly put, the securities business system is more efficient than the banking business system. As a nation we, should accept the fact that anything that can be securitized will be securitized.

From his own experience. Mayer recalled a meeting with the House Banking Committee in the mid 1980s. When he spoke critically of banks’ willingness to lend in Latin America and play games with government bonds and exotic instruments while ignoring their social function of lending to enterprise at home, one major banker blew up at him, saying, “Look. There is no more plain vanilla lending any more.” And so we have events that led to 2007-2008.

There is a broader background to the current economic conditions, one that began some 72 years ago when John Maynard Keynes brought out his work, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. Recently we asked an economist if Keynesian economics was still being taught throughout academe. He assured us that it is taught and is now in full swing in our current Stagflation. It is also to be remembered that when Richard Nixon closed the US gold window in 1971, he commented, “We are all Keynesians now.”

For the essence of Keynes’s work, and for pleasurable reading, we turned to, The Failure of the New Economics*** and The Critics of Keynesian Economics,**** both written by this Committee’s distinguished colleague, Henry Hazlitt.

In the section analyzing Keynes’s criticism of classical economics, Hazlitt juxtaposed his ideas and those of Keynes. When Keynes complained that classical economics reached conclusions quite different from that of the ordinary uninstructed person, Keynes supposed that added to its intellectual prestige. Hazlitt responded, “Keynes certainly reached conclusions quite different from the ordinary uninstructed person – for instance that saving is a sin and squandering a virtue.” (The Failure… pg. 56)

When Keynes said that the teaching of classical economics translated into practice was austere and often unpalatable and that lent it virtue… (The Failure…pg. 56) Hazlitt wrote, “The ‘virtue’ of Keynes’ teaching is that it praised thriftlessness, reckless spending, and unbalanced budgets and was therefore extremely palatable to the politicians in power.” Hazlitt consistently objected to Keynes’s doctrine of government spending, artificially low interest rates, and printing press money. (The Failure… pg.56)

Hazlitt quoted L. Albert Hann who compared the reading of Keynes to watching…”a sort of trick film. Everything happens in a manner that is exactly the opposite of what the non-Keynesian is used to.” (The Failure…pg 44) /CMRE Ed. - the Bizarro world of Batman and Seinfeld?/

Hazlitt called The General Theory…one of the most obscure, awkward and circumlocutory economic books ever written….Its existence is one of the great intellectual scandals of our age…as with some of the works of Hegel and Marx, the very mystification added to the book’s prestige.” (The Critics of Keynesian Economics…pg. 10)

To Keynes, credit expansion would perform the “miracle…of turning a stone into bread….”

Ludwig von Mises rejected the much glorified “progressive” economic policies of Keynes saying…”no one should expect that any logical argument or any experience could ever shake the almost religious fervor of those who believe in salvation through spending and credit expansion. (The Critics…pg. 315)

And finally. . .

In the book Capitalism, The Unknown Ideal (1967) by Ayn Rand with articles by Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve Chairman, made clear what Keynes had promoted: “This is the shabby secret of the welfare statist’s tirades… Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the ‘hidden’ confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in understanding the statist’s antagonism towards the gold standard.”

Invite your colleagues to join you in attending the meeting.

++++++++++++++++++

*The Bankers – The Next Generation by Martin Mayer
“The New World of Money, Credit and Banking in an Electronic Age
Truman Talley Books, Plume, New York, 1997
**Grover Cleveland and Sound Currency
by Lawrence W. Reed
Mackinac Center, Speech delivered October 28, 2006
(The first dinner registrant who reports what Joseph Pulitzer
said about Grover Cleveland will be acknowledged with a prize.)
***The Failure of the “New Economics”
Henry Hazlitt. D. van Nostrand Co. Inc. 1959
****The Critics of Keynesian Economics
D. van Nostrand Co., Inc. Copyright transferred to Henry Hazlitt, 1973
New Preface Copyright, 1977 by Henry Hazlitt, Arlington House


A Recent Meeting -

Annual CMRE Fall Dinner Meeting
Thursday, October 25, 2007

The Union League Club -- 38 East 37th St. New York City 

Globalization
August 15, 1971* – October 25, 2007
Perspective and Analysis of Roiled Markets

 

Cocktails and Registration 4:30 PM
Introduction of Guests
Chairman for the Evening
Sean Fieler, Equinox Partners, CMRE Director

 

Opening Session  5:15 – 6:00 PM

Leonard Liggio, Vice President, Atlas Research Foundation
- A View of the U.S. in the World Beyond the Markets -

 

Eugene Schroder, Rancher, Scholar, Historian

- Farming, The (Endangered) Industry that Keeps the Nation Going

 - The Return  of “Cowboy Ethics”-

 

Speeches will continue while Dinner is Served

Session II –  Special Report
:
 
Robert Brooke, Rhombus Research, London, England

Learning the Lessons from Japan
- There is a similarity between conditions in the subprime crisis in the U.S. and the way
that subsector after subsector of the Japanese finance industry was destroyed during the 90s “… few commentators seem to have made the link.”
 
Session III
Randall Dodd, President, Financial Policy Forum; Derivatives Study Center

The Credit (Debt) Crisis

Martin Mayer, distinguished author, especially on the banking industry,

  - The Use and Abuse of Credit Derivatives Ratings -

 

- The Question of Ending National Currencies -

Richard W. Rahn, Director of the Cayman Island Monetary Authority,

Chairman, Institute for Global Economic Growth; Author, “The End of Money” 

And, the Final Word………

*August 15, 1971

In his May 3, 2007 WSJ article, Leo Melamed, Chairman Emeritus of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange , wrote:  “If one had to pinpoint the birth of globalization, a good bet would be Aug. 15, 1971.”

He continues:  “When US dollar convertibility to gold was dropped, there came an irreversible breakdown of fixed exchange rates, which initiated the modern era of globalization and provided the rationale for the launch of financial futures by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. The world left the gold standard for the information standard and the U.S. then for three decades dominated the world’s capital markets.  With derivatives, the CME, Chicago Board of Trade and the New York Mercantile Exchange initiated the modern futures era.  Financial engineers created a vast array of financial instruments.  In securities, Chicago Board of Trade Options Exchange stock options were born and the NYSE, Nasdaq and other American exchanges grew without equal.”

Merton Miller, Nobel Laurent in economics, said the period between the mid-1960s and mid-1980s was unique, no other 20-year period in American history witnessed even a tenth of the financial innovation of that time. But, suddenly, American first mover advantage was over while the growth of other industrial nations moved up.

The date, August 15, 1971, marks the time the founders of CMRE were forming the Committee.  In the spring of 1973, they held their first conference at Arden House, Harriman, New York. Among the stars who spoke were Jacques Rueff, Robert Triffin, Hans Sennholz, Donald H. McLaughlin, Otto Roethenmund, Sir Roy Harrod, C. Lowell Harriss, Henry Hazlitt and John Exter.

There had been a dollar crises, the U.S. had to devalue the dollar and the Bretton Woods system was all but finished. That group of esteemed economists conducted a discussion with the seriousness the situation warranted.  Jacques Rueff concluded saying, “Western Civilization is in great danger.  Let us hope we shall not delay too long before adopting the measures that are indispensable if we are to save it.”

(That kind of remark sends one back to reading Gibbon – Decline and Fall…) 

But in the political world where money was managed, measures were not adopted with Western Civilization in mind.

Henry Hazlitt was brilliant. “Establishing a sound currency is an ethical problem.
There is a moral issue here
.
We have forgotten that our currency unit, the dollar, was originally a pledge. It was a solemn pledge by the U.S. Government to pay its bearer on demand 1/20th of an ounce of gold. Our government disdainfully repudiated that pledge in 1933. It made another pledge to pay 1/35th of an ounce, not to our own people but to foreign central banks. That pledge was repudiated in 1971.”

Adam Smith warned, said Hazlitt, that whenever a nation piled up too much debt, it usually paid it off in a depreciated currency. "The raising of the denomination of the coin (currency devaluation) has been the most usual expedient by which a real public bankruptcy has been disguised under the appearance of a pretended payment.”  Hazlitt concluded, “We should agree that this is a swindle and that some mere ‘technical adjustment’ is not required.”

In that regard, one can consider that China holds around $1.3 trillion of foreign exchange reserves, nearly all of them estimated to be in dollars.  Japan holds about $900 billion dollars of reserves, around two-thirds of them in dollars. Other players, Russia, India, etc., hold smaller but still impressive amounts of dollars. One might wonder what Adam Smith and Henry Hazlitt would say of this situation. Is there a future swindle lurking in there someplace, and if so, who is being set up to take the hit?

What is to be done to liquidate those dollar claims? Creditor countries could buy gold from the U.S. and give us dollars they hold in return.  One bright economist has suggested they could buy Ft. Knox and take a deed to it in exchange for cancellation of the Treasury notes they hold.

Moreover, the U.S. now faces a serious crisis in the real estate market that is said to be “battering investor confidence across the globe, and dashing hopes of a quick end to the recent credit-led turmoil in global markets.”
(Financial Times, London, August 1, 2007)

Mr. Melamed concluded his article recognizing the benefits of the U.S. first-mover advantage as a priceless intellectual legacy. The knowledge and experience from that reservoir, coupled with the constitutional and cultural birthright Americans have to think freely, experiment and create, give Americans an extraordinary potency. The discussion in October can include that unique American background and the opportunities that it creates.

We write this brief history for your greater appreciation of the grand program scheduled for October 25.  CMRE monographs could add to your understanding of this subject. You may write for information regarding those publications. A new monograph (No. 56) by Forrest Capie, “The Search for Stable Prices and the Role of Gold,” is now available.
Invite your associates to join you on October 25.


Audio CDs of the Oct 5, 2005 meeting and the May 11, 2006 meeting are available.
$50. each (includes shipping)

If you would like to learn more about these meetings,
you may write to: 
CMRE
10004 Greenwood Ct.
Charlotte, NC 28215

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The Committee for Monetary Research & Education, a non-profit educational organization, seeks to promote greater public understanding of the nature of monetary processes and of the central role a healthy monetary system plays in the well-being, indeed, in the very survival of a free society. The Committee's ability to carry out these purposes depends entirely on voluntary support from the public.

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