Courtesy of the world's oldest central bank - Sweden's Riksbank - we now have the answer... well, in a manner of speaking. The image at right shows a page from the 19-page document the country's central bank sent in response to a request by Bloomberg News for details of BlackRock’s research into the central bank's bond-buying program.
"The Swedish corporate bond market exhibits a number of singularities when compared to other Anglo-Saxon markets," the document showed. Almost everything else was blacked out.
The central bank, which is due to announce its next policy decision on Tuesday, said a further 68 pages of the report couldn’t be shared at all, as they, "in their whole, are covered by secrecy."
Therefore, in case anybody wants to know what's going on in the world of international finance or even your local credit union, they should refer to BlackRock, the publicly-traded company that the US Federal Reserve employed months ago to execute their own bond-buying scheme. BlackRock is still doing the Fed's - and other central banks' - dirty work, which, under normal circumstances would have been outlawed by the Fed's own charter, but, since there's a pandemic and central banks apparently have outrageous superpowers that allow them to violate laws and the constitutions of most countries, a fully-redacted explanation is about the best one can expect.
In other words, you, peon, are not supposed to see what's happening behind the curtain. You are supposed to remain clueless and intellectually vacuous. The central bank knows what's best for you. A life of debt servitude and poverty is your manifest destiny and how that is achieved you are not allowed to know.
If heavily-redacted central bank documents involving the currency of an entire nation isn't enough to shake up the few remaining trusting souls who think banks are all on the up-and-up, perhaps the report released Monday by the International Consortium of Investigative Reporters (yes, in a world dominated by fake news, there is actually such a group) will convince otherwise.
The group's investigation, known as FinCEN, revealed that a number of large international banks - including HSBC, JP Morgan Chase, Barclay's, Wells Fargo, Citibank and many more - were involved in money laundering for drug cartels, criminals, and oligarchs, all while their own compliance departments were flagging the transactions with suspicious activity reports filed with the US Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN.
Though thousands of such reports - known as SARs - were received by Treasury, but little to nothing was done in the vast majority of cases.
Money that was laundered or funneled to shady organizations, crime families, or drug cartels between 1999 and 2017 amounted to more than $2 trillion.
While international banks routinely break laws, aid corrupt criminal enterprises, and launder money without interference, ordinary individuals wishing to withdraw as little as $2000 from a US bank are often subjected to outrageous questioning about the purpose for the withdrawal and are often told to return at a later date because the bank branch does not have the funds available.
It's no wonder that taking cash out of a bank branch might be troublesome, since the Federal Reserve reduced reserve requirements for financial institutions to zero, effective March 26th of this year.
Along with the recent nationwide coin shortage, restrictions on cash transactions in Europe and other countries, the future of of currency appears to be headed for a black hole.
Meanwhile, what used to be money, silver, along with gold, was slaughtered in the futures markets, losing roughly 10% in the course of a few hours. Silver futures slid from near $27 overnight to under $24 by 11:00 am ET. Gold briefly dipped below $1900 an ounce and has since recovered only slightly.
The obvious manipulation of gold and silver prices via the futures market for paper derivative contracts and adherence to these faulty price discovery mechanisms and spot prices set by the London bankers defies logic, unless you're a central banker, and then it makes perfect sense.
As is well known, central banks, which create currencies - dollars, yen, francs, euros, yuan - out of thin air, despise competition. Gold, and especially silver, is competition to their phony, fake, fiat currencies. As long as everybody uses them, all is well. The moment gold or silver become valuable, raising the public's interest in them, central bankers get very nervous and commit overt efforts to tamp down the rising prices of what's been money for thousands of years.
What's really happening is that their favored fiat is losing purchasing power at an exceedingly rapid rate as they magically produce more easy money and inject it into the system, creating inflation by increasing the money supply. Gold and silver would naturally be sought at higher and higher prices since their quantities are limited by what's already above ground and what's being mined on a regular basis, otherwise known as simple supply and demand.
Monday's market action is a prime example of how all markets are rigged against the best interests of the non-wealthy. While the Dow chopped its losses in half and the NASDAQ recovered almost fully, gold and silver were kept lower, bolstering the perception that they are not in demand when the exact opposite has been obvious for many months.
Until the COMEX and the LBMA are either ignored, exposed as frauds or dissolved, there will be no price discovery of value in precious metals. Both institutions are dominated by the same banks that launder money and assist in market-rigging of everything from LIBOR to individual stocks and bonds, including such standouts as Citibank, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley, which are all market makers in addition to being full members of the LBMA.
Putting it lightly, gold and silver investors have been getting short-changed for decades, ever since Nixon and the world abandoned the gold standard in 1971.
The future of money is looking more and more like a black hole, covered by a BlackRock.
At the Close, Monday, September 21, 2020:
Dow: 27,147.70, -509.72 (-1.84%)
NASDAQ: 10,778.80, -14.48 (-0.13%)
S&P 500: 3,281.06, -38.41 (-1.16%)
NYSE: 12,561.78, -271.79 (-2.12%)