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How An Act Of Congress Killed Off US Gold Market- Article

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traevin's Avatar
United States
1454 Posts
 Posted 08/03/2012  09:19 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add traevin to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/act-c...121.html?l=1

When President Abraham Lincoln acted in December 1861 to suspend the national gold standard -- the legal right to convert paper money into gold coin or "specie" -- he wasn't trying to start a fight with financial speculators in New York.

Lincoln had a bigger headache at that moment: trying to finance his rapidly growing Union Army in its fight against the South.

Within three years, though, Lincoln's decision would bring a defining moment that would shape the federal government's relationship with Wall Street. It came in June 1864 when Congress passed the Gold Act -- the single time in U.S. history that Congress used its power to directly close a major financial market in the middle of active trading. It was such a failure that Congress never tried again.

The Gold Act was Washington's response to a case of extreme profiteering during one of the bloodiest periods of the Civil War. After Lincoln had suspended the gold standard in 1861, he immediately asked Congress to float about $450 million in paper currency for the government to pay its bills. These steps created a temporary dual-currency system: paper "greenbacks" as legal tender for domestic debts, and gold coin as the currency of the world, needed for foreign trade, tariffs and custom duties.
Confederate Victories

Without government backing, the value of paper floated freely against gold. Within a few weeks, there was a brisk market on Wall Street for trading between gold and dollars. Each Confederate military victory sent gold prices soaring.

Speculators, stock traders, rebel and Union sympathizers, and government officials soon dominated the market, far outnumbering the bankers, exporters, importers and other commercial gold users. Daily price fluctuations affected the national war effort because rising gold prices directly eroded the value of the federal Treasury.

A Philadelphia banker, Jay Cooke, called the New York gold traders "General Lee's left flank." The New York Stock Exchange agreed; it considered gold trading disloyal and refused to allow it under its roof. This forced gold speculators to form a separate Gold Exchange on nearby William Street.

Gold prices spiked in June 1864 to $200 in paper -- a 50 percent devaluation of the nation's paper currency. That spring marked the culmination of General Ulysses Grant's "Wilderness campaign," a particularly bloody set of encounters as the Army of the Potomac pursued Confederate General Robert E. Lee across Virginia toward the Confederate capital of Richmond. Casualties on both sides were enormous, about 40,000 killed and wounded for the Union and another 70,000 for the Confederacy.

Gold prices peaked just as Grant's army reached Petersburg, Virginia, to begin a desperate seven-month siege. The spectacle of New York financiers profiting from this carnage particularly outraged the public, and Congress decided it had to act.

The result was the Gold Act, passed with little debate on June 17, 1864. It was designed to close the Gold Exchange immediately and thereby end the speculative bubble in prices. To the surprise of senators and Treasury officials, however, it did nothing of the kind.

In fact, closing the Gold Exchange only made matters worse, by encouraging hoarders and fueling a panic. Kinahan Cornwallis, a British-born writer working in New York during the war as a reporter for the New York Herald, described how "the real holders of gold were thus isolated,... and purchasers had to run from office to office, inquiring the price at which holders were willing to sell ... The whole country was alarmed by the rocket- like ascent of the [gold] premium, including Congress, amazed and rebuked by the advance." Finally, he wrote, "Leading merchants and bankers, who had urged upon Congress this prohibitory legislation, now wrote and telegraphed to Washington, imploring the repeal of the Gold bill."
Price Spikes

Gold prices would touch almost $300 before Congress would finally reverse course, repeal the Gold Act, and reopen the Exchange on July 2 -- barely two weeks after the law was passed. Even after the Gold Room reopened, chaos continued with further corners and price spikes. Only the capture of Atlanta by General William T. Sherman in August 1864 finally broke the bull market in gold. By the time Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1865, the gold price was $144, less than half its wartime high.

In the 148 years since the Gold Act, Congress has developed extensive systems to regulate Wall Street --including the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Federal Reserve, and the latest additions under the Dodd-Frank law, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Financial Stability Oversight Council -- but never again has it shut an actively trading market. Closing a market can turn excitement into fear and transform a bubble into a panic.

The Gold Act episode taught a simple lesson. In a crisis, politicians and financial regulators should follow the same rule as physicians: First, do no harm.
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Ed_B's Avatar
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 Posted 08/03/2012  5:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ed_B to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Nice bit of history, there, T. Well done.

There is more than a little speculation that Lincoln was assassinated because of his by-passing the NY bankers and having the US Treasury print up that $450 million in US greenbacks. They wanted to loan the US government the money and wanted to charge them a lot of interest to do it. Thus, Lincoln solved his civil war funding problem but, apparently, created a bigger problem for himself personally.

General Andrew Jackson was also a fierce opponent of the NY bankers while he was president and has a rather famous quote directly directly at those same bankers: "You are a nest of vipers and by The Eternal I will rout you out!"

Jackson survived 5 attempts on his life and there was not a lot of doubt about who his enemies were.

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Peter THOMAS's Avatar
Australia
2830 Posts
 Posted 08/03/2012  10:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Peter THOMAS to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
thankyou both for the history lessons.

With the full benefit of hindsight, it might have been more effective, for congress' purpose, to have "conscripted" any spare capital in the market, rather than just closing the market. Australia has long had an ambivalent attitude to the conscription of labour, and one of the catch-cries of opponents has been "Capital first", that is "[conscript] Capital first".
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macmercury's Avatar
United States
5832 Posts
 Posted 08/04/2012  01:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add macmercury to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Schools always repeats the same US history lessons, but numismatic history along brings in a whole new perspective that adds a lot of extra insight.
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Silverhawk74's Avatar
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3670 Posts
 Posted 08/04/2012  2:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Ed my brain short circuited and I thought you were making reference to Stonewall Jackson and thought you may have meant US Grant, but you were dead on as always via T.N. own Andrew Jackson. A most mysterious character in history no doubt, as often he is chastised for the treatment of the Indians, but yet he raised a full blooded Indian child perhaps as well. Perhaps his true intentions always misunderstood....

Here is a wiki paste an quote an there is an entire section dedicated to his hate for the NY banks as Ed mentioned....

"Rachel died of a heart attack on December 22, 1828, two weeks after her husband's victory in the election and two months before Jackson took office as President. Jackson blamed John Quincy Adams for Rachel's death because the episode ridiculing his wife was repeatedly used in the campaign of 1828. He felt that this had hastened her death and never forgave Adams.

Jackson had three adopted sons: Theodore, an Indian about whom little is known, Andrew Jackson Jr., the son of Rachel's brother Severn Donelson, and Lyncoya, a Creek Indian orphan adopted by Jackson after the Creek War. Lyncoya died of tuberculosis in 1828, at the age of sixteen."

Like so many in those old days, he lost many around him whom he loved, as did Lincoln way too early....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson

I visited the Hermitage in Nashville at the age of eight (Andrew Jackson's home) and it is still one of the most lasting memories of my life, something about his story stuck with me....

Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson of course was killed by friendly fire during the civil war. He did not die immediately, and actually caught pneumonia seems like on a wagon ride back to a safe zone area and died in his home with his wife by his side....

His last words were in a feverish state....

"Let us cross over the river, and rest under the shade of the trees."
Edited by Silverhawk74
08/04/2012 3:12 pm
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Ed_B's Avatar
United States
4008 Posts
 Posted 08/04/2012  7:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ed_B to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Andrew Jackson was a strong, tough, and hard man but he loved his country dearly. Because of that and his outstanding military skills he was revered by the men he led, most often to victory.
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