Future Fractional Fiat Demand?
Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2016 10:59 pm
I'm watching and reading as much as possible, while building a cash position, so as to protect present positions and potentially profit from what many see as a coming
period of depression (lower asset prices, all classes) followed by a hyper-inflationary period that will boost metals on that stratospheric trajectory we have long
been awaiting.
There are those - Bill Bonner, Harry Dent, and Mike Maloney come to mind - who posit that when a banking holiday ultimately ensues, that credit cards will fail to
find vendors who will continue to accept such payments. In that milieu, cash would become king, and possibly for a short period be the "go to" asset class. After all, who
would accept a check in payment for silver or gold if the trust in banks to cash them has been broken? Or if funds in those accounts have been bailed in?
So here's my question. I am not challenging the wisdom of holding cash "outside the system." What I'm wondering is this. There is a premium paid for fractional
precious metals, all forms, related to their size. You cannot purchase ten 1/10 oz gold pieces for the same price as an ounce. To a lesser degree, the same principal
applies to silver. So... when TSHTF... will hundred dollar bills have less utility than smaller denominations? If merchants are out of currency, how would they make
change? Is it possible that fiat currency will develop premiums for smaller denominations akin to what we see in gold? Might it someday be that two fifties would be
worth $105? Five twenties be worth $110? Ten tens be worth $120? Twenty fives be worth $130? One hundred ones be worth $150? Will the day come in the future
where a prescient "investor" in currency could work this arbitrage to their advantage?
Nothing to be lost by trying, I say. Personally, my emergency funds are bundled into $100 "bricks." Each one consists of two twenties, two tens, six fives,
and ten ones. I think that when the dust clears after the eventual bank runs... small currency denominations will be in short supply.
What think you?
I have found while doing this that both my banks almost seem to resent (I'm constantly being asked "are you a merchant?") turning over banded bundles of ones... and most of those they do pass out are ratty looking; tattered, torn, or stained... and most all have many creases.
period of depression (lower asset prices, all classes) followed by a hyper-inflationary period that will boost metals on that stratospheric trajectory we have long
been awaiting.
There are those - Bill Bonner, Harry Dent, and Mike Maloney come to mind - who posit that when a banking holiday ultimately ensues, that credit cards will fail to
find vendors who will continue to accept such payments. In that milieu, cash would become king, and possibly for a short period be the "go to" asset class. After all, who
would accept a check in payment for silver or gold if the trust in banks to cash them has been broken? Or if funds in those accounts have been bailed in?
So here's my question. I am not challenging the wisdom of holding cash "outside the system." What I'm wondering is this. There is a premium paid for fractional
precious metals, all forms, related to their size. You cannot purchase ten 1/10 oz gold pieces for the same price as an ounce. To a lesser degree, the same principal
applies to silver. So... when TSHTF... will hundred dollar bills have less utility than smaller denominations? If merchants are out of currency, how would they make
change? Is it possible that fiat currency will develop premiums for smaller denominations akin to what we see in gold? Might it someday be that two fifties would be
worth $105? Five twenties be worth $110? Ten tens be worth $120? Twenty fives be worth $130? One hundred ones be worth $150? Will the day come in the future
where a prescient "investor" in currency could work this arbitrage to their advantage?
Nothing to be lost by trying, I say. Personally, my emergency funds are bundled into $100 "bricks." Each one consists of two twenties, two tens, six fives,
and ten ones. I think that when the dust clears after the eventual bank runs... small currency denominations will be in short supply.
What think you?
I have found while doing this that both my banks almost seem to resent (I'm constantly being asked "are you a merchant?") turning over banded bundles of ones... and most of those they do pass out are ratty looking; tattered, torn, or stained... and most all have many creases.