Excellent point.vincecate wrote:You forgot silver. If I was China I would buy up huge amounts of silver too.Higgenbotham wrote: That leaves gold and while the Chinese would have been willing to spend that $300 billion per year on gold (or whatever was left of that $300 billion that they didn't spend on other things, but accumulated as reserves) the volume of gold sales worldwide are not enough to accumulate that volume of gold by purchasing it on the free market. The only way to buy that volume of gold is to find a horde that someone is willing to sell.
The market can accommodate any demand by adjusting the price. If China had wanted to purchase $300 billion per year the last 4 years they could have done so, but the price of gold would be higher then and now.
If you are a major manufacturing country with vast amounts of paper money from countries whose paper money has historically been highly valued, such as the United States and European countries, you would have no problem what so ever buying a Trillion dollars worth of precious, semi-precious and bulk commodities that could be delivered to your country. Even if the terms were payment upon delivery.
As you point out the price would go up on these quantities, and these terms, but for the right price, you could change your paper money into tangible assets stored in your country. Assuming deliver occurred before war broke out.