Global De-Banking On The Rise? $100 Bills See Mysterious Surge In Circulation
It has been three years since the establishment launched its official ‘war on cash’ by eliminating Europe’s €500 bill, under the pretense that this effort would be fighting financial crime, terrorism, corruption and drug dealers.
Of course, as we wrote at the time, what Europe and the rest of the world’s elites would be truly doing is setting the scene for ever more aggressive NIRP, and by removing the highest denomination bank notes, it would make evading negative rates that much more difficult and costly (albeit would certainly favor gold).
How did the ‘war on cash’ workout? Not so well, as CNBC’s Kate Rooney points out, the amount of $100 bills in circulation is surging. And it’s leaving some economists scratching their heads.
The number of outstanding U.S. $100 bills has doubled since the financial crisis, with more than 12 billion of them across the world, according to the latest data from the Federal Reserve. C-notes have passed $1 bills in circulation, Deutsche Bank chief international economist Torsten Slok said in a note to clients this week.
Generally, economists believe the surge is related to people around the world wanting to hoard cash, a similar force that’s driven the interest in cryptocurrencies. High denomination, high value currency notes have historically been a preferred form of payment for criminals, given the anonymity, lack of transaction record and relative ease with which they can be brought across borders.
Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, has been down the “rabbit hole of a topic” for more than a decade. He said the growth in $100 bills in circulation is a signal the world is relying on them as a store of value — and still using them for international crime.
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