See:

http://164.195.100.11/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=/netahtml/search-bool.html&r=2&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=ft00&s1=turk.INZZ.&s2=gold.ABST.&OS=IN/turk+AND+ABST/gold&RS=IN/turk+AND+ABST/gold

for proper formatting, etc.



United States Patent 5,671,364 Turk September 23, 1997


Method and system for commodity-based currency for payment of accounts
and elimination of payment risk

                                            Abstract

A system and method for permitting gold or other commodities to
circulate as currency requires a network of system users that
participate in financial transactions where payment is made in units
of gold. The gold is kept in secure storage at a deposit site for the
benefit of the users. The payments in gold are effected through a
computer system having data storage and transaction processing
programs that credit or debit the units of account of gold held for
the account of each system user.


 Inventors: Turk; James J. (P.O. Box 4682, Greenwich, CT 06830)
 Appl. No.: 465430 Filed: June 5, 1995


 Current U.S. Class: 705/39; 340/5.41; 340/5.92 Intern'l Class: G06F
 015/30; G06F 015/00 Field of Search: 395/149,600,239,201,235
 364/408,403,401 R,464.01 340/825.35


                                   References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents 4023013
May., 1977 Kinker 235/61.
4312510 Jan., 1982 Bodner
273/256.  4314352 Feb., 1982
Fought 235/37.  4891503 Jan.,
1990 Jewell 235/380.  4903201
Feb., 1990 Wagner 395/237.
4931932 Jun., 1990 Dalnekoff et
al.  395/205.  4933842 Jun.,
1990 Durbin et al.  395/230.
4960981 Oct., 1990 Benton et al.
235/379.  4985833 Jan., 1991
Oncken 395/242.  4994964 Feb.,
1991 Wolfberg et al.  395/236.
5063507 Nov., 1991 Lindsey et
al.  395/226.  5101353 Mar.,
1992 Lupien et al.  395/237.
5179698 Jan., 1993 Bachman et
al.  395/604.  5220501 Jun.,
1993 Lawlor et al.  380/24.
5438509 Aug., 1995 Heffron
395/670.



   Other References

 Lee, P. and Ghosh, S.; "NOVAHID: A Novel Architecture for
 Asynchronous, Hierarchical, International, Distributed, Real-Time
 Payments Processing,"IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in
 Communications, v12, n6, pp. 1072-1087. Aug. 1994.


Primary Examiner: Chin; Willington Assistant Examiner: Carman; Melissa
Kay Attorney, Agent or Firm: St. Onge Steward Johnston & Reens

   Parent Case Text



This is a Continuation-In-Part of application Ser. No. 08/015,588,
filed Feb. 10, 1993; abandoned Jun. 6, 1995.

      Claims



What is claimed is:

1. An electronic commodity based system for conducting financial
transactions, comprising:

at least one deposit site having secure facilities for storage of a
commodity;

an inventory of a valuable commodity stored in said secure facilities
at a said deposit site, said inventory including a quantity of units
of said valuable commodity held at said deposit site for an account of
at least one identified person;

a computer system for processing data for accounting transactions
denominated in said units of said commodity, having

(a) an account data storage device for recording data comprising an

identification of persons and a quantity of units of said commodity
credited to said account of each of said persons and an identification
of said deposit site where said units of commodity are held,

(b) a transaction data storage device for receiving records of
transactions denominated in units of said commodity from a said person
identified as having a quantity of said units of said commodity
credited to said account of said person, said records of transactions
including at least an identification of a person who will receive a
debit, a person who will receive a credit, an amount of a debit of a
quantity of said units of said commodity held at a deposit site, an
amount of a credit of a quantity of said units of said commodity held
at a deposit site, and an identification of the deposit site where
said quantity of said units of said commodity are held,

(c) a transaction posting device for posting said records of
transactions to said account data storage device to update said data
comprising an identification of persons and a quantity of units of
said commodity credited to said account of said persons at an
identified deposit site;

a remote terminal located at said deposit site for receiving and
sending data to said computer system, said data identifying a person
and a quantity of units of said commodity held at said deposit site
for an account of said person;

said electronic commodity based system permitting persons to conduct
financial transactions without reliance on national currencies in
conducting said financial transactions whereby obligations, of a
person receiving a said debit of said units of said commodity held at
a deposit site, to another person receiving a said credit of said
units of said commodity held at a said deposit site, are extinguished
upon posting of said records of transactions, thereby eliminating
payment risk.

2. A system in accordance with claim 1 wherein said commodity
comprises a precious metal.

3. A system in accordance with claim 2 wherein said precious metal
comprises gold.

4. A system in accordance with claim 2 wherein said precious metal
comprises silver.

5. A system in accordance with claim 3 wherein said gold is specified
to a selected purity.

6. A system in accordance with claim 2 further comprising means for
remote access to submit records of transactions to instantly debit and
credit a person's accounts.

7. A system in accordance with claim 6 further comprising verification
means for verifying the identity of said person obtaining access to
said computer system and for confirming that said person is authorized
to submit records of transactions to said transaction storage device.

8. A system in accordance with claim 2 wherein said units of said
commodity are designated as a payment for a futures contract of a
different commodity.

9. An electronic gold based system for conducting financial
transactions, comprising:

at least one deposit site having a protected vault;

an inventory of gold stored in said protected vault at a said deposit
site, said inventory including a quantity of units of gold held at
said deposit site for an account of at least one identified person;

a computer system for processing data for accounting transactions
denominated in units of gold, having

(a) an inventory data storage device for recording data identifying an
amount of gold stored at a said deposit site,

(b) an account data storage device for recording data comprising an
identification of a person and a quantity of said units of gold stored
at said deposit site credited to an account of said person,

(c) a verification means for verifying the identity of a person
obtaining access to said computer system and for confirming that such
person is authorized to submit records of transactions,

(d) a transaction data storage means for receiving, from a person
obtaining access to said computer system, records of transactions
denominated in said units of gold, said records of transactions
including at least an identification of a person who will receive a
debit, a person who will receive a credit, an amount of said debit in
said units of gold, an amount of said credit in said units of gold,
and an identification of the deposit site where said units of gold are
located,

(e) a transaction posting means for posting said records of
transactions to said account data storage device to update said data
comprising an identification of a person and of a number of units of
said gold held at a said deposit site for the account of the person;

a remote terminal located at said deposit site for receiving and
sending data to said computer system, said data identifying a person
and a quantity of units of gold held at said deposit site for an
account of said person;

said electronic commodity based system permitting persons to conduct
financial transactions without reliance on national currencies in
conducting said financial transactions whereby obligations, of a
person receiving a said debit of said units of said commodity held at
a deposit site, to another person receiving a said credit of said
units of said commodity held at a said deposit site, are extinguished
upon posting of said records of transactions, thereby eliminating
payment risk.

10. A system in accordance with claim 9 further comprising means for
remote access to said computer system to submit and store records of
transactions.

11. A system in accordance with claim 10 wherein said gold is of a
selected purity.

12. A system in accordance with claim 9 wherein said gold units of
account are designated as a required payment in a futures contract for
a commodity other than gold.

13. A method of accounting, using a valuable commodity as a deposit
currency, implemented by a computer system, comprising the steps of:

creating a deposit account data file for each of a plurality of
persons, each said deposit account data file identifying a person, and
a number of units of commodity stored at a deposit site for the
benefit of the person;

entering records of transactions denominated in units of said
commodity, said records of transactions including at least an
identification of a person who will receive a debit, a person who will
receive a credit, the amount of such debit in units of said commodity,
the amount of such credit in units of said commodity, and the identity
of the deposit site,

posting said records of transactions to debit and credit the deposit
account data files of said persons to update said data identifying a
number of units of said commodity held for the account of each said
person;

said method permitting persons to conduct financial transactions
without reliance on national currencies in conducting said financial
transactions whereby obligations, of a person receiving a said debit
of said units of said commodity held at a deposit site, to another
person receiving a said credit of said units of said commodity held at
a said deposit site, are extinguished upon posting of said records of
transactions, thereby eliminating payment risk.

14. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein said commodity
comprises a precious metal.

15. A method in accordance with claim 14 wherein said precious metal
comprises gold.

16. A method in accordance with claim 14 wherein said precious metal
comprises silver.

     Description



FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the field of computerized systems for
settlement of financial transactions.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the historic past, precious metals circulated as currency. The
metals circulated mainly in the form of coins, and over time
improvements were made to coins to improve their reliability. These
improvements included, for example, detailed engraving on the face and
obverse of the coin, and milling of edges. These improvements were
intended to prevent the clipping of coins, which was a process that
lightened the weight of the coin. When this practice occurred, the
coin was debased, i.e., it lost purchasing power because the coin no
longer constituted the weight of gold it was purported to
constitute. Each debasement interfered with normal trade and commerce,
and these interferences impeded economic activity in
general. Subsequently, debasement of coin became subtler, and
frequently included substitution of a base metal for the gold.

The circulation of precious metals coins was in time supplanted by
certificates during the period from 1680-1840. By this method of
currency, the coins of precious metal remained in safe and secure
storage, typically a vault facility maintained by a bank or warehouse
company. A certificate of deposit, a paper document, was issued by the
bank or warehouse company and evidenced the deposit of coin that had
been made into the facility, and the certificate of deposit began
circulating as a substitute for the coin. Circulation of the
certificate, in lieu of the coins, offered numerous advantages. Paper
was easier to transport, and a relatively small amount of certificates
could be used to complete transactions of high value. There was less
risk of debasement of the coin that was stored. However, while these
advantages significantly improved the circulating medium, there were
also disadvantages. These included forgery of paper certificates,
fraud and bankruptcy of the bank or warehouse company.

As a result, another improvement to currency soon emerged. This
improvement in the nature of currency was the creation of deposit
currency. Deposit currency is a process that enables paper money
and/or coin to circulate as currency. By this method of currency, the
coins of precious metal and/or the paper currency that represented a
claim to those coins, remained in safe and secure storage, typically a
vault facility maintained by a bank. Circa 1840 to the present, the
circulation of coin and paper money for commercial transaction was
supplanted by deposit currency, i.e., money is now moved around mainly
by checks and wire transfers.

The creation of deposit currency significantly improved the
circulating medium. It was no longer necessary to extensively rely on
coins, which could be clipped, debased, etc., nor on paper money,
which could be counterfeited. By moving monetary units of account on
deposit in one bank to another bank, the process of payments was
significantly enhanced.

However, in time unforeseen problems have appeared which detract from
the use of deposit currency as a medium of exchange. The institutions
in which clients lodge their money and deposit currency sometimes are
unable to meet their commitment to their clients to return the
clients' coin or paper money. The institutions, typically banks, which
accept the deposits of coin and paper money from their client, loan
the coin and paper money to other clients. Occasionally these
borrowers failed to repay their loans, causing the bank to take a
loss. Cumulatively these losses can be large enough to cause the bank
to fail. A bank in that case no longer has sufficient coin or paper
money to repay its liabilities to its clients.

Because bank failures have caused great harm, much effort has been
expended to prevent bank failures where possible and to limit the
adverse impact on economic activity should a bank fail. For example,
government programs have been implemented to insure depositors that
their money will be returned, or that they will otherwise still be
able to have access to the value of their deposit currency. The
deposit insurance programs are limited to some maximum amount,
presently $100,000, so bank clients with deposits greater than the
insured amount are at risk for the amount of their deposit currency
above the insured limit.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the invention to provide a method and system for a
commodity-based currency for payment of accounts that avoids the
problems of prior art and deposit currency account systems. It is an
object of the invention to provide such a system and method which is
independent of external events that cause fluctuations in value of
national currencies. It is an object of the invention to provide such
a system and method that permits gold and other commodities to
circulate as deposit currency.

In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a commodity based
currency system for paying accounts comprises: at least one deposit
site having secure facilities for storage of a valuable commodity; an
amount of a commodity stored at the deposit site; and a computer
system for implementing and recording transactions defined in units of
the commodity. The accounting of the transactions is denominated in
units of the commodity. The computer system includes: an account data
storage device, a transaction data storage means, and a transaction
posting means. The account data storage device is capable of recording
data identifying persons and a number of units of the commodity
credited to each of the persons and held in the deposit site for the
account of the persons. The transaction data storage device receives
records of transactions denominated in units of the commodity. These
records of transactions include an identification of a person who will
receive a debit, a person who will receive a credit, the amount of
such debit, the amount of such credit, and the identity of the deposit
site. The transaction posting means extracts data from the records of
transactions and posts debits and credits to the account data storage
device to update the data identifying the number of units of the
commodity held for the account of each person involved in the
transaction.

The system preferably permits remote access to submit transaction
records, and provides verification means for verifying the bona fides
of the person seeking to submit transaction records. A remote terminal
is provided at the deposit site to enter information regarding the
commodity held at the deposit site for the account of a person.

In a preferred embodiment, the commodity comprises a precious metal,
such as silver, or most preferably, gold of a specified purity.

Other objects, aspects and features of the present invention in
addition to those mentioned above will be pointed out in or will be
understood from the following detailed description provided in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of the operation of the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

A glossary of the terms used in the present application is provided
hereafter.

As used herein, a "computer system" comprises at least the following
components: a central processing unit (CPU), a display device, a data
storage device, and a printing capability.

As used herein, "money" is a tool that enables the participants in an
exchange of goods and services to define value of the exchange.

As used herein, "currency" means the physical representation of
money. Currency is the medium of exchange enabling producers and
consumers to exchange goods and services indirectly for other goods
and services. Currency is denominated into units of account, which
permits economic calculation by the participants in the
exchange. Currency also is a means of payment which enables the
participants in an exchange to settle their respective obligation.

As used herein, "cash currency" is the paper notes issued by a
country's central bank. Each note is denominated in terms of a fixed
number of units of account.

As used herein, "deposit currency" is the liability of the banks that
accept deposits of a country's national currency.

As used herein, a "clearing house" is a center for processing
transactions to credit and debit accounts held by parties to the
transaction.

This invention relates to a system and method for payment and receipt
of monetary units of account. More specifically, it relates to a
clearing house 10 that is the center of an interactive communications
network that will enable gold and/or other commodities to be used and
freely exchanged as a means of payment, i.e., to be used as currency.

The clearing house is intended to develop an extensive user base
located within the United States and globally that will use gold
and/or other commodities as a currency for effecting payments in
cross-border as well as intra-country commercial transactions. Since
this currency is preferably a defined weight of gold or other
commodity, the currency of the clearing house will be non-national.

Each system user individually establishes a depository account with
the clearing house either by storing gold or other commodity at an
affiliated deposit site 22 or by purchasing gold or other commodity
already stored at such a deposit site. The deposit site will confirm
the deposit of the commodity to the clearing house and transmit the
information via remote terminal 24 to the computer system 26 described
hereafter. Each account will be denominated in the currency of the
clearing house, which is a defined quantity of gold or other commodity
(for example, ounces, or kilograms of gold, barrels of oil,
etc.). Every system user that establishes an account relationship with
the clearing house will become a participant in the network of system
users using the payment processing capability provided by the clearing
house.

The network of individuals, corporations and other entities that are
clients of the clearing house will use communications and information
processing technology made available to them by the clearing house to
effect transactions in the commodity denominated currency of the
clearing house. They will (1) make payments to other members of the
network, generally their suppliers, and (2) collect payments from
other members of the network, generally their customers.

Though it is envisioned that the clearing house will initially
establish working relationships with corporations involved in
international trade and commerce, the economies of scale that will be
generated by an increasing number of transactions completed through
the clearing house means that in time the scope of the clearing house
activities can be broadened to include transactions by
individuals. The high volumes of payments and receipts now undertaken
daily in the course of normal economic activity indicate that the
potential opportunities for the application of this invention are very
significant.

This invention therefore provides a system and method of settling of
payments for transactions through a clearing house with a global scope
of operation (hereafter referred to as "Global Clearing House" or
"GCH").

The advantages that GCH will offer system users, which differentiates
its services from other payments mechanisms now available, include (1)
the ability to complete a payment without incurring the risk now
inherent in existing mechanisms used to complete payment transactions,
(i.e., possible loss of funds deposited in a bank which is seized or
which is insolvent), (2) the ability for a client to receive immediate
credit and to be immediately informed that monetary units of account
have been added to the account kept by the client at GCH, (3) the
ability for a client to make immediate payment and to be immediately
informed that monetary units of account have been deducted from the
account kept by the client at GCH, (4) the ability of a client to
maintain monetary units of account on deposit without being exposed to
the practice of fractional reserve banking (wherein banks do not keep
as a reserve assets equal to the amount and identity of their
liabilities) and thereby avoid the risks of partial or total loss of
the deposit as a result of the overissue of the currency (where banks
create liabilities for currency based on assets which they do not have
on hand), (5) the ability of a client to maintain monetary units of
account on deposit without being exposed to the risk that those
monetary units of account will be loaned by the institution, and (6)
the ability to use gold and/or other commodities as currency.

Gold is the preferred commodity as it is a low-risk medium of payment
and it has a known value. Gold extinguishes the obligation arising
from a transaction in trade and commerce. When the seller receives
gold, there is no further obligation because the product sold has been
exchanged for a tangible asset. However, a national currency does not
necessarily extinguish the obligation incurred when the buyer acquires
a product. The seller does not receive a tangible asset. When the
seller instead receives a national currency, the seller receives a
promise to pay, which is principally dependent upon the central bank
which issues the national currency. The obligation can be further at
risk if the payment clearing bank is unable to meet its obligations to
deliver the currency specified in a transaction.

Using gold as currency also permits the creation of financial
instruments and futures contracts denominated in terms of a stated
weight of gold. For example, a futures contract for delivery of
soybeans could be designated payable in gold units of account instead
of in U.S.  Dollars. Other commonly traded commodities, i.e., crude
oil, agricultural products, etc., could be similarly designated in
gold units of account. The transactions would then be processed and
cleared through GCH.

The above advantages differentiate the commodity currency processed by
GCH from any deposit currency now in use.

Referring now to FIG. 1, a commodity based currency system for paying
accounts in accordance with the invention comprises: at least one
deposit site; an amount of a commodity stored at the deposit site; and
a computer system for implementing and recording transactions defined
in units of the commodity.

The Deposit Sites

Preferably there are several deposit sites for storing the
commodity. The deposit sites are preferably located in countries
having secure and stable political systems where there is minimal risk
of misappropriation of the asset by the government or private
persons. The deposit sites will typically be a bank; however, other
secure vault facilities could also serve as the deposit site. Typical
site locations would be London, New York, Zurich and Tokyo, as well as
other locations.

The deposit site provides facilities for safe and secure storage of
the commodity to be used for currency. Typically such deposit site
consists of a protected vault. The bank or protected vault that is

servicing the GCH system users will have the ability to (1) receive
the commodity from a client, (2) return the commodity to a client, (3)
test the purity of the commodity, (4) measure the weight and/or other
physical properties of the commodity, (5) provide identifying
information for each parcel of the commodity placed within the deposit
site in order to distinguish between the different parcels belonging
to the different clients of the deposit site, (6) report to the client
the quantity of the commodity stored by the client at the deposit
site, and (7) provide identifying information and the capability to
physically separate from the total quantity of the commodity stored in
the deposit site those parcels of the commodity to be designated for
use as currency.

The Commodity

The commodity must be non-perishable, and most preferably has a high
ratio of value to weight and volume. In a preferred embodiment, the
commodity comprises a precious metal, such as silver, or most
preferably, gold of a specified purity. However, several other
commodities, notably crude oil and other petroleum products may also
serve as the commodity used to designate units of account in the
system.

Gold has three unique advantages as money. Each of these are inherent
to gold, and they are not advantages available to any national
currency.

When defined to a precise weight, gold is a consistent and unvarying
unit of account. An ounce of gold is knowable and unvarying. An ounce
today is the same as an ounce yesterday or an ounce twenty years
ago. However, a national currency does not have these
characteristics. A U.S. Dollar or a Deutschemark or a Swiss Franc on
deposit in Bank AAA is not the same as the same currency on deposit at
Bank CCC because these two banks have different levels of capital and
a different mix of assets. Therefore, Dollars or other currencies on
deposit in these unrelated institutions have entirely different levels
of risk, so the national currency is not a consistent and unvarying
unit of account.

Gold is non-national money, which means that it is outside the scope
of government. Therefore, gold is not subject to the political process
because it is beyond the control of governments, their central banks
and monetary authorities. The result is that gold over long periods of
time tends to hold its purchasing power better than any national
currency. And as set forth above, gold extinguishes an obligation on
delivery.

Opening of an Account

The system and process of the invention require system users to
establish account relationships with GCH. The account relationship is
confirmed when a system user deposits gold with GCH in one or more of
GCH's approved depositories. A system user makes a gold deposit or
purchases another person's gold deposit and does so at a specific
site. The deposit site then notifies the GCH by data transmission of
the identity of a person and units of gold held for the account of
that person that gold is available for settling transactions for the
benefit of that user.

In particular, additions of currency to the system will be made in the
following way: (1) the system user transfers a quantity of the
commodity to be used as currency to a deposit site; or (2) the system
user notifies the deposit site to earmark all or part of the quantity
of the commodity stored at the deposit site by the user. In the first
case, the deposit site verifies the receipt of the commodity and
provides confirmation to the system user and GCH specifying the
quantity and/or other physical attributes of the commodity. In the
second case, the deposit site separates the earmarked parcels of the
commodity to be used as currency in a separate area of the deposit
site designated solely for use of storing earmarked parcels of the
commodity comprising the currency of the GCH. Once the physical
transfer is completed, the deposit site notifies the GCH that the
commodity has been established as currency by the system user.

The GCH then credits the account previously established by the system
user at the GCH with the quantity of the commodity specified by the
system user which has been established as currency and has been
credited to the account of the system user. Once established in this
way, the commodity earmarked at the deposit site becomes eligible for
use as currency, and the system user may transfer all or part of the
commodity units of account to another account within the system.

The balance sheet of GCH reflects (1) the cumulative deposits of its
system users, which are liabilities of GCH, and (2) the identical
amount of gold as its assets. GCH's financial position is presented in
Table No. 1.

                  TABLE No. 1 ______________________________________
                  GCH Balance Sheet Before Transaction ASSETS
                  LIABILITIES ______________________________________
                  Gold Stored in London 100 oz. Client A 100 oz.
                  London Gold Stored in Zurich 100 oz. Client A 100
                  oz.  Zurich Gold Stored in New York 175 oz. Client B
                  175 oz.  New York 375 oz.  375 oz.
                  ______________________________________



The Computer System

Once a system user establishes an account relationship with GCH, the
user has access to an interactive communications network giving access
to a computer system. When two system users enter into a trade
transaction between themselves, they effect payment through this
network.

The GCH computer system is adapted for storing of data and entering
the accounts and the transactions affecting the accounts of the
participants in the system. Each GCH system user is provided with the
means to conduct transactions in the user's account maintained with
the GCH. Each account typically includes the name, address and other
identifying information of the account holder, a unique account number
assigned to each account, an inventory of transactions conducted
through each account, and the means to verify the accuracy and
authenticity of each transaction conducted for an account when
instructed by the account holder.

The computer system thus includes an account data storage device, a
transaction data storage means, and a transaction posting means.

The account data storage device is capable of recording data
identifying the system user and a number of units of the commodity
credited to the user and held in the deposit site for the account of
the user.

The transaction data storage means receives and stores records of
transactions which are denominated in units of the commodity. These
records of transactions include an identification of a system user who
will receive a debit, a system user who will receive a credit, the
amount of such debit, the amount of such credit, and the identity of
the deposit site.

The transaction posting means extracts data from the records of
transactions and posts debits and credits to the account data storage
device to instantly update the data identifying the number of units of
the commodity held for the account of each person involved in the
transaction.

The system includes a remote terminal 24 at the deposit site 22 for
receiving and sending data to the computer system upon opening or
closing of an account and/or when there is a transfer of units of
gold. The data is transmitted from the deposit site to the transaction
data storage device and includes an identification of units of the
commodity 20 held at the site for the account of such person.

The system preferably permits remote access from client terminals 26
to submit transaction records to the system 10, and provides
verification means for verifying the bona fides of the person seeking
to submit transaction records. This permits the user access to the
computer system through an interactive communications network from a
location remote from either the GCH or the deposit site.

Typically, the account holder will use a computer which instructs a
modem which provides access to the computer system by dialing
telephone numbers available to the GCH system users. Once the
centralized computer of the GCH 10 is accessed in this way and once
entry is made by providing a series of security codes to prevent
unwarranted and unwanted access, the GCH client has access to the
chosen account to which it is the account holder. Once access has been
granted, the account holder may review the account, conduct
transactions for the account, review past transactions or other data
stored by the centralized computer for the account.

Access to the centralized computer of the GCH permits real time,
instantaneous transfers of units of account. To transfer units of
account of the commodity in order to complete a financial obligation,
the system user (hereafter the "paying client") instructs the GCH (1)
to debit from the paying client's account a specified quantity of the
commodity, (2) the day and time the specified quantity of the
commodity is to be transferred, (3) the account number and other
verifying information to specify the identity of the client (hereafter
the "receiving client") to whom the payment will be made, and (4) a
prearranged series of security codes maintained between the paying
client and the GCH in order to provide security and protection from
unauthorized transactions.

The centralized computer of the GCH collects the transfer instructions
provided by the paying client and enters those instructions into a
transaction file maintained to record the authorized transactions for
all paying clients. When the appointed day and time is reached, the
centralized computer of the GCH completes the transaction by debiting
the account of the paying client for the quantity of the commodity
instructed by the paying client, and simultaneously credits the
account of the receiving client instructed by the paying client. The
credit made to the account of the receiving client is made
simultaneously as a debit of the account of the paying client. Once
the credit of the commodity units of account is made to the designated
account of the receiving client, the receiving client has immediate
access to those commodity units of account, thereby extinguishing the
obligation of the paying client to the receiving client.

For example, A and B enter into a transaction in which A agrees to
purchase from B a specific good/service. The price is agreed between
them to be 25 ounces of Zurich gold. GCH is then instructed by A to
debit A's account for 25.0000 Zurich ounces and pay this amount to B's
account. Accounting of gold in ounces should be to at least four
decimal points, though five or more decimal points could be used if
greater precision in the measurement of value in the exchange is
required.

GCH confirms immediate payment to both A and B. The gold is not moved
from the storage facility. It remains in the same Zurich location, but
it is now stored there by GCH for the account of B instead of A. This
changed position is presented in Table No. 2.

The total assets and liabilities of GCH remain unchanged. Only the
composition of the liabilities changes, and it only changes after GCH
performs its payments function.

The net result of this transaction is that gold is circulating as
currency. Gold is used as a monetary unit of account in a transaction
of trade and commerce entered into between A and B, and it therefore
is circulating as currency even though it remains in safe and secure
storage.

                  TABLE No. 2 ______________________________________
                  GCH Balance Sheet After Transaction ASSETS
                  LIABILITIES ______________________________________
                  Gold Stored in London 100 oz. Client A 100 oz.
                  London Gold Stored in Zurich 100 oz. Client A 75 oz.
                  Zurich Client B 25 oz.  Zurich Gold Stored in New
                  York 175 oz. Client B 175 oz.  New York 375 oz.  375
                  oz.  ______________________________________



GCH uses a tangible asset (i.e., a defined weight of gold) as the
basic monetary unit of account. GCH is a clearing house with assets
that are identical to its liabilities. In other words, GCH does not
monetize debts and thereby turn the debt obligations of borrowers into
currency.  GCH will have on hand as an asset the total weight of gold
it owes to its depository clients. The Monetary Balance Sheet of GCH
is substantially different than that of the Dollar, any national
currency, or any existent bank as shown in Table 3.

                  TABLE No. 3 ______________________________________
                  Monetary Balance Sheet of Global Clearing House
                  (Denominated in Units of Account Called Ounces)
                  "Quality of Money" "Quantity of Money" ASSETS
                  LIABILITIES ______________________________________
                  Gold in Secure Storage 375 oz.  Client Deposits 375
                  oz.  375 oz.  375 oz.
                  ______________________________________



In contrast to any national currency, the "quality of money" is
identical to the "quantity of money" on the balance sheet of GCH. This
common identity of assets and liabilities illustrates a unique
advantage available to users of the invention. Identical assets and
liabilities provides certainty that payments will be made as directed
and without risk.

Closing of an Account

A system user can subsequently "cash out" of the GCH system by either
(1) selling his gold interest to another; (2) withdrawing the user's
gold deposited at a deposit site. At this point, the deposit site will
notify the GCH that the system user's gold units of account are no
longer available to the system, for example, by entering information
in the remote terminal at the deposit site.

It is to be appreciated that the foregoing is illustrative and not
limiting of the invention, and that various changes and modifications
to the preferred embodiments described above will be apparent to those
skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications can be made without
departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and it
is therefore intended that such changes and modifications be covered
by the following claims.

      * * * * *




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