"The Vatican has large
investments with the Rothschilds of Britain, France and America, with the
Hambros Bank, with the Credit Suisse in London and Zurich. In the United States
it has large investments with the Morgan Bank, the Chase-Manhattan Bank, the
First National Bank of New York, the Bankers Trust Company, and others. The
Vatican has billions of shares in the most powerful international corporations
such as Gulf Oil, Shell, General Motors, Bethlehem Steel, General Electric,
International Business Machines, T.W.A., etc. At a conservative estimate, these
amount to more than 500 million dollars in the U.S.A. alone.
"In a statement published in
connection with a bond prospectus, the Boston archdiocese listed its assets at
Six Hundred and Thirty-five Million ($635,891,004), which is 9.9 times its
liabilities. This leaves a net worth of Five Hundred and Seventy-one million
dollars ($571,704,953). It is not difficult to discover the truly astonishing
wealth of the church, once we add the riches of the twenty-eight archdioceses
and 122 dioceses of the U.S.A., some of which are even wealthier than that of
Boston.
"The Catholic church, once
all her assets have been put together, is the most formidable stockbroker in
the world. The Wall Street Journal said that the Vatican's financial deals in
the U.S. alone were so big that very often it sold or bought gold in lots of a
million or more dollars at one time. The Vatican's treasure of solid gold has
been estimated by the United Nations World Magazine to amount to several
billion dollars. A large bulk of this is stored in gold ingots with the U.S.
Federal Reserve Bank, while banks in England and Switzerland hold the rest.
"But this is just a small
portion of the wealth of the Vatican, which in the U.S. alone, is greater than
that of the five wealthiest giant corporations of the country. When to that is
added all the real estate, property, stocks and shares abroad, then the
staggering accumulation of the wealth of the Catholic church becomes so
formidable as to defy any rational assessment. 'The Catholic church is the
biggest financial power, wealth accumulator and property owner in existence.
She is a greater possessor of material riches than any other single
institution, corporation, bank, giant trust, government or state of the whole
globe. The pope, as the visible ruler of this immense amassment of wealth, is
consequently the richest individual of the twentieth century. No one can
realistically assess how much he is worth in terms of billions of dollars.'"
Avro
Manhattan, 'The Vatican Billions', quoted here