GOLD: PRICE, MOTIVATION TIMING & STRATEGY

gold_ic-insert.pdf18th December 2009  Investors Chronicle article

Today’s Investors Chronicle features an article commissioned from me on ‘Gold : Price, Motivation, Timing & Strategy.’  The article  includes discussion on gold price prospects.  

This blog posting follows the I/C article, the 5th November Goldwatcher  posting Are Goldrush Prices Making Sense? and the associated September 8th Goldwatcher posting  $1000 Gold : Here to Stay or here to Play.         

Gold isn’t a very interesting asset to own when the world is in good shape. But, sadly, as we all know, that’s not the case now. Our economies are still in an unholy financial mess. Compounding the economic problems Afghanistan has become ‘Obama’s War.’  How can we justify spilling more blood, maiming more troops and borrowing more money to prolong this disaster when all we have accomplished after eight years is boosting opium production to record levels, refinancing The Taliban and financing a corrupt government?  There is ample motivation for everyone to make gold an asset allocation priority now. 

Even in the worst of times and for millennia gold has kept its value. That’s why it is  the most enduring, best and probably the only asset to own as protection against Armageddon outcomes such as financial and civic disorder. In these situations, as carefully explained in The Goldwatcher, gold’s stateless money franchise ensures some security for you and your loved ones. But, to have this protection, you need to own physical gold. Not paper gold, shares in mining companies or shares in funds owning mining companies that won’t survive the crisis. 

The unholy financial mess that nearly ended with global financial meltdown in 2008 hasn’t gone away. It’s been aborted by global money printing on an unprecedented scale and there will be consequences.  If history is anything to go by our paper money currencies are on course  to becoming  worth less and less and they may eventually be worthless in years to come. Owning gold and other precious metals can also be motivated to preserve the purchasing power of our assets. But it’s not the only way of achieving this outcome. In most cases it also won’t be the best. Let me explain why. 

Pundits are comparing apples to potatos and tomatos.

Gold pundits proclaim that the dollar lost over 90% of its purchasing power since Roosevelt’s 1934 devaluation. But who keeps a dollar bill or a pound note for 76 years?  We spend or invest money. It’s true we will need $16 or $13 of 2008 money, depending which yardstick we use, to match the purchasing power of $1 in 1934. However it’s also true that over 76 years a comparison with the return on $1 gained from compound interest, even at the lowest ruling interest rates,  will leave gold looking sick. A comparison with investments in equities will leave it looking even sicker. 

Another patently flawed pundit claim is that assets revert to mean and, as gold peaked at $850 in 1980, it’s now set to  breach $2000.  As explained in the Investors Chronicle article $850 was a spike – a brief encounter that occurred against the background of events very different  to what’s happening in the world now. For one thing inflation then was in the double digits. Now we are fending off deflation No logical argument can be made for mean reversion to spikes. Apples can only be compared to apples.

Note added 19th December : Gold can’t beat checking account 30 years after spike

The Goldwatcher framework: 

The Goldwatcher was structured as an information  framework supporting analysis of events affecting the value of currencies and gold.  You can make your own decisions on whether or not owning gold makes sense and whether or not gold prices make sense at any time by addressing the questions associated with key Chapters and information resources in the book. 

The ten chapters contributed by me in Part One on ‘Demystifying the Gold Price’ and associated questions are: 

1: Introduction – Why gold? 

2:  The Gold Mining Industry – What gold price gives producers a worthwhile profit? 

3:  Gold Supply and Demand - Do central banks still need gold and does gold still need central banks? (NB to read this one now)

4:  The Rise and Fall of the Gold Standard – Did gold cause the great depression?

5:  The Dollar Standard and the Deficit without Tears – Is the dollar again America’s currency and everyone else’s problem? 

6:  The Economic Consequences of 9/11 and George W Bush – For how long will Asians go on lending for Americans to go on spending? 

7: The end of Cheap Oil, ‘Chindia’ and other Tipping Points to Instability – Will alternative energy come to the rescue? 

8:  Globalisation & Global Economic Rebalancing. Can the IMF avoid Global Financial Meltdown? 

9:  Gold Prices: Inflation, Deflation, Booms and Busts: Do Trees Grow to Heaven?

10: Investing Choices: What Gold? 

I will post comments on key developments affecting gold from time to time for various websites and publications. If you would like to be informed when comments are published or have any other queries please e-mail me johnnkatz@gmail.com. All communications will be answered.

Thank you for reading The Goldwatcher.

Seasons Greetings and good luck with your investments.

CLICK HERE FOR KITCO GOLD PRICES AND ANALYSIS

CLICK HERE FOR REALTIME MULTICURRENCY GOLD PRICES  

TO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE

 goldbook-book.png

ARE GOLDRUSH PRICES MAKING SENSE ?

$2000 dollar gold?

The conclusion that gold in the range of $1000 to  $1100 makes sense is well supported by: 

 1: Renewed central bank interest evidenced by The Central Bank of India’s  $6.7 billion purchase of 200 tons of gold from the IMF at $1045 per ounce  announced two days ago ; and

2: Background analysis in The Goldwatcher on when gold prices make sense and when they don’t . 

Pundits are now beating the goldrush drum with talk of prices on course to $2000, $3000 and even $5000. At present, in my opinion, these predictions don’t make sense.  Conditions will change as will expectations for gold and other currency prices.  But, while the world still faces deflation,  further dramatic price rises can’t be expected  without a catalyst for change,    

The recovering world economy:

g20.JPG

I advanced the case in The Goldwatcher for drawing a line between the pre 9/11 and post 9/11 worlds. Now we have to draw another line between the world as it was in September 2008 when the global economy was about to plunge into the depths, as illustrated in the above Time cover,  and the world as it is now with clear signs of  recovery in some important economies.  However,  though generally showing signs of growth,  many economies are still in emergency care and won’t survive without financial life support.  In this delicate state investors need continuous advice on currencies and I don’t give investment advice. Further investors in different parts of the world will also need advice specific to their needs.   Here are some accessible information sources I rely on:

1: Kitco for live reports with charts on gold prices and analysis differentiating the extent to which price movements are attributable to $ movements and investor activity;

 2: Dr Marc Faber’s Gloom Doom and Boom report with astute comment from the perspective of a gold expert and icon contrarian investor; 

3: Sharefin’s extraordinary chart resource and regular news postings;

4:  Link deleted 10th August 2010

 5: The Bullion Buzz for well selected contributions supporting the case for gold;

6: IHS Global Insight’s Economic Outlook -  a superb resource that takes the pulse of the most important factor in the global economic equation - the US economy. Working outside the investing bank community Global Insight are free of hype.  As independent economists they are consistently rated among the world’s most prescient forecasters across the spectrum of key economies and industries;

7: Nouriel Roubini’s RGE Monitor . The gold standard macro economic commentary for those who can afford the price;

8:  Kitco Casey : the immaginative and sound resource for speculative investors focusing on the big picture and rewarding opportunities; and

9: The Goldwatcher Webliography  listing of publications contributing essential regular information and analysis.(Page 322) 

Goldwatcher commentary:

I will comment on catalysts for change and key developments affecting gold from time to time. To be kept advised on future postings to this blog,  or other contributions I make,  e-mail me:  johnnkatz@gmail.com

Note added 16th December : There appears to be a glitch with the forwarding of e-mails addressed to me at The Goldwatcher. Any message not acknowledged has not been received. I apologise for this and will respond to any messages not acknowledged if they are re-sent to me at the above address. Thank you for reading The Goldwatcher and good luck with your investments.

* Added 9th November 2009 : Video interview with Jon Nadler, Kitco, on bear market in the $ rather than bull market in gold>

* Added 11th November : Street.com interview with Jon Nadler, Kitco 

goldbook-book.png

 

CLICK HERE FOR KITCO PRICES AND ANALYSIS

CLICK HERE FOR REALTIME MULTICURRENCY GOLD PRICES  

TO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE:

The Gold Price, Red Ink and Animal Spirits.

CLICK HERE FOR REALTIME MULTICURRENCY GOLD PRICES  

TO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE:

gold-price-prospects.jpg  

This article,  Part Three in a series on key economic developments since publication of The Goldwatcher. addresses Gold Price Prospects, Red Ink and Animal Spirits.

The articles were commissioned and published by The Stock Research Portal Review.

 Part One and Part Two address the sequence of events that led to the collapse of the Casino Capitalism House of Cards and almost led to global financial meltdown in September 2008. 

THE GOLD PRICE, RED INK AND ANIMAL SPIRITS 

‘Conventional Wisdom’ on gold prices:

Gold was again on course to breaching the magical $1000 threshold at the end of May when Goldman Sachs published a Research Note ‘The US Dollar – As Good as Gold.’ The report set out why they were not recommending gold at current prices .

Unsurprisingly the gold price retreated  within days of the research being published falling from $975 on May 29th  to  $919 on 22nd June. I say ‘unsurprisingly’ not because Goldman’s Wall Street consensus analysis was specially insightful or revealing. Rather,  because when they scent blood in the air packs of speculators,  all too often with eager investors following in their tracks, get carried away and when they hear a warning shot   they panic. 

The ‘Dollar As Good As Gold Report’ concluded: ‘With the average cost of production estimated at $500 per ounce, the marginal cost of demand at $700 per ounce and no shortage of gold for real long term use, a price of $950 seems enough to provide mining companies with very attractive returns on their capital.’  The analysts  added ‘if worries about the debasement of paper currencies persist, or any signs of inflation appear, the demand for additional gold could push prices above $1,250. Between March 1973 and August 1975, the moving 3-year average of year-on-year inflation was 10% and gold rallied 27%. Between May 1978 and November 1981, when inflation measured 12% per annum, gold rallied 47%. So clearly, unanticipated inflation is favourable for gold prices.’
As they were not expecting either inflation shocks or that the dollar would  will be debased by lax monetary policy when global economies recovered Goldman were not recommending gold.  They noted, however, ‘just like crude oil in mid-2008, if enough people worry about the dollar and inflation, momentum can carry gold to much higher levels beyond any measure of fair value.’

Though not everyone will agree  average gold production cost is as low as $500 an ounce  Goldman’s arguments were in line with a general Wall Street consensus on gold and with ‘conventional wisdom.’  We all generally  expect gold to perform well when inflationary pressures build up. The statistics they quote confirm this view. However contrarians and out of the box thinkers won’t be impressed by analysis that doesn’t address deflation.  Many among them, including the writer of this article, see both deflation and global overcapacity  as  menaces  to the global economy.

Though we all have a pretty good understanding of the effects of inflation most of us know literally nothing about deflation. And that’s only to be expected. It’s three quarters of a century since the deflation associated with the Great Depression.  We know that since  property and stock exchange bubbles popped two decades ago Japan has experienced deflation. But we aren’t familiar with the causes and effects of deflation,  don’t know when there is a real danger of deflation or understand why gold is ultra important when there is a danger of deflation

Leading economists, including Nobel Laureate Dr Paul Krugman are also questioning old views on Japan. He warns ‘we may or may not be about to face our own lost decade, but the sheer misery millions of Americans will face in the near future probably exceeds anything that happened in Japan during the 90s.’

Gold, deflation and capital preservation:

The comments on gold and deflation that follow are from an exceptionally thorough, well informed and insightful article written in 1986 by Dr. Sam Hewitt, founder of Sun Valley Gold Company. His analysis challenges  the  flawed ‘conventional wisdom’ that because gold performed badly during recent decades in a period of  disinflation (the 1980s and 1990s) it will do even worse during deflation.  The lesson from history is that currency hoarding is a common feature in deflationary episodes and ‘the interaction between declining credit quality and currency hoarding is key to understanding the role of gold as an alternative currency.  Each historical episode of deflation confirms that whenever confidence has declined in the issuer of paper currency gold was favoured over paper currency as a capital preservation asset.’

In the Sun Valley report deflation is defined as : ‘falling levels in economic activity and falling price levels on an absolute basis. Contraction of economic activity is generally preceded by an unsustainable boom period and usually kicked off by an event which causes economic confidence to be lost. Characteristic of most deflationary periods are deteriorating credit quality and  the shift by investors from capital growth to capital preservation.  Deflations typically end after crisis conditions force policymakers to enact large-scale inflationary policies designed to counteract deflationary conditions.’

Reading this definition of deflation it is tempting to say the current financial crisis must be a poster child for the unsustainable boom,  loss of confidence and the associated poor credit quality that follows. But that’s only half what needs to said. The current crisis is also a crisis of solvency at all levels from State to household.  Further,  policymakers have made a global commitment to do whatever is necessary to restore economic growth.  In attempts to reflate economies trillions of dollars have already been committed to supporting liquidity, bailing out banks and industries. Yet the world is still faced with overcapacity and solvency crises.  Trillions more will be needed. The State of California’s inability  to meet its commitments reflects the solvency crisis at state level. The General Motors and Chrysler bailouts reflect major industrial examples. Further, after the second anniversary of the global financial crisis we have to question why the reflating formula hasn’t worked. The answer appears to be excessive credit fed the unsustainable boom.  Lax regulation made it possible. Financial leverage is now amplifying the consequences.

Putting Humpty Dumpty together again:

Commentators have used the analogy of Humpty Dumpty’s fall to describe the global financial collapse and question whether Humpty can be put together again.  A Goldwatcher blog “Has Bernanke whizzed the Humpty Dumpty economy into a Hunky-Dory economy? dates back to March 2008. 

How little we  knew about Humpty then! In their recently published book ‘Animal Spirits’ the celebrated economists Nobel Laureate Dr. George Akerlof and Dr. Robert Shiller inform us Humpty’s misfortune hails from a time before children’s story books were illustrated. This explains why over the years we have forgotten  Humpty was an egg. So, the authors conclude, ‘all the King’s horses and all the King’s men could not put him back together again.’  And, they add (emphasis mine) ‘that tale well describes the current financial crisis.’ Out of the box analysis in their book ‘Animal Spirits,’ discussed later in this article,  contributes to a better understanding of the crisis and  suggests innovative solutions.

Also discussed in The Goldwatcher is Nobel prize winner  Paul Krugman’s comment on prospects for a dollar plunge resembling the bad tempered  road runner cartoon character Wile E Coyote at the moment  he stepped over the edge of a  cliff with his legs flailing in thin air and realized, alas  too late,  he was about to plunge into a chasm.

Dr. Krugman concluded if creditors find they have been myopic there may yet be a Wile E Coyote moment for the dollar. Ironically,  it wasn’t the dollar that faced a Wile  E Coyote moment when the financial crisis hit. It was the global economy. And,  as the crisis developed,  the dollar has remained in demand as a perceived safe haven. 

 Debtor creditor imbalances  between the US, China and other dollar surplus countries  are often  cited as the root cause for global financial instability. In whitewashing President George W. Bush’s borrowing binge Fed Chairman  Ben Bernanke made the case that a global savings glut had literally foisted  trillions of dollars of cheap money on US consumers.  Indeed, as cheerleader for the global savings glut theory,  Bernanke  may have been the most myopic of all concerned parties.   Commenting on his whitewash  The Goldwatcher quoted  the well respected investment banker and economist Donald Coxe’s acerbic comment  that  it was really a case of a  global savings glutton gobbling up the savings of the rest of the world.  In any event the global savings glut story is now history. Harvard Professor Jeffrey Frankel, authoritative on currency issues,  sees the global saving glut issue as stone dead. In a recent paper on Global Currencies prepared for Central Banks Frankel writes  ‘Regardless who is right about the last 8 years  over the next 8 years national saving will fall globally.   In the short run, governments are responding to the most severe recession in 70 years by increasing their budget deficits.  In the long run, the spending needs created by the increased retired population and rising medical costs will continue to reduce saving, both public and private.  In response, long-term real interest rates should rise, from the recent low levels.’  
 

Contrarian and out of the box thinking:

While Bernanke and others were hyping the global savings glut and other patently flawed theories contrarians and other out of the box thinkers anticipated and warned of the pending  crisis. In his  book Debt and Delusion,  published in 1999,  a British economist Dr Peter Warburton  made the case that central bankers were so obsessed with rooting out inflation they only looked at credit statistics relating to  banks -  ignoring the enormous,  burgeoning and largely unregulated credit explosion taking place in what we now call the ‘shadow banking’ system.  As a consequence in the boom years linkages between reported expansion of credit in the major Western economies  and real world money were grossly understated and misleading. Further the impressive reduction in inflation reported was an illusion ‘obtained largely by substituting one set of serious problems for another.’ The effect was tipping economies into over capacity and deflation.

Warning now of an imminent return to inflation Warburton is  again running contrary to the consensus view that a global excess capacity glut and deflationary pressures will keep inflation at bay.  He accepts consumers can expect to be the beneficiary of inventory liquidation for an extended period of time. But  lean inventories and ‘the fracturing of the supply chain mean that obtaining products will become not only more difficult  but also more expensive.’  It’s worth remembering that when Chrysler & G.M. sought  bailout  taxpayer funds among the most compelling reasons for  support  were repercussions that would follow  for the industry’s component supply chain if they went out of business. Even Ford,  still able to survive without government support, informed Congress if G.M. or Chrysler went out of business they would be vulnerable to supply interruptions and would also require government support.  Foreign  owned auto manufacturers in the US were  in the same boat.

Auto component suppliers remain vulnerable as,  compounding the  dire conditions in the industry,  they have been obliged to accept an expanded role in the supply chain requiring additional finance for just in time manufacturing programmes and associated customer support obligations. 

The message from Dr Warburton’s analysis is a Keynsian focus on the consumer will not be sufficient for economic revival. The supply chain can’t be ignored. If it’s broken the economics of the industry will be affected and prices are likely to rise. 

In spite of a cash for clunkers scheme introduced to support  car sales in the U.K. manufacturers put their prices up. Many, including  Ford,  have already increased prices twice this year  It’s unlikely now auto prices will ever be  as low as they were over the last few years. So, while there is a strong case to make that deflationary pressures will keep inflation tame, there are also instances where  inflationary pressures will prevail.

Animal Spirits, credit and unemployment:

The phrase ‘animal spirits’ was introduced into the economics lexicon by Lord Maynard Keynes who recognised people are not always rational in their financial decisions. They also act following their animal spirits – ‘ a spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction… our innate urge to activity that makes the wheel go round.’  In their book ‘Animal Spirits’ mentioned above  Akerlof and Shiller approach macroeconomics from the perspective of human behaviour and find conventional macroeconomists failed to anticipate and prevent the financial crisis because they ignored essential behavioural characteristics. These  include confidence, fairness, concerns over corruption, bad faith, and money illusions.  I can add with some satisfaction that the chapter in The Goldwatcher addressing  gold prices starts with a quote from Lord Keynes on animal spirits followed by the sub heading ‘Introduction : A crisis of Confidence.’ Not only do Akerlof and Shiller  make a convincing case for the imperative to restore confidence but they also find confidence and lack of confidence have multiplier effects. 

Bantering with the phrase animal spirits in a book  addressing economics and behaviour  makes for some entertaining reading and also for some confusion. But the key conclusions Akerlof and Shiller reach are substantial contributions to improving monetary policy. They identify the credit crunch as ‘the overwhelming threat to the current economy, and argue ’it will be difficult and perhaps even impossible to achieve the goal of full employment if credit falls considerably below its normal levels.’ To bridge the gap they propose a credit target for policy makers and note ‘achieving the credit target is urgent for several reasons. Most pressing is that  firms that count on outside finance will go bankrupt if they can not obtain credit and, if the credit crunch continues and many firms go bankrupt, it would take an impossibly large fiscal and monetary stimulus to achieve full employment.’  Akerlof and Shiller approach issues of credit and unemployment from a different perspective to Dr. Warburton but their conclusions aren’t far apart.  Talk of green shoots in the economy isn’t convincing while unemployment is rising and while firms that can’t access credit are going our of business,

Nouriel Roubini’s red alert:

Dr. Nouriel Roubini,  the economist who has most consistently identified the causes and evolution of the financial and economic crises,  now sees light at the end of the tunnel with the U.S.  and global recessions over by late 2009. But he also forecasts an anaemic and vulnerable recovery with a peak unemployment rate of close to 11% in 2010. Such a large unemployment rate,  he notes,  ’will have negative effects on labour,  income,  consumption and growth; will postpone the bottoming out of the housing sector; will lead to larger defaults and losses on bank loans (residential and commercial mortgages, credit cards, auto loans, leveraged loans); will increase the size of the budget deficit (even before any additional stimulus is implemented); and will increase protectionist pressures.’

A vulnerable dollar:
In this climate of uncertainty gold has already made a comeback in  central bank reserves after years when its retention in their vaults was often seen as pointless.  Now in the light of concerns over the stability of fiat currencies it makes sense for central banks to own gold again.  David Rosenberg, former Chief Economist for Merrill Lynch and now chief economist and strategist with Gluskin Sheff & Associates,  comments the US dollar “.. is the only policy tool that has not budged one iota since the crisis erupted two years ago. But we are sure that as the unemployment rate makes new highs and increasingly poses a political hurdle in a mid-term election year, it would make perfect sense for a country that always operates in its best interest - even if it may not be in everyone’s best interest - to sanction a US dollar devaluation as a means to stimulate the domestic economy.”  With  downside potential for the dollar he suggests investors protect their portfolios from the consequences of a declining dollar with a range of investments including gold. 

David Rosenberg’s analysis is consistent with the committment policy makers have made to take whatever steps are necessary  to revive economic growth.  Competitive devaluation is not on the agenda. But  currency debasement and inflation can also come via fiscal deficits and lax monetary policies initiated by fire fighting policy makers and central banks.  Gold attracts again as a quasi currency insulated from policy manipulations eroding the value of fiat currencies.

Reports from national mints and gold dealers in all major centers confirm physical gold is in short supply. It’s obvious why  it is. Currencies are vulnerable to debasement and,  when confidence declines in the issuers of paper currency, gold is favoured  as a capital preservation asset.

goldbook-book.pngTO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE:

Will Alternative Energy Come to the Rescue?

 Conservation, innovation and co-operation: 

 riversimple-urban-car-001-pic.jpg

Riversimple Open Source Technology Fuel Cell Prototype: London June 2009

The Goldwatcher Chapter  ‘The End of Cheap Oil, Chindia and other Tipping Points to Instability‘ associates with the question ‘Will alternative energy come to the rescue?’  The Chapter ends with the comment: ‘..The balance of global economic power is slipping away from the US and other western consuming economies. Conservation could improve the economic balance but unfortunately it is not being taken seriously. Discussion on this subject will be continued on The Goldwatcher blog.’

Through last year The Goldwatcher agenda was hijacked by the global financial crisis , near global financial meltdown  and subsequent G20 salvage initiatives following the  collapse of the Casino Capitalism House of Cards.  These developments are  reviewed in the two part comment prepared for Stock Research Portal.   Part One addresses  pre April 2009  events and Part Two comments on developments after the April 2009 G20 leaders summit. The Economic Jihad being waged against the US and western economies is covered in the previous blog.

The ‘Riversimple’ hydrogen fuel cell car and open source technology:

Claiming fuel consumption equivalent to 360 miles per gallon  Riversimple, a fledgling British company, last week unveiled their prototype two-seater hydrogen fuel cell car.  They claim to be ’dedicated to making highly energy efficient vehicles using a radical new approach to personal mobility.’ Information on the development of the Riversimple prototype  in collaboration with Oxford University, Cranfield University  and a Shanghai company Horizon Fuel Cell Technologies. is accessible on the company website.  The British BOC Group PLC and the Piech family of Porsche founder Ferdinand Porsche  supported and funded research. 

Riversimple’s approach to open source technology has exciting potential.  Following the open source model they are inviting  ’the community’ to  develop vehicles and,  to manage cooperative relationships,  have established an Open Source Foundation.

Transition Towns:

Riversimple’s  open source approach fits well with the established and rapidly growing  Transition Towns community networks addressing the consequences of climate change and peak oil.  Their prototype is still only a tiny step on a formidably lengthy road.  But it’s a step in the right direction and, with community support following the open source model, progress could be rapid. 

TO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE:

goldbook-book.png

$1000 GOLD AND PROSPECTS FOR THE $

Volatile markets:

Oil at about $70, more than 100% above its price a few months back,  and gold sliding as it fails to breach the psychologically important $1000 threshold illustrate current market uncertainties and volatility.  Oil prices usually respond to grass roots supply and demand realities. However now the IEA and other organisations continuously revise secular forecasts. This suggests statistical information being used may be unreliable,  inadequate or outdated and speculation affecting oil prices.

On January 22nd this year The Goldwatcher posted on price prospects for 2009 and a year ago in 2008 The Goldwatcher posted on gold under $700 0r over $1000. Both posts are worth considering now. An earlier 2008 post $1000 Gold : What’s next also discusses gold as a contrarian investment and other factors that come into play when psychological thresholds are being challenged.

The grass roots supply and demand fundamentals for gold and the technical picture appear to be weak.  At current high prices demand in India has collapsed. The price is vulnerable  if investors and speculators stop buying and without support from industrial users corrections could be steep. 

On the other hand the geo-political case for gold is exceptionally strong. With Mr. Ahmanidejad  in office for another four years Iran is likely to become a serious nuclear threat.  North Korea is already a serious nuclear threat.  Mr. Netenyahu is back in office with the same ideas that accompanied his last failed term of office. And,  while the war in Iraq may be scaling down,  conflicts in Afghanistan are scaling up as  initiatiaves to destroy Al Qaeda and the Taliban are getting nowhere fast.

Most telling for the gold price, of course, are the multi trillion dollar fiscal boosts introduced to revive economies and the inflation that may come in their wake.

Too far too fast: 

Titled  ‘Too Far Too Fast’   last week Barrons published a mid term roundtable update with comments from  their  contributors.  Some noted the $ has fallen,  yields on Treasuries have been rising dramatically and market ’insanity might be ending’ 

A key theme for the roundtable contributors was the consequences likely to follow  shifting of debt and leverage from the private sector to governments .  Some contributors advised buying gold now while others, expecting a mid term market correction, advised buying gold when it had corrected.

Gold, the consumer capitalism house of cards and challenges to $ hegemony:

The Two articles contributed for Stock Research portal in April and May are  now posted on Goldwatcher pages. Part One addresses  developments pre the April G20 London Summitt and Part Two addresses post April developments including challenges from China and Russia to the privileged role of the $ in the monetary system,  gold sales by the IMF and gold price prospects.

THE G20, GOLD & THE CASINO CAPITALISM HOUSE OF CARDS

CLICK HERE FOR REALTIME MULTICURRENCY GOLD PRICES  

 TO BUY THE GOLDWATCHER CLICK HERE: 

goldbook-book.png

london-summit-emblem.jpg 

 Can the G20 save the world from global financial meltdown?

The question Can the IMF save the world from global financial meltdown? is raised in The Goldwatcher Chapter on Globalisation and Global Economic Re-balancing. After reviewing initiatives on adjusting global  imbalances I concluded all the IMF really achieved was to ‘convince China and America’s other creditors that the worst thing they could do with their money would be to leave it in low interest rate US Treasury Securities - ‘knowing that the dollar will continue falling.’  I was dead wrong on that call for a while. The dollar strengthened by the time the book was published. 

But the IMF appeared impotent when the casino capitalism house of cards was collapsing last November.  It was The G20 that met urgently in Washington and secured a consensus on joint emergency actions ‘to restore global growth and achieve needed reforms in the world’s financial systems.’ 

The April 2nd G20 Summit in London has recorded  wide ranging  understandings on the spectrum of  economic and financial challenges menacing the world, including beefing up the IMF financially and operationally.

If we read the official hype in the G20 communiques we get the impression that not only can they save the world but they have. If we read the views of the commentariat we find serious challenges to these claims.

The Goldwatcher approaches the G20 initiatives as both  essential and generally positive - but by no means enough to assure that global financial  crises are resolved. Ian Campbell, the founder of the indispensable web resource Stock Research Portal.com will be publishing  a Newsletter series on gold, currencies and associated economic issues. He has invited me to write the first contribution, a two part article on:

1) Gold and the Casino Capitalism House of Cards; and

2) Whether the G20 and the IMF can save the world from global financial meltdown.

This is the link to the articles on the Stock Research Portal website. Part One and Part Two are now also posted on this website.

BERNANKE : INSIGHT ON THE SHOCK & AWE

CLICK HERE FOR REALTIME MULTICURRENCY GOLD PRICES  

goldbook-book.png

 

 Bernanke - The Printing Press Speech: Saying what he means:

Within a few months after his appointment as a Fed Governor Ben Bernanke made his  November 2002 ‘Printing Press’ speech :  ‘Deflation : Making Sure ‘it’ doesn’t happen here.’  Prior to the speech he was a distinguished academic recognised as a world authority on the Great Depression. Outside academia  he was relatively unknown. To his credit he said what he meant but , if he had made that speech when more removed from the collegiate atmospheres of Stanford and Princeton Universities,  he would have left out the  the sensationalist words I have italicised below:

‘Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.’

‘A money-financed tax cut is essentially equivalent to Milton Friedman’s famous ‘Helicopter drop’ of money.’

Goldbugs world wide had their day in the sun when the speech was published. ‘Bernanke’s printing press’ has since been touted as absolute proof the dollar is on a slippery slope.  ‘Helicopter Ben’ became his unwelcome moniker.’ In the financial press and blogosphere the speech was met with shock and awe.

This  chart illustrates the relentless gold price climb for years after the speech - though not necessarily because of the speech:

gold-2000-to-2009.gif 

Bernanke was also right. By engaging in what is now known as   ’quantitative easing’ the Fed can expand its balance sheet and provide liquidity even with interest rates zero bound. Bernanke did not anticipate the unholy financial mess that has erupted . He spelled out uncoventional ways the Fed could and would act to abort deflation.  The full speech is a must read for the insight it gives on current Fed actions

Will the G20 mean what they say?:

Now for the real shock and awe.  Committed to heading off of a deeper recession or depression printing presses have been turned on worldwide. Trillions have replaced hundered of billions  as measures of expansion.  The Fed is literally flooding the market with enough excess liquidity to support the banking system, the shadow banking establishment and even Zombie banks.   An ever widening alphabet soup of new facilities has led to credit extended by the Fed surging from under $900 billion six months ago to  over $3 trillion now. And there’s much more to come.  Other key central banks including The Bank of England have also  been engaged in similar though less extensive activities.

A statement declaring their intent to do whatever is necessary to restore economic growth followed  a meeting of  G20 Finance Ministers and central bankers last week.   On April 2nd the G20 Head of States summit follows.

Outcomes for the G20 Summit will be crucial for the Global Economy.  Will they say what they mean and mean what they say?

helicopter_ben.jpg

BEAR MARKETS & GOLD

goldbook-book.png 

Perspective on current and previous bear markets: 

four-bears-small-format.gif

The above chart, best seen by clicking the chart at source on d.short.com, illustrates the severity of the current and previous bear markets. Thanks to Doug Short for persmission to reproduce the chart.

Additional insight on ’irrational exuberance’ from The Goldwatcher:

 Alan Greenspan made his famous ‘irrational exuberance’ remarks in December 1996:

‘Clearly, sustained low inflation implies less uncertainty about the future, and lower risk premiums imply higher prices of stocks and other earning assets. We can see that in the inverse relationship exhibited by price/earnings ratios and the rate of inflation in the past. But how do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values, which then become subject to unexpected and prolonged contractions as they have in Japan over the past decade? […]

Pity he didn’t act on his better instincts and prick the dot.com and housing bubbles. Even a blind mad could  have seen them (see The Goldwtcher Pages 146/7)

Gold and the equity bear markets:

Gold is a financial asset with a different risk reward profile to equities and other financial assets.

FRANK HOLMES, GOLDWATCHER CO AUTHOR, COMMENTS ON CNBC

 

goldbook-book.png

CNBC’S interview with Frank Holmes, Goldwatcher co-author yesterday: 

Following dramatic rises in the gold price yesterday - and even more dramatic falls  in equity and commodity markets world wide -  CNBC interviewed Goldwatcher co-author Frank Holmes,  one of the world’s most authoritative and respected voices on gold.  

The CNBC interview covers key issues investors must keep in mind and is supported by comments from CNBC analysts. Frank Holmes’s headline advice is straightforward  ’Don’t buy gold to get rich - buy gold for protection.’

 You can  Access the CNBC interview through this link.

The Goldwatcher and this blog contributed by co-author John Katz:

My content in the Goldwatcher is unbiased. I am an independent analyst and neither a gold bull or bear. In a nutshell my contributions point to when owning gold makes sense and when it doesn’t and when gold prices make sense and when they don’t. The Chapters I contribute address the questions investors interested in gold must ask,  starting with their motivation, timing and strategy for making and managing their investments.  

The most recent update on gold price prospects in this blog was posted on 22nd January

The Goldwatcher book and the blog address the issues of the day affecting demand for gold,  other currencies and other assets. They include subjects ranging from  the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to our once rock solid British Banks now going bust.

The Goldwatcher Book Chapters follow this sequence

 Foreward by Dr. Marc Faber - starting with this comment:

‘Years from now, the events of late 2007 and early 2008 will be remembered as a classic case of the flawed thinking by Governments that choose to use monetary policy to try and sustain an unsustainable economic bubble, and how that action broadens and deepens the pain when the bubble inevitably busts.’

Part 1 : Written byJohn Katz  ‘The Goldwatcher’ in this blog -  e-mail address : john@thegoldwatcher.com

1:  Introduction : Why Gold?

2: The Gold Mining Industry : What price gives producers a worthwhile profit?

3: Gold Supply and Demand : Do Central Banks still need gold, and does gold still need Central Banks?

4: The Rise and Fall of the Gold Standard : Did Gold Cause the Great Depression?

5: The Dollar Standard and the ‘Deficit without Tears’ : Is the dollar again America’s currency and everyone else’s problem?

6: The Economic Consequences of 9/11 and George W. Bush : For how long will Asians go on lending for Americans to go on spending?

7: The End of Cheap Oil, Chindia and other Tipping Points to Instability 

 Will alternative energy come to the rescue?

(The causes and evolution  of the present economic crisis including the housing boom and bust, the CDO racket, Alan Greenspan’s misguided views on regulation  etc are all covered in the above Chapter)

8: Globalisation and Global Economic Rebalancing

Can the IMF avoid global financial meltdown?

9: Gold Prices : Inflation,Deflation, Booms and Busts

Do trees grow to heaven?

10: Investing Choices . What Gold?

Part Two : Written by Frank Holmes:

11: Inside US Global Investors

12: Investing in Gold Equities

13: Gold Mining Opportunities and Threats.

PART THREE : THE FACT BOOK APPENDIX - includes detailed analysis of global gold mining production, fabrication, scrap recovery and central bank holdings, sales and intended sales;  a Chart Book, Chronology and Webliography.

The Goldwatcher is available from Amazon and all leading booksellers

STEALTH SOCIALISM : ALISTAIR DARLING, LLOYDS & HBOS

alistairdarling.jpg

Alistair Darling

Stealth socialism:

Following a further shock loss of 11 billion pounds announced by the Lloyds TSB Group Britain’s star crossed Chancellor Alistair Darling was reported by the BBC today revealing his latest visionary discovery. The key to sorting out the Lloyds TSB - Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) fiasco, Mr. Darling says,  is ’getting banks to identify their bad assets so they could be removed from the system.’  Yes Virginia. This  statement was made today by the same Chancellor who was associated last autumn with orchestrating, sponsoring and, according to some reports even forcing the merger of solvent Lloyds TSB Bank with the insolvent Halifax Bank of Scotland Group (HBOS).

When the deal was done HBOS was bust and facing liquidation. But,  if shareholders in solvent Lloyds TSB  could be persuaded to throw their capital in to support HBOS, the bothersome HBOS liquidation could be avoided.  Now, in the comment quoted above, Mr. Darling implicitly acknowledges he allowed Lloyds Bank to do the deal before he knew, with absolute certainty,  that HBOS had come clean and identified to the last penny their bad assets and removed them from the system.  And, adding insult to injury, he has since staked billions of pounds of taxpayer’s money in the merged bank, again without adequate due diligence to confirm that all bad assets are out of the books.

Plundering Lloyds TSB Shareholders.

lloyds-share-chart-wsj.gif

One year chart Lloyds TSB source Wall Street Journal

The BBC also report today  the blunt comments from  Conservative Front Bencher and former Chancellor Kenneth Clark on the Lloyds TSB - HBOS merger.  It was a disaster for Lloyds TSB shareholders that ’should never have been allowed to happen….  Lloyds TSB was a boring bank, it was a steady bank, it hadn’t done silly things.’  So, we can conclude, shareholders with their savings in Lloyds shares had also ‘not done silly things.’ Where does Mr. Darling go from here?

 Will he  call in the serious fraud office to investigate the circumstances that led to  Lloyds TSB shareholders being fleeced? Will he admit, as President Obama has following a misjudgement,  that ‘he screwed up?’ Perish the thought.

Britain at the cross road of credibility: Gold stays on the agenda

Britain’s political stability, effective legal system and traditions of fair play have, by and large, supported universal trust in her financial institutions. If this trust is lost  creditors will no longer  support  borrowings and investors won’t buy British shares.

Owning gold over  the last year protected investors from the sterling and London Stock Exchange crashes and returned a handsome profit.  Each of us have to decide for ourselves now whether prospects for  investors in British financial assets are better or worse than they were a year ago.  Present revelations tend to remove  doubts about the answer.

Gold remains on the agenda.

* Note added 15.02.09 :  Speaking at the G7 summit in Rome yesterday afternoon Chancellor Alistair Darling tried to quell speculation that the Lloyds Banking Group could be nationalised. He said banks are “best run in the commercial sector and privately owned.’

* Note added 16.02.09 : Accepting that the report read yesterday on nationalising the Llloyds TSB Group was not accurate the above blog has been modified.