2008: a year of surprises
Stocks fall on economic worry, gold "anything can
happen"
By David Bradshaw ~ links ~ wisdom
Editor, Real
Money Perspectives ~ Daily
email
Jan 28, 2008 ~ *latest news*
~ podcast
* Monday gold prices rose 1% on a weaker dollar ahead of
another Fed rate cut this week and a So. African mining shutdown.
Friday gold closed in NY up $3.50 to
$910.50/oz., silver rose $.16 to $16.41/oz. Last week precious metals
gained over 3%. YTD in 2008 gold is up 8.5%, silver is up 10%.
* "Anything can happen from here,
including a rocket shot to $1,000 over the next few weeks, which I
consider to be a very good probability. We already have lift-off. Get ready
for the rocket shot," writes James Turk's Freemarket Gold&Money
Report at MW
"Supply fears due to
suspended gold mine production in South Africa, a top precious metals
producer, drove U.S. platinum and gold prices to record highs on
Friday," reports Reuters.
* "The Wall Street
Journal has agreed to publish a full-page ad this Thursday in which the
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA.org) charges the U.S. government
surreptitiously utilizes gold reserves to engage in international swaps and
other market manipulations," reports WND.
(listen to GATA founder Bill
Murphy)
"A Reuters global poll of 50
traders and analysts forecast gold prices surging more than 20 percent
this year and gold retaining most gains in 2009 as dollar weakness, market
turmoil and inflation fears stoke investor interest.
"The
Fed is cutting rates to stimulate the economy, but times of crisis usually
means investors head into gold. And during this - one of the most
turbulent weeks of even my turbulent life - gold has outperformed,"
said Peter Hambro, founder of the second-largest gold producer in Russia to
London
Telegraph. Mr. Hambro expects worldwide stagflation to drive gold past
the $1,000 barrier this year.
Global equities rallied on speculation the Fed will further reduce U.S.
borrowing costs to avoid a recession. "The markets sense more
stability, The Fed is going to drop rates again, and that's going to hurt
the dollar and help gold," said Leonard Kaplan, president of
Prospector Asset Management in Evanston, Illinois to Bloomberg.
* The US dollar weakened against
the euro and yen on Monday ahead of the Federal Reserve's policy
meeting later this week.
"The
dollar extended its losses against the euro and pound last week on
weaker-than-expected U.S. existing-home sales data and news that the median
sale price of an existing single-family home fell for the first time in the
40-year history of the survey, dropping 1.8%," reports MW.
* Oil prices fell back under $90 a barrel Monday, on
worries that a stimulus plan to avert a major slowdown in the world's
largest economy may not be enough.
* "U.S. stocks opened
higher only to quickly shed early gains, echoing declines overseas as
worries about the global economy deepened. "The market needs further
confirmation the economy is not in a recession; this week's economic data
could set the tone," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at
Avalon Partners, reports MW.
Quick-fix economic stimulus?
"Democratic and
Republican congressional leaders reached a tentative deal Thursday on tax
rebates of $300 to $1,200 per family and business tax cuts to jolt the
slumping economy," reports AP.
"Most single
taxpayers would get $600 and most two-wage households would get at least
$1,200. The deal includes an additional amount of $300 per child. A
total of 116 million taxpayers will receive checks of some size,"
reports CNN.
"Government fixes
will be temporary until the underlying structural problems are addressed
and strategies are employed to work through those problems. It is time
to allow kids to be kids, adults be adults and markets to be markets. If
our markets are truly 'free markets,' then let them be free and they will
fix themselves," writes Swiss America CEO Craig R. Smith.
"It’s hard not to believe that the economy
will pay a price for the speculative binge of the last two decades,
either by going through a tough recession or an extended period of
disappointing growth. As is already happening, banks will become less
willing to lend money, households will become less willing to spend money
they don’t have and investors will become more alert to risk,"
reports NYTimes.
"The worst housing financial crisis in decades is only
going to get worse, a Merrill Lynch report said Wednesday. The
investment bank forecasted a 15 percent drop in housing prices in 2008 and
a further 10 percent drop in 2009, with even more depreciation likely in
2010," reports CNN.
"The Federal Reserve
cut its overnight lending rate by 75 basis points to 3.50% after the
global financial markets sold off on fears the U.S. economy is entering a
recession," the Fed announced
Tuesday.
"While millions of investors
face a potential panic on Wall Street, those wise enough to have put
themselves onto a personal gold standard by owning gold remained cool, calm
and collected, knowing gold is the perfect safe haven during financial
storms such as this," reports Craig R. Smith.
Global stock markets slid between 3% and 7% on
Monday on concerns about bond insurers and the health of U.S.
financial institutions. "People are certainly nervous about a
potential recession in the U.S. spilling over to the rest of the
world," said David Cohen, Director of Asian Economic Forecasting at
Action Economics in Singapore," reports AP.
"A 20 percent drop
in the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index from its June high signaled European
stocks are now technically in a bear market, weakening the euro,"
reports Bloomberg.
"Forget rate cuts
and stimulus packages. In Wall Street's eyes, the recession is already
here and the credit crunch is far from over," reports CNBC.
Investors are selling stocks because they're skeptical that an economic
stimulus plan President Bush announced last Friday would shore up the
economy, which has been battered by housing and credit problems.
More than three in four Americans believe the U.S.
economy is already in a recession, or will be sometime in 2008. Only 19
percent of 1,000 Americans surveyed believe the nation will avoid a
recession, while 57 percent believe that there will be a downturn this year
according to a Fortune Magazine poll," reports CNN.
"Congress could help steer the economy away
from recession if it adopted a quick, efficient and temporary fiscal
stimulus plan", said Fed chairman Ben Bernanke last Thursday. The Fed
chief urged lawmakers to boost consumer spending within 12 months, tagging
the mortgage meltdown's cost at $100 billion or more.
"I think the market clearly said it does not want the
government involved. At one point it reminded me of "American
Idol" as some in Congress proved their incompetence by their
questions. One Congresswoman did not even know Chairman Bernanke's
professional background!" Craig Smith told FOX NEWS.
Last week the Labor Department reported that
consumer inflation
rose .3% in December and 4.1% for all of 2007, the highest in 17
years. Yesterday the government reported that wholesale inflation rose 6.3%
in 2007, the highest in 26 years on rising energy costs.
Gold's stunning start
Last week gold closed in NY
up $.60 to $880.50/oz., silver rose $.19 to $16.09/oz. The precious
metals ended the week down 1.5% after rising over 7% in the first two weeks
of 2008.
"China became the world’s largest
gold-producing country in 2007, replacing South Africa. In January 2008
China opened its first gold gold futures market in Shanghai, in response to
its citizens’ zeal for gold," reports Forbes.
"Further credit events and increases in oil
prices can create a 'spike' past the $1,000 level in the near
term," reports London
Telegraph.
Gold is once again illustrating how a healthy
long-term bull market functions. Gold prices have dashed above $700,
$850, and then $900 an ounce since September 2007! Gold prices may need a
breather to flush out speculation before continuing its fundamental march
upward.
"Gold prices will test a record $1,000 an
ounce this year, boosted by growing investment interest, safe-haven
demand and strong market fundamentals, a Citigroup metals analyst said.
"We believe gold has entered a new
investment-driven phase. Catalysts are rotating from safe-haven demand,
to currencies, to the re-flation trade, as new buyers enter the
market," John Hill, director, metals research, at Citigroup in San
Francisco," reports Reuters.
"The big lure to gold continues to be its
tendency to hold value when the rest of the investment picture turns
septic. As it's done of late, with U.S. inflation measures hitting
multi-decade highs, U.S. stocks starting off the year with their biggest
drop in 30 years and the global outlook looking both inflationary and at
risk of a slowdown," reports MW.
"I’m convinced that in 2008 the world
will witness a gold price explosion, propelling the shiny yellow metal
into the next and perhaps most exciting stage of this bull market,"
said Swiss America CEO Craig R. Smith.
"If you have not yet taken action in
acquiring a position in gold, you now have a golden opportunity to buy
high quality U.S. gold coins at a historically low collectible (or
extrinsic) premium, relative to gold's melt (or intrinsic) value,"
reports Dr. Fred Goldstein, Sr. Broker at Swiss America.
"Craig Smith and Swiss America have accurately forecast
future trends of gold, oil and stocks over the last decade, and I
expect his 2008 forecasts will be no different. Put your family on a
personal gold standard this year so you're positioned to be protected and
to prosper!" said Michael
Savage, host of The Savage Nation.
"Keep in mind the price of gold would have to
climb well above $2,100/oz. just to reach an inflation-adjusted new
high. Therefore, gold has a long way to go. Suddenly the calls for
$1,000/oz. gold now are almost a given," says Mr. Smith.
"We don't see any reason in this cycle why
gold shouldn't reach its real all-time high, which is actually about
$2,200 an ounce," said David Garofalo, CFO of Agnico-Eagle Mines,
adding the time frame of three to five years." (Read 46 other experts forecasting $2,200 gold)
2008 Outlook
"The price of gold tells us a lot about
ourselves. It holds up a mirror to the way we are governed, our economy
and its prospects. It reflects not only the physical dangers of floods,
famine, terrorism and war, but also the financial perils of systemic
addiction to debt and budgetary incontinence," reports London Telegraph.
"Now that the inflation arm of stagflation is
appearing through the political camouflage, gold is in strong demand and
people are jumping aboard the golden coach. Gold provides an insurance
policy against catastrophy. Therefore, stay with a high asset allocation to
gold and buy on dips," reports John
Browne at Moneynews.com.
"Ross Norman, director of TheBullionDesk.com,
said the world faces a new era of "peak gold" in which
discoveries become rarer, leaving the market starved of the metal just as
demand in China and emerging Asia begins to gather pace. Mr. Norman, the
top forecaster for the London Bullion Market Association over the past four
years, said gold would reach $1,200 an ounce this year," reports London
Telegraph.
"In the Middle Ages gold fetched nearly $3,000
an ounce in real terms. The price fell to nearer $550 when Spain
flooded the world with Aztec and Inca riches, and there it hovered for
three centuries. But the modern era has been an aberration. Supply is
exhausted. Perhaps we should now regard the Middle Ages as the proper
benchmark price. One thing is certain: Gold will outperform paper as long
as governments keep increasing the global money supply 15 per cent a
year," reports London Telegraph.
"When measured in 'hard
money' terms, the U.S Treasury’s 10-year Note lost 20% of its value
compared to an ounce of gold since August 2007. Wouldn’t it make
better sense to park excess cash in gold, rather than U.S Treasury IOUs,
during periods of double-digit money supply growth and soaring
commodities?" asks Gary Dorch, editor of Global Money Trends.
"It is very encouraging to see such a
positive start to the gold market in 2008," said James Burton,
chief executive of the World Gold Council: "It is evident that
gold’s unique investment attributes as an effective safe haven and
dollar hedge have resonated with investors during this time of financial
uncertainty," reports
FT.
"Gold will rise to a record in 2008,
increasing for an unprecedented eighth consecutive year, as investors
seek protection from accelerating inflation, metals analysts tell Bloomberg.
"With the US facing a possible recession,
economists have voiced growing concern about the threat of stagflation
- where weak economic growth is twinned with out-of-control
inflation," reports London
Telegraph.
"A significant proportion of the investment
community thinks that the U.S. economy is either teetering on the brink of
recession or is already entering one," said Stephen Stanley, an
economist at RBS Greenwich Capital. Bill Gross, head of PIMCO, the world's
largest bond fund, told the Financial Times that "if I had to be bold,
I'd say we began a recession in December," reports WT.
"Americans are falling behind on their credit
card payments at an alarming rate, sending delinquencies and defaults
surging by double-digit percentages in the last year and prompting warnings
of worse to come," reports AP.
Market analysts warn that more U.S. businesses are
likely to hang "going bankrupt" signs on their doors next
year as the twinned blows of slower economic growth and pricey
commodities force the weakest companies to seek refuge from
creditors," reports MW
.
"Just as the U.S. dollar has farther to fall,
so do the commodities have farther to rise. On that point, JP Morgan
forecasts that of all the commodities, they expect precious metals to be
the strongest in 2008, followed by agricultural products, base metals and
energy," reports Goldseek.
"Experts say they expect gold could surge to
above $1,000 an ounce in the next 12 months on continued weakness in
the dollar and robust investment demand," according to a broad
cross-section of professionals interviewed by TheStreet.com. James
Turk says the next leg of the bull run should mean a rally of 30% next
year. (See Swiss America survey of 47 experts)
"For gold investors, there’s more good news to come: None of
those catalysts that made 2007 such a grand year for gold are expected to
be absent in 2008," reports MoneyMorning.
"The rise in gold prices to this point has
been steady and sustainable. For much of its rise, gold has been in a
stealth bull market. But the gold price advance is no longer stealth. The
chart says it wants to go parabolic," reports DailyReckoning<
/a>.
"Can anything be as mesmerizing as gold?"
asks Barron's in "Golden Opportunity?" back on 12/26/05.
"Commodities are an asset class for the first time in
history", says Barrons Roundtable member Mark Farber, who "thinks
the price will eventually exceed $3,000."