Posted Friday, 19 July
2008
By Jeff Clark
Editor of BIG GOLD
Casey Research
That’s right: the long-awaited Mania
stage in gold may be nigh. How can I make such a claim? After all, some
have been screaming “It’s here! It’s here!” for
months or even years. So I propose that instead of simply declaring that
Mania time is near, I lay out the facts and see if you come to the same
conclusion.
First, let’s agree on the personality of
a Mania. A Mania begins with a fleeing or panic from customary investments
toward what seems to be the asset of the day; it ends in an astounding
run-up in price. For gold, while the over-exuberant profit seeking is yet
to come, the stage is now being set for the Mania’s beginning:
investors are fleeing real estate, bonds and, increasingly, blue chip
stocks because their prospects are so bleak. Even TIPS (Treasury
Inflation-Protected Securities), according to Morgan Stanley, are failing
to keep up with inflation because the official CPI to which they’re
tied understates inflation by underweighting, for example, the past
year’s 40% increase in gasoline and 130% increase in corn. The very
investment designed to protect from inflation is falling short, since its
gauge is more cheerful than accurate.
So, what will fleeing investors flee to? A hint is found in the never-say-die price of oil. You may
not be buying oil at these levels, but somebody is, the
underlying message being that even though some commodities appear
expensive, they represent something more tangible than paper money and more
profitable than conventional equities.
Although I believe this is evidence of
what’s to come for gold, it’s not my reason for declaring the
Mania close at hand.
To get to my answer, consider what occurs in
the economic and monetary landscape just before a gold
Mania...
Inflation is drowning your life –
everything at the store costs staggeringly more than last year, and
gasoline prices force changes in your driving habits. The government tries
to bring inflation under control, but instead the currency of your nation
takes a scary nosedive. Investors abruptly push up interest rates. The
stock market is in a downward spiral, dropping literally every day. Foreign
investors are dumping your country, and loans all around you are
defaulting. Unemployment is rising. Your household wealth is plummeting
(with damage from both the real estate and the stock markets), and
there’s no end in sight to inflation.
Would you concur this is the kind of
environment that leads directly to a rush into precious metals?
I’ve got news for you... it’s already happening. The country of Vietnam is
experiencing every one of those maladies... inflation is an incredible 27%,
interest rates are over 8% (they rose 100 basis points in one swoop), the
stock market was down every day in May, and unemployment
has more than doubled (from 2% in ’07 to 5.1% in
’08).
And here’s the interesting part: how did
the Vietnamese public react to all this? Did they dollar-cost average down
on equities? How about real estate; that’s always a long-term winner,
right? What about bonds? Maybe inflation-protected securities? Or did they
just sit on cash? How about none of the above. The economic and monetary
problems in their country have sent the Vietnamese fleeing to
gold. And not gold stocks; gold bullion. Furthermore, they’re
hoarding (and hiding) it from their government.
Hard figures on the size of the local gold
trade aren’t available, but current estimates are that the public
owns 16 million ounces, including 1.3 million ounces imported in the first
quarter of 2008. Of this, only about 10% has been deposited into banks
(which actually pay 2.5% interest on gold). The remaining 90% presumably is
under mattresses (or hanging around the owner’s
neck).
And the trend to gold is spilling into other
financial areas. After a long period of quoting land prices in
Vietnamese dong, landlords are now setting prices in gold in order to avoid
the dong's devaluation. Nguyen Trung Vu, general director of the Ky Moi
Real Estate Co, said that while it is complicated to quote prices and make
transactions in gold, "I think that making transactions with payment
in gold will become a trend.”
My question to you is,
what happens
when Americans flee their currency, as the Vietnamese have? What happens
when inflation isn’t just an annoyance but becomes
lifestyle-altering, as in ? What happens when the stock market continues to
plunge and all traditional investments are losing investments, as in ? What
happens when the dollar loses so much value that the average citizen
scrambles for a safe harbor for their money?
Well, the stage is set. Account statements for
the first half of the year are in the mail, and they aren’t pretty.
What alternatives are left? To where will American investors send their
dollars?
When it dawns on the general public that, as
in , no conventional asset is safe – let alone profitable –
gold will take off. Our flight to quality is just around the corner because
it’s already happening an airplane ride away.
There is other hot-off-the-press evidence that
the golden pot is starting to boil...
- It is possible the central
banks of and are buying gold. There is also unconfirmed talk that the
central bank of and other sovereign wealth funds may be buyers. Since
these countries have trillions more cash than Western central banks have
gold, it is easy to envision a scenario where central banks as a whole
become net buyers, even if some countries continue selling.
- Over 50 countries are now
experiencing double-digit price rises. Ukraine is now at 29%, and in the
Gulf states inflation is out of control. Russia is at 15%, and India is
close behind at 11%. China is on the cusp, at 7%. Interest rates are still
below inflation rates in much of the emerging
world.
- The supply/demand picture
for gold is getting tighter every month... Older mines are playing out,
rising costs threaten the marginal operations, and large new deposits are
simply not being discovered. Yet demand in all categories is up –
industrial, jewelry and investment. And the potential for investment
dollars to flee to gold is tremendous; consider that the sum total of the
world’s paper financial assets (including equities, bonds and bank
deposits) equals US$74.5 trillion. Yet the value of all physical gold held
by private investors and central banks is just US$1.1 trillion. A mere 5%
of that going into gold would be $3.725 trillion. What do you suppose that
would do to the gold price?
The Gold Mania is nigh. In fact, our research
shows this is the last summer you will be able to buy gold for 3 figures.
Do you have enough? Perhaps the most transparent way to find the answer is
to ask: will you feel like you bought enough gold when it’s selling
for $2,000 an ounce?
Jeff Clark is the editor of
BIG GOLD, a Casey Research publication focused on the
safest ways to profit from the current bull market in gold.
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