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Preserve Your Wealth
with Precious Metals - Updated
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By Nick Barisheff
Sep 29 2009 2:40PM
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“I’m not so much
interested in the return on my money
as I am the return of my
capital." - Will Rogers
In this extraordinary environment, preserving your personal
wealth becomes priority one. Before you make another major financial
decision, it is imperative to understand the big picture by recognizing and
understanding three critical issues. First, we are in a secular bear market
for financial assets (stocks and bonds). Second, the consequences of the
global bailouts will likely be highly inflationary. Third, we are at a
pivotal point in the long-term investment cycle. Let’s examine each
of these three keys in more detail.
KEY 1: WE HAVE ENTERED A SECULAR BEAR MARKET
In a secular (long-term) bear market, stocks plunge in
value, single digit price/earnings ratios become the norm, and they can
stay that way for decades. The secular bear we are experiencing now
actually began when the stock markets crashed in 2000-2001, but few
investors noticed because in 2003 the markets were artificially propped up
by massive amounts of easy money from the US Federal Reserve under Chairman
Alan Greenspan. This was not a new monetary policy. Greenspan’s
response to every financial “crisis” he faced starting with the
stock market crash of 1987 all the way through to and past 9/11 was to pour
money into the system. The system was never allowed to self- correct,
allowing a variety of asset bubbles to form.
During a secular bear market such as this one, stocks
habitually move down or sideways. But there are occasional and sometimes
violent bear market rallies to the upside that suck in naïve investors
hopeful of a quick market turnaround. The most recent example is the
spring/ summer 2009 rally in which the S&P TSX, the Dow and the S&P
500 has risen between 48 and 56 percent from their March lows. Since we are
just in the early to middle stages of this secular bear market for stocks,
investors still have time to rebalance their portfolios into negatively
correlated assets. That means selling stocks and bonds (which will decline
when interest rates rise) and buying an asset class that will thrive in
this uncertain market: precious metals
Cash may seem to be a safe haven but it won’t protect
against rising inflation. Bonds did well in 2008 because interest rates
were slashed to zero. But rates have nowhere to go but up, which means
adding or keeping bonds in your portfolio is likely to produce a negative
return. It is important to note that bonds no longer provide true
diversification protection because stocks and bonds have become positively
correlated, meaning they generally move in the same direction.
Buy and Hold Doesn’t Work In A Secular Bear
Market
Following traditional bull market mantras such as
‘Buy-and-Hold’ and ‘Stay the Course’ is a recipe
for disaster in a secular bear market. Because secular trends last for
years, they also take years to break. The most recent examples are
the1966-1982 bear market in equities which, on an inflation-adjusted basis,
investors lost nearly two thirds of their value during this period.
As Warren Buffett points out “During these 17 years, the stock market
went exactly nowhere.”
During this current bear market, the DOW has been negative
over the past ten years, the MSCI World Index is only marginally positive,
yet precious metals have soared over 200 percent (Figure 1). If
inflation is taken into account the stock indices would be in significant
negative territory, while volatility has been extreme: many of the stocks
that formed the DOW in 1999 are no longer even in existence. One more fact:
if you are counting on stock dividends to help you get through this
downturn, consider this: at the time of writing, companies are cutting
dividends at the fastest and deepest pace in at least 50 years.
KEY 2: MASSIVE BAILOUTS WILL TRIGGER MASSIVE INFLATION

As Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg wryly points
out, “the new growth engine for the economy is government
spending.” We are in the early stages of a global government spending
spree of unprecedented proportions which, coupled with zero percent
interest and extraordinary money supply growth, will be hugely
inflationary. Financial assets will continue to lose purchasing power in
this kind of environment, but gold and precious metals will hold theirs
because they are a proven hedge against an investor’s two worst
enemies -- inflation and economic turmoil.
In recent years, the US money supply has been growing at an
alarming rate. In 2008, despite a slowdown in lending and credit, money
supply still grew dramatically with M3 (the broadest measure of money
supply) increasing at about 11 percent, as Figure 2 shows.
In 2009 the money supply is still growing at approximately 9 percent on an
annualized basis. Over the long term, M3 increases have been the best
leading indicators of future increases in the price of goods and
services.
Most people think of inflation as a rise in the price of
goods and services but in actuality price rises are the effect, not the
cause, of inflation. As famed economist Milton Friedman pointed out many
years ago, “inflation is always and everywhere the result of an
increase in the money supply”.

Precious metals are the only currency to own
when central bank printing presses are debasing global currencies at
unprecedented rates. Because they are a proven store of value, precious
metals are likely to be the only asset class that will preserve the
purchasing power of your savings as we enter into a prolonged period of
‘–flation’: deflation, stagflation or inflation (one of
the latter two being much more likely).
KEY 3: RIDE THE INVESTMENT CYCLE
A buy and hold strategy might work if it
weren’t for the existence of cycles that drive bull and bear markets.
A good way to understand the investment cycle is to look at what is called
the Dow:Gold ratio. The Dow:Gold ratio (Figure 3) calculates the
number of ounces of physical gold bullion it would take to
‘purchase’ one share of the Dow Jones during any given time
period. When the ratio rises, as it did in the 1920s, 1960s and 1990s, it
tells us that portfolios should be overweight stocks. When the ratio
slumps, as it did in the 1970s and today, it tells us that portfolios
should be overweight precious metals bullion.
The last three major stock market bubbles ended with the
Dow:Gold ratio above 18:1, while the last two major bear markets (1932 and
1980) ended with the ratio near 1:1 At the height of the equities bull
market in 1999, the Dow:Gold ratio peaked at over 40:1. But now the
current ratio is below 10:1 and falling. It is certainly not too late to
increase your allocation to gold and precious metals.
Precious metals preserve wealth

Precious metals have successfully preserved
wealth for thousands of years because, unlike stocks and bonds and paper
currencies, they are not someone else’s promise of performance and
they are not someone else’s liability. Massive credit expansion has
put US debt at over $11 trillion, but if the $60 trillion in unfunded
pension liabilities and Medicare obligations that the US owes its citizens,
actual debt is approaching a staggering 500 percent of GDP.
America’s spiralling debt crisis is
leading many experts to consider the previously unthinkable: that the US
might become the next Argentina, which famously defaulted on its debt ten
years ago. To learn more about the debt crisis, visit
www.ChrisMartenson.com. Dr. Martenson has created a superbly researched
video called the “Crash Course” which explains in
layman’s terms how massive debt is destroying investors’
wealth.
Precious metals are a safe haven
In 2008, stocks lost 30-70 percent of their value, while
gold increased about 5 percent in US dollars. But equally significant, in a
year of record-setting volatility, gold’s volatility was reassuringly
low. At its lowest point, gold was only down 14 percent and at its highest
it was up 21 percent. Both Goldman Sachs and UBS see the price of gold
rising, and UBS expects investment demand for gold to pull the price of
silver and platinum up along with it. Citigroup is calling for gold to rise
above $2,000.
Precious metals protect against depreciating dollars

Since gold and precious metals are priced and traded in US
dollars, they surge in value when the US dollar declines. As trillions in
new money is printed, the dollar and other currencies will fall
precipitously relative to gold. In an environment where the dollar is
already weak and other currencies are weaker, investors seeking to preserve
and grow their wealth must understand the impact of declining currencies on
their portfolios.
Figure 4 shows the Canadian and US dollars have
lost approximately 84 percent of their purchasing power since 1970. The
world’s other currencies have fared no better. Not coincidentally,
1971 was the year the link to the gold standard was cut. Only gold, along
with its two precious metals brethren – silver and platinum –
will hold their value in periods of severe deflation and inflation.
Physical bullion versus proxies
Few investors are aware of all the precious metals
investment options available to them. Some precious metals investments such
as futures contracts and options are better suited for speculation and a
higher tolerance for risk. But certificates, pooled accounts, ETFs and
mining stocks also have higher risk. Only physical, bullion stored on a
fully allocated, insured basis can guarantee peace of mind because it gives
the investor exclusive title to the safest and lowest risk precious metals
investment of all.
For absolute security, physical bullion should always be
stored in allocated and insured form. If not, investors take the risk that
their bullion may be lent out without their knowledge or consent or may not
be there at all. Today, buying and storing physical, allocated bullion has
never been simpler. You can privately and securely purchase bars of gold,
silver and platinum in large bar sizes and have them insured and stored for
you at a registered LBMA vault without ever breaking the Chain of
Integrity. Visit www.bmgbullionbars.com to learn more or read our BMG
Special Reports on how to invest in precious metals at:
www.investinpreciousmetals.ca and www.goldmyths.com
It’s time to preserve your portfolio’s
purchasing power
A minimum 10 percent allocation in precious metals is
considered adequate in a bull market, but a much larger allocation of 20
percent or more is suggested for protection in a secular bear
market. If you have not already done so, now is the time to rethink
your investment strategy and preserve your hard-earned wealth. Physical
bullion will keep its value regardless of whether the economy is headed for
inflation, deflation or hyperinflation.
For the first time in history, the central banks have an
unlimited ability to print as much money as they need. Precious metals are
the only currency that will survive intact in this environment, because
while governments can print infinite amounts of money, they cannot
“print” more precious metals. More and more investors and
institutions are turning to precious metals, because this secular bear
market is expected to last for many years, eating away at investors’
hopes and dreams and portfolios along the way. Don’t let your
portfolio be one of them. Now is the time to make an investment in your
future, because the future is precious metals bullion
Nick Barisheff
President, Bullion Management Group Inc.
September, 2009
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Nick Barisheff is President and CEO of
Bullion Management Group Inc., a bullion investment company that provides
investors with a cost-effective, convenient way to purchase and store
physical bullion. Widely recognized in North America as a bullion expert,
Barisheff is an author, speaker and financial commentator on bullion and
current market trends. For more information on Bullion Management
Group Inc., BMG BullionFund and BMG BullionBars visit: www.bmginc.ca.