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The Case For Gold
Today
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By Howard Katz
Dec 27 2010 12:11PM
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The establishment argument against gold comes down to the
statement that it is a collectable that earns no yield. Art, rare
coins, stamps and gold and silver bullion do not earn a yield.
Stocks, bonds and real estate earn yields, so the prudent investor should
focus on these assets rather than gold or precious metals.
First, let us examine a hole in this argument. Let
us look at bonds and other fixed income investments. The best
instrument here is T-bills because they are virtually risk-free (not
counting the risk from the depreciation of the currency). A study of
the yield on T-bills going back to 1933 (which is the beginning of the
modern monetary system) shows that the yield paid on T-bills bought at
almost any time over the past 75 years has been completely eaten up by the
depreciation of the currency. For example, right now you can buy a
T-bill yielding 1%. But the (official) Consumer Price Index is rising
by 4% per year. So at the end of 12 months time, you receive $1,010
(from your original $1,000 investment) and can buy goods which at the start
of the 12 month period had cost $970. In reality, your money has
shrunk in value and you have received negative interest. It
hasn’t been this bad all the time, but the average over the past 75
years shows a return of (very close to) 0% real interest.
This eliminates T-bills as an establishment investment, and
it pretty much eliminates any riskier fixed income investment as
well. Because all you are receiving beyond the T-bill rate is a small
risk premium. Yes, you get some extra return, but you have to take
extra risk. The game is not worth the candle. And if you try
so-called inflation protected Treasury securities, they are only protected
against the “inflation” reported in the official Consumer Price
Index. Interestingly, it was right at the time that these were
introduced that the Bureau of Labor Statistics began to introduce
fraudulent statistics into the CPI so that it no longer truly measures the
rate of price increase in our society.
What is needed during this period when the U.S. currency is
depreciating (as measured against goods) is an economic good which protects
you against currency depreciation and which also has a yield. Stocks
have yields because (most of) the companies have earnings. Real
estate usually has a yield (unless it is raw land). In both of these
cases, it is possible to protect yourself against the depreciation of the
currency and still earn a return on your capital.
So far the establishment argument is looking good.
Both stocks and real estate, like gold, can protect you against the
depreciation of the currency. But unlike gold they pay a yield.
The problem with this argument, however, is that it is true only for the
long term.
Starting with the Kennedy tax cut of 1963, budget deficits
and the creation of money became the operating policy for both political
parties. Indeed, the (official) Consumer Price Index has risen every
year since that date. However, different goods react differently to
the easing of credit and the printing of money. The result of this
has been the development of what I call the commodity pendulum.
First, commodities lag behind the rise in other prices and become
undervalued. Then they play catch up and rise rapidly. When
they go too high the cycle starts again. For example, commodities
were undervalued in 1971 and dramatically outperformed stocks through the
decade of the ‘70s. In the ‘80s and ‘90s, the
situation was reversed; commodities declined, and stocks rose.
Starting early in the new century commodities were once again undervalued
and began another rise, and this will soon lead to large scale declines in
bonds and stocks. That is, the first part of this century will be a
repeat of the 1970s.
So although the establishment point is correct for the very
long term, it is too long for practical trading. Yes, stocks can give
you protection against the depreciation of the currency as well as
yield. But that did not help the stock investor from 1966 to 1982
because he lost 70% of his capital in real terms.
The argument for gold now is the same as it was in the
early 1970s. Gold, and other commodities, are coming off a giant
oversold condition. Over the ‘70s, gold multiplied by a factor
of 25 times. What will happen during this swing of the pendulum
cannot, as yet, be predicted. But it is likely to be quite
similar.
Take the establishment supporter who bought stocks in
1966. It was the recognized “wisdom” of that day to buy
“good, sound stocks for the long pull.” They laughed at
the foolish gold bugs buying gold stocks with the price of the metal at
$35/oz. Gold, after all, was a collectable. This situation is
repeating in our day. The same forces which pushed gold upward then
are pushing it upward now. The ethanol bill plays the role of the
Russian wheat deal. The establishment type who buys “good,
sound stocks for the long pull” today is quite likely to sit through
a 70% decline in real terms over the next dozen or so years.
We all know what the establishment did in the 1970s.
When gold raced over $800 in January 1980, they said, “We will
pretend that this whole affair never happened. It is too embarrassing
to admit that we were wrong and the gold bugs were right.”
Those who do not learn from history are condemned to repeat it. And
repeat it (the seventies) they are.
But when the commodity pendulum is finally over (and that
will be quite some time in the future), and the cycle is ready to switch
back in the other direction, when the day comes that gold is overvalued and
stocks undervalued (similar to 1980-1982), I will be perfectly happy to get
out of gold and buy stocks again.
But as I remember the advice of the economic establishment
over the past generation, they were as bullish as they could possibly be on
stocks in 1966. And then they turned as bearish as the gloom of night
in 1982. I am confident that they will do the same thing on this
second swing of the commodity pendulum.
Thank you for your interest.
Howard S. Katz
****
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