A stitch in time…

Okay… We have left 2011 behind. We are rid of it forever. It won’t come back. Never. Not even if the universe lasts a million years, we will never see it again.

Or will we? One of the intriguing discoveries of 2011 came the giant particle accelerator in Switzerland. Those clever scientists set up a race, from Geneva to a finish line in Italy, 730 kilometers away. It was a race of neutrinos against light. Who do you think won?

The smart money was on light. Einstein said it was the fastest thing in the cosmos. Nothing could be faster, he believed. That’s why planets are “light years” from Earth. For example, other scientists discovered a couple of distant planets — many light years away — that were about the right size and the right distance from their star. They could have liquid water…and water-based life. But what we “see” of these planets is already 950 years old. That’s how long it took the light to reach us.

So, if you want to see 2011 again, you could theoretically race ahead of light and watch it all over again. That is, if it were theoretically possible to go faster than light, which it wasn’t…until a few months ago.

When the scientists released their neutrinos in Geneva, the little critters quickly took the lead and then zipped along, beating light to the finish line. Barely. It was a photo finish. And some scientists think the photo was fumbled.

But unless we can hitch a ride on some souped-up neutrinos, 2011 is gone forever.

Will 2012 be better…or worse? We don’t know.

From our point of view, there was nothing wrong with 2011. It did pretty much what it was supposed to do. We are in a Great Correction. The year just ended felt like a Great Correction is supposed to feel. High unemployment. Falling high prices. Financial crises. Stock prices losing ground. What more do you want?

On that last item, The Financial Times adds detail:

“$6.3 trillion wiped off markets in 2011.”

The FT cites a Bloomberg calculation that tells us the global stock markets lost a little more than 12%, dropping to total capitalization of $45 trillion.

While stocks lost 12%, gold rose about 10%. For the 11th year in a row (we’ve lost track) our “sell stocks/buy gold” formula paid off. Between falling stocks and rising gold there’s a spread of 22%. Not bad.

Dear Readers deserve full disclosure. Towards that end, we didn’t make money on both sides of the trade in every single year. Gold went up every year. But stocks didn’t go down every year. Stocks haven’t had a losing year since 2008. That means they were going up…alongside gold…for 2009 and 2010. And it means that selling stocks wasn’t such a hot idea those years. You could have made more money by buying stocks and buying gold.

Still, if you had followed our approach you would have made solid money every year — even when other investors were getting killed. Let’s hope our good luck continues!

But today, we’re writing not about the known knowns of the past but about the unknown knowns of the future. We don’t know where prices are headed in 2012 — and we know it!

Still, we don’t mind taking a guess. And let’s begin with our favorite investment — gold. Apparently, the smart money thinks gold’s run is over.

George Soros, the billionaire who two years ago called [gold] the “ultimate asset bubble,” cut 99 percent of his holdings in the first quarter, Securities and Exchange Commission data show. Hedge fund managers John Paulson, Paul Touradji and Eric Mindich also sold bullion this year. While speculators in New York futures are the least bullish (.MMGCNET) in 31 months, the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 44 traders and analysts is for prices to rally as much as 39 percent to $2,140 an ounce in 2012.

The divergence of views is widening after prices declined 19 percent from a record close of $1,900.23 on Sept. 5, or 1 percentage point away from a bear market. As some investors retreated to cash amid a $10 trillion slump in global equity values since May, others bought more metal, taking holdings in exchange-traded products to an all-time high two weeks ago. Bullion’s 8.1 percent gain in 2011 means it’s on track to beat stocks, bonds and the dollar for a second straight year.

“It’s done its job this year of protecting investors,” said Michael Cuggino, 48, who helps manage about $15 billion of assets, including $3 billion in gold, at Permanent Portfolio Funds in San Francisco and correctly predicted in February that prices would keep rising. “Gold has been all over the place. If you bought gold at $1,800 then you aren’t too happy. Some people will get out of gold, but the longer-term investors will remain.”

Dennis Gartman, the economist and author of the Suffolk, Virginia-based Gartman Letter, said Dec. 13 that traders were witnessing the “death of a bull.” He sold the last of his gold the previous day and said Dec. 23 his outlook was neutral. The “megatrend” in bullion is “in all likelihood near the end of the road,” Markus Mezger, co-founder of Zug, Switzerland-based Tiberius Asset Management AG, which manages about $2.5 billion of assets, said in its 2012 outlook report on Dec. 23.

Well, what about it? The smart money thinks gold is washed up. It thinks the bull market in gold is over. The smart money is selling. It’s moving on.

But what about the rest of us? What about those of us who cherish good looks more than brains…virtue more than money…a good drink over a good deed? What do we think?

We don’t remember our bad guesses. But we remember our good ones. And you may recall too that when gold got to $1,900 we thought it had gotten ahead of itself. After all, we’re still in a Great Correction. And as near as we can tell, the correction is intensifying. Prices don’t go up in a correction; they go down. Investors don’t fear inflation; it’s the lack of it that makes them sweat.

Besides, it looked to us like gold was over-priced.

In the 1940s, gold sold for $35 an ounce. A new Buick cost about $750. Without putting too fine a point on it, you could get your new wheels for about 20 ounces of gold.

Today, a new Buick will set you back about $26,000. Divide by $1,550. What do you get? About 16. This tells us that an ounce of gold is worth more today than it was then.

How about oil? In 1940 you could get a gallon of gasoline for about 10 cents. Last week, it was $3.50 cents. An ounce of gold would have bought you 350 gallons in 1940 and 414 gallons today.

Conclusion: gold is not too cheap at $1,500. At $1,900 it was too expensive.

So we warned that gold would go down too. Since then, it’s lost almost 20% of its value.

But we’re looking ahead. And ahead what we see is more of the same…more or less. Gold will eventually shock everyone by rising far above $1,900. When the real crisis hits…the crisis coming in the US bond market…gold will be the money that nobody doesn’t want.

But what we learned in 2011 was that when a Great Correction pinches, the dollar is the salve of choice — not gold. When investors fear losses, they turn to the dollar for protection.

Eventually, when they begin to fear inflation, the gold bugs’ day of glory will be at hand.

In the meantime, we’ll probably see a further correction in the gold price…perhaps down to $1,200. Or, perhaps it will stop at $1,400. We don’t know. And it doesn’t matter. Buy gold on dips; sell stocks on rallies.

This strategy may or may not pay off in 2012; but gold is insurance against financial disaster. And one is coming…

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America's most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning. Dice Have No Memory: Big Bets & Bad Economics from Paris to the Pampas, the newest book from Bill Bonner, is the definitive compendium of Bill's daily reckonings from more than a decade: 1999-2010. 

  • Aticus

    Bill, check out this video I just watched – It lines up nicely with your philosophy of government:

    The Story of your Enslavement

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xbp6umQT58A&feature=player_detailpage

  • gman

    “The smart money thinks gold is washed up.”

    it would be more accurate to say they see better infestment opportunities elsewhere.

    consider.

    1) what does owning gold do?
    2) does it do this for a soros?

  • Ben

    I sold some of my gold in 2011 (much too early, alas) after using 1928 as a bench mark. I thought this a fairer measure of gold’s relation to consumer goods, since it was before the Depression and the drop in the dollar’s value and the increase in Gold’s price. Gold was (probably) over-valued from 1933-???? because of that. Even using 1928, goods (such as Gas) made me estimate gold was (and still is) about double its CPI value. So I’m selling more in 2012.

  • gman

    “Prices don’t go up in a correction; they go down.”

    correct. but everything in the grocery store is going up. wages are going down (i.e. prices are going up relative to wages). automobile prices are going up. taxes are going up.

    so – what is correcting?

  • gman

    “In the 1940s, gold sold for $35 an ounce. A new Buick cost about $750. Without putting too fine a point on it, you could get your new wheels for about 20 ounces of gold.

    Today, a new Buick will set you back about $26,000. Divide by $1,550. What do you get? About 16. This tells us that an ounce of gold is worth more today than it was then.”

    incorrect. it tells us that an ounce of gold is more in demand today than it was then. and/or it tells us that the dollar is in less demand today than it was then. which makes perfect sense.

    the keys will be these two considerations.

    1) for bond infestment, is the tax power of the state increasing or decreasing?

    2) for business infestment, is the earning power of companies increasing or decreasing?

    for either, increasing -> dollar power and decreasing -> dollar weakness.

  • Andrew B.

    Not sure that cherry picking 2 examples is a good way to measure whether the price is fair.

    I also don’t want to delude myself.

    But, consider that back in 1970 roughly only the Americans and Western Europeans could really buy gold. And consider that the global economy expanded much more than the gold supply since then. There’s nothing to say that gold should maintain the same purchasing power for a loaf of bread over a certain period of time. The bread may become more abundant, or the participating population (demand for gold) could increase much more. Ultimately though gold is the fear money. Nobody would own gold if trust in the system or in the local “paper” would be high. Now trust is increasingly scarce.

  • Chris

    Bill, who says we should believe the mainstreams economists and experts that are often very wrong ! How many of them are joining hands with Ron Paul to “End the Fed” ? and how many of them predicted the housing crisis ? or any other crisis ? Who says we should trust their views on selling gold ?

    After all they can afford to loose far more money than the rest of us because they are so rich to begin with, think of it from that point of view.

    That said however, I think you might be right that the “exhausted” gold price might go down for a while before accelerating again. But it will definitely accelerate very soon like you say with the expected crisis coming that will be much bigger. The Euro is on the brink on being destroyed and the way the Fed keeps acting, the US is not far behind having already been through so much already.

    What people forget however is China, it seems like they keep growing non stop and their demand for gold is also something to remember and include in our calculations. And don’t forget India either ! If a billion Chinamen are buying gold day and night and the richest men in America are selling gold will you decide to buy or sell ? :-)

  • Chris

    PS- Not only that but many of them are investing billions of OTHER PEOPLES MONEY !

  • CT

    Rationalism so early in the year cannot be a good sign.

  • Farmer Bob

    “Prices don’t go up in a correction; they go down.”

    Indeed they do. A few items are up (farmers sold off their dairy herds), limes are 10¢ and apples 79¢ a pound — can you guess what will be going down next year (as farmers ramp up production), and what will be going up as they cut back?

  • Felix

    Just about time you saw sense Bill! You’ve been pushing gold for what, twenty years now? Noticed that the whole thing just got a whole lot worse did you? Now you’ve got all this useless cash and you wish it wasn’t ten years gone?

    Good luck with that Bill, time waits for no man. Seriously. I’ll be right behind you.

  • Chriss

    Who says we should believe the mainstream economists and experts that are often very wrong ! How many of them are joining hands with Ron Paul to “End the Fed” ? and how many of them predicted the housing crisis ? or any other crisis ? Who says we should trust their views on selling gold?

    After all they can afford to loose far more money than the rest of us because they are so rich to begin with, think of it from that point of view.

    That said however, I think you might be right that the “exhausted” gold price might go down for a while before accelerating up again. But it will definitely accelerate very soon like you say with the expected crisis coming that will be much bigger. The Euro is on the brink on being destroyed and the way the Fed keeps acting, the US is not far behind having already been through so much already.

    What people forget however is China, it seems like they keep growing non stop and their demand for gold is also something to remember and include in our calculations. And don’t forget India either ! If a billion Chinamen are buying gold day and night and the richest men in America are selling gold will you decide to buy or sell ? :-)

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  • Starving Steve

    Mega-trend on gold: down to just above the top of its old trading range ($300-$500), so gold is going to take a slow drop to $650-give or take. Too many gold bugs to-day implies gold is heading a lot lower. De-flation in housing and oil also implies much lower gold prices.

  • Starving Steve

    Starving Steve:

    America is exporting oil for the first time since 1949. The game has changed; this is a de-flation, slow and controlled brilliantly by the Fed which has dressed the slow de-flation up to be an inflation. The banks now pay real interest on savings by letting the Fed-controlled slow de-flation add to the buying power of the money held by savers in the banks….. Bernanke is brilliant because he talks-up “accommodation” and “stimulation”, “capital injection”, and he has faked-out the markets.

    The de-flation is so obvious now: 70 miles per hour— not 70 kph, but 70 mph— all the way to San Jose (Silicon Valley) in the morning rush-hour. The jobs are gone. The incomes are gone. The careers are gone. Everything has now moved to China.

    So who is going to buy homes in and around Silicon Valley for even $500,000 each? Game over, thank you.

    Cash for clunkers in the housing market? — not from me, thank you.

  • Starving Steve

    I have always been a supporter of sound money, too. But labour is sound money, too. Oil is sound money. Kilowatt hours of electricity are sound money. So are homes that one needs to live in, sound money. Land around cities is sound money……. Gold is not alone in the “sound money” game.

  • Starving Steve

    America would be on the verge of an inevitable collapse if the U.S. would invent another war, such as the Viet Nam War or the Korean War….. But I think the U.S. is a very different country now, especially under President Obama than it was a few decades ago under Ronald Reagan or Pres. Richard Nixon.

    Let’s think about this: We under Obama are interested in peace, energy, housing, jobs, income, hard money, de-flation, free-trade, multi-lingualism, immigration, Mexico, Canada, Latin America, Europe, liberalism, expanding Medicare to cover everyone regardless of age, maybe using the Obamacare plan as a model or mechanism for expanding Medicare; reviving the Rust Belt, and maybe few other things as well….. Behind his daily speeches, plenty of positive things are now happening under the direction of the Obama Administration.

    One of the BIG BONUSES for Americans (and for the people of the entire world) is that

  • Starving Steve

    One of the BIG BONUSES for Americans ( and for the people of the entire world ) is that the Republicans are out— hopefully forever— and there is new thinking and a whole new approach in Washington under the Obama Administration.

  • Starving Steve

    And one more point before I promise to be silent and let others post here:

    It was the Republicans ( the conservatives, both of the Bushes, Bill O’Reilly, Rush Limbaugh ) and their thinking that gave us $1900 gold, $4.60 per gallon gasoline, one-million dollars for a house in and around Silicon Valley in California, $200 for a simple shopping-cart of groceries, and equally outrageous costs for private for-profit medical care….. DON’T EVER FORGET THAT.

  • Starving Steve

    Gold at $1900/ounce, nor even at its current ridiculous price of $1500+/ounce is not “sound money” any more than a bag of old soda pop cans is “sound money”. In fact, of the two investment options: the current very over-priced gold or the price for scrap aluminum cans, I would much prefer owning the bags of old soda pop cans because atleast the price of aluminum has barely increased at all.

  • Starving Steve

    The last Republican Administration in Washington gave America a one-trillion dollar deficit. George Bush: ONE-TRILLION DOLLARs in deficit dumped onto the Obama Administration because under the conservatives, working people did not have jobs. The unemployed couldn’t pay taxes with their zero incomes. The top-down economics of the Republicans gave America $1,000,000,000,000 in deficit.

    Do you all remember the sixteen years of crap we had to listen to every day under the Republicans? — the top-down, anti-labour, anti-union economics from George Bush, Bill O’Reily, Rush Limbaugh on the radio, etc?

  • Starving Steve

    America’s best days may well be ahead:

    a.) The Republicans are OUT;
    b.) America is now exporting oil for the first time since 1949;
    c.) And possibly an enlightened electorate now may begin to throw the environmentalists out, and including throwing the high-density and anti-growth city planners out.

    For once in my lifetime of more than six decades, the electorate may be beginning to think critically of what happened to America since WWII…. For the first time, the electorate may begin to LEAN FORWARD.

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