Gold Price Dip
It’s hard to be bullish on gold when there’s so much bad news in the world.
After all, gold offers a refuge against bad times ahead. Like all good insurance, it’s best bought before trouble arrives — not during or after.
And just how much worse can the news get from here?
1. The Dow’s on track to close out its worst June since the Great Depression, down almost 10 percent for the month.
2. GM’s stock is trading at a 54-year low, taking it right back to when CEO Charles Wilson declared “what was good for the country was good for General Motors and vice versa.”
3. U.S. Dollars — the bedrock of world forex reserves — now buy one-third less against the rest of the world’s money compared with 2002.
4. The price of crude oil has risen more than five times over since U.S. and U.K. troops liberated the oil fields of Iraq in 2003.
5. Libya is threatening to cut its oil production in protest at U.S. anti-terrorism laws; Tehran just pulled $75bn worth of investments from Europe to avoid sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program.
6. Global inflation has risen from three percent last June to more than 5.2 percent per year today; analysts at Barclays Capital believe U.S. inflation will hit 5.5 percent by August.
7. Real estate prices have turned sharply lower in the U.S. (down 15 percent year-on-year), Ireland (down 13 percent) and the U.K. (down 3.6 percent) as well as in Spain, Australia, South Africa and the emerging economies of east-central Europe. Price in Riga, Latvia dumped 38 percent in the year to May.
8. Western consumer confidence has sunk to multi-year lows; emerging-market consumers face the worst rates of inflation in more than two decades, rising 25 percent year-on-year in Vietnam and more than 13 percent in India; surging fuel and food prices have sparked protests and riots in Asia and now unionized strikes across Europe.
9. Investment and lending banks are being forced to take back “securitized” debt onto their balance sheets, destroying their capital adequacy ratios and halting new lending as pension & insurance funds try to flee risk. In the U.K. alone, new lending fell 95 percent in May after allowing for such “de-securitization.”
Watch out below! It’s every man for himself — women and children included! Or so the financial pundits now claim.
Makes you wonder where they’ve been during the bull market in gold starting in 2001. But with inflation surging and new credit shrinking, “we’re in a nasty environment,” said Tim Bond, head equity strategist at Barclays bank in London, this week.
Above all, “there is an inflation shock underway,” he said in Barclays’ latest Global Outlook. “This is going to be very negative for financial assets. [So] we are going into tortoise mood and are retreating into our shell.
“Investors will do well if they can preserve their wealth.” And investors who choose to buy gold are usually looking to achieve just that.
Indestructible, un-inflatable, and instantly priced in the world’s only true globalized market, gold bullion stands apart from all of those boom-time investments. Stocks, bonds, securitized debt, real estate…you can keep ‘em when the end of the world strikes.
These happy assets promise to pay you income. They also rise in value as the economy grows. Whereas gold, in sharp contrast, just sits there — neither smiling nor frowning, and never paying an income. Its value comes from, well, from its gold-ness alone.
And as the spike above $1,000 an ounce showed in mid-March — just as Bear Stearns collapsed — you need the end of the world to make buying gold worthwhile.
Right?
Well, perhaps not.
Because the value put upon gold should also be expected to benefit from sub-zero real rates of interest. War and terror be damned! The only sure push that gold prices need is low interest rates colliding with rising inflation.
And right now the world’s got that in spades.
“Figure 8,” notes Michael Lewis of Deutsche Bank in a recent paper for the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), “illustrates the strong performance in gold returns as US real interest rates decline. We find that when real interest rates in the U.S. move below -3 percent, gold returns have tended to be significant.”
Listen up at the back! Because the Federal Reserve’s key interest rates stands at just 2.0 percent, scarcely half the rate of U.S. consumer-price inflation. And with a real return paid to cash of minus 200-basis points, you really should doubt the Fed’s true intent toward the value of money from here.
Even with the Euro trading above $1.57 on the foreign exchange markets, however — and even with the European Central Bank (ECB) promising to raise interest rates to defeat inflation next week — the Eurozone’s 320 million consumers are also suffering a 12-year record rate of wealth destruction. Here in the United Kingdom, after inflation and tax since the middle of 2003, the real returns paid to cash savings have stuck right on zero since mid-2003.
The fast-growing economy of India, meanwhile, offers negative real interest rates of 3 percent and worse. Taiwan’s real interest rates sit slap bang on zero after a rate-hike this week. And Chinese cash savers are way under water with inflation running at seven percent.
Any wonder “the number of credit cards in circulation jumped 93 percent in the year ending March 31 to 104.7 million,” as the Asia Times quotes the People’s Bank of China this week? Central banks everywhere want you to spend money, not save it, forcing the issue by destroying the value of money itself.
So any wonder that the world bid for gold — a tangible asset that can’t be inflated and can’t be destroyed — just keeps rising higher? “The purpose of money is to be a store of value,” said Dr. Marc Faber — the infamous fund manager behind the Gloom, Boom & Doom letter — to CNBC today.
(He kept laughing for some reason. No doubt he’s long gold…)
“When interest rates are negative, it destroys the wealth of honest depositors who have their money in the bank and don’t want to speculate,” Faber went on. “Now what people should do, basically, is to invest in gold. Because when it comes to action, the Fed shows no concern about inflation…
“The policies pursued by Mr. Bernanke have damaged the American public enormously by pushing commodity prices — specifically food and oil prices — much higher. And so real incomes are going down and discretionary spending is being hurt very badly.”
Gold represents wealth, in a word. Just remember that it won’t actually grow wealth, because it’s not a productive asset. Whatever else you might want from a metal, wealth preservation is the gold buyer’s best hope.
And that might prove all investors can ask if the news on inflation and rates, stocks, bonds and jobs, doesn’t start getting better.
Regards,
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
June 30, 2008
Comments: