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Freebuck.com |
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Precious Metals and Natural
Resources Investing |
By Adam
Brochert
To borrow a phrase from a recent piece by Martin Armstrong, “it’s
just time” for Gold to shine and revert to its role as money. Of course, the
powers that be and their minions laugh in contempt at such a concept. Wall
Street laughs at the investment that has no growth potential and pays no
dividends.
And yet, these are the people who didn’t see this economic crisis coming and
now declare that it is over! It may be over for them, since they have lined
their pockets with taxpayer funds to mitigate their losses, but for the rest of
us, the pain is just beginning. Economic depressions are a process, not a
one-time event.
Japan has been
in an economic depression for 19 years now, yet you won’t see pictures of soup
lines on Japanese television. Their government has a printing press, a fiat
currency and has ramped up government debt to levels relative to their GDP that
make The United States look like a model of government restraint. Yet, debt
deflation still reigns and the Nikkei Japanese stock market index remains 75%
below its 1990 peak 19 years later.
Will we repeat this two decade depression (which is not over for Japan
by a long shot)? Of course. The only wild card is our
currency. History tells us that the U.S. Dollar will hold up well during a
deflationary depression and is a good place to put one’s money if one does not
wish to trade the bear market. But the reserve currency status of the US Dollar
is at risk and the calls for a replacement grow louder every day. If a
geopolitical event dethrones the US Dollar, an immediate and significant
devaluation of the Dollar will occur.
So, why is it Gold’s time? Many reasons, but here are the main points to
consider:
• Gold is an international currency and store of value, not a commodity. Cash
is king during deflation and Gold has been chosen as the best form of cash by
civilizations over the past several thousand years. Apparatchiks cannot decree
otherwise with any lasting success.
• Growth for stocks in aggregate is negative, dividends are being slashed
rapidly, and dilution via new equity offerings is coming at a rapid clip. This
wipes out the reason for taking a risk with equities right now.
• Gold provides a hedge against a rapid currency devaluation, which many
governments around the world are trying to achieve. A holder of fiat cash or
government bonds is not automatically hedged against this risk. Gold cannot be
successfully debased by bureaucratic decree.
• Other asset classes besides cash will do poorly over the next decade and will
likely produce negative returns, while Gold will hold its value. Everyone and
their grandmother, with the exception of underwater bankers and real estate
industry employees, knows real estate is poor investment
and the bottom won’t be in for at least 2 more years (the wildly bullish
scenario). Stocks and corporate bonds are dead for the next decade, trading
opportunities aside. Commodities will be crushed by the deflationary scenario
that has started if it continues as anticipated.
• Trust is evaporating and fear and pessimism are the new long-term sentiment.
People underestimate the importance of this concept. Gloom and doom are gaining
a head of steam. The future is not looking good for at least 70-80% of people
in the U.S., Europe,
and Japan. Gold
thrives in this setting.
• Gold is in a long-term bull market that demonstrates no signs of being over.
In fact, Gold made new highs in 2009 in multiple currencies, including the
Euro, Swiss Franc and Canadian Dollar (among others). Here’s a 10 year weekly
log scale chart of the price of Gold relative to the Swiss Franc, people’s
traditional fiat currency “of last resort”:

• Finally, consider the Dow to Gold ratio, or a ratio of the
“price” of the Dow Jones Industrial Average divided by the price of an ounce of
Gold in US Dollars. This ratio will absolutely reach 2 before this secular bear
market is over (the bullish scenario for those who are anti-Gold) and could
fall below 1. In other words, maybe Gold won’t make you rich in deflation but
it will preserve your wealth and allow you to buy a whole lot more shares of
the Dow Jones once the dust settles. This ratio filters out the effects of
inflation or deflation, since the ratio hit 2 in the deflationary 1930s and 1
in the inflationary 1970s. Here’s a chart of the last 30 years of action in this
ratio on a log-scale weekly chart:

Now the ratio could reach 2 with the Dow at 4,000 or 20,000 (I think the former
is much more likely) and either scenario is bullish for holders of Gold and
indicates a higher return for Gold relative to holding the stocks that make up
the Dow Jones Industrial Average (or the S&P 500).
I think the intermediate-term low for Gold is already in and we are set to
re-challenge $1000/ounce. We may or may not make it through on this attempt,
but the time is growing short for the breakout above $1000/ounce to occur. Once
$1000/ounce becomes support instead of resistance, the final stage of the bull
market in Gold will be set to begin. Based on the recent events in Europe,
I would say that by the time ATM machines in the U.S.
are installed to allow people to buy Gold from ATMs in this country, then it
will be time to start thinking about the bull market in the Gold price coming
to an end. A sentiment event like this, coupled with a Dow to Gold ratio at or
below 2, is when I’ll start looking to trade Gold for something else. Until
then, Gold is the safest and best no-brainer investment and wealth preserver
out there.
And don’t get me started on the Gold miners, because once this cyclical bear
market in equities is just about over (we’re not close in time or price yet),
this will be the go to sector and will strongly outperform other investments, including
the price of Gold. Those looking to buy in to the Gold stock bull market are
advised to be patient, as good buying opportunities will come along later this
summer.
(What's this?)
Richard Russell: Competitive devaluations to spur on
gold (GreenLightAdvisor
Views, 6/27/09)
Why Silver and Gold
"In the Ground" is Tremendously Undervalued Right Now (Blogging the Commodity
Bull Market, 6/25/09)
Gold Prices: Why You
Shouldn’t Expect $1,000 Gold Anytime Soon (Investment U, 6/23/09)
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