Gold:
Cheap as Chips...?
by Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Monday, 18
August 2008
"...Might the seasonal shape of the gold price
turn this summer's collapse into an autumnal boom...?"
THE SHARP DROP in world gold prices starting in late July
knocked the cost of physical metal more than 20% off its record top of
mid-March at last week's low point.
That level
– just above $750 per ounce – also happens to sit right where the uptrend
starting in Sept. 2005 now lies. Meaning, for technical analysts at least, either a test (and perhaps collapse) of the bull market...or
a screaming opportunity to Buy Gold
on the cheap.
Whichever
way prices now move from here, however, it's worth considering the typical
shape of a year in the life of the gold market.

As this
chart shows – swapping the Dollar for British Pounds Sterling, to remove the impact
of the Dollar's 30% drop on the foreign exchanges – the past 10 years have seen
the Gold Price
follow a clear and regular pattern.
There have
been exceptions, of course – most notably 2003 and 2006 – when the "summer
lull" that followed a sharp rise failed to match those high prices again
by late-autumn.
But in the
main, and with a near-tedious rhythm, the price of Gold has risen in spring, slipped back
or steadied in summer, and then enjoyed very much sharper gains once more,
before the next year really gets started.
CAVEAT INVESTOR: There are no guarantees this shape could be
repeated this year. With the Gold Price falling
so far, so fast, from its recent all-time record highs, sentiment amongst
professional and institutional traders has clearly turned against the metal.
Gold buying
by the world's No.1 buyers, meantime, has indeed collapsed, with imports to India dropping by 47% in the first half
of 2008 from the same period last year. Indian gold buyers tend to account for the
surge in physical buying seen during the autumn, as their
festival season culminates in Diwali, the
"festival of lights".
Diwali
falls at the end of October this year. Reports out of India say the recent sharp falls in Gold
Prices has already led to strong investment and jewelry
demand. And here in the West, the economic background remains very bullish for Gold – at least according to history.
US interest rates now lag inflation in
the cost of living by more than 3%. A mountain of leveraged debt still teeters
above Manhattan and the City of London. Government debt is rising
worldwide, with a true "monetization" of bad loans at Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae now only a few weeks or months away.
If you
thought about Buying Gold but were
deterred by this spring's sudden high prices, it may be worth noting that the Case for
Gold remains as it was. Too much debt, plus too much inflation, threatens
to destroy the value of savings and wealth held in paper (whether in bonds,
cash or equities). Physical gold, in sharp contrast, cannot be created at will.
Owned outright – in your name alone – it's also no one else's liability or
promise to pay.
Professional
gold bars, stored securely and at very low cost in – say – Zurich, Switzerland, also represent one of the world's
deepest and most liquid capital markets. That's simply not true of Gold Coins.
And it's worth noting, perhaps, that if the coin and small
bar market can hit sudden supply problems like the Current
Squeeze even as prices are falling, just what might become of liquidity –
the ability to sell quickly for full value – when private investors come to
sell en masse...?
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of the
Gold Market
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and head
of editorial at the UK's leading
financial advisory for private investors, Adrian
Ash is the editor of Gold News and head
of research at BullionVault – where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in
Zurich on $3
spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2008
Please Note: This article
is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for
your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information
or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be
verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.