Gold and Silver, preparing for the next launch - to
greater heights.
By Peter Degraaf
Normally when a commodity rises in price, the supply
increases, as producers put their product on the market to take advantage of
the higher price. In the case of gold,
we see the opposite to that trend. In
the year 2000, just before the current bull market in gold began, the world’s
mines produced 2,573 tonnes. (Some
sources quote 2,604 tonnes). In 2007, after gold
increased in price from $260.00 to $900.00, the supply of new gold actually DECLINED
by 129 tonnes, to 2,444 tonnes. South
Africa, historically the world’s largest
supplier of gold, is now producing the lowest number of ounces in 84 years, and
has been overtaken for
first place by Red China. (Source www.goldsheetlinks.com). Gold is scarce, and
getting scarcer!
Meanwhile the world’s money supply, the medium of exchange
that is used to purchase gold, is increasing dramatically. Money supply in over a dozen major economies
is increasing at double digit rates.
According to the World Gold Council, demand for gold is
running 30% above last year. It’s no
wonder! While the gold supply is
decreasing, the amount of paper and digital money is increasing. It’s like going to an auction, where the number
of artifacts is limited, and upon entering the auction hall, the auctioneer
hands out hundred dollar bills. Guess
what is going to happen? Prices will
rise!
Slower economic activity in the USA
will spill over into other economies, resulting in lower tax revenues. Ironically this will coincide with increased
government spending because of the various ‘safety nets’ have been put into
place. Unfortunately, lower tax revenues
combined with increased spending cause a geometric (not arithmetic) rise in
budget deficits. We can therefore expect monetary inflation to continue for a
long time.
“DETERMINE WHAT IS BEST FOR THE GOVERNMENT AND KNOW THAT IS WHAT THE POWERS ARE
WORKING TO MAKE HAPPEN. INFLATION IS
WHAT IS ‘BEST’ FOR A GOVERNMENT WITH ENORMOUS DEBT” …Ayn Rand.

Pictured is a recent 10 million dollar note from Zimbabwe. It even has an expiry date printed on
it. What can you buy with this
banknote? If you hurry, it might buy a
pound of chicken.
RISING GOLD
DEMAND.
Gold demand is not limited to jewelry or to investors. The European Union has forced the electronics
industry to stop using certain products in assembly and production. Six products can no longer be used, including
cadmium and lead. This ruling is affecting
every electronic item, including iPods, cell phones, computers, laptops etc.,
and has forced manufacturers to switch to silver and gold.
Central bankers usually sell gold, when they want to hide
the fact that their fiat currencies are becoming ‘worth less’ (on the way to
becoming worthless). Since gold is the
barometer by which the value of fiat currencies can be measured, it is in the
interest of money creating banks to keep the gold price from rising. The problem for the central banks is that
each time they sell an ounce of gold, they get closer
to the day when they will lose control.
Already the Canadian Central Bank is virtually ‘out of gold’, (having
sold 38 billion dollars worth, and using the funds thus acquired, to buy US
dollar denominated bills and bonds).
The US gold supply has not been audited since 1953, and the
wording describing the gold in custody keeps changing! Originally it was called ‘Gold Bullion
Reserves’. Then in 2001 the description
was changed to ‘Custodial Gold Bullion’. Six months later the wording was changed
again, this time to: ‘Deep Storage Gold’.
Could it be that this refers to gold that is still in the
ground, and has yet to be mined?
If that is the case, and since the government does not own
any mines, what ominous implications do we draw from that mysterious
terminology?
CENTRAL
BANK DEMAND.
The Russian Central Bank indicated in 2007, that they wanted
to add several hundred tonnes to their reserves. The Chinese Central Bank in 1978 had 95% of
its foreign reserves tied up in gold.
Today, because of the rapid increase in its foreign reserves (much of it
in US dollars), only 1.5% of its assets consist of gold. A number of highly placed officials are on
record as stating that they would like to see a change, especially as they
notice the decreasing value of the US dollar.
Just a small switch on the part of Chinese bankers from dollars to gold
will have a very positive impact on the gold price.
Although China
is now the world’s top gold producer, it is nevertheless a ‘net’ importer!
China
is buying all of the gold its mines produce plus at least another 25 tonnes per
year.
Compared to some other commodities, gold is lagging, and has
a lot of potential to rise dramatically.
Since the current bull market in commodities began in 2001, oil has
risen over 1,000%; copper +500%; lead +600%; Molybdenum +1,100%; Uranium +600%,
Platinum 550%; Rhodium +2,000%. Gold
thus far has risen less than 400% during this seven year period.
The most powerful ‘driver’ for gold is the so-called ‘real
interest rate’. This interest rate is
arrived at by deducting the rate of inflation from the current T-bill
rate. When this formula produces a
result of +1% or higher, the ‘real rate’ is considered positive, when it
produces a result of -1% or lower, the rate is negative.
Chart courtesy Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis

Featured is a chart of ‘real interest rates’
using the official CPI rate.
Subscribers to my Weekend Report are well aware of the fact that actual consumer prices are much
higher than those reported by the government.
Thus, if we reconstruct this chart, using the figures reported by John
Williams at www.shadowstats.com, then
‘real interest rates’ in 2008, are negative by a lot
more than -2%!
According to Gibson’s Paradox: When ‘real interest rates’ fall, gold will
rise, and vice versa. This is one
of the most completely established empirical facts in the entire field of
quantitative economics. Next we’ll look
at a gold chart to see if Gibson’s Paradox is reliable.
Chart courtesy www.stockcharts.com

Featured is the gold chart going back to 1989. Real interest rates according to the earlier FED
chart, turned positive in 1991, and the gold price dropped. In 1992 real rates
fell, and the gold price rose. In 1994
rates rose slightly, and gold was steady.
At the end of 1996 rates rose, and gold
fell. In 2000 and 2001, real rates
started to drop, and by 2002 the rates were negative, and despite desperate
efforts on the part of the bank of England,
as it sold large quantities of gold, the gold price took off. From 2002 until 2005, real interest rates
were negative, and gold kept on rising throughout that period. In 2006 rates turned positive again, and gold
corrected for most of that year. In mid
2007 we saw the beginning of the sharpest decline in real rates in almost 20
years. This decline is ongoing, and if we use actual inflation figures, we
are probably at -5%. This is incredibly
bullish for gold, and provides the ammunition to keep this bull market going
for quite a while. Short-term
corrections, such as the one that started in March should be viewed as
opportunities to add on, not looked upon in fear that the rally is over.
Using past history as our guide, the top we saw in March
will likely last anywhere from 1 month to 3 months. The next chart shows us what happened in
years past, after a top in the first quarter.

Featured is the 8 year gold chart. The blue arrows point to the lows that were
carved out after a top in the first quarter of the year. The worst pull-back occurred in 2006, and you
will recall that ‘real interest rates’ were positive at that time, pressuring
the gold price. The good news for gold
bulls is that the March 2008 pull-back has
already matched that correction, and although it is possible that gold
will drop lower, in view of the fact that ‘real interest rates’ are now
decidedly negative, one would be foolish to count on prices going much lower.
Large numbers of people who are
selling today, may end up buying back at a higher price.
There are a lot of ongoing trends that suggest that the
bottom for gold is in place, or very close. Oil, natgas, copper, platinum and grains, along
with the HUI gold stocks chart, are all showing signs of having turned back up
again, supporting the commodity bull market.
This commodity bull market has a history of swinging in 20
year cycles. Since the current one
started in 2001, we need not expect a top for a number of years yet.

Featured is the weekly gold chart, using closing
prices. The green arrows point to the ‘price
trigger’ where the uptrend resumes, after a pull-back. Notice we are within a ‘hair’ of another one
of these triggers. This next one will be
at 941. Don’t be ‘left behind!’
COMPARING
GOLD TO SILVER.
The bullish case for gold, that has been
made in this article, is even more powerful for silver. Whereas most of the gold that is used,
eventually gets recycled, most of the silver that is used, ends up in
landfill. Small amounts are used in
every cell phone, computer, refrigerator, TV set, laptop, satellite, electrical
switches, medical wound coverings, water filters etc.
The 2.5 billion ounces that existed in US
government stockpiles when I first became interested in silver in the early
1960’s are gone! Used up! Finished!
During the recent
drop in silver a few weeks ago, the number of ounces in the SLV, silver ETF
actually increased! A very bullish
development!
Silver seems to bottom towards the end of each quarter: March, June, September and December often
carve out a bottom in silver. The drop
in March came right on schedule.
THE RATIO
BETWEEN GOLD AND SILVER.
It was my pleasure to meet Mr. Nelson Bunker Hunt at a convention;
just after the Comex board changed the rules on silver contracts, and finished
his run at silver in early 1980. I asked
him about the gold to silver ratio. He
told me that he felt that in time, the ratio would shrink to 10 ounces of
silver for an ounce of gold.
More than 25 years have passed since that conversation, and many
more uses for silver have been discovered.
Less and less silver is being found.
Due to environmental concerns it is more difficult now to open a mine
than at any time in history. (Congress
is currently discussing mining legislation HR 2262). It is my belief that the ratio between gold
and silver will shrink in time, to 5 ounces of silver buying an ounce of gold.
WHO DO YOU BELIEVE?
A word of advice to those of you who are confused by the
different views offered by a myriad of advisors: Keep a simple record of their
predictions. Mark the name, the date on
which the prediction was made, the nature of the prediction etc. Then keep track of the predictions, and weed
out those advisors who are accurate less than 50% of the time, since flipping a
coin will give you 50%. You’ll soon
notice that when a hot-shot analyst tells you that he expects gold to drop
$100.00, he is usually back a few days later with a new forecast.
Mr. James Sinclair, the CEO of Tan Range is predicting that
gold will rise 80% by early 2011. He is
backing this prediction with a 1 million dollar bet. I’ve listened to Mr. Sinclair speak at one of
the New Orleans Seminars. He knows gold! I doubt if he will lose this bet.
EXIT STRATEGY.
We are a long way from having to be concerned about an exit
strategy from our gold and silver positions. For those of you who worry
about tops, I’ll share my exit strategy with you. When 2 ounces of gold or 10 ounces of silver
are equal in value to the daily quote for the Dow industrials, I’ll start
making plans to sell most of my metals, and I’ll buy blue chip stocks or real
estate with the proceeds. Today the ratio between gold and the Dow is 13.6 ounces of gold or 700 ounces of silver versus the
Dow. That is a long way from my exit.
DISCLAIMER:
Please do your own due diligence. I am NOT responsible for your trading
decisions.
Happy trading!
Peter Degraaf April 08/2008 AD
Peter Degraaf is an on-line stock trader, with over 50 years
of investing experience. He issues a
weekly alert to his subscribers. For a
60 day free trial, send him an E-mail itiswell@cogeco.net,
or visit his website www.pdegraaf.com