Global Gold 4
By Adam Hamilton
Of all the countless investments worldwide, gold is easily the
most universally recognized. From the biggest banks in premier
cosmopolitan cities to the smallest vendors in this planet’s dustiest corners,
everyone knows gold. This metal’s timeless
intrinsic value is beyond dispute and is welcome everywhere.
But although recognized, gold is not perceived the same way everywhere.
We all view it through the unique lenses of our own home currencies. Most of us are born, reared, and socialized
in a single country. By the time we
reach investment age, our minds are hardwired to judge value exclusively relative
to our particular country’s currency.
As an American, I see everything in US dollar terms. Sure, I am well aware the Fed is working overtime
to destroy its fragile
fiat currency. Yes, I certainly know the
US dollar’s hegemony is rapidly waning.
Nevertheless, I was born and raised in a dollar world. Even as a longtime student of the global markets,
my worldview is hopelessly dollar-centric.
It is all I’ve ever known.
So I can only effectively wrap my mind around today’s
secular gold bull in dollar terms. But
if the vagaries of fate had seen me born in China,
I’d have the same mental handicap but think in yuan instead. And this gold bull won’t look the same in
yuan as it does in US dollars. The same
goes for all other currencies.
Averaging $926 US dollars per troy ounce in Q1 2008, gold is
looking very strong to American investors like me. But how do investors in other countries
perceive this bull? We can gain some
idea by rendering it in their local currencies and examining the resulting
charts. This exercise will help us
understand whether global investors are more likely bullish and ready to buy gold
or bearish and ready to sell.
In this series
of essays, I’ve periodically looked at the gold price in ten major regional
currencies. Three, the US dollar, euro,
and yen, are truly global. The rest are
heavyweights that dominate their particular region and are collectively used
daily by the majority of the world’s population. Together they offer a great global survey of
the state of this secular gold bull.
We’ll start with the US dollar reference chart. Despite the best efforts of Alan Greenspan
and Ben Bernanke to irreparably ruin global confidence in the dollar, for
decades the gold markets have been priced in US dollars all over the
world. This is getting increasingly
problematic, and the dollar’s remaining days as the world reserve currency are certainly
numbered, but for now it is still king in the gold world.

Over a challenging decade where the US
stock markets have ground
sideways to lower at best, gold has been a phenomenal investment. This metal that was so despised in the early
2000s has nearly quadrupled! While stock investors are getting ever poorer
as the Fed’s inflation relentlessly erodes their real wealth, gold investors
are getting richer and richer. Early contrarians have
already earned fortunes.
The US dollar’s secular bear is just as striking. Since mid-2001, the US Dollar Index has shed
nearly 41% of its value! Since gold is
the world’s oldest and most successful global currency, it has definitely
benefited from the Fed’s gross mismanagement of the dollar. But the dollar’s behavior has plagued
perceptions of this gold bull for its entire advance. Investors tend to attribute far too much to the US dollar.
Back in Stage One, the dollar bear was indeed the primary
driver of this gold bull. But when Stage Two dawned in mid-2005, global
investment demand usurped the flagging dollar as gold’s primary driver. The differences between the Stage One and
Stage Two gold bulls are vast and readily evident in all currencies.
In Stage One foreign investors
largely ignored the young gold bull, which they believed was simply a dollar
bear. They overlooked subtle signs that
could have earned them fortunes, like rising secular support lines in their
local-currency gold prices. But nearly
three years into Stage Two, today they definitely believe. It is too bad the dollar bear’s importance
was overestimated back when they could’ve bought really cheap gold.
Today in Stage Two, American mainstream investors generally
believe gold is rising only because
the US dollar is falling. This is a silly
thesis though! If this gold bull was
merely a dollar-bear thing, gold would be up about the same 41% as the US
dollar is down. But gold is up 293%, far
more than the dollar alone can explain. This myopia prevents them from understanding
soaring global investment demand for gold.
So if you are an American suckered into believing Wall
Street’s party line on gold merely being the anti-dollar, perusing the
following charts will be very good for you.
If gold was climbing simply to reflect a devaluing dollar, it would
track fairly flat in most other currencies.
But this gold bull is universal, a worldwide
investment-driven juggernaut no longer shackled to inverse-mirroring the US
dollar’s sorry fate.
On these next nine charts, the gold prices are forex-implied based on the US-dollar-per-local-currency
exchange rates. And regardless of local
custom, all gold prices are quoted in local currency per troy ounce for comparability.
The seven major highs in USD gold, shown above with the green numbers,
are noted on all charts for reference points.
If they don’t mark a new local-currency-gold-bull high, they are shown
in red.
The exchange rates are all computed in the same direction (USD
per local) so a rising red line always means a currency is gaining strength
against the US dollar. The secular gains
in gold and local-currency exchange rates are compared with the reference
baselines in the US dollar chart above.
The yellow numbers show these results as multiples of the gains in USD
gold and the losses in the US Dollar Index.

Back in Stage One Canada gold didn’t really do all that much, and it was flatlined in a tight range for several
years before the dawn of Stage Two. But
boy, Stage Two hit like a freight train!
Canada
gold witnessed two huge uplegs despite persistent Canadian dollar
strength. The Canadian dollar rallied
76% in a very consistent secular-bull uptrend, yet Canada
gold still soared 156%, 0.53x as far as USD gold.
Canada,
of course, is a hotbed for gold mining.
I heard from a lot of Canadians in the early 2000s who were
understandably not very excited about gold.
But with dazzling record gold highs today, the legions of small
exploration companies in the Great White North are going to be a lot more
motivated to find new gold deposits to bring to market. If you like high-potential Canadian juniors,
rejoice for C$1000 gold!

I’m not sure where Ben Bernanke studied economics, but based
on his handling of the US dollar my guess is somewhere in Latin
America. This region has
long been plagued by incredibly mismanaged and weak currencies. And Brazil,
despite being the strongest economy in this area by far, is no exception. The Brazilian real went on one wild ride,
crashing in the early 2000s which drove a massive
surge in gold.
After this crisis, the real started climbing in a huge
secular bull. But instead of correcting,
gold simply consolidated high despite the real’s strength. Brazil
gold has recently hit major new highs in Stage Two. Despite a 137% trough-to-crest run higher in
the real, Brazil
gold still managed a very impressive 237% bull of its own. Global gold investment demand is driving gold
higher even in the strongest currencies.

The great collective wealth of the Europeans coupled with
their insatiable cultural lust for gold made euro gold critical for this entire
global bull. Back in the early 2000s,
euro gold couldn’t break above its long-vexing resistance at €350. So European investors
understandably concluded that gold was not in a bull market. They figured we excitable Americans were
simply too dimwitted to realize it was just a dollar bear in disguise.
Yet it’s not just higher highs that make a bull, but higher
lows. Euro gold’s support line was
inexorably rising as each correction grew weaker and weaker. I called it a stealth bull. But the Europeans wouldn’t believe until the
momentous mid-2005 €350 breakout. When
it happened, I wrote that Stage Two had dawned. And history now proves it had indeed! Euro gold has rocketed higher in both Stage
Two uplegs since.
Today the euro is the key contender to usurp the US dollar’s
throne to become the new global reserve currency. Heavy euro buying as big investors diversify
out of dollars has driven a massive 89% bull run in the euro. Despite such strength, euro gold is still up 133%! This is absolute incontrovertible evidence
that gold’s bull is a worldwide phenomenon driven by global investment
demand. The notion it is merely a US
dollar thing today is laughably naïve!

Thanks to the giant moat surrounding it, the UK
can usually do its own thing without worrying much about other war-loving
Europeans invading it. So it hasn’t yet
joined the euro party. Nevertheless, the
pound sterling has mirrored the euro’s march higher very well. So UK
gold looks very much like euro gold.
This is important since London
remains the capital of the gold world and a leading money center.
UK
gold didn’t do much during Stage One when the dollar bear was gold’s main
driver, but it has soared in the pair of huge Stage Two uplegs since. This is another key example of gold rising in
the face of a very strong local currency.
Only soaring global investment demand can drive such a universal
omni-currency gold bull. Record pound
gold is very bullish and will entice a lot of new capital into chasing this
metal.

Japan
is a proud adherent of the Bernanke school of currency
destruction. It has relentlessly
devalued its yen to try and keep pace with the US dollar bear in hopes of
maintaining its brisk export business to American consumers. All of this holding down the yen has led to a
pretty flat currency chart. Trough to crest
the yen has only managed to rise slightly less than the US dollar has fallen.
Despite all this blatant currency manipulation, Japan
gold has had an awesome bull run, especially since the dawn of Stage Two. Like in Europe, huge
pools of wealth exist in Japan. And like investors everywhere, there is
nothing like new record highs to get the Japanese interested in buying into a
bull. Artificially-low interest rates
make gold even more appealing to the Japanese, since they can’t earn a yield in
bonds anyway. Maybe Bernanke studied
economics in Japan.

The Chinese are also heavy exporters to the States, so they
long had their yuan hard-pegged to the US dollar. They sort of unpegged
it in mid-2005 near the dawn of Stage Two, but it was still subject to tight daily
trading boundaries. Since then the yuan
was been accelerating higher, but we are still looking at a modest 18% total gain
which is easily the lowest witnessed in all nine of these major regional
currencies.
Thanks to the yuan pegging, the Stage One China gold bull is
identical to the USD gold bull. Stage
Two has been smaller than USD gold’s as the yuan
rises, but only slightly. China
gold is also at record highs and investment demand for gold by mainstream Chinese investors is
soaring. With their love for gold and
high savings rates, the Chinese are going to be a major demand-side driver of
this gold bull going forward.

Today India
is the world’s biggest gold consumer by far.
Indians are shrewd gold buyers very sensitive to the gold price. Yet they have still helped drive the pair of
huge Stage Two uplegs seen around the world.
Like all investors, the higher the price of an asset goes the more the
Indians want it. So
sustained high India gold prices are very bullish for global investment demand since India
is such a big component of it.
The rupee has also been weak, but it has still risen over
the course of this gold bull. The vast
majority of this currency’s entire secular bull occurred quickly in late 2006
and early 2007. Yet despite this sharp
surge, gold barely retreated. In Stage
Two gold demand is so universal that it transcends sharp moves in any one
currency, even within the world’s biggest gold consumer. Indians are leading Stage Two buying.

Like Canada,
Australia has
had a very strong currency in the 2000s.
Much of these gains occurred in a giant Aussie dollar upleg in
2003. Unfortunately this helped drive
local gold prices into a long consolidation under A$600
resistance. Australians didn’t enjoy this
gold bull in Stage One, like the Europeans, so they didn’t even believe a gold
bull existed. This was certainly a
rational stance based on the local gold price.
But everything changed in Stage Two, when Australia
gold rocketed higher in that pair of huge Stage Two uplegs. These new highs are getting Australian
investors excited about gold again and leading to something of a renaissance in
gold exploration on this resource-rich continent. A 133% gold bull despite a 96% currency bull
really drives home the global nature of soaring gold investment demand.

For 101 consecutive years, South
Africa was the world’s largest gold
producer. But last year China
usurped it! All kinds of problems are hammering
South African gold output, ranging from a Marxist anti-investor government to
inadequate infrastructure (like electricity) to support large-scale
mining. Its rising currency has also
seriously hurt the miners that have to pay costs in rand but sell gold in US dollars.
These factors actually put South
Africa gold in a multi-year bear downtrend
following a big spike on the late-2001 rand crash. But as Stage Two was preparing to dawn, gold
started to recover. South African
investors have since enjoyed the same pair of huge Stage Two uplegs that the
rest of the world has witnessed. The
resulting high prices, if sustained, will help the big SA miners grow their
profits again.
After looking at all ten of these global gold charts, some
key themes emerge. Most importantly,
this gold bull is absolutely global in nature.
Dazzling new record highs have been seen in local-currency gold prices in all major currencies worldwide. The Wall Street arguments today claiming that
gold is rising just because the US dollar is falling are simply shortsighted
and false. Global investment demand is
the driver.
It is true that the dollar bear was gold’s primary driver back in Stage One, prior to
mid-2005. Gold did indeed mostly reflect
the dollar devaluation up to that point, which means it didn’t do much at all
in other major currencies like the euro.
But that era is long gone. In the
second stage of secular gold bulls, this metal decouples from the dominant
devaluing currency. This happened in summer
2005.
So American traders today, particularly Wall Streeters and futures guys, who think the US dollar
weakness is the key to this gold bull are woefully mistaken. While gold does still tend to move opposite
to the dollar tactically on a day-to-day basis, strategically it has totally
decoupled. Gold’s gains not only dwarf
the US dollar’s losses, but the fact that it is rising dramatically all over the world refutes this
dollar-centric thesis.
Another key insight these global gold charts offer is
psychological. For most of the things
people buy, higher prices retard demand.
You may like a cup of coffee every morning for $4, but would you pay $40
for one? I doubt it. But in the investing world, economic
principles are flipped on their heads.
Higher prices from recent gains make any investment much more appealing
to the masses than lower prices.
Back in early 2001, regardless of where they were in the
world or what currency they thought in terms of, gold didn’t excite many
investors. Cheap investments are
loathed, as investors extrapolate the downtrends that led to their low prices
out into infinity. But today, with gold
continuing to carve new record highs all over the world, more and more
investors are getting excited about this metal everywhere.
This excitement leads to buying, deploying capital. But freshly-mined gold supplies are already heavily
constrained and central banks’ hoards are getting smaller and smaller thanks to
their endless gold sales and a growing world gold market. Thus soaring global investment demand driven
by record gold prices sparking greed cannot be met by any type of supply
growth. So gold prices
will have to continue higher.
But of course the higher they go, the more new investors
will be enticed in and the greater excitement will build. This creates a wonderful virtuous circle that
ultimately culminates in a Stage Three gold bull. This is a popular mania where goldlust spills out of the investing world to seize the
dreams of ordinary people in the streets.
This is when gold will truly shoot vertical, probably briefly climaxing over US$4000 per ounce!
While I suspect we are some years away from a Stage Three
mania yet, today’s global gold bull is certainly laying the groundwork. Slowly but surely gold, like any secular
bull, is winning respect and capital within the global investment world. Record highs make this metal much more
appealing to investors. This is a
universal and immutable human trait that respects no national or currency
boundaries.
At Zeal, we were among the earliest gold investors. I first formally recommended gold as an
investment to our newsletter subscribers at $264 in early May 2001. But while gold is slowly gaining respect
today, gold stocks are struggling. Sooner
or later they will be aggressively bid up to reflect this new higher-gold-price
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The bottom line is gold’s bull market is universal and
global, far transcending the myopic and quaint dollar-centric notions Wall
Street is babbling about today. True, there
was a time when the US dollar bear drove gold.
But that became history when Stage Two dawned in mid-2005. Since then gold has risen powerfully all over
the world, in all currencies, because soaring global investment demand is
driving it higher.
And nothing begets more investment demand like sharp runs
higher leading to record prices. Investors
who would have scoffed at gold three years ago are starting to pay attention
today. The higher it runs, the more they
will want it. Nothing sparks greed in
the human heart like gold, as history testifies abundantly. Today’s early Stage Two
uplegs are the vanguard of a coming massive shift into hard assets.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
April 11, 2008
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