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The
following is for the gold bugs - succinct and to the point:
Some
people would assert that if governments were prepared to accept
monetary discipline there would be no need for gold, but this is
rather like the statement that if there were no sin there would be
no need for laws. In the effort to please (or bribe) their voters,
governments are under constant temptation to do things that,
directly or indirectly, lead to monetary expansion and inflation;
and it may be easier to resist such temptations if the authorities
are subject to some form of external discipline, even though it is
one to which they have voluntarily submitted. Politicians cannot
be expected to accept such a curb on their powers unless the
public demand for it is so strong that acceptance is the only way
to get elected.
From
Gold or Paper by E.
Victor Morgan & Ann D. Morgan, 1976
Now
this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end.
But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.
Lots
of quotes today.
The
above words by Sir Winston Churchill and the Morgans encapsulate
the where we are and the
why. There has been much
hand wringing today over the drops in the gold and silver spot
prices. If you convince yourself that the rise in commodity prices
is due to the ephemera of any given day a la Marketwatch, CNBC,
Fox News, Reuters or AP (take your pick….could be Iran nuke
threats, oil price shock, Nigerian rebels, etc. etc. etc.) and
that the precious metals market is a bubble, then carry on with
your blinkered existence and don’t read anything into the fact
that the US Fed has stopped reporting the numbers for the M3 money
supply.
Gold,
silver, base metals, natural gas, oil, and practically all other
commodities are going up in price because of inflation. Inflation
is too many dollars chasing too few goods….it is a concept that
few seem to grasp in this dumbed-down media era in which we live.
Instead the financial reporting world dismissively wave such
things away and blame price rises on shortages or gouging. It is
INFLATION pure and simple!
From
the editorial in the back of Barron’s
this week:
“not
even the supply and demand for gold is stable enough to make the
“barbarous relic” a reliable touchstone for the value of
money. The recent rise in the dollar price of gold is as much due
to a change in policy from some foreign central banks as it is to
any suspicion (well-founded though it may be) about U.S. dollar
debt or the purchasing power of the dollar.
Codswallop!
The
spectacular price activity of gold and silver over the last week
are phenomena unavoidable for the mainstream press to comment
upon. I have seen perhaps a dozen press articles, almost all of
which attach the caveat at the end about the all time high of
$850/oz January 21st, 1980 and the 20 or 25 year (take
your pick) bear market
that ensued. This is all pretty much disingenuous rubbish. The
bear market days were only really for 5 or so of those years when
the dot.com machine was in full throttle and gold mining was not
making much money.
Kudos to the Sunday
Times of South Africa, October 16, 2005 from which I clipped
this nugget. This is one of the few unabashedly bullish pieces on
gold I have seen in the mainstream media. Those who took note of
it when it appeared have assuredly made money.

When
I attended the San Francisco Gold Show in December 2005, the gold
price crossed over into +$500 territory, however I was so deflated
by the response this event seemed to be getting that I actually
began writing a piece entitled “Not
with a bang but a whimper”, after T.S. Elliott’s famous
poem “The Hollow Men”. Thank goodness I didn’t put it out,
because within hours it seems the gold price started to begin its
rapid ascent.
Whatever way the
media choose to spin the gold price - and most choose to fence sit
– those people who have been knocking gold for years now are
sounding more and more like “Hollow
Men”. There is no denying that gold is very significantly up
in price since the heady dotcom daze of 2000-2001. As someone who
has been watching the gold price for decades, I always know the
bias of a publication when I see the gold price graph they are
using…. I’d say most of the time, the idiot press would choose
to begin their graph at the all-time high of January, 1980, when
the price was at its peak. The gold price since then looked like a
ski slalom, with a precipitous drop. With gold in $620 territory
the graph is starting to look more like a parabolic mirror than a
ski slalom. The naysayers will continue to tell you that gold is
still doing poorly in 1980 dollars because of inflation. They will
tell you this bull run is almost done. They will tell you that
this bull market cannot be sustained. Disregard it, because gold
is probably going to go a lot higher still.
The January 1980
top in the gold market was what we call the manic
phase in the market; when everyone is leaping in, when gold
was the subject of conversation at every cocktail party and around
every water cooler. Gold was going up $50 in price each day. We
are a long way away from this type of activity. But, we sure
have seen it in recent years in the internet stocks and the
housing market haven’t we? I would say that times are such that
a manic buying frenzy in precious metals is completely and
entirely conceivable, even predictable. Why? Inflation.
Disaster
Preparedness
In
North America and Europe, spring season is here and for the most
part the fires, floods, and hurricanes of last year are but an
unpleasant memory. Hurricane season is well past in the USA, but
Queensland, Australia is taking a beating right now, and places
like Tennessee are getting their annual pummeling from tornados.
Last year was quite something for natural disasters. The Asian
Tsunami struck December 26th 2004 but it wasn’t until
the early days of 2005 that reporters were able to get access to
many areas and see the magnitude of the devastation. America was
hit with three major hurricanes: Katrina and Rita in quick
succession, and then Wilma. I flew over Miami a couple of days ago
and still there are plenty of blue tarpaulins on damaged roofs.
Last year the mountains of Kashmir and the foothills of the
Himalayas were hit with a massive 7.6 magnitude in the Hindu Kush.
On April 18th at 5:12 AM Pacific Time was the 100th anniversary of
the great San Francisco Earthquake.
In
Louisiana and Mississippi, homes and local banks were “wiped to
the slab” by Katrina. Banknotes were reduced to a pulpy mass and
covered with a combination of diesel oil, pesticides and raw
sewage. For those already weary survivors, convincing the
check-out girl at the local 7-Eleven where you had been evacuated
that what you offered in your hand was indeed money became a
beyond-the-pale task.
Incidentally,
for those hapless folks who may have to call on the services of
the Treasury Department’s Bureau of Engraving and Printing (BEP)
in Washington D.C. ; according to Coin
World they handled more than 26,000 mutilated currency claims
in 2005. “If the currency is seriously damaged or mutilated it
must be sent to the BEP for examination and identification after
which the claimant will be reimbursed for its face value by a U.S.
Treasury cheque. The standards by which mutilated currency can be
exchanged at face value are: (1) at least 51% of a currency note
is present and identifiable, or (2) 50% or less of a currency note
is present and the submitted evidence justifies the method of
mutilation and the U.S. Treasury is satisfied that all missing
portions of the currency note have been totally destroyed.”
Sounds
pretty complicated huh?
Apologies
to Matthew 6:19, but gold is the only treasure where moth and rust doth NOT corrupt.
Turning
to man-made disasters: through history, gold has got many people
out of tight scrapes, be it the coins and ingots handed over for
passage on rickety rafts by the Vietnamese boat people to the
bangles and jewellery handed to corrupt soldiers I watched last
week in the film, Hotel
Rwanda. Even in fiction, James Bond 007 had 50 gold sovereigns
hidden in the lining of his leather attaché case in From
Russia with Love; Major T.J. “King” Kong (Slim Pickens)
had 100 dollars in gold in his survival kit along with a
“combination bible and Russian phrase book and 3 lipsticks” in
Dr. Strangelove. Gold
stays money after the social fabric has been torn to pieces.
The
majority of folks reading this are not imminently threatened by
natural disaster or mob violence. Your parents or grandparents
might have stashed some gold behind a few bricks in the cellar
because they had lived in a very different time, with a couple of
World Wars, a pogrom or two, and a Depression. To do so today
seems so old-fashioned. To say it’s important is like Chicken
Little saying the Sky is
Falling.
However,
there are other disquieting things out there which threaten our
comfy existence; more subtle and pernicious and not apt to make it
into sound-bite CNN coverage ….INFLATION.
Sometimes
in order to understand the gold and silver markets you need to
look at other markets like energy and the base metals. For the
next couple of paragraphs I’m going to focus on base metals.
Take the 30 second test. How many articles of metal can you come
up with? Here’s my list:
Safety
pins, propane cylinders, guard rails, automobiles, thumbtacks,
locomotives, wing nuts, oil tankers, construction cranes, soda pop
cans, lightning rods, CD coatings, pipelines, paperclips and
pennies.
All
of these essential parts of 21st century life (some
arguably more so than others).
In
order to get a proper picture it’s often necessary to back away
from the canvas and stare at it from the middle of the room. You
can’t divine much from a 1 month chart due to noise caused by
volatility. Let’s look at the 5 year graphs for aluminum,
copper, lead, nickel and zinc. Start with http://www.kitcometals.com/charts/
and
then scroll through the various historical charts for the metals
listed on the left hand side of your screen when you click on the
above link.
Every
one of these metals is in a bull market. Zinc and copper are just
as parabolic as gold and silver. This is not just a spike or a
blip on the graph…this is a very disquieting trend built over
time which is metal market wide.
So…..if
the metals are all going vertical, and yet inflation (as measured
by the Hollow Men) is flat or minimal there is something that
doesn’t compute in the official figures …or….manufacturers
are taking it on the chin and not passing the costs on to the
consumer. Not yet anyway. Take car manufacturing. In the average
automobile there’s 17 pounds of zinc in the form of galvanized
steel for rust proofing. Another 20 pounds go into die cast parts
like door handles, locks and trunk latches. Each tire contains
about half a pound of zinc which is used to cure rubber. A car
battery contains 18 pounds of lead, and another 9 pounds is used
in soldering and other components. There’s 42 pounds of copper
in a car in the radiator and wiring. The average passenger car
also contains 267 pounds of aluminum. Nickel provides a few pounds
as catalyst supports, exhaust systems, and safety belt springs. I
haven’t even counted the steel….
With
metals going higher it seems obvious to me that the price of every
item made of metal is going up - unless manufacturers eat the
increases and slash their costs (pensions, workforce) to stay
competitive (think car manufacturers). Should the increased costs
of production translate into a consumer pull back…downturn,
recession or even dare say “deflation”. Well…..in the Sage
Words of Mr. Bernanke:
Like
gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are
strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a
technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic
equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it
wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S.
dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so,
the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms
of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices
in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a
paper-money system, a determined government can always generate
higher spending and hence positive inflation.
Remarks before the National Economists Club, Washington, D.C.
November 21, 2002
In
the words of an editorial in yesterday’s Wall
Street Journal, entitled
“Betting on Bernanke”: “Our own surmise is that Mr.
Bernanke may be muttering to himself that Mr. Greenspan skipped
town just in the nick of time.”
(Ode
to a Central Banker)
The
Hollow Men
by T. S. Eliot
We
are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
Our dried voices, when
We whisper together
Are quiet and meaningless
As wind in dry grass
Or rats' feet over broken glass
In our dry cellar
This
is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.

©
2006 Keith M. Barron Ph.D.
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