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I
am often asked by subscribers to our International
Speculator why I’m so sure the economy of China is
going to continue on a roll, in turn keeping demand high for
commodities in general, and precious metals in particular.
Rather
than going through the macro-economics, I tend to abbreviate by
referencing China’s troubled history, and pointing out that
China’s leadership, which today are communist only in rhetoric,
are well aware that they are an anachronism. Which is to say that
a serious slowdown in the economy, with its attendant mass
unemployment, could quickly turn into a terminal event…
politically and maybe even personally. So they’ll do what they
must to keep the economy humming along. And that is to continue to
benefit from the lessons so clearly learned in Hong Kong… first
and foremost, staying out of the way of the market.
Put
another way, now that the capitalist genie—or, more correctly,
1.3 billion genies—is out of the bottle, there’s no soft way
of going back.
As
David Galland points out in the article that follows, the best way
to take advantage of China’s explosive growth comes from getting
positioned in gold (and for leverage,
gold stocks)… the cultural default for wealth in Asia. As
you’ll read, the signs of China’s new golden age are already
starting to appear. - Doug
Casey
Asia’s
Golden Age
by David Galland, Casey Research
More
straws in the wind for gold… a wind coming out of the East.
On
March 29 the Tokyo Commodity Exchange (Tocom), the world’s
fourth-largest commodity futures exchange, announced the loosening
of margins to allow greater daily price fluctuations for gold. The
move broadens the range by 33% as of April 1.
But it was not
only what they did but what they said that caught our attention.
According to Bloomberg, Shigeharu Amari, the general manager of
Tocom’s public relations department, said that “Heightened
demand for gold in China and India have led to major swings in
bullion prices over the past six months, which is why we decided
to make the change.”
China’s
traditional cultural affection for gold, understandable given that
country’s troubled history, was suppressed by Mao and company
for 52 years, until the liberalization of gold ownership in 2001.
Today, that
affection for gold is being stoked even hotter by concerns over a
falling dollar and a pig. Actually, the rumor of a pig. In the
Chinese lunar calendar, 2007 is the “year of the red pig,”
purportedly a very auspicious year. Better yet, it is also widely
rumored to be the “Year of the Golden Pig,” which, according
to fortunetellers, only comes around every 600 years.
The lunar
calendar kicked off on February 18, 2007, but even before the
starting gun, the pick-up in Chinese gold sales was apparent; in
2006, according to the China Gold Association, gold consumption in
that country grew by 17%. Toss in a golden pig and things get a
lot more interesting. Even though the country’s annual gold
production is forecast to reach 260 metric tonnes this year, it
will fall about 100 tonnes short of meeting Chinese demand. The
Shanghai Gold Exchange, China’s only precious metals trade
platform, noted a gold trading volume of nearly 130,000 kilograms
in January, a rise of 72.83% over the same period last year.
For the other
great contender, India, gold jewelry has historically played a
crucial role--60% to 70% of all jewelry is sold during the wedding
and festival season in October and November, and many Indian banks
provide loans for purchasing gold jewelry. Even though higher
prices have pushed gold jewelry sales down in 2006, most analysts
now see gold in India taking on a larger role as an investment for
the newly affluent looking to protect wealth (Indian inflation is
now running at 6.5%), versus just as body décor and status.
Speaking of
Indian investment, on February 15, the first Indian gold ETF
launched, the Gold BeEs of Benchmark Mutual Fund. The second ETF
launch, the UTI Gold Exchange Traded Fund, is already underway.
Rajesh Bhojani, UTI Mutual Fund’s president of marketing says
about 30% of the gold market in India is investors—and we
suspect the new gold ETFs are going to dramatically boost that
percentage.
Hopping back to
China, by now anyone with any interest in gold is aware of the
rock-and-hard place dilemma caused by the 700 billion greenbacks
now littering China’s official reserves. In 2006 alone, the
Chinese took about $3.4 billion in exchange rate losses … chump
change today, but a clear warning shot of far bigger losses to
come.
Diversifying out
of the U.S. dollar and into a far more diverse basket of assets,
including tangibles such as gold, has become a very high priority
in China. But yet, despite announcing last year that they were
starting a new government investment management corporation, the
primary purpose being to manage their towering reserves, the
Chinese don’t seem to be in a big hurry to diversify. Well,
maybe not all is as it seems.
Chinese
Checkers
Recently, the
Chinese engaged in a bit of carefully orchestrated theater, the
purpose of which was to reassure the world’s financial community
they were not going to rock the boat in an attempt to diversify
out of their hundreds of billions of dollar reserves. The show
kicked off with Wen Jiabao, China’s premier, assuring the market
in a press conference that China’s new investment regime
“would not have any impact on U.S. dollar-denominated assets.”
The opening act
was followed a few hours later by China’s central bank when it
pulled back the curtain on a report stating that it wouldn’t be
making "frequent, major adjustments to the structure of the
reserves in response to market movements."
But, switching
analogies, let’s just suppose that the Chinese, rather than
being poor chess players, were actually pretty good at the game…
and the bright young team now being assembled to manage the
diversification of China’s massive reserves were actually intent
on their task?
Might the Chinese
go out of their way to reassure gullible markets that they
weren’t going to be unloading dollars, when they actually
were… getting rid of as many greenbacks as possible before the
broader markets caught on? It is certainly within the realm of
possibility. In fact, if you look at it through the spectrum of a
leadership for whom the “Big Lie” has been an official policy
tool for better than half a century, it becomes downright likely.
That this may be
the case is made all the more apparent by the recent news that
China had invested $3.3 billion in Blackstone, the U.S. private
equity firm. You can rest assured that their investment strategy
is far more diverse than just investing in U.S. Treasury bills.
The global supply
of gold is already under pressure. From rising investor interest,
helped along with hugely popular new ETFs in the U.S. and London
(among others) and from the institutions and hedge funds now
beginning to recall that gold is a good portfolio asset. Throw
onto the scale the rising demand out of a booming Asia and the
very real possibility that the U.S. dollar has seen its best days,
and you have all the pressure you need to see gold heading much,
much higher from here.
How much higher?
Impossible to say, but it is worth noting that, on an
inflation-adjusted basis, gold would have to rise to $2,276 just
to equal the previous $850 high.
How you play the
unfolding gold market will depend on your psychology and
temperament… with your choices ranging from straight bullion on
the tame side, to the extreme leverage of futures on the wild.
Around here at Casey Research, we focus on the middle path;
higher-quality gold shares that, with some dedicated effort, can
be well understood. And if they can be understood, then the worst
of the risk can be eliminated, leaving mostly just the truly
explosive upside.
Whatever approach
you take, however, just make sure that you don’t procrastinate
to the point of missing the boat altogether.
The Golden Age is
upon us.

© 2007 Doug Galland
Managing Director, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
David Galland is the
managing editor of BIG
GOLD,
a new publication from Casey Research dedicated to helping
investors profit from the developing bull market in precious
metals--with an easy-to-maintain portfolio of conservative mid- to
large-cap gold producers and near-producers.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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