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GOLD
IS GOING TO THE MOON
An interview with the editors of BIG
GOLD, Casey Research
by Doug Casey
Chairman,
CaseyResearch.com
March 26, 2008
As
part of our survey of expectations for gold in 2008, one of our
BIG GOLD editors interviewed famous contrarian investor and Casey
Research Chairman Doug Casey. Here’s his take on what’s to
come.
BIG
GOLD: Gold has passed its 1980 nominal high. Why do you think
it’s breaking out now?
Doug
Casey: The fact that gold has moved above its 1980 high is
meaningful only in an academic way; today’s dollar is worth only
a fraction of a 1980 dollar. From here on, it’s best to avoid
thinking about anything just in terms of dollars. What’s
developing now is likely to be the biggest monetary crisis of the
past 100 years, potentially the biggest since the U.S. Civil War.
This isn’t a prediction, just an appraisal of the tumultuous
possibilities that are opening up. Americans are going to have to
learn to think more like Argentines: if an Argentine tried to keep
track of value in the local peso, he’d be bankrupt in 5 years.
BG:
There are those who agree with you about a possible crisis but
believe we’ll see deflation instead of inflation, or at least
deflation before inflation.
DC:
What we’re facing is a monumental monetary crisis that can take
one of two forms. It can be deflationary, where billions and
billions of dollars are wiped out through bankruptcies and
defaults, and the remaining dollars become worth more as a result.
Or it can be inflationary, where the world’s central banks keep
dollar assets from being wiped out by supporting the issuance of
debt --- which is what they’re currently doing, by propping up
failing banks and homeowners who can’t pay their mortgages.
Those are your two alternatives. You can have either one –
it’s really a flip of the coin as to which you get.
It’s
also possible you can have both at the same time. You could have
deflation in some areas of the economy, such as real estate, which
is happening now, and inflation in other areas of the economy,
where prices are going up, as with food and oil.
I’m
of the opinion that government is so big and so powerful now, and
the average person – idiotically – relies on it so heavily,
that much higher inflation is inevitable. They’re certainly
going to do their very best to keep a deflationary collapse from
happening, because they all remember what it was like in the U.S.
in the 1930s. Yet not too many people think about Germany’s
inflationary collapse in the 1920s. It was much more unpleasant.
Inflation
is the enemy of the person who works, saves and invests. But
it’s the friend of the speculator.
BG:
Why do you think gold stocks have lagged while gold has taken off?
DC:
Gold stocks are a play on gold. But they're also stocks. The best
environment for them is when both gold and the general market are
moving up, and lately the stock market has been problematical.
People are going to panic into gold, because it's cash – money
in the most basic form. Gold stocks are not money; they're
speculative vehicles. And despite the strength in gold, the costs
and risks of finding and building mines have gone up just as fast
in the last couple of years. There's no necessity for them to move
in lockstep with gold itself. That said, I think gold stocks are
really going to howl as gold goes into the Mania stage.
BG:
The water in the pot is definitely getting hotter. Where do you
think gold is going this year?
DC:
Gold has been in a bull market since 2001. It’s gone up, on
average, about 25% per year compounded, and there’s absolutely
no reason the bull market should stop now. On the contrary,
there’s every reason to believe that the gold bull market,
having gone through its Stealth stage and still being in its Wall
of Worry stage, is going to hit the Mania stage. To sell now would
be to leave the big money on the table.
My
best advice is, be right and sit tight. And that means staying
long until you see a golden bull tearing apart the New York Stock
Exchange on the front cover of Newsweek magazine, at which point
it will be time to sell.
BG:
What price do you think gold will hit in 2008?
DC:
Strictly gazing through a crystal ball, I think it’s going over
$1,200, no problem.
BG:
What about the long-term price for gold?
DC:
Just to reach its previous high in purchasing power, gold will
have to go over $2,500 – probably more like $3,000 after you
discount the phoniness in the government’s CPI numbers. But
because this crisis is much more serious than the one in the late
1970s and early ‘80s and much more far-ranging, $3,000 is
actually a fairly conservative number. I’ll say it again: gold
is not just going through the roof, it’s going to the moon.
BG:
What advice would you give to readers of Big Gold about how to
invest in gold and gold stocks in the coming environment?
DC:
The first thing is, you’ve got to have a lot of physical gold in
the form of gold coins. Second, make sure a large chunk of those
coins is outside the political jurisdiction where you live. If you
live in the U.S., they’ve got to be outside the U.S. If you live
in Canada, they’ve got to be outside Canada, and so forth.
Third, gold stocks are definitely going to howl, so you definitely
should have a good position in them.
As
important as gold and gold stocks are, though, I suspect we’re
going to see foreign exchange controls of some type or description
in the years to come. That means if you don’t have assets
outside your native country, you’re going to be caught like a
lobster in a trap. I think it’s very important to diversify
internationally. Buying foreign real estate is one prudent way to
do so because, even though there’s been a worldwide property
mania, there are still some places where property is very cheap,
leaving plenty of upside. In addition, if you pick a locale where
you’d like to live, you’ll have a comfortable place to wait
things out – which is a serious plus, because I think things in
the U.S. are going to get really ugly in the years to come. And
most important, the government can’t make you repatriate foreign
real estate.
BG:
What if I don’t have the ability to buy real estate outside the
country I live? I know you can have a foreign bank account and a
safe deposit box, but I have to report those, so how does that
help me?
DC:
You have to report a bank account, but you don’t have to report
a safe deposit box.
BG:
What if I have over $10,000 of coins in that box?
DC:
It doesn’t matter. It’s just like having a million dollars of
foreign real estate – not reportable. Of course they can change
these arbitrary laws – probably to make them more restrictive
and invasive – at any time.
BG:
Thanks, Doug, for the practical advice. Anything else you’d like
to say to Big Gold readers?
DC:
Hold on to your hat; you’re in for the ride of your life.

© 2008 Doug Casey
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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