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GOLD: HOW HIGH IS
HIGH?
by Antal E.
Fekete,
Gold Standard
University Live
January 18, 2008
Now
that the sound of cork-popping and other signs of celebrating the New
Year, and the new record highs in the price of gold, are dying down,
some questions arise the answering of which brooks no delay. How high is
high? Is it the nominal price or the so-called ‘real’ price of gold
that gives us a valid reading of whence we came, where we are, and
whither we go? Chrysophobes have already started their dissonant chorus
reminding gold bugs that the last time gold was trading at these levels,
in January, 1980, it was a sign marking the onset of a bear market
taking the price down by more than 75 percent, lasting over twenty
years. Goldbugs take comfort in the thought that the previous peak in
the price of gold was much higher in “real terms”, so that the
current price is not so high after all. However, this begs the question.
The previous peak was the result of a blow-off, and further rise from
here may make a new blow-off loom large on the horizon, with all the
unpleasant consequences.
The
chorus of chrysophobes will obviously get much louder as we may see
fresh record prices in four digits. Just how serious is the danger that
a blow-off could trigger another bear market lasting for decades?
Gold
Standard University offers a unique perspective on the gold price issue,
a perspective which is deliberately ignored, even denigrated, by
virtually all investment advisory services. Ours is the perspective of
monetary science as it existed prior to 1936, before Keynes and other
charlatans gained academic recognition and prominence for peddling their
pet monetary nostrums. Let’s review some of the principles that are
indispensable in separating grain from chaff.
THE
VALUE OF GOLD
Gold
is the senior monetary metal (silver being the junior). This has nothing
to do with the denials, declarations, and desires of devaluation-happy
governments. It has to do with the fact that the value of gold, unlike
the value of other earthly wares, depends far less on scarcity, and is
threatened far less by increasing supply. One may even say that the
value of gold is exempt from the effect of the law of supply and demand.
Often the rising price of gold causes a contraction of supply. A
blow-off may indeed cause a withdrawal of all offers to sell. After that
happens, gold is not for sale at any price. But again, a blow-off may
bring out an avalanche of supply. The essence of the gold price is volatility.
The essence of the value of gold, however, is stability.
We conclude that the price of gold has nothing to do with the value of
gold.
WHAT
MAKES A MONETARY COMMODITY?
Monetary
economics is the science of monetary commodities, which are necessarily
quite different from the non-monetary variety. The latter are produced
in order to satisfy consumption demand. The former are produced to
satisfy demand for the ultimate asset that has no counterpart in the
liability column of the balance sheet of someone else. The
only default-proof asset is a holding of monetary metals.
The
value of gold is more stable than the value of any non-monetary
commodity, although this fact is deliberately obscured by the managers
of global irredeemable currency, anxious to confuse the issue. They have
the power to engineer temporary surges in the value of their product,
irredeemable promises to pay, in order to put gold into the worst light.
What makes a monetary commodity? It is the fact that existing supplies
are very large relative to the flows of new metal from the mines. A
discovery of new gold fields makes little impact as its effect on supply
is small. On this basis gold has been far and away the leading monetary
metal for most of the Modern Age. It still is.
GOLD
IS GOLD AND PAPER IS PAPER
The
managers of the global fiat currency system are helpless in facing the
challenge of gold. They can have their high-profile auctions, trying to
demonstrate that gold is scrap and is being sold as such. But what these
gentlemen accomplish is only to undermine the value of their fiat
currency through the dilution of the assets backing it. Those who can
read balance sheets understand that selling a monetary asset that is
nobody’s liability such as gold, and replacing it with the
irredeemable promises of coin-clipping governments, makes the balance
sheet of the central bank weaker, not stronger. After all is said and
done, gold is gold and paper is paper.
A
paper promise cannot be better than the good faith behind it. This good
faith is not a consequence of a quantity-rule advocated by the
monetarists. It is a consequence of the promise being redeemable in
something other than another promise. Gold is not a promise: it is the fulfillment
of promise. You need not trust gold if you don’t trust the issuer
who stamped it. The weight and purity of gold can be readily tested with
scales and acids.
The
history of good faith behind monetary promises could hardly be more
dismal, as the monetary annals of the twentieth century reveal. There is
not a single currency without at least one instance of breach of faith
during the twentieth century. The Swiss defaulted on the Swiss franc
once, in 1936. The U.S. defaulted on the dollar twice: in 1933 and in
1971. The British defaulted on the pound sterling at least three times:
in 1931, 1948, and in 1968.
By
1971 it looked so bad that the world’s governments agreed to make the
deciphering of their monetary record difficult through the stratagem of
“floating”. The word is a misnomer designed to camouflage
“sinking”. Floating obscures the underlying fact of competitive
currency devaluations. The dam burst and the world’s stock of money
started on an exponential track. Prices of consumer goods took flight.
Interest rates were destabilized. Derivatives markets proliferated.
MONETARY
DEBAUCHERY HAS ITS OWN DYNAMICS
But
it was in the twenty-first century that monetary debauchery started in
earnest. The scope of monetary destruction that goes on right now makes
earlier episodes pale in comparison. Worse still, monetary debauchery
has its own momentum and is not responsive to monetary brakes. Everybody
talks about the unprecedented rate of new money creation. Nobody
is talking about the equally unprecedented rate at which money is being
destroyed. No sooner had new money been printed than its value
depreciated. The point has been reached that the more new money is
created, the more its value declines; and the more it declines, the more
new money has to be created. What you have is an irresistible spiral
into the abyss.
As
I was saying, the price of gold has nothing to do with the value of
gold. It has to do with the disappearing value of fiat currencies in
which the gold price is quoted. A falling price of gold ought to be
interpreted correctly, like the fall of a piece of rock. Is that rock
pulling the earth, or is it the earth that is pulling the rock until the
latter crashes into the former, through the mutual attraction of masses?
A
falling gold price is the market’s reaction in anticipating
large-scale dumping of gold on official account. The dumping is
politically motivated: it is designed to misinform and mislead.
Naturally, the market obliges: it brings down the price to facilitate
central bank unloading. But once dumping stops, as it obviously has to
at one point, the market immediately adjusts the gold price back to its
pre-dumping level or higher. Only ignoramuses swallow the propaganda
line that gold is passé, and
the millennium of global irredeemable currency is here.
GOLD
AS INSURANCE
Selling
gold after a surge in the gold price is akin to canceling fire insurance
after surviving unscathed a devastating fire destroying homes and
property in the neighborhood. It can be confidently predicted that
higher gold prices will bring out a lot of selling by woolly-thinking
people, as if insurance against the danger of collapse of the
international monetary system were no longer necessary after an initial
tumble in the gold value of paper currencies.
The
reason for this illogical behavior is greed that is often greater than
the desire for security. A large part of the gold bug population is
motivated by „get-rich-quick” mentality more than by the mentality
of insurance policy holders. This type of behavior should not detain us
here. We do know that there were passengers aboard the sinking Titanic
willing to sell their life-savers for cash. “Profit-taking”,
so-called, will ultimately dry up as the collateral risk (what I
euphemistically call the dead-cat bounce of the dollar) will become
clear even to people ignorant of the difference between monetary and
non-monetary commodities.
SUPPLY-DEMAND
EQUILIBRIUM PRICE OF GOLD
One
of the most controversial propositions that we here at Gold Standard
University have to face, and the idea that appears to die hardest, is
the supply-demand equilibrium price of gold. The price of monetary
metals is not governed by supply-demand considerations. Such a supposed
equilibrium is just the figment of the imagination, lacking any
scientific merit. The fact is that supply and demand in the case of
monetary metals is indefinable. By their very nature the monetary metals
are subject to the most intense and most concentrated speculative
attacks, both from the long and short side of the market. Speculators in
gold are not poring over production and exploration results. Rather,
they are trying to divine how the largest holders of gold are going to
react to a surge in the gold price. Accordingly, from sellers they
become buyers and vice versa
on a moment’s notice, moving the price as they do.
There
are no scientific principles to support predictions about human
behavior.
There are only statistical laws, and we might as well admit up front
that they are very imperfect. A statistical law is the more valid the
larger is the number of cases it can catch within the net of sampling.
It follows at once that when it comes to predicting the consequences of
a single isolated, non-repeatable event, such as gold scoring a certain
new record, statistical analysis is useless. As any upright scientist
will admit statistical analysis has a congenital weakness: its validity
and usefulness diminish in proportion with a decrease in the number of
samples. There is simply nothing science can do to eliminate or to
assuage this weakness. Of course, quacks are ready to exploit our
incurable ignorance and will try to impress the gullible public with
mathematical hocus-pocus. They will pretend to make “scientific”
predictions about the consequences of isolated, non-repeatable single
events in the realm of human behavior.
I
am a professional mathematician. Here I stand as a new Luther and bear
witness that mathematics has not been in the past, is not at present,
nor will it ever in the future be able to make predictions about human
behavior based on minimal samples. I am fully aware of the significance
of my statement and I am willing to stake my professional reputation on
it. It is not possible to predict whether a surge in the gold price will
bring out more sellers than buyers, or whether it will bring out more
buyers than sellers.
Proliferation
of mathematical symbols and studied gestures by pseudo-mathematicians do
not science make.
THE
SIREN CALL OF PROFIT-TAKING
However,
monetary economics is able to predict that the ranks of so-called
‘profit-takers’ in the gold market will be drastically thinned out
by persistent losses they stand to suffer (as have the ranks of naked
short sellers in the gold mining industry). Ultimately, when a certain
threshold in the price of gold is passed, profit-taking will dry up
altogether (as short selling by gold mines has A.D. 2007).
I
say ‘so-called profit-taking’ because we are dealing with an
oxymoron. Can one really take profits in the gold market by taking paper
currency, destined to lose whatever value they may still have?
The
call to take profit is a siren song. To neutralize it, you had better
follow the example of Odysseus who had himself chained to the mast, and
had the ears of his oarsmen plugged with wax.
SILVER
AND GOLD BASIS
When
the profit-taking mentality is thoroughly defeated and discredited by
the market, gold will go to permanent backwardation making the gulf
between cash gold and paper gold unbridgeable. The gold basis will go
negative, burning the bridge leading back to contango. From then on gold
is not for sale at any price. Just when this will happen is impossible
to predict. There are a few clues nevertheless. One is the silver basis
that acts as a precursor of the gold basis. Whatever little information
we may glean from the markets, it all has to do with the basis. It is
therefore all the more surprising that investment advisers cavalierly
ignore the basis as an analytic tool, just as they ignore the coming
backwardation.
Likewise
it is impossible to pinpoint where the threshold price, past which the
supply of gold will dry up completely, is located. History and theory
confirm that there is such a threshold, but we are left to guessing how
high it may be.
BRIBE
AND BLACKMAIL IN ECONOMICS
Governments
have forcibly removed gold not only from the banks, but from academia as
well. As a result, the level of ignorance in the world about gold is
appalling. Gold has been relegated from economics to superstition,
witchcraft, and soothsaying. It is treated like a narcotic agent.
“Gold is addictive. Gold ought to be taken away from man’s greedy
little palms by a paternalistic government”, as advocated by Lord
Keynes’ New Economics. The advice is disingenuous. It is not given in
the interest of people. It is given in the interest of the pilferers and
plunderers of people. Here is how one author, Howard Katz, describes
economics as it has transformed, nay, corrupted, American institutes of
higher learning.
“Something
is rotten in the state of economics. In the middle of the 20th
century a group of bankers bribed some of the nation’s top colleges to
peddle a reactionary economic theory (which was to make bankers a lot of
money). This theory swept American higher education with the result that
pretty well everybody who has graduated with a degree in economics no
longer has the slightest idea of what he is talking about… There is
nothing wrong with the science of economics, but there is something
terribly wrong with the kind of trash handed out by our nation’s
colleges today. It is people dumb enough to imbibe such trash who are
the reporters and columnists in most of the media, and these are the
people giving most Americans economic advice.”
THE
AFTERMATH OF THE NEXT BLOW-OFF
Gold
Standard University is fighting back. It is not motivated by the lure of
making a fortune in gold speculation. Not as if it condemned efforts to
salvage capital from the crumbling old monetary regime to transfer it to
a new one. But salvaging won’t be a bed of roses as the idea of making
a fortune in gold speculation seems to suggest. Gold Standard University
is motivated by values held in the highest esteem. It is motivated by
truth, the cause of which has been so pitifully betrayed by economists
in taking bribe money from banks; and the dissemination of which has
been so miserably compromised by economics departments in reacting to
blackmail (namely the threat to discontinue grants and to purge
truculent economists).
Making
statements about the future course of the gold price is a most
treacherous undertaking. Gold Standard University is committed to tell
you all that can be supported scientifically. Making predictions about
the timing of price moves up or down is beyond the pale. However, I am
willing and happy to share with you my insight, for whatever it is
worth, on the gold price issue as well as on the burning question how
long the agony of watching the death throes of global fiat currency will
take. I promise that I will always carefully delineate facts from
opinion.
We
can dismiss the suggestion out of hand that the next blow-off, if and
when it comes, will ring in a new bear market in gold. At any rate, it
will be very different from that witnessed in 1980. The credit of the
United States was immensely stronger then. There was room for drastic
increases in the rate of interest that helped restoring the dollar to
strength. Higher interest rate is a very strong and very effective
medicine ― that is, if the patient has a constitution that it can
be administered. If the patient is too weak, strong medicine would be
lethal.
BANK
CAPITAL AND THE DERIVATIVES MONSTER
The
dominant fact to understand is that yield varies inversely with the
value of the underlying asset. Therefore increasing
the rate of interest would further erode the capital structure of the
American banking system, already badly shattered by the subprime
crisis. It is out of the question that the Fed could follow the
Volcker-recipe, 1980 vintage, of letting interest rates go double-digit.
Contrariwise, if the Fed were able to lower interest rates by hook or
crook, that would be a reprieve for the banks with melting capital. It
is my considered opinion that the Fed is doing what it does because the effect
of a falling interest rate on
bank capital is instantaneous. By contrast, pumping money into the
banking system works by way of trickle-down. Talk about “stimulating
the economy” is for the birds. The real reason why the Fed has to
lower interest rates in a hurry when logic would call for increasing
them is the emergency to stave off an implosion of bank capital.
How
can the Fed engineer a falling trend in interest rates? This is the
point where my own analysis diverges from that of others. Interest rates
will fall because bond speculation in which the banks engage is
risk-free, on the strength of the open market operations of the Federal
Reserve. The banks preempt the Fed in buying the bonds. The consensus is
that the ailing dollar can be bailed out only through a regimen of
rising interest rates. But the banks bet at the roulette table that
interest rates will fall, against everybody else betting that they will
rise. Why, the $500 trillion strong derivatives monster serves one
purpose and one only, that the bull market in bonds may continue
indefinitely. In other words, the infinitely elastic supply of interest
rate derivatives is there to make sure that the shorts in the bond
market will burn their fingers right to the armpit. Interest-rate
derivatives did not come about by accident. Like the original Tower of
Babel, the Tower of Derivatives is being built deliberately. It was
conceived and nurtured by megalomaniacs, in this instance the managers
of the global fiat money system. They understand that bank capital hangs
precariously on the cliff of vanishing confidence. They are confident
that they can patch up even the largest holes in the balance sheet of
banks on capital account, provided that the derivatives monster will not
unravel in the meantime. The big unknown is whether the escalation of
counterparty risk will trigger the self-destruction of derivatives
before the managers are through.
Here
is the strategy. The Fed will keep halving the rate interest as many
times as necessary. Each halving nearly doubles bank capital. It worked
in Japan where the authorities have kept the brain-dead banks in
business through thick and thin. The Japanese merry-go-round has been
supported by the yen-carry trade; the American merry-go-round will be
supported by the derivatives farce.
Both
represent a game of musical chairs. It is a matter of opinion how long
the music can go on. I am reminded of the sinking Titanic aboard which
the orchestra continued playing even after all lights went out. I
don’t see that the music would stop this year even if the lights go
out and industrial production starts to sputter. The conundrum of a weak
dollar cum strong bonds will
continue to baffle all the experts, and lead a lot of gold bugs astray.
IS
ANOTHER DECADES-LONG BEAR MARKET IN GOLD POSSIBLE?
The
1980-2000 bear market in gold was made possible by the Volcker-coup
in pushing interest rates past 20 percent. It was designed to trick
people out of their gold position. The Volcker-coup
was an expensive gamble that succeeded, because the economy was fairly
strong in 1980, a condition completely lacking today. If Bernanke tried
to mount the Volcker-coup now, the economy would go into a tailspin. We may conclude that
another bear market in gold is well-nigh impossible.
GOLD
STANDARD UNIVERSITY LIVE
To
summarize, in my opinion a blow-off in the gold market is not imminent.
The dollar, however weak, is not yet a pushover. It will fight back,
supported by a strong bond market. The bag of tricks of the managers of
global fiat currency is not empty. They haven’t yet played the Amero
card, for example.
I
advocate a new approach to investing in gold. This approach rules out
profit-taking, but involves arbitrage between the two monetary metals.
Cues must be taken from the silver and gold basis, not from the
gold/silver ratio which is rigged.
Come
to Session Three of Gold Standard University Live to be held in Dallas,
Texas, from February 11 through 17. I will conduct the course and the
seminars in person. Bring your questions with you. Details about the
session can be found on the website www.professorfekete.com/GSUL.asp
Be part of the uplifting undertaking to resurrect monetary
science. Discover the truth about money as the giants of monetary
science, Adam Smith, Carl Menger and others have handed it down to us,
before bribe and blackmail have overtaken the search for and
dissemination of knowledge in economics.
The
world’s finance capital is on its way to total annihilation. The
essence of the subprime crisis was not the slack in lending standards.
The essence is that the worm of doubt is eating confidence away. Banks
no longer trust the promises of other banks. Under a gold standard trust
could quickly be restored by paying out gold. That’s what gold is for,
to restore trust whenever doubt arises. But gold has been removed from
the banking system. Now irredeemable promises can only be redeemed by
issuing more irredeemable promises. In such a system the erosion of
confidence cannot be checked. Lack of confidence becomes cumulative. It
is like kicking garbage upstairs. When the attic can take no more, the
day of reckoning has dawned, and the garbage comes crashing down.
What
can the individual do under these circumstances? He can salvage the
pieces of his capital from the moribund international monetary system
through the Yellow Brick Road. When you invest in gold, you transfer
your capital, bit by bit, from Sodom and Gomorrah where it is doomed by
the coming rain of fire and brimstone, to Emerald City of the New Gold
Age.
See
you in Dallas!

© 2007 Antal E. Fekete
Gold Standard University Live
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