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Introduction
April is traditionally a quiet time in
the gold market, but not this year. Suddenly, the gold market time bomb
appears to be on a short fuse.
May, 2006/May, 2007.
What is the difference between the last run to $700 and this one?
When you contemplate the
gold price nearing $700, the first question that comes to mind is
whether or not the price is for real. In other words, what is behind the
recent strength in the gold market? The second question is whether or
not the price is sustainable. After all, we've been here before, my
fellow goldmeisters, and from here we took quite a tumble just a little
over a year ago -- back to the $570 level. The short answer is
"that was then and this is now." The facts of economic life on
the planet line up much differently in May, 2007 than they did in May,
2006.
The
most profound change has been the wholesale run from the dollar led by
Japan, China and various oil exporters. In December, 2004 Japan held
$690 billion in U.S. long and short term bonds. By December, 2006, not
only had the net Japanese position failed to increase, it had actually
declined to $627 billion. Recently, China publicly joined Japan in
shunning U.S. debt paper and so have several of the oil exporting
states. Though this troubling change of direction has been de-emphasized
by the mainstream financial media, it has not been ignored by the
foreign exchange and gold markets. It explains the $2 pound; the $1.35
euro and the near $700 gold price.
Altogether, the IMF
recently reported that 80% of the annual U.S. fiscal deficit is now
financed by foreign sources. Common sense begs the question "Who is
going to fill the gaping hole left by the exit of America's top
creditors?" A prime candidate, and perhaps the only candidate, is
the U.S. Federal Reserve itself with its magical ability to manufacture
money. It will write the check for whatever Treasuries are not taken up
by the marketplace. The federal government, with two wars on the table
and a third brewing, will cash that check. However, it will not be
without a major cost in the form of ramping inflation, and perhaps, if
things get dicey enough, inflation in the extreme.
When considering what is
different between last May and now, and whether or not the gold rally
can be sustained, the withdrawal of Japan, China and several oil
exporting states from the Treasuries market, looms large. This amounts
to a structural shift so profound that few really understand the full
implications. The economists, politicians and Wall Street pundits who
always believed that the dollar quid pro quo would go on forever are now
suddenly forced with the prospect of its complete and imminent collapse.
Whereas the run to $730 last May came as a final speculative blow off
before the correction, this run to $700 looks more like the beginning
of new leg up fueled by a fundamental break down in the operating
international quid pro quo.
A rumor that Goldman
Sachs is short 1000 tonnes. What does it mean for gold investors?
When Dennis Gartman, who
publishes one of Wall Street's most widely circulated insider
newsletters, passed along the rumor that Goldman Sachs' is sitting on a
one thousand tonne gold short position, he reignited long-held
suspicions in the gold market. Gartman also linked the short position to
the 1999 Bank of England's gold sales intimating that Goldman influenced
that decision to sell over half its reserve. What's more, given the
copycat behavior of the financial engineers these days, if Goldman has a
problem, it is likely that other bullion banks do as well. Thus
Goldman's problem could be the tip of a massive iceberg.
This tells us that in the
future investors might be competing not only with each other for
available physical gold, they could very well be competing with
well-connected bullion banking institutions that have the inside track
on gold supplies. Since the long term trends indicate a steady decline
in mine production and official sector sales (the two largest sources of
gold), covering shorts of this size could create an explosive mix.
So what does this mean
for now and would-be gold investors?
Though such a brew could
be a major positive for the gold price, there is a darker side to the
story. At some point down the road, private investors could be squeezed
out of the physical gold market by a pack of hungry bullion banks. If
you do not own gold, or do not own enough, you run some serious risks by
waiting. First, it is likely you will pay more later simply because the
gold price will continue rising in response to the shortcovering.
Second, there could come a breaking point where the premium on physical
gold items goes through the roof. Last, you might find yourself unable
to locate gold at all as the free supply dwindles to nothing.
For those who consider
such thinking farfetched, keep in mind that in the late 1990s premiums
on pre-1933 European coins shot up aggressively in response to the Asian
contagion and ramp-up to year 2000. Relatively common items like the
British sovereigns and Swiss 20 franc gold coins sold at premiums of 30%
over the gold price and more. The gold market is relatively small
compared to the high-volume stock and bond markets. The number of gold
brokers nationwide is probably equal to those housed at two or three
nice-sized Merrill Lynch offices. The gold business in terms of
manpower, item availability and infrastructure is simply ill-equipped
for what might happen to it if even a minor gold panic should develop.
Why Gordon Brown's
calls for IMF gold sales have become a reliable indicator of an up trend
Recently, with gold pressing $700,
Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, on cue, renewed his
push for International Monetary Fund gold sales. There was a time when
Brown's antics were cause for alarm in the gold market, but no more. As
it turns out, one of the more reliable indicators of an impending spike
in the gold price is Gordon Brown pressuring the IMF to sell its gold.
Just prior to the Bank of England sales
in 1999, Brown pressured the IMF to sell a portion of its gold. When
that sale failed to materialize, he prevailed upon the Bank of England
to sell instead. Gold hit a bottom shortly thereafter at $280 and then
sharply rallied to $450 per ounce, the beginning thrust of the current
bull market. Then again in 2005, Brown was knocking on the IMF's door
trying to persuade it to sell, and again he was turned back. Gold, which
had been stalled in the low-$400s, promptly found new life this time
rising to over $700 per ounce -- the second leg in the bull market.
Brown's latest attempt to persuade the
IMF to sell gold suggests that the bullion banks are still having
difficulty finding physical gold, and if that is the case, they are
likely to bid up the price to meet whatever obligations are on the
table. If the past is an indicator, Gordon Brown's new call for IMF gold
sales might be predicting another explosive move upward.
Note
I: The real problem for the bullion banks could be that global
gold depositors, including central banks and private parties, have
become very skittish about the dollar, probably for the reasons outlined
in this issue's opening article. They would probably feel more
comfortable with their gold in hand, or at least in an allocated
account. Thus, they are asking, in essence, to have their gold deposits
returned. If Gordon Brown were successful in bringing some gold
liquidity into the picture via IMF sales, it might salve frayed nerves,
but it will do little more than buy time.
Note
II: We should all keep in mind that IMF gold sales require
approval by the U.S. Congress. Both U.S. political parties -- each for
their own reasons -- are opposed to any action that might depress the
gold price.
Note
III: The London Times (Rupert Murdoch owned) has decided to make
an issue out of the Bank of England gold sales pushed by Gordon Brown.
Those sales, if you will recall, occurred at the bottom of the gold
market in 1999. The method of sale -- by auction -- insured that the
liquidation price would be ridiculously low. Thus far, the British
government has lost billions on the sale due to gold's sharp price
increase -- an embarrassment for Brown and the Office of the Exchequer
ever since. Now the Times is turning up the heat and so is the British
Parliament which has called Brown to testify on the matter. It would
like to know what Brown and the British government were really up to
with those sales. Maybe, just maybe, this time around we will finally
get to the bottom of the whole affair. Brown will replace Tony Blair
soon as British prime minister.
Note
IV: The Times article linked below (a recent USAGOLD
NewsGroup must read presentation) not only makes the case for gold
as a national asset; it makes the case for gold as a personal asset. The
Times, as it points out in the article, is pushing to receive Bank of
England and Exchequer meeting minutes from the 1999 gold fiasco, and
they've been stonewalled. The obvious question is "Why?"
Gordon
Brown's Blunder - London Times - 4/15/07

© 2007 Michael J.
Kosares
USAGOLD / Centennial Precious Metals, Inc.
Contact
Information
Michael Kosares, Proprietor
Centennial Precious Metals
PO Box 460009
Denver, Colorado 80246-0009
www.USAGold.com
USA 1-800-869-5115
Canada 1-800-294-9462
European Union 00-800-2760-2760
Australia 0011-800-2760-2760
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