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WILL
GOLD CATCH-UP WITH CRUDE?
by Michael J.
Kosares
USAGOLD-Centennial Precious Metals,
Inc.
March 11, 2008
Oil
and gold have had a long association in the minds and hearts of
investors. Where one goes, the other seems to follow. So when OPEC
made its announcement last week to maintain production at current
levels, gold market participants might have taken it as a
suggestion that gold would be basing at just under $1000 instead
of forming a top. When comparing oil and gold on the
inflation-adjusted charts, however, there appears to be more to
the story than the possibility that we have reached an interim
bottom.
As you can see,
the oil price is now approaching its all-time high adjusted for
inflation at near $105. Simultaneously gold clearly remains at
less than half its inflation-adjusted high of over $2300 per
ounce. What's more, looking back to the stagflationary 1970s, an
era many economists equate with our own, gold rose at roughly twice
the rate of oil. Now gold is rising at roughly half the
rate of oil. In other words, if historical balance is to be
retrieved in the months and years ahead, gold will not only have
to rise with oil, it will have to rise faster than oil.
One explanation
for the current disequilibrium between gold and oil is that OPEC
has become a more effective cartel, while gold is just now
breaking the bonds of decades of price management (intended or
not) at the hands of the mining companies, bullion banks and
official sector. If both are dancing to the same tune of currency
inflation, as they did in the 1970s, then something may be about
to break.
Such imbalances
are rarely overlooked by professional traders and that may be at
the heart of why interest in gold has picked up significantly with
institutional investors, pension fund managers, et al in recent
weeks. In addition, with the financial system under assault and
real estate on the ropes, the commodity complex in general looks
primed to become the repository for hot global capital looking for
a place to park.
Along these
lines, it was not surprising to read a New York Times report that
Calpers, the largest pension fund in the United States, is about
to increase its commodities commitment sixteen times to $7.2
billion through 2010. Nor did I take lightly the recent comments
by Quantum Funds' Jimmy Rogers that he expected gold to continue
its rise -- and that $3500 per ounce is not out of the question.
So, will gold
play catch-up with oil in inflation-adjusted terms? Will we see
gold at $2300 per ounce? My guess is that we will. Clearly OPEC is
not in the mood to carry the burden of competitive currency
devaluations further. The historic relationship between oil and
gold is likely to reassert itself, and it is unlikely that it will
be because crude oil took a fall. Gold, when viewed in
inflation-adjusted terms, looks like quite the bargain.
(Charts courtesy
of Thechartstore.com)
Michael
Kosares has nearly 35 years experience in the gold business and is the
founder/owner of USAGOLD-Centennial Precious Metals. He is the author of
The
ABCs of Gold Investing: How to Protect and Build Your Wealth With Gold
as well as numerous magazine and internet articles. He is frequently
interviewed in the financial press and is well-known for his on-going
commentary on the gold market and its economic, political and financial
underpinnings.

© 2008 Michael J.
Kosares
USAGOLD / Centennial Precious Metals, Inc.
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Centennial Precious Metals | PO Box 460009 Denver, Colorado 80246-0009
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