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M3
died a controversial death this week. As for whether the Fed’s
decision to stop reporting its broadest measure of money was simply
a recognition that money has become too complex to quantify, or
an attempt to hide the accelerating debasement of the dollar,
time will tell. But one thing is certain: The best gauge of
gold’s near-term direction has now become impossible to
calculate. Called the “Fear Index,” it was created by
GoldMoney’s James Turk in the 1980s, and since then it’s
been nearly flawless (read on for its final prediction).
Here’s how James and I explained it in our book, The Coming
Collapse of the Dollar:
“The
dollar is a balance sheet currency, which is to say an
accounting fiction. Its value is derived from the assets held by
the Federal Reserve and commercial banks, some of which, like
gold, are real and tangible, and some, like bank loans, foreign
currencies, and derivatives, are not. The Fear Index measures
the relative importance of gold within the U.S. monetary system,
and is calculated by multiplying the U.S. gold reserve (i.e.,
the weight of gold reportedly under the Treasury’s control) by
gold’s exchange rate to get its total market value, and
dividing this result by M3, the broadest measure of money
supply.

A
reading of, say, 2%, indicates that for every $100 circulating
as M3, there is gold worth $2 sitting in the U.S Treasury’s
vaults. Gold would thus account for 2% of the dollar’s value,
with the other 98% dependent upon the financial assets of the
Fed and the nation’s banks. The calculation for December 31,
2003 is as follows:

When
the Fear Index is falling (that is, when the number of dollars
in circulation is rising faster than the market value of the
gold in U.S. reserves, or when the number of dollars is falling
more slowly than the value of the gold reserves) the implication
is that people are willing to hold these extra dollars because
they’re optimistic about the prospects of the dollar and/or
the U.S. economy. When the Fear Index is rising (which occurs
when money is flowing into gold, pushing up its exchange rate
and raising the market value of U.S. gold reserves), it’s
usually because people are worried about the dollar or the
health of the U.S. banking system, and are looking for
alternative stores of value.
And
when the Fear Index exceeds its 21-month moving average and the
moving average rises above its level of the previous month, the
result is a ‘Buy’ signal, indicating that gold is headed
higher. As you can see from the chart below, there have been
only five such signals in the past thirty-five years, all of
which were followed by gold rallies."

Investors
who bought gold at the last Fear Index buy signal are up about
80% today. So now the question becomes, where’s the top (which
is the same thing as asking where the dollar will bottom out).
Without the Fear Index, this question has become a lot harder to
answer. But it’s also a long way off. As James wrote in his
most recent Freemarket Gold and Money Report newsletter:
“As
we can see from the page-1 chart [posted below], the
Fear Index has again been climbing over the past few years.
There are a couple of noteworthy points to make as a result.
There are two solid red downtrend lines on the page-1 chart.
Look at what happened after the first downtrend line was broken.
The Fear Index soared. Now look at what is happening.
The
Fear Index is again soaring, and I expect it to continue
climbing higher, repeating the experience of the 1970s. I’ve
drawn two uptrend channels to show that I expect the Fear Index
to climb within an uptrend channel just like it did through the
1970s. The second point to which I want to draw your attention
on the page-1 chart is the dotted, red downtrend line.
I
expect the Fear Index in time to reach and eventually break
through that downtrend line. In other words, the Fear Index over
the next several years is heading back to – and probably above
– 10%. In fact, it is my expectation that within several
years, the Fear Index will climb toward the peak reached during
the Great Depression. It will do this as the problems with
dollar fiat currency become more apparent, causing a flight from
the dollar into the safety and security of gold. The flight out
of the dollar is already underway. It’s only a matter of time
before the rush for the exits turns into a torrent.
Assuming
M3 grows at 8% a year over the next three years, and the Fear
Index rises to 10%, implying that we’re worried as in the
1970s, the Fear Index yields a target gold price of $4,961 per
ounce."


© 2006 John Rubino
DollarCollapse.com | Financial
Sense Editorial Archive
John
Rubino is
the author of The
Coming Collapse of the Dollar (co-written with James Turk), How
to Profit From the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003), and Main Street, Not Wall Street (William Morrow, 1998). A former Wall
Street financial analyst and columnist with theStreet.com, he currently
writes for Fidelity Magazine, CFA Magazine, Kiplinger's
Personal Finance, and Merrill Lynch Advisor. He lives in Moscow, Idaho.
Contact by Email.
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