|

PATTERNS THAT REVEAL GOLD
PRICE CAPPING
by James Turk
Founder, GoldMoney.com
August 13, 2007
Sometimes it is helpful to
view things from a different angle to get other useful perspectives.
That is what the following chart accomplishes. I’ve been watching the
patterns in this chart closely ever since seeing a similar version of it
a year ago on Bill Murphy’s website: www.lemetropolecafe.com

This
chart shows the price of the Dow Jones Industrials Average each day from
gold’s bear market low on July 19, 1999 to this past Friday’s close,
cross-plotted against the price of gold on the same day. For example, on
August 10th the DJIA closed at 13,239.54
and
gold closed at $670.30. So if you look at the intersection of these two
prices, there is a purple dot marking this data point.
In
my view, there are two key messages that we can read from the above
chart:
1)
The
patterns in this chart clearly show the price capping by the gold
cartel, which is an unholy alliance of several governments and their
selected bullion banks. Led by the US government, they aim to keep the
gold price at an artificially low level in a vain attempt to make the
dollar look worthy of being the world’s reserve currency. The four
different colours denote the four deliberate efforts to cap the gold
price, with each capping effort marked by a horizontal red line.
2)
Typically
the DJIA and the gold price are negatively correlated. But since August
2003, they have been positively correlated. Both are more or less rising
together, which is a significant event.
The
following explains the above chart and my analysis of it more fully.
The
blue dots illustrate the early part of gold’s bull market. As one
would expect, gold was negatively correlated to the DJIA during this
period. As the DJIA was falling initially after the collapse of the
Internet bubble and then from the aftermath of 9-11, the gold price was
rising but contained below $325, the first horizontal red line on the
above chart.
Though
it lasted for more than three years, inevitably the $325 barrier gave
way. That price could no longer be defended by the gold cartel, so the
second phase of gold’s price capping began with the new barrier at
$360. This second barrier eventually gave way in August 2003 for the
same reasons that $325 was bettered. Gold was too cheap at that price,
so the demand for physical metal overwhelmed the gold cartel’s
capacity or willingness to keep supplying metal from central bank vaults
at such a bargain basement prices.
After
all, as the old saying goes, money is power. Central banks recognize
that there is no money more powerful than gold, so they loathe parting
with their physical metal. They do so only sparingly, preferring instead
to rely upon anti-gold propaganda to influence gold prices and help
defend their price capping barriers.
For
example, how many times now has the IMF threatened to sell its gold
reserve even though one ounce has yet to hit the market? Italy’s
recent announcement that it intends to sell gold to reduce its national
debt is another example. But Italy’s entire gold reserve only equals
an insignificant 2.2% of its debt, so obviously its announcement was not
offering a serious way to pay off its debt. Rather, as anti-gold
propaganda it was a bald attempt to talk down the gold price.
The
hollow rhetoric of central bankers is becoming better understood and
more widely recognized, which is one of the factors making it more
difficult for central banks to cap the gold price. The other important
factor of course is the ongoing destruction of the dollar, which
continues to get inflated away and thereby make gold an increasingly
attractive alternative to more and more people. Consequently, three gold
price barriers defended by the gold cartel have already fallen, which is
compelling evidence that their fourth barrier will eventually fall too.
After
the second barrier fell, something unusual happened. Both the DJIA and
gold began rising together. This relationship – which continues to
this day – is unusual because these two asset classes are typically
negatively correlated. Their positive correlation can be clearly seen in
the third phase of gold’s bull market, which is denoted by the green
dots. What’s more, the pace of gold’s ascent quickened during this
phase, which is also clearly visible on the above chart.
Finally,
the fourth phase began when gold cleared $455 on September 16, 2005. The
fourth phase is patently different from the three previous ones. First,
note that the gold cartel set its barrier at a much higher price than
previously. The $700 level was a stunning 54% above the previous level
of $455. Then note the steep rise during the first part of this fourth
phase as gold climbed to the new $700 barrier. Why is this fourth phase
so different from the previous three?
My
view is that the Gold Rush 21 conference sponsored by the Gold
Anti-Trust Action Committee in August 2005 was largely responsible for
this new pattern. That conference marked an important turning point in
the battle against the gold cartel to achieve an unfettered gold market,
free of government intervention, influence and control.
At
that conference, in which I was privileged to participate, people from
countries all over the world gathered to present their findings
detailing the gold price suppression scheme, which GATA then publicized.
GATA’s success in broadcasting this message far and wide has given
gold buyers a good understanding of the gold cartel’s aims and
methods. More importantly, the Gold Rush 21 conference made clear the
exceptional opportunity available by exchanging dollars into gold. If
you haven’t already reviewed the Gold Rush 21 material, I highly
recommend that you visit the conference website: http://www.goldrush21.com/
There
is one other important point about the current fourth phase. The purple
dots marking this phase also make clear that the relationship between
gold and the DJIA has become more volatile. This result and gold’s
unusual positive correlation to the DJIA I believe arise principally
from the weak US dollar. We are witnessing a flight from the dollar that
over the past few years has benefited tangible assets and near-tangible
assets like the equities of commodity producing companies.
Why
do the barriers created by the gold cartel eventually fall? In short,
markets are bigger than any cartel or group of governments acting in
concert. Governments can influence and distort market prices through
their ongoing intervention, but ultimately the market itself determines
the value of any asset. When an asset is deemed by the market to be
undervalued, money will rush to it, as has been occurring with gold over
the past several years.
Because
of the capping efforts, the gold market can be compared to a pressure
cooker. The buying power eventually becomes overwhelming when gold is
undervalued, so central banks need to supply physical gold to the market
to keep the pressure cooker – the gold price – from exploding. For
example, we have seen this buying pressure building over the past few
months, and correspondingly, the pace of dishoarding physical metal from
central bank vaults has accelerated. Eventually the weight of metal
required to maintain the targeted price cap becomes so significant that
the cartel steps back and relieves the buying pressure by letting the
price rise, rather than part with more physical metal. Three targeted
price caps have fallen and the fourth cap at $700 will fall too.
What
does it all mean to us? It is of course discouraging when free-markets
are impeded by governments, but government intervention unfortunately
has become the norm. There is, however, a beneficial consequence of this
price capping.
Gold
is much cheaper than it would otherwise be if governments weren’t
capping its price. That creates an opportunity for everyone who
understands these circumstances to pick up gold ‘on the cheap’ by
exchanging their overvalued dollars for it. That’s as true today as it
was during any of the three previous price capping phases.
So
I expect a year or two from now we will be looking back at the gold that
we are now buying in the $600’s in the same way we today look back at
the gold bought in phases one, two and three. Those were timely
purchases because gold was good value back then, and importantly, gold
is just as good a value today.

© 2007 James Turk
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
James
Turk
GoldMoney.com
Net Transactions Limited,
ASL House
12-14 David Place,
St Helier, Jersey JE2 4TD British Channel Islands
+44-1534-760-133 Tel | +44-1534-760-125 Fax
Email
l Website
| FSN Expert Archive
|