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WHERE
WE'VE BEEN
by David N. Vaughn
Gold Letter,
Inc.
January 3, 2008
Well,
according to gold bears gold was supposed to go down.
Instead
it is going up. Makes no sense, huh? I’m really not a nut to get hung
up over the gold price. I merely see the price as a reaction to events
happening around us.

Well,
another decade is coming soon right around the corner. Seems like the
last decade barely got started. Seems like yesterday was 2001 and an
entire fresh ten years was before us. And the older we get time seems to
go faster and even faster. I remember in 2001 making estimates of where
the new decade would take us and where we would be when 2010 came. What
has happened these past years?
We
have a perpetual war in the Middle East now that we basically are
committed to forever. A military presence in Afghanistan and Iraq with
only Iran separating the two countries. If you look at a map real well
you will see why our government is itching for an excuse to establish a
military presence in Iran.
“House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi lashed out at Republicans on Thursday, saying they
want the Iraq war to drag…” "They like this war. They want this
war to continue," Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters.” “In
response, House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, said in statement:
"Republicans have stood on principle to protect current and future
generations of Americans, whether it polled well or not.” MSNBC
With
Iran subdued and controlled by the west the United States would have a
solid hold on all the oil coming from that region. But Iran stands
between all and even has a vast shoreline on the Persian Gulf. Take a
look at a map and you will notice this shore line starts at the western
end of the Persian Gulf and goes all the way to the very edge of the
Arabian Sea.
“AMERICA’s
elder statesman of finance, Alan Greenspan, has shaken the White House
by declaring that the prime motive for the war in Iraq was oil.” “I
am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what
everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil…” Times
Online
Strategically,
Iran must come under western domination for the Middle East and its vast
oil reserves to be in the west’s hands. As I see it just a matter of
time before hostilities erupt there and the United States is forced into
another occupation. Iran is a big country and a vast territory but in
the end it is militarily insignificant when compared to the might of the
United States.
“Tehran
today announced, no, Tehran warned
that it would fire 11,000 rockets at enemy bases within a minute if the
US launched military action against them. The nuclear stand-off between
the US and Iran is reaching a critical stage…” “Where does that
leave us? Who knows.” “All it takes is the situation in one country
to get too big to handle, and you can sure as hell bet that the pressure
will reverberate to the surrounding area, one Domino piece toppling
after another.” Blogspot.com
So,
Iran has come under the microscope. What else has happened? Alan
Greenspan is retired and the old magic that made up the Federal Reserve
is now gone and past forever in our generation at least. Bernanke will
never have the success Alan Greenspan had and he is already undoing all
that Greenspan accomplished. A new decade and a new and a weaker Federal
Reserve Chairman. Definitely the old magic is gone.
“The
bubble has burst and the economic consequences are now coming into
view." BBC NEWS
And
what else has changed? The housing bubble which began around 2000
finally burst. The housing bubble had been the last magic bullet to keep
the economy rolling along. Now that magic bullet is spent. The term
“subprime” has taken on a lot of meaning and it is interesting how
many derivative funds are directly related to the housing credit market.
This bubble is still in the state of deflating and has another summer to
go. So its peak might not be really felt until the summer of 2008. I
haven’t even mentioned yet the subprime housing disaster raising havoc
in the home markets and associated elated derivatives.
“The
hangover from the lending spree that fed the real estate boom during the
first half of this decade keeps getting worse…” MSNBC
And
as I write these very words the Pakistani politically popular former
Prime Minister was assassinated.
“The
assassination Thursday of Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto
threw the country's election campaign into disarray and sparked a wave
of violence across the nuclear-armed nation.” “The assassination
deals a stunning blow to liberal political forces trying to combat
rising Islamic extremism in Pakistan.” "This
assassination is the most serious setback for democracy in Pakistan,"
said Rasul Baksh Rais, a political scientist at Lahore's University of
Management Sciences.” MSNBC
A
country possessing nuclear weapons now with an unstable government or no
government. Pakistan. A country on the eastern border of Afghanistan and
formally an ally of the United States is now under threat of civil war.
The assassination was committed by Islamic extremists. Now, democracy
and civil war threaten a major nuclear power in an Islamic
country.
“Pakistan's
interior minister blamed al-Qaida and the Taliban for Thursday's
assassination…” “Bhutto was slain while campaigning…”
Breitbart.com
Did I
mention yet a higher oil price at the latter period of this decade? Soon
to reach 100 dollars a gallon. Don’t even want to mention gold
reaching past 800 from a humble 255 an ounce earlier this decade.
“Gold
above $830 on weaker dollar, Bhutto's death” “Gold futures rose for
a fourth day Thursday and closed above $830 an ounce as a sliding dollar
gave the precious metal fresh momentum and as the assassination of
former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto increased geopolitical
uncertainties.
MarketWatch.com
Anyway,
the point I am driving home is that while we have quietly slept our
world has been slowly evolving and changing. And these changes will
carry into the next decade 2010 – 2020. Sometimes change occurs so
stealthily we do not even notice it occurring around us. And the US
dollar is stealthily weakening even as we speak. So, what kind of decade
will we be entering in 2010? A messy one for sure. Notice
in the chart below the US dollars looong slide downhill?

Trader’s
Narrative
Did
we talk about China? Just in the past decade China has grown into a
major contender for super power status and their appetite for gold is
ravenous. Very high gold consumption there.
“China
approves gold futures trading” “The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SFE),
one of China's major futures trading agencies, is expected to launch
gold futures trading soon following regulatory approval.” “Gold was
the second new futures product to be introduced to the country's futures
market this year.” “Last year, China produced a record 240 tons of
gold, a growth of 7.15 percent year-on-year. In the first nine months of
this year, it produced 191.456 tons of gold, an increment of 22.175
tons, or 13.1 percent, from the same period last year.”
www.chinaview.cn
So
let’s summarize where we’ve been and where we are going into 2008
and beyond. So in a nutshell the following is where we have evolved in
this past decade:
-
Pakistan,
a major Middle East western ally, is biting the dust.
-
The
US dollar continues to sink into oblivion.
-
The
gold barometer is finally working properly and rising higher and
higher.
So,
this is where we have been and where we are and where we are yet headed.
And do you see a need for gold in this witches brew? Gold will only grow
in importance as the new decade slowly prepares for itself. Again, the
peace dividend long ago bit the dust and perpetual war waits for us
beyond the horizon,
“But
whatever process may have been involved, the result has been that the
distribution of income and wealth have become much more concentrated
during the last several decades. Those in the middle of the income and
wealth distribution have lost ground relative to those at the top,
despite the absolute increases in their income and wealth.” Falling
Behind, Robert H. Frank
It’s
not too late to invest in gold related equities to take advantage of
their wealth preserving attributes. We are living in the last days of
cheap resources and commodities. Recognizing these facts Gold Letter,
Inc. reviews undervalued gold and other resource stocks under valued and
poised to rise in this time of increased demand for resources. Gold will
only continue to escalate in value.

© 2008 David N. Vaughn
Editorial Archive
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