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Global Economics on Tilt – How to
Protect Your Ass(ets) |
By Jeff Clark, Editor,
BIG GOLD
Gold isn’t going to $2,000 an ounce.
Before you gag on your coffee or suffer
chest pains, allow me to explain.
We’re about eight years into the bull
market, and gold has breached the $1,000 level twice and has spent
weeks trading above the old high of $850. Some observers are now
saying that gold’s pretty much had its day and that once the recession
is over, it will retreat for good.
However, the four-digit gold price we’ve
seen so far is with no price inflation to speak of, no effects of the
atrocious increase in the money supply, and despite a rising dollar.
What happens to gold when each of those pictures gets turned upside
down – high inflation, excess cash jolting the economy, and a falling
dollar? After all, gold’s performance to date has been powered only by
general anxiety, not by any visible erosion in the dollar’s value.
I decided to take a fresh look at
calculations that could be used to appraise gold’s upside potential.
No one of them, by itself, comes with compelling logic. But they all
point in the same direction.
Gold’s Percentage Rise in the Last Bull
Market. What if gold in this bull market repeats the percentage
rise in the last bull market? In the 1970s gold rose from $35 to $850,
a factor of 24.28. Our low in 2001 was $255.95. Multiply that by 24.28
and you get a gold price of $6,214 per ounce.
U.S. Gold Holdings to Money Supply:
The M1 money supply consists of currency and checkable deposits. The
U.S. government currently holds 286.9 million ounces of gold. If the
government were to make each dollar redeemable by the amount of gold
it possesses, we’d arrive at the following price for gold: $1.569
trillion ÷ 286.9 million oz. = $5,468.80 per ounce
Gold/Dow Ratio: The ratio was about
“1” when gold peaked in 1980, meaning the Dow and gold were the same
price. To restore that relationship at today’s stock prices would mean
when the Dow is at 6,626, gold should be at $6,626/oz. Of course, we
think it likely that the Dow will get a lot lower before gold peaks.
But even if it drops all the way to 4,000, that would imply a gold
price of $4,000/oz.
All the Money in the World vs. Gold
Reserves: If the public eventually sees the paper game being run
by the central banks for what it is, governments will be forced to
back their currencies with gold (and perhaps other tangibles like
silver). Assuming they had to go into the market and buy the gold
needed to restore faith in their currencies, the numbers might look
like this: Total central banks reserves (including gold holdings) =
$4.8 trillion, divided by 929.6 million ounces total gold reserves
held by all official institutions that issue currency = $5,246 gold
price.
U.S. Gold Holdings to U.S. Foreign Trade
Deficit: The size of a country's deficit or surplus would be of no
consequence if all currencies were convertible into a fixed amount of
gold. However, the dollar is increasingly considered a hot potato, and
when the trade balance reverses, as it must, dollars will flow back to
the U.S. and fuel domestic price inflation. Based on the cumulative
trade deficit of $9.13 trillion (up from $6 trillion since June ‘07!)
and U.S. gold holdings of 286.9 million ounces, the corresponding
price of gold would be $31,822 per ounce.
U.S. Gold to U.S. Government Liabilities:
Finally, the GAO (Government Accountability Office) calculates an
income statement and balance sheet for the U.S. government. As you’d
suspect, it is dominated by future liabilities for Medicare and Social
Security. What if they had to be backed by the supply of gold?
Official U.S. government liabilities now ring in at an incredible
$55.2 trillion. To make good on that would require a $192,401 gold
price.
No, we don’t think gold will hit $192,000 or
even $32,000. And there really isn’t any surefire way to forecast the
eventual high. But it’s clear that every weathervane is pointing in
the same direction. So, yes, gold isn’t going to $2,000; it’s going
higher.
Witness the Breakdown
When determining how to keep your wealth
safe, the state of global affairs can be a powerful reminder that gold
should be part of the strategy. And today our world, essentially, is
on fire.
• Eastern Europe borders on bankruptcy. Brazil's economy is falling
off a cliff. Ditto Mexico.
• Protests have erupted in Latvia, Chile, Greece, Bulgaria, Iceland,
Dublin, and parts of the U.S. Workers have gone on strike in Britain
and France.
• In the U.S., 36 states and the District of
Columbia have proposed or implemented reductions in the civil
workforce. (You think customer service is poor now...)
• An astounding one in nine homes, 14 million, sits empty in the U.S.
The December median price of a home sold in Detroit was $7,500. More
than 8.3 million homeowners were upside down on their mortgage in the
fourth quarter. Freddie Mac's new CEO resigned after six months on the
job.
• Last quarter, 12 U.S. banks failed, bringing the 2008 total to 25,
the highest one-year death rate since 50 failed in 1993. More
foreboding, another 252 banks joined the FDIC’s “problem list.” So far
this year, 19 banks have failed.
• The central bank of Ukraine banned the early redemption of term
deposits, the most popular form of savings in the country. Bank
deposits have dropped 20% since September, as bank customers dodge the
risk of getting locked in.
• The projected US$1.75 trillion federal budget deficit is almost four
times the nation’s previous record-high budget deficit. The Times
Square debt clock reads over $11 trillion. Japan’s now reads $7.8
trillion.
• High unemployment has become a worldwide epidemic, with the
infection spreading.
With world economies taking it on the chin, it’s little wonder that
investor interest in gold as a safe haven is growing – a trend we
expect to continue. And just wait until the dollar resumes its slide,
the expanding money supply jolts the real economy, and inflation kicks
in.
Both Hands on the Wheel
Given the ongoing turmoil and the swallowing
darkness at the end of the crumbling economic tunnel, our recommended
BIG GOLD strategy remains keeping one-third in cash, one-third in
physical gold, and one-third in our selected gold stocks. New money
for investment should be split among the same three categories; we
just don’t see any safer places to be.
As economies around the world continue to
shrink and governments continue administering larger doses of the
wrong medicine, we’ll sit in relative comfort with our gold for
protection and our stocks for profit. We expect the prices of both to
rise as others join us.
***
Even though some of the mainstream media are
already popping the champagne, cheerfully pronouncing the end of the
crisis, we beg to differ. The economic quagmire the U.S. and much of
the developed world is in is far from over… so be right and sit tight,
as we at Casey Research like to say. And find out how you can make the
most out of gold as a safe-haven investment, by
clicking here.