Fed Intervention, Market Response Confirm: We're on the Path to Hyperinflation [View article]
We are currently experiencing deflation on a global level. World net worth has dropped something like 50%, an amount that dwarfs the amounts actually "created" by central banks. We are in a deflationary spiral that show no signs of stopping. When prices finally stop going down we'll have assets worth a fraction of their former value and many times the corresponding money supply. That will be a recipe for inflation, but from massively deflated values and prices. Until then cash (and gold) are king. Once the inflation starts, then you'll want to switch to commodities (and gold).
First Fuel, Now Metals - Forecasts Lowered [View article]
Yeah, this is a weird time. The behavior of gold totally depends on how bad the economy gets. In 'peace time' gold behaves like a commodity, basically miners supplying jewelers, with price dictated mostly by jewelry demand.
However when the economy craters with massive deflation like now, paper money holds up very well, preventing any flight to gold. However, even without extra demand, you would expect gold to hold its value . Right now all assets are falling in price, but gold is holding its value or dropping slowly depending on which currency you talking about. So gold remains the asset of choice, but only AFTER cold hard cash.
If on the other hand, we end up with inflation, where paper money starts seeking its intrinsic value (zero), gold is known by everyone as the investment of choice. Governments would print more gold if they could, but since they can't, it only needs to hold its value to go up in price. But if the inflation gets bad enough, heavy demand will outstrip all supplies and the price will really shoot up.
Central banks will try to moderate its price, but with demand shifting from promises (paper gold) to physical gold, they won't be able to (they lease their gold in the paper markets, but won't sell the actual bars). We easily return to the 1980's peak of $2100/oz (inflation corrected) then perhaps higher if this period is worse.
Of course, this is never a good thing, even if you're a gold bug. Everything else you own, like your house, will be in the crapper. Its a little like a home owners insurance policy. When your house burns down you get a big check, but your house is still gone.
Response to Bloomberg's 'Gold May Pay Only in Case of Maximum Despair' [View article]
I would simply remind people that in these times, simply preserving value is a pretty attractive outcome. Gold doesn't need to go to $2000/oz or $1500/oz if everything else is going down.
Gold has been setting record highs in pounds and euros in the last few weeks, it's only gone down dramatically in dollars, which are obviously going up as dollar denominated derivatives need to be unwound, and hedge funds repatriate all manner of international trades for dollar redemptions.
So it's actually holding up better than just about anything else. Check Platinum, Oil or real estate for comparison. Having said that, the premium on gold coins make them an inferior investment. The 400oz bar market is still quite liquid, and there are several ways to get allocated gold at very small premiums to 'good delivery' bar prices. I some cases you can buy in 1 gram increments, which is about $23 .
Fed Intervention, Market Response Confirm: We're on the Path to Hyperinflation [View article]
When prices finally stop going down we'll have assets worth a fraction of their former value and many times the corresponding money supply. That will be a recipe for inflation, but from massively deflated values and prices.
Until then cash (and gold) are king. Once the inflation starts, then you'll want to switch to commodities (and gold).
First Fuel, Now Metals - Forecasts Lowered [View article]
However when the economy craters with massive deflation like now, paper money holds up very well, preventing any flight to gold. However, even without extra demand, you would expect gold to hold its value . Right now all assets are falling in price, but gold is holding its value or dropping slowly depending on which currency you talking about. So gold remains the asset of choice, but only AFTER cold hard cash.
If on the other hand, we end up with inflation, where paper money starts seeking its intrinsic value (zero), gold is known by everyone as the investment of choice. Governments would print more gold if they could, but since they can't, it only needs to hold its value to go up in price. But if the inflation gets bad enough, heavy demand will outstrip all supplies and the price will really shoot up.
Central banks will try to moderate its price, but with demand shifting from promises (paper gold) to physical gold, they won't be able to (they lease their gold in the paper markets, but won't sell the actual bars). We easily return to the 1980's peak of $2100/oz (inflation corrected) then perhaps higher if this period is worse.
Of course, this is never a good thing, even if you're a gold bug. Everything else you own, like your house, will be in the crapper. Its a little like a home owners insurance policy. When your house burns down you get a big check, but your house is still gone.
Response to Bloomberg's 'Gold May Pay Only in Case of Maximum Despair' [View article]
Gold has been setting record highs in pounds and euros in the last few weeks, it's only gone down dramatically in dollars, which are obviously going up as dollar denominated derivatives need to be unwound, and hedge funds repatriate all manner of international trades for dollar redemptions.
So it's actually holding up better than just about anything else. Check Platinum, Oil or real estate for comparison. Having said that, the premium on gold coins make them an inferior investment. The 400oz bar market is still quite liquid, and there are several ways to get allocated gold at very small premiums to 'good delivery' bar prices. I some cases you can buy in 1 gram increments, which is about $23 .