Casey Files:
Gold in the Low $600s?
David Galland
Editor, The
Casey Report
Nov 20, 2008
Of late, I have read a number
of analysts, Jim Rogers even, who have expressed the view that
gold could dip to the mid- to low $600 level.
Could happen, but I think not.
Already, buyers of physical gold are finding anything near $700
to be cheap and so are helping to build a floor under the monetary
metal. On that topic, a friend sent this item along last week.
(Gulf News Nov 12) Riyadh:
There has been an unprecedented demand for gold in the Saudi
market recently, with over 13 billion Saudi riyals (Dh12.75 billion)
being spent on the yellow metal during the last two weeks.
Demand is expected to rise
still higher as more investors turn to gold as a safe haven in
the midst of the global financial crisis, according to market
sources.
Sami Al Mohna, an expert
on the gold market, said the trend had resulted in a substantial
rise in the gold reserves of Saudi investors.
Since soaring to an all-time
high of $1,033.39 per ounce in March this year, gold has plummeted
30 per cent.
Gold for December delivery
on Monday rose $8.60 to settle at $726.80, roughly the same level
at which it traded a year ago.
"Many Saudi investors
see this as the right time for making investments in gold as
its price is the most reasonable one at present," said Al
Mohna.
Needless to say, the Saudis
have a lot of money. Not just a lot but a really, really, big,
stupendous mountain of the stuff.
Oh, and like you and me, they're
human.
Which means they can't help
but glance through the morning's financial news, adjust the reading
glasses, and think, "Blessed Mohammed! This is getting really,
really serious. Maybe just a little extra gold under the tent
right now wouldn't be such a horrible idea."
They aren't alone. We are getting
regular reports that at these prices, demand is soaring in India
(where price inflation is now running around 11%), and brisk
sales have pretty much wiped out physical supplies of small coins
and bars in the U.S. and Europe among other corners of the world.
On that score, a few days ago,
correspondent Jim G. sent along the following.
Most of you are probably
aware that there's a shortage of gold bullion coins at the retail
level.
What does that mean?
Today I decided to purchase
some gold bullion coins. So I called the Northwest Territorial
Mint, one of the larger operations in the country or at least
the Northwest, so I've been told.
I called to see what the
availability was. The operator put me through to sales, where
I sat for 30 minutes. I finally got in my car and drove 40 minutes
there, all the while still on hold. When I finally got there,
a woman went in the back to see about bullion coin availability.
She was told they were back ordered with 30,000. Not dollars,
orders. If I placed an order today, they thought they could fill
it in 16 weeks.
To sum, I'm buying if you
know a seller.
While we already know $750
is no magic number below which gold cannot fall or below which
it cannot loiter, I take no small comfort in the fact that there
is a clear increase in demand at that price. In time, as the
dollar continues to participate in the fiat currency race to
the bottom, that number will ratchet higher and higher still.
Maybe not overnight, but in
the next six months to a year, certainly or as certain as anyone
can be about anything these days.
One thing that could get the
show on the road pronto-like has to do with the continuing presence
of the other 900-pound gorilla in the room, foreign dollar holders.
Like the Saudis, the Chinese have at their fingertips a lot of
greenbacks. Actually, not just a lot, but enough to remake the
Great Wall.
And they, too, are humans.
And so, over their morning
cup of tea, they finger the abacus while watching the daily financial
news and say, "Holy Mao! This is getting really, really
serious. Maybe just a little extra gold in the rice jar right
now wouldn't be such a horrible idea."
On that front, here's some news from
Hong Kong
(The Standard, Hong Kong. Nov
14) -- The mainland is seriously considering a plan to diversify
more of its massive foreign-exchange reserves into gold, a person
familiar with the situation told The Standard.
Beijing is considering changing
its asset allocations during the financial tsunami in order to
build up gold reserves "in a big way," the source said.
China's fears about the
long-term viability of parking most of its reserves in US government
bonds were triggered by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's US$700
billion (HK$5.46 trillion) bailout plan, which may make the US
budget deficit balloon to well over US$1 trillion this fiscal
year.
The US government will fund
the bailout by printing new money or issuing huge amounts of
new debt, either of which will put severe pressure on the value
of the greenback and on government bond yields.
The United States holds
8,133.5 tonnes of gold reserves valued at US$188.23 billion.
China holds gold reserves of just 600 tonnes, worth only US$13.89
billion.
Beijing's reserves could
easily go up to 3,000 to 4,000 tonnes, Tanrich Futures senior
vice president Colleen Chow Yin-shan said.
In another article from Bloomberg,
the head of China's gold association commented that he thought
China could triple its reserves.
And there was this quote from
that same article.
China has the world's biggest
foreign-exchange reserves at $1.9 trillion, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. It is also the largest overseas holder
of Treasuries after Japan. China's demand for gold jumped 23
percent in 2007, making it the world's second-largest consumer.
The Asian nation may buy
more gold for its reserves on concern the $700 billion U.S. bank
bailout will cause declines in the dollar and Treasuries, the
Standard newspaper in Hong Kong reported today, citing an unidentified
person.
In the final analysis, we can't
say with certainty what path gold will take between now and the
time this crisis is over. But until I can see some tangible evidence
that it has lost its value as money, I'm a happy holder and,
at under $750, a buyer.
David Galland
Nov 19, 2008
David Galland is the managing director of Casey
Research, LLC., and the editor of The Casey Report, a
monthly letter focused on helping readers get profitably positioned
in powerful long-term trends. In recent months, subscribers have
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