Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
Gold in 2008 will see a
gear shift in its evolution to higher prices still
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Gold Forecaster snippet
Jan 4, 2008
Although we do not have
sufficient space here to cover the full picture of why, [this
will be seen in the full issue of the newsletter by subscribers]
we can give you one aspect of why. This feature will be one of
"moves to extremes" in a variety of markets as "dramatically
difficult days" will hit some markets and "couldn't
be better days" hit others.
As gold is now commonly
being spoken of at $1,000 as it goes above $850 and as part of
our forecasts for 2008, it is appropriate to continue to give
you the next step in the evolution of gold that began at the
end of the last century, after having been virtually discarded
for the last twenty years of the last century.
With the crack in confidence
in the global monetary system becoming clearly visible in 2007,
as the sub-prime crisis evolved into an interbank credit crisis
towards the end of the 2007, the stage was set for more confidence
degeneration in 2008. When globally respected bank's become fearful
of established bank's ability to repay short-term loans, despite
the reality that Central Banks are lenders of last resort, something
fundamental has broken down. Even when Central banks opened
the flood-gates of credit supply to banks, not once but several
times the problem did not go away. Add to that that the initial
precipitant of that crisis has yet to reach full impact and an
economic recession seems to be on the way [unless the floodgates
of new money can stem the dive down to there] then you know crisis
management has moved from short-term to medium-term. These problems
are systemic not open to a quick fix nor even an obvious long-term
solution so have to get worse.
A look at the impact of the
tsunami of new money tells you that inflation is being fostered
worldwide, as the target of such money isn't being hit, but held
in the hands of those institutions that don't have a dire need
for it, sending good markets even higher. To get investments
right in 2008 we have to ignore the usual "overview"
approach, as this is now completely inadequate. Now we have to
separate ailing markets from healthy ones, within all economies.
And we ar seeing bond markets roaring next to steeply declining
other fixed interest markets, manufacturing sectors suffering
as emerging nation countries manufacturing flourishing.
Complicate this with the steady,
unstoppable flow of wealth to the healthy East from the West
and to massive sovereign wealth funds looking for markets to
invest in and you are seeing a global moves from poor markets
to vibrant ones in emerging nations and commodities, including
gold and silver.
In these markets the massive
increases in liquidity that we are seeing as a result of the
credit crunches across the world [except in the East] is and
will lead to a steady injection of inflation that will, we believe
become self generating. The very nature of the liquidity demand
is similar to that seen after the first World War in Europe [Germany,
France, etc]. The key feature of this was that the demand for
more liquidity could not be satisfied as prices rose in
healthy markets where demand remained strong and many businesses
crashed because the injections of liquidity just could not lift
them out of danger so their important asset prices [relative
to their survival] could not rise and went lower in the face
of rampant inflation.
The underlying reason why this
is likely now is that Central Banks to the last one will
inflate rather than see the dark hole of a recession, then depression,
suck down the monetary system and following hard on its heels,
the government of the day. Whatever the success rate of the many
global banks in combating the problems that arise, you can be
sure that each one will target either inflation as the main danger
facing them [if they have a healthy national economy] or drop
interest rates and suffer inflation to protect what growth they
have. This alone will engender a global set of extreme market
conditions, both good and bad.
As we are seeing now the
gold price will continue to be a prime beneficiary of investment
as investors realize that gold cannot suffer from these problems
as it remains unprintable.
Please subscribe to GoldForecaster
for the entire report.
-Julian D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
321gold Ltd
|