Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
What Will Take the Gold
Price Higher?
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Gold Forecaster snippet
Posted Mar 7, 2008
Gold and silver prices are
making new ground every day and are consolidating, seemingly
in preparation for an attack on $1,000. Thereafter, who will
buy gold and pay over $1,000? It seems a daunting price for any
new Investor or even one with a sizeable holding already.
A Psychological Barrier
Why is $1,000 such a barrier?
The move to four figures implies it is in a new league, in top
gear and can't hold that level. If one looks at the gold price
in the € the picture changes. In those, now distant days,
when the € was worth $1.25, the € price of gold battled
heavily to get past €530; it now sits at €640. It
seems that a 20% rise is not so outrageous as we thought. Look
at gold in the Australian $ or the Japanese Yen. There hasn't
been anywhere near such a rise as we have seen in the
US$ price of gold.
The big problem (particularly
in the US) is the thought that the $ is not rock solid. The $
price of gold involves cultural as well as value measurement
problems which have to be considered too. In other words: Is
this really about the $ and the [global] monetary system or about
gold in isolation?
Look at gold relative to the
oil price and its performance pales into a reasonable move. That's
why OPEC is talking about a € price of oil. If we look
at the oil price in the € then its performance looks considerably
more reasonable. If oil were priced in the € then its rise
would not focus attention on them but on the $ managers, the
US authorities and the public outcry would be against them, not
the oil producers. If the attention were pointed this way, perhaps
then they would actually do something about the $'s value internationally.
Something has to be done and soon, or confidence will not only
be lost outside the US, but inside as well (inflation describes
its dropping value all too well). But that may well be after
Capital (and perhaps Exchange) Controls will have been
imposed. So if one can overcome the US$1,000 barrier and look
at gold through Euro eyes or Yen, or A$ eyes, one's perspective
will change.
Gold as a Thermometer
Why did gold go up to $990
in the first place? Was it simply demand versus supply, isolated
from external factors? No, not at all.
Gold has risen as other investments
have lost their glitter. The sapping of confidence, away from
the $, away from the subsidence of consumer confidence, the threat
of 'contagion' caused by the sub-prime crisis, which metamorphosised
into the 'credit crunch' where bankers became scared to lend
to bankers right across the world, the fallout from which we
will see as the reporting season is now upon us. When these and
the other ancillary factors are synthesized, we have a structural
crisis, which the Central Banks are finding very difficult
to fight, let alone conquer. So people look for an investment
that will not suffer when the alarm bells ring. They look for
something that will go the other way - up!
Gold is doing that very well
indeed. It has acted remarkably as a "Thermometer",
rising as the investment temperature rises across the globe.
When we read of the ripple of these crises in the system, each
day carrying another consequence of the drama in the media, realistic
investors put a little more into gold. And with major institutions
now moving into commodities and with the various types of funds
that never held gold [in the shares of Exchange Traded Funds],
with all these factors finding this alternative investment, an
enormous tide of money is considering gold. As something that
cannot be printed and is nobody's obligation, just a small amount
of investment would propel gold up beyond the market's imagination.
Don't just look at the last 20 years of the history of gold;
look at why it went up in the '70s and '80s. It was for the same
reasons; only this time the power to hold it down has declined
alongside the will to do so!
What Else Can Do the
Same Job?
When you sell an investment
you actually buy something else immediately, even if it is just
the cash. When you sell gold in the States, you buy the $. When
an oil producer sells oil, he buys the $. The nifty of foot will
quickly go elsewhere, but that is now selling the $ to buy something
else? One is trapped with an investment alternative that is just
not doing the same job. Even if gold did not rise anymore, but
held current levels it would prevent the pernicious decline of
either the $ or the alternative investments [equities?] one may
choose. One can hold gold simply to preserve your wealth. The
question is: Will gold fall back at this point? Yes, there will
be pullbacks, then rises as with any consolidation; the trend,
however, remains up, so its wealth-preserving qualities look
like they will persist.
A look at India paints the
picture very well. The Indians love gold for several reasons:
financial security, religious reasons, avoidance of official
prying eyes and the corruption that attends this. They are long-term
buyers of gold and this characteristic will not change. As more
disposable money comes into their hands, they buy what they can.
With prices now at close to or over Rupees 13,000, few Indians
have the appetite to buy gold. And this loss of appetite will
continue until gold has established its place around $1,000.
The price at which they will buy will continue to rise until
they are convinced it will hold around $1,000. Should it fall,
it will be seen as a buying opportunity at the levels it turns
at and Indians will be in there too. But the bulk of Indian retail
buyers need to be convinced that these prices will hold before
they re-enter the market. You can be sure they will be back,
as they have been all the way up from $275 to current levels.
We believe the same will be true in the developed west!
Reasons for gold to
go higher
Take a look at the fundamentals
that have driven gold higher; have they changed? Have they been
exhausted? Not at all. Has the $'s fall terminated? Has
the oil price stopped rising? Has the credit crunch been resolved?
Has the world's money system been repaired and solidified? Has
the wealth's move from West to East stopped? Has confidence in
the U.S. housing market and the global economy been restored?
Can any of these matters worsen? Is the investment climate globally
looking solid and worth more investment? Will the potential Tsunami
of capital stay in one place only? If the answer to these questions
remains negative gold has good reason to rise further.
"...gold
has good reason to rise further!" |
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-Julian D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
321gold Ltd
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