Eric Sprott On How Central Banks Are Setting The Stage For The Next Big Move In Gold

A brief look at the contentious gold/central bank history as it is about to rhyme all over again:
The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913 on a promise of stabilizing the banking system. What followed instead was an unprecedented growth in fractional reserve banking, as well as the money supply, which helped fuel the roaring 20’s. The aggressive money printing created inflated values in bonds and stocks, which peaked in 1929. When the market began its precipitous slide, and the public began to realize that stock and bond values were artificially high, the populace began to convert its cash holdings into gold. The government lacked the ability to satisfy that demand and was thus forced to renege on the currency’s founding promise of gold convertibility. It’s important to point out that without this original promise of convertibility for citizens, the currency may never have been adopted.
In 1933, The Gold Reserve Act was passed by Congress and formalized into law the breaking of the gold standard. This law provided for a controlled-currency issue through the Federal Reserve System which was non-redeemable in gold. Although the link to anything tangible had been broken, the citizens had little choice but to continue using these non-redeemable dollars as a medium of exchange. The currency had already been broadly accepted, proven convenient and a perception of safety had already become entrenched.
After forty years of continued dollar printing, in August, 1971, President Nixon effectively declared the US dollar to be a completely “fiat” currency by refusing to allow foreign governments to convert their US dollar holdings into gold. The right of conversion which had been granted under the post World War II, Bretton Woods agreement could not be honoured because of decades of money supply expansion. The original ‘promise’, which had vaulted US dollar to its status as a global reserve currency and a stable store of value, was now completely broken.
These historical events resulted in a world in which all currencies are fiat; they are not backed by gold or any other tangible asset. The supply is infinite. In fact, the production of today’s newly created paper money in relation to historical commodity-based money is akin to counterfeiting. A US dollar printed today has no ties to anything tangible and as a result carries only four cents of the equivalent purchasing power of a gold-backed dollar of 1913. It is ironic that in a poor choice of wording on Wikipedia, the definition of counterfeiting states that “it is usually pursued aggressively by all governments.” It is only because the evolution of money has occurred slowly over generations that the obvious flaw with fiat currency is not widely understood.
Why Gold, as a consequence of 90 years of paper debasement, will be the next big thing.
We are gold investors because we have made a specific and calculated bet against paper money. Simply put, we are betting against paper money as a store of value. We believe its supply will continue to increase. We do not believe that the world’s major governments have any stake left in protecting it. Government debt loads have grown so massive that printing them away has become obligatory - there is no longer any other feasible option left. In our view, the savers of the world should already be outraged by the dilution they have been forced to suffer at the hands of the Central Banks. Are we to infer that the limited reaction of savers to the combination of zero interest rates and debasement of currency is a result of “learned helplessness”?
In our opinion, the lack of overt inflation to date due to the "successful" implementation of globalization, aka exporting inflation to China and anyone else who needs to purchase US securities, is the sole reason why there has not been an explosion in fiat-denominated prices to date. Yet as Zero Hedge has been pointing out for several months, the global trade picture is now dramatically changed, and China will need to look inward rather than outward. This means, that sooner or later exporting inflation as a fiat policy will fail. When pundits finally comprehend this and start blaring about it every day on CNBC, that is when the rush to gold (plated) safety will finally become acute.
And since in a fiat-debased world, everyone wonders where gold will hit (which in principle is the wrong question, as monetary representation of value will very likely cease should Central Banks finally lose control over the infinite dilution mechanism), here is what Sprott believes:
We also wanted to prepare our readers and clients for the next leg of the gold bull market as it will prove to be extremely volatile. Gold bull markets are unique in that buying becomes driven by both fear and greed. Gold is quickly moving into the hands of those who are unwilling to gamble on fiat currencies or bonds as a store a value. The new owners of gold are unconcerned with its lack of yield but instead are focused on its historic ability to preserve wealth and its unquestionable value. Given the difficulty we have valuing paper money, it becomes extremely difficult to come up with a reasoned price target for gold. Today’s gold market is significantly different from the gold market of the 1970s for two reasons: 1) Central Banks are more likely to be buyers of gold today and 2) They clearly have little ability to dramatically raise interest rates with the massive increases in government issued debt. Thus, it is easy to envision a similar twenty-five fold increase in the gold price that was seen between 1970 and 1980, which would result in a gold price today above $6,000 per ounce. We expect the often quoted “1980 inflation adjusted high” of approximately $2,200 to be achieved in short order. These targets may well prove to be irrelevant, however, as the quality of our lives will be more greatly impacted by the continued evolution of our money and how the general public chooses to value it, or not.
Read the full note here.
And when you are done, here is another just released note from Sprott's John Embry, in which he expects gold to go up by 30% in the near-term.
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on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 14:45
#211960
Gold fears not the fire of the furnace.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 01:59
#212330
Sure, but neither do most resources. I'd still rather have one that has more of a supply-demand characteristic. Like Jim Rogers said aeons ago "I don't know what tomorrow's inflation hedge will be".
Last year, when the world tanked, what happened to gold? Everyone went to the dollar! If people are dumb enough to do that, then they're dumb enough to make the same mistake again.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 03:31
#212352
The world tanked because of huge deflationary forces. A total deflationary collapse was threatened. In such a case cash = king. All other assets will be smashed. Including gold.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 06:17
#212372
Then why the US, Germany, France and Italy still holding huge amounts of Gold and now India and other on the race?.
Not to mention the Chinese Gold is not allowed to get out of the country and the same happening with the Russians...
Recall what Grenspan said back in September 2009: http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/2010/01/memories-of-beijing-ten-years-past.html
I don't care if you like or not Greenspan but he is the real insider of the FED and he's more powerful today than when he was heding the FED as he can freely says what he think...
The $300 to $1'100 move we have seen in 9 years is nothing in comparaison of what we can see in the coming weeks...
Deflation it's an invention while inflation will wipe out everybody. No choices left: 1) write-off all debts outstanding, 2) revalue Gold
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 21:15
#212808
How would you even know whether US, Germany, France, or Italy has had been leasing their gold out to misdirect economists about inflation?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 15:45
#212377
Last year everyone went to the dollar not because they're in love with it, but because it was a margin call of epic proportions. You need dollars to pay back debt. The stupidity happened earlier when they all leveraged up.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 07:23
#212394
I have been saying for two years now that corn is the new gold standard.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 15:33
#212619
The days of people running towards sovereign debt as a safe haven are coming to an end. The massive bailouts of 2008-2009 cannot be repeated, and they have consequences.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 21:12
#212804
agree totally, so what can happen next as a result?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 21:08
#212799
the 'world tanked' because the rest of the world was not involved! The 'World" was the investment banks, funds etc totally liquidating everything they could.........No one knew what was going to happen. The went to cash in everthing, bonds, gold, stocks, commods...pretty smart people were taking duffles out of the bank over those weeks!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 14:47
#211962
Sprott is very respected in the gold community. Thanks for posting this!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:51
#212271
Agreed, Sprott is highly regarded worldwide. Many thanks ZH for posting this valuable info.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 00:43
#212310
It's not that Sprott is well respected in the "gold community", Sprott and his team are among the most successful investors and money managers Canada has ever produced. And they happen to be very bullish on gold. (In other words, they aren't goldbugs for the sake of being goldbugs - they're extremely successful money managers who have come to the conclusion that gold is going up - in fiat currency terms)
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 01:54
#212329
Even JPMorgan projects AU to be at $1400 2qtr 2010; but then declining.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 14:51
#211964
With all the huge effort being made to discredit Gold , nice to read a realistic , honest analysis.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 12:25
#212520
www.technicalindicators.com/gold.htm
Please keep in mind when a CB is diversifying
it's portfolio into gold don't assume it's in
the open market. Ru bought gold last year from it's own producers. China is one of the largest producers of gold again they
will add to their position from their own mines first. Canada is a commodities based economy gold being one of them. Jewelry
demand is down 32% which usually represents 70% of worldwide demand for gold. Total demand for all uses including ETF's is down
36%. Outlook Dollar your call. In sum there are a mosaic of considerations that must be weighed from the perspective of what type of buyer and seller
you are
when considering buying gold. From a pure supply/demand presently there
is plenty around from a multiple of sources if you need to have it yesterday.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:00
#211970
Chart by Dan Norcini
http://jsmineset.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/January2910Gold.pdf
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:03
#211975
Gold and silver are to be bought.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:10
#211981
I've got something more important than gold right now-guns and plenty of ammo. I'll get gold later.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:02
#212331
You'll have to rely on your guns and ammo to get it. He who procrastinates......
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 08:49
#212411
Have you considered when and how you will be able to sleep after you actually begin to use your guns n' ammo? The Army is in Fort Knox not to protect the Gold which maybe wrapped like Chanukkah gelt, but to protect the status-quo. Media of exchange are hard to come by, but locally and within your club or tribe, and Gold doesn't cut the mustard when you factor in the security necessary to use it more than once or twice and the likes of Fred C. Dobbs.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:30
#212451
Not all of us are as fortunate as you to live in NYC. (Been there, done that, refused the t-shirt). You are constantly on these threads like a moth/flame, spreading your Kunstlerian FUD. I, on the other hand have better spent my time reading history with my fiction. Argentina wasn't even that long ago, and contemporary analysis says "PMs are insurance, ignore at you own peril". Home defense of the crime of home invasion is still legal in this country. I, for one, have no problem with that.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:38
#212006
Silver has come down nicely for those looking to make an entry into that market.
Thanks for the information, "Tyler"!
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 11:17
#212483
Personally, I don't understand why there is not more discussion of silver. The amount of silver mined in history relative to gold is about 10:1... Historically silver traded at a ratio of about 15:1 (silver to gold)... now it's what 65:1? But when commodies begin to be used again as money, silver will be critical. Even with gold at 1100/oz, it much too valuable to be used for everyday transactions... Silver, not so much. I predict that the demand for silver will skyrocket when we come off this bizarre fiat currency system - as people look for something of value to trade... the essential qualities of silver (and gold) will rise again and the same reasons they were valued in the past will ressurect them.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 06:47
#213095
Silver also has other neccesary uses apart from being an ornament unlike gold so it's valuation has a broader basis.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 11:17
#212484
double post - sorry
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:19
#212086
Looks like gold has put in a bear flag. I'm wondering how low it will go....a drop to 1055? 998? It bears watching closely for the next few days/weeks.
this post is an eye opener, read down to the bit about the bank of China.
http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/2010/01/memories-of-beijing-ten-years-past.html
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:32
#212454
I don't know about the "Beijing Put", but India's CB bought a not insignificant 200mt at approx $1045, so I would expect that range to draw considerable interest again should it be reached.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:08
#211980
Fiat money insanity! There will come a time when no amount of dollars will get you gold. Like Marc Faber says, "we are doomed!" Then he chuckles. You would chuckle too if you are prepared.
Read articles by Robert Schoon http://drschoon.com/articles.asp
Antal Fekete, of the Gold Standard Institute: http://drschoon.com/fekete.asp
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:12
#211983
Excellent post. He makes a rather convincing case. Although I wonder, when ALL the world's currencies are fiat, does the pig with the most lipstick (or the biggest nuke arsenal) win?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 00:59
#212315
Yes.
The gold bug argument is that the Central Banks have control, but are losing control.
Which is true.
But it also rests on the assumption that the types of controls remain the same. They will not.
CB power is growing at an exponential rate, and exerting ever greater effect. This phenomenon is happening in every nation simultaneously.
To assume that central banks will (and must) lose control of the money supply, is to also assume that the trend of rising CB authority will reverse and begin to wane.
This we have not seen -- at all.
Those who study history fall into two camps:
1) All fiat currencies must trend to zero. (This is historically true).
2) All democracies give way to tyranny. (This is also historically true).
Assuming that (1) will happen before (2) is a common hypothesis, but I personally give it a 50% chance.
The powers that be will always and forever, go down swinging.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 11:35
#212496
Great post.
"The issue which has swept down the centuries and which will have to be fought sooner or later is the people versus the banks." Lord Acton
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:15
#211985
tyler thanks for the sprott article and opinion on gold
it seems like the opinions about gold from many on this board are based on nothing but brain washing and growing up in world of harvard and keynesian economics.. look out the window see whats happening .. lol
.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:18
#211989
There will come a time when nobody will accept paper money for their gold. Only then will the masses understand the nature of fiat currency.
In the words of Marc Faber, "We are doomed." Then he chuckles. You would chuckle too, if you are prepared.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:38
#212004
and the time is coming gold can not be bought for any price .
silver will then be the common mans purchase of choice .. but most will wait . as they are in the vortex of mass ignorance on the nature of money. nobodys debt, no counter party risk .
can not be dreamed into existence .
but sadly even here . most will not get it. lol
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:01
#212026
Paper money is worth nothing, always has been. What is valuable is the "full faith and credit" of people who have power and wealth. The more the more power and wealth they have, the more their "full faith and credit" is worth.
Conversely, gold (or paper money, or any form of currency) is only as valuable as the full faith and credit of the persons trading it. Two homeless, starving guys in the middle of the desert who stumbled on a treasure chest of gold wouldn't feel any richer. On the other hand, two wealthy and powerful people can exchange their rights to an entire lifetime of wealth by putting ink to a piece of paper. The means they use to exchange that wealth and power is virtually irrelivant.
Finally, stop talking about "paper money." I haven't used paper money for anything but buying food and gas in about a decade. Human economic interaction has moved way beyond any physicallmaterial method of exchange, and it's never going back.
Holding physical gold is useful, in small quantities, for an emergency. So is paper money. But it's certainly not something that will ever be the solution to the economic problems humans have.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 23:07
#212286
When governments devalue money, the only wealth preservation is precious metals, agri-land and non-perishable goods that can be traded. Digital or paper dollars are okay for daily consumption. As you get paid, you spend, when you have extra, you buy gold.
You will never be sorry. Yes you may not have the artificial and temporary stock/bond market gains (taxable)during boom cycles, but you will never loose.
Gold 25%-50% of your assets depending on the economic conditions.
Gold bullion is not reportable (taxable) if you sell less than 25-30 oz or so each time.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 06:57
#213098
very sensible observation although I wouldn't invest all my extra money in gold. probably silver and stock as well
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 08:02
#212402
(((I haven't used paper money for anything but buying food and gas in about a decade. Human economic interaction has moved way beyond any physicallmaterial method of exchange, and it's never going back)))
How about an implanted chip
It's all about power --- they made owning gold illegal in the 30's ----they will do so again
Rev 13:16-17
He also forced everyone, small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on his right hand or on his forehead, 17 so that no one could buy or sell unless he had the mark, which is the name of the beast or the number of his name.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 09:21
#212419
I too use paper money for candy bars, lunch at subway, tips, and junk
I use plastic cards for everything else including gas
I pay bills on line
If big government was big enough in the 30's to prohibit ownership of gold --- they are big enough now
What will be the future of currency?
Try an implanted computer chip
If your government is corrupt and you think owning gold will save you, then you are like an ostrich with your head in a bag of gold.
The only salvation in this world is to change the government while we still have a vote
Eventually even that remedy will be gone
Rev 13:16-17
He also forced everyone, small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on his right hand or on his forehead, 17 so that no one could buy or sell unless he had the mark, which is the name of the beast or the number of his name.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 06:53
#213097
I agree. very incisive observation
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:29
#211997
well goldman definitely needs a new source for bonus money, in 07, 08 it was oil, in 09 it was dah gubment and copper, yeah, imho, gs was all over copper, and now that it has cracked definitively, they need something new
so, how will it go, well i guess it depends on how bad ben wants it kept down, and how much mr. dimon will co-operate
when paulson, and einhorn bang the drum, albeit slowly, you know they just turned the heat on low
price and time
right now we got a dollar rally that needs to crack first and them i'm in
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:31
#211999
sprott remarks
However, despite my consistent enthusiasm for the yellow metal once termed a "barbarous relic" by Lord Keynes, I still have the strong feeling that the vast majority of investors outside this room still haven’t got a clue about gold and they are certainly not aware that gold is experiencing a historic bull market with much, much further to go. What we have seen to date is merely a prelude, and the appreciation we are going to see in future years is going to greatly exceed what we have seen to date. This opinion is based on a number of factors I will expand on, but the predominant theme is that gold is re-establishing itself as money
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:47
#212013
sinclairs site
http://jsmineset.com/
has some more sprott stuff ..
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:51
#212015
Before you guys go out and convert your wealth to Gold,a few points
1. If it gives you peace of mind than have some.
2. No matter what the monetary medium is (paper, gold, whatever), the key is its use in commerce. Gold is simply hard to use. In fact paper money is soon to be gone, it is just electrons we have! And they seem to be just fine at enabling people to barter goods and services (no matter what the medium is).
3. No matter what happens to the fake world of central banks, energy, metals, agricultural commodities and their assoicates will have DEMAND and SUPPLY balances that one rather observe to preserve wealth.
4. Preserving wealth even in the 21st century can be had through old fashioned things like real-estate, farm land, barrels of oil (or ethanol of you wish), bushels of wheat etc. If you own your house, then you don't care about the monetary medium, gold and dead Zimbabwe dollars are alike, you can prices it as 500 OZ of gold or 10 Giga trillion Zim Dollars, or 8000 barrels of oil...
5. Bottom line, gold shines, but rational observation of human needs and wants is really what counts.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:02
#212027
Bingo! But bubble-makers and the financial community always have the need to profit in some way, so they issue press releases about the "things we should invest in" to drive up their own holding value. It's the Amerikan way.
Anybody do any research into some of Sprott's previous calls? If you did, you'd see this guy has cost his clients dearly since 2008. I'd be careful about jumping in with both feet on Sprott's advice.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:54
#212054
I'm curious, what was his advice last year that cost his clients dearly?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:51
#212270
boy, there are a bunch of things that you have wrong, but the most simple one is your assertion that its just too cumbersome. You then say that its soon to be all electronic. Well, so what? The electrons are still representative of some amount of FRN's whenever they do try and go all electronic.
Ever heard of Goldmoney? or Egold? You see, they do this fascinating thing with physical gold where they hold it and then, heres the crazy part, they credit your electronic account with a dollar balance that is backed by gold. I know, wayyy out there, huh? So you see, there already is electronic gold.
Your fallacy is in equating any electronic payment or transfer of FRN's to be the only basis upon which a dollar denominated market can exist. The whole question has always and always will be "What is the dollar backed by - the full faith of the govt (cough), or some commodity?" And if it is some commodity, the world population, not some elites in Davos, have always chosen gold as the medium of exchange. And as to charges that the total value isnt enough to do that now... well, a new revaluation to some number 1,000's higher than today gets the paper and real money back into relation.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 07:08
#213100
All true but still means we have to 'trust' someone to hold the gold that backs our egold. who's going to do that in large numbers; governments? central banks or banks maybe? currency exists to facilitate commerce. otherwise it is worthless. gold has no industrial use. we just fancy it. so we need a currency that derives it's value from the commerce it generates, maybe one backed by a combination of stocks and bonds which generate earnings based on commercial activity as pointed out by mikla in his post on a new currency
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:16
#212335
Sprott was right! Confusion reigns supreme. Dear oh dear.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:59
#212020
so have you 10% or your holdings in gold
and who are you ,, lol
to pronounce this idea that gold is cumbersome , and can not be a used in internation commerce
go tell that to the nations of the earth when they will only trade in a gold proxy, here my oil . please pay in gold . heres our sweat and toil .. pay in gold .
nixon plunder the nations as he refused to honor gold .
betyou a if you had gold . you would find a way to use it ,
to eat... to protect your lifes work..
most of what you say is worn over keynesian disinformation,, regergitated in worn over and old cloth . /
obviously you will one day learn .
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:03
#212030
Grade 7's a bitch, dude.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:15
#212033
kindergarten sucks even worse .. especially for the deaf and blind lol
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:38
#212048
you're eligible for special olympics with this post
or the NBA
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:21
#212124
Don't dis S.O.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:54
#212275
Ask those in Zimbabwe about paper money versus gold. See video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3LdNxV0yPM
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:12
#212032
I've never understood how Gold is not any less an arbitrary currency that paper or electrons. It has the value it currently enjoys primarily because the central banks of China and India say it should. Fiat.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:06
#212110
Simple, fiat currency can be artificially increased in quantity. Expansion of the gold supply requires digging more up and there's only so much that can be dug up each year. Almost all the gold that has ever been mined still exists in someone's posession, that should tell you a lot. If we had a federal reserve that wasn't infiltrated with people who are brainwashed and believe inflation is beneficial to the economy, fiat could be stable. But the temptation to print and borrow is too great.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:09
#212114
Gold is a store of value. Compare the price of an ounce of gold in 1913 and 2010.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:54
#212207
90% of the silver ever mined, has been used up in industry
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:45
#212148
No, a fiat currency is a substitute money that the local government says is a legal tender for public and private debts. They pay you in said money, and then you get to pay other people in that same currency, simple as that. There is a sort of arbitrary value to gold, that is true. What you're talking about is the unit of account. A standard. The real estate market wouldn't do well if the acre was a changing value, same with weight, whether in pounds or kilos. Why should money, whatever the form, be any different. "The Meter lost several millimeters against the Yard yesterday in heavy trading.." See where I'm going with that?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:27
#212339
Actually, paper value does NOT change either. The printed value is what it's worth today and tomorrow. What is changing is the quantity of that paper. But even that doesn't matter so much. What does matter is if it's distributed to the populace, thus increasing the amount in circulation. However, with gold as currency, you will always have deflation because as the world population increases exponentially and gold supplies stay flat or does not keep pace, you naturally have less supply with more demand. That has its own problems as goods and services lose value over time. In addition, using gold as the backing for money is inherently risky as there is no way to validate that the amount of gold reserved matches the amount of money in circulation. Credit would be very tight as it too would have to be backed by actual dollars, which is a good thing for fiscal responsibility, but a bad thing for growth. The point of that being that the standard of living would have to fall significantly in order to have a gold standard in a global economy as credit would be limited to the amount of money available.
To me, fiat currency isn't the problem. It's usury along with the fractional system reserve that's the real problem. If someone is willing to accept a piece of paper in trade, what's the problem since my labor is exchanged for goods using an intermediary? However, interest creates a liability for more money than existed. On top of that, adding fractional reserve lending multiplies that issue. This system MUST create more money to fulfill the obligation. A fiat currency system alone is not a problem at all since the only thing you need is for both parties to accept that as the medium for exchange of value. But interest in a system with a fixed amount of money is impossible to repay with adding more supply.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:05
#212245
An amatuer troll with no name. Next you will predict gold is on its way to 600. Go away.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 01:30
#212319
Gold is on its way to 600.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 06:53
#212382
600 what? Oz of silver?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 00:24
#212307
Gold cannot be conjured up out of thin air, and then given to your "friends"
This simple act, sets the tone for an entire society. People must chose the political path, rather than the productive one, in order to survive.
This is the point when "you may know your society is finished"
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:39
#212458
Painfully obtuse. Bask in your anonymity...
Gold must be mined and refined, cast, minted, assayed. Fiat is paper and ink or the wave of an electronic wand. You sit in the front row and gasp in awe at the bullshit alchemists.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 14:12
#212580
China and India, and the Spanish and Portuguese who invaded the Americas, and the Europeans who invaded South Africa, and the Americans who went west to the California gold rush and north to the Alaska gold rush, and people who are right now fighting over salvage rights to ancient vessels sunk with cargos of gold, and people in both first and third worlds who are right now mining gold, and people with gold in Swiss bank accounts.... Gold has been honored as wealth in all times, in all places. If you believe in stored wealth, then you believe in gold. If you don't believe in stored wealth, then stock up on food, water, energy, medicine, clothing, and everything else you need.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 07:12
#213103
naw..we indians just have been seduced by it!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:25
#212038
What I'm struggling with is who the hell is going to buy the stuff once it hits $6K or $10k per ounce? I thought my house would never go down in value - hard asset, limited supply, growing population, limited land, bla bla bla.
Home speculators and the "flip this house" mentality relied heavily on someone more stupid at some future date buying the asset at a higher price. I see no difference with gold.
Transfer all your wealth.... then what? Could redemption be difficult? You betcha.
I don't think there is any safe place to store wealth. I think the whole global economy will melt and leave eveyone fending for themselves.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:52
#212101
"What I'm struggling with is who the hell is going to buy the stuff once it hits $6K or $10k per ounce?"
Pension fund managers that are buying up Treasuries and corporate bonds today? They'll be dumping Treasuries at lows about then looking for the next peak to buy into. God bless the pension fund managers.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:26
#212129
What do you mean, who will pay for it? If the price is 6k that would mean somebody is paying for it. It's called a market.
If you're actually talking about a "Road Warrior" scenario maybe (even then, Zimbabwe is close to RW status and people are buying bread with specks of gold dust) but when it was over 2000 in today's dollars people were obviously buying and selling it to establish that price.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:28
#212131
And then the market crashed and people were like "Damn, why'd I have to buy all that gold? Now I'm broke, bitchez!"
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:25
#212174
You're right, stick with equities.
Or tulips if you can get 'em.
(BTW, I didn't junk you. I would never junk a post that used the word bitchez.)
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:50
#212205
+1
Even a 40% devaluation of the fiat currency will still mean that paper currency is the currency. Amazed that people are eager to forget.
Go read Gailbraith sometime and understand the concept that we can even have shells that are more valuable than gold.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 23:27
#212292
"Even a 40% devaluation of the fiat currency will still mean that paper currency is the currency"
Only untill someone or everyone will no longer accept the paper money or only at a severe discount.
But with Gold you will purchase the same or more goods as you did before where now it take 10x the paper money to buy those goods.
Sprott was buying gold at $400 thereabouts. He's up huge and everything he wants to buy is 35% of its former price in doelars.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:12
#212221
i will give you 230 trillion Weimar marks for one ounce of gold
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:29
#212340
No thanks.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:23
#212254
By the time gold ever gets to 6 or 10,000, many other event will have occured that will push it there.
some of these already occurred in the 90's and for those early gold bugs they are up 400% plus they probably did not see their portfolios get hit as hard as the sheeple.
In a nutshell though. When all faith in paper assets, bonds, or currency is lost the only thing that will have value are tangible goods. Gold is the king of tangible goods. patent protection on Windows vista won't mean much either. Gold will get bubblishous at some point and who knows how high it will go. All goods and services will revalue themselves in gold/silver or pounds of potatoes. There will be a market that accomplishes this or there will be tyranny of the bolshevik kind.
Many with nothing to trade might welome the empty promises of the statist bolshiveks. Gold at this point will save your life, or maybe not.
The Gulag Archipelago by A. Solzhenitsyn is enlightening reading to understand the bolshie bit.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 08:58
#212413
Redemption songs..not just Bob Marley. If a kilo of pure heroin floated by your boat and you got out your net, the fact that it was worth millions on the street would matter very little.
on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 07:14
#213104
safety is actually perceived safety. it's all subject to sudden change
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:34
#212041
For 2 years I hear Armageddon on an imminent meltdown
For 2 years I hear gold that price going to the moon.
Today's situation (rigged or not):
Wish I invested in stocks for the last couple of months
Gold price is still around thousand
Sprott might be right, give or take 50 years.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:32
#212258
John Embry from Sprott was The Royal Bank (of canada)'s PM mutual fund manager. While he managed RBC's PM mutual it it did extraordinarilly well and I think it was up 86% in 2002. Embry was a bit too outspoken for RBC and Eric Sprott gave him a job. Sprott bought up all excess production capacity at the Roal Canadian Mint. Before the rush Sprott converted his own 400oz bars into maples which he sells today.
put your money where your mouth is.....................................
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 01:40
#212325
Are you saying Sprott is talking (hyping) his book?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 07:28
#212395
Didn't know there was a book. Eric Sprott as another poster said is one of the most successful money managers ever. He has been ahead of the herd/curve consistantly especially in regard to PM's.
I have been dissapointed by many analysts Eric is not one of them. He has put his money where his mouth is.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 11:33
#212495
"Before the rush Sprott converted his own 400oz bars into maples which he sells today."
"book" as in inventory.
He has a financial interest in gold appreciating. He is a carnival barker as much as he is an analyst.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 22:23
#212843
OK. Benefit of the doubt.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:04
#212332
My money is where my mouth is. I don't think the price of gold is going to appreciate in the near future and will actually decrease in the near term. Therefore, I do not own gold.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 13:44
#212562
I couldn't tell anybody about gold back in 2002. Nobody was listening. I would tell them I hope I am wrong. For your sake I hope you are right.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 11:39
#212499
If he really was putting his money where his mouth was, he would buy gold and keep it under his bed for his own financial interest and to profit from higher prices later. He is in fact distributing his inventory now. Doesn't sold like is that confident in higher prices.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 22:32
#212848
He would but he isn't a mere individual like us, he lives in the public domain seeking clients to whom to sell his ideas.
Is he another GLD selling at the tops to suppress prices. Hmnn...........
Wouldn't be the first time but his motive might not be to sell at the top but to sell at a technically weak point to drive the price down like GLD whereby the shorts can clean up.
Nothing is that simple anymore as to think the Top is in. The game is much more sophisticated. Psyops is more like it.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 01:39
#212324
You won't wish you had invested in stocks when you were still in the market when the political decisions that drove it up over the last 10 months send it plummeting to 2-3000 or so. Gold is in a situation where there is practically no risk. Bonds, equities, and even cash are in a situation where their value is dicated by the decisions of a few politicians. That's not where you want to be, unless you are an insider of favored status (ie not likely to be thrown under the bus for political expediency--I'm not sure there is anyone in the world that fits that description right now.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 02:18
#212336
If you are so sure that stocks are going to fall to 2,000 to 3000, a 70% decrease, why not short stocks?
"Gold is in a situation where there is practically no risk." Good luck dude. I'm calling my broker Monday to see if I can borrow some gold to sell it to you.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:35
#212042
SPROTT GOLD AND PRECIOUS MINERALS FUND
Portfolio Managers Charles Oliver & Jamie Horvat
Assets Under Management $522 Million
PERFORMANCE REVIEW - COMPOUND
5 yr. 10.3%
3 yr. (-3.4%)
1 yr. 113.8%
http://www.sprott.com/Docs/Performance/gold.pdf
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:35
#212043
At the risk of ruffling a few feathers, Sprott may be correct about gold but I find his absolute, almost religious certainty about its future just a tad disturbing. And all those potential gold acolytes who know little or nothing about the metal and its "historic bull market" sound a lot like the tech "investors" of ten years ago who never met an internet or fibre optic story they didn't like (or a balance sheet they should bother to read).
I like the idea of gold as portfolio insurance or a tradeable speculation but not as a road to riches investment. Gold as money? Sounds great but without a way-back machine to the nineteenth century or worldwide abolishment of existing fiat, I have my doubts.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:37
#212047
but, but , but .... rich guy george soros, says gold is in a bubble....
also doctor doom, aka shiksa killer of new york university stern school of business, none other than poopfessor Nouriel Roubini laughs out loud when someone tells him gold at 1500 in 2010...
ha ha ha
oh yeh......
http://www.lewrockwell.com/spl2/soros-gold.html
whatcha think about them apples mr bean counter aka bates, the man trying to make it through and survive this crazy life.....?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:36
#212261
who the fuck is geoge soros or maybe what the fuck is he. One thing for sure georgie boy is not interested in anybody but old #1.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:44
#212050
America is a debtor nation. If the currency is devalued, banks get killed and regular people get a windfall. Do you think the powers that be want that? I thought you all believed the Fed was owned and operated so the banks can rule the world. You can't have it both ways.
If you believe the currency is doomed, go ahead and buy gold. But you'd be much better off getting the largest mortgage you can.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:10
#212062
One of few reality-based posts on this stream.
+1000
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 23:16
#212289
I would keep some cash with the gold, the more the better of each.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:09
#212082
tptb dont want 'banks' to rule the world . they want 'a bank' to rule the world. one of the ways they hope to achieve that is to create mayhem in the currency markets, nationally and internationally so people demand 'that something is done about it'. then they make their grand entrance. (they are merely waiting in the wings at the moment but are seen by many)
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:22
#212179
Why? That entails much more risk than simply buying and holding some gold. Anyone who goes all in based solely on an inflationary or deflationary $ scenario at the moment is foolish, in my opinion. There are too many levers being pulled.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:40
#212194
getting the largest mortgage you can
go ask those guys that bought a 900,000 home with nothing down,, how that idea works,, specially with out a job. ,service the chain around your leg
the logic is flawed,,, as if inflation goes off the map gold will keep going up.. homes are in for a long down trend into 2030.
buy the gold .. use the gold to buy the house when the time is right.
a ill logical spin based on emotion. sure get a house paid and free and clear is best.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 07:31
#212397
You are missing his point. You need to read up on the effects of hyperinflation on debts. His point is that inflation will render the mortgage debt inconsequential over time; meanwhile, in the end, you will have a truly valuable asset. The bigger the mortgage, the better the ultimate asset. Gold is not something you can live in.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 09:08
#212415
Is cashflow an issue that you consider in maxing out your mortgage vs investing in your own tools to build wealth, or is this paper-trading?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:41
#212266
"you'd be much better off getting the largest mortgage you can."
.............er, and do what.
You: "Excuse me Mr banker but i would like to take out a monster mortgage on a House."
Mr banker: " AH HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...............................
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 07:04
#212384
"If the currency is devalued, banks get killed and regular people get a windfall. Do you think the powers that be want that?"
The answer is YES, for the simple reason that the debtors can walk away from the debt if the burden gets to be too much and the banks get nothing. So it's in their interest to devalue, but just enough to keep the slaves from quitting.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 22:37
#212854
1984:
Anybody who signed the line and sold their soul to the devil still has an obligation. The failure of the lender doesn't mean the obligation is void. Someone else will pick up the paper to your house for 10 cents. You will still owe. No?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 16:53
#212051
There is a significant tax disadvantage to holding gold, no matter whether it holds up as a store of value.
Other possible long-term stores of value that do have tax advantages might be:
1) Real estate, esp. productive farmland
2) Fossil fuel investment vehicles
Others?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:45
#212197
There is a significant tax disadvantage to holding gold, no matter whether it holds up as a store of value.
75% of something much better than.. a capitol loss .. at 3000 a year write off..
and selling a gold coin or 6. at the local coin shop .. is just exchanging dollars .if you want to pay the tax be the guest of life lol
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 23:33
#212295
Who's holding gold...... what gold??
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:03
#212055
From the archives (April 7 2009: A one hour roundtable with Sprott, Roubini, Meredith and Gordon on BNN - video)
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
and Sprott from July 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3V-_0qAjRzQ
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:09
#212060
All above who have that paper money that is worth nothing, I have begun a charity that will absorb any U.S. or foreign Currency or coin that you now no longer need. We have a use for it which we cannot divulge.
Please reply to this post by leaving an address and I will send you an envelope (please specify the denomination, and number of paper currencies and coin you no longer deem worth anything)with return postage prepaid.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:00
#212080
there are stacks of currencies that are worth nothing (zimbabwe weimar etc, etc). but gold has never and will never be worth nothing.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:08
#212168
yeah just a straight exchange between salt and gold
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:28
#212182
I paid a few dollars on ebay for some zimbucks. Ten, Fifty and One Hundred Trillion denominations. Nothing illustrates a point like an artifact.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 09:13
#212416
Only Nothing is Nothing. Everything else is Something. There is nothing new under the Sun (outside of particle physics which happens on the Sun); which the only free lunch on the planet.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:12
#212063
Whodathunk that this article would be such potent troll bait.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:02
#212081
Exactly, has everyone else noticed the activity at ZH down here lately? Gold Bubble talk always gets those clicks up huh.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:46
#212200
trolled you in lol
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:22
#212065
nonsense....
people have used seashells, beaver pelts and dill seeds as money, too--go try to pump those prices up-
gold is a commodity---there's no mystery there despite best efforts of the crazies.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:40
#212072
Why aren't CB vaults full of seashells? And why aren't China/India/Russia trying to buy more beaver pelts?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:58
#212244
+10
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:51
#212155
Dollars are commodities.
Personally I think an ounce of gold is at least 6k times as useful as FRNs
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:35
#212187
Gold has few industrial applications. Most gold is held as wealth--coins and bars, jewelry. Therefore, gold's true best use is as a sure, safe store of wealth.
You could say that gold is good for nothing--except as gold.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 22:52
#212273
seashells are a fiat currency. At least you can rub your beaver with a beaver pelt and make it happy and warm. Dill seeds will grow a fine herb unlike. seashells are good for mostly sweet FA.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:32
#212068
the trouble is people have used fiat currency for so long that they think its money.
when paper currency is just a flirtatious memory of the real money that it represented.
so, the real choice is, do we get led like sheep into the new global fiat currency controlled by a central bank. or, do we buy as much gold ,silver, etc as we can and set up our own trading arrangements when tshtf , for the next leg down.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:58
#212078
sh*t, i hope so. my gold mutual fund has taken some lumps lately!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:13
#212083
"What I'm struggling with is who the hell is going to buy the stuff once it hits $6K or $10k per ounce?"
A model for using gold as a modern medium of exchange has been developed. Outfits like GoldMoney.com will let you exchange your fiat money for unencumbered gold or other PM's. You own the physical metal (not paper gold) which can be stored in London or Zurich. Your gold is valued in your fiat paper of choice and also in "Gold Grams" (grams of gold) which can be used as digital money to buy/sell stuff as you would using your fiat paper, credit card, etc.
The drawbacks are the storage, insurance and admin fees (fairly trivial amounts really) and you do not have the gold in your personal possesion.
The obvious plus is your stored wealth is in is in a non-debaseable metal that cannot be pissed away by Ben Bernanke or the other central banker money printers. And hopefully the gold is in a location where it cannot be confiscated by a corrupt criminal government.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 09:21
#212418
Hopefully is not a trading strategy. Buy $100 OTM puts to CYA.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:25
#212087
by Anonymous
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 15:25
#212038
What I'm struggling with is who the hell is going to buy the stuff once it hits $6K or $10k per ounce? I thought my house would never go down in value - hard asset, limited supply, growing population, limited land, bla bla bla.
******************************
Yes--Gold will become too expensive for most people to buy and that,as a poster earlier said,will be when Silver shines--
Sprott i think misses the end picture as well--
The buyers of gold-will be central banks,as they rush into the market and bid up the price,as they buy in a panic--in order to stop a flight out of paper,by people that eventually clue in--
Taking gold weighting out of paper currency's weakened them--
No question about that--
Gold will be,what eventually strengthens and saves them--
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:26
#212088
In every bubble, there are lots of fraudsters pushing new "theories" about why the investment is not a bubble. It's always going to be along the lines of how the "fundamentals" have changed yada yada yada. I still remember all the claims about a "new economy" prior to 2000. I also freshly remember all the claims about how real estate will not crash because it is "real" and "people always need a place to live." And now, we can hardly avoid infomercials on our car radios about why we "must have gold" because of the inflationary policies if the Fed and so on.
Now before somebody gets offended, I'll just say I'm not against gold. I own a sh$tload of physical gold and I will likely never sell it because I consider it to be insurance against catastrophe. However, I do not treat it as an investment. I bought it in 2000 when it was less than $300 an oz and I don't even count the gains because these gains will be unrealized gains as long as I am alive.
The proper use of Gold is for insurance. The improper use of gold is to speculate and treat it as an "investment." When school teachers, mailmen and housewives are buying gold at historically high prices and placing bets that it will continue to go to $5000, then you know the train has already left the station. Gold may very will continue to go up because nobody can predict how long bubbles will last. But from a risk-reward perspective, it's dumb money.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 07:20
#212391
+1000
At the day X( gold bugs dream day), the government will confiscate all gold.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 08:01
#212401
by Anonymous
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:26
#212088
But from a risk-reward perspective, it's dumb money.
************************************
Anon--have you bothered to look at a gold cart over the last 10 years?
What was the risk?
More to your statement--What was the reward?
A three bagger--nothing dumb about that--
What is dumb--is saying gold is a risk--
HF--some will just never get it--
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:51
#212464
Anon--have you bothered to look at a gold cart over the last 10 years?
What was the risk?
More to your statement--What was the reward?
A three bagger--nothing dumb about that--
What is dumb--is saying gold is a risk--
HF--some will just never get it--
********************************************
JJ, you can't be serious. Is this the best you've got? Then you are either dumb money personified or even worse a gold pusher who will lead the lambs to slaughter.
So going by what you wrote above, we should have all bought the Nasdaq in 2000 right? Yeah, that's smart.
Remember: It's BUY LOW SELL HIGH, not buy high sell low.
Reread my post: I didn't say gold was always dumb money. I said it is now dumb money. And I would say that about any investment at historic highs.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 15:42
#212626
by Anonymous
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 17:26
#21208
JJ, you can't be serious. Is this the best you've got? Then you are either dumb money personified or even worse a gold pusher who will lead the lambs to slaughter.
So going by what you wrote above, we should have all bought the Nasdaq in 2000 right? Yeah, that's smart.
Remember: It's BUY LOW SELL HIGH, not buy high sell low.
Reread my post: I didn't say gold was always dumb money. I said it is now dumb money. And I would say that about any investment at historic highs.
***********************************
Well i read thru your shit drivel--again--
Not sure why i bothered--
Your calling the end of a 10 year bull market?
Let's see some data/charts that points that out--
And this really lame--
"The proper use of Gold is for insurance. The improper use of gold is to speculate and treat it as an "investment." When school teachers, mailmen and housewives are buying gold at historically high prices and placing bets that it will continue to go to $5000, then you know the train has already left the station. Gold may very will continue to go up because nobody can predict how long bubbles will last. But from a risk-reward perspective, it's dumb money."
So--on one hand it's insurance and on the other it's risk--
huh?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 17:49
#212695
Seriously JJ, you must be farm animal stupid to have such a low level of reading comprehension. And your cause is not helped by the fact that you continue to misquote what I am saying. Buying at the top, not understanding that the past is no guarantee of future performance, and not understanding the difference between insurance/hedges and investments are rookie mistakes. The fact that you are struggling with these concepts is remarkable.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 20:48
#212783
Anon--
Point out--where i said "buy"
I asked you to prove--with a chart that this bull was over--
Don't worry--I don't expect one--because the data doesn't exist--
All we see once again--is your lame brained hype--
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 22:09
#212832
JJ, let me quote the last two sentences of my original post:
*********************************************
"Gold may very will continue to go up because nobody can predict how long bubbles will last. But from a risk-reward perspective, it's dumb money."
*********************************************
So again, reading comprehension would help you.
You want a chart? Why would I give you a chart about something I didn't claim?
But the fact remains. From a risk reward perspective, gold would not make a good INVESTMENT right now (and please don't confuse this with gold as a hedge). And this would be true of any investment that is at historic highs so don't take it personally like I just insulted your mother. I know gold bugs are a rabid bunch but you are ridiculous.
Now if you are a short term momentum trader who has a clear exit strategy and know how to use stop-losses, you can probably still make some money. But only pros should try this, not joe six pack.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 23:35
#212911
Anon--
i think you don't know what your saying--
First gold is in a bubble--says you--
Then you say a triple in 10 years is nothing--
So which is it?
btw--i'm done with you--changing your tune every post--
got it?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 17:13
#212677
About the "bubble"...
School teachers, custodians, and postmen are NOT buying gold.
When there was a real estate bubble, EVERYONE I knew had a hand in real estate. The custodian was studying to be a real estate agent, teachers were abuzz with their latest "spec" purchase.
The same thing happened with the tech bubble. Secretaries were buying Cisco, MSFT, and Yahoo.
It was crazy.
Gold bubble?
I don't know a SINGLE person who owns metals, talks about them, or can fathom why I would want any. I can only find people discussing gold in forums such as this.
If the mainstream media begins seriously considering metals, if the local and national news begins talking about it regularly, and when Oprah does a show on it... THEN we might see a real bubble.
So, right now, gold buying doesn't even constitute a mini-fad.
What will happen if the general public takes an interest in metals? Is there enough of the stuff to satisfy even a moderate demand? What if half of us want to own a single ounce of gold or 20 of silver?
I doubt there is enough. Said another way, prices could soar.
Perhaps it will never catch on... but it has definitely not caught on yet. No gold bubble.
This does not mean that it's price will remain stable... it could swing wildly... but it isn't because of a real bubble. The current price (partially) reflects it's sensitivity to the *minor* demand upswing.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:30
#212090
The story of gold and the evil spawning of The Fed are...
mind blowing. Once one studies the subject (without the heat of one's of money in the game) it becomes clear that
fiat creation is the 'holy grail' of scam artists because it is, at its core, the story of transfer of value (gold silver) to something that is not. It is in fact the very essenence of trickery...deception.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 18:58
#212733
absofuckinglutely. +10
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:31
#212091
When I bought my silver and gold it was with the idea that it might some day buy the same goods and services as it would in the mid-nineteenth century, when an ounce of gold ($20) would buy a decent plow horse. It was worth 20 oz of silver. A decent wage was $20 a month and found. With that in mind, I've got a couple year's worth.
If TSHTF, all bets are off for the first year or two, to allow for contraction of the population, so it's important to have all necessities taken care of for at least that long. In the meantime, if it does get up to $6,000/oz, I might sell enough to pay off the mortgage, just so I'll have it free and clear.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:37
#212093
I should have added--
Central banks will be competing with the squeezed shorts-ie-commercial banks--
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:33
#212233
Unfortunately, 'free and clear' is a myth as well. As long as local governments have taxation authority, they determine what you must give them in order to stay on the property. As a resident of Atlanta, my local tax authority just arbitrarily decided that they want 250% more dollars every year--even though I have no mortgage on the property. If I don't pay it, they'll send a deputy over to evict me and impound the property. And who's to say that at some point, dollars won't be enough.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 23:44
#212297
Anon 212233,
I've been wondering about the property tax thing. Could you put a number on the 250% property tax increase.
regards
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 03:08
#212346
If TSHTF, what makes you think you will own your home anymore? Taxation is mentioned above, a limited form of confiscation, but what about outright 100% confiscation of assets? What do you think TSHTF means?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 20:39
#212778
When someone here says "when the SHTF" they usually mean a run on the bank, bank holiday, martial law, stuff like that. Life could go on for most under those conditions.
The real shit hitting the real fan is socio-economic collapse. Nobody goes forward.
Nobody is really talking about that.
cougar
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:36
#212092
Nah, gold is different than every other Asset bubble, because a guy who wants to sell you gold funds says so.
You don't have to worry about gold crashing like every other asset bubble crashing, because gold is different. It's a store of value, instead of a tangible commodity that people actually need.
If you would have bought gold in ancient Rome, it'd still be worth 1000 an ounce today! If you bought gold a month ago, you got scammed.
Gold to 6000 an ounce bitchez! Yeah boyee! I is gunna by me sum gold wright now!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:35
#212188
Seriously, do you work for JPM?
If you bought gold in ancient Rome with $1,000, you have a time machine. Can I see it?
Anyways, what do you think 10 Benjamins discovered under your mattress will be worth 2000 years from now?
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 03:13
#212348
Mr. Sprott's arguement would be better received if he wasn't in the business of selling little doodads made of gold.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 09:29
#212424
The $1000 ounce of gold bought a gladiator suit in ancient Rome and the maker of the suit was killed because the ounce of gold didn't protect him from the spear.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:46
#212461
Nah - he is a 20-something smartass who imagines he has lived beyond his years...
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:39
#212095
What will happen to gold when it becomes clear over time that there is no runnaway inflation, as deleveraging outpaces money printing? As Gary Shilling says, I think we live in a deflationary world where the dollar will remain king for a long time.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:52
#212100
Oh, COME ON! That would never happen. We all know that the world is going to end tomorrow, and you'll be wiping your butt with dollars while I'm using my gold to buy cans of creamed corn and spam!
Gold to 17 million dollars by next year bitchez! I'm so glad I listened to Glenn Beck and all the gold ads, cause I'm going to be rich when the US prints 64 trillion dollars next year!
/sarcasm
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:21
#212123
you have just described what happened to the latest fiat currency to fail (zimbabwe).
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:23
#212127
Damn me for overlooking the fact that Zimbabwe and the United States are obviously completely similar!
I should have known that the world's strongest economy is going to suffer the same fate as the world's 353rd strongest economy and third world shithole!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:33
#212135
yes, you should have known.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:35
#212138
Sorry, I was busy waiting for pigs to fly, since that's a more probable event.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:14
#212175
if in 1982 when i spent several months in zimbabwe (courtesy of the british council) someone said to me that the currency would collapse one day , there would be food shortages, and civil unrest, i probably would have dismissed it as nonsense. zimbabwe was becoming quite modern and progressive.and was also attracting overseas investment.
however. if an accountant showed me fiscal position of the us ,an economist showed me the fundamentals of the us, and a banker the monetary policy, and together they chorused ' its fine, we can see the us pulling out of this without any major catastrophies'. i would rip one of their legs off and beat them to death with the soggy end for taking the piss.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:56
#212208
rofl
keep it up ...
need a bit of sanity to prevail!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:01
#212212
If that is an apples and oranges comparison, maybe the ussr is a better example....can you say 30-1 rubles to the dollar in 1990 to 34000-1 today? That's probably not a fair comp earlier as they were the only other superpower and one that relied on confidence in their system to survive... I agree in a dollar rally short term followed by inflation or other "event"....but I couldn't let your short memory go by unchallenged...
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:57
#212106
In a long term deflation, money outperforms everything else.
Gold is money.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:13
#212118
But Gold has retained its value only in comparison to fiat currencies. The price of Gold today is not measured in drams of sugar, horsepower, or bushels of wheat. It's measured in US dollars.
Once fiat currencies are hyperinflated to toilet paper and are worthless, then what do we measure Gold against? Probably against Goldman shares..... hehe.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:49
#212463
The Rothschild's will let you know how much it is worth in relation to land, etc.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:56
#212211
What a lovely golden cow you are!
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 03:17
#212349
Is your first name Rachel and are you on MSNBC?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:05
#212109
inflation is already here, its just taxiing up the runway. king dollar is dead. you dont need dollars to buy oil now and correct me if im wrong but i can buy just about anything i need elsewhere cheaper than the us.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:22
#212445
.......
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:37
#212190
That's seems to be the conventional wisdom right now (deflation), so the price of gold in dollars is hardly reflective of an inflationary worldview.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 04:10
#212358
Deflation will just make it more difficult for Government to maintain their deficit expansion. And as deflation heats up the pressure on the Government increases to borrow even more to support the economy. Deflation causes more people to default on their personal debt liabilities, hurting the economy and reducing tax revenue. If you have a high amount of debt the last thing you want is a reduction in income/prices. Face it, the Government is always better off with inflation (the hidden tax).
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 18:57
#212105
Scenario 1: You are going to be dropped off in an unknown country anywhere in the world. You get to pick which money you will take with you in your "survival kit". You get to choose between 1 ounce of gold (assume it comes sub-1 oz denominations), or $1000 US. Which will it be?
Scenario 2: You enter into a wager that will not pay off for a year. You can choose to be paid in $1000 US or 1 oz of gold. Which will it be?
I'll bet a lot of gold haterz nevertheless answered "gold" for both of the above.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 03:22
#212350
No I picked the $ US. I'll meet you back here in one year and I'll sell you an ounce of gold for $1000.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:09
#212113
Here we go again, another debate on Gold. Where's Chumba & GG to set you all straight ffs!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:21
#212125
Getting their asses chewed out by their wife about losing money by buying GOLD BITCHEZ?
"I thought I told you to get off the ZH and take out the trash! Now you lost 10000 bucks buying Gold?!?!"
"B.b.b.but honey! Here's a gold maple leaf that's worth 20% less than what I paid for it!"
"Shut up! I'm going to screw the mailman because you don't pay attention to me and you pissed away your inheritance!"
"Awwww... honey! Maybe Taraxias, GG, and me can get together and play hide the sausage this Saturday?"
"Only if you take out the garbage!"
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:28
#212130
I don't think so mate.
On the other hand, you waiting for that bloodbath for the bears all week may have some explaining to do where the money went.
This is a financial site, get educated before you post.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:30
#212134
When did I say I was waiting for a bloodbath for the BEARS? I was short last week, nucka!
I said the markets would have a bloodbath, and gold would go down too.
Obviously, I was right on both counts. Maybe you didn't read my post correctly.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:37
#212140
Not only you are ill informed, it appears you also a liar.
by Master Bates on Mon, 01/25/2010 - 19:43#205853
Well, it's a lot like how any stock or index can't get past it's first level of resistance on the first time.
Tomorrow is going to be another bear bloodbath, which will be good for the dollar.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:40
#212143
Oh, I can see where you would have interpreted that, but it's not what I meant!
Like I said, I was short all week.
And why would the markets going UP be good for the dollar anyway? That right there should clue you in to what I meant. I meant that there'd be a bear bloodbath, like the bears would kill the long people.
Now flag my post as junk like a homo again.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:46
#212150
Yeah, right, you were posting about a bear bloodbath but you were short all week
Got it. Best of luck to you mate, you'll need it.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:52
#212158
Look, you obviously don't read my posts often.
How would I think that the market going up would be good for gold, or the dollar?
And WHY do you copy and paste my posts and save them anyway?
A) you misunderstood what I meant
B) That's really lame and creepy.
I've been bearish on the markets like I've been bearish on gold. Anybody with a rudimentary understanding of TA would be.
I can link you to my facebook blog so you can see that I was really bearish if you'd like, but I'm not sure I want you knowing my real identity.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:56
#212210
I consider myself a serious T&A afficionado, but not a master like RoboTrader.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:49
#212153
And just so we're on the same page... what do you do, like copy and paste my posts or something? That's pretty gay. Almost as gay as flagging my posts as junk because you disagree with them.
Then again, you are the cockmaster.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:48
#212236
BUSTED there is no way to defend that .
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 16:09
#212639
You are starting to annoy the crap out of most people, i am afraid. Why don't you find a nice digital playground with kids your own age... Leave the audlts alone, before they tell you to go to your room.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:38
#212191
+100 Trillion Zimbucks
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:34
#212137
Wow that's a good fear spell. You're quite the shadow knight. I'm shivering.
Oh wait it was just a fart. One of those rattling ones that's like a death rattle but smells much sooner.
If you don't make the right choice you do not deserve to be righteous. Thus you will be punished with a nagging wife full of malman semen. And I'm totally empowered to make that happen. Because I work for the FED and I can force the mailman to start fucking your wife or I'll cut his budget and job.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:38
#212141
I almost understood what you mean by that.
Besides, I'm not stupid enough to get married at this age!
Nor am I stupid enough to buy gold at its peak!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:05
#212162
Stupid people don't exist. You have to make them stupid by making yourself smart. You make yourself smart by making yourself right and them wrong. Apparently you are a bit insecure with your choices as you seem to feel the need to try to fear away the gold bugs by threatening them with nagging wifes full of mailman semen and all the humiliation and despair that goes along with being "stupid" which is really just being wrong. You should really worry more about more powerful forces that are able to make you wrong.
Narrow is the path to heaven. Wide is the path to destruction. I don't know about you but I don't like something that is able to make people wrong all the time so that theres only a tiny sliver of right. Sounds like a scam to me and source of injustice.
So we're all here in school learning various ways the world and universe can fuck us over and make us wrong and it does it such a minipulative way that you just can't help but lose most of the time. You're really afraid of being wrong becuase it makes you 'stupid" this and 'stupid' that. So the best way to be 'not stupid' is to get agreement with the most people, and this teaches us all the joys of gang violence. We just need to take this out of the mental realm and into the physical realm so that the contest can be a completely different kind of stupid. I'll make some soft useless gold knives and you make some paper cuting tools and we can meet in central park and have a gang rumble. This becomes too apparent and obvious to people involved in the rumble because then you ended up killing all the people you were trying to make stupid and you can't take advantage of them by forcing them into a inferior stupid position, because all the people who had gold are now dead and all the people who had paper are alive or vice versa and theres no stupid people who were wrong who are now forced to capitulate and buy your very expensive gold or sell your gold for cheap and buy your expensive paper. So we are going to have to keep this in the mental realm otherwise it JUST WON"T FUCKING WORK and create the necessary righteousness and wrongness and the big fat profits from choosing the right gang.
So instead I'll just ask are you mac fag or a pc fag? Because thats worth killing over because both sides just watch porn and don't have children so they both cut off future profits and we need to do some killing. So sharpen up you're utra thin mac into a slashing weapon and I'll put my big fat heavy pc on the end of a stick and then we can kill each other.
Boooyaaaa!!!
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:06
#212167
You know who you remind me of? Did you ever watch wrestling in the 80's?
You know that guy, the Ultimate Warrior? Your speech reminds me of one of his.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHZzLQ1F7M0
"Speak to me WARRIOR!!!"
LOL
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:22
#212228
es you have done much damage to my self esteem. You have sucessfully diminished me and I am know a placid unresistant receptacle to your know it allness easily forced into my natural inferior postion.
Bible The reality version.
After God delivers his speach about all the things he knows and Job doesn't and who is he to question how he does things because the universe is inhabited by powerful sovereign beings. Job picks up a hammer and smashes god into a pile of goo spitting on him and ritely discerning that he is a sadistic know it all son of bitch and learning from him is going to get him hurt. Because really justifying cruelty with a vague, probably never happened promise of receiving twice as much next time after you suffer through it just doesn't make sense. Either God's a liar or he doesn't understand how this can be applied to everyone as he doesn't understand limits of systems.
The story of Adam and Eve.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-yslBFoOBk
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:29
#212232
You had to deflect that post that way because you didn't know what to do with it. A little heavy on the stream of consciousness, word salad style (how do you discern crazy and a poet?), but a whole lot of truth in there.
Meanwhile, you warn us with your name what you are up to and I think that is fair. I am not being sarcastic.
However, given your project, I'd say Hephasteus f@cked your stuff up pretty bad, given this shit is just pixels and all.
Hephasteus, winner of this round, by pixelated fiat.
You might have won in the markets last week, but some other shit is really wrong.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:46
#212149
By the way, since you work for the Fed, you should hook me up. I either want to work there or for Goldman Sachs when I grow up.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:42
#212145
I can't predict the future, so I don't know if gold/silver is a good investment.
However, I can play a little gedanken game, try to guess the possible outcomes, and prepare accordingly to the best of my ability.
Maybe things can and will go on the way they are, exponentials be damned, beyond my expiration date. In that case, gold would serve no purpose other than maybe some piece of mind, a bad investment, or a gift for the kids.
Maybe things will get better for the country/economy/dollar. Politicians actually reduce spending, set up a schedule to repay the debt incrementally, chart a return to manufacturing and other profitable endeavors consistent with a well-managed fiat currency. Or maybe via less desirable means, such as war, economic issues are circumvented. Again, gold never really comes into play.
To me it seems increasingly likely that we will see a 'correction' in my lifetime. Even so, it is not clear that gold would actually be of much use.
Say we go all Mad Max - total collapse and lawlessness. Having gold might be good in that you can maybe buy things that others cannot. But being the only house in town with the lights on (ala Twilight Zone) can be hazardous to your health. If word gets out that you have gold, you might as well paint a big target on your back. But, you say, no worries, I have guns. Sure, even if you keep them with you all the time, day and night, that guy with the hunting rifle that you don't see in the bush off to the left will soon have his own stash of gold. So for the Mad Max scenario, gold may help or it may not.
Maybe we go partial collapse, with the government essentially still in power. Bank holidays and money market freezes. Maybe the price of gold shoots to the moon and then to Saturn and eventually leaves the galaxy all together. I can't really see the government allowing a black market circumventing their controls and new currencies. So, you say, I have guns, they won't get mine when they outlaw possession (again). Maybe they don't have to - maybe they just have to put word out that anyone turning in someone who tries transacting in gold will qualify for a hefty reward. So there you sit, well-fed, with that shiny new generator and surrounded by the starving masses who have just been screwed out of their life savings. Good luck.
Likely the reality will be like none of the above and quite a surprise to all. Regardless, it does seem to me to be wise to own a little gold just in case - even if it is just enough to 'bribe the border guards', as they say.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:49
#212152
"Maybe things will get better for the country/economy/dollar. Politicians actually reduce spending, set up a schedule to repay the debt incrementally, chart a return to manufacturing and other profitable endeavors consistent with a well-managed fiat currency. Or maybe via less desirable means, such as war, economic issues are circumvented. Again, gold never really comes into play."
Huh?
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 19:57
#212159
If you assume that a fiat currency can work and those in power actually find some restraint, the role of gold may remain essentially unchanged - an investment which is sometimes profitable and sometimes not so much.
Not saying it's likely, just trying to look at various possibilities.
on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 21:10
#212218
OT and not. Tethys, I reread what you wrote that Silver is King reposted.
What you wrote is not new, but it brought sharply into focus just how much greed has torn apart the fabric of our country.
Tethys, I am really damn sad.
Greed Bitchex.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 13:17
#212545
Know the feeling. When I go through the process of trying to hedge the future, I tend to focus on worst case scenarios. This can lead to depression, but, surprisingly, also to something else.
Seeing how close we may be to the brink first led me to the 'usual' preparations - gold, food, guns, bug-out kits dispersed around town, and a plan A, B, C for what to do when TSHTF (not bad preparation in earthquake country regardless of economic conditions - two birds with one arrow).
This had me somewhat comfortable until I started thinking about what actually may go down when the $hit jumps off. This blew out my comfort level somewhat, but also led to some 'enlightenment':
Regardless of how well you are prepared - it is quite likely that things will really suck if/when we go over the brink. Nothing you can do about it. Except - take every chance you can to enjoy what is around you now. People, nature, civilization, hot water. Hell, even toilet paper.
If you think about it, not taking your life for granted can be a tremendous gift - even if things don't go south. My sadness, though, is for those who will have to pick up the pieces.
on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 20:59
#212790
[My sadness, though, is for those who will have to pick up the pieces.]
No. The ones who get to pick of the pieces get to set the rules for the next run. We need to teach them now what went wrong. Next time, the rules will be different.
This I imagine is what people were saying in the streets of Rome in 470AD. Did it matter, then? Maybe it did; we had a fairly good 1,500 years, since then.
Teach your children well.
cougar