Gold Bull Market Gold Bull Market: Golden Opportunities by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, August 4, 2005 Eric Fry discusses how the dollar's continuing difficulties will continue to fuel the Gold Bull Market. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: However prudently the U.S. might manage its debts, it is imprudently increasing them, which is not very prudent at all. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- GOLDEN OPPORTUNITIES By Eric J. Fry "I hate to be the bearer of bad news," Kevin Kerr apologized yesterday, "but the demise of the dollar is upon us and the future may be bleak for the once worshiped and almighty currency." Kerr, whose knack for identifying important investment trends has amply rewarded the subscribers of his Resource Trader Alert, suspects that the dollar's difficulties will continue powering a long-lived gold bull market. "Keep an eye on gold," he advises. "Yesterday's big gold rally may be the start of an important move in the precious metal." No one knows, of course, the precise day when a long-term macro-economic trend will begin to affect short-term price movements, but that day for the U.S. dollar – and therefore for gold – may have arrived already, even if very few market observers realize it. As the nearby chart shows quite clearly, the value of the U.S. dollar has been sliding in step with America's deteriorating national finances. Perhaps it is no accident, therefore, that gold has rallied sharply over the last four years. In 2001, the U.S. government enjoyed a budget surplus equivalent to 1.2% of GDP. Meanwhile, the current account deficit in that year totaled a mere 3.5%. Thus, these two deficit gauges combined, totaled a mere 2.3% of GDP. But both numbers have been worsening ever since, such that these "twin deficits" totaled nearly 10% of GDP in 2004! That's a lot of debt to paper over with U.S. dollars. No wonder that the Treasury will resume issuing 30-year bonds. "The dollar is the single biggest element of risk in the world of finance today," writes Addison Wiggin in his freshly minted book, The Demise of the Dollar...And Why It's Great for Your Investments. "Rearrange the current system of world finance ever so slightly. Let confidence in the greenback falter, and the mighty dollar could go up in flames...There are many ways to hedge against this risk... Better still, there are many ways to profit from the likelihood the dollar will fall." Gold Bull Market: The Dollar's Reign Is Over Wiggin does not divulge the precise profit opportunities until Chapter 12, but throughout the preceding 11 chapters, he argues persuasively that the dollar's reign is ending. Therefore, gold will once again usurp its rightful authority over the world's monetary regime. "What is real money?" he muses. "This question should be on the minds of every investor and everyone who observes what happens at home and abroad. The U.S. government has done an excellent job of convincing us that all of those dollar bills being exchanged work as actual money. In fact, though, everyone knows they have no tangible value. They are backed only by (a) a promise by the government to honor the debt, and (b) assurances from the government that the money does have value, that one dollar is worth one dollar. Both of these promises are questionable." Indeed, especially in light of America's worsening balance sheet. The Bush administration announced yesterday that it will resume issuing the 30-year Treasury bond next year. Treasury Secretary John Snow cheered the decision as evidence of "our commitment to prudent debt management." We are dubious. Prudent debt management seems a bit like prudent alcoholism management. Wouldn't the most prudent course of action be to eliminate the vice that requires managing? Unfortunately, now that our national debts total nearly $8 trillion, debt-management has become an eternal imperative. However prudently the U.S. might manage its debts, it is imprudently increasing them, which is not very prudent at all. Extending the maturities of our debts out into the future, while prudent, cannot possibly do the entire job of managing our debts. That's where the dollar comes in. Nothing "manages" government debts quite as effectively as currency-debasement. Such is the time-honored tactic that all indebted governments have utilized throughout the ages. The U.S. government will behave no differently, says Wiggin. It will satisfy its mounting liabilities with dollar bills of ever less value. In other words, the dollar bills that 30-year bondholders would receive in 2035 will be worth much, much less than today's dollars. "How can the government promise to pay its debts when the total of that debt keeps getting higher and higher?" Wiggin asks. "It's already out of control. And in our fiat money system, the implied promise that a dollar is worth a dollar has to be looked at with suspicion as well. "This is not just an exercise in economic theory. The near future could prove to be a financial disaster for anyone who continues to have faith in the strength of the dollar. In fact, a collapse is inevitable and it's only a question of how quickly it is going to occur. "The consequences will be huge declines in the stock market, savings becoming worthless, and the bond market completely falling apart. As the value of the dollar falls, that dollar will no longer be worth a dollar; it will be worth only pennies on the dollar. It will be a rude awakening for everyone who has become complacent about America's invulnerability." Gold Bull Market: Gold Rides to the Rescue This is the part where gold rides to the rescue on a white stallion. "Gold ETFs are one of the simplest ways to position for the dollar's continuing slide," says Wiggin. "The two gold ETFS that trade here in the U.S. both hold gold bullion as their one and only asset. You can locate these two ETFs under the symbol "GLD" (for the "streetTRACKS Gold Trust") and "IAU" (for the "iShares COMEX Gold Trust"). Either ETF offers a practical way to hold gold in an investment portfolio." Wiggin provides several other profit opportunities as well, of which all dollar-phobic investors may avail themselves. Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
Kevin Kerr, who specializes in trading option on futures, has been advocating the purchase of long-dated call options on gold. (We should mention that Kevin issued his most recent recommendation immediately BEFORE yesterday's gold rally). "Make no mistake," says Kerr, "gold is the real deal. Gold doesn't have a board of directors; gold doesn't have scandal; gold doesn't have an expense account or one-time charges. Gold is quite simply, gold. We call it the 'flight to quality' instrument because in tough times, times of fear and trepidation, investors flock to gold like rednecks to a NASCAR race. Gold is relatively cheap right now and options on it are a great deal. So it only makes sense to add some gold calls." Kerr suggests buying out-of-the-money calls on gold for early 2006. Perhaps yesterday's $5.00 gold rally was just another meaningless blip. Perhaps not. One thing is clear; gold does not lack for reasons to move higher. [Ed. Note: For those few who are, as yet, unacquainted with Mr. Wiggin, he is the author, with Bill Bonner, of the New York Times best-seller, Financial Reckoning Day. Those of you who are more familiar with Addison will remember the clamoring to acquire a copy of his last book and will be keen enough to get in early this time around. Click here for details: The Demise of the Dollar...and Why It's Great for Your Investments --- Advertisement --- ------------------------- And the Markets... | Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,698 | 10,684 | 57 | -0.8% | S&P | 1,245 | 1,244 | 11 | 2.7% | NASDAQ | 2,217 | 2,218 | 32 | 1.9% | 10-year Treasury | 4.30% | 4.33% | 0.01 | 0.08 | 30-year Treasury | 4.50% | 4.54% | 0.03 | -0.32 | Russell 2000 | 683 | 689 | 4 | 4.9% | Gold | $436.60 | $432.15 | $7.10 | -0.2% | Silver | $7.29 | $7.24 | $0.06 | 7.0% | CRB | 315.32 | 317.57 | 3.32 | 11.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $60.86 | $61.89 | $0.29 | 40.1% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.11 | JPY 111.46 | 1.34 | -8.3% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2334 | $1.2194 | -208 | 9.0% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7772 | $1.7702 | -196 | 7.4% |
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