Gold Scarcity Gold Scarcity: Honest Money by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, July 5, 2005 Eric Fry discusses Gold Scarcity and its effect, or lack thereof, on the gokd market. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: "It is hard to find and produce gold, easy to print money. We [gold] bulls take comfort in the geological scarcity of our precious and beloved metal." --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Honest Money By Eric J. Fry "It is hard to find and produce gold, easy to print money," observes James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer. "We [gold] bulls take comfort in the geological scarcity of our precious and beloved metal." Unfortunately, geological scarcity functions very poorly as a market-timing tool. "Gold was scarce in each and every year of the 1980-99 bear market," Grant admits. But happily - for those investors among us who get no thrills from owning a "precious" asset that falls in value - a couple of developing trends suggest that the nascent gold rally will gain momentum: First, the structure of short-term interest rates in Europe and the United States may encourage rising gold prices, according to Paul Kasriel, the self-styled chief economist of Northern Trust Co. Second, the euro's recent travails – triggered by the French vote against the European Constitution on May 29th – seem to be destabilizing the worldwide currency markets, a condition that should also encourage rising gold prices. "Gold really starts to glitter when you can't get an 'honest' return on your money market investments in any major currency," Kasriel explains. "That is, when the inflation rate is above money market rates in all major currencies, investors turn to gold as a store of value." Gold Scarcity: Gold Languishing For example, as the chart below illustrates, US short-term rates began delivering a negative real return in the summer of 2002 and did not begin to deliver a positive real return until very recently. It is perhaps no accident, therefore, that the gold price rallied from about $300 an ounce in August of 2002 to more than $450 an ounce by the end of 2004. The metal has been languishing ever since, as the Fed's rate-hike cycle has lifted short-term interest rates above the inflation rate. "In May, the year-over-year percent change in the all-items U.S. CPI was 2.8%," Kasriel notes. "The fed funds rate target was 3.00%. Thus, the inflation-adjusted fed funds rate was positive by 20 basis points – the first positive "real" fed funds rate since September 2002." Because the fed funds rate is now 3.25%, the inflation-adjusted rate has jumped to 45 basis points. Meanwhile, Europe's real short-term rates have also nudged into positive territory. In theory, therefore, short-term rates in the US and Europe both provide competitive real returns versus the inert, non-yielding precious metal. Nevertheless, ever since the French vote, gold has been rallying against both the dollar and the euro...especially the euro. Since May 29th, gold has advanced only 1% against the dollar, but more than 8% against the euro. "I wonder if the gold market is beginning to reflect the expectation that an honest return on one's money may be hard to come by in the not-too-distant future," Kasriel muses. "With eurozone economic growth faltering, the European Central Bank (ECB) is under increasing pressure to cut its policy rate. It is doubtful that eurozone consumer inflation would decline by as many basis points as the interest rate cut. Thus, if the ECB were to lower rates in the near term, it is likely that the real ECB rate could turn negative again." Likewise, Kasriel believes, the probability is high that short-term US rates will turn negative again soon. "There is a growing expectation that the fed might be near the end of Phase 1, at least, of this tightening cycle," he says. "At the same time, with energy prices flaring up again, all-items CPI inflation might start to climb again." If the quest for an "honest return" sets in motion the next leg of the gold bull market, monetary instability might keep it in motion. "The true prerequisite for a continued rally in the gold price is monetary disorder," Grant asserts. "Motive power for the 1980-99 bear market was the lack of disorder (though there were many promising crises), in the absence of which financial assets produced outsized returns." Therefore, the unfolding constitutional crisis in Europe, which is becoming a low-level monetary crisis, may provide ideal conditions for a sizeable gold rally. 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 |
Gold Scarcity: Shaking the World's Confidence "Constant readers know that [we have] been keeping a bedside vigil for the international monetary system for as long as we've been publishing," Grant continues. "We're still at it. The arithmetic of the U.S. current account is – as it has been for decades – adverse; nothing new there. New is the political and constitutional crisis in Europe. It will rattle the world's confidence in the single currency. More than that, it could lead a remnant of the world's savers to reason that the euro's problems are not unique to the euro but inherent in managed currencies. The dollar may yield more than a single currency, but it too, is an uncollateralized emission of a governmental body." Gold, of course, is not. Gold is an expressly non- governmental component of the earth's crust – and a geologically scarce component at that. This legendary scarcity – because it precludes the possibility of inflation - enables gold to provide an "honest return" whenever the world's managed currencies cannot. "There is $1 trillion or so worth of gold in the world, of which central banks hold half," Grant concludes. "There is $369 billion of gold derivatives contracts outstanding (or was at year-end, up from $318 billion at midyear). There is $9.6 trillion in U.S. M-3 (e.i. money supply) and the equivalent of $8.3 trillion in euro M-3...So relatively scarce is bullion that even a small reallocation of monetary assets to gold from paper, a small tweaking at the margin, could cause an inspirational pop in the gold price." [Ed. Note: Our resource market man of the hour, Kevin Kerr, is on a blistering run of late. If you joined him 16 trades ago you would now be up, incredibly, 16 wins. Click here to get the scoop on one of the best in the biz: Kevin Kerr's Blistering run with The Profit Machine --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Carl Swenlin A good measure of market participation -- the number of stocks participating in upside price moves -- is the percentage of stocks above their 200-day moving average. DecisionPoint.com tracks this number on the major market indexes, and in this instance we are looking at this indicator for the S&P 600 Small-Cap Index. Note how the indicator has been making lower highs for the last 18 months, even as the price index has made new all- time highs. This negative divergence is not necessarily fatal, but it does reflect how the price index is being supported by fewer and fewer stocks. The price index can move higher because it is capitalization-weighted. This allows the larger-cap stocks in the index to carry it higher, while increasing numbers of smaller-cap stocks begin to fade. This is not healthy, and it is another piece of evidence that indicates that the cyclical bull market is probably near an end. [Ed. Note: Carl Swenlin is president of Decision Point, a market research website where you'll find all the info you need to make solid investment decisions, organized into charts and reports you can access with a click of your mouse. Take a free tour of the website here: http://www.decisionpoint.com ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,303 | 10,291 | -209 | -4.4% | S&P | 1,194 | 1,191 | -4 | -1.4% | NASDAQ | 2,057 | 2,045 | -6 | -5.4% | 10-year Treasury | 4.07% | 3.91% | 0.03 | -0.14 | 30-year Treasury | 4.33% | 4.20% | 0.02 | -0.49 | Russell 2000 | 643 | 628 | 17 | -1.3% | Gold | $425.85 | $440.00 | -$1.20 | -2.7% | Silver | $6.89 | $7.21 | -$0.38 | 1.1% | CRB | 303.86 | 311.37 | 1.38 | 7.0% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $58.75 | $60.54 | $5.21 | 35.2% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.97 | JPY 109.31 | -3.34 | -9.2% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.1886 | $1.2160 | 233 | 12.3% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7542 | $1.8289 | 579 | 8.5% |
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