Do you think $500 gold will ever be a reality again?
GoldenEyeNumismatics
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What say you?
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"For me, playing baseball has been like a war and I was defending the uniform I wore, Every time I put on the uniform I respected it like the American flag. I wore it like I was representing every Latin country."--Minnie Minoso
But gasoline has to go to $1.50 a gallon average price in the US first!
The chances of that happening?
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
The only way I think we'll see that is if inflation becomes so rampant that they demonetize the dollar and issue "New Dollars" by moving the decimal point a few places.
(Edit: I notice PerryHall was thinking similarly.)
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2 decades of market intervention by Gata-Deepcaster
Cornered rats and the USTreasury's Plunge Protection Team
Manipulation.....it ain't what it used to be.
roadrunner
Source for the above chart is this article, which is worth a look.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Update with Reference. I was off by $29 ;>
Link on Cost to Produce
That argument doesn't fly. If gold dropped to $500, the mines with production costs over $500 would stop production, and the industry-wide average cost of production would fall significantly below $500.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
See the link above on Gata-Deepcaster with a nice reference to Rubin-Clinton on what they did to inject liqudity starting in 1994 without raising the eye of the bond-currency markets as to true inflation status. A few tweaks on the CPI and GDP methodologies, a nice gold leasing program, toss in a little extract of PPT and some derivatives, and voila, low "published" inflation and new "paper" growth.
roadrunner
On the contrary, I don't believe you are including market forces:
More People on Earth every year, more people are moving to higher disposable income.
The demand side is always there for Gold, always
if supply is CUT because of closed mines, what about satisfying this demand?
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
The demand side is always there for Gold, always
if supply is CUT because of closed mines, what about satisfying this demand?
Don't assume that the mine owners are willing to sustain losses to make consumers happy. If consumers are unwilling to bid gold up to higher levels, the mines will remain idle.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>That argument doesn't fly. If gold dropped to $500, the mines with production costs over $500 would stop production, and the industry-wide average cost of production would fall significantly below $500
On the contrary, I don't believe you are including market forces:
More People on Earth every year, more people are moving to higher disposable income.
The demand side is always there for Gold, always
if supply is CUT because of closed mines, what about satisfying this demand? >>
Can you name even one sector of industry (besides jewelry) that would cease to exist, or even change much at all if all the gold in the world was launched into space tomorrow? It is simply just a very pretty, albeit useless metal that we arbitrarily put value on. Once the world comes to realize that gold metal is no more useful than current fiat FRN's, look to something else (silver perhaps) to be the store of real wealth.
During the 1927-1936 era, Homestake (gold) mining stock (today Newmont) increased 13X in value. And at that time the price of gold was fixed by the US govt and illegal to own. Yet gold stocks did quite well in that deflationary environment.
Barrick (ABX) is no doubt mining gold at losses since they have hedged forward production to the tune of $2 BILL or so in potential losses. As gold goes higher than hedge gets worse. I would think some of their locked in pricing from years back (a la the gold carry trade) could be as low as $350/oz. Hence they are producing at losses. Their solution is to continue to buy other gold miners that have unhedged positions in order to somewhat balance their hedged positions.
roadrunner
Added: As roadrunner aludes to this fact - "it's all relative"
Happy New Year!
I knew it would happen.
No borrowing = economic slowdown
No borrowing = financial accountability, no derivative games
No borrowing = a bad thing? You mean the government would have to justify spending? Nah, it'll never fly.
I knew it would happen.
What happens then, launch the silver into space? Then the platinum? Then the oil? And finally all the dirt? I think we're on to something. Then there will be nothing to cause inflation as there will be nothing left to go up in price. But as each item went up, the value of the next items would rise. Imagine what the price of silver would do once gold went away? At some point in time the values would be so skewed as to be incomprehensible....and it leads us right back to where we started from....a mess
Until, the Central Bankers purchase plans for a rocket ship, I'm with jmski52. And if the gold was launched into orbit, there would be a new industry created to go up and salvage it. Supply and demand.
roadrunner
Remember that markets can be irrational, and can remain irrational long enough to wipe you out before you are proven right.
Sunnywood
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Sunnywood I agree with your market irrationality concept. In fact I don't think any of the major markets have been rational for many years. It's just one big monopoly board with the big boys pulling the strings.
Whoever gets in office next year will have little to no impact on what interest rates or gold will end up at. Those numbers are already booked based on the actions of the past 10 years.
roadrunner
High interest rates don't cause inflation. They result from it.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
roadrunner
<< <i>Can you name even one sector of industry (besides jewelry) that would cease to exist, or even change much at all if all the gold in the world was launched into space tomorrow? It is simply just a very pretty, albeit useless metal that we arbitrarily put value on. Once the world comes to realize that gold metal is no more useful than current fiat FRN's, look to something else (silver perhaps) to be the store of real wealth.
What happens then, launch the silver into space? Then the platinum? Then the oil? And finally all the dirt? I think we're on to something. Then there will be nothing to cause inflation as there will be nothing left to go up in price. But as each item went up, the value of the next items would rise. Imagine what the price of silver would do once gold went away? At some point in time the values would be so skewed as to be incomprehensible....and it leads us right back to where we started from....a mess
Until, the Central Bankers purchase plans for a rocket ship, I'm with jmski52. And if the gold was launched into orbit, there would be a new industry created to go up and salvage it. Supply and demand.
roadrunner >>
We need silver, platinum, oil, and yes, we even need dirt. But we DO NOT have any logical or practical need for gold. Maybe you missed my point. Gold is not vital to any industry in the world other than jewelry. So why we put an arbitrary value on the soft metal is far beyond my capabilities of understanding I suppose. If we had no steel tomorrow, we'd be in BIG trouble. If every tree died tomorrow, YIKES!!! If every ounce of gold ever mined was to dissapear tomorrow, oh well, wifey would have to wear her silver rings I guess. Do you get it now roadrunner?
Conversely, high interest rates may indeed cause inflation. After all, interest rates represent the cost of capital. If you view capital as a supply component, then rising interest rates (to a manufacturer, for example) are no different than rising costs of component materials. When capital rises in price, that has an inflationary impact.
Cause and effect in the macro world are always more complicated than they appear.
Best,
Sunnywood
Sunnywood's Rainbow-Toned Morgans (Retired)
Sunnywood's Barber Quarters (Retired)
The Fed's manipulation of interest rates did have a dramatic impact on the market psychology of that bubble. The same thing could certainly happen now. There are other differences between then and now, though.
The speculation (and inflationary pressure) isn't rooted in the precious metals markets now - it's been woven into the financial industry, the mortgage markets and now it's spilling over into the basic necessities of life - food & energy. Yeah, energy is reacting to it, not causing it. And precious metals - reacting to it, not causing it.
I don't have the charts on money and debt creation during the Volker years, but I'd hazard a guess that it was low, even in the face of the recession. Until money and debt creation are brought to heel, there's no reason why interest rates should affect anything other than spending in general.
And spending is what they are trying to stimulate, as usual through money and debt creation - to make it look like they are good managers of the economy. And all that is just fine and dandy, if they would also buckle down and manage the government judiciously - which is also not happening. Lots of variables, huh?
I'm still not liquidating my precious metals until I am good & ready, thank you.
I knew it would happen.
Rob
"Those guys weren't Fathers they were...Mothers."
If steel had never existed there would have been other materials to erect our buildings (plastic, wood, rock, etc). Things still would have happened and we would have advanced nontheless. It platinum didn't exist, some other substitute would have been discovered/founded for its applications. 39,000 patent applications in the past 10 years on the uses of gold can't be all wrong. And with nanotechnology in our future, you can expect more uses of gold to follow. It ain't your grandfather's barbarous relic.
Uses for gold
The precise definition of inflation refers to the monetary type. Once you print or create excess money, price inflation tends to follow. It can be slowed down or delayed, but not erased. Our monetary inflation of the past 20 years is only now starting to come back to our shores as the price of labor and goods rises in the rest of the world (ie the elimination of the free lunch).
roadrunner
Is one of them, "bail out my owner when the whole economic system goes to pot?"
I knew it would happen.
Our current "low interest" rate environment is severaly lagging the problem. Interest rates lagged the problem in the 1970's. The FED is always slow to react to the issues. Rising inflation and rising interest rates drove the price of gold up. Volcker, taking those same interest rates to extremely high levels, broke the back of the gold in
the process. It did not happen overnight, and took essentially 20% rates to do it. Today we're a long ways from that. And right now the 1st problem is fighting commercial paper illiquidity. The inflation side of the equation will have to wait until the banking crisis gets handled. Rates will be lowered to help out the banks. If they can be helped at all. At some point though, rates will have to be raised considerably to fight inflationary effects. There is no easy way out of this "conundrum." Lowering rates intially will only make the subsequent inflation worse. But losing the banking system is not an option to the FED at this point. If they intend to continue to harvest the bounty of the masses through their banks, they need the system solvent.
roadrunner
I suspect if H2 fuel cell vehicles become popular, oil will dip
if petroleum byproducts are not utilized in H2 production.
The increase in gold prices may be due to demand in India,
China, and the Middle East (investing oil money). If the
overall demand for gold goes down, price will follow.
Whoever gets in office next year will have little to no impact on what interest rates or gold will end up at. Those numbers are already booked based on the actions of the past 10 years.
Wisest thing said in this entire thread.
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
<< <i>Yes, but first we have to start paying down the national debt and restore value to the dollar. >>
Good luck with that. The only way we'll see $500 gold again is if we devalue the ounce so that one troy ounce is 10 grams. --Jerry
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>Absolutely!
But gasoline has to go to $1.50 a gallon average price in the US first!
The chances of that happening?
>>
Just as good as them dipping down to a $1 like they did in the 90's for several months.
I would have never thought that would happen.
Yes, gold can go back to $300 too.
Jerry
Rob
"Those guys weren't Fathers they were...Mothers."
As pointed out by others, gold's price is volatile, so it is best to think of this answer in terms of a probability -- ie, there are certainly conceivable economic scenarios in which gold retreats below $ 500.
However:
(1) The low trading range of gold 5 - 10 years ago now appears to have been the result of a confluence of factors that are unlikely to repeat as dramatically -- related to the rapid rise in global productive capacity associated with Chinca's rise, the end of the Cold War, the stability arising from a renewed Pax Americana and optmism surrounding the "unification" of Western Europe. This promoted stability and mild worldwide deflationary pressures.
(2) As the growth rate of global productive capacity slows, and the desire to consume catches up with production, this deflationary tendency no longer exists -- indeed, pressures are turning inflationary.
(3) Add to this a large number of global political risks that add materially to uncertainty. (they are too long to list, but, starting with current news, Pakistan . . .)
(4) Add to this growing evidence that we are going to see an increasing trend in the US towards (a) unfunded baby boom and middle class entitlements, (b) economic policies that stifle economic efficiency.
. . . it is easy to envision inflationary scenarios. Most of the scenarios for the next 10 years that result in relative stability also seem to imply increased inflation.
The down scenarios, unlike the 1990s scenario, are quite unpleasant -- ie, deflation resulting from a breakdown in the global economy and a collapse in demand. These scenarios are certainly not impossible.
First keep in mind, I am a diehard goldbug. But, gold at some point will return to $500, but that price will not be reached for a long, long time.
Right now, the country, economically is a mess, and how big of a mess it is, is slowly being realized. As the shape of the country hits home, gold will continue to climb.
Long story short, I expect gold to eventrually top $1600. However, these problems will not exist forever. At some point the imbalances will be back in balance again and gold will come back to Earth. It is the nature of the beast.
For some great gold info, check out my blog
linky
Listened to a whacko radio interview the other night and they were touting the Amero dollars and the coming change and why our Government is allowing the dollar to collapse.
The consensus was that $1 Amero would be equal to $10 US FRNs.
So.........in that case, I guess we could see gold at less than $100 but that would be in Ameros, which would be our only currency option.
What really tipped me off to the lunacy was that the lenders have struck a double secret deal where bank debts, mortgages, credit card balances, etc. don't revert to the 10 to 1 ratio.
IOW, if you currently have a 200K mortgage, it doesn't become a 20K Amero mortgage, but remains a 200K Amero mortgage. That economy car you financed and owe 10K on will now cost you 100K to pay off.
WOW! Talk about being upside down on your loans!!!
John Marnard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920, page 235ff