"Investing
in gold can secure a glittering return. Nations have built wealth
and power on gold...a commodity people can touch instead of cash.
The history of gold is as old as time itself. From references
to gold in Genesis to the myths of Jason and King Midas and the
legend of King Solomon's mines, gold has been a symbol of wealth,
freedom and power. Empires and nations from Charlemagne
to the Spanish conquest of the New World to the American frontier
movement pursued gold or built on its promise. Gold today
is not just the preserve of the jeweller and all who appreciate
fine pieces that use this precious metal in its making. In an
unstable world, gold should form part of a balanced portfolio
and there are several ways in which this can be achieved for
the individual. In value, gold has been rising dramatically recently.
From US$253 per troy oz in November 1999, the price rose to US$454.2/troy
oz in early December the highest level for 16 years. It
can be a useful 'insurance' against extreme movements in traditional
assets and rarely follows economic patterns."
Conal Gregory,
Yorkshire Post
Since bottoming in 2001, gold
has moved up in stages that have been interrupted by short, but
sharp, corrections. These corrections wipe out much of the excessive
optimism seen at each peak. So the latest correction from the
December giddy highs appears to have once again set the stage
for the resumption to higher levels. . .The factors that have
sustained this bull run in gold have not changed. That bodes
well for those of us who believe $500 gold is not a question
of if, but when."
Peter Grandich
Is it just gold bugs espousing voodoo
to try to scare us into buying the glittery stuff? Or is a financial
Armaggedon really upon us? Read the book of Revelation, then
compare it to recent plagues terrifying Earth. Tsunamis, deadly
hurricanes, 9-11, war, greed, fraud and blasphemous wickedness
in world markets. It all makes a compelling case that Babylon
the Great is falling. In the case of gold bugs, it's the mighty
U.S.A. whose walls are about to crumble under the weight of its
insatiable appetite for debt and lust for power.
The numbers are staggering.
Total U.S. debt sits at $34 trillion or 300% of GDP, which eats
up $80 million an hour in foreign lending, absorbing 80% of the
world's savings. At the same time, the U.S. trade deficit sits
at $5 trillion, growing by an alarming $600 billion in 2004 alone,
while the U.S. dollar index fell by 35%, which wiped out $3 trillion
for foreign investors. 'The day of reckoning must eventually come,'
warned Nick Barisheff, founder of Bullion Marketing Services
Inc.
The Toronto Sun
"As I write, Japanese
and European authorities are deploring the unwanted appreciation
of the yen and the euro. They are weighing joint intervention
to stop it. Such talk underscores a vital fact. In 2005 a strong
currency is the Old Maid of the monetary deck. Nobody wants it,
not even George W. Bush. But I observe that the universal yearning
for weak currencies is tantamount to a yearning for a strong
gold price. I believe that these complementary longings will
be fulfilled. Count me as bullish on gold--still."
James Grant, Grant's
Interest Rate Observer
"Thus, it's difficult
to envision a bright future for the dollar," says Dow
Theory's Richard Russell. "This is the real reason for
holding gold. To put it simply, the reason for holding gold can
be stated in three words. We hold gold 'just in case.' One more
thought -- this is early in the gold bull market. At some point
ahead, the rise in gold will accelerate. 'What do we do then?'
you ask. My answer -- 'What we'll be doing then is that we'll
probably be buying more gold at much higher prices. We'll be
buying more gold because the dollar will be in its death throes,
if not as a currency, at least as a reserve currency.'"
"As I said, it is very
difficult to make any economic calculations or financial calculation
or estimates if you have a government that manipulates the markets.
Under a planning economy, we had central planners planning the
economy and steering the economy and it ended in disaster. I
suppose that today's equivalent of the central planners of the
communist regimes are the central bankers like Mr. Greenspan
in that they can steer the economy with just one tool, monetary
policy. I think the same way the planning economies ended in
disaster, central banking as we know it today, will end in disaster.
If there was a tribunal whose laws or criteria were sound money,
Mr. Greenspan would be hanged."
Marc Faber
"As time passes and seeing
how events are unfolding, we're more inclined to believe this
bull market in gold is going to be a big one, which could surpass
the old highs at $850. If that proves to be true, then this mega
bull market will likely be composed of three psychological phases.
The first phase is when the so called
smart, big money buys. In the second phase, mutual funds and
some investors start moving in, attracted by rising prices. The
third phase is when the public jumps in, which pushes prices
up to levels higher than most expected. That's what happened
to gold in 1980, Japan in 1990 and tech stocks in 2000.
Interestingly, our dear friend
Chris Weber was at a barbecue near Monaco several months ago
where several billionaires were present. When the conversation
turned to investments one of the party goers wondered what to
invest in these days. Almost in unison, the billionaires all
said gold. They obviously bought in the first phase of this bull
market. Another dear friend Richard Russell believes we're now
in the early second phase and this tends to be the longest phase.
These psychological phases are different from our own technical
steps, which show the upside targets as the bull market progresses.
The bottom line is, gold is headed higher and you should continue
to hold."
The Aden Sisters:
www.adenforecast.com
"Career gold bulls may
wince at the new found popularity of the orphan they alone once
cherished. But we believe they should choke back the impulse
to exit the market on the grounds of it being overcrowded. If
we are right about the problems facing the dollar--and indeed,
about those confronting most of the managed currencies that compete
with the dollar--the bull side of the gold market is destined
to become far more crowded than it already has."
James Grant
I'm going to revise my thinking
on the phase gold is in. I've stated that gold is still in its
first psychological phase. I've revised my thinking on that.
Often the first and second phase of a bull market is divided
by a severe correction. I believe that the July 2004 correction
was the correction that ended the first psychological phase of
gold, and that we are now in the second psychological phase.
The second phase of a bull market is usually the longest (in
duration) phase. It's in the second phase that the public begins
to be interested in an item. And it's in the second phase that
the funds start to take their initial positions in an item. I
believe we're at the start of the second phase in gold. The
sharp July correction followed by a second correction in August
-- these two corrections, served, I believe, to knock out late-comers
and "in-and-out traders" and solidify the technical
position in gold. Only the "believers" held on, and
in many cases bought more. All of which takes us to the second
psychological phase of gold. Let the second phase begin.
Richard Russell,
Dow Theory Letters
"We conclude with ardent
conviction, the more so for our isolation, that the dollar's
role as the global reserve currency has run its course. The
transition to a new basis for international credit will be lengthy
and difficult. The repercussions of a transition are not
reflected in the financial markets. For this reason, gold
is inadequately priced. The best strategy, under these
circumstances, is to own as much as possible of what so few have
in their possession, physical gold. While gold mining shares
will perform well along the way (and should certainly be owned),
they are much easier to manufacture than the metal is to extract.
The same is true for derivatives, or paper gold. A private
banker recently told us how he had protected his clients with
gold-indexed notes issued by his employer, and that this practice
was widespread in his department. We hear similar stories
from Asian and European investors. No institution contemplating
gold in four digits would issue such paper."
John Hathaway,
Tocqueville Funds
"In
an age of increasing concerns about market volatility and political
upheaval, at a time when the largest segment of the US population
is approaching a potentially prolonged and expensive retirement,
the preservation of wealth is paramount. A virtually indestructible
asset, gold offers investors a potential, tangible hedge against
unpredictability. Since time immemorial, from the ancient Sumerian
civilizations to the present day, gold has shaped the evolution
of humanity in our quest for freedom, sustainability and wealth.
As it has been for thousands of years, so it remains today; gold,
as a store of value, is universal and enduring."
"The Case
for Gold: Preserving Wealth in an Age of Uncertainty"
State Street Global Advisors
The
price of a fine suit of men's clothes can be used to show anyone
who is not familiar with the price history of gold just how very
cheap gold is today. With an ounce of gold, a man could buy a
fine suit of clothes in the time of Shakespeare, in that of Beethoven
and Jefferson, and in the depression of the 1930s. In fact, this
statement was still true in the 1980s, but not in the late 1990s.
The suit standard now implies a gold price of perhaps $1000 per
troy ounce. Today, a really good man's suit can easily cost 4
ounces of gold, and that is without a vest, which once was standard."
The United States
Geological Survey
"It is beyond belief that
we know so little about how people get rich or poor, about how
it is they come to dwell in comfort and health or die in penury
and disease. Financial markets are the machines in which much
of human welfare is decided; yet we know more about how our car
engines work than about how our global financial system functions.
We lurch from crisis to crisis; so little is our knowledge that
we resort not to science but to shamans."
Benoit Mandelbrot
Investors should never forget
the lessons of the South Sea Bubble and John Law's experiment
with paper money. The Mississippi Scheme in particular is relevant
to the current situation in the United States; in fact, there
are several lessons contemporary investors can learn from John
Law's rise and ultimate demise.
It is true that Law's policies were initially a great success,
boosting the French economy considerably. In fact, at his peak
in 1719, Law was one of the most admired personalities in continental
Europe. But the Mississippi Scheme failed, and Law fell from
grace because the Banque Royale held for too long the firm belief
that it could solve every problem simply by increasing the supply
of paper money. When Law finally realized that the enemy was
a loss in confidence in paper money and accelerating inflation,
the damage had already been done.
There will surely be a time when the present "chain letter"
type of fiat money operation practiced by the U.S. Federal Reserve
Board will similarly no longer work and lead to a sharp depreciation
of the U.S. dollar. The other possibility, of course, is that
the dollar begins to depreciate, not compared to foreign currencies,
but -- as was also the case at the time of John Law -- against
commodities and real assets."
Marc Faber
"I want to say something
about owning gold and gold shares. Personally, I have an easier
time owning gold over gold shares. Wife Faye, who has a different
personality, has no trouble holding gold shares, and she has
held many for years. I don't view gold, the metal, as a trading
vehicle or something akin to stocks. I view gold as pure wealth.
The economic world can roll over on its fannie, my house can
burn down, any stock can crash and burn (think MRK) -- but gold
as wealth is as old as civilization. Gold is pure wealth -- it
was wealth in 2000 BC, it was wealth in the 1400s and the 1600s,
and it's wealth today. The people at the Fed may tell you that
gold is just an ancient "relic," but gold will be accepted
as wealth when these yo-yo's at the central banks are gone and
forgotten along with the whole un-Constitutional Federal Reserve
system and its currency-printing operations."
Richard Russell,
Dow Theory Letters
"Although there are only
a few reserve currencies, an appalling lack of discipline is
demonstrated by the US dollar. As things stand today, the United
States is indebted to the external world to the tune of $3 trillion.
This sum actually exceeds the total official currency reserves
of all the nations of the world -- including the USA. . . The
evolution of the reserve role of the American currency in recent
years gives grounds for a pretty pessimistic prognosis. The relationship
between the state of the dollar and the value of gold is obvious.
In relation to our discussion today, this means that gold continues
to have particular monetary attraction in the minds of all prudent
financial investors."
Oleg Mozhaiskov,
Deputy Chairman, Bank of Russia
"Evidence of the government's
'active hands' in the markets continues to grow. First, there
is the manipulation of the gold market that has been solidly
documented but not widely disseminated in the press. Beginning
under the Clinton Administration, the dollar has been made to
look strong by holding down the price of gold. This legal and
logical market manipulation has been accomplished by central
bank gold sales and by lending gold to bullion banks that could,
in turn, sell the gold to earn carry trade profits. You might
wonder why our government is so actively involved in keeping
the price of gold down. Well, a logical reason would be that
when the price of gold takes off, even the investment masses
will focus attention on the real problems of massive trade and
federal deficits and world-wide money creation. For investors
with a long-term view, the price of gold is being subsidized
and held well below market. If you like government subsidies,
you can get one by buying gold."
Richard Benson,
Specialty Financial Group, LLC
"FIVE major risks threaten
the world economy. Three centre on the United States: renewed
sharp increases in the current-account deficit leading to a crash
of the dollar; a budget profile that is out of control; and an
outbreak of trade protectionism. A fourth relates to China, which
faces a possible hard landing from its recent overheating. The
fifth is that oil prices could rise to $60-70 per barrel even
without a major political or terrorist disruption, and much higher
with one. Most of these risks reinforce each other. A further
oil shock, a dollar collapse and a soaring American budget deficit
would all generate much higher inflation and interest rates.
A sharp dollar decline would increase the likelihood of further
oil price rises. Larger budget deficits will produce larger American
trade deficits, and thus more protectionism and dollar vulnerability.
Realisation of any one of the five risks could substantially
reduce world growth. If two or three, let alone all five, were
to occur in combination then they would radically reverse the
global outlook."
Fred Bergsten,
The Economist
"Let us be blunt about
it. The U.S. is now on the comfortable path to ruin. It is being
driven along a road of ever rising deficits and debt, both external
and fiscal, that risk destroying the country's credit and the
global role of its currency. . .What cannot last will not do
so, as the late Herb Stein famously remarked. But we can choose
now it changes. The U.S. authorities can allow things to take
their course or they can develop a policy to reverse these trends.
The essence of the needed changes is quite clear: a further substantial
devaluation of the dollar. . ."
Martin Wolf, Financial
Times
"The reality of horrific
multiple U.S. deficits, a worsening energy crisis, a geopolitical
landscape that must get worse before it can get better, and a
polarizing national election [will]give the support gold needs
to go to new highs and challenge $500 in the next 12 months or
less."
Peter Grandich/The
Grandich Letter.