The Bugs were right

Posted by Ray on May 12, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

Much is being made over the price of gold over the past few days and questions are being raised. The main question is; why is gold going up while the dollar is gaining strength? To me it is fairly obvious, there is no faith in any of the currencies of the world at the moment. It is not as if gold is making highs in only Euros or dollars, but it is making highs in most currencies at this point. Again, it is because of a complete lack of confidence of currencies rather than, but not completely devoid of, inflationary fears.

In short, the gold bugs were right and the jokes that many made are suddenly not so funny any longer. What we are witnessing is nothing short of spectacular and one should not underestimate the importance of what is going on either locally or on the other side of the world. It is not very often that we see developed world economies default or come to the edge of default which should make everyone extremely nervous. This is not Ecuador defaulting or the Congo, but we are talking about Greece, which is no surprise in itself, Portugal, Spain and Italy who are or were on the verge of default. It does not end there though, even though they are the countries grabbing the headlines, because if they go France, Germany and the UK could all go as well, this is serious.

This has all the making, as I have said before, of a currency crisis and contagion that can and will more than likely grip the whole world, ending in the U.S. at some point in the near future. To many this is news to them as they fell into the “that cannot happen here” crowd, but the gold bugs, like myself, have been saying for years that at some point the markets will tell you that you have borrowed too much and they will cut you off. When that happens the currency becomes worthless and inflation will inevitably set in making life miserable for the inhabitants of said countries. This is why gold bugs accumulate gold for years because they see it coming and this is why we are witnessing Europeans scramble to buy bullion now. Rumors are that European mints are almost out of bullion, both gold and silver, which may be one reason why prices are spiking. The rumors are not verified, but it would not surprise me one bit as the Euro continues its slide and I do not believe we have seen anything yet in terms of the decline in the Euro or the price of precious metals.

Many wonder why people run to gold for safety during times of stress and the answer is simple, it is a well known store of wealth with a 5,000 year history. It is recognizable, rare, relatively speaking, it cannot be diluted, it is inversely correlated to currencies and you can usually tell if it is fake or not as well as it is portable. All of those reasons make it attractive as an alternative to currencies during times of stress and why people are buying it now. The common reason people present, lately, for not buying gold is that it is not a safe haven because it got crushed in 2008 with everything else. That is true, but the world was in liquidation and seeking dollars to try and settle trades, dollars were tough to find remember, which is why everything went down, except for treasuries. Others claim that other commodities are better, like food, that is true, but food goes bad, you would need a lot of it, it is not as rare and people always need a medium of exchange, currency, to trade with which is exactly what gold is. I am not saying it is perfect or it will work, but I would rather own it than not own it at this stage of the game.

What does have me concerned is the fact that while the jokes about gold bugs have stopped the talk about gold has escalated dramatically lately as we are pushing new nominal highs. I am bullish long-term on gold, I mean, come on, the Fed by its very nature devalues the dollar by about 3% a year by design which makes gold a no brainer for the long-term, but shorter term when everyone is bullish I get bearish, kind of. I believe this time is different as we are facing, literally, a confidence issue if a major currency which is bullish for gold, but I am concerned that the price might get ahead of itself in the near-term. This happened the last time we got in this area and all the chatter stopped when it broke its winning streak, which I was happy about, and the same thing might happen again. However, the situation is different and unlikely to resolve itself.

What amazes me is that while all the talk is about gold no one is talking about silver. We are pushing almost $20/oz on silver right now, which is close to a breakout, and conditions are right for silver to really take off. With JPM making headlines about price manipulation, a currency issue, tight and dwindling supply, high demand, a metal no one recycles, a metal that is in everything we use makes silver, in my opinion, the trade of the century. I can see silver trading much higher than it is currently based on figures I have seen which estimates all the above ground silver consumed within the next 5 or 6 years. If that happens, $20/oz silver is a steal.

Regardless, metals make sense right now and while one should wait for a better entry point the idea is to be looking for that entry point to begin with. This is not rocket science as metals have fixed extraction costs and then it is supply demand after that. With the world’s population growing precious metals make complete sense especially since the vast majority of the world’s population considers precious metals the ideal investments. That in itself should make you think of adding some to your portfolio since the emerging markets population dwarfs the developed markets by a long shot and I would rather be selling it to them at a profit rather than trying to buy it from them at inflated prices.

Annuity Blog FeedSubscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
Blog Directory
LS Blogs


Sphere: Related Content

Are precious metals being manipulated?

Posted by Ray on March 30, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

I am what some would lovingly, or not lovingly, call a gold bug, but I find that term somewhat offensive. I simply believe in precious metals based on supply, demand and the Federal Reserve’s horrible track record of continually printing money. Essentially, if precious metals guard against inflation and the Fed tries to keep inflation at +2-3% a year it just makes sense to have some money in precious metals under normal circumstances, but add in a little financial crisis and demand far exceeding actual supply and metals are a sure thing, in my opinion.

Ever since I first decided to research gold and silver, those were the first metals I ever bought, I found countless threads and blog posts about the price being manipulated by the Fed and major banks. I figured that most of this was just rhetoric by my fellow bugs, but after awhile it started to make sense. Of course, there was never any real proof, just USGA reports showing the U.S. exporting way more gold than it imported and COMEX inventory reports showing far more metal being traded than could ever be delivered. There was also some obscure Federal Reserve minutes, from the 1970’s, talking about selling gold on the open market to suppress the price. Finally, there was Greenspan saying that the Fed was ready to sell as much gold as it could to drive the price down, which makes sense since gold did poorly in the 1990’s while money supply grew at an unprecedented rate.

It was all very interesting, but there was no actual proof. Sure, we had GATA with their data points and going to the CFTC to lodge complaints, but nothing ever was done. It finally appears that the rumors and conspiracy theories may have been right after all. Last week GATA dropped a bomb on the public by announcing it had a whistleblower that proves JP Morgan and other banks are suppressing the price of gold and silver.

Andrew Maguire, the whistleblower or Exhibit A, sent a few emails to the CFTC shortly before the non-farm payroll data was released a couple months ago. Mr. Maguire clearly outlined, 2 days in advance, that JP Morgan (JPM) was shorting silver in the thinly traded after hours market driving the price down. He told the CFTC that there were 2 possible outcomes, the payroll numbers would be good and silver would go down or the payroll numbers would be bad (which is bullish for metals) and the price of silver would go down. Sure enough, 2 days later, the price plummeted and Mr. Maguire traded emails again to ensure the regulator received them, he did.

It appears that an investigation is being started which would be the first manipulation investigation since the Hunt brothers 3 decades ago. What is striking is that one of the largest banks in the world has been implicated in what could turn out to be the manipulation case of the century, if the claims are true, and no media source has picked it up. I even brought it to a reporter friend of mine for a lead, after days of not hearing anything, not even from CNBC, but nothing yet. If this is true there are large implications for the precious metals market and it is very bullish.

I always figured that if the price was being suppressed, more sellers than buyers, eventually the gig would be up because you cannot sell more than you have forever. Eventually someone will want their metal along the way which means the banks would have to deliver and buy it in the open market. If that happened the price would go through the roof, but, again, this was all speculation until the whistleblower came forward. Somehow, I know this might be hard to believe, I am sure the CFTC will find no wrong doing anywhere and everything will continue back to the way it was, dysfunctional, but if the allegations are true prices will surely rise rapidly.

It is crazy to think that silver, especially silver, would be trading so low considering it is rarely recycled and silver is used in everything from the common mirror to your cell phone. By all accounts most of the easy silver has already been mined and new mines are just coming online now, but they take a long time to get into full production. Let us not forget that silver is usually mined s a secondary metal to begin with, usually gold or copper is the primary metal being looked for. I have seen some estimates that silver reserves will be depleted in 5 years, but no one really knows and that is an aggressive figure to say the least. What I do know is that silver is in high demand, above ground reserves are declining and governments used to be net sellers of the metal, but now are net buyers of it, all of this is very bullish. My point being is prices are cheap and regardless of whether these accusations are true or not one should hold some precious metals in their portfolio, silver being a core holding.

Annuity Blog FeedSubscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
Blog Directory
LS Blogs


Sphere: Related Content


Learn  basics of stock market from   bettertrades , a company founded by Freddie Rick . Learn  options trading   to make money through buying and selling options.
home top



website statistics Site Meter