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It's a matter of confidence
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Below is an extract from a commentary posted at www.speculative-investor.com
on 13th January 2005.
Gold is not a hedge against inflation
(inflation, here, being defined as an increase in the supply of
money and credit). For example, there was rampant inflation in
the US during 1997-2000 and yet gold fared poorly. On the other
hand, there was rampant inflation during 2001-2004 and gold did
well. The big question, therefore, is: why did gold supposedly
benefit from the inflation of 2001-2004 and not from the inflation
of 1997-2000?
The short answer is that the US$ was strong during
1997-2000 and weak during 2001-2004, but this answer just begets
another question: why was the US$ strong during the first period
and weak during the second?
The reason is that confidence in the dollar was
rising during 1997-2000 and falling during 2001-2004. And this
trend reversal in confidence occurred because it started to become
clear, during the second half of 2000, that the US economic boom
was the result of credit expansion and speculation rather than
a "technology-driven productivity miracle". The US therefore
went from being widely perceived as a country that offered superior
REAL returns on investment to one that offered relatively poor
real returns on investment. After that, the effects of inflation
began to appear more in the prices of gold and commodities and
less in the senior US stock indices.
The bottom line is that regardless of what is happening
on the inflation front, the investment demand for gold increases
when confidence in fiat currency -- in this case, the US$ -- is
falling. Inflation is often a cause of such a loss of confidence,
but situations sometimes arise where higher inflation does not
lead to a fall in confidence and a consequential rise in the gold
price. Furthermore, situations can arise where confidence in a
currency plummets, causing the gold price to shoot upward in terms
of that currency, for reasons other than runaway inflation. The
collapse of the Argentine Peso following the removal of its US$
peg is a good example.
This leads us to our main point, which is that although
confidence in the US$ has taken a hit over the past three years
the level of confidence in fiat currency in general has not fallen
to any meaningful extent. We say this because the gold price in
terms of major currencies other than the US$ has moved sideways
over the past three years. To be more accurate, what we've seen
over the past six years has been a three-year period (1999-2001)
during which gold was modestly weak against the US$ and strong
against other major fiat currencies such as the euro, followed
by a three-year period during which gold was strong against the
US$ while barely holding its own against most of the other major
currencies. These two periods are identified on the below chart
of the euro gold price.

Gold's performance over the past 6 years tells us that the fiat
currency system is not yet in trouble; that all we've seen, up
until now, is a shift in investor preferences WITHIN the system.
What has happened could be likened to participants in the US stock
market favouring tech stocks during one period and financial stocks
during the next, with the S&P500 Index remaining stable throughout.
As long as the euro continues to be seen as a good
alternative during those times when confidence in the US$ is falling
and as long as the US$ continues to be seen as a good option during
those times when the euro looks unattractive, the sort of huge
gains in the gold price that gold bulls like ourselves expect
to see at some point over the next few years will not materialise.
What will really be needed in order for such gains to occur will
be a general loss of confidence in fiat currency. And by the way,
such a loss of confidence is not something we hope will happen,
it's something we think will be unavoidable if current monetary
and fiscal policies are continued (which they almost certainly
will be).
A clear signal that the aforementioned loss of confidence
was in progress would be the US$ gold price trading above 460
at the same time as the euro gold price was trading above 350
(the 2002 peak); in other words, gold trading above the bull market
highs achieved to date in terms of both the US$ and the euro.
If our forecast for a 6-12 month rally in
the US$ proves to be correct then the sequence is likely to be
a break above 350 by the euro gold price during 2005 following
by a break above 460 by the US$ gold price in 2006. That is, what
we expect to see this year is an upside breakout by the euro gold
price from the multi-year consolidation pattern shown on the above
chart. Conversely, if it turns out that we are right about the
US$ rally but gold simply continues to tread water against the
euro (if gold goes down against the US$ by about the same amount
as the euro) then we are probably still a considerable distance
(years) from large confidence-related gains in the gold market.
***
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