As I wrote yesterday, my wife and I just had our first
son.
While I'm out of the office for a short period of
time, I've asked my friend, colleague and fellow gold investor Tom Cullis
to explain a somewhat complicated concept known as
"Free-Gold."
Here's Tom:
Thanks Kevin.
Yesterday I discussed a brief history of Keynesian
monetary policy, and how it is becoming increasingly difficult for our
Government to maintain their policies further.
The problem is too much debt. And while there's no
way for anyone to wipe this debt clean or pay it down with higher taxes,
lower spending, etc. - it will be taken care of. And as I said
yesterday, it will be passed onto EVERYONE who owns dollars and dollar
denominated assets.
Obviously Central Banks and Governments have been trying to socialize losses for two years now by crushing their currencies and taking on the bad debt through bailouts, Quantitative Easing, Austerity and a variety of other programs designed to push these losses onto the general public.
This is the best example of the boiling frog
metaphor I have ever seen with the Federal Reserve slowly turning up the
heat while hoping we sit in the water not noticing that we are stewing in
our own juices.
Free-Gold is most simply put as the push back
against this attempt to socialize the losses, but the process is not
simple nor is it guaranteed. Physical gold and silver are clearly the
best bets for diversifying your assets away from those that are going to
be devalued by government action and to retain your purchasing power and,
if you get in early enough, possibly increase it
dramatically.
*****As the fortunate, intelligent, investor who
got into precious metals over the past few years while many of your
friends, family and colleagues watched their houses 401ks or even jobs
plummet in value it will be those few of us who own precious metals who
will be more strongly influencing the future.
Every family member who took your advice and
bought a few ounces of gold will be grateful and eager to hear your
future opinions while those who have scoffed and derided your decisions
will be forced toward the realization that you were, at the very least
temporarily, right. This is the beginning of the cascade and the early
stages of Free-Gold.
The evidence for this stage is all around us with
the massive success of precious metal based ETFs and demand for coins
skyrocketing and prices hitting record highs.
Obviously the most recent of these changes aren't
being driven by the hardcore gold bugs as they have traded in the
majority of their assets for gold years ago, and unless they are also all
getting multimillion dollar bonuses from Goldman Sachs (NYSE:
GS) this small segment of the population simply can't be driving
the newest demand. The simplest conclusion to draw is that new investors
are converting their assets to gold at rates high enough to create near
perpetual new highs. Stage 1 of Free-Gold is well underway.
Stage 2 is a continuation of Stage 1 as more
entrants for the gold market are found. The place to find them will be in
the areas that have not yet suffered major losses and that place is
clearly the bond market. Basically all bonds issued prior to 2006 and
haven't defaulted have done very well in this climate with record low
interest rates driving up demand for the securities available that hold
some kind of decent yield. These prices will face pressure in the near
future in all likelihood.
An increase in inflation will eat into the return
of all bonds and cause flight and frustration. Some will run into the
equities markets but most bondholders are often in that market
specifically because they are risk averse, they don't mind passing on
some yield if they think it provides them with greater security and the
past few years aren't exactly going to instill them with confidence that
the equities market is a calm, safe place to put their
money.
This is one reason why the coming phenomenon is
called Free-Gold and not Free-Precious-Metals or Free-Silver. Gold has
both a long term reputation that is better known than silver and the
additional short term reputation created over the past
decade.
If the Fed tries to anticipate and nip inflation in the bud all the bonds, including the trillions in debt governments have racked up the past few years, which have been sold recently will decline in value. And if history is any guide a simple ½ to 1 point increase will not be enough to fight inflation and the losses will be dramatic while also erasing some of the gains that older bonds had made.
The scenery for Stage 2 is set with the end of QE2
in sight. Either QE3+ will be implemented and inflation will eat away at
the bond market or QE3 will be postponed and rising interest rates will
eat away at the bond market, either way its dinner time for gold
holders.
Portions of stage 2 have already occurred with the
Fed driving out many traditional bond holds (think PIMCO), and this stage
could last for several years or it could see a catalyst of epic
proportions (think China dumping $1.7 trillion in bonds as they have
recently threatened to do) and spiral in a few weeks or even
faster.
Stage 3 is what separates Free-Gold from those who
believe a return to the gold standard is in the cards or those who
believe a crash in the dollar will lead to a true free market in
money.
Keep in mind that though Free-Gold implies a crash
and run from the Greenback it does not imply its total
destruction.
Stage 3 is when central banks start looking to the
gold price for their marching orders. Students of hyper-inflation know
that prices eventually start to spiral faster than the printing of money
would imply. They also know that gold's price rises even faster than
general prices. In fact during hyperinflation in Weimar there were two
types of currency available- the paper mark and the gold mark and there
was actually deflation in terms of the gold mark! Cash, in terms of gold
as cash, truly was king even during hyper-inflation.
Tomorrow I'll discuss the end-game for Free-Gold
and dollar, and I'll give you some ideas about what to do
next.
Good investing,
Tom Cullis
Contributor
Resource Prospector
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.