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How to get a jump on the big central banks as interest rates race towards
zero worldwide...
OF SIX CENTRAL BANKS voting on interest rates this week, only the European
Central Bank in Frankfurt failed to reduce its cost of money to either record
or multi-year lows, holding rates steady at 2.0%.
- The market's reaction? Forex traders trashed the Euro vs. those
currencies now paying way less than inflation...
- The result for Eurozone investors? Gold leapt to a new record high
by the PM Gold Fix in
London, recording a new all-time high above €719 an ounce...
- Big picture? That puts the Gold
Price right back at its long-term high for European cash savers, as
measured by the old pre-Euro war-horse, the lost and lamented German Deutsche
Mark...

Gold in 2009 has already
hit new record highs for Australian, Canadian, Indian and even Swiss gold buyers.
British gold buyers saw the price surge to £662 an ounce in January
- up by 100% from just 18 months earlier. Because as the UK Pound Sterling
slid on the forex market, gold proved itself as the ultimate hedge amid a currency
crisis.
Now the Euro looks ripe for coming under "speculative attack" from currency
traders trying to get even. The Dollar-Yen shock starting in summer 2008 whacked
pretty much all asset classes. But the biggest losers by far were those currency
gamblers still backing the favorites - those fillies sporting the best rates
of return - as the going switched from 'good' to 'heavy'.
During the previous half-decade, the interest-rate gap had paid time and again.
Sell the Dollar - and dump the Yen! - in exchange for anything bearing a strong
or rising interest rate payment. But the bottom fell out of this strategy in
mid-2008. Racing first to the bottom, the Japanese Yen (zero-hour: May
2001) was then first out of the blocks when debt needed redemption, and currency
gamblers all scrambled to cover their shorts. Close on its tail came the almighty
Dollar (zero-hour: Dec. 2008)...and thus a new form-guide emerged amongst
currency traders.
Low yield good, zero yield better. Because in a world of deflation, destroying
savers and cutting debt-service costs might just help spark an economic recovery.
That's why, when early in Prague today the Czech central bank slashed its
interest rates to an all-time low, the Czech Koruna actually bounced vs. the
Euro...
That's why today's 100-basis point cut to South African rates worked to stem
the slide in the Rand - now trading one-third below its US-Dollar value of
last February despite paying fully 1,050 basis points more...
That's why, midday here in London, the Bank of England took its base rate
further into record-low territory at 1.0%...yet currency traders pushed the
Pound Sterling to a two-week high above $1.4650...
That's why on Tuesday, when the Reserve Bank of Australia cut its interest
rate to a 45-year low, the Aussie Dollar bounced from near-6 year lows in response...
That's why on Wednesday, after the central bank of Norway cut its target interest
rate by 50 basis points to 2.50%, the Norwegian Krone turned higher after losing
one-third of its value vs. the Dollar since July last year...
And that's also why, on Thursday - when the world's No.2 behind the Fed, the
European Central Bank (ECB), opted to keep its rates flat - the Euro lost 2¢ from
this week's high to trade below $1.2850...despite paying returns to cash fully
200 basis points above the Dollar.
Priced in Euros, the value of gold - which yields nothing already, but also
carries no counter-party or inflation risk - rose to €720 an ounce, more
than 14% higher for 2009 to date.
In short, Thursday's foreign exchange action confirms the currency markets'
perverse verdict on falling premiums. First seen last year as the US Fed and
Bank of Japan cut their rates to zero and their currencies leapt, this deflation-bent
view of lower interest rates says that rewarding savers - rather than debtors
- is beneficial to a currency's future. Whereas failing to cut is a negative.
So if we were in the business here at BullionVault of
making short-term calls on the currency markets (which we're not; we just
enable private individuals to buy and sell gold, securely, at the tightest
possible prices), we'd expect the Euro to suffer right up until the ECB
next meets in March....or until currency traders start taking ECB chief Jean-Claude
Trichet at his word and begin pricing in record-low Eurozone rates ahead.
"I don't exclude that we could reduce interest rates at our next decision," Trichet
told a new conference after today's "No change" decision.
Asked whether he'll go for a half- or quarter-point cut, M.Trichet replied "It
would probably more be the first figure."
You tell 'em Jean-Claude...and you tell 'em straight!
But once the Euro starts paying "probably more" like zero than anything better,
what next for the currency markets to kick around? The Yen...? The Dollar...?
Everything and everyone all at once...?
In this race to the bottom - which even the "inflation-vigilant" European
Bank now says it will join - private investors with something to lose might
want to get a jump on the currencies, and move straight into zero-yielding Gold
Bullion.
After all, gold has already proven its value as a "currency crisis" defense
for UK investors this year. And if all currencies tipped into crisis together,
we'd guess that defense would soon trade sharply higher from here.
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