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By the editors of BIG
GOLD, Casey Reasearch
You are traveling through a desert in search of a famed oasis and its promise
of riches, rest, and drink. But your journey has grown long, you are weary,
and you begin to doubt the oasis really awaits you. But then signs appear from
those who have gone before you that your course is true, and the reward you
seek in fact lies ahead. Your spirit is renewed and you press on.
Does this describe your journey with gold?
Although gold's had a good run, rising from a monthly average of $760.86/oz
in November 2008 to $943.16/oz in February 2009, when will it take off? That's
still going to happen, right?
I'll Gladly Pay You Tuesday for a Hamburger Today
Wimpy, Popeye's burger-loving pal, was always looking to get what he wanted
today with a promise to pay tomorrow. Sound familiar?
In their thrashing attempts to get their economies going again, governments
around the world have pounded interest rates into the floor and flooded their
banking systems with liquidity. Take a look at the monetary actions from the
G7:

Interest rates are at historic lows, an artifact of the robust, worldwide
efforts to debase currencies. M2, one measure of money supply, is up in all
G7 countries, which signals that tomorrow's inflation is being baked in the
cake today.
Further, bailout numero dos, with a rich pork filling, has been signed,
sealed, and is about to be delivered, including an endowment for a "bad bank" that
will buy up the loans that troubled commercial banks would like to deny they
ever made. In addition, it guarantees hundreds of billions of dollars in bank
assets - all on top of bailout numero uno. And don't forget the estimated $493
billion the Treasury Department will have borrowed by the end of the first
quarter 2008; that on top of $569 billion the government borrowed in Q408,
an unprecedented amount for any quarter, ever.
The word "unprecedented" seems too weak to convey just how much money is being
printed and/or borrowed to buy off the recession. So, when will all this money
start showing up as higher prices at the supermarket and shopping mall? And
when will gold react to this bumper crop of paper?
The historical record indicates that a surge in money growth has its peak
effect on economic activity about 9 to 18 months later. Add another 12 months
or so for the peak effect on consumer price inflation. In other words, the
Federal Reserve is always driving with a loose steering wheel. Most of the
experience behind those numbers is with relatively tame ups and downs in the
business cycle - not the kind of financial violence we've been seeing lately
- which adds another variable. And on top of that, the numbers are about peak
effect, not initial effect.
So the timing remains uncertain. But what we do know is that there are clear
and unavoidable consequences to wildly energetic money creation, including,
sooner or later, rampant price inflation.
Is a Groundswell Beginning?
We're beginning to see interest in gold from the mainstream, which is encouraging.
And enthusiasm from the general investing public will be what ultimately sends
gold to the moon. Here's what we've observed over the past 30 days.
1. A number of mainstream economists and fund managers are openly expressing
interest in gold. "The government can print endless money, but they cannot
increase the supply of gold," said Michael Pento, chief economist at Delta
Global Advisors Inc. "Anything the government cannot replicate by decree, I
want to own." The firm, with $1.5 billion in assets, is doubling its gold holdings
to 8%. We saw very little of this six months ago.
2. The mining industry has recovered its ability to raise capital. Take a
look at the recent financings for some gold companies:
Newmont |
$1.2 billion |
Newcrest |
$476 million |
Kinross Gold |
$414 million |
Agnico-Eagle |
$290 million |
Red Back Mining |
$150 million |
Compare this to the financial woes we hear continually about banks, brokerages,
and government agencies. The only capital they can attract is government handouts.
3. While there are much better ways to turn gold into cash, Cash4Gold (who
advertised during the Super Bowl) and similar businesses bombarding the airwaves
with their pitches have sensitized the public to the topic of gold. Expect
the interest in the yellow metal - and its price - to increase in a serious
way.
4. January's Cambridge House Investment Conference in Vancouver was well attended,
with the second day setting a record. Every session was packed, standing-room-only
for most speakers, including Casey
Research's Louis James and Marin Katusa.
While no one was emphatic about the timing, most speakers agreed that at some
point gold will be sought as a safe haven by the masses, who will catapult
the price to new highs. Here is a quote from John Embry, chief investment strategist,
Sprott Asset Management:
"The average retail investor has little or no investment in gold and no understanding
of how important it will be. The year 2009 will be volatile, but volatility
is a small price to pay for where gold is headed. An explosion in gold and
silver is inevitable in the years to come."
The overriding theme was clear: Gold is going up. Period. It may or may not
happen as quickly as you want, but the recent range trading hasn't defused
its explosive potential.
So when will gold take off? The signal won't be inflows to ETFs (although
they are indicators), or jewelry sales (the '70s bull market had nothing to
do with bracelets), or even sales of physical bullion (we had that in '08 and
gold was up 5.5%, hardly meteoric). No, the payday rise in gold will occur
when there is a significant shift in the psychology of the general public.
And whether the glory days are just months from now or a year or two away,
it's clear that the oasis is real and lies ahead. Is your cup ready?
***
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