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By the editors of BIG
GOLD
All the hot air emanating from the participants of the just concluded G20
Summit in London has, with the help of the breathless press, made its way into
our neighborhood and lifted the Gordon Brown Alert wind sock atop the Casey
Research headquarters.
A little background: Gordon Brown, Britain's prime minister, became infamous
for his, let's say, slightly off judgment when he was still serving as chancellor
of the Exchequer. Between 1999 and 2002, Brown managed to sell 400 tons or
60% of the country's gold at the very bottom of gold's 20-year bear market.
The average price per ounce achieved at the 17 gold auctions was $275 - costing
British taxpayers around $2.96 billion. This stroke of genius earned the chancellor
such sterling titles as "Sold The Gold Brown" and "Bottom Brown," among others
that don't meet our PG rating for publishing.
Incidentally, 2002 was also the breakout year for gold and the beginning of
our current bull market for the metal.
A similar event in the bluster-sphere had the Alert sock flopping around again
in early 2005. In February of that year, Brown was making the rounds on the
press release circuit calling for a "revaluation" of the IMF's gold - that's
code for "sell the barbarous relic."
Gold was selling for around $415/oz at the time - and within months, the second
leg of gold's bull run began. On May 11, 2006, gold peaked at an intraday high
of $725 and remained in the $600 to $700 range for over a year in a consolidation
that led to another sharp advance.
In January 2007, the IMF's gold was again in the spotlight. A committee was
formed to advise the IMF Executive Board how to solve the organization's funding
needs, and selling some of the IMF's gold was part of the committee's recommendations.
And we had something to say about it.
The following is from an article titled "About Those Proposed IMF Gold Sales" by BIG
GOLD editor Doug Hornig, with an introductory comment by Casey Research
Chairman Doug Casey:
As you have probably heard by now, a blue-ribbon panel recently advised
the IMF to sell gold as a way of trying to clean up its finances.
The news initially spooked some weaker holders and hedge fund managers,
most of whom are clueless about the overarching trends driving gold. However,
as Doug Hornig makes clear in the following report, the proposed IMF sales
represent much ado about nothing... other than perhaps creating a buying
opportunity, that is.
Doug Casey
Doug Hornig concluded his article with:
Even if a sale does come about, will it matter?
Many feel that the IMF's actions are not liable to have much impact on
gold, arguing that the distortions of the CBGA, even at maximum 500-ton
strength, have already been fully factored into the current price and its
trend line.
This is not to say that there couldn't be a short-term downdraught. Sure
there could be, especially as the IMF sales are formally announced. Some
holders of gold, maybe a significant number, can be expected to sell into
the news.
But with countries such as China, Russia and the nations of the Middle
East itching to add to their reserves, even a large dump of physical metal
onto the market is certain to be absorbed in short order.
Nor will countries be the only buyers. Beverly Hills investments manager
Kenneth Gerbino wrote in 2005 about a similar IMF sales speculation, saying
that any additional supply "would surely be snapped up by the bullion banks
and mining companies that are 'short' somewhere between 10,000 and 12,000
tonnes, according to some very savvy analysts." There's no reason to think
that's changed much in the interim.
Gerbino could have been writing about the IMF when he concluded, "Central
bankers will most likely continue, as usual, to scare the price of gold
down from time to time by statements of gold sales. But they are all too
keenly aware of the growing number of people who realize that the gold,
not paper and ink, is the real stable monetary element."
Finally, it is important to keep the relatively miniscule amount of gold
sales we are talking about in perspective. In an era where over $1 trillion
in derivatives trade globally each day, $6.6 billion in sales is just not
that much money when compared to potential investor demand once the U.S.
dollar goes into the free fall that Doug Casey, among others, now believe
is imminent.
In other words, if IMF sales do happen, and if they depress gold's price,
that's a buying opportunity... for bullion and especially for the high-quality
junior exploration stocks that pack the most punch in a rising gold market.
This insight is as valid today as it was in 2007, to which we'll add that
gold embarked on its third major up-leg of this bull market the following August,
exploding from $650 to $1,000 in just seven months.
Fast forward to April 2009, and Goldfinger Brown is at it again, campaigning
for IMF gold sales. What does it mean? Will he prove once again to be a contrarian
indicator? We don't know. But it doesn't take a two-by-four to get our attention.
In the meantime, we'll keep an eye on the old Alert sock.
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We at Casey Research don't try to "time" the market, but we do pay close attention
to any factors that could sway it one way or the other. Whether Brown's antics
indicate the next leg up in the gold bull market or not, gold is bound to go
higher during the global economic meltdown. At this point, we recommend having
33% of your portfolio in physical gold... and crisis-proof, gold-related investments
that can get you up to 4 times the return of the metal itself. Click
here to learn more.
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