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If we're right about where the price of gold is headed, the general public
will someday clamor to buy all things gold. While gold stocks will be where
the real leverage is, the rush will start with gold itself. As a gold editor,
I have a very natural question: is there enough to go around?
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are 6.783 billion earthlings. Meanwhile, CPM
Group, a highly respected industry organization, estimates there are
4.8 billion ounces of above-ground gold in the world. And this includes jewelry,
electronics, and dental. So, even if everyone around the world volunteered
to have their chain, cross, or tooth melted into a coin, we're already short.
Those towards the end of the line are out of luck.
However, it's worse than that. Of all the physical metal ever mined...
- 2.1 billion ounces, or 43%, is found in jewelry, decorative, and religious
items.
- Private stock - gold already held by various private parties - accounts
for 1.1 billion ounces.
- Official reserves (central banks, IMF, etc.) stand at 1 billion ounces.
- Industrial use accounts for 530 million ounces.
Very little of this is likely to come available for purchase in coin form.
After all, you're not selling any of your gold, and neither are many banks
or institutions. Most everyone is buying.
So for those who don't yet have a gold coin (or you greedy investors who want
more than one), this pretty much leaves us with mine production and scrap sources.
CPM forecasts that total new supply in 2009 will be around 122 million ounces.
Only a small percentage of this is made into gold coins and bars, but if all
of it were, it would amount to less than two one-hundredths of an ounce, or
about half a gram, for every man, woman, and child on earth this year. A product
of this dimension is about half the size of that small button on your shirt
collar.
Since this supply is only available annually, it means 0.018% of the global
population - one in every 55 people - could buy a one-ounce gold coin this
year. Or, said differently, it would take 55 years before everybody had one,
assuming the population never increased (it is) and supply never decreased
(it is).
But it's worse than that. Actual 2009 coin production will be around 5 million
ounces (excluding medallions or "rounds"), leaving two one-hundredths of a gram of
gold (or 0.3 of a grain) available this year for each of the planet's inhabitants.
This is about half the size of the sesame seed that fell off your hamburger
bun at dinner last night. It means that only 0.0007% of earth's citizens -
or one in 1,356 - can buy a one-ounce gold coin this year, and it would take
1,356 years for everyone to get one.
How's that for a supply squeeze?
But it's worse than that. Demand continues rising. Gold is more frequently
in the news, attracting more customers every day. Hedge funds, which never
before considered gold, are now buying physical metal (Greenlight Capital actually
sold $500 million of GLD and bought physical gold). Central banks are net buyers
of gold for the first time in 22 years. China is running TV ads encouraging
its citizens to buy gold and silver. Last month Russia bought more gold than
they actually produced. In a recent survey, 20 out of 22 fund managers bought
physical gold for their personal investments. In other words, some investors
are already scrambling to get it... and in big quantities.
But it's worse than that. Most of the ramifications of the money printing
and dollar debasement haven't even surfaced yet. How will the general public
react when the dollar is crashing and standards of living are threatened? What
will they do when milk and gas prices surge to twice what they are now? How
will the greater collective respond when they lose faith in government interventions?
Where will they invest when they see gold and silver prices screaming upward
and don't want to be left behind?
The panic into gold by the general public hasn't begun yet. Available supply
is scarce and will get smaller. There won't be enough.
Better get your speck while you can.
[The current issue of Casey's Gold & Resource Report has a few
charts that should come with a warning. We examined just how small the gold
and silver markets are, and "explosive" barely describes the potential. If
you want to check it out for yourself, consider a trial subscription - 3 full
months with 100% money-back guarantee. Click
here for more.]
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