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This is a snippet from a recent issue of the Gold Forecaster with Subscriber-only
parts excluded.
For over more than 18 months we have watched the gold price churn below
$1,000 and in the process forming three tops, before breaking out to above
$1,050 in early October 2009. Why will it not fall back to well below $1,000
and possibly as far as $850 this time?
Technical Picture
Peter has given a great deal of detail below, in this issue and has warned,
precisely, of the various support and resistance levels to watch out for. This
information is critical for you, the subscriber, so as to help in your buying
and selling considerations.
The U.S. $
For many months now too, while traders played the gold price against the U.S.
$ the gold price has been precise in its inverse correlation to the $. We believe
that this has mistakenly led commentators to place far too much emphasis on
the $, as the inverse measure of gold.
We
say this because the moves occurred at a time when many facets of the gold
market were absent from the gold market, such as investment demand, low jewelry
demand and central bank demand. Traders held sway over the gold price and it
is they that decided that the moves of the $:€ decided the price of gold.
This lacked a reasonable basis to it. Why should the gold price be tied to
the €? Such a relationship implies that the $ in isolation, is the most
important factor in the gold market. We counter that and say, yes COMEX is
a U.S. market and such traders do have enormous pricing power, but when the
full force of all sides of the gold market come into play, COMEX diminishes
in importance, just as the waves of the sea are of less important than tides
are, to where the sea will climb on the shoreline.
Yes, the state of the $ is important in pricing gold and it is the 'hub' of
the currency world, but to gaze at it alone is to ignore the much bigger world
of gold in its entirety, acting together in synthesis, in deciding the gold
price.
This is amply demonstrated by the fact that the U.S. $ is sitting not far
off the same place, against the €, as it was when gold was just below
$1,000. We now foresee a larger de-coupling from the $ by gold, as we move
forward. Yes, the waves of the $ will ebb and flow and continue to cause traders
to move the gold price against the $ as before, but the tide of investment
demand and other factors in the gold market will flow and dominate these moves
over time.
Why Different this Time?
As we wrote last week, [Now available to new subscribers on request, to gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com]
while the facts of the article in the Independent [British] newspaper, informing
the market that France, China, Russia and select Persian Gulf oil producers
were going to price oil in a 'new' currency were denied, the market is convinced
that this will happen in time, even if it takes another decade. The
reaction in the gold market was to bring in new investment demand via bullion
itself, to prompt heavier central bank selling, to slow scrap sales and to
cause traders to add some more gold to their holdings.
On top of the consolidation phase the gold price has been going through over
the last 18+ months, this was a breakout pointing to an end of that phase.
Now it sits on top of the $1,000 level, which forms a huge support to the price.
Watershed for the Monetary System
This showed a tipping of the see-saw against confidence in the monetary system.
It was due to the realization that very little is going to be done to effectively reform
the currency world and bring back stability to these markets. More than that,
it was the realization that world governments just don't have the real political
will to ensure a stable world currency system. There are just too many conflicts
of interest for them to do so.
Meanwhile, the system decays on a broad front. The very fact that the hub
of the currency world, the U.S. $ is losing favor so quickly sends out a bigger
warning to investors and the global economy. Just take a look at what central
banks have been doing in the last few months.
Foreign
currency holdings grew by $413 billion last quarter, the most since at least
2003, to $7.3 trillion. Nations that report currency breakdowns put 63% of
this new money into the € and Yen in April, May, and June. That's the
highest percentage in any quarter with more than an $80 billion increase. Until
now China has expressed concern about the behavior of the $ alongside other
nations but were hesitant to act like this, because of the damage it would
do to the exchange rate of the $. Now the realization of the fact that the
$ will weaken is prompting action.
Imagine if oil was priced in a 'basket of currencies', that diversification
would be unstoppable and the $ would face a major crisis. Now, it is only a
question of when.
Some commentators are saying gold is rising because of inflation fears, but
inflation is not likely to accelerate until the global recovery is strong and
deflation has evaporated. And yet gold is rising.
What concerns foreign holders of the $ is its exchange rate. This means far
more than U.S. goods getting cheaper and European goods getting more expensive,
it means the future worth of the $ in terms of all other currencies.
e.g. If Europe sells goods to China, it prices them in the U.S. $. The buyer
and seller need to price those goods in a way that allows them to budget correctly
and be able to pay correctly and make their profit on the deal. If the U.S.
$ [which has nothing to do with the underlying transaction] falls, then Europe
gets less Euros to pay the supplier. This gives a great incentive not to use
the $ in these transactions. If that trend takes off, then the $ will be used
less, globally, and cause an excess of dollars to float around the system,
taking it even lower. The dollar's 37% share of new reserves fell from about
a 63% average since 1999.
The point for gold is that even central banks are wary of the U.S. $ and consequently
expect uncertainty to spread like the plague through other dependent currencies,
as they try to keep their exports competitive in the world market. Despite
it being money in earlier times only, gold remains the only money that can
be exchanged when confidence is lost and still hold its value. This reality
is rapidly rushing at us and is why gold is rising in price.
Need to Quantify?
Among financial professionals the need to quantify, to measure, to relate
is insatiable. Look back across the last few years of the gold market. Gold
was thought to move against oil. This was dropped when the facts showed differently.
Gold was thought to be anti-inflationary. While it has these properties, the
price is rising in the absence of inflation at the moment. Growth or the lack
thereof was tied to gold's performance, but when deflation hit and gold held
its price that was dropped too. In general the gold price was thought to be
a tied into something in the U.S. alone. Is this because of the myopic view
of U.S. markets or is it really a reality? Clearly, Europe and the rest of
the world are involved in the gold market too. In fact 90% of the world's bullion
is dealt in London!
So we have to counter this hunger to quantify and recognize that there are
a huge number of times in our lives and our markets when reason and measurability
are absent. The gold market is reflecting one of those times right now. When
emotions creep in, many such professionals go into denial, until they can find
something else to measure that emotion against. By that time the damage has
often been done. The point of the Independent newspaper report was that it
precipitated pent-up emotion against the U.S. $. Now the $ will be seen in
that negative light, not as a strong currency dominating world currencies.
It is moving to pariah status if it keeps on this road. It is too late
for political 'spin'.
When the Titanic sank, there was a point in time, when the 'unsinkable' ship
in the passenger's minds, changed to a sinking ship. The breakout in the gold
price was just such a point in time.
The
Price of the $?
What has happened imperceptibly is a change in measuring value. Until now,
everything was measured in the U.S. $. It was the ultimate measure of value
for over half a century. With uncertainty, led by global central banks, other
measures of value are now needed. Where can they be found, amongst other currencies?
The ailments hitting the U.S. $ can affect other currencies, all of which
are controlled ultimately by their central banks and governments. If the U.S.
Administration can't hold financial confidence why should any other currency
do so? The road down for the $ will eventually lead to something that cannot
be debauched by governments. The actions of the Chinese and Russian central
banks, tells us that they trust a 'basket of currencies' [which minimize the
impact of any individual government] and, to some extent, gold.
For years now we have said a day will come when the gold price won't be say
$1,000, but that $1,000 will be worth an ounce of gold. We've arrived.
Where is the Gold Price going now?
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