It's About Gold, Not Inflation or Deflation
by Adam Brochert
Gold's getting ready to have a short-term correction if it didn't start today.
Trying to game short-term corrections in a raging bull market is a fool's game
and there's no reason to do it. Simply buy on sharp pullbacks and hold on.
It's not rocket science for those with a time horizon of more than a few days.
One simple 10 year monthly log-scale chart can tell you where the current secular
bull market is:
Anyone who has studied prior secular bull markets knows that a 4 fold gain
over ten years is not a bubble and is not anywhere a secular top, but "bubble" calls
are everywhere in the mainstream financial community regarding Gold. First,
they don't see it coming and say it can never happen and then they call "bubble" the
second it does! I love it because Gold is still climbing a wall of worry. Yes,
the short-term speculative froth is a little high, but long term (I am not
a day trader), Gold has a long way to go regardless of what paperbugs think.
There is too much confusion regarding Gold and its role in society. This confusion,
of course, is not by accident in a paper currency regime. The deflation versus
inflation debate, it seems to me, has become the democrat versus republican
debate in my opinion. In other words, it is a distraction and unimportant to
serious Gold investors. Those who thought a democrat (i.e. Obama) would fix
our country's structural problems and stop the senseless warfare against innocent
third world nations hopefully now understand and will learn from their naive
mistake.
We are in the "confidence versus no confidence" cycle and let's just say that
confidence in Wall street and government isn't exactly waxing right now. The Dow
to Gold ratio, in my opinion, is a more reasonable proxy for the current
secular cycle than the inflation versus deflation debate. The Dow to Gold ratio
is a measure of confidence in "the system." Gold is a proxy vote of "no confidence" in
the system while the Dow Jones Industrial Average is a proxy for a "confidence" vote
in the system.
People who think Gold is a good inflation hedge and a lousy deflation hedge
have accepted the argument of the paperbugs. The rest of the argument then
goes on to tell you why oil or stocks are a better inflation hedge and how
Gold has failed as an inflation hedge in the past. Once you accept the false
premise of Gold as another commodity play/inflation hedge like oil, you can
no longer analyze Gold in its proper context.
Let me ask you some important philosophical questions:
Why did Gold back currencies or act as a currency in multiple previous historical
periods (i.e. what was the rationale) over the past few thousand years and
why did Nixon sever the U.S. Dollar's final link to Gold in 1971?
Why was Gold ownership made illegal for citizens in the United States from
the early 1930s thru the early 1970s?
Why has Gold gone up significantly in price during a recent period of rising
interest rates (i.e. the 1970s) and during a period of falling interest rates
(i.e. the 2000s)?
The answer to these questions is part of the answer to why Gold will continue
to appreciate in price. This is despite the fact that you can't eat Gold, the
world is not coming to an end, Gold pays no interest, Gold has no growth prospects,
Gold pays no dividends and you can't spend Gold at Wal-Mart. Yes, Gold will
continue to outperform general stocks, whether you think it's appropriate or
not.
Is the secret to Gold the U.S. Dollar Index? Not if recent history is a guide:
Is Gold a lousy investment during deflation? Not if recent history is a guide:
Is Gold simply a way to bet on a stock market decline or rise? Who knows based
on recent history:
The simple truth is raw and not so pretty: Gold is a good investment when
people lose trust in their society and its power structure. Think of the shift
in trust over the past few years when it comes to bankers, Wall Street, the
federal reserve (not federal, but rather a for-profit corporation given a no-bid
contract to counterfeit money), and the federal government.
Gold is a bet that the "powers that be" are going to screw things up even
worse than they already have/they already are. Does that really sound like
a high risk bet to you? If it does, go back to watching CNBC and see what Cramer
has to say (I hear he's pushing Gold stocks these days, which naturally makes
me nervous but one can't have a mania phase without widespread public participation...).
Have you not read about the real estate crash that is far from over, the insolvency
of the entire U.S. banking system, the global coalition forming to dethrone
the U.S. Dollar as the world's reserve currency, the now legendary level of
fraud on Wall Street and at the highest levels of government, and the lies
behind the "wars" on terror, drugs, and freedom in the United States?
Once you understand these things, do you really want to keep your savings
in a crappy 401(k) where you get to choose between "blue chip growth," "aggressive
growth," or "lifestyle 2020"? Now look, I am not saying stocks can't do well
if confidence in the U.S. Dollar starts to plummet at an accelerating rate.
Stocks are one of many hedges against inflation. But Gold is the asset class
in a strong secular bull market. Gold is leading the Dow and the S&P 500
over the past decade, not the other way around. This trend will continue until
we get close to a point where one ounce of Gold is equivalent in price to the
Dow Jones Industrial Average.
If you don't believe me, read what Martin Armstrong has to say (if you keep
telling the truth Marty, they're never going to let you out of jail!):
Markets and cycles are my new hobby. I've seen the writing on the wall for
the U.S. and the global economy and I am seeking financial salvation for myself
(and anyone else who cares to listen) while Rome burns around us.
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