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Below is an extract from a commentary available to subscribers at www.goldenbar.com on 21st December
2005.
21-Dec-05:
If you were surprised at how high oil and gas prices went then you're
probably low-balling your gold targets too! Were you amazed at how the stock
market has come back in recent years? How about copper, or real estate, or
platinum, or silver?
If these things overshot your targets, gold probably will too.
Isn't that your experience with markets anyhow? Don't they ultimately
always overshoot the early bulls, or early bears?
This bull is just finding its groove, and I think that instead of calling
for another intermediate correction, this time we should put on the jockstraps
and make the more difficult call. The crowd is listening at last, even if ostensibly
still not persuaded. Still, for it, the voices in the wilderness can finally,
though faintly, be made out:
"But the money's unsound, the money's unsound..."
The market knows all about China's growth prospects now.
IT'S IN THE MARKET - probably more than it should be.
What it does not yet want to acknowledge, and to which it still imputes far
too little credit when assessing price volatility, is the truth that central
banking is INHERENTLY inflationary.
But no matter; this is exactly where the upside in gold thrives.
For, until this truth is widely recognized, nothing will change.
Governments will continue to lean on inflationist doctrines in order to finance
the agendas for which they cannot justify a more visible tax (welfare, wars
or subsidies); stock and real estate speculators will tend to worship inflation
(and the central banks) because of its capacity to stimulate gigantic booms
(business) in these assets; even some gold bugs would hate to see central banking
go - few have admitted it to me, but nothing drives the returns on gold
based investments like the inflationary schematics of the central bank (usually
these are the moderates that hide behind the compromise that "some" inflation
is okay, or that it is too risky to completely abolish central banking);
the borrow and spend crowd is addicted to the doctrines of inflation because
the money they pay back tends to be worth less than the money they borrowed;
monopolists rely on inflation to alleviate the competitive pressure on prices
for their goods - this includes labor (unions are effective labor monopolies)
even though labor usually gets the short end of the stick during an inflationary
boom; and finally, banks depend on a continuing inflation in bank reserves
to multiply the value of their other assets and deposits, and they need a central
bank to coordinate the overall policy among member banks. It is an involuntary
redistribution of wealth.
But it is also a drug - great for the short term, bad for the long term;
it is indeed "the opium of the people."
The point is that until the public starts screaming this stuff about the
negative long term effects of inflation on money and prosperity (first it
must learn to define it correctly) like it eventually did in the seventies, or like
it is currently exaggerating the negative effects of growth in China, there
is upside - short or long term (monetary conditions are not exactly
loose at the moment, but they aren't tight either; more importantly, the markets
are probably aware that the Fed isn't likely to get tighter, or continue
its current baby-step tightening campaign).
As long as the doctrine of inflation is progressively embraced as a solution
to broad based economic ills, rather than identified as their cause, bull and
bear markets in gold will continue to mirror those of Wall Street - or
any stock and bond market district in the world that relies on this kind of
monetary policy to generate its booms.
More follows for subscribers...
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