|
Reg Howe's most
recent commentary about the BIS' admission that it was involved
in the rigging of gold prices (and regards such as "good policy")
has a number of implications which Reg briefly touched, but did not expand
on (it's not that he doesn't know. It just wasn't part
of his purpose for writing the commentary).
A. Gold Miners Vulnerability to Shareholder Actions:
Reg stated that now, going forward, gold miners can no longer hide behind
the general assumption that the gold market is free from rigging efforts and
that only kooks would suspect such efforts. This is only half of the truth,
though. Although miners certainly have future exposure, the very fact that
they were willing to cooperate in the central banks' schemes by voluntarily
engaging in forward sales activity and blocking any efforts by GATA and others
to bring the truth to light shows that they may even be vulnerable to shareholder
derivative lawsuits for their past behavior as well.
This can have serious implications on their future profitability, and thereby
their share prices, which affects, well, you. You need to know which mining
companies are least vulnerable to this threat, and shift your investment focus
over to those.
You also need to realize that even the most pro-GATA miners can be adversely
affected by this. Any such lawsuits - by affecting the concerned mining companies' future
bottom lines and therefore projected share price valuations - will adversely
affect the major indexes (XAU and HUI), and so may turn general investor sentiment
negative towards gold mining shares in general.
Only the most well-informed gold buffs will know which way to turn in such
an environment. The general public is only now slowly regaining consciousness
from a deep, deep, media-induced sleeping-beauty type slumber that has bewitched
them over the past two and a half decades. Once they see the indexes drop again,
they will back out of gold shares altogether, which will also affect even the
most savvy gold stock investors.
Any wide-spread exodus of the gold investing public from gold shares and
mutual funds will adversely impact the miners' ability to continue further
exploration, or to continue to operate profitably with known deposits. Further
consolidations are likely in the pipeline, and so are closures of less profitable
mines, which will further reduce world wide gold production.
That, in turn, will make gold even dearer than it already is. Continued rising
demand and falling supply from production, coupled with now dwindling gold-price
suppression efforts (the CBs know they can't afford to give up more of
their metal in this current environment) will have its inevitable effect. Especially
now, that the Gold ETFs (which must "hoard" metal to support their
claims of being good gold-price proxies) are all the rage, and with incipient
but growing central bank buying at the fringes, demand for physical will sky-rocket.
People who have focused their past investment efforts on acquiring the real
stuff rather than the share-price proxies derived from it, will see their efforts
and their foresight and apparent sacrifice pay off handsomely.
B. What This Means to Gold Miners
Comments under the previous heading have set the stage for this topic already.
The main points to make here are that prudent gold miners will make damn sure
they put appropriate disclosures of their knowledge of gold price rigging efforts
into their footnotes from now on. But it doesn't stop there.
Many of them will get hit with lawsuits from angry shareholders. Class action
trial lawyers will have a field day and will start advertising their services
on TV commercials. ("Ripped off by gold miners? Call 1-800-WESCREW-YOU")
Duped investors will smell blood and call their 800 numbers in droves. Only
those who most aggressively denounce what the central banks via their bullion-bank
henchmen "did to them" in the nineties will survive. They will
need to get way out front with their PR efforts at convincing the public that
(a) they didn't know that was going on at the time, and (b) they only
engaged in forward selling 'because they had to."
C. What this Means to Future Gold Price Rigging Efforts
Big-time gold price riggers are literally screwed.
In future, pulling off similar efforts, even on a much more limited scale
in both time and scope, will become more and more difficult. Gold (physical)
will rise and rise in its fiat-valuation. Whether or not the euro will rise
against the dollar, or vice versa, will become even more of a moot point (but
that does not mean the euro is irrelevant. Not by a long shot). All
eyes will turn to gold - and to who has any and who doesn't. That "who" includes
governments as well as private individuals.
It may well be that any future efforts at controlling the gold price will
be attempted through falsifying data concerning the true holdings of the gold
ETFs, should they really become as popular as is widely expected. So, despite
their ease of use, they may well become traps for the unwary investor.
That makes an old Bible verse come to mind: "The first will be the
last, and the last will be first."
People who made their fortunes in fiat will see the value of their holdings
dwindle. Governments who staked their futures on their ability to spin as many
fiat-plates in the air at the same time as possible will find their power positions
seriously undermined. Those who hoped to make their fortunes in gold stocks
and ETFs may end up holding the bag. Conversely, those die-hard "conspiracy
buffs" who were smart and tenacious enough to hang on to their metal
and increase their holdings over time will come out smelling like entire fields
of roses.
D. What All Of This Means To You
What it means to you is best expressed in a series of questions:
-
Where do you get your information?
-
Whom can you trust? Those who peddle gold stocks - or those who advise
buying physical?
-
What will the world look like when all this plays out? What will be the
foundation or structure of a future world financial system?
-
Will there be two parallel ones? Three? Four?
-
What effect will all this have on silver?
-
How will governments react? Will they try to confiscate it from you again?
Can they? Will it make sense for them to do so?
The answers to these will determine whether you will enjoy your life from
now on, or get bogged down in regrets over past mistakes.
Got gold?
|