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TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad shocked the world
today when he, all of the sudden, decided to wind down his country's nuclear
program and make peace with the West. "Today I have decided to replace our
plans for nuclear energy with eco-friendly wind power. Furthermore, I look
forward to my upcoming trip to Tel Aviv where I will introduce a free trade
agreement for the greater Middle East." Markets reacted immediately sending
oil back down to $40/bbl and gold to $300/oz as tensions in the region have
evaporated.
The preceding scenario is obviously fictitious, but you wouldn't guess it
based on the mainstream media's reaction to rising commodity prices, especially
gold. For the past few weeks, as gold has inched its way closer to an all-time
high set over two decades ago, the talking heads have cited events in Iran
as the catalyst for precious metal price increases. If tensions were to suddenly
cool down, then everything would be hunky-dory in the world of rising commodity
prices. Okay, maybe we can buy this argument for crude oil, where the price
per barrel likely has a small unquantifiable geopolitical risk premium built
into it. But for gold, this argument is hogwash.
We have all read reports of upper-class Iranians stockpiling gold as tensions
continue to rise, but this shouldn't really have much of an effect on the price
level as Iranian demand is a rounding error in the world of gold. The reason
why gold has more than doubled over the last four years has to do with the
diminishing amount of confidence in paper assets, namely those denominated
in U.S. dollars. Savvy investors in Asia and Europe are very much aware
of the risks of holding dollars, yet most of us in the Western Hemisphere are
still asleep at the wheel. Ninety-nine percent of Americans haven't got a clue
about gold. Maybe 1 out of 1000 Americans under the age of 40 even know what
a Kruggerrand is - yet the media is portraying those who buy gold as doing
so for Iran protection.
Gold and silver are gaining in popularity as the price rises, but we are nowhere
near the media saturation levels of real estate or stocks. When the mainstream
media wakes up to gold, only then will we hear about price increases resulting
from a lack of confidence in paper assets rather than tensions in Iran.
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Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
Texas Hedge Report
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre are internationally known
analysts and editors of The Texas Hedge
Report, a market newsletter that highlights under and overvalued securities
in the equity, bond, currency, and commodity markets. For more information,
go to http://www.texashedge.com
Copyright © 2004-2008 Todd Stein and
Steven McIntyre
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