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"...Gold just closed out its fourth best month ever. Its monetary opponents,
meantime, continue scrapping over which currency can sink the lowest, the
fastest..."
OIL DOWN, gold up - and still the mass of investors, led by Wall Street,
can't figure out what's driving this six-year bull market in bullion.
Thursday's 1.5% bounce in the gold price "was driven by the exchange rate," reckons
Michael Widmer, head of metals research at Calyon.
"The renewed weakness in the Dollar could encourage some buying of gold overseas," adds
Stephen Platt, an analyst at Archer Financial Services in Chicago.
Both ignore the 1% rise enjoyed by British and European gold owners today.
Japanese investors have seen the metal rise 1.3% so far this week.
And for US gold buyers? Gold bullion just completed its fourth-best month
on record.
At the apocalyptic price of $666 per ounce, May's average Afternoon Fix in
London was $13 shy of April's figure. But it stood 5.5% higher than January
this year. It trailed the peak hit in May '06 by less than $10 per ounce.

The competition, meantime, continues to scrap over which paper promise can
lose most value the fastest.
The Ministry of Finance in Tokyo won't allow the Bank of Japan to raise interest
rates above the current 0.5%. But sensing inflation, bond investors just demanded
the highest coupon on two-year Japanese government bonds in more than a decade
- a whole 1% per annum.
In Europe, the M3 measure of money supply rose 10.2% in April from one year
before. The three-monthly average rose to 10.4%, said the European Central
Bank this week - the fastest rate of growth in Europe's money supply since
March 1983.
Over in London, the Bank of England offers higher rates than even the almighty
Dollar at 5.50%. But the interest-rate premium now priced into Sterling has
failed to stall domestic inflation. Prices are rising at their fastest clip
in well over 15 years. The supply of Sterling (M4) has now risen at double-digits
year-on-year for the last 25 months.
And the US Dollar? First-quarter GDP growth came in at 0.6% - less than half
the Commerce Department's first and second estimates, and one-fifth of a per
cent below Wall Street's average forecast. Last time the US economy grew this
slowly, back at the end of 2002, the Federal Reserve was on its way to cutting
interest rates down to 1% - an "emergency low" to fend off the threat of recession
followed by deflation and depression.
That's why the Dollar bears merrily got back to selling the Greenback again
today. But no sooner had the Euro spiked than it fell yet again; because the
Fed's fears about inflation are coming true even as the economy grinds to a
halt.
The Chicago Purchasing Managers Index showed prices paid by US industry rising
sharply this month. The index gained 8%, in fact, a huge leap reflected by
comments that "manufacturers are using any excuse they can to increase prices" quoted
by the Purchasing Managers report.
"Prices are not coming down," adds another respondent. "Fuel surcharges are
staying the same, not lowering."
Indeed, the only portion of the US economy that seems to be "enjoying" lower
prices right now is real estate. Countrywide, the largest mortgage lender,
reported quarterly profits down 37% on Thursday. IndyMac Bancorp, a major competitor,
saw its profits drop 34%.
"I don't think the housing correction is over yet," said one economist to
Bloomberg. Both S&P and Moodys reckon average home prices will drop 8%
by the end of next year. Given the trouble to GDP growth that static home prices
have caused so far, what might 8¢ in the Dollar knock off US consumer
spending during the next 18 months?
"It does seem clear from yesterday's Fed minutes that the Fed is downgrading
its outlook for the economy," reckons Michael Woolfolk, currency strategist
at Bank of New York, "which is not seen returning to trend growth until 2008."
"We could see some further Dollar weakness," he adds - and as ever, the Dollar
is the United States' currency, but it's the world's problem.
Some 80% of US government bonds due to redeem in the next 3 to 10 years are
now owned by foreigners, reports Lawrence Dyer, a New York- based strategist
at HSBC Securities USA Inc. Alan Taylor, a professor of economic history at
the University of California, says the United States has not been so beholden
to overseas investors since the 19th century.
Foreign holdings of US securities have doubled since 2002, and no wonder.
All those cheap Dollars that the US sends abroad to pay for its yawning trade
deficit "need to go somewhere," as Charles Comiskey, head of US-bond trading
at HSBC said earlier today - "and the natural place to go to is Treasuries."
"Treasuries aren't bought for fundamental reasons but for necessity," says
Comiskey.
Anyone wanting to bet on a cheaper Dollar - or simply hedge themselves against
the grinding decline in all currency values - might do well to avoid Euros,
Sterling and Yen.
Gold remains the only world currency not open to debasement, competitive devaluation,
or the excessive promises of overspent governments.
And at $666 per ounce on average right now, it also remains within spitting
distance of the highs for this bull market so far.
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