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"...The supply of cheap gold looks to be nearing its end. The supply of
cheap money, on the other hand, only grows greater..."
ONCE UPON A TIME in the market place, says Economics 101, money
had three primary functions.
A medium of exchange for buying and selling, money was also a unit of account
for pricing those deals. Thirdly, it had to act as a store of value - a way
of freezing wealth, ready to spend at some point in the future.
But monetary history post-WWII makes a mockery of this theory.
According to the official CPI index, the US Dollar has lost more than seven-eighths
of its purchasing power over the last 60 years. One British Pound today will
buy you what four pennies bought in 1947.
Perhaps it's no coincidence that the death of money as a store of value has
come alongside the end of gold as money as well. Now replaced by Dollars, Euros,
Sterling, Yen and Swiss Francs in the global marketplace, however, gold still
retains its ability to freeze wealth for the future. For only gold remains
in limited supply.
No one can abuse gold's rarity, creating it at will by clicking a mouse or
promising a fresh loan. Mining production slipped 2% in 2006 according to new
research from Virtual Metals. Its latest Yellow Book, sponsored by Fortis,
agrees with the GFMS consultancy's data. It also forecasts that full-year mining
output in 2007 will shrink further, sitting more than 5% below the level of
2002.
The supply of cheap money, in contrast, only grows stronger each day.
The broad supply of Euros (M3) is now growing at its fastest pace since spring
1983. Here in London, bankers are lending money to private equity firms at
less than official interest rates, just so they can join the private-equity
bubble.
Swiss Francs have managed to lose value against even the Dollar over the last
two-and-a-half years. Now they continue to sink, depressed by low real rates
of interest and the loss of gold-backing that they used to enjoy. Japanese
interest rates remain so low, meantime, that the Tokyo government just sold
a two-year bond with the highest coupon in well over 10 years - a whole one
per cent per annum!
Then there's the Dollar...and nobody wants the Dollar, if only because there
are so many of them piling up so fast everywhere.
China, for instance, now has such a pile of Dollars that it's joining the
private-equity party too - giving $3 billion to Blackstone, the US investment
outfit, in the hope of putting its export Dollars to work. But as Washington
berates Beijing for not allowing the Chinese Yuan to float freely - and float
higher - on the currency markets, pressure is mounting to cut US interest rates
at home.
By extension, the cost of money worldwide looks set to drop further, too.
Expect the value of money to sink - along with the price - as the supply continues
to grow.
Gold, on the other hand, is becoming much harder to find. Formerly the world's
No.1 producer, for instance, South Africa has seen its gold-mining output fall
by more than one-half during the last decade. In the scramble to reverse this
trend, work is about to start on the world's deepest-ever mining projects -
more than 4 kilometers below ground.
But "mining deeper and deeper does not come cheaply," as Mining Weekly points
out. On top of the global shortage in qualified geologists - and the English-speaking
world's shortage of qualified engineers - "there is [now] a shortage of contracting
capacity with shaft-sinking companies in South Africa," says Michael Solomon,
CEO of junior platinum miner Wesizwe.
Already at Driefontein - currently the world's deepest gold-mine at 3,777
meters below ground - "mining at depth will cost ZAR66,000 per kilo [$296 per
ounce] over the life of the mine." Given current spot gold prices above $670
per ounce, that level of operating expense would only make the new super-deep
mines in Carletonville cost-effective for as long as the cost of digging that
deep can be controlled. As it is, South Africa suffers higher gold-mining costs
per ounce than even the United States. And now AngloGold Ashanti, Harmony Gold
and Gold Fields all face a 15% wage demand from South Africa's National Union
of Mineworkers, according to the Johannesburg press.
The shrinking supply of South African gold may be turned around in future,
but it looks unlikely to ever recover. Real fixed investment in South Africa's
mining industry grew by 7.1% last year; put that growth in context, however,
and you'll find that it came after a 13.1% drop in 2005 and a cut of one-fifth
in 2004.
The supply of cheap gold, in short, is nearing its end. The supply of cheap
money, on the other hand, only grows greater each day.
So while you may not wish to price your next shopping trip in troy ounces,
you might be well advised to save for your 2008 spending in physical gold bullion.
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