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Gold Forecaster - Global Watch
Below is a snippet from the latest weekly issue from www.GoldForecaster.com | www.SilverForecaster.com
In the face of gyrating currency markets it is difficult to get a real "price" on
anything at the moment. We have often asked the question here, what is the
price of gold? If it is $670 then we ask, what is the price of the $. Should
the $ be valued in gold, the other way round to now? Well the same question
should now be asked of oil. Why? Because the value of the $ is now subject
to question internationally.
Three years ago the oil producers were happy with an oil price of $35, then
last year with $60 and now the indication are that they are happy with $70,
because the global economy is still growing with oil at that price. This is
the criteria they set and they ignore any demand side definition of price.
The buying power of oil is not the criteria, it is how high can the price
go without hurting global growth. This makes oil a definition of money, a measure
of the value of the $ in market measurement terms. In doing this oil has taken
an important step in defining values. It is now fair to say that $70 is worth
a barrel of oil. With such a heady price rise the valuation of a currency in
terms of income [interest] achievable, is going out the door.
Yes, O.P.E.C. did turn on the supply when the market faced real shortages,
but only to show good faith in providing sufficient oil to avoid unnatural
shortages and damage the need for oil in the global economy.
This does not make oil money, for it does not meet the popular measures of
money [durable, a luxury, divisible and portable]. Yes, it meets some, which
enable it to take this position. It does so on a world-wide front simply because
we have arrived at a position where O.P.E.C. firmly controls the market
in oil and will do so long as it is supply dominated.
Gold
retains this ultimate role of money because like oil, it is not an obligation
of man. It has the advantage of oil in that it can be easily carried
in coin form. Gold is also durable in small as well as large quantities.
- But oil has the advantage of gold in that oil is needed by everyone, whereas
gold remains a luxury until it is needed in extreme times, when paper just
doesn't do the job.
It is the need for oil that has given its power as a defining measure of paper
money and will do so into the future as demand overtakes supply.
What oil producers have also been saying by indicating the acceptable price
of oil to them is: -
- While we have to accept payment in the U.S. $ we are fully aware of its
falling buying power and will ensure that the oil price will rise to compensate
that fall.
- It is a very strong statement to make and demonstrates O.P.E.C.'s full
control over its income from oil.
- We now have to recognize that they are focusing not on the receipt of the
best currency [€?], but are being pragmatic in accepting the $ for what
it is, but defining its value on an ongoing basis, by letting the price rise
and ensuring that the paper obligations of governments [all currencies] are
measurable in terms of oil [the $ in particular].
- The reality of this is that oil now measures value better than the $ and
will do so long as the globe is dependent on it.
The shift we have just described is that paper money has taken a step backwards,
particularly the $, in terms of the globe's confidence in it. We cover the
credit squeeze and the investment climate from now onwards above [in the current
issue] a point emphasized in the article above.

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