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This essay originally appeared at Whiskey
and Gunpowder.
What You Probably Didn't Know About the U.S. Dollar and Gold
I turned bullish on gold in the late '90s, in my former post as a stockbroker.
The collapse of the "strong dollar policy" of that period formed one of the
major premises of my case for gold at the time. However, by early 2005, as
the currency reached my original target and began bouncing off its long-term
lows, I recommended that clients no longer bet against the dollar, because
I felt that the dollar would level off. Still, I wrote, gold prices were going
to make their biggest move yet. As subsequent events proved, I had that one
right.
Now, the gold story is this: The value of money is in danger of dropping
precipitously again, and it is increasingly likely that the world monetary
system will have another brush with hyperinflation akin to what occurred in
the 1970s, except this time, worse.
The evidence supporting this thesis is devastating, yet this story is scarcely
factored into gold values, let alone financial markets. That is, we have seen
a rush to gold when the foreign exchange value of the U.S. dollar has crumbled,
whenever some geopolitical boiling point has been reached, when other commodities
have left the station, because the Chinese and Indian economies were heating
up, and so on. But there has yet to be a significant enough deterioration of
confidence in central banking institutions, or the quasi-fiat money they produce,
to herald the kind of buying in which a person is "anxious to swap his money
against 'real' goods, no matter whether he needs them or not, no matter how
much money he has to pay for them," according to Ludwig von Mises.
The evidence suggests we are headed there, but it also suggests that the most
spectacular part of the bull market in gold must still lie ahead of us.
But the most interesting part about these "spectacular" moves in gold, where
the market's spotlight focuses entirely on the gold story (the greatest story
never told), is the behavior of the currency markets.
What Most Investors Don't Know About Gold and the U.S. Dollar
The biggest moves in the gold price occur when the foreign exchange value
of the U.S. dollar is stable.
Did you get that? It may initially sound counterintuitive, but after reading
this article, it shouldn't.
Consider first the fact that the largest moves in gold's free-trading history
occurred in four brief periods each lasting two-three years: 1973-1975, 1978-1980,
1985-1987, and 2005-? We know that the first two of these occurred during bull
markets in gold, the third one in a bear market rally, and the last one we
believe to be a bull market move, which can hardly be considered arguable at
this point. As a matter of fact, the two former periods and the last (current)
one have something important in common -- they saw the lowest (inverse) correlations
with the currency. That is, they occurred when the U.S. dollar had reached
some level of relative stability following a two-three year collapse in its
foreign exchange rate.

Since we are still in the midst of the final period, I used the current gold
and dollar price for the table, while measuring all the other periods from
trough to peak.
But if we take the high in gold prices last year as our peak, the gain in
gold was actually 70%, and the U.S. dollar lost just 2% in this period -- instead
of the 51% and 0% originally in the table -- hence making it more substantial
than the bear market rally of 1985-1987, when the U.S. dollar dropped more
precipitously...and nothing yet suggests those trends have ended.
Since its 1971 fix, the price of gold is up some 1,750%, or 18.5-fold.
Everyone will notice the general inverse relationship between the dollar and
the gold price that can be seen in the chart, but it is not a well-known fact
that the gains in the price of gold that occurred in the top three bull market
moves alone (shaded regions in the above data series), where exchange rates
were most stable, explain nearly two-thirds of this whole move in gold prices
-- more than $400 of the gain from $35 to $650 -- while the U.S. dollar's foreign
exchange rate fell less than 5% net.

If we apply the 1970s model to the current move that started in 2005, we would
suggest that it could end in late 2007 with a run in gold prices to somewhere
between $900-1,200, and the dollar might well be only a few points from where
it is today when it all blows over. Both of the instances of dollar stability
in the '70s saw the most spectacular gains in the gold price, and by all counts,
the same factors are at play today. Investors were surely just as surprised
by it then as they will be today.
There are a lot of strong arguments for why the dollar should continue to
new lows. For instance:
- It is no longer an intrinsically viable reserve currency
- China may buy fewer dollars
- The size of the U.S. trade deficit still suggests that it is cheaper to
import goods than produce in U.S.
- The trend in interest rate differentials probably favors the foreign currencies
in the medium term.
But these arguments may already be factored in the medium-term (three-18 months)
currency outlook, and attention should perhaps be drawn to the overlooked bullish
arguments favoring the U.S. dollar.
For some of these arguments have potency, yet are least considered.
Here are two very important arguments for this time horizon:
- Money supply inflation by international central banks has exceeded the
Fed's for four years
- Risk premiums have more upside adjustment in foreign currencies than in
the U.S. dollar
Don't worry if you don't understand these things.
The main point of this article is to illustrate the historical precedent behind
a potentially bullish gold price explosion, regardless of whether the U.S.
dollar makes new lows or not.
The historical fact is that gold's biggest moves occur when the U.S. dollar
is relatively stable.
Now you know what few people do.
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