MARKET
REVIEW: The Case For Gold, Reprise
Not
surprising, of course, but certainly notable: Stocks continued their descent
Friday... all four major indexes lost roughly of 1.4%. The Dow gave up 128 points.
But
indexes are indexes and don't really tell us what's happening to the average
punter...er, I mean investor. Maybe this will: According to Lipper, the average
stock mutual fund is down 21.7% for the year. In this third year of the bear
market retirement-hopeful investors are starting to wonder if stocks really
do go up over the long run. As well they should...
Gold
stocks lost ground Friday along with the rest of the indexes, but gold futures
gained another 30 cents to close at $349. Of the 41 fund categories Lipper tracks
only 3 will end 2002 with a gain: all three are gold funds and they're up an
average of 62%.
Only
two trading days left and the dollar is down 12% for the year.
So
what's really going on? Of course, your editors at the Daily Reckoning never
claim to know... all we can do is guess along with the rest of the punters.
But in an effort to make our guess an educated one today, it might be worth
reviewing "the case for gold". After all, as we noted in late May
while turning readers on to a report of the same name written by Tocqueville
Funds' John Hathaway, gold is the only investment story of the year worth writing
about.
For
assistance in recapping "the case for gold" we turn to an article
authored by Frank Giustra and published by Brien Lundin's GoldNewsletter. (I
met Frank briefly in New Orleans in early November this year. As the leader
of Yorkton Securities during the early 1990s, Frank helped finance some of the
most important mineral discoveries in recent history. Frank left the mining
business briefly in 1996 to head up Lions Gate Entertainment. You may recognize
the name. They produced, among other movies, Monster's Ball, for which Halle
Berry won an Oscar. Following the recent move in gold... Frank's baaack!...
now serving as director of Endeavor Mining Capital Corp. Perhaps if Mr. Giustra
is ready to give up Hollywood gold for the real thing... this as interesting
a story as we're likely to ever find ever in the investment world, eh?)...
"A
Tarnished Dollar Will Put The Shine On Gold," headlines the Giustra piece.
Among the factors leading to a rising gold price, Giustra notes a widening demand/supply
gap in gold due to a decline in production by the primary producers, expected
to decline by an additional 30% over the next 8 years; the decline of interest
rates making it less attractive for gold producers to "hedge" their
future produce; and the end to the "peace dividend" - or as Harry
Schultz put it recently "geopolitics is back!" and the world is as
scary a place as at any time during the cold war. Iraq, al Qeada and North Korean
come to mind, for some reason.
But
supply and demand, the derivatives market and impending political violence are
only the beginning of the crises contributing to the renewed interest in gold
this year (and next?... and the year after that?). "The most important
dynamic affecting the gold price is," writes Giustra, "and will be,
the fate of the US dollar."
We
need only look back 31 years to get a grasp on the relationship between the
dollar and gold. In 1971, Nixon closed the "gold window", and put
the final touches on a political movement started early in the 20th century.
In Europe, banks made gold coins for general trade illegal in the summer of
1914, at the outbreak of The Great War. England restored the 'right' of citizens
to use gold specie briefly in 1925, but a run on the Bank of England's gold
reserves forced them to revoke the right again in 1931. Gold coins were made
illegal in the US in 1933 by executive order of President Roosevelt. Thereby,
removing gold from the radar of the average investor altogether.
But
Nixon's action - refusing foreign dollar holders from redeeming greenbacks for
Fort Knox gold - in '71 unhitched the dollar from any backing, except that of
the US government. Unfortunately, any period in history of government-backed,
or 'fiat' currency, has led to disastrous bouts with inflation. In the 70s the
dollar "took a swan dive" losing 70% of its value against some currencies
over the next ten years. Gold, the beneficiary of a dollar-decline, climbed
until it reached $800 within the same decade.
A
short history of Fed over since then would reveal repeated attempts to manage
the relationship between the dollar, now the world's reserve currency comprising
76% of all central bank deposits, and gold... which has suffered a 20 years
of virtual neglect.
"The
value of the dollar," writes Giustra "is impacted by many factors
including a) how much of it is printed b) the rate of return it generates c)
the fiscal health of the government balance sheet sponsoring it and d) the general
state of the economy it represents."
In
the past decade the US money supply has doubled from $4 trillion to $8 trillion,
with a full 25% of that coming in the last 18 months while the Fed tries to
reflate the economy. What's more, currency that is actually in circulation and
being used has more than doubled from $260 billion to $600 billion in the same
period. Neither of these attempts to stimulate consumer spending are improving
the economic picture. Most notably, the corporate profit picture is not improving.
Government
"fiscal responsibility," an oxymoron if we ever heard one, is anything
if not a pipe dream. And now we have an administration promising to take "war
on terror" to any corner of the earth willing to host it... on top of declining
tax revenues from the busted economy affecting all levels of government from
the Feds down to your local school board. Nobody has a keener interest in keeping
the bull market going, we noted this week, than the government.
Record
levels of consumer debt; mortgage rates at levels not seen since 1965 encouraging
even more borrowing; record bankruptcy levels; and a current account deficit
that requires 75% of all the global trade surplus capital to maintain... the
list goes on and seems rather endless... is it any wonder interest in gold is
beginning to awaken?
"As,
one by one, the foundations supporting these pillars erode," writes Mr.
Giustra, "the faith in the dollar may, at best, turn agnostic and, at worst,
turn outright atheist." And if the inverse relationship of the last 30
years holds... gold is about to be the beneficiary of a whole new crop of converts.
Early price movements in the year 2002 indicate the 'conversion experience'
may have already gripped a few... the unsuspecting.
Happy New Year,
Addison Wiggin, The Daily Reckoning