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October
14
2023

Geopolitics Stagflation and Gold – Richard Mills
Rick Mills

The crisis playing out in the Middle East has profound strategic and humanitarian implications, but what does it mean for investors, particularly those holding or considering gold and other precious metals that typically attract safe-haven demand?

The horrifying attacks on Israel by the Hamas terrorist organization are less than a week old but already we see an uptick in the price of gold compared to a lackluster 2023 performance.

Last week the yellow metal skidded to a seven-year low, with World Gold Council analysts noting September was the fourth consecutive month of outflows from gold ETFs.

Gold’s performance this year has been flat — the gains between March and May canceled out by the losses from May to October.

Headwinds have included receding fears of a US slowdown, surging bond yields and better-performing equities.

On Oct. 4, gold came within 10 bucks of a 2023 low of $1,811.20.

Then came news of the attack on Israel by Hamas, a Sunni Islamist organization that governs the Gaza Strip of the Palestinian territories.

Gold immediately reacted, climbing from $1837 on Oct. 8, the day of the invasion, to $1874 on Wednesday, Oct. 11, a bump of $37. While a 2% increase is not enough to stir excitement among gold bugs, it’s the threat of the conflict escalating beyond a mere cross-border shelling episode that Israelis and Palestinians have lived with for decades, along with macroeconomic factors, that in my opinion, will be the catalyst for the next sustained upturn in the gold price.

Spot gold since the attack on Israel on Oct. 8. Source: Kitco

Contagion

Indeed, the prospect of the conflict spreading to Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, where Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah is based, and the involvement of the United States as it moves to defend its staunch ally, Israel, is dominating headlines.

Here is what we know so far:

  • At least 1,200 Israelis and 1,055 Palestinians have been killed since Hamas launched a multi-front assault on Israel Saturday morning. Thousands more have been injured. Israel has been heavily bombarding the Gaza Strip while Palestinian groups continue to fire rockets into Israel. So far 22 Americans have died. Gaza hospitals are at full capacity and roughly 200,000 Gazans have been displaced.
  • Up to 150 hostages were taken from Israel to Gaza, where Hamas has likely placed them in strategic locations. Terrorist groups routinely use human shields — schools, hospitals or civilian families — to protect themselves, in this case against Israeli bombs and missiles.
  • Israel has ordered a complete siege of Gaza, including halting supplies of electricity, food, water and fuel. Gaza’s only power station stopped working after running out of fuel, Wednesday.
  • Israel has formed an emergency government and war management Cabinet that will include Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, National Unity Party leader Benny Gantz and current defense minister Yoav Gallant. The government will not pass any laws or make any decisions that do not concern the conduct of war, the announcement said via CNN., Netanyahu has vowed “what we will do to our enemies in the coming days will reverberate with them for generations,” leading many to speculate that Israel intends to obliterate the Gaza Strip with ground troops and tanks.
  • The US is sending two carrier strike groups to the region, the USS Gerald R. Ford and the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower. The Ford arrived in the Eastern Mediterranean on Tuesday and the Eisenhower and its strike group is scheduled to leave Norfolk, Virginia this week.    

According to Business Insider, the USS Gerald R. Ford strike force includes the USS Normandy, a Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser; three of four Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers in the fleet; the US Navy destroyer USS Carney (That’s a couple hundred thousands of tonnes of diplomacy – Rick); several F-35 fighter jets, considered to be the most advanced fighter jet in the world; F-15s; F16s, designed for both air-to-air combat as well as air-to-ground combat; and F10s, designed to provide close air support to ground forces. Israel requested interceptors and precision-guided munitions, states BI.

 A double aircraft carrier deployment would be a massive show of force in the region and could risk escalating the situation. Some Shia factions in Iraq have threatened attacks on US bases in the country if the US “intervenes” to support Israel against Hamas. (Anti-war.com, Oct. 10, 2023)

  • The US administration is in talks with Qatar, which has open lines of communication with Hamas, as part of mediation efforts to free the hostages.
  • The possibility of Israel having to fight a two-front war against Hamas and Hezbollah has grown stronger, with cross-border violence between Israel and Lebanon extending into a fourth and fifth day, Wednesday and Thursday. Hezbollah is considered to be more formidable and better equipped than Hamas. A drone infiltration scare sent millions of Israelis into shelters. The Israeli Homefront Command ordered residents in one far north town to stay in their homes and lock their doors, warning of an infiltration of militants. An IDF spokesman confirmed Wednesday that Israel fired rockets into Lebanon, striking Hezbollah positions after the group hit Israeli soldiers with anti-tank missiles. Citing the same spokesman, Fox News reported that Israel has deployed tens of thousands of additional units along the northern border. Hezbollah claims to have killed and wounded a large number of Israeli troops. On Wednesday the group issued a statement saying that it sees the United States as a direct accomplice in Israel’s killing of Gazans.
  • Syria launched missiles on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, prompting an emergency statement advising residents to stay near shelters.

Military aid: Ukraine loses to Gaza

This level of American commitment to a foreign war is understandable, given the strength of the Jewish lobby in Washington and the size of the diaspora within the continental United States. However, in my opinion, it’s also two-faced.

For months, the US and Europe have reportedly struggled to provide Ukraine with the huge amount of munitions it needs for a prolonged counter-offensive against Russia.

In July officials said the US was nearing the end of a set level of US munitions stockpiled around the world, as it continued to supply Ukraine with 155mm ammunition. As a stopgap measure, the Pentagon decided to send cluster munitions until more rounds are produced, even though they pose a risk to civilians.

Yet suddenly the ammo is available, to be shipped to Israel tout-suite, along with a full carrier fleet and another one on standby. How can this be? Either the US has the munitions or they don’t.

A week before the Hamas invasion, the Pentagon warned Congress that it is running low on money to replace weapons the US sent to Ukraine. A letter obtained by the Associated Press urges Congress to top up the $25.9 billion weapons fund, which has just $1.6 billion left. The weapons include millions of rounds of artillery, rockets and missiles.

Remember, part of the GOP’s Congress’s deal with the White House to avoid a government shutdown was to drop all assistance to Ukraine.

In the context of depleted US military aid to Ukraine, and the exhaustion of weapons stockpiles themselves, the timing of this Middle East flareup is certainly interesting. Could Russia be behind it? Putin is notorious for meddling in world affairs, in ways that embarrass the West. Examples include interference in the 2016 US election, the UK poisonings, and fighting on the side of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Moscow of supporting Hamas.

“We are certain that Russia is supporting, in one way or another, Hamas operations,” he said in an interview with the France 2 television channel on Tuesday. “The current crisis… bears witness to the fact that Russia really is seeking to carry out destabilizing actions all over the world.”

Zelensky also expressed concern that the international community is turning away from the war in Ukraine in the face of the “tragedy” that has befallen Israel following the attacks, said The Times of Israel.

While there is yet no proof of Russian involvement, it’s no secret that Russia has historical ties to Hamas, and would benefit from a war set to divert attention from its own atrocities, war crimes, in Ukraine.

Pro-war Russian propaganda has been spotted on social media, including by a military correspondent known for his support of ethnic cleansing of Ukrainians, who wrote “Not a drop of pity or sympathy (for the Israelis),” on his Telegram channel.

“This mess is beneficial for Russia…Iran is our real military ally,” said Russia’s prominent propagandist Sergey Mardan.

The Kyiv Independent notes the Soviet Union fostered relations with the PLO, largely to ensure the spread of communism in the region and to counter American influence. While Moscow has condemned some of Hamas’ terrorist attacks, it has not called it a terrorist organization.

After Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian elections, the Kremlin and Hamas leadership met several times — the latest meeting taking place in March, 2023 in Moscow, when Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hosted Ismail Haniyeh, head of Hamas.

Source: Russian Representative Office in Palestine/ X

Experts mentioned by the Kiev Independent say that while the war may benefit Russia, there is no evidence Russia was directly involved. Instead, they say the blame falls largely on Iran, which is the main benefactor of Hamas, funding it with tens of millions of dollars and providing weapons and training:

“Iran is acting with an increased sense of emboldening in the region,” Hanna Notte, an expert on Russia’s foreign and security policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Kyiv Independent.

“And that is a product of the changed Russian-Iranian relationship on the back of the war in Ukraine,” she added.

Russia and Iran grew increasingly close following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with Iran now supplying Russia with weapons.

The fact that Russia’s being armed by Iran, provides an impetus to support Iran’s activities in the Middle East, even indirectly. As tensions escalate, I would not be in the least bit surprised to see Russian and Iranian fingerprints all over an outbreak of a much wider conflict in the middle east..

Call me paranoid, but I also believe that Hamas’ timing, and the likely involvement of Iran possibly with Russian backing, comes as the United States Congress is in complete disarray. The legislative body narrowly avoided a government shutdown, followed by the ouster of Speaker Kevin McCarthy by a group of Republican hard-liners. 

The Washington Post reported policymakers in Europe “looked with furrowed brows at the chaos consuming the House of Representatives,” with the French newspaper LeMonde writing in an editorial,

“The field of ruins that the House of Representatives has become can only worry America’s allies and delight its adversaries.”

With the chamber in paralysis, WaPo asserts that Washington may be unable to authorize crucial new installments of military aid when a new battle for government looms next month. If that happens, it will be very good news indeed for Putin’s Russia.

IMF outlook worsens

This week, the International Monetary Fund raised its 2024 inflation forecast to 5.8% from an earlier 5.2%, while at the same time trimming its global growth forecast from 2.9% to 2.8%. Bloomberg notes this is below the 3.8% average of the two decades before the pandemic:

Factors holding back the expansion include the long-term consequences of the pandemic; the invasion of Ukraine; the breakdown of the world economy into blocs; and the central bank policy tightening.

The fund predicts inflation will stay above central bank targets until 2025.

Stagflation and gold

High inflation + low growth = stagflation.


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Richard Mills is a mining expert, financial writer, and the owner of Aheadoftheherd.com. He invests in the junior resource/bio-tech sectors and his articles have been published on over 400 websites, including: WallStreetJournal, SafeHaven, MarketOracle, USAToday, NationalPost, Stockhouse, Lewrockwell, Pinnacledigest, UraniumMiner, SeekingAlpha, MontrealGazette, CaseyResearch, 24hgold, VancouverSun, CBSnews, SilverBearCafe, Infomine, HuffingtonPost, Mineweb, 321Gold, Kitco, Gold-Eagle, The Gold/Energy Reports, CalgaryHerald, ResourceInvestor, Mining.com, Forbes, FNArena, Uraniumseek, FinancialSense, Goldseek, Dallasnews, Vantagewire, Resourceclips and the Association of Mining Analysts.

 

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