Ignore the hype regarding gold, bonds, booms
and busts, hope and chains, “shock and awe,” stock market crashes,
“money honey” commentary, and ignore the
politicians. Don’t obsess over
High-Frequency-Trading and market manipulation.
Instead, focus on the big picture as shown in the following chart
of monthly gold, which has been divided into 3 phases since
1971.
http://www.gold-eagle.com/sites/default/files/christenson080114-1.jpgPrices 1971 – 2014 In 3 Waves" />
Phase 1: Gold rallied from
about $42 in 1971 to over $800 in 1980, thanks to massive money
printing, debts, deficits, wars, and a loss of confidence in the US
dollar.
Phase 2: Gold prices crashed
subsequent to the bubble of 1979-80, and then drifted lower for
about 20 years. It double bottomed in 1999 and
2001.
Phase 3: Gold rallied off the
2001 low of about $255 to over $1,900 in August
2011. Since then it has corrected to under
$1,200, and double bottomed in June and December
2013. Current price is about $1,300.
How Will Gold Prices Change
in the next 3 – 5 Years?
Option
1:
Gold prices will continue rising, erratically of course, within the
green “megaphone” pattern shown above. In my
opinion this option is the most likely unless we descend into a
global deflationary depression and/or nuclear winter, which the
politicians and bankers will do “whatever it takes” to
avoid.
or
Option 2: Gold prices
continue falling much like they did subsequent to the 1980 bubble
high. I consider this option unlikely.
What Else Supports Option 1
– Higher Prices?
1) The rally into 2011 does
not resemble the parabolic bubble blow-off into
1980. The drop in prices since 2011 looks like a
correction, not a post-bubble crash. Gold was not
in a bubble in 2011.
2) Interest rates today are
practically zero, but in the 1980 crash era US rates were at
all-time highs. Economic conditions are quite
different.
3) Monetary policy today is
extremely loose, but in 1980 era it was, relatively speaking,
tight.
4) The stock market in 1980
had been declining or flat for over a decade, while the stock
market of today has enjoyed over 5 years of practically continuous
rally.
5) In 1980 confidence in the
US dollar and the financial system was fragile, while today it
seems (perhaps undeservedly) much stronger.
6) Technical indicators (see
graph below) suggest that long-term gold prices have been bottoming
during the past year. Note the other examples of
“over-sold” conditions in gold prices.
http://www.gold-eagle.com/sites/default/files/christenson080114-2.jpgPrices 1971 – 2014 In 3 Waves" />
What Else Supports Option 2 – Lower Prices?
1)
Various self-serving forecasts from investment and bullion banks
suggest lower prices – at least until they have sufficiently loaded
up on future contracts and can massively profit from the rally
ahead. I remain skeptical of such
prognostications.
2) The price chart shows
that gold has been falling since 2011. Some
people believe it will continue falling for another 10 – 20
years. However, with ever increasing debt, bond
monetization, food and energy inflation, massive Chinese and
Russian purchases, and increasing political instability, lower
prices appear to be an unlikely outcome.
3) The Fed and most other
western central banks would like stable or lower gold prices, so
their unbacked debt based paper currencies appear less
weak. Maybe they can manufacture another decline
in the gold prices such as during April – June 2013, but that also
seems unlikely.
CONCLUSIONS:
This is not 1979 or 1980 when
political and economic conditions were drastically
different. Perhaps a better analogy would be about 50
years ago (1964) when the Vietnam War was
escalating, US citizens
were angry and marching in the streets, a gallon of gasoline cost
25 cents, coffee in a restaurant cost ten cents, and a decent
middle-class wage was $2.50 per hour. The
subsequent 20 years were life-changing and financially difficult
for many people. Consumer prices increased
drastically, the purchasing power of savings was destroyed, and
people lost confidence in government and the US dollar.
Gold prices will rally much higher in the next 5
years. Jim Sinclair’s initial target of $3,500
seems very likely by 2016 – 2019. If the
powers-that-be choose hyperinflation to deal with their massive
debts, then much higher prices are “in play.”
There are many other
options. For example, if you don’t trust or like
gold, a bank will pay you 1% interest each and every year if you
invest in a Certificate of Deposit.