Why Gold Has a Long Way to Go

Nov 6th, 2009 | By Jeff Clark | Category: Featured, Gold
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A couple weeks ago, I had my TV tuned to a business show that loves to give predictions on the markets and the economy. On that day, one of the program’s regular guests declared it was time to “short” gold, that it had reached its top, and that the precious metals bull market was over. I’ll try to be nice in my rebuttal.

So, what was his reasoning: technical analysis of wave counts? falling demand? a telling ratio? sun spots? No, he noted that upscale department store Harrods in London began selling gold bullion and coins “over the counter,” ergo, the top was in. Nice try, “Bert,” but this is amateurish. You really shouldn’t be playing with the big boys if that’s the basis of your call.

Yes, gold will someday put in a top, and since the gold price is largely determined by psychology, the end of the bull run will be marked by behavioral types of signals. But calling a top in gold now is like declaring that WWII was over because the Allies won a small skirmish in early 1942. To have made such a statement, based on a small, isolated event, ignored the greater forces that had yet to play out and would have made any journalist or military strategist look foolish indeed.

And here’s why Bert looks equally silly today…

If the top were in, we’d be in the midst of an all-out Mania. Are we? Do you get the impression there’s a rush into gold by the greater public right now? Are headlines blazing the covers of major magazines pronouncing gold as the new investment king? Has Wall Street gone gaga over gold and silver? I ask because these are the true signs that a trend has entered its final blow-off top and would signal it’s time to get out.

I decided to put Bert’s prognostication to the test, and I invite you to play along.

First, I struck up casual conversations with my friends, neighbors, relatives, acquaintances, my wife’s co-workers – heck, even my seatmates on airplanes – angling to learn how much gold they were hoarding, about the killing they were making in gold stocks, and how they were getting rich from all their precious metal investments. (In fairness, I had to exclude my dad, who is an award-winning gold panner, but he’s the only one.)

I found no one – not one person – who is actively investing in anything gold or silver, let alone rushing to buy or hoard the stuff. I had two people who confided that they did own gold, but in both cases it was inherited. A few were curious how they would go about doing such a thing, and fewer asked if I thought they should. Most everyone looked at me blankly when I asked; they didn’t seem to know what I was talking about. When I got a reaction like that, it was pointless to ask about gold stocks. Of the handful I did ask, most had never heard of Barrick Gold, the world’s largest gold producer.

Now ask yourself the same thing: how many of your family, friends, neighbors, and co-workers are buying gold and silver coins? Are any of them giving you hot stock tips about a fantastic gold producer, or telling you about the latest gold discovery made by a company in China? Have any fellow investors told you they’re dumping their brokers because they can select gold stocks better on their own? Anyone telling you they’re going to night school to learn the gold mining business?

Next, I surveyed a large sampling of print media looking for some of these signals that Bert surely had spotted. Over the past couple weeks, not one of the major business magazines I reviewed had anything on the cover about gold or silver. Further, there were no articles on precious metals, such as the best ways to buy or store all this gold everyone is buying.

One magazine ran an article about ways to prepare for inflation, and gold wasn’t even mentioned! I did see an ad from the U.S. Mint in another, along with a couple small ads in the back that said they had the best prices on bullion (right beside the teasers for buying a Russian wife), but that was it. Even the portfolio allocation models recommended in the articles I read made no specific mention of precious metals (one recommended a “resource” fund, but their discussion of it was centered around energy investments).

Other than the articles you seek out, how many mainstream magazines do you see extolling the virtues of gold and silver on their cover? How many bestsellers are prominently displayed at your nearest bookstore that scream at you to buy gold stocks? Are you getting fed up with all the junk mail you get about gold and silver?

Last, I went out of my way to look for stories on gold and silver on TV and radio. About all I could find were the same ads that popped up after last year’s Super Bowl commercial by Cash4Gold. A couple programs quote metals prices, and I was able to find another that actually used the word “gold” in a sentence. It might just be me, Bert, but I can’t find any news anchors talking about the latest gold discovery or that “must own” gold stock. No in-depth special reports from investigative journalists on the hot Canadian junior mining sector. Nothing on my radio about the best ways to store all the silver every smart investor has been buying.

How about you – are you feeling bombarded by TV and radio ads and segments on precious metals? Do you have the clear impression gold and silver are the hot new investing trend around the world? Are you Tivo-ing certain TV shows because of all the great info they provide about picking the next great gold stock?

If we were in a Mania, Bert, all of this would be happening. But it’s not. Those who buy gold coins in the U.S. are still largely viewed as members of a fringe group. There is no public discussion on gold, no insider tips on the latest hot gold stock, no special reports on how to store all the bullion you’ve collected. The psychology isn’t on our side yet. One signal does not a Mania make.

Last and perhaps most important, Bert, are you sure the dollar is done falling? You’re absolutely convinced we won’t see price inflation? Our current debt load won’t pose any future problems? No more worries about foreigners buying all that debt? Obama and Bernanke really have saved the day?

Bert, send me your shorted gold positions, I’ll buy them from you. And although the gold price could see a correction in the near term, and several more along its journey to “the top,” remember that battle in early1942 and all that had yet to occur before the war was over.

And one more thing: when you finally become breathless to buy gold stocks, I just might be ready to sell them to you.

Regards,
Jeff Clark

November 6, 2009

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Jeff Clark

Jeff Clark’s research and writing skills are also utilized in his role as editor and one of the primary writers of Casey Research’s BIG GOLD. Whether it is researching new companies to recommend, analyzing the big trend in gold, or looking for other safe and profitable ways to capitalize on the bull market, Jeff is devoted to making Big Gold the best precious metals newsletter for the prudent investor. He coordinates the efforts among the research and writing team, ensuring that whatever is happening in the gold and silver market doesn’t escape coverage.

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  1. Dear Jeff:

    I laughed delightedly all the way through your terrific article.

    However, I am not buying gold–but hold on, because I have excellent reasons. First, gold is too dense a form of storage of value for most of us, although I adore it. Silver is a better choice in terms of most budgets and has far greater utility should we get to the barter economy I expect during the coming Greater Depression. Okay, strictly speaking trading hard money for goods is not barter, but when–”if,” if one prefers–an FRN is not good for much except wallpaper and starting fires, silver will be far more useful. Imagine trying to swap a Maple Leaf for groceries. No, let’s not! I’m hoping to trade eggs and ounces of silver for acreage in a couple of years.

    Second, part of coping with the current and projected economic situation is knowing a value when we see one. Things fall apart unevenly. The time to buy guns and ammo was eighteen months ago. Right now great bargains are to be had in cattle. Flour and steel are down to last year’s prices. I expect lumber to be far more costly eventually; a good stock of basics strikes me as a bright idea, storage permitting.

    It’s an interesting game, isn’t it?!

    LBT

  2. When oil was at 135 they were telling that too. and it collapsed few weeks later. this bubble is no different. soon its time will come

  3. The smart investor recognizes that the only thing “reaching it’s top” right now is the US bond market. As the world continues to realize that US debt securities are a losing proposition the global “sell” signal will eventually sound. When that day comes, what will an ounce of gold cost then?

    Why is this concept so difficult for some to understand?

  4. Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by WhiskeyGunpowde: Why Gold Has a Long Way to Go: A couple weeks ago, I had my TV tuned to a business show that loves to give predictio… http://bit.ly/2PZZ0q…

  5. Thanks for this article. I think it is germane to consider what Harrods is and what Harrods customers are like.

    Harrods is a tourist/heritage site in West London. Customers who have serious money to spend there are foreigners – probably not indigent British. Although I digress, I often feel that they must be crooks (or married to a crook) to live in an expensive foreign city and flaunt their wealth at Harrods.

    Selling gold bullion and coins at Harrods is a great sales idea. They have their own bank and safe deposit boxes ‘in-house’. It is a poor example of what might constitute the ‘top of a bubble’.

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