A
meme is now circulating that gold is in a bubble and that it's time for the
wise investor to sell. To me, that’s a ridiculous notion. Certainly a
premature one.
It
pays to remain as objective as you can be when analyzing any investment. People
have a tendency to fall in love with an asset class, usually because
it’s treated them so well. We saw that happen, most recently, with
Internet stocks in the late ‘90s and houses up to 2007. Investment
bubbles are driven primarily by emotion, although there's always some
rationale for the emotion to latch on to. Perversely, when it comes to
investing, reason is recruited mainly to provide cover for passion and
preconception.
In the same way, people tend to hate certain
investments unreasonably, usually at the bottom of a bear market, after
they've lost a lot of money and thinking about the asset means reliving the
pain and loss. Love-and-hate cycles occur for all investment classes.
But
there’s only one investment I can think of that many people either love
or hate reflexively, almost without regard to market performance: gold. And,
to a lesser degree, silver. It’s strange that these two metals provoke
such powerful psychological reactions – especially among people who
dislike them. Nobody has an instinctive hatred of iron, copper, aluminum or
cobalt. The reason, of course, is that the main use of gold has always been
as money. And people have strong feelings about money. Let’s spend a
moment looking at how gold’s fundamentals fit in with the psychology of
the current market.
What Gold Is – and Why It’s Hated
Let
me first disclose that I’ve always been favorably inclined toward gold,
simply because I think money is a good thing. Not everyone feels that way,
however. Some, with a Platonic view, think that money and commercial activity
in general are degrading and beneath the “better” sort of people
– although they’re a little hazy about how mankind rose above the
level of living hand-to-mouth, grubbing for roots and berries. Some think
it’s “the root of all evil,” a view that reflects a certain
attitude toward the material world in general. Some (who have actually read
St. Paul) think it’s just the love of money that’s the root of
all evil. Some others see the utility of money but think it should be controlled
somehow – as if only the proper authorities knew how to manage the
dangerous substance.
From
an economic viewpoint, however, money is just a medium of exchange and a
store of value. Efforts to turn it into a political football invariably are a
sign of a hidden agenda or perhaps a psychological aberration. But, that
said, money does have a moral as well as an economic significance. And
it’s important to get that out in the open and have it understood. My
view is that money is a high moral good. It represents all the good things
you hope to have, do and provide in the future. In a manner of speaking,
it’s distilled life. That’s why it’s important to have a sound money, one that isn’t subject to political
manipulation.
Over
the centuries many things have been used as money, prominently including
cows, salt and seashells. Aristotle thought about this in the 4th century BCE
and arrived at the five characteristics of a good money:
- It should be
durable (which is why, say, wheat isn’t a good money – it
rots).
- It should be
divisible (which is why artwork isn’t a good
money – you can’t cut up the Mona Lisa for change).
- It should be
convenient (which is why lead isn’t a good
money – it just takes too much to be of value).
- It should be
consistent (which is one reason why land can’t be money –
each piece is different).
- And it should
have value in itself (which is why paper money leads to trouble).
Of
the 92 naturally occurring elements, gold (secondarily silver) has proved the
best money. It’s not magic or superstition, any more than it is for
iron to be best for building bridges and aluminum for building airplanes.
Of
course we do use paper as money today, but only because it recently served as
a receipt for actual money. Paper money (currency) historically has a
half-life that depends on a number of factors. But it rarely lasts longer
than the government that issues it. Gold is the best money because it
doesn’t need to be “faith-based” or rely on a government.
There’s
much more that can be said on this topic, and it’s important to grasp
the essentials in order to understand the controversy about whether or not
gold is in a bubble. But this isn’t the place for an extended
explanation.
Keep
these things in mind, though, as you listen to the current blather from
talking heads about where gold is going. Most of them are just journalists,
reporters that are parroting what they heard someone else say. And the
“someone else” is usually a political apologist who works for a
government. Or a hack economist who works for a bank, the IMF or a similar
institution with an interest in the status quo of the last few generations.
You should treat almost everything you hear about finance or economics in the
popular media as no more than entertainment.
So
let’s take some recent statements, assertions and opinions that have
been promulgated in the media and analyze them. Many impress me as completely
uninformed, even stupid. But since they’re floating around in the infosphere, I suppose they need to be addressed.
Misinformation and Disinformation
Gold is expensive.
This
objection is worth considering – for any asset. In fact, it’s
critical. We can determine the price of almost anything fairly easily today,
but figuring out its value is as hard as it’s ever been. From the
founding of the U.S. until 1933, the dollar was defined as 1/20th of an ounce
of gold. From 1933 it was redefined as 1/35th of an ounce. After the 1971
dollar devaluation, the official price of the metal was raised to $42.22
– but that official number is meaningless, since nobody buys or sells
the metal at that price. More importantly, people have gotten into the habit
of giving the price of gold in dollars, rather than the value of the dollar
in gold. But that’s another subject.
Here’s
the crux of the argument. Before the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913,
a $20 bill was just a receipt for the deposit of one ounce of gold with the
Treasury. The U.S. official money supply equated more or less with the amount
of gold. Now, however, dollars are being created by the trillion, and nobody
really knows how many more of them are going to be shazammed
into existence.
It
is hard to determine the value of anything when the inch marks on your
yardstick keep drifting closer and closer together.
The smart money is long gone from gold.
This
is an interesting assertion that I find based on nothing at all. Who really
is the smart money? How do you really know that? And how do you know exactly
what they own (except for, usually, many months after the fact) or what they
plan on buying or selling? The fact is that very few billionaires (John
Paulson perhaps best known of them) have declared a major position in the
metal. Gold and gold stocks, as the following chart shows, are only a tiny
proportion of the financial world’s assets, either absolutely or
relative to where they've been in the past:
Gold is risky.
Risk
is largely a function of price. And, as a general rule, the higher the price
the higher the risk, simply because the supply is likely to go up and the
demand to go down – leading to a lower price. So, yes, gold is riskier
now, at $1,400, than it was at $700 or at $200. But even when it was at $35,
there was a well-known financial commentator named Eliot Janeway
(I always thought he was a fool and a blowhard) who was crowing that if the
U.S. government didn’t support it at $35, it would fall to $8.
In
any event, risk is relative. Stocks are very risky today. Bonds are ultra
risky. Real estate is in an ongoing bear market. And the dollar is on its way
to reaching its intrinsic value.
Yes,
gold is risky at $1,400. But it is actually less risky than most
alternatives.
Gold pays no interest.
This
is kind of true. But only in the sense that a $100 bill pays no interest. You
can get interest from anything that functions as money if it is lent out.
Interest is the time premium of money. You will not get interest from either
your $100 or from your gold unless you lend them to someone. But both the
dollars and the gold will earn interest if you lend them out. The problem is
that once you make a loan (even to a bank, in the form of a savings account),
you may not even get your principal back, much less the interest.
Gold pays no dividends.
Of
course it doesn’t. It also doesn't yield chocolate syrup. It’s a
ridiculous objection, because only corporations pay dividends. It’s
like expecting your Toyota in the driveway to pay a dividend, when only the
corporation in Japan can do so. But if you want dividends related to gold,
you can buy a successful gold mining stock.
Gold costs you insurance and storage.
This
is arguably true. But it’s really a sophistic misdirection to which
many people uncritically nod in agreement. You may very well want to insure
and professionally store your gold. Just as you might your jewelry, your
artwork and most valuable things you own. It’s even true of the share
certificates for stocks you may own. It’s true of the assets in your
mutual fund (where you pay for custody, plus a management fee).
You
can avoid the cost of insurance and storage by burying gold in a safe place
– something that’s not a practical option with most other
valuable assets. But maybe you really don’t want to store and insure
your gold, because the government may prove a greater threat than any common
thief. And if you pay storage and insurance, they’ll definitely know
how much you have and where it is.
Gold has no real use.
This
assertion stems from a lack of knowledge of basic chemistry as well as
economics. Yes, of course people have always liked gold for jewelry, and
that’s a genuine use. It’s also good for dentistry and
micro-circuitry. Owners of paper money, however, have found the stuff to be
absolutely worthless hundreds of times in many score of countries.
In
point of fact, gold is useful because it is the most malleable, the most
ductile and the most corrosion resistant of all metals. That means it’s finding new uses literally every day.
It’s also the second most conductive of heat and electricity, and the
second most reflective (after silver). Gold is a hi-tech metal for these
reasons. It can do things no other substance can and is part of the reason
your computer works so well.
But
all these reasons are strictly secondary, because gold’s main use has
always been (and I’ll wager will be again) as money. Money is its
highest and best use, and it’s an extremely important one.
The U.S. can, or will, sell its gold to pay its debt, depressing the
market.
I
find this assertion completely unrealistic. The U.S. government reports that
it owns 265 million ounces of gold. Let’s say that’s worth about
$400 billion right now. I’m afraid that’s chicken feed in
today’s world. It’s only a quarter of this year’s federal
deficit alone. It’s only half of one year’s trade deficit. It
represents only about 5% of the dollars outside the U.S. The U.S. government
may be the largest holder of gold in the world, but it owns less than 5% of
the approximately 6 billion ounces above ground.
From
the ‘60s until about 2000, most Western governments were selling gold
from their treasuries, working on the belief it was a “barbarous
relic.” Since then, governments in the advancing world – China,
India, Russia and many other ex-socialist states – have been buying massive
quantities.
Why?
Because their main monetary asset is U.S. dollars, and they have come to
realize those dollars are the unbacked liability of
a bankrupt government. They’re becoming hot potatoes, Old Maid cards.
But the dollars can be replaced with what? Sovereign wealth funds are using
them to buy resources and industries, but those things aren’t money.
And in the hands of bureaucrats, they’re guaranteed to be mismanaged. I
expect a great deal of gold buying from governments around the world over the
next few years. And it will be at much higher dollar prices.
High gold prices will bring on huge new production, which will depress
its price.
This
assertion shows a complete misunderstanding of the nature of the gold market.
Gold production is now about 82.6 million ounces per year and has been
trending slightly down for the last decade. That’s partly because at
high prices miners tend to mine lower-grade ore. And partly because the world
has been extensively explored, and most large, high-grade, easily exploited
resources have already been put into production.
But
new production is trivial relative to the 6 billion ounces now above ground,
which only increases by about 1.3% annually. Gold isn’t consumed like
wheat or even copper; its supply keeps slowly rising, like wealth in general.
What really controls gold’s price is the desire of people to hold it,
or hold other things – new production is a trivial influence.
That’s
not to say things can’t change. The asteroids have lots of heavy
metals, including gold; space exploration will make them available. Gigantic
amounts of gold are dissolved in seawater and will perhaps someday be
economically recoverable with biotech. It’s now possible to transmute
metals, fulfilling the alchemists dream; perhaps someday this will be
economic for gold. And nanotech may soon allow ultra-low-grade deposits of
gold (and every other element) to be recovered profitably. But these things
need not concern us as practical matters in the course of this bull market.
You should have only a small amount of gold, for insurance.
This
argument is made by those who think gold is only going to be useful if
civilization breaks down, when it could be an asset of last resort. In the
meantime, they say, do something productive with your money…
This
is poor speculative theory. The intelligent investor allocates his funds
where it’s likely they’ll provide the best return, consistent
with the risk, liquidity and volatility profile he wants to maintain. There
are times when you should be greatly overweight in a single asset class
– sometimes stocks, sometimes bonds, sometimes real estate, sometimes
what-have-you. For the last 12 years, it’s been wise to be overweight
in gold. You always want some gold, simply because it’s cash in the
most basic form. But ten years from now, I suspect that will be a minimum.
Right now it’s a maximum. The idea of keeping a constant, but
insignificant, percentage in gold impresses me as poorly thought out.
Interest rates are at zero; gold will fall as they rise.
In
principle, as interest rates rise, people tend to prefer holding currency
deposits. So they tend to sell other assets, including gold, to own
interest-earning cash. But there are other factors at work. What if the
nominal interest rate is 20%, but the rate of currency depreciation is 40%?
Then the real interest rate is minus 20%. This is more or less what happened
in the late ‘70s, when both nominal rates and gold went up together.
Right now governments all over the world are suppressing rates even while
they’re greatly increasing the amount of money outstanding; this will
eventually (read: soon) result in both much higher rates and a much higher
general price level. At some point high real rates will be a factor in ending
the gold bull market, but that time is many months or years in the future.
Gold sentiment is at an all-time high.
Although
gold prices are at an all-time high in nominal terms, they are still nowhere
near their highs in real terms, of about $2,500 (depending on how much
credibility you give the government’s CPI numbers), reached in 1980.
Gold sentiment is still quite subdued among the public; most of them barely
know it even exists.
Some
journalists like to point out that since there are a few (five, perhaps) gold
dispensing machines in the world, including one in the U.S., that
there’s a gold mania afoot. That’s ridiculous, although it shows
a slowly awakening interest among people with assets.
Journalists
also point to the numerous ads on late-night TV offering to buy old gold
jewelry (generally at around a 50% discount from its metal value) as a sign
of a gold bubble. But this is even more ridiculous, since the ads are
inducing the unsophisticated, cash-strapped booboisie
to sell the metal, not buy it.
You’ll
know sentiment is at a high when major brokerage firms are hyping newly
minted gold products, and Slime
Magazine (if it still exists) has a cover showing a golden bull
tearing apart the New York Stock Exchange. We’re a long way from that
point.
Mining stocks are risky.
This
is absolutely true. In general, mining is a horrible business. It requires
gigantic fixed capital expense to build the mine, but only after numerous,
expensive and unpredictable permitting issues are handled. Then the operation
is immovable and subject to every political risk imaginable, not infrequently
including nationalization. Add in continual and formidable technical issues
of every description, compounded by unpredictable fluctuations in the price
of the end product. Mining is a horrible business, and you’ll never
find Graham-Dodd investors buying mining stocks.
All
these problems (and many more that aren’t germane to this brief
article), however, make them excellent speculative vehicles from time to
time.
Mineral exploration stocks are very, very risky.
This
is very, very true. There are thousands of little public companies, and some
are just a couple steps up from a prospector wandering around with a mule.
Others are fairly sophisticated, hi-tech operations. Exploration companies
are often classed with mining companies, but they are actually very different
animals. They aren’t so much running a business as engaging in a very
expensive and long-odds treasure hunt.
That’s
the bad news. The good news is that they are not only risky but extraordinarily
volatile. The most you can lose is 100%, but the market cyclically goes up 10
to 1, with some stocks moving 1,000 to 1. That kind of volatility can be your
best friend. Speculating in these issues, however, requires both expertise
and a good sense of market timing. But they’re likely to be at the
epicenter of the gold bubble when it arrives – even though few actually
have any gold, except in their names.
Warren Buffett is a huge gold bear.
This
is true, but irrelevant – entirely apart from suffering from the
logical fallacy called “argument from authority.” But,
nonetheless, when the world’s most successful investor speaks,
it’s worth listening. Here's what Buffett recently said about gold in
an interview with Ben Stein, another goldphobe:
"You could take all the gold that's ever been mined, and it would fill a
cube 67 feet in each direction. For what that's worth at current gold prices,
you could buy all – not some, all
– of the farmland in the United States. Plus, you could buy 10 Exxon Mobils, plus have $1 trillion of walking-around money. Or
you could have a big cube of metal. Which would you take? Which is going to
produce more value?"
I’ve
long considered Buffett an idiot savant – a genius at buying stocks but
at nothing else. His statement is quite accurate, but completely meaningless.
The same could be said of the U.S. dollar money supply – or even of the
world inventory of steel and copper. These things represent potential but are
not businesses or productive assets in themselves. Buffett is certainly not
stupid, but he’s a shameless and intellectually dishonest sophist. And
although a great investor, he’s neither an economist
or someone who believes in free markets.
Gold is a religious statement.
Actually,
since most religions have an otherworldly orientation, they’re at least
subtly (and often stridently) anti-gold. But it is true that some promoters
of gold seem to have an Elmer Gantry-like style. That, however, can be said
of True Believers in anything, whether or not the belief itself has merit. In
point of fact, I think it’s more true to say goldphobes
suffer from a kind of religious hysteria, fervently believing in collectivism
in general and the state in particular, with no regard to counter-arguments.
Someone who understands why gold is money and why it is currently a good
speculative vehicle is hardly making a religious statement. More likely
he’s taking a scientific approach to economics and thinking for
himself.
So Where Are We?
So
these are some of the more egregious arguments against gold that are being
brought forward today. Most of them are propounded by knaves, fools or the
uninformed.
My
own view should be clear from the responses I’ve given above. But let
me clarify it a bit further. Historically – actually just up until the
decades after World War I, when world governments started issuing paper
currency with no relation to gold – the metal was cash, and it was used
as money everywhere, on a daily basis. I believe that will again be the case
in the fairly near future.
The
question is: At what price will that occur, relative to other things?
It’s not just a question of picking a dollar price, because the
relative value of many things – houses, food, commodities, labor
– have been distorted by a very long period of currency inflation,
increased taxation and very burdensome regulation that started at the
beginning of the last depression. Especially with the fantastic leaps in
technology now being made and breathtaking advances that will soon occur,
it’s hard to be sure exactly how values will realign after the Greater
Depression ends. And we can’t know the exact manner in which it will
end. Especially when you factor in the rise of China and India.
A
guess? I’ll say the equivalent of about $5,000 an ounce of
today’s dollars. And I feel pretty good about that number, considering
where we are in the current gold bull market. Classic bull markets have three
stages. We’ve long since left the “Stealth” stage –
when few people even remembered gold existed, and those who did mocked the
idea of owning it. We’re about to leave the “Wall of Worry”
stage, when people notice it and the bulls and bears
battle back and forth. I’ll conjecture that within the next year
we’ll enter the “Mania” stage – when everybody,
including governments, is buying gold, out of greed and fear. But also out of
prudence.
The
policies of Bernanke and Obama – but also of almost every other central
bank and government in the world – are not just wrong. These people
are, perversely, doing just the opposite of what should be done to cure the
problems that have built up over decades. One consequence of their actions
will be to ignite numerous other bubbles in various markets and countries. I
expect the biggest bubble will be in gold, and the wildest one in mining and exploration
stocks.
When
will I sell out of gold and gold stocks? Of course, they don’t ring a
bell at either the top or the bottom of the market. But I expect to be a
seller when there really is a bubble, a mania, in all things gold-related.
There’s a good chance that will coincide to some degree with a real
bottom in conventional stocks. I don’t know what level that might be on
the DJIA, but I’d think its average dividend yield might then be in the
6 to 8% area.
The
bottom line is that gold and its friends are no longer cheap, but they have a
long way – in both time and price – to run. Until they're done, I
suggest you be right and sit tight.
[If you
take the time to learn more about gold and silver, you’ll realize
quickly that both still have a long way to go in this bull market. And with
China – and other countries – ready to dump the flailing U.S.
dollar, it’s imperative to protect yourself with precious metals. Learn
more about China’s secret plot here.]
Doug Casey
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