Rickards Makes New Case for Gold, Predicts
$10,000 an Ounce
In his new book released yesterday, Jim Rickards, one of
the most astute observers of the modern financial system, predicts that the
gold price will rise to $10,000 per ounce. In The
New Case for Gold [1]
the author builds on arguments made in his two previous books, Currency
Wars and The Death of Money, which suggest the public is losing confidence in
paper money and will demand a form of gold standard.
Rickards targets the work at “antigold giants (such as
Paul Krugman, Nouriel Roubini and Martin Feldstein) [and] a younger
generation educated (or miseducated) to believe that gold has no place in a
monetary system.”
Rickards calculates the $10,000 per ounce level by
estimating the M1 money supply for a basket of nations, and assuming a 40
percent gold backing. While Rickards has made similar calculations in his
past work, The New Case for Gold is the first book in which he has gone on
the record with a hard projection. Rickards also notes that a projected gold
price calculation using M2 as the target money supply, with 100 percent
backing, gives an implied $50,000 per ounce level.
Ron Paul’s Old Case for Gold Gets Updated
Rickards’ new book was partly inspired by a minority
report titled The Case for Gold
[2]
. This report was written by Ron Paul and Lewis Lehrman for the US. Gold
Commission, which was set up by the Reagan administration during the early
1980s. Paul, who dissented from the commission’s findings that a gold
standard was not needed, later had his report published as a book by the Cato
Institute.
Rickards updates many of those reports’ arguments based
on developments of the past three decades, many of which are well-known to
the hard money community. These include the explosion of government spending
and borrowing and printing money, which have paralyzed the global economy to
the point that preservation of wealth is now far more important to astute
investors than attempts to expand it.
In that context, gold – which has been a historical store
of value for centuries – increases in relative importance, as do other
monetary metals such as silver, platinum, and palladium. Rickards suggests
that investors hold about 5 to 10 percent of investible assets in physical
precious metals held outside the banking system.
Fed Lacks Credibility, Digital Currency
Rickards’ two most convincing arguments relate to the
fact that global central banks are rapidly losing credibility, and that
increasing bans on the use of cash are forcing savers to keep money in an
increasingly vulnerable digitized financial system. Recent actions of the
Federal Reserve, ECB, and other monetary authorities, which essentially
involve massive wealth transfers of wealth from savers to borrowers, are
particularly questionable, not only for their fairness, but also for their
efficacy.
As Claudio Borio, head of the BIS’s economics department
noted in a Q1 report, “the latest turbulence has hammered home the message
that central banks have been overburdened for far too long post-crisis.
Market participants have taken notice. And their confidence in central banks’
healing powers has – probably for the first time – been faltering.
Policymakers, too, would do well to take notice.”
That said, Rickards’ concerns that digital forms of money
leave savers and investors vulnerable to hackers and international
governments – who can supposedly wipe out their savings with a click – is
less convincing. Rickards overlooks a far greater danger: savers’
vulnerability to their own governments seizing their assets through the use
of negative interest rates.
Conspiracy Theory: Is the Fort Knox Gold Actually
There?
Ultimately, what makes The New Case for Gold
priceless is Rickards himself, who brings to the table a pile of degrees in
everything from accounting to law and economics, coupled with a storyteller’s
instinct for a good yarn, a dry sense of humor, and a wonderful ability to
think outside the box.
For example, Rickards pooh-poohs one of the hard money
community’s pet theories: that the US Federal Reserve, which has not been
audited in decades, does not hold much of the gold that it actually claims to
have in depositories such as Fort Knox.
Rickards claims that the Fed’s opaque gold leasing
transactions are in fact nothing more than paper transactions. “The gold may
be leased to others through the BIS,” says Rickard, “yet that does not mean
US gold is not in US custody. If gold were as valuable as (some people)
claim, why would the US government let the gold out of its sight?”
Food for thought.
[1] https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/the-new...
[2] https://mises.org/library/case-gold
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