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Following the Trend

IMG Auteur
Publié le 29 février 2012
775 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 3 minutes
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Gold and silver are headed higher propelled by a powerful bull trend. Gold is climbing on its way to new multiyear highs, buoyed by massive government intervention in the capital markets. We will see gold exceed its 2011 highs this year. Silver will also soar to new highs.


What is behind this bullish prediction? Can we pinpoint the cause and effect relationship to the rise in the precious metals? Is now the time to buy gold and silver?


The answers to these questions come with a firm understanding of the dynamics of the business cycle, and the power of market trends. As we know from Mises and Hayek, interest rates have a profound effect on capital investment. Left to the free market, interest rates are determined by the supply of credit (a proxy for the savings rate) and investors’ willingness to risk placing capital in the market (a proxy of the return on capital). And as we know from Adam Smith, because investors act in their own self-interest, capital is allocated in free markets very efficiently. Investors tend to put more capital in “winners” and are quick to cut the losses in “losers”.


But if free markets are so efficient, how can there be downturns in the economy, ranging from recession to depression? The cause of most economic downturns has been manipulation in the markets, typically by government agencies that seek to “manage” one or more segments of the economy by controlling interest rates, prices or both. Governments use coercion under the color of law to achieve their ends. Government intervention distorts natural interest rates and spoils price discovery, which leads to malinvestment and market bubbles. Downturns and displacement occur when economic bubbles burst.


The Federal Reserve has been one of the chief market manipulators. By setting interest rates and controlling the availability of credit and money, the Fed distorts the natural demand for money and credit, which obscures purposeful capital investment and contaminates prices for labor and commodities, often with disastrous results. When the Fed feeds artificial credit into the economy by lowering interest rates, it spurs investments in projects that eventually fail. The high-tech and dot com and housing manias all were fueled by decades of easy Fed money and credit. In each case these artificially induced booms collapsed with massive loss of wealth and devastation of the general economy.


The data support the theory of cause and effect. The dot come run up coincided with a money supply run up which began in 1995. The money supply slightly flattened in 1996 and then zoomed up again in 1997, peaking at a 15% increase in January of 1999. The rate of increase began to fall precipitously thereafter, which popped the dot com bubble. The housing bubble, created by easy money and social engineering in the 1990’s popped in 2007, creating the Great Recession. The Fed and the Treasury added an unprecedented $2.3 Trillion to the money supply in 2008-2010 in the name of economic stimulus. The Fed’s MZM money supply measured $907 Billion in 1980 and is reported to be $10.8 Trillion as of this month. The MZM does not reflect the $16 Trillion in bailout loans the Fed provided to large US banks in 2008-2011. There is no doubt that judgments of investors and entrepreneurs are distorted by massive injections of money and credit by the Federal Reserve.




So what does easy money and credit from the central bank have to do with the price of gold? Well, every Dollar the central bank creates out of thin air debases the value of Dollars already in circulation. That is the nature of fiat currency. Because gold is priced in Dollars, it takes more Dollars to buy the same amount of gold with every new weaker paper Dollar printed. We have seen the price of gold climb along with the money supply, accelerating its climb in 2002 coincident with the fall in the Dollar.




We are now seeing technical breakouts in gold and silver. Last week, gold broke out of a bullish head-and-shoulders pattern dating back to November 2011. The price target from this pattern is just over $2000/oz. Silver followed last week, with a breakout from its own bullish head-and-shoulders pattern indicating a return to its September 2011 highs.


The trend in precious metals is up from here. Now is the time to buy gold, silver and selected gold and silver stocks.


Investors from around the world benefit from timely market analysis on gold and silver and portfolio recommendations contained in The Gold Speculator investment newsletter, which is based on the principles of free markets, private property, sound money and Austrian School economics.



 

 



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Oooops, You didn't factor in the communist bank called the FED.
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Chris C. - 29/02/2012 à 16:00 GMT
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