For the Last Time, Is Gold in a Bubble?

http://www.caseyresearch.com/articles/3479/for-the-last-time,-is-gold-in-a-bubble/

Jeff Clark, Senior Editor,


While a few mainstream outlets are coming around to at least acknowledging
gold’s stellar run, most remain skeptical or outright bearish. And the
blasphemy they purport is that gold is in a bubble.

Let’s settle it, right now, and shut these naysayers up.

Gold returned 10 (and as much as 14) times your money in the 1970s bull
market, and the Nasdaq advanced over 1,900% during its run. Our current gold
price is up about 400%.

In fact, the Nasdaq gained 182% in the final year of its peak, and gold
surged 80% in four weeks during the blow-off top of January 1980. None of
this is happening to our current gold price.

Note to doubters: we’ve got a *long* way to go before we start legitimately
using the “bubble” word.

Besides, the fact that these skeptics aren’t buying – and don’t even own any
gold in the first place – is further proof we’re not in a bubble. Ever
notice none of them claim to own it?

And they definitely need to catch up on world affairs. The World Gold
Council (WGC) reported that Russia, Venezuela, the Philippines, and
Kazakhstan all bought gold in the first quarter. Central bank sales,
meanwhile, remain depressed.

Russian President Medvedev won’t quit his quest to move international
reserve assets away from the dollar. And his country’s central bank is
backing up his words; it increased its gold reserves by $1.8 billion and
decreased its currency reserves by $6.6 billion so far this year.

China, the world’s largest gold producer, already buys all the gold produced
within its country. But the WGC recently forecasted that overall gold
consumption in China could double in the coming decade, a demand that
production certainly won’t be able to match.

The Iran/Israel showdown appears closer almost every week. As further
evidence that each side is preparing for conflict, Saudi Arabia recently
agreed to permit Israel to use a narrow corridor of its airspace to shorten
the distance for a bombing run on Iran – all done with the agreement of the
U.S government. Simultaneously, the UN Security Council imposed a new round
of sanctions on Tehran. Nobody appears to be backing down.

And the current run in gold is with no inflation. Core CPI has fallen to the
lowest level since the mid-1960s – but what happens when inflation does set
in? And what if it’s as bad or worse as the 14% rate we got in the ‘70s?
Sure, deflation is the immediate concern, but with a U.S. federal debt of
$13 trillion, unfunded future liabilities exceeding $50 trillion, and a
current budget deficit of over 10% of GDP, a massive debasement of the
dollar is virtually ensured, triggering an onslaught of inflation. It’s
coming.

With all these concerns, these guys don’t want to own gold?

Bubble, schmubble. Stocks are vulnerable, bonds are toast, currencies are
fiat. Other than cash, where are you going to put money right now?

Gold could correct, of course, and I frankly hope it
does.<http://www.caseyresearch.com/articles/3178/why-i-hope-gold-falls-to-$1,000/>I’m
not counting on it, though. The price is just as likely to head the
other direction. But if it does temporarily fall, while the bubble-heads are
smirking, I’ll be buying.

Someday I think we’ll be reversing roles.


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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