*This is not a free market

*The European Central Bank (ECB) reportedly ended up having to intervene in
the bond market on Friday, after Irish bond yields spiked (in other words,
investors suddenly developed an even more pronounced aversion to lending the
Irish government money).

The source of the sudden spasm of fear? A Barclays Capital research note
suggesting that Ireland might eventually have to get "financial assistance
from the EU-IMF" if there were "unexpected losses in the financial sector".

We've come to something when a piece of analyst research is all it takes to
rock confidence in a developed world sovereign bond market. Analysts churn
this sort of stuff out every day. And it was hardly relentlessly damning. A
healthy market could take this sort of thing on the chin.

Instead, we had the IMF rushing to deny that the country was in trouble. Or
at least, any more trouble than it's already in: "we do not envision that
IMF financing will be needed".

And of course, we had the ECB stepping in to the bond market to prop prices
up. The Financial Times report on the purchase says that "traders said the
intervention by the ECB was small - in the tens of millions of euros", but
that's not really the point. After all, if prices had fallen harder, we can
only assume that the ECB would have upped its purchases accordingly.

The point is, it's not a free market. Whether or not you think that's a bad
thing (I think it's bad, but lots of people seem to be quite happy for
governments to be embedding themselves in the markets) is neither here nor
there. What is for sure, is that you can't take a view on these markets
without trying to incorporate what central banks might do next. That
political dimension has always existed. But now it takes precedence over any
economic considerations, which makes 'investing' a gamble.

As anonymous blogger 'Tyler Durden' puts it on the Zero Hedge website, we
know that central banks are openly piling into currency and bond markets
every day. Maybe it's only a matter of time before we find them doing the
same to equity markets. Markets "have now become merely a venue for global
central banks to conduct domestic policy, and have lost all traditional
capital formation and forward looking properties."

*Why gold is hard for governments to manipulate*

This is why people are buying gold. The great thing about gold is that it's
a pretty hard market for governments to manipulate. Before I get a flood of
angry comments from those who believe the market is being suppressed, let me
explain.

Governments want most asset prices to stay high. If you want the price of
things like houses and bank debt and government debt to stay high, then
there's an easy solution - print money and buy them. It's not very healthy
in the long run, but if you're not too worried about that, then it's easy to
prop prices up.

Trouble is, governments don't want high gold prices. They'd rather the gold
price stayed low. A high gold price is a clear warning that paper currencies
- which are ultimately just government-backed promises - are losing their
value.

But suppressing the gold price clearly isn't easy to do, as the past ten
years demonstrate. Even if there is a grand cartel trying to keep the yellow
metal down, they're not doing a very good job of it.

When Gordon Brown flogged off Britain's gold roughly ten years ago, the
price hit a bottom. But now, with gold roughly five times as expensive, if
Britain decided to sell the rest, I suspect we'd have a queue of willing
buyers.

The fact is, the only way for central bankers to bring the gold bull market
to an end, is the honest way. They have to raise interest rates above the
rate of inflation, and restore the value of their paper currencies. People
have to be convinced once again that paper currencies offer a better return
on their savings than gold does.

Call me cynical, but I can't see this happening any time in the near future.


*How high can gold go?*

So how high could gold go? I'm not going to talk about where it's going to
be next week or next month - I'll leave that to my colleague Dominic Frisby.
And when any asset class hits fresh highs, you've always got to be aware of
the potential for a correction. But Tim Price, who writes our Price Report
newsletter<http://clicks.fspeletters.com//t/AQ/AAKbOw/AAKkKA/AAJ44w/AQ/AqM2Wg/eR3Z>,
last week put out an interesting piece about the Dow Jones / gold price
ratio. Take a look at the chart below, which shows the value of the Dow
Jones index divided by the gold price.



[image: image]


As you can see, says Tim: "At the bottom of previous equity bear markets /
gold bull markets, the Dow / gold ratio has reached 2.1 (c. 1904); 2.0 (c.
1932); 3.1 (c. 1975) and 1.0 (c. 1981). It currently sits at around 8.3. The
trillion dollar question is: how low can it go?"

Tim's view is that the most likely way for the ratio to bottom out, is for
"gold prices to continue to rally; equity markets to continue to fall; and
both markets meet each other somewhere in the middle."

If you're looking to put a price on it, then James Ferguson (by no means a
'gold bug') told readers of his Model Investor newsletter last week that
judging by the technical picture at least, "the realistic three to six month
target has to be above $1,500." I have to say, that sounds a pretty punchy
call to me. But the point is - gold is still a 'buy' here.

*Safe Harbor Statement:*

*Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations &
outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company
prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated
on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax
regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which
the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate
movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand
and supply constraints.*
**
*Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.**
*

**
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