I rather wish all those other countries, governments and institutions with un payable debts would just get on with it and go over the brink. Then we could purge, move on and get this financial crisis over with. All these policies and loans and bail-out funds to pull whoever or whatever back from the brink do, is to delay the inevitable. Meanwhile, innocent bystanders get caught in the crossfire of volatility. And the rest of us feel like we’re waiting in some kind of losses pending tray.
Gold, however, was this week on the brink. On the brink of what? Well, on the brink of… going lower. I have drawn a red line on the chart below at $1,525 an ounce. That red line is your brink. Gold has tested that line three times now. It has so far proved support. I see it as a big, big level. And I really hope it holds.

Why the $1,525 level matters
Coming back to that $1,525 level in gold… Why am I so keen for it to hold ? This next chart shows gold since 2000. The blue line is the 252-day moving average. There are around 252 trading days in a year, so effectively that blue line is the average price for the past year. Since 2001, gold has only gone through that blue line and stayed there for a significant period of time once. That was in 2008.The problem is, these last few weeks it’s done it again. It’s sunk beneath.

If it doesn’t, I think we’re looking at something more serious – a meltdown of asset prices, not just for gold, but across the board.

The red line marks the top of gold’s channel. The blue dotted lines mark the consolidation periods from interim high to breakout to new high. The green dotted lines mark the period from the interim high to the low from which it sets off on its next run. The longest duration from high to low was in 2008. It lasted nine months. This bear phase has been about eight months. So we’re in the timeframe for a low. I’m willing to be patient. Gold remains attractive. Although it has had a less-than-stellar year so far……
Hang on to Gold
The beauty of gold is that it offers a chance to protect against both deflation and inflation. It’s difficult to point to gold’s credentials as a deflationary hedge because prior historic periods of deflation occurred when its price was fixed. The most recent deflationary period was limited to Japan, at a time when the rest of the world economy was booming. But as deflation (in financial asset terms) is associated with acute financial stress, it seems reasonable to expect gold to provide some diversifying relief from that stress. Particularly because (unlike sovereign debt, for example) it is nobody else’s liability.
And as an inflationary hedge, it is worth noting that gold has remained a store of value for literally thousands of years. Gold is also now getting attention from the unlikeliest of sources. Bond fund manager Bill Gross of Pimco recently wrote: “As [investors] question the value of much of the $200 trillion which comprises our current [monetary] system, they move marginally elsewhere – to real assets such as land, gold and tangible things, or to cash and a figurative mattress where at least their money is readily accessible.” In short, investors are faced with a choice between vast abundance (in paper assets and all things debt-like), and genuine scarcity (tangible and real assets, especially gold). In a de-leveraging world and in light of the ongoing financial crisis, it makes sense to vote for scarcity

In case you need a reminder, the battle lines are drawn between paper (you know, all the promises written down on bits of paper) and real things. I use the gold price as a barometer of which side is winning. And gold confirms we’re in the middle of the ‘great grind’.
For the US Fed, it’s a matter of timing. With presidential elections looming in November, the generals need to wait. But make no mistake, they’re preparing for war. And in this war, they fight fire with fire, or should I say paper with paper. That is, they plan to cure the economic ills (too much debt) with more of the same. Ben Bernanke is utterly convinced that this will work. The Fed’s statement said they “will provide additional accommodation as needed to promote a stronger economic recovery” – so the only question is when?
Their tactics are increasingly desperate….The likes of Ben Bernanke thought they had this battle won before it even started. Simply issue more paper and hey presto – the battle is won.But here’s the thing. They can’t get the cash to flow round the economy. Sure, you can flood your chosen banks with cash. You can even tell them you want the new money lent out and into the economy. But telling a bank what to do is one thing – getting them to do it is quite another. And anyway, the banks need the money now. They’ve got to reimburse the customers and to pay fines for malpractice on other things like Libor rigging.
Money is not flowing as it should. Right across the globe, economies are stagnating. Governments, the public and corporations already have enough debt… they’re trying to pay it off, if anything. But of course, that won’t stop the central planners. Convinced that they are fighting a just cause, and convinced of their state of the art weaponry, they’re still up for a fight. Given that the authorities have started down the road of money printing, I think it’s inevitable they’ll continue with more of the same. It’s impossible to know exactly how this pans out for your investments. Economics isn’t science after all. It’s not physics or maths – there are no natural laws you can fall back on -And this war is based on authorities dogma , that they can control economic growth with monetary policy.
That means zero interest rates to drive new debt formation. And because that doesn’t work, it means printing money to help create negative interest rates (where inflation outpaces returns on savings). The central banks are primed for the next assault. The Fed and the ECB acting in unison will be quite something to behold. To my mind, the scene is set for gold’s next run-up. The more paper the planners throw into battle, the higher gold tends to go…
one could recall in more detail about the currency crisis in the Austro-Hungarian empire1919: the year another European currency union died. There are some interesting parallels between what happened then and what’s happening now. The concern is that if Greece is finally forced out of the euro, the crisis will burn quicker and brighter than ever before. Like Austrian and Yugoslavian savers in 1918, there’ll be a race to evacuate wealth from the periphery before it’s too late. Indeed, money is already fleeing the area. Spain and Italy are the latest countries in the market’s crosshairs and savers there are migrating to gold in a large way as we speak…….
(EconMatters Note: Here’s a very bullish technical view on Gold for your reference)
Courtesy Shamik Bhose, Sharps Pixleyvia Commodites Now (EconMatters author archive here)
The views and opinions expressed herein are the author’s own, and do not necessarily reflect those of EconMatters.
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