I’ve been thinking about gold. Actually I’ve been thinking about investments, image, monetization, media coverage, and Armageddon timing. The goldbugs, those investment professionals who push investing in this yellow precious metal, have been coming out of hibernation. We are seeing more media coverage in random commentaries about gold. I’ve even received a few emails from readers laden with questions. While I am hardly knowledgeable in this area, I have been fascinated by gold and silver as they relate to history, economics, monetary policy, and gaudy celebrity “bling” jewelry.
You see precious metals are really kind of flukes in the broad spectrum of investments and economic history. They as objects are pretty much just… there. I mean “in and of themselves”… you can’t eat them, they don’t warm you, they don’t shelter you, and they don’t (comfortably) cloth you. Their value over time was substantially derived from image and perception. “Good as gold” surfaces as a buzz phrase for the most part only in times of change and danger. The so-called “intrinsic value” of them becomes a factor when there are fears of rising inflation, political instability, and monetary stability. Every twenty or so years, they spring to life. There is a flurry of activity. Prices spike. The crisis prompting their resurrection fades. Prices subside. They return to another prolonged slumber.
Money can be made via investments in precious metals, but you really have to know what you are doing. Whether one actually purchases (and takes possession of) the metals via ownership of coins or bullion, speculates thru futures contracts, or buys stocks in companies who explore, refine, market, or trade the metals; timing of the transactions is critical. Things tend to languish, and then BOOM, there is a meteoric rise (or decline). Who can forget back to early in 1980 when the Hunts of Texas took silver prices to celestial records and then were forced to ante-up for a BILLION dollar margin call in one day? Gold prices escalated in harmony with silver back then in that metals’ boomlet – usually it is the other way around. The time to buy is before the headlines hit; the time to sell is as they hit! THAT is how the real money is made – getting in low and getting out high. Holding only tends to COST the investor.
Recent press has chronicled ongoing erosion of the US dollar
relative to the other currencies of the world. A Buck now only gets you
about seven-tenths of a Euro - or less than one-half of a British
Pound. Ongoing status of the US Dollar as the world’s reserve currency
is highly open to question. There have even been news stories (not
reported in the US) that Israel now wants its mega-millions of annual
US aid tendered in Euros so as not to be forced to absorb any future
currency translation losses!
The US effectively went off the
gold standard under Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930’s; the final nail in
the coffin for any fixed pegging of “Bullion-to-Bucks” occurred under
Richard Nixon in 1971. Since then… there has been no true disadvantage
to a fiat US Dollar (one having no intrinsic backing) as virtually all
of other world currencies were likewise “fiat monies” (having no
intrinsic backing either). The mere fact that so much paper currency is
being printed/ circulated worldwide has raised the alarm that the
“system” of the central banks is broken and corrupt. There are
movements now afoot to return to “the good old days” of currencies
backed by gold and/or silver. While such “hard metal backing” did
promote a more stable money supply in the sense that Uncle $ugar’s gold
or silver certificates did not lose 96% of their purchasing power as
have the Federal Reserve Notes since their creation in 1913, it was
virtually impossible to fluctuate the money supply – upwards or
downwards – to meet the needs of swings in the economic cycles which
are natural occurrences in history.
The present specters of
impending runaway inflation, global political unrest, absence of any
hopes for a peace in the Middle East, further declining interest rates,
energy availability concerns, and roller coaster valuations in the
world’s stock/equity markets; all will once again push gold stories to
the front page. Will “good as gold” prove to be any answer? Time will
tell… I’m Fred Cederholm and I’ve been thinking. You should be
thinking, too.