Simon Black On “The Coming Boom In Gold Prices…”

Authored by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

In June 1884, a local farmer named Jan Gerritt Bantjes discovered gold on his property in a quiet corner of the South African Republic.

Though no one had any idea at the time, Bantjes’ farm was located on a vast geological formation known as the Witwatersrand Basin… which just happens to contain the world’s largest known gold reserves.

Within a few months, other local farmers started discovering gold… kicking off a full-fledged gold rush.

Just over a decade later, South Africa became the largest gold producer in the world… and the city of Johannesburg grew from absolutely nothing to a thriving boomtown.

This area is singlehandedly responsible for 40% of all the gold discovered in human history – some 2 billion ounces (or $2.6 trillion of wealth at today’s gold price).

And while the Witwatersrand Basin is still being mined to this day, it’s not as active as it used to be.

Gold production in Witwatersrand peaked in 1970, when miners pulled a whopping 1,000 metric tons of gold out of the ground.

A few decades later in 2016, the same area produced just 166 tonnes– a decline of 83%.

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That’s not unusual in the natural resource business.

Whereas it takes nature hundreds of millions of years to deposit minerals deep in the earth’s crust, human beings only require a few decades to pull most of it out.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/goldprice.png?itok=CpCWAJ4e

This creates the constant need for mining companies to explore for more and more major discoveries.

Problem is– that’s not happening. Mining companies aren’t finding anymore vast deposits.

According to Pierre Lassonde, founder of the gold royalty giant Franco-Nevada and former head of Newmont Mining–

If you look back to the 70s, 80s and 90s, in every one of those decades, the industry found at least one 50+ million-ounce gold deposit, at least ten 30+ million ounce deposits, and countless 5 to 10 million ounce deposits.

But if you look at the last 15 years, we found no 50-million-ounce deposit, no 30 million ounce deposit and only very few 15 million ounce deposits.

So where are those great big deposits we found in the past? How are they going to be replaced? We don’t know.

Bottom line: gold discoveries are dwindling.

Part of the reason for this is that mining companies aren’t investing as much money in exploration.

According to S&P Global Market Intelligence, major mining companies (excluding those in the iron ore business) have been cutting their exploration budgets for years.

By the end of 2016, exploration budgets hit an 11-year low.

And this has clearly had an effect on new discoveries.

This is all because the gold price has been relatively flat for the past several years.

Investors have lost interest. And the mining companies, eager to cut costs, have pared back their exploration budgets as a result.

But this is where it gets interesting: natural resources are cyclical. They go through extreme periods of BOOM and BUST.

When gold prices are high, major mining companies scramble for new discoveries.

Eventually when they start mining those deposits, though, the supply of gold increases, pushing prices down.

As the price falls, the miners’ profit margins fall, which causes investors to lose interest and the miners to reduce production.

This causes supply to fall, prices to increase, and the cycle starts all over again.

In a way it’s almost comical. And that brings us to today. Well, technically yesterday.

We’ve been seeing for more than a year that interest rates have been rising.

Yesterday afternoon the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note surpassed 3% for the first time since 2014.

And oil prices have been rising steadily as well.

Financial markets don’t like this combination– it means that inflation is coming. Big time. And stocks plummeted worldwide as a result.

Now, that immediate reaction was probably a bit too panicky.

But the deep concern that inflation is coming (or has already arrived) is completely valid.

Inflation is a HUGE problem. And the traditional hedge in times of inflation is GOLD.

But remember– new gold discoveries have collapsed in the past 15 years.

And, as Lassonde said above, there are few discoveries on the horizon to make up the difference.

These companies can’t just go out and start a new mine, either. Even if they found a promising deposit, with all of the bureaucratic red tape, it would take seven to nine years to start producing gold.

So when demand for gold really starts to heat up, the supply won’t be there.

And this could really cause the gold price to soar. (Silver could rise even more… but we’ll save that for another time.)

Now, there are plenty of small, highly speculative companies, known as ‘junior miners’ who specialize in exploring for new deposits.

And when the gold market is in a frenzy, juniors with great deposits tend to be acquired at ridiculous prices by the major miners.

Now, I’m not suggesting you load up on junior miners– you can make a lot of money if you know what you’re doing, and LOSE a lot of money if you don’t know what you’re doing.

These are tiny, extremely high-risk companies often run by sharks and con-men.

As Doug Casey writes in his novel Speculator, they’re great and taking YOUR money and THEIR dream, and turning it into THEIR money and YOUR dream.

Fortunately there are safer ways to take advantage of this looming imbalance between supply and demand in the gold market.

Physical coins are an easy option.

Gold coins typically sell at a price that’s higher than the market price of gold– to account for the work involved in minting the coin.

This price difference is known as the ‘premium’.

And when gold becomes popular, the premiums often increase too.

This means you can make money both from the rise in gold prices, as well as the increased premiums.

Avoid anything obscure– stick to the most popular gold coins like Canadian Maple Leafs.

And to continue learning how to ensure you thrive no matter what happens next in the world, I encourage you to download our free Perfect Plan B Guide.

 

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23 Comments
diogenes
diogenes
April 26, 2018 10:07 am

I think the value of gold will be based on the crash of fiat currencies not on supply.

Gilnut
Gilnut
  diogenes
April 26, 2018 1:30 pm

Ding, ding, ding. We have a winnah!!!

Seriously though, goldbugs seem to think that if the inherent value of fiat currency is zero, then that makes gold’s true worth infinite. That is not the case.

Currency provides a measurement of worth/value, not much more. Gold as a currency is a more constant measurement than anything we have come up with so far. Example, an ounce of gold still buys you the same equivalent as it did in the 1800’s, the only thing that’s changed in measurement is the ‘value’ of the dollar. The more the dollar is debased, the more gold ‘seems’ to be worth, when in reality it’s not gold changing it’s worth it’s the dollar. Talking about PM’s in dollar terms (or any fiat) is about as valuable as talking about dollars in broccoli terms.

kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon and I-LUV-CO2
kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon and I-LUV-CO2
April 26, 2018 10:38 am

GOLD……………..when Fiat crashes, I will go to the Supermarket and they will honor my gold 1 oz coin valued at what?; certainly not dollars if that crashed; wonder what kitco.com will use for value?; if it is Yuan, what good will that do me?

Anyway, the grocery stores will be closed after their 3 day inventory runs out and the trucks have stopped.

Should I get a loan for $50,000 and buy Gold bars? or buy 1 oz Gold coins?; or just say Fuck it.

steve
steve

Kokoda,
Buy some junk silver for simple transactions (pre- 64 dimes and quarters). Even if nothing happens (VERY DOUBTFUL) 100 years from now that junk silver will be worth what you paid at the very least. I’ve said this many times here at TBP. When gas was .25/gal you could use a quarter to buy that gallon. The same pre 64 quarter will still buy that gallon of gas 70 years later. You can’t lose and that’s a winning strategy.

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
April 26, 2018 11:14 am

I dont see anything happening with gold. Silver was breaking out last week, but completely reversed and dumped this week. If it can somehow reverse the damage done so far this week and beat last weeks high, it will start looking bullish. But it has pulled this “almost-breakout” type pattern several times over the past year. It really looks like someone is shorting heavily into every such breakout attempt.

Persnickety
Persnickety
  Iconoclast421
April 26, 2018 1:39 pm

“It really looks like someone is shorting heavily into every such breakout attempt.”

Ridiculous. You tinfoil-hat wearing conspiracy nut. This is like claiming that a “deep state” exists, or that the FBI is susceptible to political influence. Absurd.

steve
steve
  Iconoclast421
April 26, 2018 3:16 pm

TPTB will naked short silver with BS paper contracts until they can’t. And won’tcha be glad you own a bunch when that happens.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
April 26, 2018 11:33 am

When white South Africans discovered gold (and gems), it sealed their doom….They imported lots of black labor to work in the mines, and allowed lots of treasonous European leftists to immigrate. Now they see the result, with genocide in their own country threatening.

Rather Not
Rather Not
April 26, 2018 11:46 am

While I agree with the forecast, I disagree with the logic. Mining is almost irrelevant to the amount of gold for sale, there are literally many decades of mine supply available for sale…at the right price. The supply/demand balance matters, the demand is people who want gold, the supply is people who have gold to sell, and miners selling newly mined gold is a literally tiny percentage of gold available for sale because there are literally millenia of previously mined above ground supply.

Far more relevant is the difference between holding gold, and holding a promise from someone to give you gold in a world where counterparty risk is exploding in a monetary reset. There are a lot of people, a majority in the west, who think they hold gold because it doesn’t have counterparty risk, but actually hold a promise to give them gold later from a counterparty. How many people ‘own gold’ through GLD, or even directly own ‘unallocated gold’ from a bullion bank?

Setting aside jewelry, there is probably more privately ‘held’ gold in the west that is a promise, not gold.

Mark H
Mark H
  Rather Not
April 26, 2018 2:38 pm

This article really irritated me – it seems like another permabull trying to talk the market up. You saved me some time by writing the comment I would have! Roughly 190,000 tonnes of gold ever mined. Maybe 150,000 tonnes still easily accessible (and therefore potentially tradeable)? Global annual production a bit over 2,000 tonnes. New supply is a drop in the ocean and should be ignored.

Like everything else, Gold trades on a supply:demand basis. In the physical market the supply side here is potentially 75x what mines deliver each year. Ludicrously, a paper market currently defines the price – the paper supply vs the paper demand – which is massively bigger than the physical market. I’m a gold bull, and looking at gold as a long-term store of value. But it also has the potential to be a very rewarding insurance policy too, should fiat collapse, which it deserves to. My bet is that confidence in the paper market for gold will collapse just before confidence in fiat collapses, at which point we may see some big upside. (It’ll be interesting to see if we get an increase in the demand for physical when the first petro-yuan futures contracts start to expire in a few months time). But first and foremost gold seems to me like a rather boring store of value in a world going increasingly insane.

steve
steve
  Mark H
April 26, 2018 3:27 pm

Mark H,
You want something “sexy”? Get some Bitcoin-good luck. If you want “boring” get gold. 5000 years of success is rather boring; bring it on

steve
steve
  Rather Not
April 26, 2018 3:23 pm

Rather Not,
Yes, paper gold is for fools. If you don’t have in your possession you don’t own it and they will re-pay in fiat. OTOH, there is literally a $QUADRILLION of paper out there that will be looking for security that 5000 years of gold/silver has provided. If you don’t get it now, forggetabouit later. Supply will be wiped out in a day.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 26, 2018 1:21 pm

The “Boom” in gold is always coming.

It just never quite seems to arrive.

Persnickety
Persnickety
  Anonymous
April 26, 2018 1:40 pm

Much like Brazil is always the up-and-coming country of tomorrow, and we’re always 10 years away from global starvation, and/or energy from nuclear fusion too cheap to meter.

steve
steve
  Anonymous
April 26, 2018 3:41 pm

Anon,
It sure as hell arrived in Venezuela. Gold went from 14,000 Bolivar to 88,000,000 Bolivar in about 3 months, -how’s that for arriving in style?
https://www.goldbroker.com/charts/gold-price/vef scroll to 2nd chart

Anonymous
Anonymous
  steve
April 26, 2018 4:15 pm

I don’t use Bolivar’s.

Maybe you do, but I don’t.

All of my finances require dollars.

Mark
Mark
  Anonymous
April 26, 2018 6:21 pm

Anonymous says:
April 26, 2018 at 1:21 pm

Are you kidding…if you bought in the late 90’s early 2000’s and took profit along the march before the 2011 Bankster beat down you made up to close to a 600% profit.

Gold was the trade of that decade and Silver may be the trade of the decade we are in.

Probably why JP Morgan has bought a ridiculous amount of physical silver.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mark
April 26, 2018 6:56 pm

“If”.

Hindsight is always 20/20.

You can easily make the same argument about Bitcoin over the last year or so.

Long term MA’s are what tell the real story, not the fad fueled occasional spikes that can never be anticipated and certainly not predicted.

But it’s your money, do whatever you want with it.

Mark
Mark
  Anonymous
April 26, 2018 10:40 pm

It wasn’t an “if” I did it.

And I went back in after they pulled it back and bought back in. I will wait until the coming crash for the next profit taking opportunity…one year…five years…it doesn’t matter.

I’m a debt free/saver hard asset guy and…I go long…Y.A. Tittle was my boyhood hero.

I agree with Bitcoin reading about it…but I have never touched it…doesn’t have the 6,000 year history, I can’t buy/hold it in my hands…with no one knowing I have it…or where it actually is secured.

Rather Not
Rather Not
  Anonymous
April 27, 2018 3:22 pm

You didn’t notice the boom upwards from the stable value of $20.67/oz for the first century of the US dollar’s existence until the founding of the federal reserve system? That was no boom. But since the federal reserve system, it has multiplied by 63x. If a 63 bagger isn’t a boom, what is?

Not to say there is not more room to run, but the only way to (honestly) argue that gold hasn’t boomed is to argue the USD has already imploded.

Lamont Cranston
Lamont Cranston
April 26, 2018 1:55 pm

Haile in SC is only a 4 MM oz operation but still might be the largest in the USA

I’d think that they feel the price wil rise but this $5000 stuff is likely a pipe dream

pdxr13
pdxr13
  Lamont Cranston
April 27, 2018 7:10 pm

The US Gov will be able to issue Dollars to friends in unlimited amounts, while suppressing the value of paper money/Treasuries/digital ledger in banks. Only temporarily can the value of pm’s be suppressed in notional Dollars, without criminalizing trade in pm’s among US citizens (like 1934-1971).

Shanghai Gold Exchange will be a fine place to get the non-Dollar ForEx needed to do international trade, if you can bring actual gold to the SGE.