A Gold Investor’s Biggest Advantage (Banks Envy This)

Via Birch Gold Group

A Gold Investor's Biggest Advantage (Banks Envy This)

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

This week, Your News to Know rounds up the latest top stories involving gold and the overall economy. Stories include: Gold breaks $2,000/oz (again), a deeper look at the banking crisis and its effect on gold’s price, and some details over gold’s mine supply.

Gold breaks $2,000, but is anyone surprised?

These days, the only thing more volatile than gold price is sentiment related to gold.

The Fed’s going to raise interest rates this week? Well, a stronger dollar pushes gold’s price down. Institutional investors shun “yield-free” gold in favor of paper Treasury bonds, whose yield is measured in stacks of paper (and let’s not forget, there are no constraints on those paper yields, so long as you’re willing to accept paper as payment).

Two of the three biggest bank runs in U.S. history unfold in 72 hours? The entire U.S. banking system’s credit score is downgraded, and Credit Suisse gets a $54 billion bailout (and hours later is sold off for a paltry $3.3 billion)? Central bankers scream themselves awake at 2 a.m. from nightmares of the 2008 banking crash?

It’s no surprise gold’s price surged above $2,000 this weekend. Marcus Garvey, head of metals strategy at Macquarie Group, observed:

The longer uncertainty rolls on, with neither market fears being wholly calmed nor a full-blown systematic crisis unfolding, the higher gold prices should be able to trade.

Last week’s 6.5% rise was the highest weekly gain in three years. And it’s happening right as the Federal Reserve is expected to announce another interest rates hike, which is supposed to push gold prices down.

Of course, careful observers will know that the markets price these hikes far in advance, so it shouldn’t be surprising that gold’s current price already has these higher rate expectations factored in.

Analysts are decidedly bullish on gold’s prospects right now, and they don’t really have a reason not to be.

StoneX analyst Rhona O’Connell explained the surge in gold price as investors seeking a safe haven against loss:

It’s all about risk hedging. A Swiss bank is supposed to be the be all and end all of safe havens. If something else happens in the banking sector, you can expect gold to go higher.

It’s not just safe-haven demand driving gold’s price, though. TD Securities’s global head of commodity strategy Bart Melek explained that the decision to guarantee uninsured depositors’ funds is already countering the anti-inflationary effects of interest rate hikes. Banks borrowed a record $164.8 billion from the Fed in just one week — where’s the money coming from?

(That’s really a trick question – at the Federal Reserve, they make money by fiddling with numbers on a spreadsheet, and hey presto! There’s another few hundred billion dollars in the world.)

In the event last week’s $165 billion handout wasn’t enough, the Fed unveiled a brand new bank welfare program last week, the Bank Term Funding Program. JPMorgan Chase & Co estimate this new facility could provide up to $2 trillion in new dollars to keep banks in business.

Do you see the problem here?

The Fed is at war with itself – tightening the money supply while expanding the money supply at the same time.

The result? During a time when the Fed has declared war on inflation, and is using higher interest rates and quantitative tightening to reduce the money supply, we would up with another $297 billion dollars in circulation in just one week.

Actions speak louder than words, don’t you think?

If inflation is such a problem, why keep expanding the money supply?

If propping up banks is really the Fed’s mission, at the very least be up-front about it. But no, the Federal Reserve is above the law, above every sort of legislative and executive oversight. We’re expected to simply adapt every time they change the rules of the game. Maybe the next press release will somehow break the back of inflation?

In times like these, I ask you, is it any wonder people are realizing what an absurd “store of value” the U.S. dollar has become? Is it surprising to see a surge of interest in the timeless and universal safe haven of gold?

“Gold can’t go bankrupt, unlike a bank”

We’ve said time and again how the Treasury yields’ gains are being overplayed in the media. We’ve reminded readers that Treasuries are not only historically underperforming, but that they are the only sovereign bond yet to “come around” in what is a bond market crisis some years underway.

Now, the 2-year U.S. Treasury has notched its biggest decline since 1987, the year of the infamous stock market crash. Do you still believe that the Treasury offers safety with current market conditions, especially when gold is available as an alternative?

The banking crisis is one of liquidity, yet on the other end, we’ve had the biggest liquidity pump in history added to the markets in the form of a multi-trillion dollar stimulus. Bailouts have to happen because “too big to fail” is a thing, and any form of bailout has to involve money printing. Quantitative easing to clean up the damage of the quantitative easing from a few years ago? Again, pretty clear what this spells for the dollar and gold, because we’ve seen a lot of it in the 2008-2011 run. However, and importantly, gold wasn’t nearly as well-positioned back then.

This situation is being called a crisis of confidence. That’s Wall Street talk for “Everything’s fine but people are panicking anyway.”

This doesn’t make sense, at least it doesn’t to me. A “crisis of confidence” is when you get to the office, worry you might’ve left the oven on and drive back home, burst through the door and discover – that you turned the oven off. Everything’s fine.

What’s happening with banks? To expand my analogy, you get to the office, remember the oven, jump back in your car and race home toward a pillar of jet-black smoke to find your building surrounded by fire engines. This is not a crisis of confidence! It’s just a crisis.

So even though I think he mischaracterizes the problem, at the very least GraniteShares CEO Will Rhind understands the solution:

And when you see a crisis of confidence, but particularly in our financial system and our banking sector, people rush for safe havens. And arguably, there’s no more famous safe haven in the world than gold. It’s one of the highest quality assets out there with no counterparty or credit risk. So in other words, gold can’t go bankrupt, unlike a bank, and that’s very appealing at this particular point in time.

Is there a development here that preserves the U.S. dollar’s value and its sovereign credibility while restoring the faith and credibility in banks? We’ve yet to see an analytical take presenting this scenario.

Gold over $2,000/oz is the new normal

Alastair Still, CEO of GoldMining, advised us to get used to seeing gold above $2,000. This point alone is worth consideration.

A stable gold price over $2,000/oz  means that something has gone wrong. Either the greenback crumbled further, or there is some kind of issue that isn’t going away and that is driving haven demand. So often investors see asset prices rising and, fearful of missing out on a new bull market, buy in and drive prices even higher.

Higher gold prices, therefore, could become self-supporting – and, depending on how vast the next flood of money-printing becomes, may be sustainable indefinitely.

To be clear, this is not good news for anyone except gold mining companies and those few whose wealth is primarily invested in gold. In financial terms, gold is the equivalent of a storm shelter or a safe room. You don’t want to live in your safe room, do you? Of course not – that’s not what it’s for. You have it because you need it sometimes. It’s a form of insurance. More than that, just knowing you have it when you don’t need it gives you a great deal of peace-of-mind. That’s my personal metaphor for gold ownership (and why I don’t live in a safe room).

Strangely, though, higher gold prices aren’t as wonderful for gold mining companies as you might think. Still explains:

The industry as a whole has been really quite poor in being stewards of their future, such that in the rougher times the major operating and producing companies tend to pass on the long-term future of their companies for the benefit of the short-term returns for investors.

Most of the major companies have been reducing exploration expenditures and reducing money spent to advance new projects, such that the major companies simply have not been replacing what they’ve been mining.

So, would a permanently higher gold price help encourage exploration and future planning for gold miners?

Maybe. Here’s the thing: getting a new gold mine off the ground can take as long as a decade. Starting a mine from scratch is incredibly capital-intensive. To complicate matters, most of the readily available, easier-to-reach gold has already been mined. New mines are generally going for deeper gold, or lower-quality ore – and either prospect is expensive.

Gold demand, while it’s been strong for years now, is much more elastic than supply. Considering that all-in sustaining costs (AISC) have quadrupled in the last 20 years, you can understand why gold production hasn’t risen in lockstep with demand.

In summary, I think gold’s price can go very high and stay there for a very long time before we see much of an increase on the supply side.

After 8 long years of ultra-loose monetary policy from the Federal Reserve, it’s no secret that inflation is primed to soar. If your IRA or 401(k) is exposed to this threat, it’s critical to act now! That’s why thousands of Americans are moving their retirement into a Gold IRA. Learn how you can too with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals the little-known IRS Tax Law to move your IRA or 401(k) into gold. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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9 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
April 15, 2023 12:08 am

It is just hard to read gold will skyrocket articles by people who sell gold.

The market is so rigged , there is no true price

Nobody Uno
Nobody Uno
  Anonymous
April 15, 2023 5:02 am

I don’t sell gold.
Bought my first gold in early spring of 2009 for just under $900 oz. Today 14 years later, that same gold will cost me over $2100 oz. It’s not about making money. It’s about keeping purchasing power over the years, and I think it’s done pretty good for me. It’s my savings account, and insurance policy against Monetary trickery and theft.

mark
mark
  Anonymous
April 15, 2023 11:58 am

No Name,

Was it hard to buy any commodity or hard asset or certain stock (from anyone selling them) just before a BULL MARKET?

Just before the first Gold Bull Market of my lifetime Gold took off from $35 an ounce from 1971 to $900 an ounce in 1979 (I was 21 to 29) when Nixon turned us/U.S. over to the FED Banksters. I watched it with amazement and read everything I could get my hands on about Gold and Silver and Fiat and their histories.

Then gold went from $280 an ounce in 1999 to $2,000 an ounce by 2011, and Silver went from $5 an ounce to $50 an ounce in 2011…but I was in on that PM BULL MARKET big time having cashed in a 401k in 1999 and bought PMs with most of it and made huge profits.

Here are the details…I’m not just flapping my lips:

One Man’s Contrarian 401K Adventure (by TBP Mark)

(By the way in 2011 one man on the planet predicted to the day when this 2nd Bull market of Precious Metal would start to decline…Bo Polny…TO THE EXACT DAY!)

Now here we are…and the Dollar isn’t dying…it is DEAD! It’s STIFF…stick a fork i n it it is DONE! Operation Sandman is lurking in the shadows…and the BRICS are rubbing their hands together with glee and a dark heart filled with revenge…and I don’t blame them

The entire FIAT DEBT/SLAVE/PONZI SCAM of the Luciferian Bankster Captured Dis-United States of America (and the rest of the West) is about to blow up in their faces…and you don’t want to spend some soon to be hyper inflated Bankster created out of thin air FIAT toilet paper…to a dealer…while Gold and Silver are on the launch pad of what will soon be the greatest wealth transfer in all of economic history.

Buddy, by summer you will be living in a different world…and wealth will not be measured in dollars, or yen, or pound sterling or any of that fiat bullshit…it will be measured in OUNCES!

GOLD PRICES – 100 YEAR HISTORICAL CHART

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The government has been selling U.S./us Gold American Eagles since 1986…they may try to confiscate other nation’s gold coins but many feel they won’t go that route. Also, only 22% of Americans turned their Gold in – in 1933…FDR choked all the puppies…just don’t be a puppy.

Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) gold prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base. The current month is updated on an hourly basis with today’s latest value. The current price of gold as of April 14, 2023 is $2,004.12 per ounce.

https://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chart

Silver Prices – 100 Year Historical Chart SILVER PRICES – 100 YEAR HISTORICAL CHART

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Pre-1964 so called Junk Silver (I like the dimes) are going to be invaluable in small purchases in the coming shitstom…no joke.

Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) silver prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base. The current month is updated on an hourly basis with today’s latest value. The current price of silver as of April 14, 2023 is $25.36 per ounce.

https://www.macrotrends.net/1470/historical-silver-prices-100-year-chart

As far as Gold and Silver (and many other things) two men who are polar opposites spiritually:

BO POLNY (Christiabn) and CLIF HIGH (WOO WOO Universe – reincarnation)…are predicting the same soon to be dollar/fiat crash and a Gold and Silver massive Bull Market. Their timing is slightly different Polny predicting sooner than High…but the same results…a massive wealth transfer.

No joke…most average Americans will soon be broke.

Buddy…don’t be average.

mark
mark
  Anonymous
April 15, 2023 12:21 pm

Oh yea…and there is most likely a credit card, Bank/ATM CREDIT FREEZE a coming…

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Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
April 15, 2023 2:16 pm

Just tried to buy a shitload of gold from a BC dealer.

Fuckheads are not even responding to my emails.

You would think with the markups they charge they would be eager to sell. Seems not.

Fuck ’em. Ordering from another place now.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
April 15, 2023 8:01 am

Lay ye not up treasures upon this Earth, where moth and rust doth destroy.

Seek ye first the Kingdom of Heaven.

Walter
Walter
April 15, 2023 2:02 pm

Hope gold doesn’t rapidly increase in fiat price. It means your standard of living is declining equally rapidly, after all, you live in the fiat world and gold just exists. That said, if you don’t have an allocation of gold and silver in your investments you are really not paying legitimate attention to current and recent events. If you don’t have any investments, start with the hedge, gold and silver. You can’t gain a lot but you can be certain not to lose anything long term.

Steve
Steve
April 15, 2023 6:47 pm

Time to ask tough questions. It is likely the US dollars is headed the route of the 1923 German Mark. One piece of bread cost about 5 million marks then. But here is a huge difference between bread and gold or silver. You can not eat a gold bar. Time could be coming when a bar of gold could buy a slice of bread. But if bread is that scarce, then Gold becomes valueless. You might not be able to give it away. Also think about all those gold sellers and look at the history of gold price. The rule is buy low sale high, not sale low buy high. If the price goes up much more then remember that what you are using to get it just became worth that much less. the value of gold is set.It is the cost of mining plus profit. Once created, its true value never changes. And as happens with fiat currency the value of the new currency is is worth much more then the hyper inflated one. To pt another way your bar of gold is worth around 2000 but in the new currency it could be worth one. As for investing now, buy and plant seed.