Should
You Buy Gold Now?
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Fixers
Aim to Fix Fixes With Another Phony Fix
What was the
SEC doing...?
But first,
what the stock market and the economy are doing...
In the past
two days, the price of gold has shot up more than $40. It's now
near $1,000 an ounce.
Why? We don't
know. Rumors, talk, noise...there's plenty of that. But as for why
investors are suddenly putting so much money into gold, we'll have
to wait to find out.
But should
you buy gold now? The answer is simple: yes and no.
The Trade of
the Decade is still buy gold/sell stocks. And the decade isn't over.
If you have US stocks, this is a good time to sell. The Dow went
up 63 points yesterday a weak bounce after several days of losses.
This is no
time to hold stocks for the reasons we outlined yesterday.
But gold? Should
you buy gold and hope to get rich when gold shoots up to $3,000
an ounce? A bad idea, in our opinion. You should buy gold to protect
your assets. The risk is in the paper money...because they can create
as much of it as they please. And they're under pressure now to
create a lot. You buy gold as insurance against inflation, a dollar
bust, a bear market in stocks and bonds, or a financial crisis.
Gold is nature's money. It is better than manmade money. Because,
with gold, what you have is what you've got. They can't artificially
depreciate it or easily increase the quantity of it. That's why
the feds don't like it. It won't support their cause du jour
whether it is a war, a bailout, stimulus, health care, or whatever.
Gold doesn't cooperate with the financial engineers. That's why
it's a good thing to hold when you think the financial engineers
are making a mistake.
But our view
is that while the engineers are making a mistake, they're not very
good at it even when they're making a mistake they're good at. Typically,
they're pretty good at causing inflation. But now the credit bubble
is deflating, not inflating. It will take them a few years before
they become reckless enough to move prices up again. And then, they'll
probably overshoot their objectives considerably.
In the meantime,
there's no inflation to speak of...no dollar crisis...no bond bust.
So we wouldn't expect the price of gold to soar...not just yet.
That's the big surprise that this period of deflation will last
longer than expected. Then, when it begins to seem permanent, inflation
will suddenly come roaring back.
By then, most
investors will have given up on gold...especially those who were
speculating on it going to $3,000. It will go to $3,000, but only
after speculators have dropped their positions.
So far, everything
is happening just as we expected. After more than half a century
of boom, we are now in a bust. People need to downsize...cut back...and
live a little less large than they had in the boom years. That means...well...just
what you'd expect.
Wasn't it just
yesterday that we reported that Florida was losing population? People
just aren't retiring like used to. Here's comes the evidence:
From The
New York Times comes this headline: "Older US Workers Put
Retirement on Hold."
The Times
tells us that older people are continuing to work because they don't
have a choice. They can't afford to retire. So they hold onto jobs,
which is another reason it's so hard for the unemployed to find
a job. Those who have them aren't giving them up. A Bloomberg report
today, for example, tells us that more people are applying for job
benefits than expected. Another tells us that millions of people
are running out of benefits before they find a job.
Just what you'd
expect, in other words. Here are some of the other things we expected:
1. Unemployment
is still rising.
"Investors
discouraged by US jobs report," says a headline at the International
Herald Tribune. To make a long story short, August was a disappointment.
More jobs were lost than expected.
We don't know
how many jobs we should expect to lose. But we're in the downhill
part of the credit cycle; we're bound to lose a lot of them.
2. Sales
are falling.
That's another
thing we would expect. People have to cut back. So...they do cut
back. Sales go down. That means fewer sales and fewer jobs. No point
in making things, shipping them and retailing them if no one is
buying them, right?
3. What
else would you expect? Lower house prices? Check. Higher savings
rates? Check. More bankruptcies? Check. Falling prices? Check.
Isn't it nice
when things work out "as they should"? Check.
September
8,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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