Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Market Watch: Value of gold should continue to increase


  • By
  • | 4:00 a.m. September 14, 2011
George Rauch
George Rauch
  • Longboat Key
  • Opinion
  • Share

A Market Watch article published in June 2003 mentioned that a hike in the price of gold was unavoidable. Then at $380 an ounce, it was written, “Statistics indicate the minimum price of gold should be $1,700 an ounce and that price levels of $3,000 to $5,000 are not unreasonable. The economics associated with gold clearly favors a greater gain over the next 10 years than can be seen in ownership of other investments.” 

There are three phases to a gold bull market. The first phase is when investors realize gold is undervalued and begin to accumulate it for their own investment purposes. Smart investors realize those policies will force the value of currencies down and the value of gold up. These are early investors, and that phase is over.

The second phase of a gold bull market occurs when everybody starts talking about the increasing price of gold. We are there. In the second phase, the media begins to talk about gold, and the public realizes the reasons gold has increased in value.

The third phase of the gold bull market occurs when there is panic and a stampede occurs to own gold.

That results in a sharp run-up in price. The economics of the third phase always involves governments and bankers that are hopelessly in debt. We are not yet in the third phase, even though our governments (state, local, federal) and leading banks are hopelessly in debt. 

The following problems continue to cause deterioration in the purchasing power of our country’s currency and the commensurate increase in the price of gold:

1. The administration recently agreed with Congress to enact a $2.4 trillion spending cut over the next 10 years. There are two things wrong with this agreement: They have not yet agreed upon any spending cuts; and next year’s deficit spending is estimated to be $1.3 trillion. The debt ceiling isn’t shrinking — it’s rising. As with past years, they’ll be up against the debt ceiling within two years, if not before, and we’ll go through the same process again. 

2. There are fewer buyers to purchase U.S. government bonds. Far Eastern economies do not want more dollar investments. European banks, we have just learned from our sneaky Federal Reserve, were borrowers of 70% of the Fed’s bailout money a few years ago. If European banks are out of the equation because they’re in trouble, as is the euro, who is buying the bonds?

Russell Napier discovered that the Fed was buying 200% of the securities that the Fed, itself, was selling. Because that cannot happen, Napier went on to learn that our domestic banks are currently big sellers of treasury bonds. The banks are selling bonds back to the Fed in return for cash. This is obviously the reason banks have such huge cash positions, and the reason the Fed can “purchase” 200% of what the Fed sells. 

The Fed prints $4.4 billion every day just to pay the government’s bills. The Fed uses the cash it just printed to purchase treasury securities, previously issued and sold by the Fed to the banks, just like it is doing now. When money the Fed makes every day filters down into the economy, there ends up being too much cash for the goods and services available. Therefore, the price of goods and services goes up.

3. Politicians and the press went crazy over Standard and Poor’s downgrading of U.S. debt, calling it “ridiculous, unnecessary and overreacting.” Standard and Poor’s rates U.S. government bonds (debt) based upon the ability to repay the obligation, as well as the government’s ability to pay the interest charges. The questions should be: What took Standard and Poor’s so long to downgrade the debt of a country that has no plan to repay its debt, and who continues to borrow 35% to 40% of expenditures every year? It’s unsustainable. It’s like the family who makes $65,000 and spends $100,000, year in and year out, until the borrowing they do to accommodate their lifestyle collapses upon them. 

4. In the last several years, South American, European, Japanese and the U.S. governments have borrowed all of the savings of their countries just to sustain their own governments. The money our government spent, which has gotten us into trouble, is the spending for entitlement programs. Those programs have failed to do anything constructive. Instead of being used in a way that could create permanent and growing employment, this use of capital is known in economics as “mal-investment,” which means — bad investment. The country’s savings have not been used for industrial growth. They have been given away to people who are not productive, but who are “entitled” to various U.S. government payments. Now, that $14.5 trillion of expenditures is U.S. government debt that must be repaid. But, it can’t be repaid until we quit borrowing money just to pay interest on the existing debt. That is the worst of all financial downward spirals.

5. In March 2008, the U.S. national debt was $9.4 trillion and the cost for servicing that debt was $406 billion. Today, our debt is $14.5 trillion. Professor Warwick McKibbin told the Melbourne Institute Conference last month that the U.S. is forecast to have debt of more than 100% of GDP. At zero interest rates, that can be sustained. At 5% interest rates, however, the U.S. will have to put aside at least 5% of GDP every year just to pay interest on the debt. That is not sustainable.

6. Fifty percent of people who file tax returns pay no income taxes. The other 50% pays all the income taxes. Our tax situation is too demanding for half of our taxpayers to pay no taxes at all. Our “leaders” are in a pickle: It’s tough to make people start paying taxes, and it’s tougher to raise taxes, especially in this environment.

The root causes of our economic problems are not being resolved. There are no answers to the continuation of policies that got us into trouble. It is, therefore, likely that the U.S. financial situation will get worse, while the value of gold and silver should, logically, continue to increase.

Carpe Diem.

George Rauch, Longboat Key, is chief executive officer of Bradenton-based General Propeller and a former Wall Street investment banker.

 

Latest News