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“Money Is Gold — and Nothing Else”


 -- Published: Wednesday, 9 May 2018 | Print  | Disqus 

  • Gold now has limited downside (20%) but substantial upside (650%)
  • Gains on gold are likely to come at a time when stocks are crashing
  • Investors and savers without an allocation to gold will be wiped out
  • Time to consider saving in physical gold? Editors note

by James Rickards, Daily Reckoning

Following the Panic of 1907, John Pierpont Morgan was called to testify before Congress in 1912 on the subject of Wall Street manipulations and what was then called the “money trust” or banking monopoly of J. P. Morgan & Co.

Source: Quotefancy

In the course of his testimony, Morgan made one of the most profound and lasting remarks in the history of finance. In reply to questions from the congressional committee staff attorney, Samuel Untermyer, the following dialogue ensued as recorded in the Congressional Record:

UntermyerI want to ask you a few questions bearing on the subject that you have touched upon this morning, as to the control of money. The control of credit involves a control of money, does it not?

MorganA control of credit? No.

UntermyerBut the basis of banking is credit, is it not?

MorganNot always. That is an evidence of banking, but it is not the money itself. Money is gold, and nothing else.

Morgan’s observation that “Money is gold, and nothing else,” was right in two respects. The first and most obvious is that gold is a form of money. The second and more subtle point, revealed in the phrase, “and nothing else,” was that other instruments purporting to be money were really forms of credit unless they were redeemable into physical gold.

My readers know that I am a big proponent of gold. We should all be mindful of Morgan’s admonition, and not lose sight of the way in which real wealth is preserved through manias, panics and crashes.

Today I’ll provide an overview on why I recommend gold in every portfolio, and why gold may be the best performing asset class in the years ahead.

Specifically, my intermediate term forecast is that gold will reach $10,000 per ounce in the course of the current bull market that began in December 2015. I recommend that investors keep 10% of their investable assets in physical gold (with room left in the portfolio for “paper gold” in the form of ETFs and mining stocks).

Here’s the analysis:

We begin with the 10% allocation. The first step is to determine “investable assets.” This is not the same as net worth. You should exclude your home equity, business equity and any other illiquid or intangible assets that constitute your livelihood. Do not take portfolio market risk with your livelihood or the roof over your head. Once you’ve removed those assets, whatever is left are your “investable assets.” You should allocate 10% of that amount to physical gold.

PLACEHOLDER

Jim Rickards in a vault near Zurich, Switzerland during a recent visit. The pallet in front of him has $25 million in gold bars arrayed.

This gold should not be kept in a bank safe deposit box or bank vault. There is a high correlation between the time you’ll want your gold the most and the time banks will be closed by government order. Keep your gold in safe, non-bank storage.

The next part of the analysis concerns my $10,000 per ounce forecast for the dollar price of gold. This is straightforward.

Excessive Federal Reserve money printing from 2008–2015 combined with projected U.S. government deficits over $1 trillion per year for the foreseeable future, and a U.S. debt-to-deficit ratio of 105% rising to over 110% in a few years, leave the U.S. dollar extremely vulnerable to a collapse of confidence on the part of foreign investors and U.S. citizens alike.

That collapse of confidence will not happen in a vacuum. It will coincide with a more general loss of confidence in all major central banks and reserve currencies. This loss of confidence will be exacerbated by malicious efforts on the part of Russia, China, Turkey, Iran and others to abandon dollars entirely and to bypass the U.S. dollar payments system.

The evolution of oil pricing from dollars to IMFs special drawing rights, SDRs, will be the last nail in the dollar’s coffin. All of these trends are well underway now, but could climax quickly into a general loss of confidence in the dollar.

At that point, either the U.S. acting on its own or a global conference resembling a new Bretton Woods will turn to gold to restore confidence. Once that route is chosen, the critical factor is to set a non-deflationary price for gold that restores confidence, but does not lead to a new depression.

Here’s the math on how to compute a non-deflationary price of gold using the latest available data:

The U.S., China, Japan and the Eurozone (countries using the euro), have a combined M1 money supply of $24 trillion. Those same countries have approximately 33,000 tons of official gold.

Historically, a successful gold standard requires 40% gold backing to maintain confidence. That was the experience of the United States from 1913 to 1965 when the 40% backing was removed.

Taking 40% of $24 trillion means that $9.6 trillion of gold is required.

Taking the available 33,000 tons of gold and dividing that into $9.6 trillion gives an implied gold price of just over $9,000 per ounce. Considering that global M1 money supply continues to grow faster than the quantity of official gold, this implied price will rise over time, so $10,000 per ounce seems like a reasonable estimate.

I believe this kind of monetary reset is just a matter of time. It could happen through a planned process such as a new Bretton Woods, or a chaotic process in response to lost confidence, heightened money velocity, and runaway inflation.

The portfolio recommendation is to put 10% of investable assets into physical gold as a diversifying asset allocation and as portfolio insurance. The following example demonstrates that insurance aspect.

For purposes of simplification, we’ll assume the overall portfolio contains 10% gold, 30% cash, and 60% equities. Obviously those percentages can vary and the equity portion can include private equity and other alternative investments.

Here’s how the 10% allocation to gold works to preserve wealth:

If gold declines 20%, unlikely in my view, the impact on your overall portfolio is a 2% decline (20% x 10%). That’s not highly damaging and will be made up as equity assets outperform.

Conversely, it gold goes to $10,000 per ounce, that’s a 650% gain from current levels, highly likely in my view. That price spike gives you a 65% gain on your overall portfolio (650% x 10%).

There is a conditional correlation between a state where gold goes up 650% and where stocks, bonds and other assets are declining. For this purpose, we’ll assume a scenario similar to the worst of the Great Depression from 1929 – 1932 where stocks fell 85%.

An 85% decline in stocks making up 60% of your portfolio produces an overall portfolio loss of just over 50%.

In this scenario, the gains on the gold (650% separately and 65% on your total portfolio) will more than preserve your wealth against an 85% decline in stocks comprising 60% of your portfolio (85% separately and 50% on your total portfolio). The 30% cash allocation holds constant.

So, if 60% of your portfolio drops 85% (about equal to the stock market drop in the Great Depression), and 10% of your portfolio goes up 650% (gold’s performance in a monetary reset) you lose 50% of your portfolio of stocks, but you make 65% on your portfolio on gold.

Your total wealth is preserved and even increased slightly. Total portfolio performance in this scenario is a gain of 15%. That’s the insurance aspect at work.

In summary:

1. Gold has asymmetric performance characteristics. It has limited downside (20%) but substantial upside (650%).

2. The gains on gold are likely to come at a time when stocks are crashing. That’s an example of conditional correlation.

3. In the scenario where gold rises 650% and stocks fall 85%, the gain on gold (10% allocation) exceeds the loss on stocks (60% allocation), so the overall portfolio is enhanced.

Investors without an allocation to gold will be wiped out. Those with a 10% allocation will have survived the storm with their wealth intact. That’s why I recommend gold.

Regards,

Jim Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning

Editors Note: Jim Rickards is always worth a read. We do not agree with all of his calls but it is hard to argue with much of his analysis. We too view gold and silver as financial insurance and this is why we have been providing bullion coin and bar delivery and storage since 2003.

Regarding the 10% allocation to physical gold, since 2003 we have recommended such an allocation and our clients who adopted this strategy protected and grew their wealth during the financial crisis. Today, we feel that given the scale of the risks posed by the “everything bubble” with many frothy stock, bond and property markets, higher allocations to physical precious metals of 20%, 30% and 40% can be justified.

Indeed, today there is also the additional risk posed to “cash” of bail-ins and deposit confiscation. For this reason, some of our more “wealth preservation” minded clients have now allocated much (and in some cases all) of their wealth to gold and silver coins and bars in allocated and segregated storage. Some use their precious metals allocation as a form of highly liquid pension fund. They keep relatively small balances in bank accounts and simply sell a small portion of their bullion holding to get fiat euros, pounds and dollars etc. every few months in order to fund their living and other expenses.

We are hearing of more and more clients doing this and believe this is a trend that we are likely to see more of. Those who understand that ‘gold is money’ save in physical gold and spend in paper or digital fiat.

“Money is gold,” so why only own a small amount of gold and have much of your wealth exposed to over valued paper and digital assets and indeed fiat currencies in vulnerable bank accounts. More prudent to have larger allocations to gold (and to an extent silver) and smaller allocations to risk assets and fiat currencies in digital deposit accounts.

News and Commentary

Stocks Mixed as 10 Year Yields Rise to 3%, Oil Climbs on Iran (Bloomberg.com)

Gold prices dip as dollar regains footing (Reuters.com)

Gold reports losses as DXY holds near 4.5-month high (FXStreet.com)

Trump announces withdrawal from Iran nuclear deal: recap (MarketWatch.com)

Trump pulls U.S. from Iran nuclear deal, to revive sanctions (Reuters.com)


Source: Michalowski via ForexLive

Gold keeps above 200 day MA and 50% retracement (ForexLive.com)

BIS gold derivatives down in March, back up in April (Gata.org)

The Big One Coming? Los Angeles Area Rocked By 4.5 Magnitude Earthquake (ZeroHedge.com)

The Fed Has Robbed the Future (DailyReckoning.com)

This mania for mergers is not how capitalism is meant to be (MoneyWeek.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

08 May: USD 1,310.05, GBP 969.44 & EUR 1,101.88 per ounce
04 May: USD 1,309.35, GBP 965.78 & EUR 1,094.09 per ounce
03 May: USD 1,313.30, GBP 966.19 & EUR 1,094.64 per ounce
02 May: USD 1,310.75, GBP 960.52 & EUR 1,091.99 per ounce
01 May: USD 1,309.20, GBP 956.37 & EUR 1,087.68 per ounce
30 Apr: USD 1,316.25, GBP 958.62 & EUR 1,087.62 per ounce
27 Apr: USD 1,317.70, GBP 954.41 & EUR 1,090.79 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

08 May: USD 16.45, GBP 12.17 & EUR 13.85 per ounce
04 May: USD 16.42, GBP 12.10 & EUR 13.72 per ounce
03 May: USD 16.47, GBP 12.12 & EUR 13.74 per ounce
02 May: USD 16.35, GBP 11.98 & EUR 13.62 per ounce
01 May: USD 16.25, GBP 11.87 & EUR 13.51 per ounce
30 Apr: USD 16.38, GBP 11.93 & EUR 13.54 per ounce
27 Apr: USD 16.53, GBP 12.01 & EUR 13.68 per ounce

https://news.goldcore.com/

 


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 -- Published: Wednesday, 9 May 2018 | E-Mail  | Print  | Source: GoldSeek.com

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