The Golden Cycle
By Peter Schiff
The New York Times had the definitive take on the vicious sell off in gold. To summarize one of their articles:
Unfortunately
just like 1976, a true economic recovery is not just around the corner.
More likely we are in the eye of an economic storm that will blow much
harder than the stagflation winds of the Jimmy Carter years. And once
again the establishment is using the decline it the price of gold to
validate its misguided policies and discredit its critics. But none of
the problems that led me and other modern day gold bugs to buy gold ten
years ago have been solved. In fact, monetary and fiscal policies have
actually made them much worse. The sad truth is that as bad as things
were back in 1976, they are much worse now. Whether as a nation we will
be able to rise to the occasion, and actually finish the job that Ronald
Reagan and Paul Volcker started remains to be seen. But I am confident
that the price of gold will rise much higher, and that its final ascent
will be that much more spectacular the longer we continue on our current
policy path. Don't believe the mainstream. Just as before, they will
likely be wrong again.
Peter Schiff is the CEO and Chief Global Strategist of Euro Pacific Capital, best-selling author and host of syndicated Peter Schiff Show.
By Peter Schiff
The New York Times had the definitive take on the vicious sell off in gold. To summarize one of their articles:
Two years ago
gold bugs ran wild as the price of gold rose nearly six times. But since
cresting two years ago it has steadily declined, almost by half,
putting the gold bugs in flight. The most recent advisory from a
leading Wall Street firm suggests that the price will continue to drift
downward, and may ultimately settle 40% below current levels.
The rout says a
lot about consumer confidence in the worldwide recovery. The sharply
reduced rates of inflation combined with resurgence of other, more
economically productive investments, such as stocks, real estate, and
bank savings have combined to eliminate gold's allure.
Although the
American economy has reduced its rapid rate of recovery, it is still on a
firm expansionary course. The fear that dominated two years ago has
largely vanished, replaced by a recovery that has turned the gold
speculators' dreams into a nightmare.
This analysis
provides a good representation of the current conventional wisdom. The
only twist here is that the article from which this summary is derived
appeared in the August 29, 1976 edition of The New York Times. At that
time gold was preparing to embark on an historic rally that would push
it up more than 700% a little over three years later. Is it possible
that the history is about to repeat itself?
At the time The
Times article was written gold had fallen to $103 per ounce, a decline
of nearly 50% from the roughly $200 it had sold for in the closing days
of 1974. The $200 price had capped a furious three-year rally that began
in August of 1971 when President Nixon "temporarily" closed the gold
window and allowed gold to float freely. Prior to that decision gold had
been fixed at $35 per ounce for nearly two generations. That initial
three year 450% rally had validated the forecasts of the "gold bugs" who
had predicted a rapid rise in gold prices should the dollar's link to
gold be severed. The accuracy of these formerly marginalized analysts
proved to be a bitter pill for the mainstream voices in Washington and
Wall Street who, for reasons of power, politics and profit, were anxious
to confine the "barbarous relic" to the dustbin of history.
Incredulous as it may seem now, with gold still priced at $35 per ounce, official forecasts of both the Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve were that demonetizing gold would undermine its value, and that its price would actually fall as a result.
Incredulous as it may seem now, with gold still priced at $35 per ounce, official forecasts of both the Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve were that demonetizing gold would undermine its value, and that its price would actually fall as a result.
Of course government
experts could not have been more wrong. Once uncoupled from the dollar,
gold's initial ascent in the early 1970's was fueled by the highest
inflation in generations and the deteriorating health of the U.S.
economy that had been ravaged by the "guns and butter" policies of the
1960's. But the American economy stabilized during the mid-years of the
1970's and both inflation and unemployment fell. When gold reversed
course in 1975 the voices of traditional power elite could not contain
their glee. When the gold price approached $100 per ounce, a nearly 50%
decline, the obituaries came fast and furious. Everyone assumed that the
gold mania would never return.
Although the writer
of The Times piece did not yet know it, the bottom for gold had been
established four days before his article was published. Few realized at
the time that the real economic pain of the 1970's had (to paraphrase
The Carpenters 1970's hit) "Only Just Begun". When inflation and
recession came back with a vengeance in the late 1970's, gold took off
(to quote another 1970's gem), like a skyrocket in flight. By January
1980, gold topped out at $850 an ounce. The second leg of the rally
proved to be bigger than the first.
The parallel between
the 1970s and the current period are even more striking when you look
closely at the numbers. For example, from 1971 to 1974 gold prices rose
by 458% from $35 to $195.25, which was then followed by a two-year
correction of nearly 50%. This reduced total gains to just under 200%.
The current bull market that began back in 2000 took a bit longer to
evolve, but the percentage gains are very similar. (We should allow for a
more compressed time frame in the 1970s because of the sudden
untethering of gold after decades of restraint.) From its 1999 low to
its 2011 peak, gold rose by about 650% from $253 to $1895 per ounce,
followed by a two year correction of approximately 37%, down to around
$1190 per ounce. The pullback has reduced the total rally to about 370%.
The mainstream is saying now, as they did then, that the pullback has
invalidated fears that rising U. S. budget deficits, overly
accommodative monetary policy, and a weakening economy will combine to
bring down the dollar and ignite inflation. But 1976 was not the end of
the game. In all likelihood, 2013 will not be either.
The biggest
difference between then and now is that until 1975 ordinary Americans
were barred by law from buying and owning gold. About the only route
available to participate in the earlier stage of the precious metal
rally was by hording silver dimes, quarters and half dollars minted
prior to 1965. My father indulged in this process himself by sifting
through his change, the cash registers of any merchant who would allow
him (exchanging new non-silver coins and bills for silver), and by
sifting out silver coins from rolls he bought from banks. It was a
time-consuming process, and most of his friends and family members
thought he was crazy. After all, he had $10,000
worth of pocket change earning no interest.But the $10,000 face value
worth of those coins he collected had a melt value of over $350,000 when
silver hit its peak.
By the mid 1970's
none of the problems that initially led to the recession in the early
years of the decade had been solved. Contrary to the claims of the
"experts" things got much worse in the years ahead. It took the much
deeper recession of the late 1970's and early 1980's, which at the time
was the worst economic down-turn since the great Depression, to finally
purge the economy of all the excesses. The lower marginal tax rates and
cuts in regulation implemented by President Reagan and tight money under
Volcker helped get the economy back on track and create investment
opportunities that drew money away from gold. As a result gold fell hard
during the early 1980's. But even after the declines, gold maintained
levels for the next 20 years that were three to four times as high as
the 1976 lows.
Although the economy
improved in the 1980's, the cure was not complete. Government spending,
budget and trade deficits continued to take a heavy toll. The U.S. was
transformed from the world's largest creditor to its largest debtor.
When the time came to face the music in 2001, the Fed kept the party
going by opening the monetary spigots. Then when decades of monetary
excess finally came to a head in 2008, the Fed open up its monetary
spigots even wider, flooding the economy with even more cheap money.
Peter Schiff is the CEO and Chief Global Strategist of Euro Pacific Capital, best-selling author and host of syndicated Peter Schiff Show.
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