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Thursday 2 December 2010

WHY GOLD.....!



Why Gold

Gold Bullion Bar
"Gold is the proven, quality, long-term wealth store during a slide into deep crisis - the one which everyone else comes to in a bit of a panic.
Even if, to begin with, the early buyers are buying gold purely to protect their wealth they still tend to multiply their money, because they are subconsciously anticipating future demand. The best investments do this."

Gold's Greatest Use

People always ask 'But what’s the use of gold?' which encourages some experts to pretend gold is vital for dentistry and electronics. It isn't. The fact is that gold is hardly useful at all in industry, but that certainly does not mean it is not useful at all.
So let's explain clearly why gold has repeatedly become one of the most fundamentally useful things there is in human society, and to do that let's first recognize its main quality - its reliably rare supply.

How Much Gold Is There?

Even with modern technology gold is still incredibly difficult to find.
In total about 160,000 tonnes of gold have been taken out of the Earth.
Gold Cube
That 160,000 tonnes is less than you might think. Formed into a single gold cube it wouldn’t quite cover a tennis court. In fact it would be 2 metres short. But that’s all the gold in the world.
Gold is being mined at about 2,600 tonnes a year, so the above ground supply is expanding at 1.6% per annum. This newly mined supply means the world's cube of gold - currently 20.2 metres across - is growing by just 11 cm per year.
All the world's gold will cover a tennis court when the above ground stock is 205,000 tonnes. This will be some time around 2025.
205,000 tonnes is approximately the sum of the current above ground stocks (approximately 160,000 tonnes) plus the aggregate un-mined known reserves of all the world's gold mining companies (approximately 45,000 tonnes).
That's all the world's gold - both above ground, and known about but still underground.

How Is That Gold Used?

Gold is not consumed in any meaningful sense. A tiny amount finds some use as false teeth because of its inertness, and some is used in electronics because of its non-corrosive nature and excellent conductivity.
But currently well over 95% of the world's gold is held as a wealth store - either in bullion vaults or as jewelry, which is generally considered a private monetary reserve (particularly in India, the world's biggest gold customer).
This stock of gold isn't disappearing, and its supply is growing at a very slow rate (1.6% pa) compared to its overall stock. This feature of a nearly fixed above ground quantity, growing slowly, has been true for about 4,000 years.
So you can now see that there exists a large, but not too large, and almost fixed quantity of gold in the world, almost all of which is held by its owners as a tangible store of wealth. That is something which is true of nothing else.
By contrast to gold's restricted supply our money systems are currently expanding out of control. Modern loose monetary policies - designed to keep the factories busy - are expanding the supply of currency, under political direction, by at least 11% per annum; and that's for the Euro, the most hawkishly managed of the modern world's major currencies.
In such circumstances gold's reliable rarity is again noticed by savers. Its great use is as a money proxy when artificial forms of money (which are far more common) are not being properly restricted in supply. In such times gold's unexpandable supply causes it to be a much more reliable store of purchasing power than currency. Nothing does this job so reliably and so well as gold, because nothing matches the unimpeachable rarity and stability of gold's above ground supply.
Better still, as people come to remember and appreciate this unique quality their demand for gold causes not just a retention of purchasing power, but a multiplication of it.

Gold - A Tool of Trade

Here's a 2,000 year old Roman explanation of a vital tool of trade.
"The origin of buying and selling began with exchange.
Anciently money was unknown, and there existed no terms by which merchandise could be precisely valued. Every one, according to the wants of the time and circumstances, exchanged things useless to him, against things which were useful; for it commonly happens that one is in need of what another has in excess.
But it seldom coincided in time that what one possessed the other wanted, or vice versa. So a device was chosen whose value remedied by its homogeneity the difficulties of barter."
Trade is right at the heart of human society, and it creates the need for this 'device' to store value for later exchange. The device needs homogeneity - constancy of form and quantity - which most governments attempt to deliver with paper money, and they are successful most of the time.
But when the going gets tough governments bend their own rules. They start to issue more and more money, and then nothing exists which matches the homogeneity of gold.
The Romans joined a long list of civilisations which chose gold as a reliable, apolitical, monetary medium. Before them there were the great classical civilisations of the Greeks, Persians, Ionians, and the Egyptians. After them there were many more, through the Spanish, French, Ottoman, British and American empires, all of them with gold based monetary systems.

Gold's Record As Money

But every single one of those gold based currencies eventually failed - the gold stopped circulating as the money of normal transactions, as currency. So it’s best to avoid the misunderstanding of history which leads so-called “gold bugs” to regard gold as the world’s only true and permanent money, because the hard historical fact is that it has been tested - often - and it both disappears and re-appears, depending on the prevailing economic circumstances.
Yet what is different about gold and other forms of money is the way they disappear, and why. Because its natural qualities recommend it as a high quality form of money gold suffers from Gresham’s Law, a common sense law in economics which states that “bad money drives good money out of circulation”.
Think about it for a moment and you’ll see that given a choice of spending good money (gold) or bad money (inflating paper) you’d spend the paper and keep the gold as a store of value. So in an economy where economic and political considerations have combined to produce a paper currency running in parallel with gold, and where that currency is showing the early signs of being dangerously expanded in supply, then people will elect to hold on to gold and spend paper. Magnified millions of times by everyday transactions in a typical economy this eventually stops gold circulating as money.
For much the same reasons when their time is up paper currencies will pour into circulation as people look to buy hard assets, until eventually the best value you will get from the banknote is to use it as heating fuel.
This is the key difference. While paper money forms disappear permanently, and lose all their value, gold disappears temporarily, and retains its value over the very long term.
Every few years, and when circumstances are right, gold returns. It has a history of doing so which has lasted those 4,000 years.

Gold Can Multiply Your Wealth

The trick with gold is to understand the causes for these rolling phases, to recognise them, and to act appropriately. If you own gold at the right time you will own a fast appreciating asset when normal business assets, and money itself, are tumbling in value.
Owning gold in good phase is very profitable. In the 5 years after the 1929 crash gold's investment purchasing power rose 17 times.
In the decade of the 1970s gold's investment purchasing power rose 15 times.
So far in gold's current re-emergence, with the economic situation looking every bit as as hostile as the 30s and the 70s, gold's price has multiplied by about 3 times. By comparison with those previous cycles it is still nearer the bottom than the top.

Tuesday 30 November 2010

Gold as a Currency...!

Gold: The Other Currency

by Cory Mitchell

Throughout the ages, gold has captivated societies, and in a post-gold-standard world, many feel that with the instability that occurred in the first decade of the 21st century, some form of the gold standard should be brought back. There were inherent problems with the gold standards implemented in the 19th and 20th centuries, and many people are failing to realize that gold, under the current free market system, is a currency. Gold has often been thought of in relation to the U.S. dollar, mainly because it is usually priced in U.S. dollars, and there is a rough inverse correlation between the USD and gold prices. These factors must be considered when we see that the price of gold is simply an exchange rate: In the same way one could exchange U.S. dollars for Japanese yen, a paper currency can also be exchanged for gold. .) 



Gold Is a Currency

Under a free market system, gold is a currency, although it is not often thought of as one. Gold has a price and that price will fluctuate relative to other forms of exchange, such as the U.S. dollar, the euro or the Japanese yen. Gold can be bought and stored, and while it is not often used as a direct payment method for everyday use, it is highlyand can be converted to cash in almost any currency with relative ease.
Gold, therefore, has tendencies like those of a currency. There are times when gold is likely to move higher and times when otheror asset classes are likely to outperform. Gold is likely to perform well when confidence in paper currencies is waning, when there is potential for war and/or when there is a lack of confidence in Wall Street-type trading instruments. 
Gold can now be traded in multiple ways, including buying physical gold, a gold or investors can participate in just the price movements without owning the underlying asset by purchasing a  (CFD). (To learn more, see The Gold )
Gold and the U.S. Dollar
Gold and the USD have always had an interesting relationship. Over the long term, a declining dollar has meant rising gold prices. In the short term, this is not always true, and the relationship can be tenuous at best, as the following two-year weekly chart demonstrates. Notice the correlation indicator in Figure 1, which moves from a strong negative correlation to a strong positive correlation and back again.

Sunday 21 November 2010

Gold Price "Susceptible" on Way to $3000 - 11th November 2010

THE RECENT surge in world Gold Prices is now "susceptible to a near-term pulback" according to leading North American economist David Rosenberg, citing the rate of gain, growing speculative pressure, and strong media interest.

"Look, when gold shows up on the front page of the New York Times, you know that a lot of the news is in the price," says Rosenberg – former chief US economist at Merrill Lynch, and now chief economist and strategist at Canada's Gluskin Sheff asset management group.

"We remain big fans of the yellow metal and still see potential for $3,000 an ounce in coming years, as its hedging properties against the integrity of the global financial system are hardly going to subside.

"But the reality is that it has made...an asymptotic move in recent weeks, speculative fervor is evident in the Commitment of Traders [ Gold Futures ] report, and gold is now a front page story."

Also warning in his latest Breakfast with Dave commentary that crude oil's current price find a US economy "much more vulnerable to an energy shock now" than it was in 2007, Rosenberg advises his clients that the Gold Price "can correct all the way down to $1,213.52 per ounce (the 200-day moving average) without violating any long-term trendline."

Ready to buy gold today...?
Goldbug, 11 Nov '10

India's fundamental role in global gold market

Gold is an integral part of Indian society and a foundation of wealth


APPETITE FOR GOLD: People buying gold jewellery ornaments on the occasion of Diwali - Dhanteras, at a jewellery shop in Hyderabad.
The Indian consumer's affinity and appetite for gold has continued over the years and statistics from a report published by the World Gold Council (WGC) indicate that in 2009 Indian demand accounted for 15 per cent of the global gold market.

The WGC report, titled “India: Heart of Gold”, addresses recent developments in the market in the context of the revival of Indian demand for gold in 2010. The report indicates that in 2009, total Indian gold demand reached $19 billion (Rs.97,400 crore), which accounts for 15 per cent of the global gold market.

The Hindu