Following a quiet summer, gold has just risen to
four-month highs. BullionVault founder Paul Tustain puts
the action in context...
USUALLY I tend to
focus on the reasons to buy gold rather than the timing. Timing is not my
territory. But as we approach the anniversary of gold's all-time high, my
thoughts turn to ebb and flow of the gold market.
Last year, on 6th September 2011, gold hit $1920 per
oz. It had shot up from about $1500 at the start of July, making new all-time
highs almost daily. Three short weeks later it was back down at $1540. In
sterling terms it was almost the same story, £930 at the start of July,
up to £1194 and back again to £995.
Since then people have left gold alone, and many
have sold. But gold has not fallen away like almost everything else would
have after a ten year bull run. After a rally this week, it's currently
trading around $1660, or £1040. It has taken a breather.
I speak to prospective gold buyers all the time
– and they are worried about the situation of our currency – the
Pound. Many would like to drop the pound and buy gold, yet when it was making
new highs daily, like it did a year ago, they worry,
understandably, that they'll pay the highest price in history. I do too. But
then when it drops away we worry that it has further to fall. In volatile
markets buying and selling is frightening.
What volatility? Here in the gold business we have
plodded along through July and August, and it's been dull. The rule of thumb
in the industry is to expect July and August volumes to be 30% down on the
rest of the year. Indeed not much has happened, in
fact it's been quieter than usual.
But in the last couple of days things have started
moving. Volumes are creeping up again, and prices
too. In the 7 years since we launched BullionVault,
September has always been a high volume month. This week the holidays end.
The money professionals get back to their desks and look into their crystal
balls. What will they see, apart from this bowl shaped chart of the gold
price?
Nothing has improved in Europe. Nothing has improved
in the UK – even if we feel temporarily lifted by the Olympics. Our
government has got weaker, and borrowed more money; July was dreadful. George
Osborne is now under concerted pressure to 'do something', and it's coming
from his own side as well as the opposition. As we approach the latter half
of a parliament we can reckon his worthy pursuit of economies will weaken.
We are printing new money and adding to the stock at
about £16 per working person per day – which all finds its way
into the economy via the wages of a bloated public sector. It spins around
for a few short weeks, generating modest economic activity, before settling
on savers. For some reason, which almost defies logical analysis, they buy
government bonds, thus completing the funding circle; taking cash back out of
circulation and leaving just a bigger pile of government debt. Thanks to
savers' appetite for gilts we have not seen the retail price inflation which
money printing normally produces – but only because we are in this
unusual position of printing money without increasing the quantity in
circulation.
There will be a flood when those bonds turn back
into cash, and that looks increasingly imminent. Already there is a
£1trn in outstanding debt, which is evenly spread out to about 20
years. Unfortunately every day it gets less spread out. It slowly concertinas
into the short end simply through the passage of time, and as it does so it
approaches the concentrated re-financing obligations which finally did for
Greece. It's just a matter of time.
For now we only have to finance redemptions and a
budget deficit amounting to a mere £500 million a day – which is
close to an indigestible quantity for the markets. Now remember, this is a
government which is too fragile to impose real economies, which is already a
trillion in debt, which is two years from campaigning again, and which
controls the printing presses.
Pick a number. 600 million? 750 million? 1 billion?
Daily cash demands on this scale will try the generosity of even the most
generous pension fund – which, of course, is using your money. We are
turning inexorably into Greece. Whatever we do now, the concertina effect
will impose these sorts of numbers in due course. This would be true even if
we were to cut the record budget deficit today – which is politically
impossible anyway.
When the market finally says 'no' to the
government's need for cash, the redemption of those outstanding gilts will
require printing real banknotes. You'll get your inflation then, and with
£6 frozen into bond markets for every £1 in circulation savers
will realize that the torrent of melt-water cannot stop for years. That's
when we all abandon the currency. Any other store of value will do.
I believe the Pound has a weaker future than a
German dominated mini-Euro. But thanks to a year old price spike, and a dull
summer, for now at least we can buy gold with Sterling at over 10% below its
all-time highs. Do you really fancy buying it when it's making daily all-time
highs again? I don't. I come out in a rash when I buy something at highs. It
goes against my investing religion.
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