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Bonds, stocks, real estate down, gold up!

Posted on 25 January 2009 with no comments from readers

Since the start of the year 30-year US Treasury bonds have fallen by 10 per cent, the Dow Jones Index 7.5 per cent and real estate continues on its downward track. Gold is up by almost seven per cent.

Is 2009 the year gold finally come into its own as a safe haven asset? Certainly everything is pointing the way of precious metals, and now it looks as if the bond market is failing as a competitor as a safe haven.

Falling bond prices

The last shoe to drop in financial markets is the biggest of the lot. Bond markets are huge and critically impact on currencies, government borrowing and by implication precious metal prices.

At the fundamental level it is very easy to see why a Saudi investor or Gulf State might today buy gold or silver above US treasury bonds. The tiny yield on treasuries assumes zero inflation at a time when government spending is soaring and all history suggest that this will mean inflation.

If nothing else this has undermined the argument that gold does not pay interest. Moreover, investors can see that governments can inflate the supply of bonds – but not the supply of gold and silver.

Perhaps that is why the price of gold and its cheaper-cousin silver is up since the start of the year. There are some big physical buyers out there, and the price is responding to increased demand and almost fixed supply.

That could be a disappointment to the gold bug conspiracy theorists who have spent the past decade coming up with ever more elaborate arguments about who is fixing what, where and when.

This is like President Obama complaining that China manipulates the yuan, just as if the US does not manipulate the dollar – this is what central banks do, for better or worse. Yes they might pull gold down for a few hours on Monday but this is short term and less and less effective.

Systemic failure

The problem now is that we face systemic financial failure. The central banks have made massive policy errors and more and more investors are beginning to realize the obvious truth: they do not know what they are doing, and will have no more success in solving these problems than they did in avoiding them in the first place.

It is always my beef with conspiracy theorists that the cock-up theory of history – with random actions by idiots – holds up much better to analysis.

But when financial systems come crashing down it is gold and silver – the only true money – that you want to be holding. Bonds, shares and real estate are going down in 2009 – and don’t forget that bonds will ultimately take the US dollar down too.

Holders of a diversified portfolio of precious metal assets will make a fortune as this narrow market becomes the object of incredible demand. It is a historic opportunity for those who move quickly. Save yourself, why go down with the crowd!
Order my book online from this link

Posted on 25 January 2009 Categories: Bond Markets, GCC Real Estate, GCC Stock Markets, Global Economics, Gold & Silver, Oil & Gas, US Dollar, US Stocks

no Comments posted by readers:

Comment by SW - 26 January 2009

I have just read the Marc Faber chapter in your book “Opportunity Dubai” and enjoyed it immensely.

I really enjoyed the part where he said that gold holders will be able to buy one Dow Jones for an ounce of gold!!

That would be incredible if it came true. That means either gold has to SKYROCKET or the Dow Jones has to crash bigtime.

Fascinating!

Comment by peterjcooper - 26 January 2009

Marc is so far ahead of his time – and is now saying buy the gold explorers – but actually both could happen – gold skyrocket and the Dow crash again, and they would meet half-way!

Comment by peterjcooper - 26 January 2009

Clive Maud seems to have got it right again, as he says:

“That the outlook for the dollar is bleak should hardly be surprising given that both the bond market and the dollar can be expected to collapse in unison – and last week the 30-year Treasury Bond suffered its heaviest weekly loss in 22 years, breaking down from a Head-and-Shoulders top area. The 10-year Treasury Note is on the verge of doing likewise, as can be seen on its 6-month chart below, whereupon the entire Treasury complex will be at risk of cratering.”

That would appear to contradict Jim Rogers pessimism on the Pound – his timing looks way off again.

Comment by peterjcooper - 26 January 2009

Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — Gold investors were the most bullish ever in a Bloomberg News weekly survey, predicting gains as investors seek a haven from economic turmoil.

Twenty-eight of 31 traders, investors and analysts surveyed from Mumbai to Chicago on Jan. 22 and Jan. 23 advised buying the metal. Gold futures for February delivery jumped 6.7 percent last week to $895.80 an ounce in New York. Three survey respondents said to sell, and none were neutral. That’s the most bullish response since Bloomberg News began conducting the surveys in April 2004.

Gold climbed 5.5 percent in 2008, the eighth straight annual gain, as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 38 percent. The S&P index sank 2.1 percent last week, the third straight weekly decline. Some investors buy the precious metal as a store of value in times of financial turmoil.

Traders surveyed on Jan. 15 and Jan. 16 correctly predicted gold’s advance last week. The survey has forecast prices accurately in 146 of 246 weeks, or 59 percent of the time.

Last week’s survey results: Bullish: 28 Bearish: 3 Neutral: 0

Comment by SW - 26 January 2009

I forgot to mention silver. Silver is hopelessly underpriced compared to gold right now! It should be at least $20…maybe even $50/oz!

The gold/silver ration is 75!!!!

Anyone keen on purchasing silver now or is it worth waiting for a correction?

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