Let's assume that as long as interest rate remain at zero from now until 2013, in 1.5 years, it could rise by 38% (19% pa), causing the price to rise to USD2,550 oz. Between 2013 to 2015, it could rise by half the rate, at 9% pa or 18% to USD3013 oz. That's about 63% up from current level or around 15.7% per annum. This is a decent return which is likely to be better than equities.
I prefer gold futures to gold equities because I'm not very confident of 2012 / 13's economic outlook. I may consider buying gold equities at the end of next year when stocks could be down a further 30% from now.
Central banks worldwide are starting to buy gold after decades of buying US Treasuries and European bonds to manipulate their currencies. The debasement of UST and European bonds, and the negative real rates have forced Asian central bankers to diversify their reserves into hard assets like gold.
If you look at the debt crisis that the west is facing, whether some peripheral country in Europe leaves the Eurozone, or the US getting out of their fiscal problems, all of the solutions involves printing money.
If the Eurozone breaks up, every country has to bail out their own banks that may be holding on to sovereign bonds that may default. Gold will shoot up.
If US embarks in any form of QE, gold will shoot up.
If the Eurozone stays in tact, and Germany agrees to bail out all the Eurozone countries in trouble, it involves QE and gold will shoot up.
Japan's economic trouble requires QE to keep interest rates low, the Yen weak to export out of trouble.
It is really a golden age. I'm looking at Silver but I don't think it has the same stability as gold. It is influenced more by industrial demand.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/291242-why-gold-is-going-to-2-000-an-ounce-by-the-end-of-september?source=email_macro_view
http://seekingalpha.com/article/291244-don-t-miss-gold-s-mania-stage-we-re-not-there-yet?source=email_macro_view
We're not yet in the mania stage for gold. We could be as close as a year, or as far as 5 years, but we're just not there yet. Take a look at the chart below, which shows gold compared to two of the last, biggest asset bubbles.
What kind of performance can we realistically expect for gold companies to see when we do enter the mania phase?
It's tough to find historical data on gold companies during the 1970s. Most of them are gone. The rest have been gobbled up or sliced apart into completely different companies.
We do have a frame of reference for the internet bubble. You might remember that time as a period when everyone had a hot stock tip. Everyone was up hundreds of percent, or more, on companies like Cisco (CSCO) and Intel (INTC).
What kind of performance can we realistically expect for gold companies to see when we do enter the mania phase?
It's tough to find historical data on gold companies during the 1970s. Most of them are gone. The rest have been gobbled up or sliced apart into completely different companies.
We do have a frame of reference for the internet bubble. You might remember that time as a period when everyone had a hot stock tip. Everyone was up hundreds of percent, or more, on companies like Cisco (CSCO) and Intel (INTC).
No comments:
Post a Comment