InnOvation Capital & Management, LLC
LAW – POLICY – FINANCE – MARKETS
INFORMATION FOR THE ENTERPRISE AND INVESTOR
JULY 26, 2016
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Today, we will discuss Gold as an investment, and the timing for this column is fortuitous. As we present the reasoning for increased investment in gold (and silver), this happens to coincide with a temporary pullback in the price of precious metals, probably lasting until the end of Summer.
In other words, the next few weeks present an excellent buying opportunity to increase allocations of gold and silver in our portfolios. Both gold and silver are up by approximately 25% in 2016, and we believe that they will go much higher in 2017 and 2018.
The standard advice of major investors and investment advisers, in “normal” investment climates, is to keep up to 5% of one’s portfolio in precious metals, particularly gold and silver. As we mentioned last week in IntelDigest, the “smart money” has been betting on gold this year. Several highly-regarded stock investors and hedge fund managers have gone to 10-15% of precious metals in their portfolios.
There are certain “fundamental forces” which would continue to propel the current rally in both gold and silver, and the most important are (1) extremely low, and turning negative, interest rates, and (2) weakening fundamentals in the world economy. Only a strong U.S. Dollar has kept the value of gold and silver from rocketing higher this year. When the Dollar declines, the price of gold will shoot over $2,000 per ounce.
Historically, gold has done well when “real” interest rates have fallen. “Real” interest rates refers to the return one can receive when inflation is factored in. For example, in the 1970s and 2000s, inflation was high, essentially wiping out any return from normal interest rates on fixed income investments, as well as yields on equities. Gold performed very well then, because the return from normal investments dropped to zero or went negative.
In the current economic climate, inflation is very low, but so are interest rates, which have gone negative in many places around the world. Inflation is approximately 1.4%, while the average short-term interest rates are 0.3%, and heading lower. Even with a Zero Yield, gold beats out investments with a negative yield.
“Real” interest rates are now negative, so gold and silver should do very well.
We discussed the matter of weakening economies last week; we mentioned a recent report from the Bank for International Settlements, the central bankers’ bank. It warned of the “risk trinity” of conditions looming over the global economy, including (1) productivity growth which is unusually low, (2) global debt levels which are historically high, and (3) central banks with fewer options and little room to maneuver in addressing these problems.
The world is awash in debt, and economic data is pointing to a recession, no matter how hard the Federal Reserve and other central banks work to stave off recession through manipulation of interest rates and the money supply. U.S. industrial production is down, and U.S. exports have been declining for close to two years.
Global trade is similarly in decline, especially in China, where exports are closely correlated to the country’s gross domestic product. While the formerly fantastic Chinese growth engine slows to a pedestrian pace, the weight of debt will slow it more. No market, not even the U.S., has added more debt to its economy since 2008 than China. China’s total debt has tripled over that time, to $30 trillion, with the most growth occurring in corporate obligations.
Brazil, Russia, and other economies which are driven by exports are all in trouble. Large multinational banks which have significant exposure to these export economies …. Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, HSBC, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, as examples …. have seen their stock prices fall by at least 25% in the last twelve months. Deutsche Bank alone is down over 50%.
So, we have the fundamental forces at work … negative interest rates and weakening economies. Most investors are familiar with the traditional arguments for gold … it can be a hedge against inflation and a currency hedge, it performs well in a low-interest environment, and it is considered a store of value in times of uncertainty.
Gold is a traditional safe haven in times of insecurity; it can provide insurance against cyber and political risks. And, there are good, old-fashioned fundamentals at work …. demand for gold is growing in the marketplace, from Russia and China to western markets, while supply has been dormant because new mining projects were delayed or closed down over the last few years, when the gold price was receding from its 2011 highs.
All of these factors argue in favor of much higher gold prices.
Not everyone agrees with this thesis. We have been stuck in a deflationary environment since the 2008 banking crisis, and some believe that this will continue into the future. Even seven years of lower and lower interest rates has not produced the inflation that the central bankers thought would generate economic growth.
Some well-known economists, such as Harry Dent and Gary Shilling, believe that the deflationary forces in the world economy are too strong, that low growth will continue well into the future, and the price of gold will fall below $1,000.
But, many believe that, despite the deflationary forces, governments will succeed in forcing inflation, primarily because they have no choice. Deflation makes the real value of debt go up. Deflation destroys tax collections … when prices and wages go down in deflation, governments collect less tax. If the value of debt goes up and tax collections go down, then economies collapse.
Governments can’t allow that. So, they will do whatever they can to produce inflation. Some economists posit a theory that governments will be forced to go to an extreme to produce inflation, and do so by setting the price of gold at $5,000 per ounce, or even higher. The gold market has been manipulated for several years to keep the price of gold down; it would be easy to change direction and manipulate the price up!
If major countries around the world continue to implement negative interest
rates in attempts to spur growth ….
If the Fed continues to shy away from raising U.S. interest rates for fear of
damaging the economy further ….
If weak economies take too long to come back ….
If governments and central banks manipulate the gold price up ….
Any combination of these events amounts to a compelling case for owning
gold and silver. If you’d like to know where we have made investments in gold and silver, feel free to give us a call.