jueves, 24 de enero de 2013

The Golden Constant: The English and American Experience 1560-2007

cover of The Golden Constant The Golden Constant: The English and American Experience 1560-2007
Author: Roy W. Jastram
Jill Leyland
Rating:
ASIN: 1847202616
Binding: Hardcover
List price: $147.00 USD
Amazon price: $147.00 USD

Buy it for the gold bug in your life this Christmas...

STOCK-MARKET BULLS never read history, as in anything from the day before yesterday, and least of all the pink pages' price/earnings table today.

So the library shelves marked "332" under the Dewey Decimal system are typically left free for bears and gold investors to roam. And glancing at how long the stock-bull of 1982-2000 ran, you can see why.

Gold lost three-quarters of its purchasing power during that time. Only the grand sweep of history then proved that the glass was neither half-empty or full, but shattered...as the much-fabled history-loving "gold bug" believed all along.

"Gold has two interesting properties: it is cherished and it is indestructible. It is never cast away and it never diminishes, except by outright loss..."

So wrote Professor Roy Jastram in The Golden Constant (John Wiley & Sons, 1977). Alongside Peter Bernstein's The Power of Gold and H.W.Brands' The Age of Gold – but swapping their ripping yarns for dry, scholarly tables of grain prices from the 18th century – it's one of the very few books to acknowledge what die-hard gold investors feel so sure to be true:

Gold is much more than mere metal. It's history itself.

"[Gold] can be melted down, but it never changes its chemistry or weight in the process. The ring worn today may contain particles mined in the time of the Pharaohs. In this sense it is also a constant."

It's not something you can say of many other investments. Atomic weight 79; melting point 1064°C at sea level; cooled density 19.25 grams per cubic centimetre...gold's got everything a collateralized debt obligation has not. Time cannot dull or change it. Debt default can't diminish its value (provided you own it, securely, outright of course). And as Jastram's detailed study of four centuries shows, gold's value, like its nature, also displays something of a constant – constant across the long term at least – as measured against wholesale prices.

Trouble is, as Marc Faber of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report reminded us late in 2008 – just as gold was sinking alongside everything else – "Gold has kept its purchasing power over the course of history...[but] the problem is that the owners of the gold changed over time."

How long can you wait for your wealth-store to return to full value? Or as Faber put it, "When Timur sacked Aleppo and Damascus in 1400, it didn't help to have your savings in gold. You lost your life and your gold."

Tamberlaine's Mongol heirs soon enough lost that gold, too. But amid such cataclysms, Jastram saw instead what he called "The Attila Effect" – the plain fact that, as Jill Leyland explains in her additions to the new, re-issued and updated text of The Golden Constant, "Men and women have turned to gold in times of distress, whether political, economic or personal..."

"The Latifundia passed gold bars secretly to their heirs," wrote Jastram 32 years ago, "who thus survived barbarian invasions to become nobility under the Merovingian kings of the fourth century...Austrian refugees, escaping Hitler's storm troopers, often owed their survival in a new country to the gold and jewels they could carry on their persons...The French peasant was astute when he buried his coins on the threat of invasion and pillage..."

Through such crises as the French and Bolshevik Revolutions, as well as Hungary's post-war hyperinflation – worse even than Weimar Germany's one trillion per cent on some accounts – gold retained its ability to raise cash, if not act as payment itself, for those lucky few who'd chosen to hoard it ahead of the need.

Nor does history require "extreme episodes", as Leyland writes in the new 2009 edition, "to demonstrate the value of gold in a crisis..."

Jastram's study famously split the history of gold's purchasing power into inflation, deflation, and the rest. Since gold was usually money during the first 350 years of his scope, it also acted quite oddly to our 21st century view:

Gold's value rose during deflation, but fell during inflation. Whereas today, of course, everyone expects gold to rise when the cost of living increases, but fall when the threat of inflation recedes. Which may or may not be wrong, but the first post-Gold Standard inflation said otherwise, and it most likely won't matter given the volume of faith this very modern idea now stores.

Hence Leyland's labels for her post-Jastram charts (the thirty years from 1977), which first concur with but tweaking his framework ("High Inflation: 1970-1980"; "Disinflation: 1980-2000"). To fit non-money gold's four-fold increase so far this decade, however, a whole new category's needed – "2000-2007: Inflation fears revived".

And the future? Inflationary fears will be revived by the price of the new , costing $110 in the US, or a shocking £79.95 in the UK...equal to a Dollar exchange rate of just $1.37. Yet this is a scholarly tome, and even corduroy jackets aren't cheap. Second-hand stores, meantime, are still charging $181 or more for the 1978 hardback (worse yet again in the UK, priced at £157.98 with a quarter-century-busting $1.14 on cable. How's that for the grand sweep of history!).

If you or the gold bug in your life needs reassurance this winter that, in the long-run at least, gold's constant purchasing power is as rare and precious as its substance, you could do much worse than treat him for Christmas.

Just don't expect to see much of him (and let's face it, it will be a him...) outside your library on Boxing Day.

business@gold4change.com
www.gold4change.com

martes, 22 de enero de 2013

GFMS: "Investment Demand Could Help Push Gold Price to New Record" - 16 January 2013


CONTINUED strong investment demand could be one of the factors that helps the Gold Price set a record average in 2013, according to precious metals consultancy Thomson Reuters GFMS.
GFMS, which published its 'Gold Survey 2012 – Update 2' Wednesday, says it expects gold will rise towards $1900 an ounce in the first six months of 2013. The consultancy forecasts that the Gold Price will average a record $1775 an ounce over the first half of the year, with ongoing loose monetary policy from the Federal  Reserve and other central banks continuing to offer investors an incentive to Buy Gold. http://www.gold4change.com/products

"Although there is now growing speculation around the structure and longevity of the Fed's quantitative-easing program," said GFMS global head of metals analytics Philip Klapwijk, "policies of ultra-low interest rates across the western economies will persist in 2013. This will continue to support investor interest in gold in the absence of low-risk investments that can offer acceptable yields."
Despite gold investment by tonnage falling 1.2% last year, by value it set a record of approximately $87 billion, due to an all-time high average Gold Price for the year.


The Gold Investor Index, which gauges Western investor sentiment towards gold by tracking buying and selling on BullionVault, rose to 12-month high in December, the fifth consecutive monthly rise.
"[Although] gold has often experienced longer periods when it has suffered in line with a bearish commodities sector as investors have become risk averse...the much longer-term view...still points to gold maintaining a role as a hedge against risk," writes GFMS senior analyst Rhona O'Connell in the consultancy's quarterly newsletter.

"A good example of this is the activity in exchange traded instruments compared with the movements on the Comex," O'Connell adds, noting that Gold ETF holdings are far less volatile than the outright long position of Comex gold futures traders, which measures the total number of bullish bets.

Buy gold now!

business@gold4change.com

http://www.gold4change.com