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The Gold Problem: It’s Not Money Anymore

Briton Ryle by Briton Ryle
October 3, 2022
in Precious and Base Metals
0
Investing. Close-up of young bearded trader in eyeglasses working with graph and financial reports on computer screen and holding Bitcoin in one hand while working his modern office.
  1. Get Ready for the Gold Bull Market?
  2. The Gold Problem
  3. Stocks Vs. Gold

Somewhere around 1975, my dad put up a bunch of money to be the silent partner in Red Ball moving company franchise with a friend.

Terrible name, Red Ball. But that’s not why the company went belly up a couple of years later. 

The late 1970s was the last time the US economy was wracked with ridiculously high inflation. Interest rates would eventually get pushed to 21% by Fed Chair Paul Volker. 

Imagine paying 21% a year for a mortgage! Those rates ground the US economy to a halt. Nobody could afford to buy a house, never mind hire a moving company to move their stuff. 

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So I was probably 13 or 14 when my dad said to me, “Ya know, if I had just bought gold, we’d be millionaires.”

It was that late-1970s gold bull market that instilled in investors a DNA-level belief that any inflation-based economic disruption would send gold prices soaring…

And right on schedule, I’ve seen a lot of investment promotions for gold and gold stocks lately… “Gold is about to skyrocket,” “Get ready for the gold bull market,” and so forth. 

Well, sorry to pop anyone’s wish-there-was-a-gold-stock bubble, but it ain’t gonna happen. At least not while the Fed is hiking rates and sucking $95 billion a month out of the bond market with its balance sheet reduction (quantitative tightening).  

The Gold Problem

The “buy gold” mantra says that as inflation rises, the dollar weakens, and so gold (and really all commodity prices) rises. But that’s not what’s happening.

Check out gold prices over the last year… You’ll see that gold did indeed come into 2022 with some momentum. From October 2021 lows around $1750 an ounce, gold rallied to $2050 an ounce by early March 2022. 

But gold has been down ever since. It’s now below 2022 levels at around $1750. Gold started selling off just as the Fed started hiking interest rates. And that is NOT a coincidence. At all…

Today, the US dollar is at record highs against pretty much every currency in the world. Over the last six months, good ole USD is up 18% vs. the yen and 12% vs. the euro. The barbarous relic (gold) is down around 15% in that time.

Cash is king right now. “Go to cash” has been the best investment advice since the Fed started hiking rates. And here’s why…

Gold is not money anymore. In fact, I think cryptocurrency is closer to actual money than gold at this point. But that’s a different article. 

It’s important to remember that when gold made that historic run in the late 1970s, President Nixon had just signed the Bretton Woods Accord (1972) that took the US dollar off the gold standard. Even a few years later, when inflation really took hold, the relationship between gold and money was still strong. 

In the decades since, the relationship between gold and hard currency is long gone. Absent some apocalyptic event that sends the entire world back to the Stone Age, no currency will ever be backed by gold again. 

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Stocks Vs. Gold

Today, gold is just an asset, like any stock or bond. It takes cash to buy it. When the Fed is sucking cash out of the economy by raising interest rates, assets lose value. It’s a kind of a deflationary thing: less cash chasing more goods (or assets), and prices fall. 

In other words, a gold bull market is a liquidity event, just like a stock bull market. Markets get fat on cheap money. And when money gets more expensive due to rising interest rates, markets start dieting. 

Right now, the game plan for corporations and investors is simple: raise cash and wait for asset valuations to become attractive. When it comes time to put cash to work, yeah, gold will rally some. But I guarantee you stocks will rally a lot more. 

Because companies grow. Companies innovate and bring new and improved products to market, thereby growing revenue. Management teams streamline operations and raise efficiency, thereby improving profit margins. More revenue and better profit margins mean that companies become more valuable over time. And the stakes you take in those companies, the stock you buy increases in value. 

Gold pretty much just sits there, looking shiny. 

Remember the game plan: raise cash and wait for valuations to become attractive. 

I think a few select valuations have already become attractive. I’ve written about three very sweet stocks for you to check out.

Until next time,

brits-sig

Briton Ryle
The Profit Sector

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Tags: GoldGold Bull MarketGold PriceInflationInterest RatesstocksThe Fed
Briton Ryle

Briton Ryle

I’ve been trading, investing, and sharing my insights with individual investors since 1998.  Back then, the internet was not a very useful research tool. Armed with a library card and a huge budget for the printer, I’d scroll the microfiche for Wall Street Journal and Financial Times articles. I bought technical books on wireless technology and fiber optic networks. I traveled to Chicago to learn the secrets of stock options trading directly from the experts on the floor of the CBOE.  I’ve attended and spoken at more investor conferences than I can remember…. All because I’ve always taken my responsibility to my readers and subscribers very seriously. I refuse to parrot popular opinion, offer up half-baked ideas or publish incomplete or half-hearted research.  There is no shortcut to deep research... becoming as close to an expert on topics, trends, and technology as possible. And the rewards are life-changing. The very first stock I ever recommended was South Korea’s SK Telecom. My readers enjoyed a 150% profit in a matter of months.  And after 25 years, I’ve helped tens of thousands of readers change their financial fortunes.  A few months ago, I donated all my suits to Goodwill, pulled my name off the list of speakers for the big investor conferences, and left the big city for Southern Georgia. The plan was to retire to the banks of a tidal creek that splits off from the St. Mary’s river as it enters the Atlantic between Cumberland and Amelia islands... and trade stocks when I felt like it. But, I guess retirement wasn’t for me after all. I’m back, and this is gonna be something special. 

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© 2024 The Profit Sector, LLC. All rights reserved. Our website provides stock market research, commentary, and analysis. Information is provided “as is” and solely for information purposes, not for trading purposes or advice.

Nothing on this website should be considered personalized financial advice. Any investments recommended herein should be made only after consulting with your personal investment advisor and only after performing your own research and due diligence, including reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the issuer of any security. The Profit Sector, its managers, its employees, affiliates and assigns (collectively "The Company") do not make any guarantee or warranty about the advice provided on this website or what is otherwise advertised above. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the Company disclaims any and all liability in the event any information, commentary, analysis, opinions, advice and/or recommendations provided herein prove to be inaccurate, incomplete or unreliable, or result in any investment or other losses.

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