Sean K
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You're arguing that 'normal' supply and demand factors do not effect the price of gold, and the only factor that drives the price of gold above an inflationary rate is speculation?No not really as the most important supply/demand curve to be mindful of is the *investment* supply/demand curve.
*Investment* includes in this definition *speculation*.
jog on
d998
Simply take the long term inflation rate, I used 3.5%, the starting price of Gold when it was still de facto *money* and calculate over the time period.
Gold @ $20.67oz in 1930 @ 3.5% inflation = $292.24 [as an example]
Add your own figures for inflation if you don't agree with 3.5%
So actually my figures were a bit generous, they should be $200oz-$300oz for investment value, but, I was going on memory, always a mistake.
jog on
d998
After laying out his compelling case for a deflationary depression, Prechter explains why gold and silver will not serve as safe havens for the bloodbath he envisions. In the next few paragraphs, we will clearly and concisely explain why Prechter's argument is flawed and why gold and silver should indeed be big winners in any upcoming deflation.
The article
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/texashedge/texashedge010405.html
I also remember Pretcher and other gold bears saying when gold moved from US$250 it would not get to US 300 and they have saidall the way up to its current value
Pretcher is also calling for the DOW to go under 400(no I didn't leave a zero out).
In 1850 the POG was $18.93oz. Using the same inflation rate which you are using of 3.5% per annum, this gives us a current POG of $4195oz.
Just goes to show that statistics can be skewed any which way you want.
Who knows, a number of other commentators are suggesting a Dow drop of 90% and that the economic fundamentals are worse than 1929, all speculation, but I am holding onto my seatbelt.
Studying the thoughts of others helps us be aware, books or whatever, a fixed mindset is the real doom
You're arguing that 'normal' supply and demand factors do not effect the price of gold, and the only factor that drives the price of gold above an inflationary rate is speculation?
Who else is calling for this kind of move? I hadn't heard of any actually agreeing with him
Calling for a 97% drop seems a bit crazy for my liking
Unfortunately the correct inflation rate from 1850 is 2.1%
When you use the correct data, the price of gold calculates to $494.52oz
Devil's in the details.
Thus, you come out in the ballpark of lower prices for gold currently.
Of course the other issue is that really the correct time frame to use is really when fiat currencies floated free.
I chose 1930 for a reason, as both the US & UK went off the gold standard through the depression and revalued [repegged] later.
Or, in 1971 when Nixon closed the Gold window. Inflation from 1971 was 4.7% thus the investment value of gold = $35.80 @ 4.7% = $187.05
Which rather neatly falls into my investment valuation range.
jog on
d998
Gold, Silver Gain as Investors Seek Haven From Subprime Losses
By Pham-Duy Nguyen
Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Gold and silver rose in New York as investors sought a haven from potential losses tied to the U.S. subprime-mortgage collapse.
Stocks dropped in Europe and Asia after central banks around the world added billions of dollars to the global financial system to help meet demand for cash. Before today, gold had risen 5.5 percent this year after six annual gains.
``People are going to the safest thing they can get,'' said Marty McNeill, a trader at R.F. Lafferty Inc. in New York. ``Gold is a safe haven at this point.''
Gold looks set to move sideways in US$ terms. This may well advantage Aussie home grown mine gold producers as the US$ recovers. US interest rates look set to move gradually lower.
Gold looks set to move sideways in US$ terms. This may well advantage Aussie home grown mine gold producers as the US$ recovers. US interest rates look set to move gradually lower.
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