And the Great Gold Spike of 2021 Were you forwarded this email? [Sign-up to The Daily Reckoning here.]( [Unsubscribe]( [Daily Reckoning] Back to the 1970s - âAs long as politicians spend wildly and the Fed keeps monetary loose, the case for gold will remain compellingâ…
- Financial repression: The Fedâs way of holding down interest rates…
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April 9, 2021 Editorâs note: Gold has undergone a correction of late. But today, Jim Rickardsâ senior analyst, Dan Amoss, shows you why the case for gold is as strong as ever â and why you can expect a major gold spike later this year. [Dan Amoss] Dear Reader, After a multi-month correction in gold, fear and frustration are apparent among gold investors. But today, I’d like to present a case for sticking with gold. Here it is in a nutshell: As long as politicians spend wildly and the Fed keeps monetary policy loose, the case for gold will remain compelling. And both are likely to continue for a long time. It also has to do with supply. The amount of gold supply available on the market at any given time represents a tiny fraction of the potential demand for that gold. If investment demand for gold surges, prices can spike rapidly before additional supply can hit the market. Unlike dollars, you can’t create gold at the stroke of a computer key. So future flows of money from stocks and bonds into gold could push gold prices up at an exponential rate. Additionally, the Fed has made it clear it will continue to keep rates at zero and maintain monthly asset purchases for a while. It can’t really afford to tighten policy without jeopardizing markets and the economic recovery, which depend on super-low interest rates. Therefore, the Fed must maintain a low-rate environment. As long as the Fed maintains loose policies, the case for gold will get better by the day. The Problem of Rising Yields Longer-dated Treasury yields have fallen over the past week but are still up substantially so far this year. The 10-year yield opened the year at 0.91% but climbed to 1.75% by the end of March, with plenty of dips along the way. It’s come back to 1.66% today, but the trend this year is still up. 30-year Treasury yields have followed a similar pattern. They started the year at 1.65% and today are up to 2.34%. The Fed wants to keep a lid on yields because they strongly influence interest rates, which the Fed also wants to keep low to stimulate the economy. What will the Fed do if long-term interest rates continue to rise? The likely answer is financial repression. Financial repression means central banks may try to force real government bond yields below the reported inflation rate. A simple way to define real yields is to take the 10-year or 30-year Treasury yield and subtract the latest inflation rate. Recommended Link [Billionaire: This Ticker Is âLike Investing in Google Earlyâ]( [Read more here...]( Thereâs a mad rush right now into this one ticker symbol⦠Because experts are projecting gains as high as 1,530% by the end of this year. Famous hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones poured $183 million into this ticker and said this is similar to âinvesting in Google early.â To see for yourself why billionaires are betting big on this ticker⦠[Click Here To Get The Ticker Now]( Yield Curve Control If real yields are below zero, holding Treasuries becomes more of a liability than an asset. Holders of Treasuries will sell this increasingly unattractive asset. The Fed might resort to yield curve control, which means capping yields by committing to buy unlimited amounts of Treasuries to attain the chosen yield (bond-buying drives down yields). In the past, this was done to win wars. In the future, it will be done to prevent an unwind of the debt bubble. The goal is to impose the costs of society’s excess borrowing onto creditors and savers. But there’s a catch: Using yield curve control as a tool of financial repression might not work if central banks are left as the only buyers of bonds at low yields. Their balance sheets would explode, and they’d risk losing control of them. In that case, governments might use regulations to force institutional investors and banks to own government bonds in a negative real yield environment. And if regulations force institutions to hold negative-real-yield bonds, then the only proven hedge against the portfolio damage is gold. Some say Bitcoin is now a hedge. But Bitcoin is still fairly untested in financial history and has proven to trade as a “risk-on” asset. Gold and Real Negative Yields To see how gold performs in a negative real yield environment, take a look at the chart below. Take note that both lines move in the same direction and that the left-hand scale is inverted (with negative numbers at the top of the scale). The red line is the yield on the 30-year U.S. Treasury bond, minus inflation (year-over-year CPI). It goes with the left-hand scale. The blue line is the year-over-year percentage change in the price of gold. Note the spike in the late 1970s gold bull run and the slower, steadier 15-20% annual gains in the 2002-2011 bull run. [IMG 1] If real 30-year yields are high, the red line is low (as it was in the early-mid 1980s, when yields were high and inflation was falling rapidly). On the other hand, if real 30-year yields are low, the red line is high (like in the late 1970s to 1981). So, if real yields are low or falling, then gold tends to rise steadily on a year-over-year basis. The System Has Gold’s Back It’s reassuring for gold investors that the Fed and Treasury literally cannot afford to let real Treasury yields go substantially positive. If they did, then stock and bond bubbles would deflate in a matter of months, causing catastrophic damage to the economy from an “inverse” wealth effect. So, gold investors can be confident that the “system” has their back. The real “Fed put” in my mind is for gold, not necessarily for stocks. Take another look at the moments in the past 45 years when real yields fell below zero. There’s something unique about the first time this happened in the late 1970s. It was the longest period of negative real yields in this data set. Once real yields went negative in the late 1970s, gold prices accelerated to the upside. It represented a creditor panic, as they lost confidence that inflation would ever be tamed in the future. Recommended Link [Check Your Cell Phone ASAP]( [Read more here...]( Blindsided: Why 205 Million Americans Just Got This Nasty Update on Their Phones Smartphones carried by 205 million Americans have recently been automatically updated with a feature that would make most Americans uncomfortable. Your smartphone probably already has the feature, and if you knew what this update did, you might be furious. [Click Here To See Why]( Now vs. Then Today is basically the opposite situation. Few believe that inflation can be sustained for long periods of time, yet we have both a government and central bank with the desire and tools to make this happen (over time). My point in showing you this chart is to illustrate that in the months ahead, the red line is going to look a lot like it did in the late 1970s. Funds that trade gold futures will pick up on the likelihood that real 30-year Treasury yields will fall below zero soon, possibly within the next month or two. That’s because the year-over-year CPI numbers will spike due to the base effects of low inflation in the initial COVID lockdown months of 2020 (when oil prices briefly went negative). If we see several months of 3% to 4% CPI, and the 30-Year Treasury yield stays near 2%, then real yields will be in lower territory than they have been since the late 1970s. When the red line in the chart rises, the blue line tends to do the same, which means higher year-over-year gains for gold. Gold Spike by the End of 2021 What might this look like by late 2021? Real yields are likely to fall below -1% in the months ahead. That could coincide with gold rising to the $2,300 range by July (a 30% gain from the $1,800 level of July 2020). This isn’t an explicit forecast; it’s meant to illustrate what sort of explosive rally in gold is possible in this macro environment of wild deficits and money printing. If gold tacks on $500 in the next four or five months, then gold stocks could rise more than 100%. So, now is the time to [diversify across a portfolio of junior, intermediate and senior gold stocks ahead of what could be a surge in mid-to late-2021.]( It’s hard to overemphasize the importance of the 30-year Treasury bond’s transition from a portfolio hedge for institutions and foreign creditors into a portfolio drag. Many (not all) of these investors will take a look at gold and decide it’s a superior risk-reward proposition when compared to long-term Treasuries. And this process could happen quickly, considering how much gold futures trading is done at light speed these days. The bottom line is, gold could see a big spike this year. You don’t want to be late to this party. Regards, Dan Amoss
for The Daily Reckoning P.S. Jim Rickards and I recommend you allocate 10% of your investable assets to physical gold to preserve your wealth. But while physical gold will protect your wealth, the right gold stocks can grow your wealth. Sometimes [dramatically.]( Gold stocks can outperform physical gold by [multiples.]( It happened in the 1970s and we believe it will happen again. [And there’s a rare, monumental development that’s happening right now in the gold market, even as we speak that you need to know about…]( Jim has recorded this briefing to explain everything. [Go here now]( to learn all about it. --------------------------------------------------------------- Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:dr@dailyreckoning.com) [Dan Amoss]Previously the investment adviser to one of the top small-cap mutual funds in the country, Dan Amoss is a senior investment analyst and CFA at Agora Financial. Dan tracks aggressive accounting and other red flags that markets miss as he exposes frauds and promotions that suck in unsuspecting investors. His bottom-up investing style focuses on management strategy, return on capital and the truth (and lies) buried in financial statements. Add feedback@dailyreckoning.com to your address book: [Whitelist us]( Additional Articles & Commentary: [Daily Reckoning Website]( Join the conversation! Follow us on social media: [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [RSS Feed]( [YouTube]( The Daily Reckoning is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, feel free to [unsubscribe here.]( Please read our [Privacy Statement](. For any further comments or concerns please email us at feedback@dailyreckoning.com. If you are having trouble receiving your Daily Reckoning subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox [by whitelisting The Daily Reckoning.]( [Paradigm Press]© 2021 Paradigm Press, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security they personally recommend to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Email Reference ID: 470DRED01