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Is gold the new dollar?
Massive buy by India's central bank fires up speculation; can China be far behind?
Is gold the new dollar?
News on Tuesday that the Reserve Bank of India, the country’s central bank, had purchased 200 metric tons of gold between October 19 and 30 from the International Monetary Fund sent gold soaring to a new all-time high.
The yellow metal closed at $1,090 an ounce. And it set loose speculation that could easily push gold to $1,300 an ounce on the current trend.
What’s set tongues wagging?
The idea that the buy by the Reserve Bank of India could be a signal that the world’s central banks are buying serious amounts of gold to hedge against a further decline in the U.S. dollar.
If India’s buying, the thinking goes, can China be far behind?
China has been quietly buying gold for years, doubling its holdings over the last six years. But the country still holds only 2% of its reserves in gold. That’s short of India’s 6.2% of reserves in gold after this buy.
But both figures are far short of the 60% average in Europe or the 77% of reserves that the U.S. holds in gold.
The global average for the percentage of reserves held in gold peaked at 32.7% in 1989. In 2008, after 20 year of selling by the world’s central banks, the global average was down to just 10.3%.
There’s enough logic to this theory to make it a powerful force in pushing up the price of gold.
The U.S. dollar does, indeed, seem to be in a long-term decline. Many of the countries with large currency reserves such as China are heavily over-weighted toward the dollar and are known to be looking for alternatives.
The currency alternatives to the dollar have their own problems ranging from low trading volumes to fiscal deficits at home.
Gold, in contrast, looks like a stable store of value for the long term.
Which may explain why it is rising not only against the U.S. dollar but against all of the world’s major trading currencies. Since the beginning of September, gold has outperformed even such “strong” currencies as the euro and the Australian dollar.
I don’t see the rally in gold ending soon. If you ran one of the world central banks, could you think of a good reason to put your faith in the U.S. dollar?
My preference at this point is for gold-mining stocks instead of gold itself. Gold miners are more leveraged to the price of gold so they’ll go up faster than the price of gold itself rises. (Down faster too, I’d note.)
I own one gold stock in Jubak’s Picks at the time of this post. To read more on Kinross Gold (KGC), check out my most recent update.
At the time of this writing, Jim Jubak owned shares of Kinross Gold in his personal portfolio.
hydropillar you are killin' me man ... tears of laughter running down all over my keyboard dude .... lolololololol !!!!
It is a such a sad day for the greenback.
Nice article Mr Jubak. Could you go a little further and get us some figures on how much gold and silver the gov. actually has in reserve? As I remember, they sold all of our Silver and most of our Gold back in 1979-1981 trying to fight the rise in gold at that time. It would surprise me if we have bought any since then. It would be real interesting to know, where the world gold stores really are, country by country, ounce by ounce.
One thing the Gold Bugs must not forget is that the anti golds will not give up easily. Governments will dump Gold etc. to control the market when things get interesting, as they did in 1980. Even the rise in interest rates would cause gold to go down, but that is the other side of a double edged sword, as that would cause the gov. more problems.
As the "MEYERS FINANCIAL REVIEW" commented in the 80's the gov is in a vise and the handle is being turned. The squeeze is on.
They have $100 dollars in reserve 77 of them are backed by gold if they buy another ring from the bubble gum machine i see this going to 150%
1. What is a "gold reserve" vs. a "forex reserve" and why are these relevant?
2. 77% of WHAT?
3. How much of the worldwide gold mining companies are held by Chinese ownership?
4. 2% for China is misleading - they hold about 15% of the gold tonnage held by the US
5. Why do you continue to hawk only your own stock holding in such a Crameresque fashion - give us some alternatives like the wonderful mutual fund BGEIX.
Still, as always, a very good article subject and much food for thought. Thanks.
ROFLMAO! "Is Gold the New Dollar"! LOL!!!!
reality9999 - ONE OF THGE BEST POSTS OF ALL TIME!!!
edgar eugen - ONE OF THE CRAPPI EST POSTS OF ALL TIME!!!
Jim J., you are sometimes such a tease with the paucity of info provided.
1.
The gold market is more inflated tht real estate was. The reality is that there is only enough gold in the world to fill about 2% of the contracts and derivatives based on it.
That market will crash like everything else, once people actually start trying to collect on thier profits, and realize that thier gold holdings are no more than worthless peices of paper written by greedy broakers and banks
Let's be realistic here....when and if gold goes to $4500. an ounce and silver is ratioed to 16 to 1 of gold, then it's makes much more sense to be holding onto $290. an ounce silver.
Gold will only 4 times it value, Silver will 30 times it's value. I don't know it sells itself. Vince @ Silver-Wow
77% of nothing is not much .. do you really think the USA has a reserve of anything??
If you have $45,000 in credit card debt and $300 savings as your RESERVES, are you in good shape? NO
USA has 12 trillion current debt and 60+ trillion unfunded future liabilities (Medicare, Social Security, government pensions, etc.) and a very small so-called "reserve" of which 77% might be gold. Silver reserves are gone forever. Some reserves in OIL.
You think gold will go up, you all will be breathless when SILVER takes off.
StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.
Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.
MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances.
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