Gold News

Gold Mania? Wait for $3000

Investors absent, central banks hoarding...

I'VE HAD at least a dozen Uber drivers pitch me on suspect investments, writes Adam Sharp in Addison Wiggin's Daily Reckoning.

For a while, it seemed like every trip came with free, and invariably horrible, picks.

Interestingly, I've not had a driver, or a barber for that matter, pitch me on gold and silver. Despite gold regularly breaking out to new highs, we really haven't yet seen any signs of a typical retail mania.

Looking at Google Trends. There are no signs of increased investor interest in precious metals. Google search volume for "gold price" over the last year is showing barely any movement. Other search terms such as "buy gold online" or "gold etf" – which would indicate growing interest – are similarly flat.

Despite solid performance, gold and silver are not yet hot commodities. A 2023 survey by Bank of America showed that 71% of financial advisors had a 0-1% allocation to gold. Only 27% had a 1-5% exposure rate.

Perhaps even worse, only 2% of advisors report a 5-10% allocation to gold. Madness.

So if investors aren't snatching up all the gold, what's driving the price up?

Central bankers are buying in droves. The chart below shows purchases by country in 2024 through July.

Chart of reported H1 central-bank gold buying by country. Source: World Gold Council

According to the World Gold Council, central banks added 37 tons in July alone. That's up 206% month-over-month.

There's no sign of central banks slowing their buying anytime soon. It's also important to note that we don't have great data on Russia or China, which could both be buying substantially more bullion than reported.

There's rich irony in the fact that the primary gold bulls today aren't individual investors, it's the guys running the fiat printers. This is an insider buy signal at a global scale. And these aren't fickle day traders in for a quick flip. These central banks have a new reserve policy, and it appears to heavily favor gold.

Over the past 75 years, the US Dollar emerged as the world's leading international reserve asset. It eclipsed gold in the early 1990s and remains dominant to this day. But the trend has finally flipped. Today, gold as a percent of international reserves is climbing, and the Dollar is falling.

This is a monumentally important trend. De-Dollarization is actually beginning to happen. But central banks aren't switching to the Chinese Renminbi or the Euro, they're reverting to classic hard currency: gold. It's re-goldification on a massive scale.

The era of fiat dominance may well be in its twilight years. And good riddance. Being home to the world's reserve currency has hollowed out the US manufacturing base and caused spending to spiral out of control.

All of this helps confirm my view that we are still very early on precious metals. Fed printing operations are just now about to start back up. QE will eventually reignite, and the scale will likely dwarf previous episodes within a few years. Depending on who wins the White House, a stimulus program may be in the works as well.

Gold and silver are absolutely crucial aspects of a modern portfolio, and are still wildly under-owned by investors. In the next 5 years, we will likely see a number of sovereign debt crises, and/or sustained inflation above 10% in a number of countries. The piles of government debt have simply grown out of control.

Lower interest rates will help cut the debt servicing costs (interest expenses). But there's a good chance it will also reaccelerate inflation. No matter which path we choose, the piper will be paid for past excesses.

Eventually, we will experience a true precious metal mania. I suspect it will begin when gold hits $3000 and silver breaks out above $49.45, its 1980 all-time high. Everyone will be buzzing about gold and silver. Your neighbors, friends, and colleagues. And it will be glorious.

Fortunately, we're not there yet and still have time to prepare. We may even get a pullback after gold's impressive run from $2000 in Feb 2024. But then again, we may not...
 

Publisher of Agora Financial, Addison Wiggin is also editorial director of The Daily Reckoning. He is the author, with Bill Bonner, of the international bestsellers Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt, and best-selling author of The Demise of the Dollar.

Addison Wiggin articles

Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News.

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