- Joined
- 13 February 2006
- Posts
- 5,255
- Reactions
- 12,088
Gold is not currency. It's a metal. History has moved on.
In Mad Max, no one cares about it.
If the world went to hell, I can't see all the baubles (diamonds, pearls, etc.) being worth much to anyone.
Think what you really would need. A bit of shiny metal (in rings on half the population) ain't going to be important.
Medicines for instance would be valuable.
Guns, seeds, fishing tackle, fuel, food, books with knowledge, good land, strong sons, livestock etc.
Here's a variation on your theme with weekly POG charted below @finicky:Someone I follow on twitter, Northstar @Northst18363337, was saying this on Mar 13,
"I heard some Elliot Wave target in the $1430 region. This fits in very well with an earlier chart of mine. It'll test your nerves though"
View attachment 101361
And if I am wrong, then I will be like the millions of others who have regarded gold as a store of value.
Market uncertainty has had gold and bonds regularly running in tandem, as exemplified below in the period from late January 2020:However, gold as money (or an asset) will always be in competition with other asset classes for returns. The closest competitor are Bonds. Sovereign Bonds (which are considered risk free depending upon Government issuing) compete with gold for investor capital, which provides the volatility in price. The lower the real return on other asset classes, the higher the price of gold.
1. Market uncertainty has had gold and bonds regularly running in tandem, as exemplified below in the period from late January 2020:
2. So it's not true to presume they are always competing, and it is least true in uncertain times.
3. But if you ascribed to @ducati916's school of thought then the above is not really possible. It's the difference between theory and the real world that we need to disambiguate in markets.
4. Right now there is a struggle of market sentiment running in tandem with fiat currency interdependencies that price gold quite differently.
My posted charts show your points are regularly untrue.1. The correlation goes back far further than January 2020, how about 1971 as a start.
2. Incorrect. Bonds and Gold have been competing since 1971 as at that point the US went off the gold standard and inflation started to ratchet higher. Bond yields lagged the rate of inflation (seriously) and POG continued to rise. Only when the rate of interest exceeded the rate of inflation, which had the 10yr yielding 15%, did inflation reverse, as did, the POG.
3. So currently we have a situation where since 2001 where 'low' interest rates have predominated, the POG has risen (or stayed relatively stable) through that same time period. IF yield rises, POG will fall, which we have already seen with only 'basis points' increase in yield.
4. Yield governs fiat exchange rates also, as should be abundantly clear in the massive carry trades that predominate within the fx world.
jog on
duc
Ok, here's the 9 year period from August 1971 when Bretton Woods was scrapped:1. The correlation goes back far further than January 2020, how about 1971 as a start.
Ok, here's the 9 year period from August 1971 when Bretton Woods was scrapped:
View attachment 101522
The shaded periods above were recessionary.
If we are to believe you, this relationship (correlation) is wrong!
Maybe 9 years of being wrong is not enough?
Here's a separate period of 9 years:
View attachment 101523
And here's the period immediately afterwards (ie from 1995) to the present, and the relationship is now mostly inverted:
View attachment 101525
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?