By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph.uk | 15 November 2007
The era of 'peak gold' has arrived.
Dollar crunch puts gold centre stage |
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LEFT: Eastern glitter— models wear Just Gold jewellery from the collection of Henry Jewellery Group
"There's not much gold out there," said Gregory Wilkins, chief executive of top producer Barrick Gold.
"There is a great disparity between the money spent on exploration and success. It's hard to say where the price of gold is going because we're in uncharted waters. I would say it could easily move to $900, $1,000, or beyond. It could happen very quickly," he said. |
We know from the US Academy of Sciences that some 26% of all the copper and 19% of all the zinc that ever existed in the earth's crust has already been lost to mankind, mostly wasted in milling or smelting or buried in landfills. Data has never been collected for gold, and the 5bn ounces mined over history is still around. Roughly 1bn are in central bank vaults. But the same patterns of exhaustion are emerging.
South Africa's output is down to the lowest since 1932 [[some of that's political: normxxx]]. Much of what remains elsewhere is locked up in no-go countries run by demagogues or serial expropriators.
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Kevin McArthur, chief executive of Goldcorps, said his group was not setting foot outside North America.
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Gold reached a 27-year high of $846 an ounce in early November following rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve, though it has fallen back since. Investors seemed to be betting on a "Bernanke reflation", suspecting that the Fed will turn the liquidity tap back on to cushion the US property slump.
Tony Fell, chairman of RBC Capital Markets, said the world money supply has been growing by 5%-10% while the stock of mined gold has been rising at 1.6%, creating a mismatch that must be covered. Mr Fell says the total debt burden in the US has exploded to 340% of GDP, in stark contrast to the steady levels of around 150% of the post-War era. It almost insures further dollar debasement. "We're in the very early phases of a prolonged bull market," he said. RBC argues that the global dollar system known as Bretton Woods II is "coming apart at the seams" as Asian, Mid-East, and Latin American states start to break their dollar links to avoid importing US inflation.
The result is to resurrect gold, which is fast regaining its role as the world's benchmark currency. It was the last currency bust-up— caused by America's attempt to the fight the Vietnam War and fund the Great Society, without adequate taxes— that lay behind the 1970s bull market in gold. "The fact that monetary policy in the core was too loose for the periphery triggered the demise of Bretton Woods 1. The late 1960s saw first France and then Germany and Britain all start to swap their dollar reserves for gold. We may well be witnessing a similar situation today as price pressures build in the emerging world," it said in a new report.
However, RBC warned that gold was looking toppy after the blistering Autumn rally and faced a likely sell-off in coming weeks, perhaps to $725-$750 [[gold closed today at $790: normxxx]]. India's gold buying season is coming to an end with the Diwali Festival. The country accounts for 22% of world gold demand. The level of speculative "long" positions on New York's Comex futures market has remained above 20m ounces for five weeks in a row. This sort of pattern is typically followed by a sharp slide, although the global credit crunch and bank scares may change the game this time. But RBC says any correction is likely to be short, with gold probing record highs of $900 an ounce early next year.
Whether the gold mining shares will at last join the party is far from clear. Many have languished through the bull market, and some are trading well below levels reached when gold was half the price. Costs are rising at $60 an ounce annually. They will average $460 per ounce by next year. From tires, to diesel fuel, and the geologists' salaries, mine inflation is running at 15%.
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RBC is betting that the gold mining shares will soon start to shine again, enjoying their famed leverage to the spot price. At $1000 an ounce, it forecasts a share feast: Barrick up 65%, Newmont 80%, IAMGOLD 90%, NovaGold 90%, and Centerra 100%.
Purists will always prefer ingots of glistening metal.
Normxxx
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