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Does Gold Have a Future?

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Many investors made a lot of money in gold prior to its peaking in 2011. Since then, it has been a dismal performer. Those who got in early are likely still ahead, but nowhere near where they were. Those who jumped on the bandwagon late got mauled. Some in both groups may today consider gold a swear word. Others consider gold still as an important hedge in terms of protecting their financial assets. “Does gold have a future?” is a question asked by many, particularly in these dangerous times.Gold has shown a bit of life this year, up around 4 or 5%. That is attractive under most circumstances but especially so when traditional equities have been traumatized. Will this continue? Is it an aberration for gold (and stocks)?gold-bugThese questions are important. Personally, I think gold has a future. It is hard to claim otherwise regarding something that has been regarded as money for most of the history of mankind. However, any projection or forecast should be taken with a grain of salt. Regardless of how well some presents a case, some things are just not knowable. Future prices, whether they be gold, stocks or other items generally qualify for this “grain-of-salt” consideration.

The following article describes what many went through riding gold. It is from Jared Dillian of the Mauldin Newsletter (a great free newsletter by the way). For anyone with love or hate for gold, the following article is worth reading. For some it is historical. For all, it is balanced.

Why QE Was the Worst Thing in the World

JANUARY 28, 2016

Long before I started writing for Mauldin Economics, I was a gold bull.

A mega-gold bull.

This started in 2005. I was making markets in ETFs at the time, and as head of the ETF desk at Lehman Brothers, I signed the firm up to be one of the early authorized participants in the SPDR Gold Shares fund (GLD). I was pretty excited.

It may seem quaint now, but at the time, there really wasn’t an easy way to invest in gold outside of coins or bars (high transaction costs, cumbersome) or futures (high barriers to entry). Physical gold, of course, is preferable, but you can’t really trade it, per se.

So I bought some GLD in 2005, bought more, bought more, bought more in 2008 with veins popping out of my neck, and was caught massively long in 2011.

I figured, oh well, it’s just a correction, I’ll ride it out. Except I didn’t know that it was going to be a 40+% drawdown and last five years. If I’d had that knowledge, I probably would have sold.

But my investment thesis on gold hadn’t changed.

Let me explain.

Why Gold

When the financial system was melting down in 2008, I predicted (possibly before anyone else) that Ben Bernanke would conduct unconventional monetary policy: quantitative easing. In retrospect, it wasn’t a hard call. He basically said he was going to do it in a 2002 speech.

I remember the day. The long bond rallied nine handles.

Anyway, that’s when the veins popped out of my neck, because I said all this printed money was going to slosh around the financial system and cause hyperinflation. Of course, I wasn’t the only one saying this, but I was saying it pretty loudly.

Never happened. All that money never ended up sloshing around—it ended up deposited as excess reserves back at the Fed. Years later, people theorized that quantitative easing actually caused the opposite to happen: deflation.

Anyhow, in finance, it is okay to be right for the wrong reasons. Gold went up for three more years, the best-performing asset class, even though the underlying thesis was totally wrong. There was no inflation whatsoever. Eventually, gold got the joke as sentiment turned, and you know what the last five years have been like.

The Weimar Experience

When the gold bugs start talking about hyperinflation, they usually start talking about Weimar Germany, probably the best-documented example of a situation where inflationary psychology took hold.

I don’t want to rehash the whole story here, but basically, post WWI, the League of Nations saddled Germany with a bunch of war reparations it could not possibly ever repay. In the end, though, Germany did repay—with printed money.

The funny thing about inflation is that it is always fun at first. Weimar Germany boomed for a couple of years, before the inflation began to get out of control. Ultimately, the deutsche mark collapsed, replaced by the rentenmark, which was actually backed by something of tangible value: land.

The ensuing financial collapse brought about political instability, which led to the rise of Hitler, and you know the story from there.

Now, clearly that hasn’t happened in the US, and it isn’t likely to happen. We did not get inflation… of goods and services. Interestingly, though, we got inflation of financial asset prices. Stocks and bonds went up, as well as real estate—even art. Great, but as you know, not everybody owns stocks, usually only people with some money to invest.

So as all the research shows, the rich have gotten richer, and the poor have gotten poorer. Inequality has increased massively, which has brought about political instability, which will lead to… who, as president, exactly?

Perish the thought.

Anyway, whether gold goes up or down, I continue to assert that printing money is absolutely the worst thing a central bank can do. Even under the best of circumstances, the unintended consequences are colossally bad. Even now, the Fed is just getting around to acknowledging the fact that QE might have actually caused wealth inequality.

There are those who will always say, “What, was the Fed supposed to do nothing? What do you think would have happened?”

An unimaginably bad depression. Then, the best recovery ever. And nobody would be mad at each other.

Gold Is Bouncing

You can’t deny the price action. Over the last few weeks, it is positively buoyant. If I were short, my butt cheeks would be tightening up.

I’m starting to develop a theory, which is crazy, but then again… it might not be entirely crazy. You can help me decide.

Maybe gold is starting to price in some of this political instability. Maybe it is starting to price in a Sanders or Trump presidency.

After all, if Bernie Sanders were to become president, he would double the debt overnight. If it were Trump, probably the same thing—we are talking about a guy who has spent his entire career screwing creditors.

This increases the possibility, however remote, of debt monetization. Also, populists are great for gold prices.

Like I said, maybe not so crazy. Regardless of whether gold goes up or down, or if you think gold bugs are total idiots, it makes sense (for a lot of portfolio theory reasons) to have it as part of your portfolio.

Sometimes a bigger part than others.