Richard Shaw | Nov 05, 2012 01:02AM ET
Some investors believe that gold is the “real” money (and some believe that is nonsense). Some of those who believe it is real money express that belief in terms of currency debasement through an ever expanding quantity of currency in circulation.
Their argument is that the wealth of a nation at any moment is a fixed value, and that by merely printing more fiat currency (paper money declared by government to be legal tender with no asset backing required), the currency is worth less and less and gold worth more and more — Weimar Republic hyperinflation and Zimbabwe hyperinflation being the extremes of that.
Historical Narrative Perspective:
In 1900 the U.S. Dollar became convertible and redeemable into gold for any holder, both citizens and foreign governments. During 1933, the Dollar was made convertible into gold only by foreign governments, not U.S. citizens. In 1971, the U.S. Dollar was made not convertible into gold by any party.
Here is how it is explained by the Federal Reserve Bank , the September 1, 2012 quantity of U.S. currency in circulation is $1.064 Trillion. The price of gold on September 1 was $1,692. The ratio of currency in circulation per ounce of gold held by the U.S. based on this data was $4,079 (let’s term that the “conversion ratio”). We should point out that the European Union has nearly the same conversion ratio. Japan, however, has a much higher conversion ratio (indicating a greater currency debasement on their part than in the U.S. and in Europe).
For contrast, they reported the a July 199 gold holdings slightly greater than now at 261,615,927 ounces, and a quantity of currency in circulation of $0.488 Trillion. The price of gold back then was $258 per ounce. The conversion ratio then was $1,864.
Currency In Circulation Changes:
From 1969 through now, the average annual rate of change of currency in circulation was 6.98%. Figure 1 shows that data, with more significant variation since about 1990. Figure 2 presents the same data for the shorter period from 2000, since which the average annual currency expansion has been 6.28%
Figure 1: Long-Term Rate of Change Of USD In Circulation
Starting in July 1999, we indexed the amount of currency in circulation and the price of gold to see what that might reveal. The gold price really took off after 2003 (which happened to be the bottom in the stock market).
Figure 3: Indexed Change in M0 (M Zero) vs Indexed Gold Price
M0 (M zero) is the letter designation for total currency in circulation.
The price of gold and the conversion ratio seem to move in parallel as shown in Figure 4, but by starting at different base levels had quite different growth patterns (as shown in Figure 3).
Figure 5 shows the spread between the price of gold and the conversion ratio. Interestingly, the spread has been roughly steady with an average spread of $2,221. The spread went above the average in 2008 when gold declined 30%, and above the average when gold surged during the stock market recovery, now is closer to average. If the average persists, the current price of gold might be expected to be about $1,860.
Figure 4: Actual Gold Price vs USD Currency/Treasury Gold Holdings
If the real money theory holds water (and it may or may not be adequate as a single variable to explain gold price movement over the long-term), the likely explanation would be that ebbing and flowing of investor interest and trust in the stock market and government, and fears of deflation or inflation, and exchange rates the put the Dollar higher and lower at times; all added layers of upward and downward pressure on gold, causing it to fluctuate around a more central value based on the concept of gold being real money that in the end would be based on how much gold was potentially behind it.
Other Factors Potentially Better Related To Gold Price:
We think there should be some metric or some set of metrics that can be tracked to help establish when gold is overvalued or undervalued. Fiat currency per ounce of central bank gold is the most logical fist suspect since that is actually the way it was under the legal system as one time in the past.
There may be others, and we are looking for them. Our prior blog post did an historical chart review of the relationship between the price of gold and several other assets and did not find any essentially better metric. That doesn’t make the conversion ratio a good or the best metric, but it doesn’t knock it out of consideration either.
Perhaps there is a polynomial metric that we will find with further research, but pending that we are inclined to think that, all other things being constant (which they seldom are), gold is likely to find a current center around $1,860, advance at least 6% per year as the currency base appears likely to do, and perhaps break with its multi-year spread behavior and approach $4,000 per ounce to reach the conversion ratio. Then again it could drop into bear market territory under recession/deflation conditions.
As time goes by and the likely 6% currency expansion continues, the $1,860 center and the $4,000 price potential would probably increase proportionately.
Gold could, of course go well beyond the currency growth adjusted $4,000, but the rationale would need to be established to understand it or manage around it (e.g a collapse in the exchange rate of the Dollar, which is the global price base of gold; or currency printing presses gone crazy).
Temporary Gold Price Decline Scenario:
As we have noted in other posts, there is also a realistic chance of gold at least temporarily declining to something like $1,300 if it goes down 30% from its recent peak, as it did in the 2008 market crash. That possibility arises because (a) gold is in a decline at the moment, and (b) the fiscal cliff has the potential to be market disrupting and deflation fear generating as was the case in 2008.
Figure 6: Current Daily Chart For GLD (gold ETF) for 1 Year:
The leading physical gold fund is GLD. For who do not own bullion directly or do not traded in gold futures, this fund is a popular alternative. Other physical gold ETFs are IAU, SGOL and AGOL, but GLD is the largest and most liquid, with liquid stock options available.
The dashed gold line is the 200-day average. The pink shaded area is the 3-month price channel. The green shaded area is the 1-month price channel.
The ratio of the prices of GLD and gold are not constant, although GLD trades in the vicinity of 1/10th the price of gold. The daily fluctuations in the ratio, represent the inefficiencies in the arbitrage process that is intended to keep the price and the NAV close. The gradual decline in the ratio probably represents the drag effect of fund expenses.
Figure 9: GLD and GOLD Plotted Side-by-Side:
The price ratio might give a more severe interpretation of the price relationship than this chart, which plots GLD and gold prices on the same chart. The gold price scale is on the left, and the GLD price scale is on the right. The plots are minimally different and virtually on top of each other.
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