Gold And The Question Of Economic Stimulation

 | Aug 27, 2012 02:56AM ET

After spending the better part of three months locked in a lateral range, gold finally broke out on Aug. 21 and went on to make a series of follow-through highs. December gold was quoted at $1,667 as of this writing, its highest level since early May. The move came as many investors assume the Fed is about to stimulate the economy.

The basis behind this assumption came from the recently released minutes from the U.S. Federal Reserve’s latest meeting, which showed that “many members” of the Fed's Open Market Committee felt that additional action would be warranted unless the economic recovery shows “substantial and sustainable strengthening.” The minutes also showed that many officials favored pushing any increase in short-term interest rates beyond the Fed's current target of late 2014. Many economists believe the target will be pushed to mid-2015.

All summer, pundits on both sides have been complaining that the U.S. economy is “lousy” and in danger of sliding into yet another recession. The actual numbers haven’t exactly presented a rosy picture, but neither have they been all that bad. The economic recovery that began in 2009 hasn’t been particularly robust, and we’ve never recovered pre-crisis levels of growth. But as I’ve long maintained, the overall domestic economy has been slowly on the mend since the stock market recovery of 2009 began.

Moreover, consumer spending this year in some markets has been through the roof. Granted, much of the action has been along the high-end of the economy (e.g. luxury auto sales, jewelry, prime real estate, etc.) But even John Q. Public can’t deny it has done its share of spending at some point this year, as sales numbers from companies like Apple (AAPL) will attest. And as I keep reminding you to the point of being a nuisance, the New Economy Index (NEI) recently hit an all-time high.

This is one of the simplest ways I know of measuring the actual strength of sales transactions taking place across the U.S. retail economy.