Why the Stars Are Aligned for a Bull Market in Precious Metals

 | Oct 27, 2023 01:09AM ET

I am firm in my conviction that the current market and political environment is quite similar to the third quarter of 2008. In that prior period of time, the financial system was headed toward a complete melt-down and the price of gold was mercilessly manipulated lower by western Central Banks in advance of the introduction of massive money printing, which was propitiously labeled “Quantitative Easing.”

While the rest of the financial system headed lower at the end of October 2008, the precious metals sector took off in a torrid bull cycle. The ensuing three years produced jaw-dropping investment returns. I believe that we are on the cusp of a similar move in the financial markets and the precious metals sector. The caveat is that I also believe, with a high degree of conviction, that the implosion of dollar-based financial assets will be worse than in 2008.

I recently spent a considerable amount of time examining, and trying to poke holes in, the precious metals sector investment thesis. The first concern is that perhaps the thesis that gold and silver represent both a wealth preservation asset and a total rate of return investment opportunity is wrong. That might be the case except that the price of gold (and silver) is historically undervalued relative to financial assets (stocks and bonds). In isolation, this makes the sector an inordinate value investment proposition.

In addition, the major (and many “minor”) countries and Central Banks in the eastern hemisphere have been accumulating physical gold at a record rate on an annualized basis. Away from the well-known gold-accumulating countries, Turkey, Singapore, and Poland have been notably buying large quantities of gold this year. In addition to increasing the percentage of gold in their currency reserves, the biggest foreign buyers historically of U.S. Treasuries – China, Japan, and Saudi Arabia – have been reducing their Treasury holdings as well as reducing the amount of dollars held in their respective reserves.

The chart on the next page from Incrementum’s 2023 “In Gold We Trust” report (with my minor cosmetic edits) shows the amount of Treasuries sold and gold purchased by official foreign entities (Central Bank primarily) between Q4 2014 and Q4 2022: