Gold Is A Chameleon

Authored by James Rickards via The Daily Reckonig,

Is gold a commodity, an investment, or money?

The answer is…

Gold is a chameleon. It changes in response to the environment. At times, gold behaves like a commodity. The gold price tracks the ups and downs of commodity indices. At other times, gold is viewed as a safe haven investment. It competes with stocks and bonds for investor attention. And on occasion, gold assumes its role as the most stable long-term form of money the world has ever known.

A real chameleon changes color based on the background on which it rests. When sitting on a dark green leaf, the chameleon appears dark green to hide from predators. When the chameleon hops from the leaf to a tree trunk, it will change from green to brown to maintain its defenses.

Gold also changes its nature depending on the background.

Let’s first look at gold a commodity…

Gold does trade on commodity exchanges, and it tends to be included in commodity industries. The common understanding here is that gold is a commodity. But I don’t think that’s correct.

The reason is that because a commodity is a generic substance. It could be agricultural or a mineral or come from various sources, but it’s a substance that’s input into something else. Copper is a commodity, we use it for pipes. Lumber is a commodity, we use it for construction. Iron ore is a commodity, we use it for making steel.

Gold actually isn’t good for anything except money. People don’t dig up gold because they want to coat space helmets on astronauts or make ultra-thin wires. Gold is used for those purposes, but that’s a very small portion of its application.

So I don’t really think of gold as a commodity. But nevertheless we have to understand that it does sometimes trade like a commodity.

As far as being an investment, that’s probably gold’s most common usage.

People say, “I’m investing in gold,” or, “I’m putting part of my investment toward bullion gold.”

But I don’t really think of gold as an investment either. I understand that it’s priced in dollars, and its dollar value can go up. That will give you some return, but to me that’s more a function of the dollar than it is a function of gold.

In other words, if the dollar gets weaker, sure the dollar price of gold is going to go up. If the dollar gets stronger, then the dollar price of gold may go down.

So if you’re using the dollar as the measure of all things, then it looks like gold is going up or down. But I think of gold by weight. An ounce of gold is an ounce of gold. If I have an ounce of gold today, and I put it in a drawer, and I come back a year from now and take it out, I still have an ounce of gold. In other words, it didn’t go up or down.

The dollar price may have changed, but to me that’s the function of the dollar, not a function of gold. So again, I don’t really think of it as an investment.

One of the criticisms of gold is that it has no yield. You hear it from Warren Buffet, you hear it from others, and that’s true. But gold is not supposed to have a yield because it’s money. Just reach into your wallet or your purse and pull out a dollar bill and hold it up in front of you, and ask yourself what’s the yield? There is no yield. The dollar bill doesn’t have any yield. It’s just a dollar bill, the way a gold coin is a gold coin.

If you want yield, you have to take some risks. You can put that dollar in the bank, and the bank might pay you a little bit of interest, but now it’s not money anymore. People think of their money in a bank deposit as money, but it really isn’t money. It’s an unsecured liability of an occasionally insolvent financial institution. The risk may be low, but there’s some risk, and that’s why you get a return.

Of course, you can take more risk in the stock market or the bonds market and get higher returns (or losses, as the stock market is currently proving). The point is, to get a return you have to take risk. Gold doesn’t have any risk. It’s just gold, and it doesn’t have any return. But again, it’s not supposed to.

Gold’s role as money is difficult for investors to grasp because gold hasn’t been used as money for decades. But gold in recent years has been behaving more like money than a commodity or investment. It is competing with central bank fiat money for asset allocations by global investors.

That’s a big deal because it shows that citizens around the world are starting to lose confidence in other forms of money such as dollars, yuan, yen, euros and sterling.

When you understand that gold is money and competes with other forms of money in a jumble of cross-rates with no anchor, you’ll know why the monetary system is going wobbly.

It’s important to take off your dollar blinders to see that the dollar is just one form of money. And not necessarily the best for all investors in all circumstances. Gold is a strong competitor in the horse race among various forms of money.

Despite the recent price action, which is far more a function of the stock market rather than gold itself, this is great news for those with price exposure to gold. The price of gold in many currencies has been going up as confidence in those other currencies goes down. Confidence in currencies is dropping because investors are losing confidence in the central banks that print them.

For the first time since 2008, it looks like central banks are losing control of the global financial system. Gold does not have a central bank. Gold always inspires confidence because it is scarce, tested by time and has no credit risk.

Lost confidence in fiat money starts slowly then builds rapidly to a crescendo. The end result is panic buying of gold and a price super-spike.

We saw this behavior in the late 1970s. Gold moved from $35 per ounce in August 1971 to $800 per ounce in January 1980.

That’s a 2,200% gain in less than nine years.
We’re in the early stages of a similar super-spike that could take gold to $10,000 per ounce or higher. When that happens there will be one important difference between the new super-spike and what happened in 1980.

Back then, you could buy gold at $100, $200, or $500 per ounce and enjoy the ride. In the new super-spike, you may not be able to get any gold at all. You’ll be watching the price go up on TV, but unable to buy any for yourself.

Gold will be in such short supply that only the central banks, giant hedge funds and billionaires will be able to get their hands on any. The mint and your local dealer will be sold out. That physical scarcity will make the price super-spike even more extreme than in 1980.

The time to buy gold is now, before the price spikes and before supplies dry up. The current price decline gives you an ideal opportunity to buy gold at a bargain basement price. It won’t last long.

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Gold Bars Fight Covid Kits for Space on the Plane

Business

Gold Bars Fight Covid Kits for Space on the Plane

Before the health crisis, gold typically traveled around the world on commercial flights.

By Elena MaznevaJustina Vasquez,
and Ranjeetha Pakiam May 2, 2020

Swiss refiner Valcambi SA tried for five straight days last month to move a shipment of gold out of Hong Kong. Twice the metal was packed carefully onto a plane, only to be offloaded again.

After daily attempts and numerous arguments, the gold suddenly arrived in Switzerland without warning, said Chief Executive Officer Michael Mesaric. “We had not even asked for a slot.”

The coronavirus crisis has shone a light on a corner of precious metals markets that usually draws little attention: the logistics of transporting gold, silver and other metals across the world. The business is dominated by companies including Brink’s Co., G4S Plc, Loomis AB and Malca-Amit, which link miners and refiners with gold trading and consumption hubs around the world.

In normal times, gold bars worth millions of dollars travel the world in the cargo holds of commercial planes, just a few meters from the feet of passengers, before being whisked in armored trucks to refineries and vaults. But the grounding of flights has had a chaotic effect on an industry that’s used to relying on instantaneous delivery: prices in key markets have diverged dramatically, and the London gold market has even started talking about allowing delivery in other cities around the world.

Molten gold in molds at the Valcambi refinery in Balerna, Switzerland. 
Photographer: Stefan Wermuth/Bloomberg

Now, with global travel at a standstill, the precious metals industry is scrambling for alternative ways to keep the market moving. It’s a world of logistical headaches: even when space can be found on a plane, packages are often turned away if essentials like medical supplies need to travel instead.

“The limited commercial flights, charters or freighters we are using must prioritize personal protection equipment, medical, food and other essential products over our requirements to move bullion,” said Baskaran Narayanan, vice president at Brink’s Asia Pacific Ltd.

Another big name in the business, Malca-Amit could deliver within 24 hours before the health crisis, said managing director of Malta-Amit Singapore Pte. Ariel Kohelet. Now it’s more like 48 to 72 hours, and costs have risen.

“We’ve widened our use of cargo-only aircraft that are not dependent on passengers to fly and we’ve also chartered aircraft,” he said.

Some in the market say they’re managing to keep operating without delays. However, it’s been particularly difficult to get metal in and out of Asia, said Robert Mish, president of precious-metals dealer Mish International Monetary Inc.

“Some customers understand it and some don’t,” said Mish. “Some customers will pay more now, and others will say, ‘I understand,’ and take delivery in two weeks.”

It’s even getting more expensive to move gold that doesn’t typically travel by airplane.

German refiner C. Hafner GmbH + Co. KG used to send gold bars to neighboring Poland in security trucks. After road borders closed and its contractor stopped operating, the company has started flying the metal with FedEx Corp., said Torsten Schlindwein, deputy head of precious metals trading. Transportation costs have surged about 60% as a result.

Peter Thomas 
Source: Peter Thomas

Lockdown regulations and red tape have contributed to the delays, said Peter Thomas, a senior vice president at Chicago-based broker Zaner Group. When he tried to fly some silver out of Peru in early April, authorities initially refused to approve loading documents or allow union workers to load the plane. The metal was eventually moved on private aircraft, he said.

“It was expensive but it got done,” he said. “I think that as the virus subsides and as we get rolling again, we’re going to see a lot of product that has been sitting around, especially in smaller refineries, hit the market.”

— With assistance by Jack Farchy

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Gold is an asset you should hold every day – Revival Gold

Friday May 01, 2020 

As every new day passes, with the world economy at a virtual standstill because of the COVID-19 pandemic, investors are starting to realize that they need to hold some gold and that in turn will be positive for the mining sector, according to one mining executive.

Hugh Agro, president and CEO of Revival Gold

In a recent interview with Kitco News, Hugh Agro, president and CEO of Revival Gold, said that it is difficult to be negative on the precious metals space as governments and central banks flood financial markets with capital.

“Gold is not just for the difficult times. It’s for every time,” he said. “You’re in gold for the long run, not because you want to see a crisis or you expect a crisis, but because governments can’t manage their currencies.”

In an environment of higher gold prices, Agro said that he expects the mining sector to continue to attract capital as retail investors look for exposure and leverage to the yellow metal. He added that the mining sector, and especially junior explorers, remain an attractive option to the physical metal.

“Not everyone can be a Ray Dalio or Jeffrey Gundlach and buy millions of dollars’ worth of gold and have exposure to the gold price going up,” Argo said. “But you might have the money to invest in undervalued mining companies.”

Agro added that right now, all the attention is focused on major producers, as companies are expected to report significant increases in cash flow in their first-quarter earnings. Senior benefited in the first quarter from a substantial rise in the gold prices, coupled with lower input costs.

However, improved margins among senior miners will benefit junior explorers. “Senior gold companies are making, 50%-60% margins on what they’re producing, and now they’re looking for ounces of gold to replace that production. I expect capital will trickle down to the juniors and the explorers very quickly.”

As to what companies investors should be looking at, Agro said that it’s not just about weathering the current economic crisis but what is the growth potential when the global economy is back on the road to recovery.

He added that investors should also look at the major players backing junior explorers. Companies with big players in the mining sector, supporting them, will have easier access to capital if the global shutdown lasts longer than expected.

Agro said that he is confident Revival gold has a big enough war chest to wait out the economic crisis. He added that the company is also in a good position to grow and leverage its Beartrack gold project in Idaho. He said that the property has an updated resource of 3 million ounces.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Agro said that the company is currently working on a preliminary economic assessment to evaluate the costs of starting a heap leach project and have some production on the property.

Agro added that they should have that study done by the end of the year.

As to what investors should do in the current environment, Agro said that now is the time to build a diversified mining portfolio with a mix of senior producers, and juniors. He added that the key is to have a healthy pipeline for future growth.

“It’s not a matter of if, but a matter of when senior producers start buying junior projects to support their production,” he said.

By Neils Christensen

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