Gold News

$8,000 Gold?

Bullish as he is, John Paulson may be underestimating gold's potential...

THE KNOWN big gold buyers and sellers are making for an interesting trading environment currently right now, writes Addison Wiggin for the Daily Reckoning.

The Gold Price is being pulled down, for example, by news that George Soros is cleaning out some of his considerable position.

The trade hasn't shown up in a 13-F filing — because that will be issued later this month — but The Wall Street Journal claims "the Soros fund has sold much of its gold and silver investments over the past month or so," according to "someone close to the firm."

As authoritative as that sounds, the story the WSJ tells is that Soros loaded up on gold to guard against a collapse in consumer demand after the crisis. Gold, the theory goes, would buy more if prices were falling. But now that the Fed has loosened the monetary spigots, and will keep dribbling even after QE2 wraps up in June, Soros does not fear "deflation" so much.

Likewise, if he's selling his gold, he doesn't think "inflation" is much of a threat either.

Alan Fournier of Pennant Capital is unloading some of his gold too, most likely to take profits as the market gets jittery near this false peak.

Meanwhile, John Paulson is happy to take the other side of the trade… which is helping keep a floor under the Gold Price.

The man who made his fortune shorting subprime told investors yesterday that lax monetary policy from the Fed, and the Bank of England, has him convinced gold will head to $4,000 an ounce over the next three-five years.

Mexico's central bank added 93.3 metric tons of gold to its reserves in February and March.

We haven't seen a number like this since November 2009, when India happily snapped up 200 metric tons of the International Monetary Fund's gold stash. Most of the Mexican purchase — 78.5 metric tons — came in March, marking the single largest one-month accumulation by a central bank in 10 years, according to the World Gold Council.

Combined with steady purchases by China and Russia since 2003, the news "seems to confirm there's an appetite now among emerging economies with large forex reserves to add to their gold reserves," says Matthew Turner, precious metals strategist at Mitsubishi.

Central banks worldwide became net buyers of gold last year for the first time since 1988.

Using the government's current CPI calculation, gold would be priced at $2,442 today. And using the government's 1980 CPI methodology, we'd be looking at $8,331 — a tad more ambitious than John Paulson's $4,000.

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Publisher of Agora Financial, Addison Wiggin is also editorial director of The Daily Reckoning. He is the author, with Bill Bonner, of the international bestsellers Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt, and best-selling author of The Demise of the Dollar.

Addison Wiggin articles

Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News.

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