By David Galland, Editor, The Casey Report | 22 November 2008
In the past few months, I've read a number of analysts, Jim Rogers even, who have expressed the view that gold could dip to the mid— to low $600 level. As we've seen in the past few months, anything can happen in this market... but there are things happening all over the world that tell me buyers of physical gold are finding any price near $700 to be too cheap to pass up. In other words, there are ready buyers prepared to "keep a floor" under gold at current levels. On that topic, a friend sent this item along last week...
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The Saudis have a lot of money to pour into gold. Not just a lot... but a really, really, big, stupendous mountain of the stuff. Oh, and like you and me, they're human. Which means they can't help but glance through the morning's financial news, adjust the reading glasses, and think, "Blessed Mohammed! This is getting really, really serious. Maybe just a little extra gold under the tent right now wouldn't be such a horrible idea."
They aren't alone. We are getting regular reports that at these prices, demand is soaring in India (where price inflation is now running around 11%). And brisk sales have pretty much wiped out physical supplies of small coins and bars in the U.S. and Europe… among other corners of the world. On that score, a few days ago, I received this note from a subscriber. It speaks volumes about the current state of gold:
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While we already know $750 is no magic number below which gold cannot fall, I take no small comfort in the fact that there is a clear increase in demand at that price. In time, as the dollar continues to participate in the fiat currency race to the bottom, that number will ratchet higher and higher still. Maybe not overnight, but in the next six months to a year, certainly… or as certain as anyone can be about anything these days…
One thing that could get the show on the road pronto-like has to do with the continuing presence of the other 900-pound gorilla in the room, foreign dollar holders. Like the Saudis, the Chinese have at their fingertips a lot of greenbacks. Actually, not just a lot, but enough to remake the Great Wall. And they, too, are human.
And so, over their morning cup of tea, they finger the abacus while watching the daily financial news and say, "Holy Mao! This is getting really, really serious. Maybe just a little extra gold in the rice jar right now wouldn't be such a horrible idea." On that front, here's some news from Hong Kong.
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In another article, from Bloomberg, the head of China's gold association commented that he thought China could triple its reserves. Considering China has around $2 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves [[almost three quarters of a trillion in dollars alone: normxxx]], the country could triple its gold reserves and not even blink. In the final analysis, we can't say with certainty what path gold will take between now and the time this crisis is over. But I see signs all over the world that there is a huge amount of buying interest for gold right now [[which is quite dangerous for the price of gold if things ever settle down: normxxx]]. And until I can see some tangible evidence that it has lost its value as money, I'm a happy holder and, at under $750, a buyer.
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Normxxx ______________
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