The gathering storm
Any respite for the US Dollar will prove temporary. This could be a fantastic chance to buy gold
today...
ONCE EVERYONE gets back from their vacation and starts to focus on what's
really going on in the
investment markets, we may be in for a torrid few months of volatility and losses.
I believe the current
lull in gold prices could offer a good opportunity to defend yourself before the real trouble begins.
(To Buy Gold Today at low prices and for
very low fees, visit BullionVault
now...)
Since the end of June there
has been huge damage done to the finances of hundreds of organizations worldwide. But much of this pain
is still hidden inside
investment funds holding obscure financial instruments which are now unmarketable.
Too many investment
professionals have been backing the same short-odds gamble – residential housing – and the aggressive
financial arrangements they set
up are unraveling a little more every day.
The underlying problem of
non-paying US mortgage debt is
getting worse, not better, but this fact is being forgotten in the current rate-cut induced rally in
shares and bonds. Short of
organized double-digit inflation I don't believe there is a force capable of halting the slide in
subprime US property
prices.
On top of that, we still have the extended pain of increasing rates
hitting more US home-buyers as
their "teaser" deals end. Data compiled by Inside Mortgage Finance and Lehman Brothers say this trend
has barely begun. It won't peak
until the end of summer next year.
The world's largest financial
organizations have already taken big hits
– quietly, for the moment – but the collapse of the subprime sector really is hurting, and we are seeing
things that just shouldn't
happen in a well-ordered financial world.
- Fund managers are not producing credible fund valuations; they have frozen values using old prices, and are forbidding the normal result, which is investors piling through the exits.
- No-one can price mortgage-backed derivatives at the moment, and no-one really knows how the underwriters of credit default swaps are pricing the insurance time-bomb they're sitting on. These horrible investments are in many cases worth nothing, and in the case of credit-default swaps, less than nothing.
The current lull might prove an opportunity for the prospective gold buyer. Gold has not yet moved
up; in fact, it has dipped a
little as stretched investment funds have sold whatever they can to raise cash and reduce their margin
calls.
Nor can any serious comment on the gathering storm fail to remark on the apparent "flight to quality"
which on Monday last week saw
US Treasury bonds put in their strongest day since Black Monday 1987.
US
Treasury bonds are part of the
fast-growing and utterly irredeemable $9 trillion public debt now outstanding in the United States. The
US trade deficit was also on
record-breaking form again last month. Only a few short weeks ago these dreadful statistics drove the US
Dollar to record lows against
a basket of major world currencies.
Only a lack of imagination would allow
investors to think suddenly of
the US Dollar as today's "quality" refuge. Any respite for the Dollar will surely be temporary; indeed,
the bounce we saw during the
sharpest stock-market losses so far may have simply been short-covering by Dollar bears (of which there
are plenty) rather than fresh
buying of “quality”.
Everything that has just happened in fact makes things
worse for the US currency. At
the heart of this current crisis lies the bubble in poor-quality US home loans. It is US consumers who
are being pinched; it is the
return on invested US Dollars which is now being cut.
Lower US rates on the
back of America's weakening
domestic economy will re-kindle a Dollar slide in due course. So the current lull may offer only a brief
window, in which fewer,
stronger Dollars buy more gold than they soon will.
If you're interested in
the protections which owning
gold – outright in your name – may provide, then please do consider the option of buying and storing
physical gold bullion in Zurich,
Switzerland, through BullionVault.
As the Financial Times
reported in a feature article about BullionVault at the weekend, "private buyers [used to find] it
extremely difficult and often
prohibitively expensive to acquire gold – not least because of the cost of storing and securing high
quality bars of bullion." Now BullionVault "dramatically
cuts the cost to customers of keeping their share of the
precious metal," as the FT puts it.
And amid the storm now
gathering in the broader financial
markets, I believe Buying Gold could offer a serious
defense against both volatility
and losses in stocks, bonds and the US Dollar.











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