A Bubble In Gold?
Nope. Not by a long way...
VIEWING the gold price in a vacuum, some may think there is a bubble in
gold, writes Gary Tanashian
in his Notes from the Rabbit
Hole.
The gold price is, after all, doing this...

But a bubble in gold? No.
Just last week the gold price ticked our
target of $3000+, which was
established in 2020 as gold topped out and began its Handle-making phase and pattern consolidation,
after making a higher right side
high to its massive and bullish Cup pattern.
Is this round number target (it
was actually the Cup's
measurement) a stop sign? Maybe, for a while. Maybe not. Targets are objectives, not earth shattering
conclusions, and bull markets do
not go straight up.
Aside from gold's nominal price, I have frequently
presented this chart of the gold price
relative to the S&P500. This shows who has really been the recipient of official (Fed and
government) inflationary policies since
2011, and who has not.

There is no bubble in gold, as compared to the SPX.
But in looking
through nftrh.com's extensive
Links page, I reacquainted myself with Macrotrends, a helpful website that holds a lot of ratio charts
of various markets. It's a nice
visual nerd fest. Below is one that goes well with my assertion in the chart above.
A bubble in gold? Hardly,
as compared to the bubble in Monetary Base, which is a way of saying the bubble in monetary policy. I
have been assigning the real
bubble dynamics to monetary and fiscal policy, with the stock market simply being bubble beneficiary
#1.
Gold, on the other hand...Palookaville.

A bubble
in gold?
Here is how Macrotrends describes the ratio.

Aside from making my long-standing point
that gold is not primarily about inflation (as they've chronically inflated money supplies for decades),
the chart tells us that the
current bull market in gold is only just getting started.
My assertion is that
the break in the Continuum's
decades-long disinflationary downtrend (which gave license to ongoing and chronic inflationary policies
by Fed and government) is
indicative of policymaking that will be handcuffed relative to recent decades, in its ability to rescue
asset markets in "business as
usual" fashion.

It is not hard
to imagine that the nominal gold price could move significantly higher, even if the Gold/Monetary Base
chart above gets nowhere near
the 4.8 level noted by Macrotrends.











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