Jeff Clark, Editor, BIG GOLD
Casey Research snippet
May 4, 2009
Gold isn't going to $2,000 an ounce.
Before you gag on your coffee or suffer chest pains, allow me to explain.
We're about eight years into the bull market, and gold has breached the $1,000 level twice and has spent weeks trading above the old high of $850. Some observers are now saying that gold's pretty much had its day and that once the recession is over, it will retreat for good.
However, the four-digit gold price we've seen so far is with no price inflation to speak of, no effects of the atrocious increase in the money supply, and despite a rising dollar. What happens to gold when each of those pictures gets turned upside down - high inflation, excess cash jolting the economy, and a falling dollar? After all, gold's performance to date has been powered only by general anxiety, not by any visible erosion in the dollar's value.
I decided to take a fresh look at calculations that could be used to appraise gold's upside potential. No one of them, by itself, comes with compelling logic. But they all point in the same direction. (more)
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