Gleeful over Gold
Observant people could have found reason for suspecting something
was going wrong in real estate during the time from 2005 to 2007 without being
aware of the extremely loose or even nonexistent underwriting standards being
used by many lenders or noticing the
bubbles in home prices in many markets around the country simply by surfing
through late night cable TV channels and counting the number of programs on
getting rich flipping real estate. In a
similar way the recent years’ abundance of TV advertisements for getting rich by
buying gold and silver could have functioned as a warning of trouble coming in
the precious metals markets.
Now that gold and silver have fallen a good bit from their
recent highs, many in the financial media,
particularly those with ties to and affinities for the financial and political
establishments, have been fairly joyfully proclaiming the death of gold and depicting
the so-called gold bugs as fools and paranoiacs who do not know what they are
doing. On the surface this is an odd phenomenon.
Prices of assets fluctuate with different things being attractively or
unattractively priced at different times. There have been bear markets and
bubbles in various classes of assets. Precious
metals do not differ from stocks, bonds, or real estate in that respect. Yet most
of these people did not write or talk about foolish stock bugs when the indexes
had huge declines in price twice in the last dozen years. Nor do they usually
talk about foolish bond bugs of the present day piling into assets with little
or no upside potential, prices artificially propped up by government actions, and an almost guaranteed negative after-inflation
return.
It is worth thinking about why the general tone is so
different with respect to the precious metals. My guess is that it is in large part because
purchasing precious metals, at least by
implication and often by explicit conclusion, shows a lack of trust in the
government, its currency, and its partners in the financial establishment. It
is natural for many in Washington and Manhattan to find such mistrust both déclassé
and threatening, and perhaps even infuriating.
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