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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

5 responses to “Gold and Silver Markets Start to Normalize, Report 4 May”

  1. Thank you, Keith, for another clear and reassuring article. Recently I came into some extra cash and due to your steady guidance over the years, I did not succumb to FOMO and only exchanged 10% of this cash for gold and 10% for Silver. I’m holding 80% to buy into the dribble down of the dollar price of gold as the dollar strengthens compared to other currencies and in the near term to gold as well (as also supported by Brent Johnson’s US Dollar Milkshake Theory).

    1. I like Brent Johnson as well, although his recent Grant Williams interview with Luke Gromen brought out good points by both gentlemen. Good as they are, I think they’re both off the mark on one key point.

      Which dollar are they referring to?

      There are two: The dollar itself and by itself, and the dollar index which compares the fiat dollar with other fiat currencies. Intuitively, the dollar index and any such “rubber yardstick” is of little value, since (in that case) we’re simply measuring one rubber yardstick (US fiat) with another rubber yardsticks. They could all decline 90% from here… but if the dollar declines by only 85% analysts will say “the dollar is strong!” How silly that is? Because all fiat is going down, as they always do. So all we’re measuring is how fast they’re going down compared to one another. Big deal.

      If you want to know how the dollar is really faring, look at gold. And gold is trading at new all time highs (over $1900 U.S. equivalent) in every other currency. So yes, the dollar is strong — and could get stronger — but only ‘relatively’ strong. Yet the dollar is clearly worth less by the only measuring stick that counts… gold. Gold is that one hard asset by which everything else is measured.

      Of course both gentlemen assume that gold can’t (or shouldn’t) rally side by side with a (relatively) strong dollar. They’re mistaken. How else do we explain the rally in gold from $1050 to $1700+ over the last few years… nothing but speculation? No. Politicians around the world have been spending money and depreciating their currencies at a record pace. Why shouldn’t gold have gone up in that environment?

      Another point: Gold will have no problem rallying with a (relatively) strong dollar because the underlying dollar strength is indicative of the deep financial rot (i.e., debt) in the system. As Keith has pointed out many times, the dollar is well bid because every major sector — and especially government — is way over their heads in debt… debt that needs to be serviced.

      In a way the dollar getting strong is a sign of ‘End Times’, not from a Biblical perspective (although who knows) but certainly from a financial perspective.

      Interestingly, the root word for debt (in the original Greek I believe) is the same word for “death”. So if we WERE to see some spike in the dollar it would be a very bad omen, and gold would see the dollar strength for what it truly is…. signs of a terminal disease… and a patient about to croak.

  2. “just look at the mess in the crude oil market, when a futures contract was worth over $20 but spot was -$38!”

    This did not happen. The spot price for WTI crude hit an intraday low of $7.71 USD on April 28. Spot WTI oil never went negative.

    Chart and data:
    https://www.investing.com/currencies/wti-usd

    What did go negative was the CME May futures contract for WTI crude, this is a financial instrument which is an oil derivative. 1 futures contract being settled for 1,000 barrels of crude oil upon expiry. If you were long and could not pay for, or have the means to take physical delivery of 1,000 barrels – you were forced to sell the futures contract at whatever bid price there was (again, for the futures contract, an oil derivative).

    Since you know how this works, and developed a theory and business on the exact same concepts in the gold market… I’m not sure why you would write the quote above.

    1. Agree. Although sometimes ppl using “spot” interchangeably with “front end futures”… but (to your point) it’s still a futures contract and not actually the spot/cash price.

      Good catch.

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