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Why I Don't Trust Gold
Wall Street Journal ^ | 05/27/2010 | Brett Arends

Posted on 05/27/2010 6:47:03 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

This is a very sad day for me.

In Part One of this series, when I argued that gold might be about to go vertical, I made a whole bunch of new friends among the gold bugs.

And now I'm going to lose them all.

That's because even though I think gold might be about to take off, I don't recommend you rush out and put all your money into gold bars or exchange-traded funds that hold bullion.

And this is for one simple reason: At some levels, gold, as an investment, is absolutely ridiculous.

Warren Buffett put it well. "Gold gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace," he said. "Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head."

And that's not the half of it.

Gold is volatile. It's hard to value. It generates no income.

Yes, it's a "hard asset," but so are lots of other things—like land, bags of rice, even bottled water.

It's a currency "substitute," but it's useless. In prison, at least, they use cigarettes: If all else fails, they can smoke them. Imagine a bunch of health nuts in a nonsmoking "facility" still trying to settle their debts with cigarettes. That's gold. It doesn't make sense.

As for being a "store of value," anyone who bought gold in the late 1970s and held on lost nearly all their purchasing power over the next 20 years.

I get worried when I see people plunging heavily into gold at $1,200 an ounce. What if the price goes back to where it was just a few years ago, at $500 or $600 an ounce? Will you buy more? Sell?

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: currency; gold; goldbuggery; inflation; usdollar
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1 posted on 05/27/2010 6:47:03 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The hard truth told, Gold in a crisis is useless. After all the hype and fears are worn out; it has to be sold for necessities. The clarion call will sound and this bubble will pop.


3 posted on 05/27/2010 6:52:06 AM PDT by Broker (Stranger in a very strange land.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Food, water, guns, bullets.


4 posted on 05/27/2010 6:54:34 AM PDT by ryan71 (Let's Roll!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Gold is not an investment.

Gold is savings.


5 posted on 05/27/2010 6:54:35 AM PDT by farmguy
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To: SeekAndFind
Yes, it's a "hard asset," but so are lots of other things—like land, bags of rice, even bottled water.

Or ammunition.

6 posted on 05/27/2010 6:56:17 AM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (The US will not die with a whimper. It will die with thundering applause from the left.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Yes, but Warren B. is a bit of a P.T. Barnum. His local jewelry firm is buying old jewelry just like the rest. Buffett’s like Obama, it's what he does, not what he says. Gold seems like it has only one purpose; for use in the case of emergency and the emergency must be hyper-inflation. With the ship of fools in Washington and other capitals around the world, the possibility seems more like a probability, so how stupid is it?
7 posted on 05/27/2010 6:58:14 AM PDT by throwback ( The object of opening the mind, as of opening the mouth, is to shut it again on something solid)
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To: SeekAndFind

Gold. 21st Centurys’ tulip bulb. I’d rather have copper, lead, brass, & wheat.
The copper, lead & brass is to protect the wheat. ;-)
If, & it’s a big if, granted, 1929 were to happen again, which would you rather have? A gold coin, or a loaf of bread?


8 posted on 05/27/2010 6:58:23 AM PDT by rickb308 (Muslims need to check with Native Americans & ask how that whole cowboys & indians thing worked out.)
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To: SeekAndFind
What if the price goes back to where it was just a few years ago, at $500 or $600 an ounce? Will you buy more?

Yes.

Buffet misses the point. We are at a stage of history when everything we thought constituted an investment is about to be wiped out. It started with the dotcom bubble. It continued with the housing bubble. We know the resultant paper and physical losses that followed. Now, we have this ridiculous debt bubble that is a worldwide scandal. When the other shoe drops, we'll finally know where we stand (only we won't be standing). In that scenario, all investment bets are off; except one.

The point not to be missed about gold is not that it's an investment, but that it will withstand the worst case scenario.

9 posted on 05/27/2010 6:58:39 AM PDT by Migraine (Diversity is great... ...until it happens to YOU.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Dave Ramsey told a caller once that he’d be better off with a can of soup and a gun, if it hit the fan.


10 posted on 05/27/2010 6:58:43 AM PDT by lacrew (Barack Obama is always the least experienced most condescending guy in the room. (Rush))
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To: Broker
‘Gold in a crisis is useless’

It is a hedge, that is all.

Depending on the scenario, other forms of investments will bring higher returns, ie drinking water, food, ammo.

The idea that you should only put your faith in any single thing is absurd and of course foolish.

Diversification in investing is prudent; gold has it's role.

11 posted on 05/27/2010 6:59:22 AM PDT by Palter (Kilroy was here.)
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To: SeekAndFind
The utility of gold is that it can be exchanged for any currency. At some point you can't exchange Zimbabwe dollars for US dollars at any exchange rate simply because nobody wants the Zimbabwe dollars. Gold's value is when you don't know what currency will still be valuable after the crash and what currency will be nicely printed toilet paper. It is like "Investing" in lifeboats. You don't buy a lifeboat because you expect to make money selling it later. You buy a lifeboat because it will get you out of a bad place when everything around you goes to heck.
12 posted on 05/27/2010 6:59:40 AM PDT by GonzoGOP (There are millions of paranoid people in the world and they are all out to get me.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Free market. period.


13 posted on 05/27/2010 7:01:08 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin! (look it up))
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To: Broker

The hard truth told, Gold in a crisis is useless.

And, it is hard to carry in your pocket. In crisis, where and who are you going to sell your gold to? How much food could you buy with a bar of gold? If you pull out gold coins to pay for something - will you have a big hairy guy following you out of the grocery? Food, water and ammo is what you need.


14 posted on 05/27/2010 7:02:31 AM PDT by Bitsy
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To: SeekAndFind

And this is for one simple reason: At some levels, gold, as an investment, is absolutely ridiculous”

What’s ridiculous is the notion that any and all fiat currencies will end up with any value other than totally, flat as a pancake worthless. Gold is a store of value and it has filled that role admirably for much, much longer than any fiat has ever approached. The $ only looks good because it’s being valued against a basket of even more worthless fiats.

There’s a race to the bottom that has accelerated dramatically over the past few years that will result in most financial assets being wiped out. Late 08 and early 09 was a foretaste. You don’t solve debt issues by creating more debt which is all we’ve done.

We are not in a gold bubble, one has to only look at the valuation being attached to the mining stocks along with silver’s relative value wrt gold to clearly see that truth. Gold has much further to run in a world where it’s being valued in rapidly depreciating currencies.


15 posted on 05/27/2010 7:02:52 AM PDT by bereanway (Sarah get your gun)
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To: rickb308
If, & it’s a big if, granted, 1929 were to happen again, which would you rather have? A gold coin, or a loaf of bread?

By far -- a loaf of bread. The existence of a loaf of bread assumes that it is available.
If it's available, I assume there's more.
If there's more bread, someone is selling it.
If someone is selling it, that means they can't eat it all and need something with which to store the value of their bread. That's where gold comes in.
About the only thing the beatniks and hippies got right was when they called money, "bread".

16 posted on 05/27/2010 7:02:54 AM PDT by Migraine (Diversity is great... ...until it happens to YOU.)
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To: SeekAndFind; PA Engineer; blam; TigerLikesRooster; Cheap_Hessian; CJinVA; Jet Jaguar; ...

Goldbug ping

Well let’s count how many ways this is trite old rehash:
- no dividend, check
- you can’t eat it, check
- what if you bought it at the tippy tippy top, before you were born?, check

Then he waves his hands about how much “surplus” gold there is, using as the absolutely worst mental image possible, how many bullion coins the Mint could make with it. Does anybody remember exactly how many times in 2008 and 2009 the Mint stopped accepting orders because they couldn’t get material? Four, five, more?

And people are buying gold and hanging on to it, that’s why the price is high, because there’s less of it out there?

His first installment of this series came out on May 25, the very day of gold options expiration, notorious and easily proven for almost every month of the last year to be as the time when gold hits its monthly bottom.

Mail me to get on or off the Free Republic Goldbug Ping List.


17 posted on 05/27/2010 7:02:59 AM PDT by jiggyboy (Ten per cent of poll respondents are either lying or insane)
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To: rickb308
"If, & it’s a big if, granted, 1929 were to happen again, which would you rather have? A gold coin, or a loaf of bread?"

I'd take the gold coin. The price of bread in 1929 was about 10 cents, while the gold coin held value at $20.66. In general, food prices were falling in the depression, and there wasn't a shortage of it, just a shortage of jobs to get money to buy it.

18 posted on 05/27/2010 7:06:34 AM PDT by In veno, veritas (Please identify my Ad Hominem attacks. I should be debating ideas.)
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To: farmguy

Although Gold extraction has increased, I think it more likely that the world’s balance sheet, money printing and debt has far outpaced increased gold production.
Gold may not be a great investment, but fiat currency based assets are even worse.
Buying gold at it’s inflation peak was not wise in the late 70s/early 80s, but no one could predict when inflation would end when Jimmy Carter was president. Right now we have relatively little inflation just like in the 1960s.
If we get real economic growth (as in the mid 1980s and beyond), yes, I agree it would be wise to get out of gold. We will have to see some sound economic policy or a really positive and tranformative technological breakthrough that allows real wealth creation.


19 posted on 05/27/2010 7:07:01 AM PDT by grumpygresh (Democrats delenda est)
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To: Broker

Saw a very interesting blog from an “urban survivalist” in Argentina when that country’s economy blew-up in 2001, the Gov’t confiscated foreign currency accounts, there was rioting in the streets, etc...

He also explained that gold, in most forms (esp. anything less than pure), was not useful. Do you exchange a gold bar for a tank of gas? He posited gold would have been more useful in the forms of small coins or tradeable links of some kind that would be easily carried, traded and recognizable to people (basically, he just described a type of currency)

More useful to him: A gun, ammunition, stored food/water, and a big truck/SUV that allowed him to get out of situations with would-be robbers on the roads


20 posted on 05/27/2010 7:07:27 AM PDT by PGR88
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