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In October 2007, when gold was USD 750/oz and a US Dollar fetched 7.5 Chinese
Renminbi Yuan (RMB), I published an article titled "Gold
and RMB - Last Shoe to Drop for the dollar", in which I said:
For a US family that spends $300 to $500 a month on Chinese goods,
a further 40% appreciation of the RMB will translate into a $100 to $200
monthly cost increase. The logic of asking the Chinese to revalue their
currency upwards is no different from asking the Saudi's to jack up their
oil price further, which is no logic at all for a US consumer. Holding
Dollars is like playing musical chairs. When the music stops, the one
holding the most Green IOUs, loses.
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With a rapidly sinking Dollar vs. western currencies, the Dollar's
supreme image is now very wobbly.
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Having built up a war chest of USD 1 trillion, the Chinese need
no more Dollars to shore up confidence in its own paper within the
international arena.
Combining these two factors, the Chinese government will likely loosen
the RMB peg to the Dollar at a faster pace, and we expect a minimum of
20% appreciation in RMB over the Dollar (i.e 5-6 RMB to 1 USD) in the
next 12 to 18 months. Gold is international money, and will follow the
RMB's suit and climb to over $1,000/oz over the same period. This gold
target is a conservative estimate given that other commodities from oil
to copper have all quadrupled from their lows this decade. Gold's low
was $250/oz in 2001.
Gold and the RMB's rise will be the final chapter to the Dollar's
status as the world's reserve currency, and the end to an era of low
priced Walmart goods made in China.
-John Lee, October 27 2007
Now, 7 months later:
The RMB has since appreciated at the fastest 6-month pace on record, up over
7% and cracked through the psychological 7 RMB/USD barrier to trade at 6.95
RMB/USD. The talk of demanding the Chinese to revalue their currency has all
but disappeared.

3 year RMB exchange rate to USD, no signs of slowing down
Gold met our 12 month target in 4 months and surpassed USD 1,000/oz in March
2008.

2 year gold chart, ready to take another crack at $1,000/oz
Fast-rising commodity prices and appreciating RMB are putting pushing up prices
of everything measured in USD. Unheard of in the past decade, computer prices
are going up for the first time in recent memory.
2009 Gold Target: USD 1,300/oz based on 5 RMB to 1 USD exchange rate
Let's do an experiment: If we fix the RMB-denominated gold price constant
at today's closing of RMB 6,425/oz, the price of gold will reach USD 1,285/oz
should RMB reach our target of 5 RMB to 1 USD by the end of 2009.
There are those who predict a rebound of the dollar index and a protracted
USD 800/oz gold price or even lower. They just don't get the message. Gold
is an international market. Physical gold demand is mostly from Asia and as
long as Asian currencies keep strengthening, the USD-denominated gold price
will keep going up, regardless of what happens to the US dollar index.
Our 2009 gold target of USD 1,300/oz does not factor in external elements
such as geo-politics or the speculative herd-following frenzy. I have a feeling
this once-unthinkable 4-digit target will turn out to be too conservative.
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