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The Euro is Falling Against the $, Should Gold [and Silver] Fall Too, or Rise With the $?

This is a snippet from the Gold Forecaster. The newsletter that covers all pertinent factors affecting the gold price [with a 95% accuracy rate].

We are so used to looking at gold rising when the $ falls that the concept of gold rising when the $ rises seems to break the rules. We have often commented that there is no rhyme or reason why the € and gold should move in step with each other. And yet they have driven mainly by COMEX speculators and traders for well over a year now. Just read most daily commentaries and you will see this link to an inverse path to the $ given as the main reason why gold moves.

Now the € is sending out distress signals [as we discussed in the global currencies section below] and capital is fleeing the European currency. This confirms a trend we have been highlighting, that capital is fleeing from troubled currencies, not selecting the $ as the place to be. We pointed to the Yen, to the Pound sterling and alerted you to others that face such capital flight. They turn to the $ [the reason for the $'s rally] because it is the world's prime currency and one at the moment less in danger because of this role. But be careful, the fundamentals of the $ are also pointing to trouble.

All currencies involved

When the crises really hits the $, all currencies [unless isolated as the Yuan is now] of the monetary system will become volatile. The weakness of the € is warning us of structural dangers facing the paper currency system itself. A stable global money system requires nations cooperate globally and don't put national interests first. This will not happen so long as there are so many countries, separate interests and separate economies in the world. The attempt by the Eurozone to integrate so many of these politically, economically and culturally separate sovereign states was bound to suffer structural damage when a rough storm hit. And now you can see the gold market reacting as it moves up, while the $ is holding ground at $1.40 to the €. Fixed exchange rates failed because of these differences, so why shouldn't one currency overlaid as the € is, fail too?

Failure of Fixed and 'Floating' systems

Now take the floating exchange rate nature of the system and ask why should an economically strong nation have to suffer a rising currency that reduces and could eliminate its strength? You can be sure that if the Deutschmark was resurrected and Germany goes it alone, the exchange rate would price German goods out of the market despite the quality of its goods. When it was around, the signal it was going to revalue was when its Finance Minister denied it was going to revalue! Don't think for one moment that the Chinese Yuan is going to willingly, suffer a similar fate. We are now at the point where we must conclude that 'fixed' exchange rates don't work and 'floating' exchange rates won't work, or should we say, "are not in national interests".

We have made mention of the imminent de-coupling of the gold price from the $ in the last few issues saying it had to start with a rise against the €, then the $ simultaneously. We are stating to see that now in the market, but much more work has to be done before that is accepted by COMEX and the like, but happen it will, as a potentially huge move into gold by the largest institutions and bodies of wealth is moving to start the process.

Gold gaining respect

Consequent to European nations ceasing to sell gold and other on the other sides of the world buying it, it is now in most nation's national interests to hold the gold they have in the face of the worst storm the currency system will ever see. As a matter of prudence gold is being acquired quietly, but in volume. Of interest is the large covering of short positions we are seeing on COMEX. If this continues we will have to ask, is this J.P. Morgan et al making moves ahead of President Obama's moves against the banks trading with other than proprietary funds on its balance sheets? Such a move would be far larger than the process of de-hedging we have seen over the last few years if this were to happen!

Dangers ahead

What is happening in the Eurozone, to the €, to the $ [even though the two may soon give an air of stability as they glide down together - if only in terms of confidence]] alongside the shift of wealth to the East, is a build-up in both volatility and credibility of the currency system itself. With national interests so strongly entrenched, globalization is a sitting duck in times of stress. In its place we will see protectionism manifest itself in the monetary world first, via measures to 'manage' the exit of capital from vulnerable nations. At its worst we will see stringent Exchange Controls implemented as part of this process somewhere down the line. But the instability such will bring, will take gold to the level of respect that it used to have. The reasons why, will then scream at us. Gold is untainted by national interests and is an internationally respected measure of value that is being recognized more by each passing day.

It is not simply a matter of past inflation being recognized in a higher gold price. Future credibility loss, associated risks outside of inflation still have to be factored into the gold price. Then add potential to past inflation to the price and what do you have?

Consequently, there are far too many reasons why gold should move independently of both the $ and the €.

Impact on the gold price
Subscribers only

2010 gold prices forecast.
For Subscribers only - We are in the process of forecasting prices in 2010 in Gold - Silver - the $ - the € - the Global Economic tensions developing - The Oil Price - COMEX - Long-Term Gold Investors - Chinese retail demand - Indian retail demand - European retail and Institutional demand - U.S. retail demand.

Gold Forecaster regularly covers all fundamental and Technical aspects of the gold price in the weekly newsletter. To subscribe, please visit www.GoldForecaster.com.

 

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