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"Peak
Gold", Central Banker Confusion
By
Steve Saville The
Speculative Investor
Date
Below are excerpts from recent
commentaries posted at www.speculative-investor.com.
The
irrelevance of “Peak Gold”
It
is said that the cure for high commodity prices is...high commodity
prices, the reason being that a high price encourages more
production and thus eventually brings about a price decline.
However, gold's 10-year (and counting) bull market has not yet
prompted an increase in the gold-mining industry's output. In fact,
the production of newly mined gold has tapered-off over the past
decade, causing some gold-mining analysts and company executives to
claim that "Peak Gold" is at hand. As is supposedly the
case in the oil patch, the idea is that the ability of the gold
mining industry to ramp-up supply in response to a rising price is
being constrained by physics and geology.
We doubt that "Peak Gold" is upon us. It takes a decade or
more for the gold-mining industry to respond to major changes in
gold's price trend, so the modest decline in production of the past
several years is probably due to reduced exploration activity during
the 1990s and the first few years of the 2000s. However, we don't
want to get into a debate about whether "Peak Gold" is a
valid theory or not because the concept of a gold production peak is
not meaningful. The reasons are detailed in our November-2009
article titled "Why
changes in gold production don't matter".
The crux of the issue is that most of the gold mined in the past has
not been consumed (burnt, eaten, used-up in industrial processes or
built into structures); rather, it remains available today in
readily saleable form. Consequently, gold-mine supply adds only
about 1.5% per year to the total supply of gold, and changes in mine
supply have very little influence on gold's supply/demand equation.
For instance, if every gold mine in the world closed down tomorrow
it wouldn't make a big difference to gold's 5-year price outlook.
Such news would undoubtedly prompt a violent knee-jerk reaction, but
the price would eventually settle at a level that reflected the loss
of only a 1.5%/year contribution to total supply.
By way of further explanation, imagine that gold were money. In this
case, the contribution to total supply made by the mining industry
would be the monetary inflation rate. If the inflation rate were
zero, that is, if the gold-mining industry ceased to exist, then
gold's purchasing power would tend to increase over the long-term at
roughly the same rate as the economy grew. For example, if, during a
20-year period, there were no money (gold) supply growth and average
annual economic growth of 3% then gold's purchasing power would be
expected to gain a total of about 80% (3%/year compounded for 20
years) over the course of this period. At no stage would there be a
shortage of money (gold), assuming that prices were permitted to
freely adjust.
Today, gold is not money, but it can be analysed as if it were. In
fact, in order to draw correct conclusions it MUST be analysed as if
it were money. This involves looking at gold-mine supply as a small
addition to the total aboveground supply.
Just
when we thought we’d heard it all…
Just
when we thought we were beyond being surprised by anything a central
banker could say, a senior Australian central banker proved us
wrong. In a speech reported in a 23rd
February Mineweb article, Ric Battellino, the Deputy Governor of
the Reserve Bank of Australia, stated that mining booms cause
inflation (inflation, here, meaning a rise in the general price
level). And how did he come to that conclusion? He noticed that
mining booms have always coincided with periods of high inflation.
This made us wonder if he believes that a rooster crowing causes the
sun to rise.
Battellino's comments on the relationship between mining booms and
inflation are so silly they could easily be mistaken for satire.
Unfortunately, he was being serious. He is either a really bad liar
(a good liar wouldn't tell such a ridiculous tale), or his
understanding of cause and effect is embarrassingly inadequate.
A mining boom will, of course, typically coincide with an unusually
steep upward trend in the general price level because both are set
in motion by a rapid increase in the money supply. In other words,
the mining boom and the rise in the general price level are both
effects of central-bank manipulation of money. Looking at it from a
different angle, investment booms couldn't get very far and there
could not be large increases in the general price level unless the
central bank first pushed interest rates down to an artificially low
level and then supplied whatever amount of new money was needed to
maintain the low interest rates.
Regular
financial market forecasts and analyses are provided at our web
site:
http://www.speculative-investor.com/new/index.html
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aren’t offering a free trial subscription at this time,
but free samples of our work (excerpts from our
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