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The Factor Hiding Gold’s ‘Real’ Price: When ‘Golden Bull’ Will Return Read Newsmax: The Factor Hiding Gold’s ‘Real’ Price: When ‘Golden Bull’ Will Return |

Jim Rickards thinks that when you’re buying gold, looking for the best “entry point” is one key.
And that makes sense. Ideally you want to enter at a price that is low enough, so you can store as much value in your portfolio as possible.
But a challenge arises when there are factors you can’t “see” that affect that entry point. For example…

When you take a look at the standard “gold price” chart below, you can see the 5-year trend. Any “breakout” remains in check, with prices failing to break $1400. You can view a chart of this 5 year trend here.
You might think “Gold may never break out.” And that might be true – if you only see gold as a “commodity” valued for its growth potential.
But Jim also sees gold as a “highly liquid and heavily traded form of money. That means the price can be temporarily manipulated from its fundamental value.
And that is the factor masking gold’s real price… temporary manipulation.

Jim explains this in a recent Agora “5-Minute Forecast”:
“Manipulation can be caused by central banks seeking attractive entry points or trying to squelch disorderly price spikes,” he says.
And hedge funds “shorting” gold can instigate selling that might lead to a full-scale collapse of gold’s price.
While its price can be manipulated, fundamentals like “supply and demand, monetary economics and the presence or absence of inflationary expectations” ultimately determine gold’s price.
In other words, gold’s price can’t escape its fundamental value long-term, no matter how much price manipulation is attempted by hedge funds and central banks.
And with the exception of a mild selloff in the 70’s, the U.S. has held onto most of its 8,000 tons of gold, despite removing the gold standard in 1971.
So if the U.S. is holding onto its reserves in spite of the “price,” there must be something else going on.

The Gold Price Manipulation ‘Mask’ Gets Ripped Off
There’s a different chart from the same Agora report that you might want to check out.
This one compares the dollar price of gold to 5-year TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities), which correlate closely to the standard CPI measure of inflation.
The TIPS and dollar price of gold correlate closely until 2017. At that point the two diverge.
Generally, when inflation rises, so do gold prices. When inflation dips, gold prices generally follow. But in 2017, they diverge.
This may be resulting from gold price manipulation on the part of the U.S. to prop up the dollar (even though POTUS claims to be trying to weaken the dollar).

History indicates gold prices and inflation won’t remain divergent, however, and market fundamentals play a big part of the reason why.
Either the TIPS data reflect the inflation accurately, and like every year prior to the “anomaly” in 2017 in the chart above, gold’s dollar price will soar and meet the rising inflation meaning the two lines will converge again…

Or, as Jim Rickards believes, in September the Fed will have to hit “pause” on the rate hikes and gold will rally:
On the other hand, if strong growth — and inflation — doesn’t materialize because of Fed “over tightening,” the Fed will have to pause interest-rate hikes to avoid a recession. If that happens, Jim believes the Fed will push pause in September.

“In that case, gold will also rally because markets will conclude that the Fed cannot stay the course in tightening,”
At that point, the gold price manipulation mask would be ripped off, and prices would reflect fundamentals instead.
In fact, Jim Rickards even thinks “gold is on sale”:
“A gold price that is materially below fundamental value is what I mean when I say gold is cheap or ‘on sale,’”
It’s all about the entry point, and right now the entry point seems pretty good.
Get in Front of the Next ‘Golden Bull’
We already know the Fed isn’t telling us the “real” inflation rate. History tells us that gold’s price generally rises and falls in step with the inflation trend. That, or diverging trends eventually reconnect.

And that happens because of gold price fundamentals. Right now, those fundamentals seem to point to the next bull market for gold.

Newsmax.com
6/25/2018

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