The Screaming Fundamentals for Owning Gold and Silver
by Chris Martenson
Recently
by Chris Martenson: Argentina:
A Case Study in How An Economy Collapses
This report
lays out an investment thesis for gold and one for silver. Various
factors lead me to conclude that gold is one investment that you
can park for the next ten or twenty years, confident that it will
perform well. My timing and logic for both entering and finally
exiting gold (and silver) as investments are laid out in the full
report.
The punch line
is this: Gold and silver are not (yet) in bubble territory, and
large gains remain, especially if monetary, fiscal, and fundamental
supply-and-demand trends remain in play.
Introduction
In 2001, as
the painful end of the long stock bull market finally seeped into
my consciousness, I began to grow quite concerned about my traditional
stock and bond holdings. Other than a house with 27 years left on
a 30 year mortgage, these holdings represented 100% of my investing
portfolio. So I dug into the economic data to see what I could discover.
What I found shocked me. It's all in the Crash Course
in both video
and book
form, so I won't go into that data here.
By 2002, I
had investigated enough about our monetary, economic, and political
systems that I decided that holding gold and silver would be a very
good idea, poured 50% of my liquid net worth into precious metals,
and sat back and watched.
Since then,
my appreciation for and understanding of the role of gold as a monetary
asset and silver as an indispensable industrial metal have deepened
considerably.
Investing in
gold and silver is still a good idea. Here's why.
Why own gold
and silver?
The reasons
to hold gold and silver, and I mean physical gold and silver,
are pretty straightforward. So let’s begin with the primary reasons
to own gold.
- To protect
against monetary recklessness
- As insulation
against fiscal foolishness
- As insurance
against the possibility of a major calamity in the banking/financial
system
- For the
embedded 'option value' that will pay out if and when gold is
remonetized
By ‘monetary
recklessness,’ I mean the creation of money out of thin
air and the application of more liquidity than the productive economy
actually needs. The central banks of the world have been doing this
for decades, not just since the onset of the great financial crisis.
In gold terms, the supply of above-ground gold is growing at roughly
3% per year, while money supply has been growing at nearly three
times that yearly rate since 1980.

Now this is
admittedly an unfair view, because the economy has been growing,
too, but money and credit growth have handily outpaced even the
upwardly distorted GDP measurements by a wide margin. As the
economy stagnates under this too-large debt load while the credit
system continues to operate as if perpetual expansion were possible,
look for all the resulting extra dollars to show up in prices of
goods and services.
Real
interest rates are deeply negative (meaning that the rate
of inflation is higher than Treasury bond yields). This is a forced,
manipulated outcome courtesy of central banks that are buying bonds
with thin-air money. Historically, periods of negative real interest
rates are nearly always associated with outsized returns for commodities,
especially precious metals. If and when real interest rates turn
positive, I will reconsider my holdings in gold and silver, but
not until then. That is as close to an absolute requirement as I
have in this business.
Monetary
policies across the developed world remain as accommodating
as they’ve ever been. Even Greenspan's 1% blow-out special in 2003
was not as steeply negative in real terms as what Bernanke has recently
engineered. But it is the highly aggressive and ‘alternative’ use
of the Federal Reserve balance sheet to prop up insolvent banks
and to sop up extra Treasury debt that really has me worried. There
seems to be no way to end these ever-expanding programs, and they
seem to have become a permanent feature of the economic and financial
landscape. In Europe, the equivalent would be the sovereign
debt now found on the European Central Bank (ECB) balance sheet.
Federal
deficits are seemingly out of control and are now stuck
in the -$1.5 trillion range. Massive deficit spending has always
been inflationary, and inflation is usually gold/silver friendly.
Although not always, mind you, as the correlation is not strong,
especially during mild inflation (less than 5%). Note, for example,
that gold fell from its high in 1980 all the way to its low in 1998,
an 18 year period with plenty of mild inflation along the way. Sooner
or later I expect extraordinary budget deficits to translate into
extraordinary inflation.
Reason #3, insurance
against a major calamity in the banking system, is
an important part of my rationale for holding gold. I’m not referring
to “paper gold” either, which includes the various tradable vehicles
(like the "GLD" ETF) that you can buy like stocks through your
broker. I’m talking about physical gold and silver because of their
unusual ability to sit outside of the banking/monetary system and
act as monetary assets.
Literally everything
else financial, including your paper US money, is simultaneously
somebody else’s liability, but gold and silver are not. They are
simply, boringly, just assets. This is a highly desirable characteristic
that is not easily replicated.
Should the
banking system suffer a systemic breakdown, to which I ascribe a
reasonably high probability of greater than 1-in-4 over the next
5 years, I expect banks to close for some period of time. Whether
it's two weeks or six months is unimportant; no matter the length
of time, I'd prefer to be holding gold than bank deposits.
During a banking
holiday, your money will be frozen and left just sitting there,
even as everything priced in money (especially imported items) rocket
up in price. By the time your money is again available to you, you
may find that a large portion of it has been looted by the effects
of a collapsing currency. How do you avoid this? Easy; keep some
‘money’ out of the system to spend during an emergency. I always
advocate three months of living expenses in cash, but you owe it
to yourself to have gold and silver in your possession as well.
The final reason
for holding gold, because it may be remonetized,
is actually a very big draw for me. While the probability of this
coming to pass may be low, the rewards would be very high.
Here are some
numbers: The total amount of 'official gold,' or that held
by central banks around the world, is 30,684 tonnes, or 987 million
troy ounces (MOz). In 2008 the total amount of money stock in the
world was roughly $60 trillion.
If the world
wanted 100% gold backing of all existing money, then the implied
price for an ounce of gold is ($60T/987MOz) = $60,790 per troy ounce.
Clearly that's
a silly number (or is it?), but even a 10% partial backing of money
yields $6,000 per ounce. The point here is not to bandy about outlandish
numbers, but merely to point out that unless a great deal of the
world's money stock is destroyed somehow, or a lot more official
gold is bought from the market and placed into official hands, backing
even a fraction of the world's money supply by gold will result
in a far higher number than today's ~$1,500/Oz.
The Difference
Between Silver and Gold
Often people
ask me if I hold goldandsilver as if it were one word.
I do own both, but for almost entirely different reasons. Gold,
to me, is a monetary substance. It has money-like qualities and
it has been used as money by diverse cultures throughout history.
I expect that to continue.
There is a
chance, growing by the week, that gold will be remonetized on the
international stage due to a failure of the current all-fiat regime.
If or when the fiat regime fails, there will have to be some form
of replacement, and the only one that we know works for sure is
a gold standard. Therefore, a renewed gold standard has the best
chance of being the ‘new’ system selected during the next bout of
difficulties.
Silver is an
industrial metal with a host of enviable and irreplaceable attributes.
It is the most conductive metal known, and therefore it is widely
used in the electronics industry. It is used to plate critical bearings
in jet engines and as an antimicrobial additive to everything from
wall paints to clothing fibers. In nearly all of these uses, plus
a thousand others, it is used in such vanishingly small quantities
that it is hardly worth recovering at the end of the product life
cycle -- and often isn’t.
Because of
this dispersion effect, above-ground silver is actually at something
of a historical low point. When silver was used primarily for monetary
and ornamentation purposes, the amount of above-ground, refined
silver grew with every passing year. After industrial uses cropped
up, that trend reversed, and today there are perhaps 1 billion ounces
above ground, when in 1980 there were roughly 4 billion ounces.
Because of
this consumption dynamic, it's entirely possible that over
the next twenty years not one single net new ounce of above ground
silver will be added to inventories, while in contrast, a few billion
ounces of gold will be added.
I hold gold
as a monetary metal. I own silver because of its residual monetary
qualities, but more importantly because I believe it will continue
to be in demand for industrial uses for a very long time, and it
will become a scarce and rare item.
Scarcity
If we cast
our minds forward ten years and think about a world with oil costing
2x to maybe 8x more than today, we have to ask how many of our currently-operating
gold and silver mines, or the base metal mines from which gold and
silver are by-products, will still be in operation, and how many
will close because their energy costs will have exceeded their marginal
economic benefits.
After just
100 years of modern, machine-powered mining, nearly all of the good
ores are gone. By the time you are reading stories like this next
one, you should be thinking, 'Why are they going to all that trouble
unless that's the best option left?'
South
African Miners Dig Deeper to Extend Gold Veins' Life Spans
Feb 17, 2011
JOHANNESBURG—With
few new gold strikes around the world that can be turned into
profitable mines, South Africa's gold miners are planning to dig
deeper than ever before to get access to rich veins.
The plans
raise questions about how to safely and profitably mine several
miles below the surface. Success would mean overcoming
problems such as possible rock falls, flooding and ventilation
challenges and designing technology to overcome the threats.
Mark Cutifani,
chief executive officer of AngloGold Ashanti Ltd., has a picture
in his office of himself at one of the deepest points in Africa,
roughly 4,000 meters, or 13,200 feet, down in
the company's Mponeng mine south of Johannesburg. Mr. Cutifani
sees no reason why Mponeng, already the deepest mining complex
in the world, shouldn't in time operate an additional 3,000-plus
feet deeper.
"The most
critical challenges for all of us in South Africa are
depths and depletion of reserves," Mr. Cutifani
said in an interview.
The above article
is just a different version of the story that led to the Deepwater
Horizon incident. By the time exceptional engineering challenges
are being pondered to scrape a little deeper, it tells the alert
observer everything they need to know about where we are in the
depletion cycle. We are closer to the end than the beginning.
We are at a
point in history where we can easily look forward and make the case
for declining per-capita production of numerous important elements
just on the basis of constantly falling ore purities, and gold and
silver fit into that category rather handily. Depletion of reserves
is a very real dynamic. It is not one that future generations will
have to worry about; it is one with which people alive today will
have to come to terms.
The issue of
Peak Oil only exacerbates the reserve depletion dynamic by adding
steadily rising energy input costs to mix. Should oil get to the
point of actual scarcity, where we have to ration by something other
than price, then we must ask where operating marginal mines fits
into the priority list. Not very high, would be my guess.
Supply and
Demand Gold
Not surprisingly,
the high prices for gold and silver have stimulated quite a bit
of exploration and new mine production. With over a decade of steadily
rising prices, there has been ample time to bring on new production.
Which leads to a real surprise: In the case of gold, relatively
little incremental mine production has occurred.
The analytical
firm Standard Chartered has calculated a rather subdued 3.6%
gold production growth over the next five years:
Most market
commentary on gold centres on the direction of US dollar movements
or inflation/deflation issues – we go beyond this to examine future
mine supply, which we regard as an equally important driver. In
our study of 375 global gold mines and projects, we note that
after 10 years of a bull market, the gold mining industry
has done little to bring on new supply. Our base-case
scenario puts gold production growth at only 3.6% CAGR over
the next five years.
(Source
Standard Chartered)
Of course,
none of this is actually surprising to anyone who understands where
we are in the depletion cycle, but it's probably quite a shock to
many an economist. The quoted report goes on to calculate that existing
projects just coming on-line need an average gold price of $1,400
to justify the capital costs, while greenfield, or brand-new, projects
require a gold price of $2,000 an ounce.
This enormous
increase in required gold prices to justify the investment is precisely
the same dynamic that we are seeing with every other depleting resource:
Energy costs run smack-dab into declining ore yields to produce
an exponential increase in operating costs. And it's not as simple
as the fuel that goes into the Caterpillar D-9s; it's the embodied
energy in the steel and all the other energy-intensive mining components
all along the entire supply chain.
Just as is
the case with oil shales that always seem to need an oil price $10
higher than the current price to break even, the law of receding
horizons (where rising input costs constantly place a resource just
out of economic reach) will prevent many an interesting, but dilute,
ore body from being developed. Given declining net energy, that's
forever, as far as I am concerned.
The punch line
of the Standard Chartered gold report is that they think $5,000
gold is a realistic target and go on to note the most important
shift in gold accumulation of the past 30 years:
The limited
new supply comes at a time when central banks have turned from
being net sellers to significant net buyers of gold.
The result, in our view, will be a gold market in deficit, even
assuming flat growth in demand.
With the
supply-demand balance so out of kilter, we see the gold price
potentially going to US$5,000/oz.
(Source)
The emergence
of central banks being net acquirers of gold is actually a pretty
big deal. Over the past few decades, central banks have been actively
reducing their gold holdings, preferring paper assets over the 'barbarous
relic.' Famously, Canada and Switzerland vastly reduced their official
gold holdings during this period, a decision that many citizens
of those countries have openly and actively questioned.
The World Gold
Council out of the UK is the primary firm that aggregates and reports
on gold supply-and-demand statistics. Here's the most recent data
on official (i.e., central bank) gold holdings:

(Source)
Note that the
2009 data is lowered by slightly more than 450 tonnes in this chart
to remove the one-time announcement by China that it had secretly
acquired 454 tonnes over the prior six years, so this data may differ
from other representations you might see. I thought it best to remove
that blip from the data. Also, the data for 2011 is for the first
four months only, so we might expect 2011 to be a record-setter
if the current pace continues.
Overall, world
supply and demand are a bit out of alignment right now, with supply
increasing by 2% last year and non-official demand increasing by
10%:

The summary
of the fundamental analysis is that with mine production seriously
lagging, the price increases for gold, and increased central bank
and investment demand, we have set the stage for some hefty price
increases irrespective of any fiscal or monetary shenanigans.
However, once
we put those back into the mix, I forecast a quite volatile but
upwardly sloping price for gold over the coming years. Possibly
a very steep upward slope at points.
Supply and
Demand Silver
Silver demand
is growing by double-digit percentages, being led primarily by industrial
uses and investment demand. The Silver Institute does a fine job
of tracking and reporting on these matters.
First, demand:
Total
fabrication demand grew by 12.8 percent to a 10-year high
of 878.8 Moz in 2010; this surge was led by the industrial
demand category. Last year, silver’s use in industrial applications
grew by 20.7 percent to 487.4 Moz, nearly recovering
all the recession-induced losses in 2009, and is now seeing pronounced
advances in 2011.
Jewelry posted
a gain of 5.1 percent, the first substantial rise since 2003,
primarily due to strong GDP gains in emerging markets and the
industrialized world’s improving economic picture. Photography
fell by 6.6 Moz, realizing its smallest loss in nine years, as
medical centers deferred conversion to digital systems. Silverware
demand fell to 50.3 Moz from 58.2 Moz in 2009, essentially due
to lower demand in India.
(Source)
Now, supply:
Silver Production
2010
Silver mine
production rose by 2.5 percent to 735.9 Moz in
2010 aided by new projects in Mexico and Argentina. Gains came
from primary silver mines and as a by-product of lead/zinc mining
activity, whereas silver volumes produced as a by-product of gold
fell 4 percent last year.
Mexico eclipsed
Peru as the world’s largest silver producing country in 2010,
and Peru is followed by China, Australia and Chile. Global primary
silver supply recorded a 5 percent increase to account for 30
percent of total mine production in 2010.
(Source)
Again, we are
comparing double-digit demand increases against low single-digit
supply increases. After a decade of rather dramatic price
increases for silver, the alert observer should be asking exactly
why this is the case.
In table form,
we can clearly see that the silver balance for the world requires
both dishoarding from government stockpiles and the recycling of
scrap silver. That is, shortfalls from mining have to be made up
from above-ground stocks:

(Source)
There's only
so long that such an imbalance can continue before the shortfalls
require much higher prices to cool off demand.
One of the
precise reasons that I originally invested quite heavily in silver
is that I came to the conclusion that the price was far too low,
artificially so, and that it would therefore be a great investment.
So far, so good.
Given the above
fundamentals, I project that prices for the precious metals will
be many multiples higher in today's dollar terms by the end
of the decade.
Part II of
this report: How
to Play The Greatest Gold & Silver Bull Market Of Our Lifetime
delves into the specifics of how much of your net worth to invest
and in what forms, what price targets gold and silver are likely
to reach, and what indicators to look for that will indicate that
it's time to sell out of your precious metal investments.
Click
here to access Part II (free executive summary, enrollment required
for full access).
June
30, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Chris
Martenson
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