Its
Weight in Gold: The Real Prices of Things
by
Charles Vollum
Casey
Research
Recently
by David Galland: Why
Gold Is Going Higher
Fiat currencies
the world over are being manipulated by central banks, which is
distorting asset and commodity prices. Successful investing requires
that investors have a good idea of what things cost and what they
are really worth – and using the world's oldest and most stable
form of money, gold, to compare prices is one way to get that insight.
To that end,
below is a sampling of current prices measured in grams or milligrams
of gold. Price comparisons are against prices as of June 10.
Currency
Watch:
| |
|
Change
from: |
|
| |
Price
in Gold |
Week
ago
|
Year
ago |
| USD |
20.3
mg
|
0.7%
|
-20.4%
|
| CAD |
20.8
mg
|
0.7%
|
-15.7%
|
| EUR |
29.7
mg
|
1.9%
|
-3.9%
|
| JPY |
0.254
mg
|
1.7%
|
-9.4%
|
The month of
May was rough for all the currencies, with the EUR and JPY making
new all-time lows on the 24th and 25th, respectively,
while the USD made a new all-time low on June 6th. Since
then, they have all been struggling to regain the lost ground. Last
week, the much-beleaguered euro made the most headway, followed
by the JPY. All of the currencies are down significantly from their
year-ago levels, but the USD has fared much worse than the others,
down 20%.
Bond
Watch:
| |
|
Change
from: |
|
| |
Price
in Gold |
Week
ago
|
Year
ago |
| 1-3
Year (SHY) |
1.72
g
|
0.8%
|
-19.1%
|
| 20+
Year (TLT) |
1.98
g
|
1.5%
|
-16.4%
|
U.S. Treasuries
have been a terrible investment for at least the last eight years.
Since 2002, shares of the ETF SHY have lost 76% of their value,
despite an apparent increase of 29% when measured using dollars.
The long bond ETF TLT is just as bad, down 70% since 2002, despite
a smoke-and-mirrors “gain” of 66% when measured in dollars. While
Treasuries ticked up about 1%, following the lead of the USD, they
remain down about 19% from a year ago.
Equity
Watch:
| |
|
Change
from: |
|
| |
Price
in Gold |
Week
ago
|
Year
ago |
| DJIA |
243.09
g
|
0.8%
|
-6.5%
|
| S&P
500 |
25.85
g
|
-1.6%
|
-6.9%
|
| Nikkei
225 |
2.42
g
|
2.0%
|
-9.6%
|
| HUI |
10.34
g
|
-4.7%
|
-12.0%
|
Major stock
indices have been falling for the last ten years. The Dow, for instance,
hit its all-time high around 1,400 gold grams in 1999. It has since
lost over 80% of its value. For the last two years, major indices
have been pretty flat after bouncing off their March 2009 lows.
As with bonds, nominal prices have risen as currency values have
fallen, leaving investors with lost purchasing power and huge tax
liabilities.
Commodity
Watch:
| |
|
Change
from: |
|
| |
Price
in Gold |
Week
ago
|
Year
ago |
| Crude
Oil |
2.02
g/bbl
|
-0.2%
|
4.7%
|
| Silver |
0.760
g/oz
|
7.0%
|
65.5%
|
| Copper |
82.6
mg/lb
|
0.0%
|
13.3%
|
| Coffee |
53.9
mg/lb
|
2.1%
|
54.0%
|
| Cotton |
30.5
mg/lb
|
-6.5%
|
44.8%
|
Silver has
been strong, not just in dollars but in gold as well. On February
18, it closed convincingly above its long-term resistance level
at 0.7 grams of gold. This was followed by a fast run-up to the
1.0-gram level, last seen in the early 1980s, and then a quick drop
back to the 0.7 level.
There is a
lot of concern about rising commodity prices recently. Although
many of these commodities are up strongly in the last year, they
are rebounding off deep lows.
Crude oil,
for example, finds its long-term support at around 1 gram per barrel
(g/bbl), and hit 1.1 g/bbl in February of 2009. Although it has
recovered to 2 g/bbl, crude traded at over 4.9 g/bbl as recently
as 2008.
Coffee is another
example. Trading at under 34 mg/lb in May of 2010, it currently
stands at 54 mg/lb yet in 1997 it traded over 230 mg/lb.
Cotton was
less than 20 mg/lb in early 2010, and now trades near 30 mg/lb.
Cotton's 30-year average price is 53.2 mg/lb (74% higher), and its
record high of 250 mg/lb is eight times today's level.
Chart
of the Week: Boeing Co.

An article
on MarketWatch discussing the Dow Industrial stocks stated that
for 2011, Boeing is the best-performing stock in the index. On May
10, it was up 22.5% – a new 52-week high and very near its price
three years ago (all in U.S. dollar terms, of course).
The chart above
shows the real situation: rather than making a new 52-week high,
the stock was down 10.1% from its 52-week high set last July. It
was up 14.2% for the year, not 22.5%. And rather than approaching
its price of three years ago, it was in fact down 40%. And Boeing
was the best-performing stock of the 30 Dow Industrials!
Of course,
all this doesn't tell one whether Boeing is a good buy at today's
prices; to determine that, one would have to dig deeply into its
fundamentals. But it does show that the conventional media, by using
dollar prices, give very distorted ideas about how cheap or expensive
things really are.
Don't be fooled
by bogus government currency shenanigans! Keep track of your investments'
true values, using gold.
It isn’t too
late to capitalize on gold. It can offer security, profit potential,
and an inflation hedge. BIG
GOLD can help you sort through stocks, ETFs, and other
ways to invest – and it’s risk-free
for three months.
June 18, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
Research
|