April and May could be surprisingly juicy.
The gold market underscored the veracity of my scenario in a very clear fashion Thursday: Gold posted its biggest gain in six months after the Fed’s plan to buy debt hammered the U.S. dollar and reignited inflationary fears. Gold futures for April delivery actually jumped $69.70 an ounce, or 7.8%, to reach $958.80.
The gold market underscored the veracity of my scenario in a very clear fashion Thursday:
The gold market underscored the veracity of my scenario in a very clear fashion Thursday:
The yellow metal reached a record high of $1,033.90 an ounce on March 17, 2008 – a year ago this week – when U.S. rate cuts sent the greenback to an all-time low against the euro. Gold prices subsequently declined in concert with most other commodities. It’s up 8.4% so far this year, according to Bloomberg News.
If the hedge funds pile into gold, they will overwhelm the physical gold market, in which 2008’s mine output of 2,407 tons and other supply of 1,061 tons had a value of only about $98 billion at recent prices of approximately $900 per ounce. Gold’s peak price in 1980 of $875 was equivalent to $2,300 in today’s money; it is by no means impossible that the price of gold could soar well beyond that level.
Hedge fund interest in gold was demonstrated Tuesday by the hedge-fund billionaire John A. Paulson, who was probably 2007-2008’s most successful investor, thanks to a strategy to short housing assets that generated profits of more than $10 billion. Now Paulson has gone and bought 11.3% of gold miner AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. (ADR: AU) for $1.28 billion. Paulson’s on a hot streak, so there must be a good chance some of his rich buddies will follow him into the sector; that will inevitably shift the market considerably.
Gold mines had a 2008 that was less profitable than you might expect. The price of gold was essentially flat over the year, while the price of oil soared to a peak in July, affecting miners’ costs badly, since fuel represents 25% or more of a mining firm’s total expenses. Only in the fourth quarter, as fuel prices declined and gold prices rose, did mining economics improve – but, even then, many miners were badly affected by write-offs in their copper operations, where prices had collapsed after a long bull market.
However, the good news is that gold prices have risen by almost 10% in the 2009 first quarter from the final quarter of last year, while fuel prices have declined even more; hence, the quarterly results to be announced in April and May could be surprisingly juicy.