Apart from gold!Gold price back to $1,900 per ounce
Gold is back near record nominal highs with spot gold trading around $1,900 per troy ounce and close to €1,350 per troy ounce. With US markets closed for Labor Day, the focus has been on the ongoing euro-crisis. Merkel’s election defeat in her home state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania has increased doubts over the German ruling coalition’s determination to bail out weaker neighbours. The subsequent crash in European stock and bond markets, as well as euro weakness in currency markets has been a harsh reminder to all that there are precious few assets that are insulated from sovereign and systemic risk.
Yup, silver is going to see a superb rally over the next few months.The price of silver also rose, briefly touching $43 per ounce. Technically silver seems to have finished its period of consolidation after the Spring correction and seems to have resumed its uptrend, it might not take long to regain the $50 per ounce level.
http://www.caseyresearch.com/cdd/appetite-gold
Peak Oil is the end of growth -therefore very bad for most equities and bonds as well real estate to a certain extent.According to estimates by Shayne McGuire in his new book, Hard Money; Taking Gold to a Higher Investment Level, the typical pension fund holds about 0.15% of its assets in gold. He estimates another 0.15% is devoted to gold mining stocks, giving us a total of 0.30% – that is, less than one third of one percent of assets committed to the gold sector.
Shayne is head of global research at the Teacher Retirement System of Texas. He bases his estimate on the fact that commodities represent about 3% of the total assets in the average pension fund. And of that 3%, about 5% is devoted to gold. It is, by any account, a negligible portion of a fund’s asset allocation.
Now here’s the fun part. Let’s say fund managers as a group realize that bonds, equities, and real estate have become poor or risky investments and so decide to increase their allocation to the gold market. If they doubled their exposure to gold and gold stocks – which would still represent only 0.6% of their total assets – it would amount to $93.3 billion in new purchases.
The gold boom has only started.But what if currency issues spiral out of control? What if bonds wither and die? What if real estate takes ten years to recover? What if inflation becomes a rabid dog like it has every other time in history when governments have diluted their currency to this degree? If these funds allocate just 5% of their assets to gold – which would amount to $1.5 trillion – it would overwhelm the system and rocket prices skyward.