Thursday, April 21, 2011

Gold at $1,500 Settles the Jim Rogers-Nouriel Roubini Debate

Celebrity guru Nouriel Roubini has been dead wrong. Prolific investor Jim Rogers has been spot on. They had an impassioned debate in November of 2009.

Professor Roubini earlier said of gold prices,

Maybe it will reach $1,100 or so but $1,500 or $2,000 is nonsense,” Roubini said.

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Professor Roubini represents the mainstream econometric model based analysis whom has constantly failed to predict the markets accurately.

As Professor Robert Higgs points out, mainstream (academia) thinking has [bold highlights mine]

little interest in the search for truth, however one might understand or pursue it. To them, their research and publication amounted to a game in which the winning players receive the greatest rewards in salary, research funding, and professional acclaim. They understood that because of cloistered academic inbreeding, economists at the most prestigious universities consider the “smartest guys” to be those who employ the most advanced, complex, and incomprehensible mathematics in their “modeling” and “empirical testing.

Gold’s record price surge has been nominal based.

Economist John Williams, who uses the old methodology (1990 CPI) to compute for inflation, says that gold is still far away from reaching its inflation adjusted high in 1980s.

The USAWatchdog quotes economist John Williams (bold highlights original)

In a recent report, economist John Williams of Shadowstats.com contends a declining U.S. currency is reflected in spiking gas prices. Williams’ said, “. . . the primary problem behind higher oil and gasoline prices is the Fed’s efforts at dollar debasement, but few in the media are willing to blame the Fed . . . Also hitting the dollar, though, are increasing instabilities in and ineffectiveness of political Washington, D.C., as viewed by the rest of the world.”

Williams says gold and silver are nowhere near their former inflation adjusted highs of 1980. Back then, gold hit $850 per ounce and silver $49.45 per ounce. To truly equal that price in today’s inflated money, gold would have to be “$8,331 per troy ounce” and silver would have to be priced at “$485 per troy ounce,” according to Williams’ recent calculations.

Yet Gold’s record price surge isn’t only a US dollar dynamic but against global currencies.

The following charts from gold.org shows of gold trends in different currencies since 1998

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Euro

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Yen

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Pound

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South African Rand

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Australian Dollar

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Canadian Dollar

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Indian Rupee

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G-5 basket

In my view, surging gold in all currencies seem to be validating Voltaire’s observation—Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value ---- zero.

The blunt way to say this is that zero extrapolates to hyperinflation.

Again, all these mainly depend on the prospective actions of global governments, most especially the US Federal Reserve.

1 comment:

Filipinofreedomfighter said...

It's good that you point this out. The success of freedom depends largely on the de-legitimiation of the 'intellectual' class as it is upon arguments. Keynes' General Theory had some pretty nutty stuff in there but still succeeded because it gave sanction to the fascism of FDR.