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Ponce
9th August 2011, 06:41 PM
Tuesday, August 9 2011

When Buying Gold Becomes a Life-or-Death Question.

Dees Illustration
Jeff Clark
BIG GOLD

I was recently asked in an interview if I thought gold was going to $5,000 an ounce. “No,” I said bluntly. “I think it’s going higher.”

“You’re that optimistic?”

“No,” I replied. “I’m that pessimistic.”

Imagine the condition of our world if gold reached $5,000 an ounce – and kept soaring. We’ll likely be in a mania if that happens – but what kind of mania will it be? There’ll be some greed to be sure, but I think there’s a good chance a deeper reason will be at play. And it’s the same reason that will drive you to keep buying gold at $2,000 an ounce.

You’ll have to.

There are 101 reasons to own gold right now. You might buy because of the debt turmoil you see around the globe. You may think it wise, like the Chinese and others, to keep some of your savings in gold. Negative real interest rates may draw you to gold. You might buy because of the mere fact that demand is overwhelming supply. Or you fear inflation. Or deflation.


But most of these factors are missing one critical element: They’re not yet personal.

Most reading this have not had to flee their country, been the victim of hyperinflation, or watched helplessly as their currency went poof! Longtime investors have made money on their gold investments, to be sure, but most of us bought the yellow metal as an investment and not because of a do-or-die situation.

It’s doom and gloom to say this, but I think it’s possible and perhaps even probable that at some point we’ll all feel forced to buy gold, almost irrespective of price, due to a sudden and rapid depreciation of the U.S. dollar.

How do we get to that point? Simple: You go to buy something and realize you’ve just been priced out of the market, not because the item is too expensive, but because you suddenly realize the money in your hand no longer has purchasing power. Your reaction to that event is predictable: You feel cornered, maybe even scared, and the urgency to seek an alternative takes over.

This is obviously an inflation scenario, but it’s not exactly a stretch to get there from where we are today. Here’s why.

The following chart tracks the dollar and gold adjusted by the CPI from 2000 to present. It catches many people off guard, once they realize its implications. Look what’s happened to the greenback in the past 11+ years:




Since the Y2K scare, the dollar has lost an incredible 25% of its purchasing power. Even adding the measly interest one would earn in a traditional savings account doesn’t make up for this loss. This isn’t a picture of the dollar since the creation of the Fed or since Nixon took us off the gold standard. This is what’s happening right now – a gross devaluation of your dollar-based savings. Gold, on the other hand, has not only preserved but increased our purchasing power.

Now, imagine this scenario on fast forward. Instead of a 25% loss in 11 years, what if it occurs in, say, two years? That’s what can happen in a highly inflationary environment. At some point, given the baked-in consequences for our currency and the unwillingness of politicians to effectively deal with the problem, you one day instinctively realize, as you hand money to a cashier to buy milk and she asks for more, that it is a depreciating asset and no longer a stable form of exchange.

In other words, you won’t buy gold at $2,000 an ounce because you think it’s going to $6,000; you’ll buy gold because you fear the dollar will continue losing its ability to meet basic monetary requirements and you’ll need a substitute, something that will retain its value.

Regardless of whether the downward trend with the dollar continues at the same pace or speeds up, one thing is clear: It will continue. You must portion some of your savings in gold.

Sooner or later I think we all will have an epiphany about money that pushes us to buy gold, even if it’s at levels that would seem expensive today. When that time comes, you won’t be focused on the price of gold but on the absolute need to acquire a more lasting asset.

If I’m right, $1,700 is not a high price to pay.

[For many, $1,700 at a pop is a lot of money to come up with for an ounce of gold. But Jeff found a way to buy gold and silver for $100/month, and was so impressed with the programs that he uses them himself. Check out his top two recommendations in the brand-new issue of BIG GOLD and start accumulating enough gold and silver to protect your savings from ongoing devaluation.]

http://www.activistpost.com/2011/08/when-buying-gold-becomes-life-or-death.html

mick silver
9th August 2011, 07:00 PM
when gold hits 10.000.00 most will be dead already and it will not matter no more

osoab
9th August 2011, 07:08 PM
when gold hits 10.000.00 most will be dead already and it will not matter no more

10,000 in what currency? 10,000 in USD is not that far fetched.

mick silver
9th August 2011, 07:09 PM
when they lose controll that big there will be a big war to

palani
9th August 2011, 07:15 PM
The only reason for gold to hit $10,000 is if a cuppa joe reaches $500.

Shami-Amourae
9th August 2011, 07:28 PM
What happens when the government puts a price ceiling on Gold, then keeps printing money? What do you do then?

osoab
9th August 2011, 07:31 PM
What happens when the government puts a price ceiling on Gold, then keeps printing money? What do you do then?


buy more ammo if you can still get it?

palani
9th August 2011, 07:32 PM
Anytime govt. implements cost controls the price becomes set by the black market.

Best not register any securities of substance.

gunDriller
9th August 2011, 07:49 PM
What happens when the government puts a price ceiling on Gold, then keeps printing money? What do you do then?

learning to ignor Uncle Shylock, and to live your life on your (moral) terms, not the terms of Uncle Shylock ... without upsetting Uncle Shylock ... that's what you do.

as far as the details of price controls ==> i think it will be via taxation & paperwork.

they tried it with the Obama-care $600 1099 law, which i think has been over-turned.

but there's still the $10,000 limitation ... if you do business with someone $10K or more, they are supposed to report it, & make you file a 1099.

i think that's a current law. they could easily lower the threshold to $5000.

for example, with gold at $5000 - then you could only sell one ounce of gold ... if you didn't lose it in the boating accident :-(

madfranks
9th August 2011, 08:27 PM
What happens when the government puts a price ceiling on Gold, then keeps printing money? What do you do then?

Gold is not just an asset in the US. The US gov't may declare a price ceiling on gold in dollars, but not in euros, francs, yen, etc. So keep it and if you have to sell it, sell it to a foreign buyer in their currency and turn it back into FRNs.

Joe King
9th August 2011, 08:52 PM
they tried it with the Obama-care $600 1099 law, which i think has been over-turned.

On goods, but not on services.
ie they don't want anyone being paid more than $600 without reporting it.

Twisted Titan
9th August 2011, 09:16 PM
What happens when the government puts a price ceiling on Gold, then keeps printing money? What do you do then?


Ascend to your rightful place as Silver Warlord or Golden Warqueen of The Florishing underground

DMac
10th August 2011, 09:26 AM
The only reason for gold to hit $10,000 is if a cuppa joe reaches $500.

This argument is thrown around constantly and it is inaccurate. One possibility? Yes. The only possibility - categorically no.

In 1970 I could have bought 1 ounce of gold for $35 and by 1980 I would have paid $850. Coffee did not go up in similar fashion. Nor did bread. The world did not end and then later on the price went down.

Mania stage means just that - mania in the people. Hyperinflation is not a requisite for gold to hit $10K/oz. Nor is it for silver to hit $300 an ounce. Hyperinflation is just one of several scenarios that we are in that could lead to an explosion in the prices of metal.

palani
10th August 2011, 10:12 AM
This argument is thrown around constantly and it is inaccurate. One possibility? Yes. The only possibility - categorically no.

My comment was with respect to the price of gold considered as a barometer of the quantity of paper dollars floating around in the "economy". Speculative pressures require consideration as well. In a non-linear environment superposition does not apply.

Grog
13th August 2011, 09:44 AM
Street prices will still vary. Isn't the govmt's official price still something like 36 an ounce?

1970 silver art
13th August 2011, 11:36 AM
Street prices will still vary. Isn't the govmt's official price still something like 36 an ounce?


I think the "official" gov't price for gold is $42.22/oz.

willie pete
13th August 2011, 01:16 PM
Gold is not just an asset in the US. The US gov't may declare a price ceiling on gold in dollars, but not in euros, francs, yen, etc. So keep it and if you have to sell it, sell it to a foreign buyer in their currency and turn it back into FRNs.

that's the FIRST thang I thought of....if the jew-S by that time were to put a cap on the POG, I doubt other countries would follow along...they own too much to do so