Saturday , November 2 2024
Home / SNB & CHF / The Clinton-Comey Effect

The Clinton-Comey Effect

Summary:
See the introduction and the video for the terms gold basis, co-basis, backwardation and contango. Hillary Clinton and FBI chief James Comey. As absurd as this must appear to anyone looking at the situation in a detached manner, anything that might endanger Ms. Clinton’s election victory seems to be seen as negative for market confidence. - Click to enlarge Confidence Speculation Twice last week, the prices of the metals spiked. Once on early Monday due to a cause unclear to us. The second time on Friday late morning (Arizona time) due to, get this, additional problems for Democrat Hillary Clinton. The stock market dropped at the same time that the prices of the metals surged. Call it the confidence speculation. The price of gold ended the week +, and that of silver +%excerpt%.18. Was it speculation? Or was it, this time for once, stackers going bananas buying up metal along with dried food, barrels of water, prime bunker real estate, and lead (ammo)? The Value of Money Before we get to that, we want to tackle a fallacy that comes up over and over again.

Topics:
Keith Weiner considers the following as important: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Guillermo Alcala writes USD/CHF slides to test 0.8645 support with US inflation data on tap

Swissinfo writes Swiss central bank posts CHF62.5bn profit

Nachrichten Ticker - www.finanzen.ch writes Trump-Faktor und Marktbedingungen könnten für neuen Bitcoin-Rekord sorgen

Charles Hugh Smith writes Is Social Media Actually “Media,” Or Is It Something Else?


See the introduction and the video for the terms gold basis, co-basis, backwardation and contango.
The Clinton-Comey Effect

Hillary Clinton and FBI chief James Comey. As absurd as this must appear to anyone looking at the situation in a detached manner, anything that might endanger Ms. Clinton’s election victory seems to be seen as negative for market confidence. - Click to enlarge

Confidence Speculation

Twice last week, the prices of the metals spiked. Once on early Monday due to a cause unclear to us. The second time on Friday late morning (Arizona time) due to, get this, additional problems for Democrat Hillary Clinton. The stock market dropped at the same time that the prices of the metals surged. Call it the confidence speculation.

The price of gold ended the week +$10, and that of silver +$0.18.

Was it speculation? Or was it, this time for once, stackers going bananas buying up metal along with dried food, barrels of water, prime bunker real estate, and lead (ammo)?

The Value of Money

Before we get to that, we want to tackle a fallacy that comes up over and over again. How do you define or measure the value of money?

The same school of thought that gives us the Quantity Theory of Money—which we have debunked decisively, and which we have spent so many words in this report, addressing its implications for the price of gold—offers a simple answer. Tempting, because it sounds so simple, it’s utter rubbish. What’s the idea?

You measure the money by its purchasing power. Prices are measured in money. So why not reverse it, and measure the money by… prices?! Well, for one thing, it’s circular. Self-referential. Infinite recursion, in the terminology of computer science.

But more importantly, this view lumps taxes, regulations, labor law, lawsuits, compliance and you name it, all together. If the government adds a costly new tax which wipes out half an industry, you can bet (literally!) that the product of the remaining companies will sell at higher prices. Maybe at much higher prices.

But does this mean that money has gone down in value? That it is on the path to hyperinflation, even? No.

Taxation is not a monetary phenomenon.

Further, suppose you look at prices in different cities. For example, things are cheaper in Yuma Arizona, than in New York City. Can we compare the Yuma dollar purchasing power to the New York City dollar? Of course not. It’s the same US dollar!

We contend that there is only one way of measuring the value of the dollar. Look at its price in gold. As of Friday, that is 24.4 milligrams.

And how do you measure the value of an ounce of gold? Let’s make an analogy to gold’s abundance. We contend that gold is the most abundant commodity (with the exceptions of air and water). How is that? We measure abundance, not by absolute quantity, but by a ratio of stocks to flows.

It would take all the gold mines in the world many decades to produce the amount of gold now known to be held in human hands (which number we believe is underestimated substantially). No other commodity (except silver) comes remotely close to this.

The approach to measuring gold’s value is similar. The value of the next ounce (N+1) is measured relative to the prior (N). Let’s look at water in contrast with gold.

Suppose you’re walking through the Arizona desert in July. The temperature might be 120 degrees Fahrenheit (49C). You get so thirsty that you could die very quickly. You walk up to someone selling gallon jugs of water. What would you pay for the first?

It’s worth nothing less than your life.

How about the second? You will need it to walk back to civilization. The third? A spare. The fourth? Zero, zilch, nil.

Value(1) = ∞

Value(2) = 10

Value(3) = 1

Value(4) = 0

The value of each unit of water is not merely lower than the previous unit, but massively lower.

For gold (you knew this was coming) the value is flat. That is, anyone will happily accept the fourth gold coin just as the first. And the 104th the same as the 101st.

This is an important feature for money, is it not? It means that any business, no matter how large, can keep its books using gold. Even as the balance sheet grows, the value of the unit of account—the numeraire—remains constant.

Kind of like how engineers rely on the constant length of the meter stick, no matter how tall the building. Imagine if they used some sort of rubber band to measure length and the higher the skyscraper, the shorter the rubber band shrank! Construction above one story would be impossible.

Well, if the unit of account varied in value as water does, economic calculation beyond a simple subsistence farm would be impossible.

Fundamental Developments

Read on for the only true picture of the fundamentals of the monetary metals. But first, here’s the graph of the metals’ prices.

Gold and Silver Prices

(see more posts on Gold prices, silver prices, )
The Clinton-Comey Effect

Gold and silver prices. - Click to enlarge

Gold:Silver Price Ratio

Next, this is a graph of the gold price measured in silver, otherwise known as the gold to silver ratio. It didn’t move last week.

For each metal, we will look at a graph of the basis and co-basis overlaid with the price of the dollar in terms of the respective metal. It will make it easier to provide brief commentary. The dollar will be represented in green, the basis in blue and co-basis in red.

Gold-Silver Ratio

(see more posts on gold silver ratio, )
The Clinton-Comey Effect

Gold-silver ratio. - Click to enlarge

Gold Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

Here is the gold graph.

Could scarcity (i.e. co-basis, the red line) be rolling over? It’s too early to tell, but bears watching.

The fundamental price of gold barely budged, though it’s about twenty bucks below the market price.

Gold Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

(see more posts on dollar price, gold basis, Gold co-basis, )
The Clinton-Comey Effect

Gold basis and co-basis and the dollar price. - Click to enlarge

Silver Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

Now let’s look at silver.

Last week, we asked:

The big question this week: does the buying of metal remain strong, or is this just another flash in the pan?

So far, the buying has held up. The fundamental price is up just about as much as the market price.

Silver Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

(see more posts on dollar price, silver basis, Silver co-basis, )
The Clinton-Comey Effect

Silver basis and co-basis and the dollar price. - Click to enlarge

Premium on Gold and Silver

Let’s put this in perspective. Below is a graph showing not the prices of the metals, but premium vs discount. The green region at the bottom represents discount, and thus a safe place to buy. The red region at the top represents danger, as you’re overpaying.

Note that silver has not been offered at a discount in quite some time. This does not mean that the price has to crash tomorrow morning. But it does mean you’re paying a speculative premium. Maybe you will get a chance to unload to the next speculator at an even higher price, but maybe not.

Gold was in discount through around the end of April. It tipped into discount at the end of August. It’s now selling at a premium, though not a large one.

Premium on Gold and Silver

(see more posts on Gold, silver, )
The Clinton-Comey Effect

The premium on gold and silver - Click to enlarge

Charts by Monetary Metals

Keith Weiner
Keith Weiner is president of the Gold Standard Institute USA in Phoenix, Arizona, and CEO of the precious metals fund manager Monetary Metals. He created DiamondWare, a technology company that he sold to Nortel Networks in 2008. He writes about money, credit and gold. In March 2015 he moved his column from Forbes to SNBCHF.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *