Gold-Silver Ratio: Debunking The Myth

A 16-to-1 gold to silver ratio has been the Holy Grail of some silver investors since the mid-sixties.

Unfortunately, fifty years later, it is a quest that continues unabated without success.

In fact, there is evidence that contradicts and widens the chasm that separates wishful thinking from reality. 

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Gold Vs. Gold Stocks – Just The Facts, Ma’am

GOLD VS. GOLD STOCKS

“…but what I do know is the people running the company are practically married to their shareholders and investors, like you.”

That’s good to know.  After two decades of sharing their bed(s) with investors “like you” since the honeymoon period and birth of gold’s bull market in 1999/2000, the management of this particular gold mining company is still committed.  And, presumably, other companies’ managements are similarly committed. Are you? 

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$10,000 Gold May Be Reasonable; Or Wishful Thinking; Or Meaningless

Is $10,000 gold reasonable?

Right now, from gold’s current price point of $1240.00 per ounce, we are speaking of an eight fold increase to get to that gloriously celebrated number.  Even if the specific price target is more modest – say $7000.00 per ounce – it is still a huge jump from where we are today. 

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How Much Is Gold Worth?

Just how much is gold worth? Lots of varying opinions, but is there a consensus?

Everyone has an opinion as to what something is worth, whether the object of consideration is their home, a late grandfather’s pocket watch, or a specific stock.

The price of a specific item or asset at any given time is a reflection of all those varying opinions.

Some are based on fundamentals, some are based on technical factors. But the combination of all the opinions, and the resulting expectations (some expect the price to go up, others expect it to go down or remain the same), plus all of the other known factors at the time that might possibly impact the price, provide us with the clearest possible indication of current value for the item in question: its market price.

If we believe that gold is money, we might have a different opinion or expectation than someone who sees gold as an investment; or someone else who deems gold to have no useful value.

If we don’t believe that gold is money, then we are saying that something else is.  That something else, practically speaking, is fiat, paper currency issued by a government or central bank (dollars, euros, yen, etc.).

With that in mind, let’s rephrase our original question: “How much is money worth?”

In the simplest of terms, money is worth  whatever it can be exchanged for.  This means that the value of money is in its purchasing power.

With that fundamental understood, the logic leads to a clean and simple statement: Gold, or any other money, is worth what we can buy with it. 

So, what can we buy with it?  And how do we know that our gold/money is realistically priced?

With gold currently priced at $1750 oz., the value of gold today is what we can buy with seventeen hundred fifty dollars.

But, is $1750 oz. an accurate reflection of gold’s purchasing power?  Are there reasons why we might expect that price to rise or decline to any substantial degree that would influence our choice to hold money in gold vs. US dollars?

Let’s go back to a time when the US dollar and gold were both money and equal in value (i.e., purchasing power).

SOME GOLD PRICE HISTORY

In 1913, both gold and US dollars were legal tender, and interchangeable. Either was convertible into the other at a fixed price.  A one ounce (.9675 ounces) gold coin was equal to twenty US dollars and vice-versa.  (note: the official gold price was $20.67 per ounce, which multiplied by .9675 ounce of gold in a gold coin equals $20.00).

On the surface, it would seem that one ounce of gold over the past century has increased in value by eighty-four hundred percent ($20.67 in 1913 vs $1750 today).  If that is true, we should be able to buy eighty-five times as much with one ounce of gold today as we could in 1913. However, that is not the case.

We said earlier that the value of money is what we can buy with it, or what we can acquire in exchange for it. What should be obvious by now is that even though the price of gold increased by eighty-four hundred percent, we don’t know whether there was an increase in actual value or possibly a decrease in value if gold was unable to maintain its original purchasing power.

We can however, draw some conclusions about relative performance.  The specifics are that gold gained in price by eighty-four hundred percent relative to the US dollar’s loss in value/purchasing power of almost ninety-nine percent. (see A Loaf Of Bread, A Gallon Of Gas, An Ounce Of Gold)

Gold has maintained its value, and increased its purchasing power in absolute terms, over the century-long period under consideration.

What we don’t know is the extent to which the current price of $1750 oz. reflects accurately the loss in US dollar purchasing power. How much value has the US dollar lost since 1913? Is it ninety-eight percent, or less; ninety-nine percent, or more?

The current market price for gold of $1750 oz. indicates a fairly specific loss of 98.8 percent in US dollar purchasing power.  A full ninety-nine percent decline translates to a one hundred-fold increase in gold’s price, or $2060 oz.

In August 2020 gold traded at $2057 oz., which indicates a loss in purchasing power in the US dollar of ninety-nine percent since 1913.

As recently as January 2016, gold traded as low as $1040.00 per ounce.  That price indicates a decline in US dollar value closer to ninety-eight percent.  In fact, it is nearly exactly equivalent to that mark.  A ninety-eight percent decline in US dollar value equates to a fifty-fold increase in the gold price since 1913 (100 percent minus 98 percent = 2 percent;  100 percent divided by 2 percent = 50; $20.67 per ounce times 50 = $1033.50 per ounce)..

HOW MUCH IS GOLD WORTH TODAY?

Gold, in US dollars, is worth somewhere between $1000.00 and $2000 oz. That may seem like a broad range for price-conscious investors, but it is consistent with gold’s price action historically.

The current price of gold at $1750 oz. reflects a specific loss of 98.8 percent in US dollar purchasing power.

The US dollar is the only barometer you need to watch.  The elements of surprise and timing are critical.  Most especially so, if you are short-term oriented in your thinking.

Items for consideration that could have a substantial impact on the US dollar include  1) new and unexpected actions by the Federal Reserve;  2) accelerated or delayed effects of inflation previously created by the Fed; 3) complete repudiation of the US dollar; 4) a credit implosion; 5) Fed’s reaction to a credit implosion.

Some of the listed items, or variations of them, can affect the value of the U.S. dollar positively, too; which is why you need to keep your eye on the dollar, and not the specific event.

Kelsey Williams is the author of two books: INFLATION, WHAT IT IS, WHAT IT ISN’T, AND WHO’S RESPONSIBLE FOR IT and ALL HAIL THE FED!

Hi Yo Silver! sort of…

HI YO SILVER!

In January, 1980 silver peaked at close to $50.00 per ounce and gold hit its high point of approximately $850.00 per ounce. Thirty-one years later, in 2011, both metals again reached lofty levels.

For gold, the new high point was $1900.00 per ounce.  For silver, the number was $50.00 per ounce; again.

Six years later, as of this writing, gold is priced at $1260.00 per ounce. Silver is at $17.00 per ounce and change.

Over the entire thirty-seven year period, gold is forty-eight percent higher than its January, 1980 peak price; whereas, silver is sixty-six percent lower.  

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Gold And Unrealistic Expectations – Gold Is Not An Investment

GOLD AND UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS

Gold has been characterized as insurance, a hedge against inflation/social unrest/instability, or, more simply, just a commodity.  But it is treated most of the time, by most people, as an investment.  

This is true even by those who are more negative in their attitude towards gold. “Stocks are a better investment.”  In most cases, the logic used and the performance results justify the statement. But the premise is wrong.

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Gold, Mansa Musa, And Inflation

GOLD AND MANSA MUSA  

From Wikipedia…

 Musa Keita I (c. 1280 – c. 1337) was the tenth Mansa, which translates as  “sultan” (king) or “emperor”, of the wealthy West African Mali Empire. 

During his reign Mali may have been the largest producer of gold in the world at a point of exceptional demand. One of the richest people in history, he is known to have been enormously wealthy; reported as being inconceivably rich by contemporaries, “There’s really no way to put an accurate number on his wealth” (Davidson 2015). 

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Gold Is Still About The US Dollar Part II

GOLD IS STILL ABOUT US DOLLAR PART II

In my original article I made the following statements:

“It means that holders of any non-USD currency who want to exchange it for gold, must first exchange it for US dollars and then exchange the US dollars for gold.

When anyone is selling gold, the proceeds are always paid in US dollars. The dollars can be held as such, or they can be exchanged for other currency.”  

Another professional labeled the above statements as “fiction”.

I do not agree.  But I do see the possibility for others to infer something other than what was intended.  Therefore, I apologize. And I have replaced the statements in question with the following:

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Gold Is Still About The US Dollar

GOLD IS STILL ABOUT THE US DOLLAR

The US dollar is the world’s reserve currency.  And that isn’t likely to change in any radical way, anytime soon.  Unless there is some kind of calamitous implosion of the dollar.  I am talking about outright rejection and repudiation.  And that could happen.  The problem is that there isn’t another currency that could likely take its place.  By the time that possibility becomes a reality, any possible candidates would likely be in worse shape. This includes the Euro and Chinese Yuan.

All currencies are substitutes for real money, i.e. gold.  And because all governments inflate and destroy their own currencies, the possibility of gold reasserting itself as the international medium of exchange increases considerably under the aforementioned conditions.

But, a lot of bad stuff has to happen before we get to that point. And governments around the world have too much at stake to capitulate when it comes to ceasing to issue ‘funny money’.

So, for the time being, lets focus on things as they are.  Which leads us back to the title of this article.

Gold is priced in US dollars and trades in gold are settled in US dollars because of the hegemony of the dollar and its role as the world’s reserve currency.  But what does that mean to others around the world?  For example, those who live and work in Germany (euro), Japan (yen), China (Yuan)?

When someone in Switzerland, for example, exchanges Swiss Francs for gold, they are quoted a price in Swiss Francs. That seems pretty straight-forward. But how is the price for gold in Swiss Francs calculated when the international market for gold is priced in US dollars?

The amount that someone pays in Swiss Francs (or any other non-USD currency) is determined by calculating the exchange rate between the US dollar and the specific non-USD currency involved.  Based on that calculation, it is then known how many Swiss Francs are needed to equal the transaction amount in US dollars.

What is particularly important here isn’t necessarily obvious. But it is a critical factor when assessing a transaction of this nature. And here is why.

On December 31, 2013, gold traded at $1210 per ounce. And on that day one euro could be exchanged for 1.3776 USD. Hence, 842 euros ($1210 USD divided by 1.3776 = 842) could be exchanged for $1210 USD which could then subsequently be exchanged for one ounce of gold.

Nine months later, on September 30, 2014, gold again traded at $1210 per ounce.  But the exchange rate for one euro was 1.2629 USD.  Even though the gold price in US dollars was unchanged, the cost for an ounce of gold in euros had increased nine percent to 958 ($1210 divided by 1.2629 = 958).  To be technically correct, the cost of US dollars had increased for holders of euros.

On May 31, 2016, twenty months later, gold was again trading at $1210 per ounce.  The euro had weakened further relative to the US dollar and the exchange rate for one euro was 1.1131 USD. Using the same math as before, the cost for $1210 US dollars had again increased, this time by an additional thirteen percent to 1087 euros.

Over the entire two and one-half year period (twenty-nine months in all) the cost to acquire gold for holders of euros had increased by twenty-four percent. And yet, gold itself, priced in US dollars was the same.

There are several things we can learn from this.

For one thing, there is always a demand for US dollars since they are needed for use in international trade (oil transactions are priced in US dollars, too).

For another, the potential for changes in exchange rates of any other currencies relative to the US dollar must be considered for these transactions.

The possible combinations are numerous and always different. An increase in the value of the euro relative to the US dollar in the examples above would have given us results opposite to those which actually occurred.  And, of course, every currency other than the US dollar would show different results based on their changes in value relative to the US dollar.

Currency exchange rates are continuously changing and so is the US dollar  price of gold. It is possible to have an increasing US dollar price for gold and, simultaneously, a stronger US dollar relative to another currency.  This results in a ‘double whammy’ to the holder of a non-USD  currency – unless you already own the gold.

In our examples earlier, the US dollar price of gold could actually have declined for the periods indicated and still resulted in a higher cost for holders of euros.

The US dollar price of gold does not tell us “what gold is doing”. It tells us what the US dollar is doing.  Or rather, what people think is happening to the US dollar.

But what people think is happening changes all the time. Also, the information we are ‘fed’ by the Fed is suspect and inaccurate. Hence, changes in the US dollar relative to gold are ongoing and can be quite volatile. Over time, however, the gold price in US dollars is a reasonably accurate reflection of the value of the US dollar.

The US dollar price of gold does not tell us anything about other countries and their currencies. To know that we must look at exchange rates of those currencies relative to the US dollar.

Let’s be clear about something. The ‘value’ of gold does not change.  It is original money and its value is constant and stable. And has been for several millenniums.

The value of the US dollar, however, changes all the time. This is precisely because the supply of dollars is manipulated by the Federal Reserve via the ongoing expansion and contraction of the supply of money and credit.  Mostly expansion.

For an historical, real-life example of value and purchasing power as they relate to gold and the US dollar, see my article A Loaf Of Bread, A Gallon Of Gas, An Ounce Of Gold.  

 

Kelsey Williams is the author of two books: INFLATION, WHAT IT IS, WHAT IT ISN’T, AND WHO’S RESPONSIBLE FOR IT and ALL HAIL THE FED!

Source Of The Fed’s Power

SOURCE OF THE FED’S POWER

We have become pawns in the game of Chess being played by the Federal Reserve Bank.  Who is their opponent?  Anybody else who makes a move.

We have become pawns in the game of Chess being played by the Federal Reserve Bank.  Who is their opponent?  Anybody else who makes a move.

Week in, week out, everyone’s eyes and ears seem fixed on what the Federal Reserve Board will say or do.  Mostly, it is about what they say. That’s because they can’t really do much of anything.

Except inflate the supply of money and credit.  Which they have been doing for over one hundred years.  And they are good at it, too.  The historic erosion in value of the US dollar should merit more acclaim – or outrage.  Unfortunately, the Fed is good at shifting the focus of concern to their opponent(s).

In their various statements, members of the Federal Reserve Bank often refer to their policies, decisions, and efforts in ways that make them sound sincere about their attempt to “manage the economy”.  And, admittedly, they are sincere in that attempt.  The trouble is, it is an impossible task.

The US Federal Reserve has led us down a primrose path by virtue of their self-proclaimed intention to manage and modify the stages of the economic cycle (prosperity, inflation, recession, depression).

Federal Reserve Bank policies are a repudiation of fundamental economic principles. The consequences of those policies and actions are evident in the historical results and the final resolution will be ugly.

On the face of it, that should be enough to discourage anyone from taking upon themselves such a hopeless task.  But the problem is much worse than that. The inflation created by the Federal Reserve is intentional. And their efforts have brought about a ninety-eight percent decline in the value of our money.

The cumulative effects of their ‘success’ have made their job even more difficult.  Now their efforts are almost solely focused on containing the effects of their own inflation.  The stages of the economic cycle mentioned above are skewed in ways which alter their duration and hugely increase their volatility.

So why does the Fed do the things they do?  For that matter, why does the Federal Reserve Bank even exist?

From my article, The Federal Reserve And Interest Rates – Definitely Not What You Think:

In addition, the Federal Reserve Bank is also charged with ensuring the financial operation of the US Government. Or, in other words, maintaining their (the US Government’s) ability to borrow money by issuing more and more debt in the form of Treasury securities. In my opinion, this is the sole and overriding purpose behind the existence of the Federal Reserve. And it drives every decision they make. It is not about the economic effects of their policies on US citizens (individually or collectively). It is ALL ABOUT KEEPING THE US GOVERNMENT SOLVENT. The US Government is not solvent, of course, but maintaining and reinforcing the confidence in their financial viability is absolutely essential. And nothing else takes precedence.

Alan Greenspan was noted for his verbiage.  Other Federal Reserve Board chairs and members make frequent comments about various things related to the economy and financial matters.  And the official reports and statements given for public consumption are usually crammed with facts and figures deemed to be part of a credible basis for the decisions and actions taken.

But, whereas there is a great deal of information related, you won’t hear anything referring to the above reason for the existence of the US Federal Reserve Bank.

The responsibility of “keeping the US Government solvent” may sound ‘laudable’ to some. I certainly would prefer that the US Government be able to return to solvency and maintain it. But something seems amiss.

It isn’t so much about keeping the government solvent as it is facilitating the government’s ability to borrow more and more money.  This is done  by issuing more and more Treasury bills, notes, and bonds.  When the US Government needs money, the Federal Reserve creates deposits of Treasury securities in the accounts of certain ‘primary’ banks/dealers. Those institutions are then responsible for placing the securities with numerous other dealers and so on, down the line.

The largest amounts are sold to foreign governments and (very) large investors.  Some are held by dealers as part of their investment inventory and some by banks who hold them as part of their reserves.  The proceeds of those placements, of course, flow back to the US Treasury.

Acting for and in behalf of the US Government in the placement of US Treasury securities is the primary role of the Federal Reserve Bank.  And it is the source of their power.

Buying from and selling to certain primary dealers in Treasury securities is an ongoing function of the Fed.  It is done for the purpose of expanding and contracting the supply of money and credit already in the system.  Which is an active way for the Fed to execute their mandate to “manage the economic cycles”  and ‘hopefully’ ensure that economic conditions and operation of the financial system allow for continued issuance of more and more debt by the US Government (i.e., more U.S. Treasury Bonds).

This has supposedly worked reasonably well for several decades. But since the supply of money and credit is always expanding, the value (purchasing power) of the US dollar continues to suffer. Which is precisely why “a dollar today doesn’t buy what it used to” or “doesn’t go as far”.

And therein lies the rub.  Confidence in the dollar is critical to the US Government.  If that confidence is not sustained, then all bets are off.

The US Government must be able to sell enough Treasury securities. Otherwise, they will not have enough money to operate.  If they don’t have the money to operate, they lose control – and power.  And they will do whatever they can to avoid that outcome.

Any policy or ‘action’ by the Fed is always taken with this objective in mind:  Maintain the viability of the market for US Treasury Securities.  This enables the ongoing operation and function of the US Government.

As long as people continue to “look to the Fed” for direction, then they are demonstrating a degree of confidence that keeps things from unraveling.  And it helps the Fed maintain a semblance of status quo.  Which in turn benefits the US Government.

The Fed’s power lies in their manipulation and ongoing expansion of the supply of money and credit.

Unfortunately, expecting, wishing, and hoping that an isolated few individuals can control, avert, or stop the economic consequences that have been brought to bear on their own citizens and the rest of the world is a pipe dream.

Sooner or later, the dam will burst.

Kelsey Williams is the author of two books: INFLATION, WHAT IT IS, WHAT IT ISN’T, AND WHO’S RESPONSIBLE FOR IT and ALL HAIL THE FED!