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Looks like the worst is over, but there is still risk

Paul van Eeden
Jul 3, 2006

As anticipated the US Federal Reserve raised the overnight interest rate on Thursday by one quarter of a percent to 5.25%. Instead of rallying on the news the dollar plummeted. In the accompanying statements the Fed seemed to indicate that its stance towards further interest rate increases has softened and it would consider both inflation and economic growth going forward. Since there are clear signs the economy might be slowing down this could mean the end of the Fed's rate hikes -- hence the dollar fall.

The gold price rose in direct response to the weaker dollar and a casual observation of the gold market might lead one to the conclusion that the worst is behind us. Nonetheless, I remain cautious because base metals prices are still grossly overvalued in my opinion and if base metals prices fall they could drag the gold price down temporarily. That's because many of the institutions that bought into the commodity super-cycle idea also bought gold, and if they sell, they will sell across the board.

The positive for gold is that pressure on the US dollar is increasing. My own expectation is that the dollar has to fall, on average, roughly another 35%. In the May 29th Commentary I mentioned that the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) was quoted in Forbes as saying the dollar had to fall by 35% to 50% in order to balance the US current account. Last week I saw an article quoting Daniel Gros, a director of the Centre of European Policy Studies (CEPS) saying that accounting errors in America's balance of payments and net international investment position add up to a staggering $2.7 trillion. His prediction: A substantial depreciation of the US dollar.

In the March 6th Commentary I explained that both China and Japan have to let the dollar fall as neither of the two could unilaterally keep the dollar where it is. In several commentaries I had documented China's changing stance towards the dollar and in the March 6th commentary I reported that Japan had changed its stance as well, by saying that the end of its zero interest rate policy had arrived. However, neither China nor Japan has actually done anything substantial yet. China has not rebalanced the basket of currencies against which the renminbi exchange rate is set and Japan has not yet started raising interest rates. That does not mean changes are not coming.

Japan announced again this week that its policy of zero interest rates is over and suggested that the Bank of Japan could start raising interest rates by the end of summer. Higher Japanese interest rates would kill the yen-dollar carry trade and could lead to a rise in the yen-dollar exchange rate (devaluation of the dollar).

President Bush's Treasury secretary nominee, Henry Paulson, told a Senate panel that the US has to aggressively encourage China to make its currency more flexible. Translated, it means that China has to allow the US dollar to fall.

As the dollar falls the gold price in US dollars will rise and according to my calculations the gold price should rise to about $1,000 an ounce. That makes the current gold price of around $600 an ounce look very attractive. If I did not own any gold related investments I would be aggressively buying right now. But, as I said earlier, there is also some risk that the gold price could fall further before it eventually rises to triple digits. Therefore I would also not be fully invested at this time.

I always try to engineer win-win situations, which is why I own a lot of gold investments and I have a lot of spare cash. If the gold price goes up, I'm happy. If the gold price goes down, I can buy more at lower prices, and I'm happy. It also makes it much easier to sleep well at night and not worry about what the gold price is going to do next week or next month.

Paul van Eeden
email:
pve@publishers-mgmt.com

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