Showing posts with label Gold Price Gold Price Adjusted for Inflation John Williams Gold Marc Faber Gold gold price 2011 2012 hyperinflation gold Deutsche bank gold price estimate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gold Price Gold Price Adjusted for Inflation John Williams Gold Marc Faber Gold gold price 2011 2012 hyperinflation gold Deutsche bank gold price estimate. Show all posts

Marc Faber's February Outlook--Still Looking for a Correction


Legendary investor Marc Faber is out with his latest issue of the Gloom Boom and Doom report. Here are a few highlights:

1. Stocks---Still cautious on US and developed markets and expects a short term correction. In particular, Faber points out that while the Dow made a new high, the transports have not yet confirmed the move, which is bearish. Another warning sign is the failure of the Russel 2000 small cap index to make a new high. This is important because it has until now lead the general market. Furthermore, the internal market breathe (NYSE new highs) has been steadily falling, despite a rising market. Longer-term, Faber is pretty constructive on the stock market as the Fed will simply not let the market decline very much.

2. Emerging Markets--Faber remains very bearish on emerging markets in general (Brazil, India, etc). He notes that many failed to make new highs in January, despite favorable market conditions, which could indicate a major top in some emerging markets. Faber thinks emerging markets could fall between 20-30%. In fact, this would be a great buying opportunity for investors.

3. Commodities--Faber is concerned about commodities, as they are currently very overbought by almost any measure. He goes on to say that commodities seem to have reached the parabola stage--going straight up, which is usually the very end of the move. Yes, it could last longer than anyone expects, but at some point prices will collapse again, as they did back in 2008. This cycle, Faber notes, always occurs as higher prices lead to an increase in supply, which eventually overwhelms the market causing prices to fall. The cycle is longer for industrial commodities compared to agricultural prices as it is harder to build a new copper mine than it is for a farmer to plant more soybeans. This cycle will play out even with the Fed's money printing. Investors should prepare for some downside volatility in commodity prices.

4. Gold and Silver--Long term Faber is still bullish on the metals, but he thinks they could fall in the short term with the general market. Gold could fall to the $1,100-1,200 area. For investors this should not cause any alarm because with the fiscal problems of the US and further monetization, the future for gold  is still bright. Faber would use any decline to add to his positions.

5. Real Estate--No, Faber is not calling a bottom in US real estate, but he points out that relative to other asset classes, real estate is cheap. He would consider buying a home as long as you are prepared to live in it for a while. Faber also postulates that if housing continues to decline, commodities and stocks may sell-off even more.

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Gold Headed to $1600 by 2012--Deutsche Bank

I believe that of the major investment banks, Deutsche bank is the only one which has an optimistic price target for gold longer term. From Dow Jones:
Gold posts fresh record high of $1,282.90/oz on Friday, and has more to go, says Deutsche Bank in weekly commodities review, citing exchange rate and interest rate trends, central bank purchases, heightened macro economic volatility and de-hedging as major demand influences. But how high, and is price over-extended or has a bubble formed?, bank asks, reiterating that prices would need to surpass $1,455 to be considered extreme in real terms, hit $2,000 to represent a bubble. So, bank says its target of $1,600 in 2012 isn't excessive given favourable interest rate, exchange rate trends and appearance of new sources of demand from both private, public sectors. "For the time being we believe the drivers of this rally are fundamental rather than speculative," with physically-backed ETFs playing an important role, it says.
It is refreshing to have an investment bank say something positive about gold other than it is a safe haven play. The $2,000 number is on the low side because it is using the government's inflation numbers. Real inflation, as most people know is much higher than government figures. John Williams of Shadow stats believes that if you use real inflation numbers, the price of gold would have to rise to $7,500 to match its inflation adjusted high reached back in 1980. Marc Faber said in the Gloom, Boom, Doom report that he expects gold to reach $4,000 before the bull market is over. Either way, we sill have a way to go in the great gold bull market.

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