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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AC Flyer who wrote (14829)2/11/2002 12:53:30 AM
From: rolatzi  Respond to of 74559
 
It is well worth analyzing earlier peaks in the price of gold to assess the current potential

the-privateer.com
In particular:
Gold War II - The IMF/U.S. Treasury Gold Auctions - 1975 to 1979
On January 1, 1975, after 42 years, it again became "legal" for individual Americans to own
Gold. Anticipating the demand, the U.S. Treasury in particular and many other Central Banks
sold large quantities of Gold, taking large paper profits in the process. This had two results. It
depressed the price of Gold, which fell to $US 103 in eighteen months. More important by far, it
"burned" large numbers of small individual investors.
But this "pre-emptive strike" against the Gold price did not solve the imbalances inherent in
the floating currency regime. As the Gold price began to recover from its August 1976 low, the
(US-controlled) IMF along with the Treasury itself, began a series of Gold auctions in an
attempt to hold down the price through official means. But the problem of yet another free fall
in the international value of the Dollar got in the way. Between January and October of 1978,
the Dollar lost fully 25% of its value against a basket of the currencies of its major trading
partners. By early 1979, due to this precipitous fall, the demand for Gold was overwhelming the
amount that the IMF/Treasury dared supply, and the Gold auctions came to an end.
Gold regained its ($195) December 1974 level by July 1978. It then pressed on to new highs,
hitting $250 in February 1979 and $300 in July. Also in July, Paul Volcker was appointed as Fed
Chairman by a desperate Jimmy Carter. Gold continued to surge, hitting $400 in October. While
this was happening, Mr Volcker was attending a conference in Belgrade. There the assessment
was made that the global financial system was on the verge of collapse. When Mr Volcker
returned to the U.S. from Belgrade, he took a momentous step. He announced that the Fed was
swiching its policy from controlling interest rates to controlling the money supply.
This new Fed policy took some time to have effect. In the meantime, Gold soared from $381 on
Nov. 1, 1979 to $850 on Jan. 21, 1980. The public, who had been burned in 1975, were late on
the scene. The great burst of public Gold buying came in the four weeks between Christmas
1979 and the Jan 21, 1980 high. As in 1975, they were "burned" again.

The Paper Era Begins
In early 1980, Mr Volcker's new Fed policy began to bite. U.S. interest rates began to
skyrocket. As they rose, the Dollar first slowed it's descent, then stopped falling, and then
began to rise. Both the public and the investment community which had stampeded into Gold
was lured back into paper by this huge rise in interest rates - and by the prospect of a higher
U.S. Dollar. The threat of financial meltdown was averted, but at a cost. The U.S. Prime rate hit
20% in April 1980 and stayed there (with a brief dive in mid-1980) until the end of 1981.
There was a rush out of Gold and back to Dollars.
Once interest rates began to come down, in early/mid 1982, the choice of where to put the
Dollars faced investors once more. The initial solution was just as it had been in the 1970s. The
Dow took off - rising from 776 to almost 1100 between mid August 1982 and late January
1983. Gold started earlier and took off even harder - rising from $296 in late June 1982 to
$510 at the end of January 1993.
That's where the similarity to the 1970s ended. Gold fell $105 in the last four trading days of
February 1983. As it fell, the Dow broke above the 1100 point level for the first time. The long
bull market in stocks, and the long stagnation of Gold, had begun.
Many facets went into this change in investment attitude, but one concrete change in the U.S.
financial system was the most telling. Way back in March 1971, four months before Nixon
closed the Gold window, the "permanent" U.S. debt ceiling had been frozen at $US 400
Billion. By late 1982, U.S. funded debt had tripled to about $US 1.25 TRILLION. But the
"permanent" debt ceiling still stood at $US 400 Billion. All the debt ceiling rises since 1971 had
been officially designated as "temporary(!?)". In late 1982, realising that this charade could
not be continued, The U.S. Treasury eliminated the "difference" between the "temporary" and
the "permanent" debt ceiling.
The way was cleared for the subsequent explosion in U.S. debt. With the U.S. being the world's
"reserve currency", the way was in fact cleared for a debt explosion right around the world. It
was also cleared for three of the biggest bull markets in history.

The global stock market boom of 1982-87
The Japanese stock market boom of 1988-90
The Dow (and then Nasdaq) led boom - late 1994 to March/April 2000(?)



To: AC Flyer who wrote (14829)2/11/2002 1:41:22 AM
From: Moominoid  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
End of hedging, consolidation in industry, end of central bank selling all are in the background, and then the Japanese Banking system collapses, the NAS goes to 500.... that's the picture....