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Gold: A Glimmer of Positivity In The Midst of Extensive Economic Turmoil

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Gold is at 1,613.34 today. With the massive benefits and stimulus packages now approved by Canada and the US, this will trigger not only a short term rise in Gold Price, but most likely for the foreseeable – and unforeseeable – future.

The following (truncated) was first posted by John Hathaway, Senior Portfolio Manager, Sprott Asset Management, |March 2, 2020: 

1. Coronavirus Poses Black Swan Threat

Before the coronavirus panic, gold had been rising steadily, up 18.31% in 2019. Gold strength was based on the expectation that central banks had no way to normalize interest rates, as we discussed in our January commentary, No Way Out. The outlook for public policy in major economies was for gold-friendly monetary largesse and ever-larger doses of fiscal stimulus, even before the virus threat. A black swan event was not necessary to drive capital flows into the yellow metal but it has surely helped.

2. Paper Currency is Toast

Coronavirus will eventually go away. Global indebtedness will not. A vaccine will be found and the pandemic contained, hopefully in a year or less. More than $240 trillion1 of public and private sector debt is here to stay and very likely to expand exponentially (the global debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 318%). Economic growth was weakening well before the virus and will most certainly suffer for the near to intermediate term. This will lead to even larger deficits and stronger handcuffs on policy alternatives. Paper currency is toast, if that were ever in doubt.

3. Risk-Conscious Investors Turning to Gold and Bonds

Despite gold’s excellent performance, investor interest in gold and related mining shares remained muted throughout 2019 because mainstream investment strategies had generated good returns. Coronavirus associated economic risks have served to expose the fissures in the otherwise complacent façade of financial serenity and well-being. Suddenly, it has become apparent that all is not well with conventional thinking.

4. $14 Trillion and Counting

Capital flows are pouring into sovereign debt seeking safety. Negative yielding sovereign debt is approximately $14.57 trillion at last count. In a weakening economy, credit defaults of lower-rated debt will rise. Compromised balance sheets cannot be saved by reductions on the short end of the curve in a business contraction. Creditors will not wait for the promised eventual recovery. Many dreams will go belly up before the Federal Reserve cavalry can save them.

5. Gold Miners are Healthy

While earnings of most companies and economic sectors are likely to decline this year, those of precious metals miners are rising strongly and likely to climb further. The global cost of mining an ounce of gold is roughly $1,000 an ounce.

The average gold price rose from $1,270 in 2018 to $1,394 in 2019, a gain of 9.83% and a margin increase for miners in general of approximately 46%. If current metal prices hold, earnings would rise again by approximately 47%. In this deflationary environment, costs are likely to remain stable and may even decline. Margins could expand more than expected. Cash flows are robust, balance sheets are improving and dividends are on the increase. It is a story unlikely to be told in other economic sectors.