How (And When) Gold Could Go to $5,700/oz

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    from Birch Gold Group:

    From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

    This week, Your News to Know rounds up the latest top stories involving gold and the overall economy. Stories include: Is $5,700 gold inevitable? Some mixed data from the world’s top mints on gold and silver demand; and how the global de-dollarization movement insulates nations from sanctions.

    TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/

    Compared to stocks, gold is 60% undervalued (for now)

    MoneyWeek’s Dominic Frisby is an analyst to watch. His precious metals analyses are full of insights, and his latest observation on gold’s price is fascinating. Frisby shows off his decades of experience by reminiscing about gold’s price trajectory from the late 1990s to now.

    This isn’t just a nostalgia piece, though. Frisby points out three important points in gold’s price history: $250/oz in 1999, $1,910 in 2011 and $1,920 today.

    Why these?

    First:

    There was the low in 1999 at $250/oz, marked for all eternity by Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, as he sold off two-thirds of British gold at the bottom of the market when there were no compelling reasons to do so.

    Ouch. To give Gordon Brown the benefit of the doubt, surely he assumed gold was no longer a prudent investment. (But what did he replace it with? I’ve no idea.) But remember, 1999 was near the peak of the dot-com bubble. Safe haven investments were out of fashion. Unprofitable, high-growth tech companies were all the rage – and yes, that does sound familiar.

    The dot-com bubble popped, markets tanked, and another bubble inflated in its wake – the one history remembers as the Great Financial Crisis. Gordon Brown probably felt severe heartburn the day gold reached its all-time high of $1,920 in 2011, a 668% increase over the 1999 price.

    Frisby points out that the 2011 peak in gold’s price was the culmination of several years of a historic bull run. And, as we’d expect after a long bull run, the retracement that followed was considerable. And quite possibly heartbreaking to some gold owners. (Consider, though, even gold’s low points of 2013 and 2014 were significantly above the Bank of England’s selling price.)

    Fast forward to today – gold’s price is $1,920 again. Does that mean we’re at the peak of another bull market? Frisby thinks not.

    And here’s the kicker. When we compare the S&P 500 index and gold’s price ratio from 2011, and project forward to today? Gold should be $5,700/oz.

    Now, just to be clear, that should be is arguable. Currently, the S&P 500 is valued some 30% higher than back then. So it’s more likely the case that gold is considerably underpriced compared to stocks, even after their decline from “astronomically overvalued” to “merely twice as expensive as the historic median.” Frisby doesn’t necessarily think gold will surge to $5,700/oz – it could, but what’s more likely in my mind is that stocks will continue their fall toward realistic prices.

    So, either gold rises to meet the S&P 500’s price level, or the S&P 500 falls to reasonable prices. Either outcome, Frisby predicts, will leave gold owners in an enviable position.

    UK’s Royal Mint posts record sales figures

    UK’s Royal Mint announced that its sales of gold bullion increased by 25% year-over-year, and silver sales increasing 29% over the same period. Unsurprisingly, Royal Mint said that March had the highest volume of monthly sales as the Russian invasion of Ukraine spurred safe-haven demand and brought gold to a new all-time high. Interestingly, they saw a 5% increase in new buyers – so it wasn’t just goldbugs and silver stackers driving demand, but new investors interested in securing their savings, as well.

    Andrew Dickey, the Royal Mint’s Director of Precious Metals Investment, is bullish on gold’s prospects this year. He said that recessionary concerns, general uncertainty and crypto market turbulence should all contribute to heightened gold demand:

    Looking forward to 2023, many financial experts are expecting this momentum to continue, which will promote a level of confidence in investors of precious metals following IMF warnings of a recession. Evidence shows that previous recessions have had an impact on the gold price increasing, with the metal historically deemed a ‘safe haven.’

    The U.S. Mint’s sales figures appear to be trailing those of Britain’s Royal Mint. But is it really a lack of demand, or is something else playing a role? Out of the four precious metals’ sales figures that the U.S. Mint revealed, we can’t help but focus on those of silver. For example, 3,499,000 1 oz American eagle silver coins were sold so far this month, compared to 5,001,000 coins sold last January.

    Read More @ BirchGold.com