Cut The Bull: Is Gold A Safe-Haven Or What?

By Nico Isaac
Since always, the mainstream financial experts engage in what I like to call “Operation Cheap Suit.” They “wear” certain ideas like secondhand clothes, carelessly taking them on and off as the occasion sees fit.
Case in point: The disposable notion of Gold’s safe-haven status.
There is no consistent truth there, but rather, an ever-changing “wardrobe” which depends entirely on price action. To wit: When gold prices soar, the usual suspects freely don its “safe-haven” notion. Then, when prices fall, those same experts strip off the idea faster than a man on fire.
You don’t have to take my word for it. The following news items from the past two years bare all the necessary details:
  • Gold rockets to its highest levels of all time in early 2008: “Bullion Sales Hit Record In Stampede To Safety.” (Financial Times)
  • Gold plunges more than 30% from its March ’08 peak: “Gold prices plunge on recession fears. Confidence is at rock bottom. No one wants to be long any commodity.” (Bloomberg)
Then, there are the more immediate, near-term responses from the past month:
  • “Gold prices fall as a surge in stocks weakened the precious metal’s safe-haven appeal. Investors buy up gold as protection against tumultuous markets and a deteriorating economy.” (AP)
  • “Gold Rises On Economic Optimism… We continue to have a fairly positive correlation between economic activity, reflected by equity indices, and the precious metals.” (Reuters)
(Go With Gold: The latest Financial Forecast Service offers the most comprehensive coverage of the near-, and long-term trend changes in store for the yellow metal. Click here to receive the complete package, absolutely risk-free.)
Fact is, you’re not going to find the “truth” in any of the usual sources. That’s certain. While in Chapter 22 of his Conquer the Crash, Elliott Wave International’s president Bob Prechter does list 5 reasons why “holding a healthy amount of gold and silver” is a good idea in a deflationary depression, in his March 14, 2008 Elliott Wave Theorist, he presented an indisputable case AGAINST the idea that “Gold always goes up in recessions and depressions.” Click here to get started.

Categorised as: Gold News


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>