Gold over $700: Too much, too fast?

By Doug Casey

Doug Casey, chairman of Casey Research, is an internationally acclaimed resource stock speculator and author of the book “Crisis Investing,” which broke records by spending 26 weeks as No. 1 on the New York Times Best-Seller list. Each month his International Speculator newsletter provides unbiased, carefully researched recommendations on early-stage gold, silver and other natural resource stocks with the potential to provide a 100 percent or better return over the coming 12-month period. Learn more about intelligent investing in resource stocks and about the International Speculator.

Recently, there was much ado about an ambitious Harvard student (a redundancy) who got caught with someone else’s prose on her hands.

So that I don’t suffer the same embarrassment, I will forewarn you that parts of what you are about to read were swiped wholesale … albeit from myself, from a recent interview sent out as a special report to subscribers of our International Speculator newsletter.

While the reasons for this outrage definitely include sloth and a lack of time, they also include the fact that the interview is fresh and still very much relevant to the questions at hand. Namely, “Are we really in the precious metals bull market of a lifetime?” and “With gold blasting over $700, have things moved too far, too fast?”

To answer the first, I would start by pointing out (as I did to our subscribers) that bull markets and bear markets follow one another as surely as a person inhales and exhales. And, as with breathing, the longer you hold your breath, the more urgent and powerful the subsequent intake. Commodities in general, but precious metals in particular, went through a deep bear market that lasted an entire generation. Gold fell from over $800 in 1980 to $256 in 2001; silver from $50 to $4. These are fantastically deep and prolonged bear markets. But they were even worse than they seemed because the dollar was losing about two-thirds of its value at the same time. For Americans to keep track of value, over time, with dollars is as idiotic as for an Argentine to try to do that with pesos.

The financial crisis of the late 1970s drove the metals to those highs. We’re now looking at another crisis, one that will dwarf the turmoil of the 1970s and likely bring on a depression worse than the 1930s. With so much trouble just ahead, there’s good reason to believe that the metals will exceed their old highs – which, in today’s dollars, means gold over $2,000. Let me reiterate what I’ve said for years: This time, gold isn’t just going through the roof. It’s going to the moon.

And there are other reasons. Because the bear market was so long and deep, there’s been relatively little exploration for new deposits of not just precious metals but of all metals – copper, nickel, moly, zinc, you name it. Meanwhile consumption has risen steadily all over the world, but especially in China and now India.

Entirely apart from that, most areas of the world have been pretty well explored. As with oil, the easy-to-find, rich, near-surface deposits have been cherry picked. What’s left are mostly low-grade or deep deposits in hard-to-access locations. And even after you’ve found a deposit, permitting is expensive and slow.

In a nutshell, the world has been living off of inventory for a long time.

But, as far as the precious metals are concerned, these factors will be greatly compounded by the brewing monetary crisis. It will be of historic proportions.

Has gold moved too far, too fast?

There are basically two views. The bears argue, quite correctly, that commodity run-ups are always self-correcting: Consumption drops just as production increases and prices retreat. They also point out, correctly, that the longest bear market ever is actually in commodity prices, which have been dropping, in real terms, since the beginning of recorded history. The bulls, including myself, argue that, while these things are true, both fundamental and monetary factors militate for perhaps a decade of higher prices until the fundamental trend reasserts itself. In other words, I think we’re in a period that’s going to run against the norm. Stocks, in bear markets, tend to fall twice as fast as they previously rose. Commodities, in bull markets, rise twice as fast as they previously fell. We’re in one of those times. I, like everyone else, would be much more comfortable in conventional, prosperous times. But I like to be a realist and make the trend, whatever it is, my friend.

When the bubble arrives – and I’m very confident it will – it will be easy to tell. The magazine cover stories, the cocktail party buzz, the talk of legislation in Washington to “do something” about high prices, the reports from brokerage firms – there will be lots of indicators. Of course, few people will pay attention to them in the right way – they’ll think they’re accurate descriptions of reality, not indicators of a mania. It was the same with the Internet stocks a few years ago.

Generally, there are three stages to a bull market. The first is stealth, when prices go up but nobody cares or even notices. With commodities, that happened from about 2000 to 2003. Next is the “Wall of Worry” stage. People see that prices are rising, but expect them to fall back to the bear market levels they’d gotten used to. People come up with all kinds of reasons why they’re overpriced. They are confused by the new reality, and many “old hands” and commodity producers take the opportunity to sell, since they haven’t seen good prices for years. This is the stage of the market we’re now in. Finally, there is the mania stage, when broad masses of the public get involved. It’s where the big profits – but also the big risks – are. Personally, I’m more comfortable buying when everyone says you’re an idiot for doing so, or at least when they’re skeptical. When we’re all hearing about what a great investment gold is, I’ll be looking for other opportunities. But my guess is that we won’t really be there for another year. And when it arrives, the mania should last for some time, as it did most recently with the Internet stocks.

While I was expecting to see a big surge – and went on record with that expectation on March 22 when gold was trading at $550 – there’s little doubt that gold and silver may be getting ahead of themselves for the short term. A market trend, even an unstoppable one – which is how I view the current metals bull market – is still going to periodically correct.

Get used to it.

That is especially true if you’re an investor in the mining shares, which is absolutely, without question, the right way to play this market. Buy on dips (historically, we see buying opportunities in the summer months) and don’t be chased out of the market by volatility.

When this thing does finally come to an end, the better-managed gold and silver stocks will be trading for many multiples of what they trade for today.

This trend is your friend … get comfortable with it.


The emerging bull market in precious metals, and in the precious metals stocks, is just beginning to gather speed, with 100 Percent, 300 percent, even 2,000 percent profits ahead for early investors.

But the really big profits require being selective in your chosen stocks, avoiding the “paper tigers” and focusing on those with excellent management teams, working on big targets in highly prospective geology. For over 20 years, Doug Casey’s International Speculator has been providing investors with clear, unbiased recommendations on the world’s best resource stocks. Learn more about this uniquely valuable service.

Doug Casey

Doug Casey is the author of "Crisis Investing," which spent 26 weeks as No. 1 on the New York Times Best-Seller list. He is also editor and publisher of the International Speculator, one of the nation's most established and highly respected publications on gold, silver and other natural resource investments. Doug has made his subscribers millions with his in-depth research, right-on perceptions and contrarian attitude. Learn more about becoming a subscriber to the International Speculator. Read more of Doug Casey's articles here.