TMR
- GOLD HISTORY
By: Leonard Melman
Originally published fall, 2006 - Revised January
15, 2007
Gold appears to be in a truly pivotal time frame as
this is written in mid-January 2007. The retreat from its quarter century high
of $730 in May, 2006 drove gold below $600 per ounce before recovering to its
present level and the great question remains: “Is gold in a corrective phase of
an ongoing bull market, destined to break out once again to new highs - or - is
this decline the beginning of a new and prolonged precious metals bear
market?” Perhaps the answer to that intriguing question lies in the yellow
metal’s price history itself.
No metal on earth has ever had the importance of
gold. It has been regarded as wealth on earth since the beginning of recorded
history. Wars have been fought over gold and even the rise and fall of the
Roman Republic, later the Roman Empire, which lasted for a thousand years, can
be measured in its accumulation of golden wealth. Roman coins forged from gold,
silver and copper were currency on earth.
That tradition remained throughout European, North
American and even Oriental civilizations until the 20th Century.
Every attempt to create currencies based on unbacked paper failed miserably,
such as the monetary inflation in France and the creation of paper Continentals
in America, both during the latter part of the eighteenth century.
However, as the Twentieth Century progressed, for
various reasons, the world turned away from currencies of gold and silver, or
those backed by the precious metals and adopted the wholesale use of unbacked,
fiat, paper currencies, culminating in the final closing of the gold
convertability window by America in 1971. And with that change, the price of
gold began to fluctuate dramatically - and has ever since.
Up until the late 1960’s, the price of gold in terms
of US dollars was set by the American government, ranging from $21 in the early
twentieth century to $33 during the Roosevelt revisions of 1933, and later, $41
by President Nixon in 1971. However, conservative investors, recalling the
utter failure of every currency in history, began to acquire gold holdings and
the market price for gold began to rise above the official quotation. Gold
began to be traded on commodity exchanges and the American government passed a
law which enabled the private ownership of gold at the end of 1974. From early
1971 to year-end 1974, gold soared to $200 per ounce during the first great
modern golden bull market.
But the optimism was short-lived and gold began to
fall, reaching a major low of $100 per ounce in the summer of 1976. However,
important fundamental changes began to occur, each one favourable to the
precious metals market. Inflation began to rise, slowly at first, but then more
rapidly, eventually reaching twenty percent. Interest rates began to climb
relentlessly, also reaching twenty percent. Political confidence in the ability
of government to solve problems diminished, particularly during the Jimmy Carter
years. The “Twin Towers”, reflecting the US National Debt and the US Budgetary
Deficits, rose to historic highs. Oil embargoes took place, driving the price
of gas relentlessly higher and also spreading fear and uncertainty. And,
finally, the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union seemed to open the door
to direct confrontation between the superpowers of the era.
In a 42 month period between July 1976 and January
1980, gold began to rise at an ever-accelerating rate, breaching $200 per ounce
in August, 1978; $300 in June, 1979; $400 in September, 1979 - and then
embarking on an amazing rush to its final peak of $870 on January 21, 1980.
Fortunes were made in all manner of gold trading - but it all ended with an
agonizing smash, eventually bringing gold down to below $300 by mid-1982.
During the next twenty years, gold enjoyed periodic
rallies, such as 1983 and 1987 when gold returned to $500, but for the most
part, the two decades were characterized by quiet, dormant, and gradually
sinking precious metals markets, finally bottoming out close to $250 per ounce
in both late 1999 and in early 2001. During those two decades, inflation
abated, political stability improved, industrial expansion took place, petroleum
markets were predominantly stable and interest rates steadily declined from
their previous high levels.
Finally, after that second bottom, gold began to
rally in a sustained manner, rising up through $300, $400, $500 and eventually
reaching the aforementioned $730 this past May.
The great speculation, then, is this: are overall
fundamental conditions gradually turning toward those which sustained the great
two-part bull market of 1971-1980 - or are they likely to reflect the relative
stability of the long precious metals ‘drought years’ of 1981-2001?