Quote from loufah:
Well, US paper currency is also priced in USD, but its value has gone down over time due to inflation.
And it takes many more dollars to buy products/services. Yet GC is not at the number the GC/inflation folks think it should be at.
This conversation is me and a colleauge of mine who runs money and is the most succesful investor I personally know. He has been a GC holder for a long time. And was also NET short into the crisis...truly gifted trader. I posed the GC/inflation question after reading this thread :
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me : I truly donât understand the "inflation adjusted price" argument. If gold is priced in USD, how is inflation not reflected directly in its price at all times?
him : $1,000 was the critical resistance. Keep in mind that based on 1980
high of $850, and using
U.S. Government C.P.I. figures, equivalent price is over $2,300.
Alternate inflation figures equate to over $6,000.
Higher interest rates turn everything; very simple. How does that happen? From 1/80 to now, gold has gone from $850 to $1,180, or +39%.
Cumulative inflation per U.S. Government over that period has been +170%.
$850 + (170% x $850) = $2,300
To rephrase it: If the 1980 high price of gold kept up with the C.P.I., it would be $2,300.
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Gold is clearly not reflecting as rapid a debasement of the greenback as many think. And if it hasnt tapped these levels during the deepest recession/financial crisis/multiple wars(decade of hell???) in decades what makes anybody think it has much higher to go?
I know nothing. Move like a jellyfish with the tide.
Not short nor long gold. Just speculating mentally.