Capital Gold Group Report: Gold Most Likely to Double
By John Dourekas
Of Kitco News
Hong Kong (Kitco News)
-- Gold will most
likely double from its current $1150 an ounce during the course of the
bull
market, according to Puru Saxena, founder of Puru Saxena Wealth
Management.
In an exclusive interview with Kitco News, Saxena said one major
factor in
gold’s favor "is that central banks have now become net buyers of gold.
So
that reduces supply from the market,” said Saxena.
Investment demand will appreciate over time as people become more
dubious
over currencies and they transfer assets into gold as a hedge, said the
investment adviser from his Hong Kong office.
He thinks inflation will occur at an accelerated pace over the next
few
years. "Real interest rates are negative in most countries, so gold
should
continue to benefit purely as an anti-currency because people lost faith
in the
euro and the dollar," he said. "At some point people are going to say
well, ‘we don’t want to lose purchasing power in currencies that are
dubious,
we want gold as an insurance.’”
Saxena is not so optimistic, however, for base metals, which he said
are
likely to struggle. “If you look at the inventory levels at the London
Metals
Exchange, the stockpiles are extremely elevated and inflated," he said.
"So even though copper, lead and zinc have had a big run-up since last
August, inventory levels have actually increased, so that leads us to
believe
it is speculation.”
As for the sudden rise of palladium, Saxena cautions against this
metal for
now. “Palladium has gone parabolic. Usually when you have a parabolic
spike
they are followed by a parabolic collapse," he said. "I think
palladium will have a big correction and when it does, that will be the
time to
buy."
Currently, Saxena said he is fully invested in his preferred
companies. “We
think the bull market will run for another couple of years – in my view
we will
see a big boom again in all asset classes,” he said.
Saxena sees more opportunities in precious metals and energy. He
said
that he is invested 35% in energy and 15% in precious metals. On
currencies he
prefers the Canadian and Australian dollar, as well as the Singaporean
Dollar,
Chinese Yuan and the Indian rupee.
American Revival?
Saxena does not subscribe to the bearish view that has America on the
wane.
“The US is still the world’s largest economy,” he said. “Surely it is
losing
its dominance as countries in Asia climb-up the prosperity ladder but it
will
be a gradual transition. I don’t think the US is going to go down in
flames. Ultimately the American consumer will come roaring back.”
He is, however, skeptical of the lack of clean-up of the financial
system.
Throughout the recession the total debt in America has continued to
expand and
this is the crux of the problem, he said. “You cannot solve a problem of
over-leverage and excess debt by taking on more and more debt. You can’t
put
band-aids on the problem or you will eventually have a currency crisis,”
said
Saxena.
Saxena said that over time the consequences of this will be twofold:
longer
term interest rates will increase substantially over the next decade and
the
CPI, which he calls a “terribly flawed barometer of inflation” will
double in
seven to eight years. In turn, he said, the US dollar’s purchasing power
will
diminish against hard assets.
The US has three options for survival, said Saxena, “It can either
accept a
painful recession. They can default because it cannot pay back
liabilities or
the third option is monetary inflation. I suspect they will continue to
debase
the value of the dollar and print greenbacks.”
In the future, Saxena said that he predicts the financial industry
will
become more heavily regulated. “A bank should either operate as a
commercial bank with no investment banking or if you go into investment
banking
the government should not bail you out." "If you make mistakes you
should be penalized and the bond and shareholders lose everything.”
EU Debt Crisis
Saxena is not a big fan of Europe. “I think the IMF or European Union
will bail out offenders but that is a band-aid on the problem and it
will be a
long-term negative effect for the euro," he said. "I think the euro
is a terribly flawed currency because you have so many different nations
with
different objectives, requirements and problems all lumped into one
basket.”
The problems with Western Europe are the same as in the US, said
Saxena.
“Too many excesses; too much credit; too much consumption and not enough
savings.”
No End for Goldman
Saxena said Goldman Sachs has been made a scapegoat and will survive
the
tribulation. “The biggest offenders are Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and the
regulators themselves because all these shenanigans were occurring right
under
their noses," he said. "Regulators knew what was going on… So I think
to come back at Goldman alone is a bit unfair –I think you have to go
after
everyone.” He said that in five years from now people will have
forgotten about
this ordeal.
China Correction
Property in certain cities in China are certainly overvalued, said
Saxena.
“If you look at Beijing and Shanghai the properties have become
incredibly
unaffordable -- it takes 20 years of income for the average household to
buy a
property,” he said.
A correction in China will occur when there is more monetary
tightening,
said Saxena. When this will happen? Saxena does not know. “One thing
working in
favor of Chinese assets is that China doesn’t allow the Chinese to
invest
overseas – so the money is all contained within the economy,” he said.
As for the purchase of the IMF’s 191.3 tonnes of gold, Saxena
forecasts
Asian Central Banks will purchase a significant amount. “Over time as
these
cash piles for China and India continue to get bigger and bigger with
foreign
exchange reserves, they will turn towards buying hard assets,” said
Saxena. He
does not think IMF gold sales are a big threat to the markets as they
were four
or five years ago.
Market Manipulation?
Regarding rumored gold market manipulation by the major banking
powers,
Saxena has some suspicions and would not be surprised if some paper
selling was
occurring to keep the gold price down.
“The central and private banks make their money by promoting the fiat
money
system –if the price of gold suddenly jumps fivefold, that is a red flag
that
there is something seriously wrong with the system," he said. "It
would not be surprising for me to hear that they are suppressing the
price of
gold – we had the biggest financial crisis in decades and rather than
increasing in value, the price of gold actually fell.”
Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold
