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Gold Rushes and Bubbles


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2010 May 19, 7:12pm   7,675 views  40 comments

by turtledove   ➕follow (10)   💰tip   ignore  

Hi. Been a long-time lurker; first time poster. Several articles posted recently talk about how the stock market is about to do something horrific and dollars won't be worth the paper they are printed on... that people are looking to invest in more securely valued items like gold (assuming there's no gold bubble). Could someone please explain to me why gold would be any more secure than anything else?

You can't eat or drink it, heal yourself with it, heat your home with it, clothe or shelter yourself with it -- or start your car with it. 78% of gold is used for jewelry. So when life as we know it ends, how exactly would gold help you out? Isn't it only as valuable as other people think it is? When we move down the ladder of the hierarchy of needs, how much value could it possibly have? Don't get me wrong, I like the sparkly stuff, but if I had to have shoes and food for my kids, I wouldn't want gold for let's say -- medical services we could provide. If at the end of the day a house is just sticks and bricks (which at least provides shelter from the elements) what on earth would a desperate global economy want with gold?

#bubbles

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2   turtledove   2010 May 19, 8:21pm  

larrypatrickmaloney says

If you have to ask, you will never know.

So this is inherent knowledge that you're born with (or not, as the case may be)?

Why don't you humour me with an actual answer, anyway? Afterwards we can decide if I have the mental horsepower to comprehend what I "will never know."

3   MarkInSF   2010 May 19, 8:59pm  

Could someone please explain to me why gold would be any more secure than anything else?

- unlike money, which is really just promises and contacts, gold cannot be defaulted upon. It won't go to zero like fiat currencies can. (secure against hyperinflation)
- like other tangible goods, it tends to hold it's exchange value for other tangible goods over long time periods. (secure against inflation...sort of)

Other than that, not much. Downsides:

- It earns no interest
- it has very high transaction costs for the physical commodity
- it's trade value is very volatile
- it can become overvalued (correlary to last point) in terms of trade value, and thus is subject to sharp DROPS in value.

As you say, you can't eat or drink it or wear it.... but you can't do that with bank deposits or shares of stock either.

4   burritos   2010 May 19, 10:54pm  

It's insurance against fiat currency. What you said about gold:

"You can’t eat or drink it, heal yourself with it, heat your home with it, clothe or shelter yourself with it — or start your car with it. 78% of gold is used for jewelry."

Could also be said about a pile of 100 dollar bills and you can't even wear the $100 bills. When confidence in money is lost, it has to be placed somewhere else as a form of money. Historically, that has been gold. I don't think it's an investment(unlike apple or exxon). It's insurance against the financial world going to the crapper. I think 5% is more than enough. Anymore, you might as well be taking your money to vegas and betting "no pass" at the craps table.

5   mthom   2010 May 20, 1:28am  

As others have posted above, everything you criticize about gold can be said about a US dollar bill. Normally if you gave someone 200 pieces of flattened cotton would you expect to receive an iphone in return? Probably not. Yet, when those pieces of cotton have the right president printed on them, they are supposedly worth something.

6   tatupu70   2010 May 20, 2:22am  

mthom says

As others have posted above, everything you criticize about gold can be said about a US dollar bill. Normally if you gave someone 200 pieces of flattened cotton would you expect to receive an iphone in return? Probably not. Yet, when those pieces of cotton have the right president printed on them, they are supposedly worth something.

That's the point of a currency, isn't it? To facilitate exchanges of goods and services? Would you rather go back to a barter society?

7   mthom   2010 May 20, 2:38am  

Maybe I am missing the point. The original poster said gold essentially has no value aside from jewelry. What intrinsic value do dollar bills have? I agree dollar bills are a good means for paying for goods/services, that doesn't address the criticism of gold though.

8   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 3:12am  

mthom says

Maybe I am missing the point. The original poster said gold essentially has no value aside from jewelry. What intrinsic value do dollar bills have? I agree dollar bills are a good means for paying for goods/services, that doesn’t address the criticism of gold though.

Dollar bills have no intinsic value. Neither does the pattern of magnetic polarity in your bank's disk drives that say you have $X on deposit with them. Money doesn't have to have intrinsic value. It's really just a unit of account: who is owed, and who owes.

But ponder this: If you owned the mortgage of a homedebtor, i.e. you had a legal contract saying the homedebtor owed you $1000, does that mortgage have "intrinsic" value? Can you trade that IOU from the homedebtor for other things? Indeed you could. You could even say it has "intrinsic" value, since ultimately it is a claim on the home, which has intrinsic value. Having money is really no different than holding a mortgage note, since our money is credit based. It's just made much more convenient and fungible by the banking system.

Even holding a physical dollar bill in your hand is just a marker that you are owed a dollars worth of good/services, and it's given value by somebody else's debt for a dollars worth of good/services. These days a dollar bill is about 1/2 backed by mortgages, and half by US Treasury debt, Your dollar of credit represented by the dollar bill you hold in your hand also represents the dollar of debt owed by homedebtors and taxpayers.

9   mthom   2010 May 20, 3:16am  

Nomograph says

mthom says


The original poster said gold essentially has no value aside from jewelry. What intrinsic value do dollar bills have?

The original poster was correct. If you cannot use gold as medium to exchange goods and services, then it has no value. The value of both gold and paper money is derived from the goods and services that it represents.
For example, lets imagine a free market comprised of three people alone in the desert. One person has food, the other has water, and the third has gold. All three are hungry and thirsty. The food and water people will be fine. The gold person will be a welfare case, completely dependent on the goodwill of the other two.

Would a person with a $1 bill or even a $100 bill be any different than the person with the gold?

10   SFace   2010 May 20, 3:23am  

yes nomo, from that perspective gold as a commodity has no economic benefit beyond a psycological one where people can exchange food for gold. Besides the three people stranded in an island case, Let's say three countries have econcomic resouce: 1) Canada has natural gas and timber, US has agriculture and livestock and Mexico has gold and silver, which country would I rather not be?

Gold has no basic value (relative to cost) vs. their other commodity peers like oil/gas copper/nickel, cows/chicken, potash/fertilizer, etc. From that perspective, I never buy gold. I am willing to bet, buffet as a value fundamentalist never own gold (except Kay's jeweler) as well.

Somehow I wonder how aliens view earthlights spending all that energy and effort drilling, digging, crushing and refining for shiny oz's.

11   burritos   2010 May 20, 3:30am  

mthom says

Nomograph says

mthom says

The original poster said gold essentially has no value aside from jewelry. What intrinsic value do dollar bills have?

The original poster was correct. If you cannot use gold as medium to exchange goods and services, then it has no value. The value of both gold and paper money is derived from the goods and services that it represents.

For example, lets imagine a free market comprised of three people alone in the desert. One person has food, the other has water, and the third has gold. All three are hungry and thirsty. The food and water people will be fine. The gold person will be a welfare case, completely dependent on the goodwill of the other two.

Would a person with a $1 bill or even a $100 bill be any different than the person with the gold?

The guy with the gun and bullets would certainly have a say. "Mao Zedong"

12   Â¥   2010 May 20, 3:33am  

mthom says

What intrinsic value do dollar bills have?

They are legal tender for all USD-denominated debts, public and private.

Note that the IRS bills you in USD, and that your taxes are only payable in USD.

Also, in the private economy, if you owe a USD-denominated debt, FRNs by law must be accepted.

Money is like the score in a game, it is not the game. The actual game is the acquisition and enjoyment of goods and services, and the accumulation of fixed capital and knowledge to create these goods and services with greater efficiency (less input labor and/or materials/energy).

I agree with the original question that demand for gold, outside of the speculation, is one of "want" and not "need". Without wage inflation -- ie stagflation -- my general understanding is "inflation in things you need and deflation in things you want".

There are huge profit margins embedded in many consumer products. Take Coca Cola. This costs 10c on the dollar to produce, and a substitute good (water) is freely available everywhere. As and if things continue to get tougher for J6P I think the Coca Cola Corporation is going to find itself under pricing pressure.

Gold's primary attribute is that new supply arrives on the market in a limited manner, and given the energy costs involved, its production cost is somewhat driven by energy costs.

13   Â¥   2010 May 20, 3:36am  

SF ace says

I wonder how aliens view earthlings spending all that energy and effort drilling, digging, crushing and refining for shiny oz’s.

You're echoing Buffett:

“It gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head.”
– Warren Buffett

14   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 3:44am  

MarkInSF says

But ponder this: If you owned the mortgage of a homedebtor, i.e. you had a legal contract saying the homedebtor owed you $1000, does that mortgage have “intrinsic” value? Can you trade that IOU from the homedebtor for other things? Indeed you could. You could even say it has “intrinsic” value, since ultimately it is a claim on the home, which has intrinsic value. Having money is really no different than holding a mortgage note, since our money is credit based. It’s just made much more convenient and fungible by the banking system.

Even holding a physical dollar bill in your hand is just a marker that you are owed a dollars worth of good/services, and it’s given value by somebody else’s debt for a dollars worth of good/services. These days a dollar bill is about 1/2 backed by mortgages, and half by US Treasury debt, Your dollar of credit represented by the dollar bill you hold in your hand also represents the dollar of debt owed by homedebtors and taxpayers.

Actually, come to think of it, this means a dollar bill does in fact have some intrinsic value. It's backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, which have intrinsic value.

15   turtledove   2010 May 20, 3:58am  

mthom says

As others have posted above, everything you criticize about gold can be said about a US dollar bill.

That's exactly what I'm saying. The value of fiat currency is based on a perception of value. I think that the same thing can be said about gold. Dollars (or Euro over here in Ireland) are valued at what people believe the value to be. Gold seems risky to me since it suffers the same problem. It is only worth what someone else will trade for it. As I said above, in a desperate economy where money is without value, if you were to come to my husband for medical help (no one would come to me, my skills are useless in a desperate economy, I'm only an accountant) I would not want gold. I would want something I could use... Food, water, oil, clothing, various trade skills.

Yet, many have said that we should invest in secure things like gold. And these are very smart people saying this. And the gold market is going crazy these days... So, people are buying it in droves. Yet it doesn't seem any more secure than anything else that derives its value from perception.

16   Â¥   2010 May 20, 4:00am  

MarkInSF says

Actually, come to think of it, this means a dollar bill does in fact have some intrinsic value. It’s backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, which have intrinsic value.

I think this understanding is a bit weird. Not necessarily incorrect, but it doesn't really jibe with my understanding.

The dollars were CREATED via mortgage lending and the Fed buying treasuries, but I find the idea that they are "backed" by the same to be a bit odd.

A dollar's value AFAICT is the goods and services it can acquire as it pings through the USD bloc.

The supply of USDs may have risen dramatically since 1995:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M3

but so has trade within the USD bloc (which encompasses half the planet's population now).

While it's a somewhat contentious argument, I think our move into Iraq in 2003 was partially to keep Iraq (and the mideast) in the USD bloc and out of the Euro bloc. Not that euros can't be converted to dollars, but a post-sanction Saddam was going to reintegrate the Iraqi private economy with Europe (France, Germany, and Russia) and NOT the US or UK.

17   mthom   2010 May 20, 4:00am  

To Troy and Mark, I think I misused "intrinsic value." Maybe what I should have used was "true value?" You guys seem to know more about this, so correct me if that's wrong. In the original post, the complaint was that gold can't be worn, eaten, drunk, etc. My understanding is that the dollar bill isn't any different: you don't wear, eat, drink, etc. dollar bills either.

18   turtledove   2010 May 20, 4:07am  

MarkInSF says

MarkInSF says
Actually, come to think of it, this means a dollar bill does in fact have some intrinsic value. It’s backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, which have intrinsic value.

So, could one go further to say that since the dollar has some intrisic value, by virtue of being backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, that the dollar could be worth more than gold -- if the world decided that gold has no value other than sparkliness. (though my six-year-old might disagree, as she loves her sparkly princess crowns).

19   maxweber1   2010 May 20, 4:12am  

I think about the theory of money or theory of currency. The medium has to be easily transported, transferred, and well-recognized. Gold fits. Very well. cars don't. Eggs don't very well although people did use to wax them so they'd keep.

Now, cash dollars fit. So do virtual dollars and fiat dollars for now. The theory goes the money doesn't represent value intrinsically but represents the work for which it was created. As governments have resorted to printing fiat money (database entries of wealth) with no actual real backing from work or product then, in theory at least, they are no longer creating money. They are now creating worthless false scrip.

Gold is a sure bet. One knows it is worth what it took to mine it at least.

Well, People used to be paid in Salt. "worth their salt" and "salt-pay = salary". So, you might think of other valuables. My grandmother told me the fridge was the most life-changing invention of the 20th century. So, salt lost its value. But other things are essential today. One could probably argue steel and plastics are the new gold. Or motors, engines, and equipment. Guns and butter. Computers and cell phones. Can you make any of these?

When your AC goes out and you don't have the money to pay for a repair then how will you pay your neighbor to fix it? With gold. He'd take that I'm sure. With food. That too if he's broke. With a lawnmower. Maybe not. A gun. Maybe but that's a legal issue now.

My hunch is one can think of gold as a EOTWAWKI hedge but a much better one is a value-producing business. E.g. goats or auto repair. As the world rushes to safety (US Treasuries), then the US government will continue to print trillions of dollars. The wealth will flow towards the party providing the least worth for the trade. That is, the US Government might sell you $10,000 in Treasuries. It then spends your money. Well, any fool knows 50%+ of government spending is waste; so, you gave them money with value and they wasted it. Now you have something of value. The problem arises in the inflation imposed on your wealth due to the way money is created in the USA. While you got $10,000 in Treasuries the competitors such as a central bank get a $10,000 print-money-at-will token. They and their henchmen can now loan out $100,000 or $1,000,000 or even much more if you consider leverage and re-leverage. So, your "value" drops fast when the amount of money being created is increasing geometrically. Some argure for deflation. This is because they do not understand the difference between productivity and GDP. They do not understand the value of money is dropping very fast when money is defined as representing real work or product.

Another way of looking at it is one hedge fund manager earned $4B last year. That's enough to pay 80,000 teachers. He only pays 15% tax. You probably pay 35%. Well, he uses his money up by purchasing a business or an island or something. This is two distinct cases. In the island case, no money disappears per se. In the business case he may spend $100M making a product nobody wants. At the end of the year, the product is canned, paychecks bought food which was eaten and bills paid and the money has gone. Nothing of value was created. $100M disappeared. Obviously, one might think the hedge fund pay (or even his $1B in tax shelter versus a doctor) would be more profitably spent paying for education. Which is more likely to create value to society? Your government (technically the Senate) thinks the hedge fund manager provides more value to society than 20,000 teachers would. The vanity of humans means almost all billionaires are wasteful.

Similarly, by investing in gold you are saying you cannot figure out where to put your money and society is hoping the person selling you gold can do it better. You are making a very negative statement about the economy. Rather than build a ghost town in a desert or an island in the ocean, you have put your money in long term storage. You are not worse than the wasteful billionaires.

The gold arguement is inflation versus deflation. We are clearly in a high inflation environment when dollars are adjusted for real work output. The USA is living on borrowed time. Over 40M are on food stamps, the government buys indirectly almost all mortgages each month, employment is collapsing ex-government jobs, et cetera. We have lots to look up to and much we can improve however! But the American people are dominated by those who allow their greed to blind them to the future of America. They are greed-bent on destroying America. No middle class. No freedom. No American Way.

Surely physical gold is a fine investment in this trend. More surely one might invest in learning to garden. 40% of the nations vegetables were produced in gardens in the 1940's. This is why there are bill riders to outlaw vegetable gardens at homes (or make them prohibitively expensive to license).

Again, gold is a fine investment when gardens are outlawed. See, gold will simply be outlawed too just like in the past. This time the rulers can go through database records and determine who has gold. In fact, as things collapse, one might argue holding gold is a fine way to get yourself on the bad list. The modern Mccarthy list or whatever it is now.

I know one guys who doubled his fortune over the last few years buying gold. Very smart dude. Fortunately or unfortunately, I don't have enough money to worry about this and am more inclined to buy a work truck, tractor, or farm plot (farming is illegal by deed restriction on one plot I looked at!).

TimJowers

20   maxweber1   2010 May 20, 4:19am  

BTW, John Williams still tracks M3. Anyone considering GOLD must read his inflation projection. I would love to know other TRUTHFUL FACTS macro-economics sites but haven't found much other than some Feds' sites.

http://www.shadowstats.com/article/hyperinflation

21   Â¥   2010 May 20, 4:20am  

maxweber1 says

We are clearly in a high inflation environment when dollars are adjusted for real work output. The USA is living on borrowed time. Over 40M are on food stamps, the government buys indirectly almost all mortgages each month, employment is collapsing ex-government jobs, et cetera.

This is all deflationary.

This is why there are bill riders to outlaw vegetable gardens at homes

This is more right-wing bull--- hysteria that is circulating 24/7.

(farming is illegal by deed restriction on one plot I looked at!)

Sellers, AFAIK, can put anything in the title's CC&R, and it runs with the land for all perpetuity. One of the more bizarre elements in our land tenure system.

22   Â¥   2010 May 20, 4:23am  

maxweber1 says

Anyone considering GOLD must read his inflation projection

Show me the (W-2) money. No wage growth, no inflation, just reallocation.

Japan 1990-2003 was one demonstration of this dynamic.

23   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 4:24am  

turtledove says

MarkInSF says

MarkInSF says

Actually, come to think of it, this means a dollar bill does in fact have some intrinsic value. It’s backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, which have intrinsic value.

So, could one go further to say that since the dollar has some intrisic value, by virtue of being backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, that the dollar could be worth more than gold — if the world decided that gold has no value other than sparkliness. (though my six-year-old might disagree, as she loves her sparkly princess crowns).

Indeed. That is the next logical step in the argument. Which has more intrinsic value, a home or gold?

I'd like to see gold bugs answer that one!

Troy says

The dollars were CREATED via mortgage lending and the Fed buying treasuries, but I find the idea that they are “backed” by the same to be a bit odd.

No it's not odd. Yes, the money was created when the debt was taken on. If I own a home, then I write a legal binding note that says something to the effect "The bearer of this note has claim to $1000 worth of my home", that note is now newly created money, backed by my property. A bank simply makes the note fungible and moneylike by assuming the risk, accepting the note and in return giving a generic "bank deposit". The bank deposit was created in the loan process, and the bank deposit is also backed by property. There is no inconsistency, just two ways of saying the same thing.

24   maxweber1   2010 May 20, 4:25am  

Troy says

maxweber1 says


We are clearly in a high inflation environment when dollars are adjusted for real work output. The USA is living on borrowed time. Over 40M are on food stamps, the government buys indirectly almost all mortgages each month, employment is collapsing ex-government jobs, et cetera.

This is all deflationary.

Hmmm, prices I see are inflating. Pay is not. At least from my middle class position I see zero signs of inflation. When I factor in the exploding national, state, and municipal debt holes then I must admist inflation is very high.
This is why there are bill riders to outlaw vegetable gardens at homes

This is more right-wing bull— hysteria that is circulating 24/7.

Got me. I think the rider was you can garden but cannot sell produce. My friend quoted some bills to me a while back. Same dude who told me pharmas were using virus DNA in meds and when I questioned him he brought me links and texts from existing patents by pharmas showing the same. here are two links he sent on the garden and nutrition-starvation:
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org ; www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org

(farming is illegal by deed restriction on one plot I looked at!)
Sellers, AFAIK, can put anything in the title’s CC&R, and it runs with the land for all perpetuity. One of the more bizarre elements in our land tenure system.

Yeah, its nuts. Like the gardening laws, probably much is not enforceable.

25   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 4:31am  

maxweber1 says

BTW, John Williams still tracks M3. Anyone considering GOLD must read his inflation projection. I would love to know other TRUTHFUL FACTS macro-economics sites but haven’t found much other than some Feds’ sites.
http://www.shadowstats.com/article/hyperinflation

Oh, dear, another inflationista Shadowstats follower. I've already ripped that guy to shreds.

/?p=28444#comment-667147

BTW, here is a headline from yesterday:

Inflation Rose in April at Lowest Rate Since the ’60s

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/20/business/economy/20econ.html?src=me&ref=business

26   Â¥   2010 May 20, 4:48am  

maxweber1 says

prices I see are inflating. Pay is not. At least from my middle class position I see zero signs of inflation. When I factor in the exploding national, state, and municipal debt holes then I must admist inflation is very high.

There are two dynamics. Monetary inflation and "inflation expectations".

Monetary inflation is growth of the supply of money and velocity of money. This is like the yeast that rises the cake. Times are good, everyone can find a good-paying job, and the prices of goods and services that are in limited supply rise in response to the increased buying power.

When the Fed talks about "inflation expectations" what they are referring to is the wage-price spiral, like what we saw in the Bay Area 1995-2000.

Home prices were going up, software people were in demand, so they were able to bargain for higher wages, which made home prices go up, and this cycle repeated several times.

When I factor in the exploding national, state, and municipal debt holes then I must admist inflation is very high.

Contary to appearance, privately-held government debt is NOT the creation of money. This debt is a simple money transfer from debt holder to the debtor and is NOT INFLATION, though it is inflationary for the local authority acquiring the money as it is increasing the local money supply without a concomitant increase in actual wealth. Debt, normally, is simply deferred taxation, and when taxation is increased to pay the debt we will see deflation.

Now, if the Fed starts printing money to satisfy debt holders, THAT is monetary inflation. But again, debt holders are not W-2 earners, and the core problem with an economy in the liquidity trap is getting money to J6P's W-2 income.

There's plenty of money around now, enough for everyone. Problem is the wealthy have nearly all of it. We're in the end-stages of a Monopoly game, basically, with most of the players with their properties turned over for cash and basically out of the game.

27   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 4:58am  

Troy says

There’s plenty of money around now, enough for everyone. Problem is the wealthy have nearly all of it. We’re in the end-stages of a Monopoly game, basically, with most of the players with their properties turned over for cash and basically out of the game

Exactly. The reason the huge money supply (m3, mzm, etc that inflationist like to point to) is not inflationary is because the people that hold most of that money have no interest in spending it, just keeping if there aren't good ways to make it grow. It's got no velocity.

28   Â¥   2010 May 20, 5:15am  

The bank deposit was created in the loan process, and the bank deposit is also backed by property. There is no inconsistency, just two ways of saying the same thing.

the problem is the intrinsic value of the house is the sticks and bricks. The land value component of the home mortgage is untethered to physical reality, as Japan's declining market made pretty clear. I guess the the "real" intrinsic value is essentially its rental value, which is dependent on area wages etc.

Plus a lot of new suburbia of the last decade was built in very uneconomic locations should gas go to $10/gallon. Houses are pretty non-mobile and it's tough recycling them, so all this suburban investment may very well be malinvestment late this century if not decade, should it cost $30/day to commute door-to-door.

29   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 5:28am  

MarkInSF says

Troy says

There’s plenty of money around now, enough for everyone. Problem is the wealthy have nearly all of it. We’re in the end-stages of a Monopoly game, basically, with most of the players with their properties turned over for cash and basically out of the game

Exactly. The reason the huge money supply (m3, mzm, etc that inflationist like to point to) is not inflationary is because the people that hold most of that money have no interest in spending it, just keeping if there aren’t good ways to make it grow. It’s got no velocity.

BTW, this is why I think the idea of a consumption tax is completely backward. If deflation kicks in, we should be encouraging holders of money to consume, not hoard their money. We should be granting a tax DEDUCTION for consumption. That essentially ends up propping up prices in the face of price deflation. This also allows the money to flow into the hands of debtors, who can then pay off their debts. It's a way to embrace credit deflation w/o destroying aggregate demand. I know it sounds kooky, and it would be very unpopular to give cash rebates to the rich for spending their money, but it's actually win/win.

30   tatupu70   2010 May 20, 5:32am  

maxweber1 says

Gold is a sure bet. One knows it is worth what it took to mine it at least.

Why? If I spend 3 days mining sand does that make it worth something?

31   MarkInSF   2010 May 20, 5:37am  

Troy says

the problem is the intrinsic value of the house is the sticks and bricks. The land value component of the home mortgage is untethered to physical reality

Well, there is that. I suppose you could make an argument that the property backing the currency is not of sufficient value. I think I see what you're getting at. A central reason the property has so much dollar value is that that somebody was willing (even if not really able) to take on that amount debt. Still, it is interesting to note that our currency arguably is more backed by things with intrinsic worth (land, and shelter) that ever in it's history, including under the gold standard.

32   Â¥   2010 May 20, 6:03am  

MarkInSF says

I know it sounds kooky, and it would be very unpopular to give cash rebates to the rich for spending their money, but it’s actually win/win.

more wealth-preserving to just *take* their money. The Bush tax cut sunset is one step in the right direction. We need to make about three-dozen more, alas.

The wealthy "fostering jobs" with their discretionary spending is something of a broken-window fallacy. The goods and services they acquire -- ie the labor they command -- with their spending accretes only to their well-being and is generally an over-investment by the labor pool in rich-person-only luxury stuff.

Toyota's going to sell 500 Lexus LF-A @ $400K apiece. At the end of the day the economy would be better off with 6000 workaday cars @ $30K apiece instead (assuming there is consumer need for new cars right now, which there really isn't).

This is just my inner Marxist talking and I haven't really developed this line of thinking that well, LOL.

33   turtledove   2010 May 20, 6:12am  

thank you for all your interesting thoughts on all this. I look forward to reading them more carefully tomorrow morning and writing worthy replies. (yes, it's bed time on this side of the pond.)

I leave you with these final questions:

Is gold currently in a bubble?... based on the fact that has always been the traditional default currentcy and therefore people hold it in perhaps unwarranted esteem...

Do you believe that the bubble will pop (maybe any ventures to guessing when)? What would be the consequences of that? How big of an industry are we talking about?

Night, night, my good friends from the other side of the pond.

34   B.A.C.A.H.   2010 May 20, 11:51am  

I don't think gold is the same as fiat currency because you cannot print gold, though some seem to be claiming that "paper gold" is being minted for trading purposes.

Is gold in a bubble?

It depends on what you call a bubble. Is the nominal price rise in the decade from $300 to more than $750 a bubble? I doubt it.

The recent runup well north of $1K a bubble? Probably.

35   MarkInSF   2010 May 21, 6:32am  

turtledove says

Is gold currently in a bubble?

Likely so. I think there were perfectly valid reasons for gold be much more dear from it's late 90's low, but more and more buying seems to be based just on gold being the "hot thing". If it is in a bubble, it's likely to continue it's rise. Bubbles tend to go on for a lot longer than bubble callers think.

36   knewbetter   2010 May 21, 7:03am  

Land, Scarlet. Land is the only thing that matters because its the only thing that lasts!

Everything is in a bubble. The comment about water vs Coca Cola is right on.

37   CBOEtrader   2010 May 21, 7:26am  

turtledove says

MarkInSF says


MarkInSF says
Actually, come to think of it, this means a dollar bill does in fact have some intrinsic value. It’s backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, which have intrinsic value.

So, could one go further to say that since the dollar has some intrisic value, by virtue of being backed by mortgages, which are backed by houses, that the dollar could be worth more than gold — if the world decided that gold has no value other than sparkliness. (though my six-year-old might disagree, as she loves her sparkly princess crowns).

This is a fun thought experiment, but IMO not accurate. A mortgage is secured by a property but it is not backed by a property. The mortagage may only be exchanged for a home if the debtor defaults. Therefore the dollar is backed by Fannie bonds, which are backed by mortgages, which are backed by future streams of dollars.

I agree with Troy's description of the value of a dollar.

Troy says

The dollars were CREATED via mortgage lending and the Fed buying treasuries, but I find the idea that they are “backed” by the same to be a bit odd.
A dollar’s value AFAICT is the goods and services it can acquire as it pings through the USD bloc.

If our economy goes Mad Max on us, I would accept dollars as tinder to light my fires, and gold to throw at the angry mob that wants my fire. All the while yelling, "I'm rich, biatch!! Go make your own fire, jerks!"

38   knewbetter   2010 May 21, 7:52am  

All real wealth comes from the earth. Even things like art and leisure are only given value after food and shelter are abundant.

39   LarryPatrickMaloney   2010 Nov 22, 7:19pm  

So I'm revisiting some of the old threads I posted on.

To respond to TurtleDove:

larrypatrickmaloney says

If you have to ask, you will never know.

So this is inherent knowledge that you’re born with (or not, as the case may be)?

Why don’t you humour me with an actual answer, anyway? Afterwards we can decide if I have the mental horsepower to comprehend what I “will never know.”

============
So, this common expression means that if you have to have everything explained to you, then you lack the personal power to learn on your own. Get it?

For you liberaltards out there, I took the liberty of posting a chart of Gold for you, since the last time we wrote on this topic. Gold is up 40% since then.

I'm glad progressives don't buy PM's.

40   pkowen   2010 Nov 23, 9:33am  

turtledove says

thank you for all your interesting thoughts on all this. I look forward to reading them more carefully tomorrow morning and writing worthy replies. (yes, it’s bed time on this side of the pond.)
I leave you with these final questions:
Is gold currently in a bubble?… based on the fact that has always been the traditional default currentcy and therefore people hold it in perhaps unwarranted esteem…
Do you believe that the bubble will pop (maybe any ventures to guessing when)? What would be the consequences of that? How big of an industry are we talking about?
Night, night, my good friends from the other side of the pond.

I think this is the key point - gold is at all time highs. Is it a bubble? I don't know really, but I'll put it this way: I was buying at one time, I sold out and am not buying now. I think it has little upside and lots of down. But then I am not a 'gold bug' who thinks it's going to $2000+/oz.

I think Nomo made some of the most cogent statements - wealth really comes from the means of production i.e. arable land, ability to provide services, etc. I wouldn't recommend investing in California real estate (the money was made already) but I would take riparian rights to fresh water on a good piece of arable land over gold any day, in terms of a safety net in a gloom and doom scenario.

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