Monday, January 23, 2012

Trillion dollar bazooka and $2,200 gold (Stockhouse)



1/24/2012 12:11:11 AM | Peter Krauth, Money Morning
262 Reads | 1 Comments
Even Standard Chartered bank's analysts expect gold to climb to $5,000
It's the beginning of a new year, and there's no shortage of big headlines...

Europe is on the financial brink, Iran is a powder keg, and precious metals like gold have retreated.

It's also a time when there is no shortage of financial forecasts.

Even though these kinds of predictions about the future can be tough to make, I'll admit it's kind of fun to look forward and see what the future may hold.

Like in December 2010, when I said I expected gold to reach $1,900/oz  in 2011. Some people thought that I was crazy. At the time, gold was trading for just $1,390/oz.

But just nine months later, that turned out to be a pretty good call as gold hit a new high of $1,923/oz. before eventually pulling back.

Better yet, in January 2010, I even said gold would eventually top $5,000. Of course, most people thought that call was preposterous.

Now, even Standard Chartered bank's analysts expect gold to climb to $5,000.
Gold price forecast: Expect gold to hit $2200/oz. in 2012
Today, gold price predictions like those are becoming a lot more commonplace. For instance, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GSStock Forum) recently set its 2012 gold target at $1,940/oz, while Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MSStock Forum) now expects gold to hit $2,200.
But what's more important is to actually understand the reasons why market experts believe gold prices will continue to rise.
In fact, to support my earlier $5,000 price forecast for gold, I maintained that one of the underlying reasons was that we would eventually face a currency crisis.

At the time I wrote:
A Currency Crisis is Looming: The "PIGS" - Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain (or "PIIGS," if you want to include Ireland) - aren't in very good fiscal shape. And they aren't alone. Iceland has already gone over the edge. The United States, the United Kingdom, and countless other economies are struggling. And that reality has ignited a crisis of confidence about fiat currencies in the minds of many investors. Money is nothing more than paper and ink, backed by the full faith and credit of the issuer. When investors find that their faith in the issuer is shaken, the value of that currency erodes. Additional sovereign-debt downgrades from ratings agencies are but one potential trigger of a currency crisis. Under such conditions, gold - the ultimate store of value, and the oldest existing form of money on earth - will soar as investors seek to protect their purchasing power.
That was two years ago...

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