QUOTE(Tuffers @ Mar 14 2007, 12:46 PM) [snapback]578001[/snapback]
What this thread seems to boil down to is that 'fiat' currencies are fine as long as people continue to have trust in them as a store of value. A low inflationary environment is likely to foster such trust. IMHO we are a very long way indeed from that trust being eroded. For gold to rise to the levels some on here predict, we would have to see widepsread abandoning of paper currencies. I just can't see that happening other than in some sort of Mad Max style Armageddon environment and frankly in those circumstances I would be past caring.
I think a level of >1000 is very realistic within 2-5 years max. If there is really Armageddon, then gold will just explode.
In 1929, one ounce of gold could buy a block of houses in Berlin (Weimar/hyperinflation).
As I have posted before, I'll then be the first Mayor of Berlin who completely owns it (or London, or NYC, haven't decided yet).
Regarding the trust in fiat issue, I have completely lost it after spending a lot of time on money research.
The USD is backed to 90% by US-government debt. In other terms: the Dollar is green paper that promises
green paper, that hasn't been printed yet. Now, that's a good outlook. Especially with China & Russia slowly
getting out of the USD and buying
real things, as long as they still can. China has announced the intention to
go shopping with its 1 trillion(!!) USD reserve (that's $1,000,000,000,000). Anyone honestly thinks that won't erode USD?
Furthermore, our friend the GBP, how is it backed? I don't know. I only know that most of the national gold treasure
was wasted in a vain attempt in the late 1960s to help the (then still pseudo-gold-backed) USD. Labour wasted the little
rest of it. The BoE has foreign currency reserves? USD? Well, congrats! The pound is backed by little sheets of green paper
that get useless soon (read above).
Buy gold. I am serious.
PS: As with everything, be patient. It will take average Joe some time to realize that USD is eroding. Our holidays in the
US are surprisingly cheap though, aren't they?
PPS: Pundits think the babyboomers retiring will cost $ 60,000,000,000,000. It hasn't been reserved for, which is, why it
has to be printed. Good luck with fiat!