The answer, of course, is "no one knows." But the prospects for gold seem good - or, put another way, the prospects for currencies appear to be not-so good.
Reporter Tom Sullivan offers details in Barron's.
The dollar is not as good as gold. Neither are 22 other currencies.A recent study by GoldMoney.com, which enables online cross-border transactions using gold as a currency, found that from 2000 through 2009, gold rose an average 10.1% a year versus the Swiss franc...14.9% against the U.S. dollar... [and] 20.0% for the Sri Lankan rupee.
"Gold isn't going up, currencies are going down," says James Turk, GoldMoney.com's founder. "The purchasing power of gold remains basically unchanged against commodities. In contrast, the purchasing power of national currencies is being constantly eroded."...
That's because governments are debasing currencies, he says, destroying their citizens' purchasing power by spending beyond their means and using debt to stay afloat. The U.S., as one example, is trying to goose its economic recovery through massive deficit spending, but it may worsen the situation should the dollar tank, Turk asserts.
As always, there are those who see things a different way. The Barron's article quotes Ashraf Laidi, chief strategist at CMC Markets, who predicts gold will fall against the dollar.
Laidi could be right. But for any weaker gold/stronger dollar scenario to extend to the longer term would require the reversal of a pronounced nearly decade-long trend (see table).

A more extensive version of the table is here (PDF).
___________________________________________________________________________________
Joseph Slife is a contributing author and editor for SMI. Visit www.soundmindinvesting.com to learn more.
Digg
Facebook
Twitter
Stumble
Reddit
Del.ico.us
Yahoo buz
BIO
Subscribe to this blogger



RSS