Are Gold prices on the way down?
One would think!
On the eve of the Swiss Gold Referendum the following was
published. The Back and forth between
the gold advocates and those with differing views is as fierce as ever, gold bugs as they are referred to mounting
every effort in the face of seeming economic recovery and gold prices that have
fallen from the lofty $1800 dollars per ounce prices to the $1200 realm. A
valuation that seems lofty compared to the average price of the past 30 years.
This uncharacteristically sharp critique seems emboldened by the recent
precipitous declines in the price of metals and other commodities whose prices
have been similarly driven up.
Global Economics View
Gold: a six thousand year-old bubble revisited
26 November 2014 │ 14 pages
Willem Buiter +1-212-816-2363 willem.buiter@citi.com
From the Piece
Gold: a six thousand year-old bubble revisited
- · Gold is a fiat commodity currency (with insignificant intrinsic value).
- · Bitcoin is a fiat virtual peer-to-peer currency (without intrinsic value).
- · Gold and Bitcoin are costly to produce and store.
- · Gold as an asset is equivalent to shiny Bitcoin.
- · Central bank fiat paper currency and fiat electronic currency are socially superior to gold and Bitcoin as currencies and assets.
- · There is no economic or financial case for a central bank to hold any single commodity, even if this commodity had intrinsic value.
- · Forbidding a central bank from ever selling any gold it owns reduces the value of those gold holdings to zero
Swiss ‘Save our Swiss gold’ referendum imminent:
- · SNP to hold 20% of assets (16% of GDP) in gold
- · SNP gold never to be sold
Introduction
On November 30th, 2014, the Swiss will vote in a
referendum on a popular initiative 'Save our Swiss gold' (henceforth the Gold
Initiative). If the Gold Initiative passes three consequences follow: (1) the
Swiss National Bank (the SNB) must hold at least 20% of its assets as gold, (2)
the SNB has to repatriate the 30% of its official gold stock that is now held
abroad by the Bank of England and Bank of Canada and has to physically hold all
its gold in Switzerland, and (3) the SNB may never sell any gold again.
Figure 1 shows The
total assets of the SNB, its gold reserves and its other foreign exchange
reserves, the sum of foreign currency investments, the reserve position with
the IMF and international payment instruments.
( see original article for Chart Figure 1) There is a break in the series for the value
of the gold holdings and for total assets: as of 2000, gold holdings have been
priced at market value. Until 1999, they were valued at the official parity
price of CHF 4,596 per kilogram. As can be seen from Figure 1, The balance sheet of the SNB has exploded in
size since it began to lean against the appreciation of the Swiss Franc by
active foreign exchange interventions early in 2009. Its balance sheet at the
end of September 2014 stood at 522 bn Swiss Francs, about 83% of annual GDP. On
that same date, the value of its gold reserves was about 39 bn Swiss Francs,
about 7.5% of the value of its total assets. That represented 1,040 metric
tonnes of gold, almost 129 grams (4.5
oz.) per capita. In 2000, the SNB held 2,500 tonnes of gold and it has also
been the biggest national seller since. If
the gold initiative passes, the SNB would have to purchase at least 1,733
metric tonnes of gold to meet the 20% threshold by 2019 (based on end-of
September 2014 SNB balance sheet size and gold price). The world’s annual
production of gold is likely to be around 3000 metric tons in 2014. The price of gold, like that of any asset
price, is volatile. In nominal terms it has increased spectacularly over the
more than 200-year period, and especially since the end of the gold peg of the
US dollar in 1971. In real terms, the increase has been somewhat less
spectacular, from $10.08 in 1971 (measured in 1913 dollars) to $59.89 in 2013.
The real price of gold hit $73.60 in 1980 and $73.30 in 2012, underlining the
volatility of the (real) gold price. Someone who invested in gold in 1971 and
held onto it for 42 years, that is, till 2013, would have achieved an annual
real rate of return of 4.3 percent (minus carry costs) - reasonable given the
riskiness of the asset. ( see original
article for Chart Figure 2) Item (2) on
the Gold Initiative ballot makes little sense to us. Holding all one’s physical
assets in one nation means ignoring the benefits of geographic diversification
of ‘custodial risk’. Item (3) is quite extraordinary because it would make the
SNB’s gold holdings worthless. Making it illegal to ever sell any of the gold
the central bank has now or acquires in the future and enforcing this gold sale
ban effectively would make the gold useless as an international reserve. The
gold stock can never be used for foreign exchange market interventions and it
likely cannot be used as collateral. The gold becomes useless as a store of
value of any kind. The gold has no consumption value to the central bank. Its
value is therefore zero. What about the first point, the requirement that the
SNB hold at least 20% of its assets in gold? Is gold the kind of asset that
should constitute at least 20% of a central bank’s portfolio? We consider what,
if anything, makes gold special in what follows. For those readers who cannot
wait to hear our conclusion, the short answer to the question: ”Would it make
sense for the SNB to increase its gold holdings to at least 20% of its balance
sheet on average (permitting it to sell the gold when it deems this
necessary)”, the short answer is: no. The slightly longer answer is: absolutely
not. Further elaboration follows.
What’s special about gold?
Gold is unlike any other commodity. The only things that
come close to it are Bitcoin and similar digital peer-to-peer currencies.3 Gold
is costly to extract from the earth and to refine to a reasonable degree of
purity. There is an (unknown) upper limit to the total amount that is
recoverable at any cost. It is costly to store. It has no significant remaining
uses as a producer good – equivalent or superior alternatives exist for all its
industrial uses. About 70 tonnes of
gold is used annually in dentistry4 (out of a total annual production of close
to 3000 tonnes). Gold use in dentistry is gradually giving way to advanced
composites and porcelain veneers and crowns. Gold is also used in jewelry. The
Gold Council reports (flow) consumer demand for gold in 2013 as reaching a
record high of 3,863.5 tonnes. However, this consumer demand includes not just
jewelry (2209 tonnes) but also small bars and coins (1654 tonnes). Small bars
and coins represent demand by households for gold as an asset, investment
demand, that is, not ‘consumption’ demand. In our view, a significant part of
the demand for gold in the form of jewelry is likely to represents investment
demand rather than true consumption demand as well.5 True consumption demand
for gold, for its intrinsic aesthetic qualities, is likely to be small indeed.
Annual ‘flow’ true consumption demand, medical (including dentistry) demand and
industrial demand (405 tonnes – mainly in electronics) is therefore likely to
be dwarfed by annual new gold production. Central banks added 368.6 tonnes of
gold net to their reserves in 2013 – a form of investment demand.6 We can
therefore safely ignore the intrinsic value of gold as an industrial, medical or
dentistry input and as a consumption item and treat it as a ‘fiat commodity’ –
one that has value as an asset if and to the extent that enough people believe
that is has value as an asset. For the
purposes of the rest of this note, gold can be viewed as shiny Bitcoin. Bitcoin
too is costly to produce (to ‘mine’, using high-powered servers that could be
doing other, more useful things instead, using energy both to keep the servers
running and to cool them).7 The algorithm governing Bitcoin is supposed to set
an absolute upper limit of 21 million bitcoin units, although anything that can
be programmed can be re-programmed. Like
paper currency and Bitcoin, Gold is ‘irredeemable’. It is an ‘outside’ asset –
an asset of the holder that is not a liability of anyone else. Gold is
anonymous, in the sense that it is accepted in payment without the receiving
party having to know the identity of the paying party, and the identity of the
previous owner(s) is not revealed on the gold ingots. This can only work if something
can be identified reliably as being or not being gold. Counterfeiting
(gold-painted lead ingots) are of course a risk (as it is with paper currency
and, for all we know, with Bitcoin). Bitcoin is not anonymous, because every
unit of Bitcoin is held in an electronic ‘wallet’, which has a clear and, in
principle, identifiable owner. The legitimacy of a unit of Bitcoin is in fact
established by tracing all is previous owners back to the original mining. It
is possible to hide (through encryption) the identity of the current beneficial
owner of a Bitcoin wallet, just as it is possible to hide the identity of the
beneficial owner of a bank account behind an array of corporate, trust or
personal fronts. The total stock of
‘above-ground’ gold was about 177,200 metric tonnes as of the end of 20138 (a
metric ton is 2,204 lbs. or 35,264 oz., for those of a non-decimal mind-set).
About 50 percent of this existing stock of above-ground gold is kept as a pure
store of value (for investment purposes), most likely somewhere below-ground,
for security reasons. The other 50 percent exists as jewelry.9 I would argue
that most of this jewelry demand small-scale store of value (investment) demand
by households, rather than demand driven by aesthetic considerations or other intrinsic
values. The outstanding stock of physical gold, at 177,200 tonnes or
thereabouts, is very large relative to the maximum amount of new gold that can
be mined and refined during a year. The short-run supply curve of new gold is
steep and becomes vertical at a volume of production that is small relative to
the outstanding stock (annual gold production had been declining from a local
peak of just over 2,500 tonnes in 2001 to 2,330 tonnes in 2008, but more
recently has risen to more than 2,900 tonnes in 2013 – yet only 1.6% of the
outstanding stock).10
John Maynard Keynes once described the Gold Standard as a
“barbarous relic”.11 From a social perspective, gold held by central banks as
part of their foreign exchange reserves merits the same label, in our view. The
same holds for gold held idle in private vaults as a store of value. The cost
and waste involved in getting the gold out of the ground only to put it back
under ground in secure vaults is considerable. Mining the ore is
environmentally damaging, especially if it involves open pit mining. Refining
the gold causes further environmental risks. Historically, gold was extracted
from its ores by using mercury, a toxic heavy metal, much of which was released
into the atmosphere. Today, cyanide is used instead. While cyanide, another
toxic substance, is broken down in the environment, cyanide spills (which occur
regularly) can wipe out life in the affected bodies of water. Runoff from the
mine or tailing piles can occur long after mining has ceased. Even though, from a social efficiency
perspective, the mining of new gold and the costly storage of existing gold for
investment purposes are wasteful activities, they may be individually rational.
The same applies to Bitcoin. Its mining is socially wasteful and
environmentally damaging. The benefits of Bitcoin are: (1) to libertarians, the
existence of a privately provided and decentralized, peer-to-peer, alternative
to a previously partly government-provided and centralized construct or
arrangement, in this case central bank money or base money serving as a means
of payment and medium of exchange; and (2) the benefit of near-anonymity, or
more exactly, the ability to hide the identity of the owner using strong
encryption. This (near-) anonymity, shared by gold and paper currency, is
valuable to all those interested in escaping the prying eyes of the state or of
powerful private entities. This may be for good reasons (when the state is
oppressive and unaccountable) or for bad reasons (when the anonymity of the store
of value is used in criminal activity, tax evasion, money laundering or
terrorism financing). There is no invisible hand here (or elsewhere) to ensure
that the aggregation of individually rational behaviour adds up to anything
desirable or sensible. Because to a
reasonable first approximation gold has no intrinsic value as a consumption
good or a producer good, it is an example of what I call a fiat (physical)
commodity. You will be familiar with fiat currency. Unlike what Wikipedia says
on the subject, we argue that the essence of fiat money is not that it is money
declared by a government to be legal tender. It need not derive its value from
the government demanding it in payment of taxes or insisting it should be
accepted within the national jurisdiction in settlement of debt. Instead the
defining property of fiat money is that it has no intrinsic value; it derives
any value it has only from the shared belief by a sufficient number of economic
actors that it has that value. The “let
it be done” literal meaning of the Latin ‘fiat’ should be taken in the third
sense given by the Online Dictionary: 1. official sanction; authoritative
permission; 2. an arbitrary order or decree; 3. Chiefly literary any command,
decision, or act of will that brings something about. The act of will in question is the collective
attribution of value to something without intrinsic value. Being declared legal
tender by a government may help achieving that status, but it is neither
necessary nor sufficient. Gold is very
close therefore to the stone money of the Isle of Yap. This stone money, known
as Rai, consists of large doughnut-shaped, carved disks, consisting usually of
calcite, that can be up to 4 m (12 ft.) in diameter, although most are much
smaller. Apparently, the total stock of Rai cannot be augmented any further. It
also depreciates very slowly. This intrinsically useless form of money in the
Isle of Yap is in all essential respects equivalent to gold today in the wider
world. Another example would be pet rocks, as long as the rock in question is
rare and costly to get into its final shape. Another is Bitcoin, a fiat virtual
currency. Gold has become a fiat
commodity or a fiat commodity currency, just as the US dollar, the euro, the
pound sterling and the yen (and a couple of hundred other currencies) are fiat
paper currencies and as Bitcoin is a fiat virtual currency. The main
differences between them are that gold, like Bitcoin, is very costly to
produce, while the production of additional paper money has an extremely low
marginal cost. If we count the deposits of commercial banks with the central
banks, which together with currency in circulation make up the monetary base,
as fiat money, then the incremental cost of fiat base money creation is zero.
The good news for gold bugs
Since gold is a fiat commodity currency, its value will
be determined largely by its attractiveness relative to other fiat currencies –
the fiat paper currencies issued by central banks. Gold should not be analyzed as one of a set
of intrinsically valuable commodities (silver, iron, lead, zinc, platinum,
aluminum, titanium etc. etc.) but as part of a set of intrinsically useless and
valueless fiat currencies – the US dollar, the yen, the Yuan, the euro,
sterling, the rupee, the rouble, Bitcoin etc. etc.. It is therefore in times that market
participants are nervous about the future value of most other fiat currencies
that gold will be most attractive. Such a time is what we are going through
now. Many systemically important central banks have expanded their base money
stocks and balance sheets massively. The Fed has quadrupled the size of its
balance sheet. The Bank of England has more than tripled the size of its
balance sheet. Many central banks have bought vast amounts of public debt. In
the UK, out of the initial £375 bn of quantitative easing, almost everything
was spent on gilts. Over the past two years, the Fed added $1.7 trillion to its
balance sheet (which is around $4.5 trillion as of end-October 2014) through
large-scale asset purchases involving Treasuries and Agency MBS. Although in
most of the developed world low-flation or even deflation is the immediate
threat, there is a medium and long-term threat of much higher inflation in all
countries with enlarged central bank balance sheets and the prospect of large
future fiscal deficits. The great advantage to investors of gold is that,
although it is not intrinsically valuable, it is very costly to increase its
stock. The tap can be opened at the drop of a hat for fiat paper and electronic
currency. The tap produces never more than a trickle in the case of gold. So
when fiscal profligacy threatens price stability in some of the main industrial
countries (especially the US and the UK) because the central banks in these
countries may be forced to monetize both the stock and large new net flows of
public debt, the one fiat money whose quantity cannot be varied at will by a
monetary authority will do well. We see that with gold today. We also see that,
to a lesser degree, in the strength of the euro. The ECB is by far the most
independent of the leading central banks. It also has a heavily asymmetric
de-facto interpretation of price stability: inflation is unacceptable, deflation
is OK.So until the risk of serious inflation is removed from the medium-term
outlook for the US, the UK and other fiat currencies, gold could be a
relatively attractive store of value despite the cost of storing it.This
argument, however, assumes that if paper or electronic fiat money loses its
value, gold will keep its value. That is an assumption and, as I shall argue in
what follows, most likely an unwarranted assumption.
The gold bug’s nightmare
An economy with fiat money can have many different equilibria.
To make the point as clearly and simply as possible, consider a stationary
economy. Population, endowments, technology, government spending, taxes and
preferences are all constant. The government budget is balanced. Prices are
flexible. There is a constant stock of fiat money (which could be paper money,
gold, Rai, pet rocks, or Bitcoin). This fiat money is perfectly durable and
therefore can serve as a store of value. It pays no interest. Because this fiat
money exists and is durable, it can, in principle, be a store of value – an
asset. It is may help, but is not necessary for the argument that follows to
assume that, should this fiat money have positive value, society has
(informally/spontaneously/collectively) decided to use it as a medium of exchange
or as means of payment. It could even be legal tender. With a bit of further work, it can be shown
that such an economy will have an equilibrium with a positive, constant price
of money (a constant general price level). Economists call this the fundamental
equilibrium. This stationary economy will, however, also have many other (in
fact infinitely many other) non-stationary equilibria, called (speculative)
bubbles. They always have equilibria in which the value of money starts at a
positive value but falls steadily towards zero – the general price level rises
without bound even though the quantity of money is constant. The holders of
money anticipate the future inflation and thereby reduce the real stock of
money balances they want to hold. This further increases the actual and
expected rate of inflation, and the real stock of money balances goes to zero:
the general price level goes to infinity or the price of money goes to zero. In
other words, the economy becomes Zimbabwe.
What is often ignored is that this economy has an equilibrium that is
even more ‘fundamental’ than the ‘fundamental’ equilibrium with a constant
positive value of money. That is the equilibrium in which the price of money is
zero in every period, not just in the long run (as with the speculative
inflationary bubble equilibria). Remember, fiat money, including gold or
Bitcoin, is intrinsically useless. It has value only because people believe it
to have value. If everyone expects that money will have no value in the next
period, it will have no value this period, because no-one will be willing to
take receipt of money to carry it into the next period where it will be
valueless. So fiat money with a zero value is always an (unfortunate)
fundamental equilibrium. I would
actually call it the only fundamental equilibrium. All other equilibria with a
positive price of money – an asset with no intrinsic value – are benign
(relatively speaking) bubbles. The constant price of money (constant general
price level) equilibrium is also a bubble, based entirely on belief and trust –
a beneficial bootstrap equilibrium, lifting itself by its hair, like the Baron
von Münchhausen. In a world with
multiple fiat moneys, the zero value of money equilibrium lurks for each of the
fiat currencies, including gold and Bitcoin. In a classic paper, Kareken and
Wallace (1984) have shown that even in the other (nice) fundamental
equilibrium, in which each of these fiat currencies has a constant positive
value, those constant positive values can be anything – there is exchange rate
indeterminacy between the various fiat currencies. This holds for paper or
electronic fiat money, gold and Bitcoin.
So if gold has positive, albeit wildly fluctuating value, it is because
we are in a benign bubble for gold. Likewise, Bitcoin’s positive value
represents a benign Bitcoin bubble. The gold bubble is, of course, pretty
impressive. Intrinsically useless gold has positive value. It has had positive
value for nigh-on 6,000 years. That must make it the longest-lasting bubble in
human history. Is there a possibility
that, out of the blue, the market could produce a zero value for central
bank-issued fiat paper and electronic money (base money)? Yes, if the prices of
goods and services in terms of base money are freely flexible. Fortunately they
are not. The world is Keynesian. Nobody understands the mysteries of the unit
of account or numéraire, but for some reason in most societies today for most
of the time, central-bank issued fiat money or base money has been the unit of
account for most contracts, and prices of goods and services in terms of this
numéraire, are sticky - empirically and for reasons we don’t understand, but
they undoubtedly involve limited computational capacity and other
manifestations of bounded rationality. Nominal wage and price rigidities
therefore rule out the zero price of base money equilibrium (notwithstanding
the fundamental equilibrium at the end of a hyperinflation). But other asset prices are not sticky in
terms of the numéraire. There exists therefore an equilibrium in which the
price of all other fiat moneys (including Bitcoin and gold) in terms of base
money is zero.We are obviously not in an equilibrium in which the prices of
gold and Bitcoin at zero. Does that mean that in the future also the value of gold
and of Bitcoin will be (relatively stable) even if the central bank were to
start running the printing presses at full speed, producing a hyperinflation in
terms of base money prices? Not necessarily. Assume the initial prices of both
gold and Bitcoin in terms of base money are positive and that the value of base
money in terms of goods and services is positive. Once gold and Bitcoin have
positive value in terms of base money today, their future value is determined
by no-arbitrage relationships between these three fiat moneys – all of which
don’t have any intrinsic value as consumer goods, intermediate goods or capital
goods. No arbitrage means the absence of risk-free pure profits from buying and
selling these three stores of value against each other. Since neither currency
nor gold nor Bitcoin is interest-bearing, the exchange rate between currency,
gold and Bitcoin should be expected to be constant over time. Any change in the
currency price of Bitcoin and gold is therefore unanticipated. There must have
been a lot of major surprises! The fact that the stocks of Gold and Bitcoin are
finite does therefore not suffice to keep them safe from hyperinflationary base
money issuance by the central bank.
Conclusion
I don’t want to argue with a 6,000-year old bubble. There
have been hyperinflations with the value of central bank base money going to
zero, but the price of gold has not followed that of paper money. Perhaps that
was because, at the time, gold still had some intrinsic value as a productive
input, and even today retains some intrinsic value as a consumer good. Even if
we view gold as an intrinsically valued commodity, it would still be unsound to
invest 20% of the central bank’s balance sheet in a single commodity. If the
central bank is to invest in commodities, better to have a balanced portfolio
of commodities or, more conveniently, a balanced portfolio of commodity ETFs or
other derivatives.
Requiring a central bank to put 20 percent of its balance
sheet in any single commodity, even if that commodity had meaningful intrinsic
value, represents a highly unorthodox and risky investment strategy, in our
view, regardless of whether one judges it by its likely future profitability or
by its wider social benefits. We conjecture that the SNB is most concerned that
the Gold Initiative might pass.
Even though I view gold as a pure bubble, that bubble may
well be good for another 6,000 years. Its value may go from $1,200 per fine
ounce to $1,500 or $5,000 for all I know. Investing a vast amount of money in
something whose value is based on nothing more than a set of self-confirming
beliefs will make for an exciting ride.
(See Link above
for complete publication)

