News on Gold

Gold Not Even Close To Being Overvalued Yet – Doug Casey

by Gold Editor on March 8, 2011

Gold Not Even Close To Being Overvalued Yet - Doug Casey

Author: John McCrank (Reuters)
Posted: March 8, 2011

TORONTO - The investment legend said he wouldn't be surprised if gold hit $5,000 in the next couple of years as central banks continue to pump liquidity into the system but warned risks remain high in the sector.

Junior resource stocks, while no longer cheap, still present speculators with big opportunities as an unprecedented rally fuels precious metals and the companies that find them, said veteran investor Doug Casey.

Casey, a legendary investment guru who founded and chairs his own research firm, said he would not be surprised if gold hits $5,000 an ounce in the next couple of years, as paper currencies in the United States, Europe, and Japan drop in value.

"Central banks all over the world are creating trillions of currency units and that in turn is creating lots of bubbles," he said in an interview on the sidelines of the PDAC prospectors and developers convention in Toronto.

"It's very probable that they're going to ignite a bubble in gold and they're going to ignite a really wild bubble in small resource stocks."

Gold hit a record high of $1,444.40 an ounce on Monday as oil prices spiked on political instability in the Middle East and North Africa, and on worries that a downgrade of Greek debt could undermine confidence in the euro.

Casey said he believes that gold is not even close to overvalued. In his opinion, the current economic recovery will not last -- we are "in the eye of the hurricane," he says -- so gold's safe-haven appeal will only get stronger.

He said he also likes the prospects for silver, and that if there's a bubble anywhere in the commodities sector right now, it's likely in rare earths, a group of metals used to make electric car batteries and electronic devices.

A SIX-YEAR-OLD WITH A CHAINSAW

While there's a lot of money to be made in speculating on companies that seek out and extract precious metals, it's a high-risk sector that's not for everyone.

"For the average person to get into this sector and get overweight in this sector is like giving a six-year-old a chainsaw - it's very dangerous."

The stocks are volatile, the commodities fluctuate in value, they require huge upfront capital to extract, and there are huge political risks. Most explorers will fail.

Some, though, will find what they're looking for, and when they do, their value can grow by 10-fold or even 1,000-fold.

"You only need one of those if you have a halfway descent position in it, once in a lifetime," he said.

His Phoenix-based firm recommends prudent investors put 90 percent of their portfolios lower-risk sectors, like short-term bonds, dividend-paying stocks, and precious metals and gold, while putting the remainder into speculative investments.

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