Negative Rates, Soaring Gold - 20 November 2009

Why today's negative interest rate – after inflation – points to a 2010 bull market in gold...

IT'S SIMPLE – When the bank pays you nothing in interest, gold goes up, writes Steve Sjuggerud in his Daily Wealth.

And right now, the bank is paying you nothing in interest.

Why does gold go up when interest rates are low? It's simple...

The knock against owning Gold has always been that, unlike cash, it pays no interest. Compound interest is almost irresistible. If you can earn 7% a year on a $10,000 deposit, in 10 years time, it will be worth $20,000.

Gold, on the other hand, will just sit there like a bump on a log.

But every so often, like right now, paper money pays you no interest...and the scales tip in favor of gold.

That's the simple version. Let's add one little tiny wrinkle to it, so you can see why gold has become irresistible now.

The forecast for inflation in 2010 is around 2%. Yet the Fed is keeping interest rates near zero. So instead of earning nothing in interest at the bank, you're actually losing 2% a year to inflation. That's what's really happening – the REAL interest rate at the bank (minus inflation) is negative 2%.

My longtime friend Porter Stansberry asked me to do a study of what happens when real interest rates are less than zero. The results were astonishing.

In short, when real rates are negative, Gold soars as cash loses value. Even stocks stink under these conditions. Whereas when real rates are positive, gold stinks and stocks soar.

Here are the actual results. (Note: These are compound annual gains.)

1973 through 1980
The median real interest rate was -1.15%
Gold returned +32% per year
The real return on the S&P 500 was -7% per year (not including dividends)

1981 through 2001
The median real interest rate was +2.7%
Gold returned -3.5% per year
The real return on the S&P 500 was +7% per year (not including dividends)

2002 to today
The median real interest rate was -0.4%
Gold returned +18.5% per year
The real return on the S&P 500 was -3% per year (not including dividends)

Well, there it is, plain as day. As you can see, these trends persist. And in 2010, real rates will be negative.

Bernanke will keep nominal rates near zero...so subtracting inflation will give you a negative real interest rate. There is essentially no chance for a POSITIVE real interest rate in 2010. Said another way, you WILL lose money in the bank in 2010. Whatever interest you earn won't keep up with inflation.

History shows, under that environment, stocks don't do well...and gold soars. There's nothing in sight to end that trend. Trade accordingly.

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Steve Sjuggerud, 20 Nov '09
Former stock-broker, mutual-fund vice-president and hedge-fund advisor Dr. Steve Sjuggerud is the founder and editor of True Wealth. Launched in 2001 and now one of America's best-followed newsletters for private investors, True Wealth also provides free analysis and ideas in the Daily Wealth email service.