When Gold Escapes the Pork Belly Trap, Casey’s Louis James Wants to Own These Seven Companies

The Gold Report: You recently observed in your newsletter that gold has been acting more like a commodity, like pork bellies, than like a currency. That misclassification has discounted the value of precious metals, depressing the price. Why do you think that is?

Louis James: Commodities, as a group, tend to move together. We see it with copper and other industrial metals, and we see it in other commodities, including pork bellies. The commodities index is not just an average line. It actually is fairly representative of the sector as a whole. That matters right now because the trend for commodities is downward, plus the fundamentals are. . .scary. China’s slowdown is accelerating, for example. If gold were just another commodity used to make jewelry or fillings, it would be logical to lump it in with iron oreā€”and therefore be bearish. But it plays another role that is much more valuable. It is the currency of choice in an uncertain world.

The good news is that the perception seems to be changing. When China’s stock market tanked and the rest of the world hemorrhaged a month ago, gold prices jumped. Gold acted as a safe haven asset; it acted like money. It was where people went when they were scared. That was an important validation. That doesn’t mean everything is hunky dory now. But it is a reminder that with sufficient provocation, gold still does its job.

TGR: What are some of the things that cause the fear-o-meter to jump? Is it the Federal Reserve? Is it ISIS? Is it Russia? You mentioned the Chinese stock market. I know a lot of people think a presidential election is a scary thing. Are we going into a season of fear?

LJ: Financial fear trumps political fear when it comes to impacting precious …read more

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