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Thread: Rising of Gold/Silver vs Rising Value of Housing

  1. #1

    Rising of Gold/Silver vs Rising Value of Housing

    I am discussing the purchase of precious metals with my partner. He believes that the belief that the price of silver rising as the dollar is devalued is the same as the belief people had that housing would always rise because of inflation. Please help me explain to him how these are different.



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  3. #2
    Wish I could help. That analogy could turn out to be accurate. There are no guarantees. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Gold, silver and real estate will never go to zero, but they can and do go down.
    "Foreign aid is taking money from the poor people of a rich country, and giving it to the rich people of a poor country." - Ron Paul
    "Beware the Military-Industrial-Financial-Pharma-Corporate-Internet-Media-Government Complex." - B4L update of General Dwight D. Eisenhower
    "Debt is the drug, Wall St. Banksters are the dealers, and politicians are the addicts." - B4L
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    Proponent of real science.
    The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own, and do not represent this forum or any other entities or persons.

  4. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Lindsey View Post
    I am discussing the purchase of precious metals with my partner. He believes that the belief that the price of silver rising as the dollar is devalued is the same as the belief people had that housing would always rise because of inflation. Please help me explain to him how these are different.
    So , what does he think is a better investment ?

  5. #4
    If he has that impression he doesn't understand the reasons for the bubble at all.

    Tell him that nobody's loaning anyone a half-million dollars on a no-job, no-income, and no-asset basis in order to buy silver.

  6. #5
    It is not really the same thing, but if anything he has it backwards. Saying gold will "revert to a mean" is the same thing as saying "housing prices will never fall".

    Show him a chart of interest rates. Ask him what is the only possible direction. Ask him if the 50+ trillion in credit can be rolled over at higher interest rates. As soon just a few borrowers can't pay back loans at higher rates, it will snowball into a deflationary depression. Then tell him the fed can and has at every chance shown it is willing to sacrifice dollar value for financial stability. Ask him who would want to hold dollars or promises to be paid in dollars(bonds) if everyone knew the fed was buying debt with newly created cash. Show him base money and explain to him debts are "leveraged" off of base money. Ask him what the money supply will look like once base money nearly fully replaces the credit market.

    If he wants to know why nothing has happened yet with the explosion of base money, show him excess reserves. Explain to him that once they start being converted to require reserves, which will happen one way or another, it will only serve as a massive catalyst both are raising rates and expanding money supply.

    If he ask why can't rates stay at 0% forever, tell him we would turn into Zimbabwe since in order to keep rates at 0%, the fed has to be in the market buying short term assets. This causes inflation which causes people to dump debt and the fed will be the only buyer(vicious cycle).


    This is a rough view on how I feel things will play out, but there are many variable. It may or may not be right.

  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by thoughtomator View Post
    If he has that impression he doesn't understand the reasons for the bubble at all.

    Tell him that nobody's loaning anyone a half-million dollars on a no-job, no-income, and no-asset basis in order to buy silver.
    That's a sure sign that a bubble is reaching its peak. When your barber is making leveraged purchases of metals, it may be time to sell.
    "Foreign aid is taking money from the poor people of a rich country, and giving it to the rich people of a poor country." - Ron Paul
    "Beware the Military-Industrial-Financial-Pharma-Corporate-Internet-Media-Government Complex." - B4L update of General Dwight D. Eisenhower
    "Debt is the drug, Wall St. Banksters are the dealers, and politicians are the addicts." - B4L
    "Totally free immigration? I've never taken that position. I believe in national sovereignty." - Ron Paul

    Proponent of real science.
    The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own, and do not represent this forum or any other entities or persons.

  8. #7
    Ask him this: If you lived in Zimbabwe, would you feel secure holding Zimbabwe dollars, or gold & silver.

    He can't compare housing crisis with silver/gold.

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Brian4Liberty View Post
    That's a sure sign that a bubble is reaching its peak. When your barber is making leveraged purchases of metals, it may be time to sell.
    The guy who used to be my Barber ( The Mrs. cuts it now ) has a great building, brick , probably 130 yrs old



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  11. #9
    These are not ordinary times , debt, money supply etc are all new territory , our currency appears, to , me, to be about worthless and about to get worse....

  12. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Lindsey View Post
    I am discussing the purchase of precious metals with my partner. He believes that the belief that the price of silver rising as the dollar is devalued is the same as the belief people had that housing would always rise because of inflation. Please help me explain to him how these are different.
    The belief that housing will always rise because of inflation remains true, and is well founded. That has nothing to do with the massive inflation and subsequent collapse of the housing bubble, which operated on fundamentals that were only similar to the "monetary inflation on the whole".

    As long as monetary inflation on the thin-air supply side is perpetually greater than monetary deflation on the back-into-the-vacuum destruction side, price inflation (upward pressure on general prices) will be the result. That is as true for housing as it is for precious metals or anything else that has real value in exchange.

    Monetary inflation propagates throughout the economy and eventually turns into general price inflation. But that kind of propagation takes time. For that process to even happen, new debt-based thin-air currency has to be injected into the market through specific loan channels. The housing bubble was a specific channel where the credit floodgates were deliberately opened as wide as possible.

    The housing bubble was a case of an artificially selective kind of credit inflation, with its own CREDIT-SPECIFIC boom and bust. The price bubble was far more localized in the economy (by sector, not geography), as it was confined primarily to All Things Land And Real Estate (read=what the banks and speculators had the most faith in). Easy credit, artificially low interest rates, government guarantees, along with all the massive abuses in the financial system (putting all the AAA-rated lipstick on millions of repackaged high-risk sub-prime debt pigs), fueled and prolonged the rampant belief--even with financial institutions--that housing could only go up, never down. There would always be another sucker willing to pay more down the road. That was a case of selective ease of access to specifically channeled currency that caused everything in a particular industry to be overvalued, and all based on the fundamental of an increasingly spiraling number of artificially induced bids in the market.

    The housing bubble was like a bunch of gambler's anonymous members let out of their cages, and put into Gamblers Frenzy Fantasyland. Most found themselves on winning streaks, and after relatively short wave of successive wins suddenly believed that they had indeed found the holy grail -- as cash cow meets perpetual motion machine. After that it was no longer gambling; it was a SURE THING. Eventually winning streaks took on an immortality of their own, as millions thought of (fervently believed in) that it was now the new rule, rather than the artificially fueled exception that it was.

    To mix my metaphors nicely, the speed addiction really did STIMULATE, even as it seemed to "provide" free energy (rather than reallocate it without any regard to future health).


    Now, how does that relate to silver, and what are the differences? A key problem is in how to discern how much a given increase or decrease in prices can be attributed to what kinds of behavior in ANY market (public or private). What are the underlying fundamentals?

    Here's one glaring difference:

    With silver, there are no banks offering loose credit, no political mandate that anyone should own any precious metals, no government programs in place that guarantees loans for the purpose of buy (bidding up) silver or any other commodity. In fact, it is highly discouraged by both government and the financial sector (apart from those that actually deal in PM's). The risk really is all yours. Worse yet, it is made even more risky, as the MF GLOBAL FIASCO proved, where even allocated holdings can be STOLEN, with no legal recourse in that particular Lawless Financial Sector and all its tangled webs.

    That doesn't mean there aren't artificial manipulations going on with precious metals, nor does it mean that recent demand for PM's is not driven by (as a reaction to) monetary policy. Both are true. We just aren't privy to what they are, let alone how they equate to silver being overvalued or undervalued. We do know is that governments are scrambling left and right for PM's--especially gold.

    There is no free, perfectly competitive and wholly undistorted PM market. As it is now, we have naysayers on the one hand who will declare with utter conviction that PM's are in a bubble, and that a correction is coming. On the other hand, we have goldbugs and silverbugs (me among them) who are declaring with equal conviction that PM's are undervalued, with prices that are artificially suppressed, not inflated.

    All of the above would be moot, of course, were it not for the fact that we can at least say, without refutation, that ALL fiat currencies are falling exponentially in value against everything--housing and PM's--AS THEY WERE DESIGNED TO. The fiat currency fundamentals absolutely guarantee that all fiat currencies will FALL EXPONENTIALLY in value, which means that all raw tangible assets will rise in price over time. That means that it's not an either/or between housing and silver. Once the housing bubble finally corrects--as well as it can--it will continue to rise in price right along with everything else. And even if there was a "correction" for any PM, gold or silver", it's only a jumping up and down in an fiat currency elevator that is on a crash course, and headed straight for the global basement.

  13. #11
    Aside from the bubble, housing prices have pretty much tracked the over rate of price inflation. Gold does not always follow inflation. When Nixon closed the Gold Widow in 1972 officially ending any gold backing of the US dollar, the price of gold rose for the next eight years- its nominal price peaking in 1980 (in a bubble). After that, it moved generally down until about 2001 (20 years) and it has been basically rising since then. I say generally because it did move up and down in between but the overall trend was up, down, and then up again.

  14. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Lindsey View Post
    I am discussing the purchase of precious metals with my partner. He believes that the belief that the price of silver rising as the dollar is devalued is the same as the belief people had that housing would always rise because of inflation. Please help me explain to him how these are different.
    The simplest difference is this....you can't build neighborhoods full of gold and silver simply because there is a booming demand; that is, there is a limited supply of gold and silver whereas, as we saw 6 years ago, we can build houses until everyone in America has one. Gold/silver are called God's money because you can't create more of them out of thin air, however so long as there are economic illiterates in DC, trees, there can be an indefinite increase in money and houses at any time (hmmm....given this logic, I would think environmentalists would join us in hating the Federal Reserve).

    If this doesn't convince your partner, bring on the numbers. Look at the increase in gold and silver from the time Bush was elected till the time Obama was elected the first time, then from the time Obama was elected the first time till the time Obama was elected the second time.


    SILVER/GOLD

    1/20/2001 $4.75/$264.60
    1/20/2009 $11.17/$838.23
    11/6/2012 $30.96/$1,680.40


    These things have gone up for over a decade. If that's still not enough, just buy a few silver coins and see what they do over the next year.

  15. #13
    ...deleted - I posted wrong clip into wrong thread... sorry.
    Last edited by FindLiberty; 11-19-2012 at 10:14 PM.

  16. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Lindsey View Post
    I am discussing the purchase of precious metals with my partner. He believes that the belief that the price of silver rising as the dollar is devalued is the same as the belief people had that housing would always rise because of inflation. Please help me explain to him how these are different.
    Is your partner aware of car they might have wanted to buy in 1964 for, e.g., $4000? Do they think that car would be worth $120,000 today like an equivalent amount of silver?

    The median house price in 1964 was $18,900. Saved in silver, that could be $567,000 yet the median house price is now under $175,000 (yet peaked over $275,000).

    Of course houses and cars have both utility and costs. The downside to gold and silver is not having bought it soon enough (and the cost of physical security if you hold it - which arguably - you ought to be providing for anyway with your life, stuff, and loved ones and their stuff).



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