Investing Opinion

The Gold Bubble Is About to Burst

Stock quotes in this article:GLD 

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- The gold bubble is preparing to burst. You can tell we're near the end because of the confusion of rationale seeking to explain the precious metal's continued rise.

Is gold -- tracked by exchanged-traded funds such as SPDR Gold Shares(GLD) -- reaching new highs because of the fear of a double dip? Is it because of quantitative easing? Is it because of the euro collapse? Is it because of the first dip? Is it because of expectations for future inflation? Is the current price movement being fueled by investor speculation or has there truly been a fundamental change in society that can explain the spike?

Let's uncover the real story behind the gold bubble.

There have been four groups who have participated in this run-up:

  • Group 1 (November 2007 - April 2009): Hedge funds who were worried the global financial system would crumble as a result of the mark-to-market banking regulatory requirements.
  • Group 2 (October 2009 - April 2010): Hedge funds who were worried that unprecedented stimulus would result in hyperinflation as global economies recovered.
  • Group 3 (May 2010 - July 2010): Hedge funds who were worried that the eurozone would collapse, thereby causing currency chaos.
  • Group 4 (August 2010 - ???): Individual investors who are now buying gold for the first time because they want in on the action.

Before the financial crisis, in January 2007, gold was priced at $650/ounce. The average price of gold had fluctuated between $300 and $500 during the 10 years before.

As the financial crisis unfolded, gold served as the ultimate investment vehicle to profit from fear because of its unique characteristics. It isn't valued on fundamentals, it generates no earnings, it pays no interest, it is essentially a perpetual zero-coupon bond that is easy to manipulate into a snowball effect.

This ambiguity made the asset a prime profit-generating allocation during times of uncertainty. Unfortunately for current gold investors, fear/panic is diminishing by the day. Without that essential element, the big money will exit the trade. September's strong stock market performance was the beginning of a new stage -- a stage that I refer to as a "sigh of relief."

Investors have endured panic for three years, and gold has rightfully gone up. Now that the cataclysmic panic is subsiding those left carrying gold in their portfolios are trying to come up with reasons to justify the holding. Quantitative easing is a tough sell. Slow growth isn't enough. The time looks ripe for the investment vehicle of fear to break down.

Gold at $1,400 an ounce is eerily similar to oil at $140. Remember all the credible firms extrapolating the speculative action into $200 oil forecasts. Those same bubble-builders are now calling for $2,000-an-ounce gold.

I may not be very old, but I've already seen this movie three times. During the 1999 holiday season individuals who had never bought a tech stock were buying Lucent(LU). In 1996 family and friends talking about flipping real estate at neighborhood barbecues. In 1997 I was flooded with hate mail when I suggested oil would plummet to $30 a barrel.

TheStreet Premium Services

Jim Cramer
Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS:
Trade right alongside a Wall Street pro — enjoy access to his Charitable Trust portfolio and be sent trade alerts BEFORE he makes a move. Learn More
OptionsProfits
OptionsProfits:
Get 50+ trade ideas a week from the industry's top options experts. Plus — exclusive commentary on market trends and essential trading tools. Learn More
Real Money
Real Money:
Our team of professional Wall Street Pros — including Jim Cramer, Doug Kass, and Nicholas Vardy — delivers intelligent analysis, timely trade ideas, and colorful commentary. Learn More
Stocks Under $10
Stocks Under $10:
Break into the market with small- and mid-cap stocks... all $10 or less! David Peltier tells you exactly which low-priced stocks he's buying and selling. Learn More
To begin commenting right away, you can log in below using your Disqus, Facebook, Twitter, OpenID or Yahoo login credentials. Alternatively, you can post a comment as a "guest" just by entering an email address. Your use of the commenting tool is subject to multiple terms of service/use and privacy policies - see here for more details.
blog comments powered by Disqus
Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
12,454.83 1,317.82 2,837.53 17.45
Oil *
107.26
DOWN
74.92
DOWN
2.86
DOWN
1.85
DOWN
0.14
10 Yr
1.74%
SPDR Gold
152.68
-0.60%
-0.22%
-0.07%
-0.80%
Data delayed 20 minutes

Top Stories and Tools

Articles From

After the Bell

Before the Bell

Booyah! Newsletter

Midday Bell

TheStreet Top 10 Stories

Winners & Losers

We respect your privacy.
Podcasts

Connect with TheStreet