One of the reasons that big money managers, and the world's wealthiest
 people, don't understand gold, and silver, is that human beings, even
 very, very smart people, just do not understand very large numbers,
 nor relative size.
 
 Money in U.S. banks, M3, is growing at a rate of about 12% per year,
 or more.  So, in the last 12 months, it grew by about $1.3 trillion
 dollars, which is $1,300 billion dollars.
 
 The world gold market grew this year at a rate of about 1.5%, as the
 world's mines produced about 2500 tonnes, and it has been estimated
 that there is about 155,000 tonnes of gold in the world.
 
 People also don't understand weights and measures.  Big money managers
 must learn how many ounces of gold are in a tonne.  And it's troy
 ounces, not avoirdupois ounces, and gold is measured on the world
 stage in metric tonnes, spelled tonnes, not short tons.
 
 1 metric tonne = 32,150.7466 troy ounces.
 
 So, how much is 2500 tonnes of annual world gold production worth?
 Well, times 32,151 ounces, its 80 million ounces.
 
 And how much is 80 million ounces of gold worth, at $675/oz.?
 It's worth only $54 billion dollars.
 
 See, big money managers simply don't know the numbers!  They also
 probably fail to account for the value of that new gold.  Comparing
 dollar for dollar, it compares like this:
 
 $1300 billion of new money printed.
 $54 billion dollars worth of new gold mined, at $675/oz.
 
 So, the U.S. is actually creating new paper money at a rate 24 times
 as much as new gold.  (1300 / 54 = 24!)
 
 And of course, this is hardly a fair comparison.  I'm comparing U.S.
 dollars to world gold production.   We should compare total world
 paper money creation rates, to world gold mining rates.  But that's a
 lot of work, and I don't know if I can source it all out.  My well
 researched guess is that the U.S. dollar is only about 1/4 of the
 world total increase of paper money.   (It is widely admitted that
 other nations are now printing up money even faster than the U.S.!)
 So, let's multiply by a factor of 4.
 
 $1,300 x 4 / 54 = 96!
 
 Thus, the world is creating new money at about a rate nearly 100 times
 faster than the world's value of new gold.
 
 So, again, how much is $1300 billion of new U.S. money created this
 year?
 
 Well, that's about how many dollars China now has.  And China has
 continued to announce that they should buy gold to diversify.  People
 just don't understand what this means for gold prices, because they
 don't understand large numbers, nor do they understand the numbers in
 the gold world.
 
 A "wise allocation" would be 50-100% at this stage.  But a more
 realistic, "foolish" allocation would be at least 5-10%.  But what
 happens if China tries to spend that $65 to $130 billion on gold, when
 annual world gold production, 2500 tonnes, at $675/oz., is worth only
 $80 billion?
 
 It's anyone's guess, so go ahead and guess.  I'll wait.  But that's
 just China.
 
 With gold now rising since the bottom in 1999 or 2001, people are now
 beginning to look at gold, and paper money, they are beginning to
 discover the relative size of these markets, or read articles like
 this one.
 
 So, investors, the world over, may have about $40 trillion worth of
 investments to allocate and spend on gold.  What if 5% of that went
 into gold?  That's $2 trillion dollars, or $2,000 billion.
 
 What will happen when that much money is going to move into gold, when
 the world's annual gold production is a mere $54 billion?
 
 How much gold is traded in a year?  Most of the gold in the world is
 not traded, it is held, for a very, very long time, for times just
 such as now, when the world wakes up from the delusion of paper
 money.
 
 Some of the best guesses that I've read are that only about 5,000
 tonnes of gold trades each year, which is about twice what is mined
 annually.  Some gold is recycled.  And central banks "add" to the
 supply through selling.
 
 There is a big issue over how much gold the central banks regularly
 sell, and have sold.  With good reason, because, officially, the
 world's central banks hold 33,000 tonnes of gold.  If half of that is
 leased out, then buying back that much gold on the world market is
 also going to cause gold prices to rise substantially.
 
 Let me back up a minute, to help explain that.  In 1999, European
 banks decided to limit how much gold they would sell per year to 500
 tonnes, and no more than that, so as to avoid hurting the gold price.
 (They were also leasing gold, which also adds even more to supply.)
 Good timing.  They picked the exact bottom of the gold market, so they
 were right that their prior, uncoordinated sales, and leases, were
 hurting gold prices.  In fact, it spooked the market so badly, to
 limit gold sales, that gold prices rocketed up from about $260 to $330/
 oz in less than a week, and that explains the vertical spike you see
 on gold price charts going back to late 1999.
 
 It was exciting, if you were paying attention.
 
 Now, this was not "new gold sales".  Nor was it "less gold sales".  It
 was merely an announcement of "not more than 500 tonnes/year" of gold
 sales.  But really, it was a confirmation of major gold sales.
 
 Today, we have many confirmations of major gold buying, on the
 horizon.  China will be buying someone's gold.  CalPERS manages over
 $234 billion for California employees, and is bullish on commodities
 now, including gold.
 
 I read that "Barclays Capital did a survey of their institutional
 clients and 70% of them said they would have 5% of their assets in
 gold in three years time."
 
 I don't know what these money managers are thinking.  If they knew
 about the relative size of the gold market, the price would be $2000/
 oz. by tomorrow morning.  As it is, the gold price is likely to hit
 $2000/oz. within 3 years, and most will still miss the big easy gains.
 
A commodity is anything for which there is demand, but which is supplied without qualitative differentiation across a given market.[clarify] Characteristic of commodities is that their prices are determined as a function of their market as a whole. Generally, these are basic resources and agricultural products such as iron ore, crude oil, coal, ethanol, sugar, soybeans, aluminium, rice, wheat, gold and silver.
 
  
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