Gold Remains in High Demand Around the World Among Investors Concerned about the State of the Global Economy.
The last two months have seen silver dramatically underperform gold…

…interestingly tracking the dollar index…

…after reaching record ‘lows’ against the yellow metal.

The surge in silver (relative to gold) began around the same time as the gold market “broke” with the COVID crisis causing geographical shortages of physically deliverable gold for futures contracts (decoupling the price of gold futures from the physical price for that liquidity/transportation premium).

But now, as Bloomberg notes (and the chart above shows), the New York gold market has been flipped on its head in just a couple of months, with a scramble for the metal turning into a glut.

June futures sank to more than $20 an ounce below August earlier this week, from a premium in mid-April.

Gold remains in high demand around the world among investors concerned about the state of the global economy. And, as Simon Black pointed out recently, EVERY possible scenario is on the table as far as policymakers are concerned, and no one can say for sure what’s going to happen next.
There are very few things that are clear. But in my view, one thing that has become clear is that western governments will print as much money as it takes to bail everyone out.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the US federal government will post a $3.6 TRILLION deficit this Fiscal Year due to all the bailouts. Plus the Federal Reserve has already printed over $7 trillion.
Frankly, they’re just getting started.
With this incomprehensible tsunami of government debt and paper money flooding the system, real assets are a historically great bet.
Real assets are things that cannot be engineered by politicians and central banks– assets like productive land, well-managed businesses, and yes, precious metals.
And they all tend to do very well when central banks print tons of money.
Farmland, for example, was one of the best-performing assets during the stagflation of the 1970s.
And financial data over the past several decades shows that whenever they print lots of money, the price of gold tends to increase.
Right now, in fact, the price of gold is relatively cheap compared to the current money supply.

And the price of silver is ridiculously cheap compared to gold. Again, silver has never been cheaper in 5,000 years.
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