The price of gold has been in decline over the past few weeks.
Despite the Federal Reserve launching a fourth round of quantitative
easing, the precious metal can not seem to stem the heavy selling
pressure. However, long-term investors
are not likely to be deterred by the short-term price action as central
banks around the world continue to engage in currency wars.
In a recent speech at the Economic Club of New York, Bank
of England Governor Mervyn King predicted a continuation of currency
wars next year. He explains, “I do think 2013 could be a challenging
year in which we will, in fact, see a number of countries trying to push
down their exchange rates. That does lead to concerns. Will other
countries react in kind? What will happen? The policies pursued by
countries for domestic purposes are leading to tension collectively.” He
also adds, “There are limits to how far monetary policy can be
effective in the very long run shifting spending for the future to
today.”
At this point in the war, central banks are still trying to find
their limits. Over the past six years, the maestros of the printing
presses have injected the financial system with roughly $11 trillion and
show no signs of slowing down. At its two-day policy board meeting, the
Bank of Japan decided to increase its asset
purchase program for the third time in only four months. The central
bank effectively launched QE10 by expanding the monetary easing weapon
by 10 trillion yen to 101 trillion yen. Including the latest move, the
BOJ has expanded its quantitative easing program five times this year.
“Japan’s economy is weakening further and is expected to remain weak for
the time being,” explained the central bank, according to Reuters.
The bond
buying expansion was widely expected as Shinzo Abe, the country’s new
prime minister from the Liberal Democratic Party, recently won his
election in a landslide. He has promised to stimulate the economy with a
large spending package and is a strong advocate of monetary easing by
the BOJ. In addition to QE10, the central bank pledged to review its
“medium to long-term price stability” at its next meeting in January.
The BOJ currently has a 1 percent inflation target, but is expected to
implement a 2 percent target, as demanded by Abe.
The Federal
Reserve already has a 2 percent inflation objective and recently
explained in its latest Federal Open Market Committee statement that it
will tolerate higher inflation as long as longer-term inflation
expectations continue to be well anchored. While the BOJ does not
technically have an unlimited bond purchasing program officially in
place like the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank, there appears
to be little limit in how much the BOJ can ease, so far.
When central bankers intervene and manipulate financial markets
it distorts investment decisions and creates capital misallocations.
The full effects of monetary easing will likely not be known for years,
but some investors are taking caution ahead of time. As the WSJ
reported earlier this week, a small number of pension funds in Japan
are starting to invest in gold in order to “mitigate the damage from
possible market shocks.” Gold is currently trading
near multi-month lows, but corrections like this are not uncommon and
precious metals still remain as a viable way to diversify a portfolio
against currency wars.
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