Roubini: Significant Risks Of Gold Correction

Downside risks to gold, writes Nouriel Roubini at The Globe and Mail:

“But, since gold has no intrinsic value, there are significant risks of a downward correction. Eventually, central banks will need to exit quantitative easing and zero-interest rates, putting downward pressure on risky assets, including commodities. Or the global recovery may turn out to be fragile and anemic, leading to a rise in bearish sentiment on commodities – and in bullishness about the U.S. dollar.

Another downside risk is that the dollar-funded carry trade may unravel, crashing the global asset bubble that it, with the wave of monetary liquidity, has caused. And since the carry trade and the wave of liquidity are causing a global asset bubble, some of gold’s recent rise is also bubble-driven, with herding behaviour and “momentum trading” by investors pushing gold higher and higher. But all bubbles eventually burst. The bigger the bubble, the greater the collapse.

Gold’s rise is only partially justified by fundamentals. And it is not clear why investors should stock up on gold if the global economy dips into recession again and concerns about a near depression and rampant deflation rise sharply. If you truly fear a global economic meltdown, you should stock up on guns, canned food and other commodities that you can actually use in your log cabin.”

Roubini, the Insider

Robert Wenzel over at Economic Policy Journal points out that the new head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is Gary Gensler, who spent 18 years at Goldman Sachs as co-head of finance.

He also  has a nice hat-tip to me for spotting Roubini’s insider status first. Well, I did spot it first, but it wasn’t hard to do.  His bio on wiki has the links. You’d just need to think of looking at it. What are the chances that policy wonks who go to the same schools, attend the same conferences, live in the same neighborhood and work at the same places are going to to be “independent”?

From Wenzel:

More and more the picture that is emerging of Roubini is that of a major insider. Writes The New Republic: He has a

…swelling portfolio of clients–the World Bank, IMF, 50 central banks,and 30-odd finance ministries among them….”