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Monday, November 14, 2011

Ratio of U.S. Gold Reserves to Various Money Supply Metrics

By Mike Hewitt


The official gold reserves in the United States steadily increased during the first half of the 20th century. Accumulation was particularly rapid following the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 which officially raised the price of gold from US$20.67 to US$35 per troy ounce. Large shipments of gold bullion went west across the Atlantic as the European central banks sold off their gold reserves for American currency. This flow of gold reversed its course beginning in the late '50s until the gold window was closed on August 15th 1971. From that date onward, aside from some sales in 1975 and 1978, the U.S. official gold reserve has remained steady.


U.S. Gold Reserves and Gold Price
A recent report from Société Générale shows a chart comparing the value of the U.S. gold reserve against the U.S. monetary base from 1968 to 2008. The chart reveals a compelling argument that gold is presently undervalued. As of December 2nd 2009, the U.S. gold reserves of 8,133.5 metric tonnes are valued at US$316.4 billion, against a monetary base of US$2,081 billion.

The monetary base includes both cash in circulation and that held in bank reserves. The following chart shows data going back to 1918.
Gold Backing of the U.S. Monetary Base

Two peak periods can be observed in the above chart when the value of the gold reserves exceeded that of the U.S. monetary base. The first peak was a result of the gold hoard accumulated by the United States resulting from the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. By the end of 1948, the U.S. held 21.7 thousand tonnes - an astonishing 75% of all the gold held by central banks!

The second peak in the ratio of values in gold reserves to monetary base was caused from the price escalation of bullion during the late 1970s. On January 21st 1980 the peak price of gold hit a high of $850 per troy ounce - a record that would stand until January 2nd 2008, nearly 28 years later.1

Gold has been in a ten year bull market beginning at a low of $251.70 per ounce in August of 1999 to over $1200 an ounce in December 2009. What is of great interest is that this near five-fold increase in the price of gold has failed to significantly change the ratio of values between the U.S. monetary base and the gold reserves!

The reason is that the U.S. monetary base has exploded as part of the extraordinary monetary policies adopted by the Federal Reserve in response to the global financial crisis beginning on December 12th 2007 with the announcement of a temporary Term Auction facility (TAF).2
U.S. Monetary Base

As of November 2009, the ratio of the U.S. monetary base to the valuation of the gold reserve is nearly 7 to 1.

The monetary base is now greater than that measured by M1 as the value of bank reserves has now exceeded that held by the public's checking accounts and other demand deposits. The following chart shows a comparison of the valuation of the gold reserves against M1.

Historical data for both the pricing of gold and the amount held as reserves can be found going back further than 1929, but unfortunately not for M1. Again we see the two peaks as before. However, at no time did the value of the gold held in reserves equal M1. The current ratio of M1 to gold reserve is 5.7 to 1.

It would never happen, but it is interesting to consider that if everyone cashed in their checking accounts and went to purchase gold directly from the U.S. reserve at the current market rate, all of the gold would be gone after only 17.5% of the cash was redeemed.

If the citizens decided to also cash in their savings accounts, then that figure drops to 3.5%! In other words, the ratio of cash in circulation plus the value of all publically held checking/savings accounts to the official gold reserve is 28.5 to 1.

Though it would be unwise to simply project these ratios onto the current price of gold in order to determine what the price ought to be, they do suggest that gold is indeed undervalued.

At only two times in recent history was gold significantly over-valued in terms of the U.S. dollar. In both of these instances there was a clear result. In 1934 the new price of US$35 offered by the U.S. monetary authorities resulted in a multi-year inflow of gold to the United States from the rest of the world. The second time was the final run-up at the end of the 1970s culminating in the famous US$850 per troy ounce price that was followed with a near two-decade bear market.

The mild gold fever at present time does not compare to the long lineups of gold buyers seen in 1980. On the contrary, there is still a large level of public disinterest in accumulating gold in preference to U.S. dollars. As the 30-second Cash4Gold ad during Super Bowl XLIII revealed, the largest advertising campaigns are still aimed at getting people to sell their gold, not buy it. Share/Save/Bookmark

Notes

1 The average price of gold in 1980 was just under US$615 per troy ounce.
2 The TAF is still with in existence nearly two years later - its most recent action being a US$25 billion auction of 42-day credit on November 30th 2009 for which $16.7 billion was sold.
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© 2009 DollarDaze

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mike Hewitt Mike Hewitt is the editor of DollarDaze.org, a website pertaining to commentary on the instability of the global fiat monetary system and investment strategies on mining companies. His website also provides a no-cost market data feed service with up-to-date quotes on currency exchange rates, commodity prices and major indices. Mike can be emailed at mikehewitt@hotmail.com.