$3,000 Gold? Citi Analysts Say “Don’t Rule it Out!”
PICK ONE: Central bank purchases, stagflation, or a deep global recession!
You could see gold surge by 50 percent according to Aakash Doshi, Citi’s North America head of commodities research. He and other Citi analysts wrote in a recent note to clients that among the pathways to $3,000, gold would be a ramp-up in de-dollarization by central banks.
That could lead to a US dollar crisis.
And that is not the only avenue to much higher gold prices in the next 12 – 18 months, he said.
Reporting on an interview with Doshi, CNBC says another trigger that could drive gold to $3,000 would be a “deep global recession” that could spur the U.S. Federal Reserves to cut rates rapidly.
“That means the brakes have been cut, not to 3 percent, but to 1 percent or lower – that will take us to $3,000,” Doshi said.
More from CNBC’s report:
Stagflation — an increasing inflation rate, a slowing economic growth and rising unemployment — could be another trigger, though Doshi said there’s a “very low probability” of such a scenario….
These three potential triggers aside, Citi maintains that their base case for bullion is $2,150 in the second half of 2024, and the price of gold to average a little over Doshi added.
A widely followed J.P. Morgan analyst, Marko Kolanovic, and his team have also raised the prospect of a return to 1970s-style stagflation. “There are many similarities to the current times,” they write. “We already had one wave of inflation, and questions started to appear whether a second wave can be avoided if policies and geopolitical developments stay on this course.”
We think Citi’s calls are fine as far as they go, but that they don’t go nearly far enough. Other forces on the immediate horizon include a move by Washington to create a central bank digital social credit surveillance currency, a widening of America’s many wars, serious civic strife over the election and its manipulation, an implosion of China’s economy, and banks tipping over the brink here in the US.
The ducks are lining up for much higher gold prices. If you are not sufficiently prepared, come see us at Republic Monetary Exchange.