Written by Jan Nieuwenhuijs, originally published at Gainesville Coins.
In the hierarchy of money gold is superior to fiat money. From an historical perspective the past decades have been characterized by trust in fiat money, whereby fiat made up the lion share of global international reserves. The war between Russia and Ukraine (and by extension West and East), inflation, and systemic risks are reversing this trend. A long-term gold valuation model, which assumes gold will account for the majority of international reserves, suggests the gold price to exceed $8,000 in the coming decade.
The Hierarchy of Money
Reading Zoltan Pozsar’s analyses for a few years led me to read books and follow lectures by his intellectual mentor Perry Mehrling, Professor of International Political Economy. According to Mehrling there is a natural hierarchy of money, to be visualized as a pyramid.
At the top of the pyramid sits the ultimate money, which is scarce, universally accepted, and has no counterparty risk because it’s no one’s liability: gold. Below gold are national currencies issued by central banks. Then come deposits that are created by commercial banks. Securities, such as bonds and equity, are at the bottom.
Because everything underneath gold can be created out of thin air, the base of the pyramid can be easily widened. Throughout the business cycle balance sheets (assets and liabilities) are extended—credit is created—causing an economic boom. During a recession, balance sheets contract and the shape of the pyramid is remodeled.
Horizontally, the pyramid is all about quantity and leverage. Vertically, the pyramid is about quality: the higher up the better the quality of money. From Mehrling:
In a boom, credit begins to look like money. Forms of credit become much more liquid, they become much more usable to make payments with. And in contraction, you find out that what you have is not money, it's credit actually. In a contraction, you find out that gold and currency are not the same thing. That gold is better. You find out that deposits and currency are not the same thing. That currency is better.
Now my interpretation…
A Long-term Gold Valuation Model
What has happened in the past decades, after severing the gold standard in 1971, is a massive increase in supply of fiat money, credit, and securities. The pyramid is out of shape with a tiny tip and a fat debt belly. Global debt to GDP is near its all-time high established in 2020.
Policy makers won’t allow the debt to default—a contraction of credit—because the global financial system has grown too big and intertwined. One default too much could risk the stability of the entire arrangement. The only way to restore the shape of the pyramid is by an increase in the price of gold.
In a previous article we discussed the relationship between the price of gold and equities over the past one hundred years. These are dynamics between the top of the pyramid and the bottom. We concluded that the current decline of the equity market capitalization, relative to GDP, is signaling a new gold bull market.
In today’s article, we will use Mehrling’s hierarchy of money framework, and examine the relationship between national currencies and gold to get a sense of where the price of gold is headed.
Central banks have created so much “money” since 2008 that from an economic perspective the relation with bank deposits has weakened. Measuring the value of official gold reserves versus the monetary base (central bank money) may not satisfy to predict the future price of gold.
Instead, we will evaluate how much gold central banks are willing to hold relative to foreign national currencies. In other words, the composition of international reserves (foreign exchange and gold), which underpin their balance sheets. By going through the archives, I have been able to conceive a long run data series of gold as a percentage of international reserves from 1880 until present*.
Central banks in aggregate have an unusual faith in foreign exchange, as gold’s percentage of total reserves accounted for 16% in 2022, against a historical average of 59%. These central banks, however, are starting to lose confidence in the currencies issued by their peers. In 2022 official gold reserves went up by a record 1,136 tonnes, while foreign exchange reserves went down by a record $950 billion. Large purchases by central banks on all continents in recent years indicate how central banks think the system will stabilize, by a rising gold price, confirming they have no intention in designing a new pyramid.
In light of the war, which caused the US to freeze the Russian central bank’s dollar holdings, inflation, and systemic risks, the trend of gold increasing its share of total reserves is logical.
Should we extend this trend and assume gold to make up a conservative 51% of global international reserves, the price of gold would need to be $10,000 per troy ounce. Naturally, in the process of raising the gold price central banks increase the weight of their gold and sell foreign exchange, resulting in a lower price of gold required to make up the majority of total reserves. On the other hand, over time central bank balance sheets grow and so does their demand for international reserves, possibly revaluing gold in urgency.
I use central banks as a proxy for the entire economy. The private sector is in a similar boat as central banks: they have little exposure to gold versus credit assets as well. It’s definitely not just central banks that will drive up the price. Let’s say $8,000 per ounce, a ballpark figure, would make gold’s share of total reserves exceed 50%.
Conclusion
Throughout the ages the price of gold always rises as the amount of physical metal available is insufficient to meet mankind’s liquidity needs. National currencies devaluing against gold to increase liquidity is a fact of life.
In the old days, coins were debased by lowering their bullion content, resulting in more units of national currency. Since the gold standard was abandoned in 1971, fiat money can be created by the stroke of a key, aimed at boosting growth, or revitalizing the base of the pyramid. But the top inevitably follows. The price of gold has to go up to reset the shape of the pyramid. Now—given war, inflation, and systemic risk—will be one of those moments for the gold price to adjust.
*For this article I have excluded Special Drawing Rights, IMF Tranche Positions, and silver from international reserves, for the consistency of the data series and because they make up only a small part of total international reserves. Data from 1880 until 1913 is mainly sourced from Peter Lindert and Timothy Green. The numbers include official gold and foreign exchange reserves, not foreign exchange held by private banks or gold coins in circulation. Data from the interwar period is sourced from multiple publications by the League of Nations, Central Bank Annual Reports, the World Gold Council, and the Federal Reserve. Data since 1950 is sourced from the IMF, the World Gold Council, Metals Focus, and the BIS. Data from Robert Triffin is used as a check on my calculations. The numbers from 1880 until 1935 must be viewed as estimates.
Sources
Bank for International Settlements (BIS), Annual and Monthly Reports.
Banca D’Italia (1987). Gold In the International Financial System.
Bloomfield, A. I. (1963). Short-Term Capital Movements Under the Pre-1914 Gold Standard.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (1943). Banking and Monetary Statistics 1914-1941. Part 1.
Eichengreen, B. & Flandreau, M. (2009). The rise and fall of the dollar (or when did the dollar replace sterling as the leading reserve currency?)
Green, T. (1999, for the World Gold Council). Central Bank Gold Reserves. An historical perspective since 1845.
International Monetary Fund. International Financial Statistics.
League of Nations, multiple publications.
Lindert, P. H. (1967). Key Currencies and The Gold Exchange Standard, 1900-1913.
Lindert, P. H. (1969). Key Currencies and Gold 1900-1913.
Mehrling, P. (2012). Economics in Money and Banking.
Triffin, R. (1961) Gold and the Dollar Crisis, The Future of Convertibility.
Triffin, R. (1964). The Evolution of the International Monetary System: Historical Reappraisal and Future Perspectives.
World Gold Council, Gold Demand Trends reports and Datahub.
Hey Jan, great article as always. I really appreciate your well-researched, measured, and conservative approach to price predictions. I get fed up with guys making baseless outlandish claims of "$20,000 gold and $1,000 silver." As someone who owns both, (started buying silver in 2007) the prospect of $8,000/oz gold does not excite me even slightly, because I'm aware of the ramifications it will have for the majority of people. The common question I'm met with is "what can gold or silver do for me? How will it gain me money?" People have this ill-conceived notion that money begets money, when in a lawful money system this isn't the case. The fiat system we've been bridled with for the last 50+ years based on usury and ever expanding credit has created a patently false notion of what wealth is, and has completely destroyed any real ability for the market to have price discovery in fundamental sectors such as housing. When this breaks, not if, but when, millions of people will be destitute, holding liabilities they were taught to see as assets. I would argue that the only way a lawful monetary system could ever truly work and flourish would be for the loaning of money with interest to be banned. Sure, this sounds crazy, but I'd encourage you to do some research and look at the history of usury, when it became a mainstream practice, and who was behind it. A great book on the subject was written by Michael A. Hoffman. It's titled Usury in Christendom. Incredibly undervalued book. Changed my entire perspective of money. I don't consider myself a Christian in the modern sense of the term whatsoever, but this book is fantastic. I'll end by saying, what we have with the crypto/stocks/derivatives is all a de facto financial system. Gold, silver, and hard work are the only way to a de jure financial system.