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Archives for January 2026

Gold’s 50-Year Price Explosion

January 30, 2026 By Richard Young

Originally posted on July 27, 2020.

Part I

I was there from the start.  In early August 1971, I had just joined internationally focused research and trading firm Model Roland & Co.

On 15 August 1971, President Nixon shocked the world by announcing that the U. S. would no longer officially trade dollars for gold. At that time, gold’s fixed price was $35/oz.

By 1980, gold would hit an astronomical $800/oz.

OK then, back to Model and the firm’s wonderful head partner Leo Model. From my first day onboard at Model, I started covering a bevy of major Boston institutional accounts.  I was 30 years old, and I would become friends with analysts, portfolio managers and traders at Wellington Management, Fidelity Investments, First National Bank of Boston, State Street Bank, State Street Research, Endowment Management, Studley Shupert, and Keystone Management through my entire investment career on Federal Street in Boston.

I immediately realized that international trading (including gold shares and arbitrage), as well as monetary strategy and world currencies, was going to be my focus from August 1971 onward.

Five decades later, these subjects remain today my daily focus. I have been a buyer of gold, silver, and Swiss francs for decades, and I have never sold a single one of my positions.

By 1972 I was off to London on a mission for Leo Model. My job was to produce a strategy report for Model, Roland & Co on the international gold shares market. It took eight days in London to meet all the insiders with whom Mr. Model had arranged visits. Except for a single, most unpleasant glitch, (understatement) all went well.

I went on to submit a 25-page strategy report to Mr. Model. Shortly thereafter I was informed that Mr. Model had sent my report along to the firm’s chief monetary guru, one Edward M. Bernstein, one of the architects of the Bretton Woods monetary agreement.

Remember, I was 31 years old, and quite terrified to hear that EMB had been brought into the loop.

On 7 August 1972,  I received the surprise of my young life: EMB wrote  back on his corporate letterhead:

I think the collection of papers on gold is excellent. It seems objective and pointed. I have no suggestions. Put me on the list to get what you put out on gold.

Sincerely,

Edward M. Bernstein

Although I did not know it at the time, a year later, I would no longer be at Model, Roland.

Check back in with richardcyoung.com for my introduction Part II and the kickoff of our industry-leading precious metals, currencies, monetary madness, fed maleficence and dollar destruction weekly update.

Warm regards,

Dick

 

 

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Filed Under: Investing Strategies Tagged With: precious

Natural Gas Prices Jump on Ice Storm Threat

January 23, 2026 By Richard Young

By Jittapon @ Adobe Stock

With a big ice storm coming, natural gas buyers have driven prices up on worries that production facilities will be impacted by the severe weather. Prices for Henry Hub gas rose to $4.96/MMBTU yesterday, a jump of 62% compared to only two days prior. 

The intense storm predictions cover areas of Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, as well as Pennsylvania, home to the Marcellus shale formation. 

 

Source: National Weather Service

In the map below, you can see America’s top 100 natural gas fields by reserves, with a significant portion positioned within the storm’s predicted track. 

Source: EIA

As America has reduced coal consumption, it has rapidly increased natural gas consumption. Disruptions to production now will mean greater uncertainty for energy consumers, both for heating and power generation. 

Be sure your family is prepared for the storm. 

Filed Under: Feature

The Fed Should Be Careful with Lower Rates

January 7, 2026 By Richard Young

From August 15, 1971, the day President Nixon officially took America off the gold standard (the system had been breaking down for years beforehand) to September 17, 2007, the day before the Ben Bernanke-led Federal Reserve began what would be an unprecedented economic intervention in the face of the Financial Crisis, the mean interest rate of 3-month T-bills was 6.08%. For the 18 years following Bernanke’s intrusion on markets, it’s been 1.39%.

For decades, I have called the 90-day T-bill the investor’s “North Star.” The T-bill is the risk-free rate of return you can use to chart your course among other investments. The “Real North Star” is the risk-free rate of return with inflation taken out. It’s a measure of the growth or decline in Americans’ purchasing power.

During the pre-Bernanke era, the yields on T-bills rarely fell below the rate of core CPI inflation, and then only for brief periods. Since Bernanke’s response to the Financial Crisis, yields on T-bills have spent more time below the rate of core inflation than above.

Low rates are harmful for savers. When the Fed pushes short rates below 4%, investors should be wary. Here’s how I explained it in 2003:

The 90-day T-bill is often referred to as the risk-free rate of return. Here we are looking at ultimate safety. In retirement, I advise you to draw no more than 4%. When T-bills are 4%, and ideally 4% plus the current inflation rate, you can invest defensively with ultimate safety and a satisfactory, if not munificent, return. When the T-bill rate is below 4%, you cannot make your draw. As such, you are knocked out of the box with the ultimate safety investment. That’s a big deal, no way around it. Aggressive investors and know-it-alls eschew T-bills as dull and boring and certain to produce modest results. Well, all of that is true, but you know what? So what? You can win the day with (1) no credit risk, (2) no interest rate-cycle risk, (3) no stock market risk. You’ll sleep well at night. No, you won’t get rich on your investments, but when you already have your nest egg, you just may not need to get a whole lot richer. With the North Star today at 1.1%, red lights are flashing in a really big way.

The recent release of minutes from the last meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee showed that Federal Reserve officials are internally debating the efficacy of future interest rate cuts. The Federal Reserve should be cautious about lowering rates further than it already has. The Real North Star is still in positive territory, but every cut brings investors closer to losing purchasing power on the risk-free rate. The last thing Americans need after years of Bidenflation is further erosion of their purchasing power.

Filed Under: Feature

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