Despite gold’s recent sell off, I feel increasingly comfortable with our short-term (one-year) and our long-term (five-to-seven year) forecast of the future price of gold.

Indeed, by this time next year, gold’s price could be challenging or even surpassing the yellow metal’s all-time high of $1,924 an ounce reached in September 2011.

And, looking further out, by the end of the current decade, gold could double ($4,000) or even triple ($6,000) its previous all-time high.

This bullish forecast does not depend upon some global economic crisis, financial-market meltdown, or geopolitical black swan.

I expect that the U.S. and other major economies will continue to perform poorly, muddling through for several years to come with sluggish business conditions forcing the Fed and other leading central banks to pursue reflationary monetary policies and lower-than-normal interest rates – a bullish long-term mix for gold that promises stagflation and much higher prices for gold later in the decade.

But even if the U.S. and global economies perform better than expected, gold should still do well, reflecting sound gold-market fundamentals with the prospective “freely available supply” of physical gold insufficient to satisfy prospective global demand for gold.

Freely available supply includes not only current mine production and metal recovered from old jewelry scrap but, most importantly, the net re-sale of bullion and small bars by current holders. At the same time, prospective global demand for gold includes both fashion and investment-grade jewelry of all sorts plus coins, small bars, and bullion bought by investors.

One feature of gold’s bear market over the past four years has been a massive shift in gold ownership from West to East, from the older industrialized nations to the rising Asian economies, from paper gold and ETFs to physical bars, bullion coins, and investment-grade jewelry, from traders and speculators to long-term investors and hoarders – importantly from “weak” hands to “strong” hands.

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