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CRISIS?
WHAT CRISIS?
- The Casey Files -
by
David Galland
Managing Editor, BIG GOLD
from Casey
Research
October 4, 2007
As I perused the
financial news over the past week, I was increasingly puzzled as
to why it is that the denizens of Wall Street and Main Street
appear to be paying almost no attention to the unfolding crisis.
Case in point,
according to the popular financial media, investors were recently
cheered on by the rumor that Warren Buffett may buy into the
sinking Bear Stearns.
Sure,
he might, but if he does, rest assured it will be at a fire sale
price… the beginning of a trend, if you ask us, of salvage
operators moving in to lay claim to abandoned and sinking ships.
And
even if Buffett was to buy into Bear Stearns, it is worth
contemplating the inevitable fate of gurus, sages and oracles. A
recent example was provided by legendary bond manager Bill Gross
of Pimco fame who, like Buffett, could make no misstep… until
2005 when he stepped off a cliff, costing him his sterling rep and
his loyal followers money. Glancing at the three-year return of
his much glorified mutual fund, we find you would have done better
in a money market fund.
Over
the past week, we also learned that things remain less than
chipper in the housing sector, summarized nicely in the following
Bloomberg headline, “U.S. New-Home Sales Slump More Than
Forecast; Prices Drop Most Since 1970."
We
also heard that Citigroup’s profits slid 60%... that the EU
political class is talking down the euro, the starting gun in a
race to the bottom for the fiat currencies (of course, with the
dollar falling, exporters from other countries are
disadvantaged)… and that Toronto-Dominion bank is using its
appreciated Canadian currency to swoop in to pick off U.S. banking
giant Commerce Bancorp (expect more of this sort of thing).
Personally,
however, the most puzzling of my weekly readings have involved the
many articles and analyses noting that investors are cheered, made
giddy even, by the prospect that the Fed will make even further
cuts.
So
cheered, in fact, that since the Fed’s last cut, major U.S.
stock markets have soared to new records. This when they should be
crashing!
I
can’t help wondering how have those still feeding money into the
broader stock markets have missed the entire disgruntled foreign
dollar holder thing? You know, what happens when foreign holders
of an unprecedented US$6 trillion get serious about unloading some
of those dollars now that the Fed has shown it will sacrifice the
dollar in order to try to keep the U.S. economy afloat.
To
be something less than politic, I find myself wondering how those
who think that destroying the dollar is a free pass to a bright
tomorrow, and back up that view with their investment dollars,
could be so stupid?
My
sincere belief – formed by my interactions with the breed while
a partner in a mutual fund group some years back – is that the
disconnect with what seems to be so obvious to us, but not to the
“Street,” has to do with the herd mentality of mainstream
financial analysts. And, by extension, the people who actually
tune into mass media for their investment advice (which, to my way
of thinking, is like going to McDonald’s in the expectation of
enjoying fine dining).
It
is this herd mentality that makes them slow on the uptake.
For
the simple reason that the worst possible calamity that can befall
a money manager is to be found underperforming the peer group
averages when quarterly portfolio review time rolls around.
Don’t get me wrong, it is of no concern if you lost your
client’s money in great gobs over the previous 3 months… as
long as everyone else has also lost their clients’ money in more
or less the same proportions.
But
underperforming your peer group for two or three quarters in a
row, that is another thing altogether. In that sad event, you
could find yourself called to the captain’s quarters for a good
old-fashioned thrashing and possibly, heavens forbid, a reduction
in income so severe you might have to give up the
8,000-square-foot cottage in the Hamptons (a fate, I am told,
worse than death).
Given
the dire consequences of underperformance, therefore, the Armani-loafered
herd walks largely in lock-step -- and very gingerly at that --
especially when confronted with what appears to be a seismic shift
in the global economy and investment markets. Consequently, they
won’t move until they are “certain” that they are not just
right, but that everyone else is shuffling in the same direction
at more or less the same pace.
The
price action of gold of late, which saw gold nudging $743, gives
me some hope that the scales are falling from the eyes of the
broader investment universe.
That
view is supported by an Op-Ed penned for the New York Times by the
highly respected and often contrarian (for a main street analyst)
Stephen Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia. Here’s an
excerpt…
Moreover,
the more the Fed under Ben Bernanke follows the easy-money Alan
Greenspan script, the greater the risk to the dollar.
Why
worry about a weaker dollar? The United States imported $2.2
trillion of goods and services in 2006. A sharp drop in the dollar
makes those items considerably more expensive — the functional
equivalent of a tax hike on consumers. It could also stoke fears
of inflation — driving up long-term interest rates and putting
more pressure on financial markets and the economy, exacerbating
recession
risks. Optimists may draw comfort from the vision of an export-led
renewal arising from a more competitive dollar. Yet history is
clear: no nation has ever devalued its way into prosperity.
So
far, the dollar's weakness has not been a big deal. That may now
be about to change. Relative to the rest of the world, the United
States looks painfully subprime. So does its currency.
I
probably don’t need to tell you the importance of this sort of
breaking away from the herd. Others look at Roach and wonder if
maybe he could be right… then broach the topic delicately over
martinis down at the local watering hole. Once the feedback loop
confirms that the Fed, and the global economy, is indeed trapped
squarely between a rock and a hard place, the stampede will begin
for the sectors we are positioned in, especially gold stocks.
While
gold stocks took a hit along with the broader markets in the early
August rush for liquidity – understandable, given the fact that
gold had not yet begun to move – as you can see from the chart
below, they have begun to catch the attention of the larger
investor herd. This rebound is nothing less, in our view, than a
preview of the portfolio protection and upside profits that the
better-managed gold producers will provide.

Sharp corrections
make for quick turnarounds, especially when the underlying
commodity – in this case, gold – is in a strong bull market.
The trend is our friend.

© 2007 David Galland
Managing Editor, BIG GOLD, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
David
Galland
is the Managing Editor of BIG
GOLD, the highly acclaimed monthly publication dedicated to
keeping investors closely in touch with opportunities in the
precious metals producers and near-producers with larger market
capitalization, the very stocks that institutional investors
gravitate to during periods of crisis. Large volume makes these
easy-to-buy, easy-to-sell stocks ideal for investors looking for
the extraordinary upside of gold stocks in a gold bull market, but
without the more speculative risks from junior exploration stocks.
Learn
more by clicking here now.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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