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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
For
anyone living in the 20th century, the rising cost of living is nothing
new. Since the creation of the Federal Reserve, the dollar has lost
about 95% of its purchasing power. Chris Mayer explores our other
options for making sound investments...
Inflation, as it is
commonly known, has not always been the normal state of affairs. As
James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, has pointed out,
"From George Washington to the A-bomb, prices alternately rose and
fell... As Alan Greenspan himself has pointed out, the American price
level registered little net change between 1800 and 1929."
The
basic nature of our money assures it will lose value over time. It can
be created nearly at will and it is left in the hands of government
officials, who routinely spend more than they have. In such a state, a
nation's paper money has a shelf life like a fresh egg or a jar of
mayonnaise. It doesn't last forever. Unlike these foodstuffs, paper
money has no printed expiration date.
According
to economist Felix Somary, who experienced firsthand the devastating
monetary inflations that destroyed the German mark in the 1920s, it took
Rome four centuries to destroy its currency. Germany and Austria reached
that point in just nine years, ending in the famous hyperinflations of
the 1920s, and before that, Russia managed it in only five years.
Everyone's experience is different, but our collective experiments in
paper money have not created a currency that increases in value over
time.
The
life and value of a monetary unit has less to do with the wealth of a
country than with the simple facts of supply and demand. As the great
Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises noted, "Even the richest
country can have a bad currency and the poorest country a good
one."
For
some interesting insights into the flight of the dollar, I want to share
some thoughts I recently read from Justin Mamis, author of several
investment books and a longtime market adviser. Mamis was born during
one of the great turning moments in stock market history - 1929.
Mamis
talks about the experience of the dollar's immediate predecessor as cock
of the walk, the old British pound. The pound, the currency of choice
for a long stretch of time before the American dollar, was the product
of the British Empire. Imperial ambition and sound money, though, never
mix, and the pound probably peaked somewhere before World War I. After
World War II, Mamis notes, "The Empire peeled off like an onion
into a grab bag of different independent countries... the Bretton Woods
Agreement of July 1944 signaled the end of the British pound as the
world's reserve currency."
The
British pound continued to weaken against the dollar over the ensuing
years. Mamis notes: "Weakness, in a long-term sense, begets
weakness, like the flaws in an incestuous genetic pool."
The
dollar has been the world's reserve currency, or currency of choice,
since at least Bretton Woods. From this short collection of historical
vignettes, we can make one safe assumption. As Mamis puts it, the status
of being a "reserve currency is not a permanent appointment."
To
pinpoint when the dollar's status as the world's currency of choice will
end is an impossible task. These things tend to unfold over many years,
and there does not appear to be any immediate contender ready to ascend
to the throne. But that should not deter the investor from making the
basic assumption that the dollar of a decade hence will buy less than a
dollar of today.
I'll
include one last quote from Mamis, who advises us not to expect
long-term trends to always be immediately apparent or obvious. "We
must warn not to turn the next century's global changes into something
that has to be evident in its entirety all at once - or else denied. Nor
will our concerns be proven instantly 'wrong' because the dollar finally
has its oversold rebound." Well said.
This
situation - the whittling away of the dollar - creates the need for
sound investing. Basically, investors look to survive the ravages of
inflation (and taxes - of which inflation is a most insidious type).
Like the biting winds of nature that sculpt rock and carve stone,
inflation and taxes will grind the greatest piles of fortune to dust
over time. Preserving it, making it grow - essentially investing well -
is the investor's difficult art.
So
should you put your money in euros, perhaps, or some other foreign
currency? The euro may strengthen against the dollar, but I think the
dollar and the euro share the same fate, like the passenger pigeon and
the Carolina parakeet. The road to extinction may be of indeterminable
length, but the final destination of that road is not in doubt. The same
can be said of all our paper currencies, be they yen or pounds, pesos or
ringgit. All of them are on the same slide.
But
there are other ways to beat the decaying paper currencies that make up
so much of our financial wealth. The idea of tangible asset investing,
investing in stuff that has survived and prospered in a variety of
conditions, should meet the challenge in the years ahead.
Often,
I've looked at some great fortunes and drawn insights and lessons from
those experiences. Recently, I came across an old book, originally
published in 1907 and written by Gustavus Myers, called History of the
Great American Fortunes.
It
is a mammoth study of American wealth over the previous 200 years and
deals with fortunes in shipping, land, fisheries, railroads, trusts,
banks and other industries. I've only read a couple of the opening
chapters, which happen to cover the shipping and land fortunes. But some
of Myers' observations got me thinking about the durability of some
forms of investment over others. Shipping and land offer interesting
contrasts.
Myers
writes about the great fortunes of the shippers. "Enormous as were
the profits of the shipping business, they were immediate only. In the
contest for wealth, it was inevitable that the shipper should fall
behind. Their business was one of peculiar uncertainties. The hazards of
the sea, the fluctuations and vicissitudes of trade, the severe
competition of the times exposed their traffic to many mutations."
In other words, shippers' fortunes came and went, like the late-1990s
boom in tech stocks, the 1960s conglomerate boom or any number of
investment crazes of years gone by.
Many
shippers were aware of the vicissitudes of their business and often
invested some piece of their fortunes in land, banks, factories,
turnpikes, insurance companies and railroads. Those that didn't didn't
last.
Contrast
this with Myers' observations on those fortunes built on land, primarily
in commercial cities of importance:
Fortunes
built on land in the cities were endued with a mathematical certainty
and perpetuity. A lot of the tendencies and currents of the times
favored the building up of an aristocracy based on the ownership of city
property. With the progressing growth of commerce and population, with
immigration continuing... every year witnessing a keener pressure for
occupation of land, the value of this latter was certain to increase.
An
investment in land was an investment in something that was real and
often increased in value despite what its owners did with it. It could
be titled and its ownership made certain - unable to be copied by a
competitor.
One
more quote from Myers, who draws this interesting conclusion:
A
more formidable system for the foundation and amplification of lasting
fortunes has not existed...And that it is pre-eminently so is seen in
the fact that the large shipping fortunes of a century ago are now
generally completely forgotten, as the methods then used are obsolete.
But the land has remained land; and the fortunes then incubated have
grown into mighty powers of great national, and some of considerable
international, importance.
Now,
I'm not concluding that land is a new surefire investment bound to make
us all rich in time. But the best characteristics of land provide
insight into what makes a resilient investment, able to hold its value
in a variety of market conditions.
Land
has some characteristics, such as its durability, relatively fixed
supply and timeless qualities that have often made wonderful investments
and formed the keystone to later fortunes.
To
survive and prosper in the years ahead while the dollar crumbles, look
for real assets that share these qualities.
Regards,
Chris
Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning
Editor’s
Note: Chris Mayer is a veteran of the banking industry, specifically in
the area of corporate lending. A financial writer since 1998, Mr.
Mayer’s essays have appeared in a wide variety of publications, from
the Mises.org Daily Article series to here in The Daily Reckoning. He is
also the editor of the Fleet Street Letter.

© 2005 Christopher W. Mayer
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora
Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter
publishing companies, and the author of the free daily e-mail The
Daily Reckoning. He
is also the author, with Addison Wiggin, of “Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st
Century” (John Wiley & Sons).
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This
essay was originally published in The Daily Reckoning.
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