Moneyization:
The global financial phenomenon of individuals and businesses
moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest
confidence, or money which has a higher store of faith.
Or,
Structural Deficit is a Dollar Killer
A new year has
changed little. That is, nothing that would alter the long-term
optimism for Gold. The state of the U.S. financial system did not
change suddenly and miraculously in January. Those trend we
identified, now over five years ago, that were seen as sending
$Gold to over US$1,200 are still in place. What was not foreseen
is that our patience would be rewarded with a new, wonderful
Chairman of the Federal Reserve. A leader has been appointed for
the U.S. central bank that will not hesitate to destroy the value
of the U.S. dollar when the Mortgage Bubble collapses. Investors
in Gold and Silver could not have found a better friend if they
had done the selection.
Around the world,
investors in many countries have been rediscovering Gold. The
global rejection of fiat money is only beginning. That shift of
wealth to Gold from paper assets and fiat money is the moneyization
process. Individuals across the globe are shifting from paper
money to real money. Gold is rising again as the money of choice.
The world is moving from less desirable national monies to that
money, Gold, in which they have a higher faith.
At the heart of
the thesis for investing in Gold is the mismanagement of the U.S.
economy. Has anything changed? No, the massive current account
deficit of the United States continues on track. That deficit will
lead to a devaluation of the U.S. dollar and a rejection of dollar
denominated paper assets. Rather than change for the better, the
situation grows more dire as the structural nature of the trade
deficit increases. Simple
depreciation of U.S. dollar or appreciation of Chinese renminbi
can no longer remedy the situation.
Analysts and
writers tend to know which of the U.S. deficits is being
discussed. Readers often do not, and try to combine them in one
set of thoughts. Questions on the U.S. deficits come in on a
regular basis from readers and concerned investors, and deserve
some attention. The U.S. has three
important deficits, the current
account deficit, the deficit
of the national government and the savings
deficit. While they are indeed related, one relationship at
a time is an easier approach. The current account deficit includes
the trade deficit, and some other transactions. It is the net
transfer of money from the U.S. to foreigners for essentially
buying more foreign goods than the U.S. sells to foreign
consumers. That process transfers wealth from the U.S. to foreign
producers.
The danger
in this current account deficit of the U.S. is
that it is large, and growing larger.
In the first graph is plotted the dollar size of the U.S. current
account deficit using bars and the left axis. Again, the current
account deficit is essentially the trade deficit. Also plotted is
the more important metric, that annual deficit as a percentage of
GDP using triangles and the right axis. As
is readily apparent, the absolute size and relative size of the
U.S. imbalance in trade continues to grow.
How does this
deficit relate to the deficit of the U.S. government, about $600
on annual basis? While a connection exists in economic theory, the
more important matter is that this governmental deficit has been
financed by selling bonds to foreign investors to "soak
up" those dollars being sent abroad to foreign producers. In
a world without massive U.S. government bond issuance, foreign
investors would have had no choice but to sell those $800 million
each and every year in the foreign exchange market. That
action would have sent the dollar crashing to unimaginable
relative lows against other national monies.
The governmental
deficit at the national level in the U.S. created the liquid debt
into which those foreign owned dollars from the trade deficit
could flow. Without that debt, the U.S. dollar would have already
plunged to unimaginable lows against other national monies. The
wisdom of the U.S. government financial deficit is in part
separate from the economic impact of the reinvestment of the
dollars being spewed forth by the current account deficit.
Without that
liquid debt into which foreign investors have invested trillions
of dollars, the U.S. dollar's value would have collapsed. That
investment in debt has deferred, not eliminated, the foreign
exchange and economic impact of the cumulative current account
deficit. In short and for the moment, do not consider the
issue of the U.S. national financial debt, but rather focus on the
current account deficit.
Foreign official
institutions alone own in excess of $1.5 trillion of U.S.
government debt, held at the Federal Reserve. That investment has
allowed the world to avoid the repercussion of the massive U.S.
trade deficit.
If that debt did
not exist, they simply could have opted to buy Kansas and Iowa
instead. The selling of U.S.
dollars by foreign investors has simply been deferred by
investment in that debt.
The hope of the
"good times" economists at the Federal Reserve and on
Wall Street has been that the U.S. dollar will gradually and
painlessly weaken. That weakening will cause more U.S. goods to be
sold to foreign consumers and fewer foreign goods to be bought by
U.S. consumers. In the years of the Gold standard and prior to
1971 that might have happened. Unfortunately, the U.S. economy has
been radically restructured during the years Greenspan ran amuck
at the Federal Reserve. For example, the U.S. owned and based
automobile industry is being restructured and liquidated.
"Ford motor
will axe almost a quarter of its North American workforce and
close seven vehicle factories by 2012 . . . . The company intends
to cut 25,000-30,000 jobs by 2012 and lose about one-eighth of
senior managers by the end of March. The closure of the factories
will cut annual capacity by 1.2 m , or just over a quarter, in the
next three years. (Simon & Mackintosh,2006)"
Those
factories are not being moth balled, they are to be liquidated.
The machine tools and conveyor belts will not be sitting there
waiting for the dollar to revalue, but rather will be loaded on
trucks and hauled away. The factories will be bulldozed, and grass
planted so the deer and bunnies again have a place to have sex.
U.S. dollar could go to five to the Euro and the yen to below 80
to the dollar and those factories will not be reopened. The human
capital base, likewise, is being liquidated. Canadians are slowly
coming to recognize that their economy and employment are related
to the health of U.S. economy and companies.
Depreciation
of the U.S. dollar will not correct the trade deficit as it has
increasingly become a structural deficit. The U.S.
economy simply is no longer able to produce the goods the world
wants. Autos are merely the most recent and most visible
manifestation of the damage done to the U.S. economy by the
Federal Reserve in the past two decades. Bernanke's Delusion may
argue that the reason the U.S. has a massive trade deficit is that
foreign consumers are not spending enough, but the evidence does
not support that view. The auto industry is just the latest in a
long list of U.S. producing industries that have been liquidated.
Quite simply, the U.S. does not produce goods that consumers want
to buy. Consumers prefer Toyotas to Fords and would rather have
iPods than mortgage software!
Again, the sale
of those dollars transferred to foreign producers has simply been
deferred. The impact on the U.S. dollar's value has simply been
postponed. When recession arrives in the U.S., foreign investors
will begin to liquidate, either through sale or maturity, their
trillions in U.S. debt. The consequences will be felt in the
foreign exchange markets, and North American interest rates.
The
price mechanism is the means used by foreign exchange markets to
instill discipline on a rogue economy. As the value of a
nation's money falls, the price of imported goods increases. Since
the U.S. has failed to maintain productive capacity, U.S.
consumers will have no choice but to pay those higher prices.
Their standard of living will be lowered dramatically. What
will be the ramifications of a U.S. recession combined with
collapsing real estate prices while other prices are pushed higher
by a falling value for the U.S. dollar? Bernanke
"dumping money out of aircraft" will only exacerbate
this situation.
As the second
graph suggests, a U.S. recession of size is increasingly likely.
Plotted is the U.S. savings rate, monthly. Savings is equal to
disposable income minus consumption. Disposable income is after
tax income, essentially equal to pay check income. U.S. consumers
have been spending far more than their income. The data in this
graph suggest that U.S. consumption spending should fall $400
billion, or more. That will make a nice recession, and the impact
will be felt globally by those producing goods for the U.S.
consumer.
For
consumers in the U.S. to spend more than they earn, money must
come from one of three sources. Money to fill this spending
deficit can be borrowed outright, stocks can be sold, or extracted
from home equity by borrowing on homes. Thus
far consumption in the U.S. and production in other countries has
been financed by converting home equity into debt and spending the
cash acquired. Liquidation of homeowners' equity has been
taking place on a massive scale in the U.S., and other countries. U.S.
consumption is not financed by income, but rather by debt,
primarily related to homes. Now though, around the
globe we are starting to see the end of the speculative boom in
real estate prices.
And despite the
"blow and go" from "rosy view only" economists
and analysts, the real estate bubble around the world is starting
to show some serious signs of strain. First from Shanghai, the
epicenter of the Chinese economic miracle and now the home of the
upside-down mortgage,
"Once one of
the hottest markets in the world, sales of homes have virtually
halted in some areas of Shanghai, prompting developers to slash
prices and real estate brokerages to shutter thousands of offices.
For the first time, homeowners here are learning what it means to
have an upside-down mortgage - when the value of a home falls
below the amount of debt on the property. . . About 1 million
homes in Shanghai alone - about half the number of housing starts
for the entire United States in 2004 - are under
construction.(Lee,2006)"
And from Texas,
where housing prices collapsed in the 1980s, comes word of
foreclosures,
"In a
healthy local housing market, a sign of trouble has appeared. More
people are losing their homes to foreclosure than at any time
since the Texas real estate bust of the 1980s. . . .[Connie
Zetterlund, an agent specializing in foreclosure sales said]
'There are tons of foreclosures out there right now. . . .I'm
seeing lot of properties bought in 2004 and already going to
foreclosure'. (Brown & Augustums,2006)"
And from Germany,
the now former home of "fast cash" open end property
funds which were till December the number three investment of
choice,
"Now these
brick-and-mortar investments aren't looking so solid after all. On
Dec. 13, Frankfurt's Deutsche Bank shocked the German banking
world by freezing the $7.2 billion fund. . . . Freezing the fund
amounts to the equivalent of a bank closing its doors to a mob of
frantic depositors, and the result has been alarm in the German
banking community about the country's $105 billion property-fund
industry.(Ewing,2006)"
The massive
problems in the German property funds have not received adequate
coverage by the North American business media. Investors are kept
informed of every wiggle in the GOOG "Ponzi-like" stock
scheme, but little on the crumbling world of real estate. Reality
blind, real estate investors should research KanAM, for example.
Euro Property, 1 August 2005, reported that KanAm quit taking
cash into some funds because investors were providing too much
money. And then from The Wall Street Journal Eastern Edition,
20 January 2006, we find that KanAm "freezes additional fund
after asset run." One
month too much money trying to get in, and now too much money
trying to get out.
The global real
estate market, and especially in the U.S., is a giant
"musical bag" game. Someone is going to end up holding
the "debt bag" on this real estate lending. The Real
Estate and Mortgage Bubbles are bursting. The bell is being rung.
Who will end up holding the trillions in defaulted debt? And in
our, meaning Gold and Silver investors', corner is Chairman
Bernanke at the Federal Reserve. Can the Fed resist "dumping
money out of air craft" in an attempt to halt the collapse of
U.S. real estate prices? Will Federal Reserve be able to resist
destroying the value of the dollar in an effort to halt imploding
real estate values. Banks will again find out the meaning of OREO
on their balance sheets. Instead of encouraging your child to
learn computer skills, perhaps some course work in auctioneering
might be a better value.
Moneyization is
about finding the right national money in which to denominate your
investment life. Around the world, investors are shifting to Gold,
the only global money. The
U.S. dollar is the liability of an economy spending more than it
earns. Canadian money is a liability
backed by an economy whose biggest customer cannot pay its bills
without borrowing. Gold is the money of choice in the new
millennium. The Euro and the renminbi are only temporary steps,
and will serve as Silver coins once did. By the way, which
national money do you believe Canada will adopt?
The case for
Gold's Super Cycle continues well supported by mismanagement, past
and future, of U.S. economy by Federal Reserve. Short-term
euphoria has developed as Gold moved to new cycle highs repeatedly
in recent months, as shown in US$Gold chart above. While
still expecting the US$Gold train to arrive at over $1,200, now
may not be the time to jump aboard. Many of us have been
anticipating the Silver ETF for some time. That filing has
suddenly come as news to some investors, pushing Silver up and
raising hopes for Gold. US$Gold purchasers should perhaps be
sitting on their mouse rather than clicking it. Other buying
opportunities will develop. CN$Gold investors, see last chart,
should note that CN$Gold has recently not been as exuberant as
US$Gold
References:
Case, B., Brown,
S. & Augustums, I. Housing divide widens, (2006, January 21).
The Dallas Morning News.
Ewing, J. A
property market on ice. (2006, January 9). Business Week, p. 78-9.
Lee, D. A Home
Boom Bursts. (2006, January 8) latimes.com.
Simon, D. &
Mackintosh, J. Ford to axe 25,000 jobs and close seven plants.
(2006, January 6). The Financial Times, p. 1.

GO TO TOP
© 2006 Ned W. Schmidt
Archived
Editorials
Ned
W. Schmidt,CFA,CEBS is publisher of THE VALUE VIEW GOLD
REPORT. That report now includes a weekly message, TRADING
THOUGHTS, to help investors identify timely points for
buying Gold and Silver. His monumental report, "$1,265
GOLD", with 255 pages and 98 graphs, is now widely known,
and is available at www.amazon.com
or from the author by clicking HERE
This work has now been read by investors in over twelve countries
around the world. Ned welcomes your comments and questions. His
mission in life is to rescue investors from the abyss of financial assets
and the coming collapse of the U.S. dollar. He
can be contacted by Email.
Please remember that no method is perfect nor is the one
running the model.
All estimated returns are for the model portfolio and
do not reflect those earned on actual portfolios.
|