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, Good
Part Still Awaits Us
So far the ride
in Gold and Silver has been enjoyable. What needs to be
remembered, though, is that the good part is still out there in
the future. The global shift away from paper assets to real assets
is in infancy. Puberty has barely arrived. Denial is still too
widespread among the majority of investors. Individuals remain
doubters that the Real Paradigm will reign investment supreme in
the years ahead. Simply consider the facts in the first graph.
Which was correct, the purveyors of paper or the Gold Bugs? As
they are now starting to say, "better a bug than broke."
And by the way, which
group has been paying fees to the mutual fund advisor for those
five year stock returns?
From the
beginning of money time, sovereigns first and then later fiat
governments created national moneys. The purpose of those monetary
creations was economic power. Those earliest moneys were often of
precious metals. Greed being a basic characteristic of government,
the value of those moneys was clipped and shaved away. Ultimately,
the wealth confiscating power of fiat money was discovered by
governments. Those acts denied the citizens the full value of
their money. However, only for a time were they fooled.
Individuals learned that naive reliance on the face value of any
government money was not a wealth-wise act. The concept of money's
purchasing power became part of common understanding. Individuals
learned, and moved to moneys in which they had higher faith, the
moneyization process.
Mexicans rushed
from pesos. Russians ran from rubles, becoming the largest holders
of U.S. currency outside of North America. Argentineans got
trapped, confiscated and converted to government paper. The entire
history of paper money is of ultimate disintegration. Paper just
does not have staying power. It rots, mildews, burns, and can
simply fall apart. The simple rule of government, or fiat, money
needs to be remember. Governments
influence the value of national monies to benefit the existing
political power structure. In doing so, they transfer
wealth from individuals to the government.
Individuals are
increasingly moving to the only viable and liquid real alternative
to fiat money. Gold's price is where it is today due to
individuals selling government money and buying Gold, the natural
money. Each individual investor must evaluate the relative merits
of their national money. Some situations are more urgent the
others. New Zealand, for example, has recently demonstrated that
urgency can develop rapidly. Complacency is not rewarded by
foreign exchange markets. Getting
out needs to be done before the problems develop.
For
U.S. and Canadian investors the heart of the matter is the future
for the U.S. dollar. The second graph shows the
manifestation of the fundamental problem for both dollars. That
statement has been carefully worded. The U.S. trade deficit, or
current account deficit if you prefer, is not the problem. Rather,
it is measurement of the consequences of the problem. The
problem is the structural changes that have taken place in the
nature of the U.S. economy. In China, roads and
factories are being built. In the U.S., billions are squandered on
chasing the stock of an internet search engine. Around the world,
workers are going in the doors of factories each day. In the U.S.,
workers are busy designing way to download rap music to cell
phones. Which activity will generate the most future national
income and the more valuable national money?
For several years
we have listened to economists and analysts talk about how the
U.S. trade deficit would "self correct" as the dollar
declined in value. Well, the Canadian dollar, the Euro and others
have risen in value versus the U.S. dollar. Has the slope of the
trade deficit line in that graph improved? No, in fact it has
worsened. The problem is structural. The rest of the world is
working in factories. U.S. workers are playing on the internet and
designing world changing mortgage software.
The small box in
the graph is when the European central bankers identified the
crisis, and instituted the agreement on Gold sales. Since then,
the dollar price of Gold has more than doubled. Those central
bankers, led by the German central bank, saw the problem coming.
Yet, nothing tangible to remedy the situation has been done. As
longs as those receiving the green paper are willing to relend to
the consumer addicts in exchange for jobs nothing will be done.
Those same conditions that gave $Gold the first double, will give
it the next double.
As the U.S. swaps
green paper for computers and cars and oil, excess dollars are
disposed of in the foreign exchange market. Recycling of dollars
back into U.S. debt is not complete. As a consequence of that
ongoing surplus of dollars, the value of those dollars falls. That
depreciation of the dollar's value pushes up the dollar price of
Gold. As written before, what is happening is that the
Gold price of the dollar is declining. Two
factors suggest that the dollar price of Gold will continue
higher, though not every day or week or month.
First at
the national level in the U.S., denial and shifting of blame are
the policy norms. The new chairman of the Federal
Reserve, and other misguided analysts, contend the U.S. trade
deficit is the fault of the rest of the world. Economic policies
in other countries are the reasons for U.S. consumers spending
more than their income. Greenspan was motivated to please Wall
Street. Bernanke is motivated to please the Washington
politicians. Such a motivation is the prime reason for holding
forth with Bernanke's Delusion. Such views suggest future Federal
Reserve policy is likely to be supportive of the value of your
precious metals.
Second,
the trade deficit of the U.S. is structural, and long-term in
nature. As a way of understanding this consider
the third graph. Plotted in this chart is the number of U.S.
workers, in millions, employed in real work. That means they are
making real goods. As is readily apparent from this graph,
U.S. employment in jobs producing real stuff is no higher than it
was at the end of the 1960s.
Six economic
recoveries are shown in the graph. That is when employment expands
off of a trough. The latest experience is minuscule when compared
to the others. Current economic expansion in the U.S. has not
brought a recovery in jobs doing real work. Rather, U.S. goods
producing industries have been aggressively liquidated over past
years. Chairman Greenspan oversaw the liquidation of a whole list
of businesses. For example, textiles and furniture manufacturing
are now largely nonexistent in the U.S. The domestic auto business
is moving that way. Hey, that is ok. Everyone is going to be so
rich off their GOOG and hedge fund investments no real work will
be necessary.
The
U.S. economic expansion is built on consuming foreign made goods
paid for by money received from converting home equity into debt.
U.S. workers that do go to day jobs are involved in creating
mortgage debt, servicing mortgage debt, construction financed by
mortgage debt, or moving goods purchased by the cash from mortgage
debt. This structural trade problem is not to be reversed.
The factories are not coming back even if the yen goes to 50 or
the Euro to $5. Chinese renminbi might go to 2 to the buck, and
the factories will not move back. The consumers of
tomorrow are in that big swath of land from Poland to the Pacific
Ocean.
The U.S. has
turned to services as the savior, selling "insurance" to
each other and writing blogs. Services are nice businesses, but
cannot be easily exported. Most services are primarily a local
activity. Certain financial and insurance activities may be well
done in the U.S. However, the demand for such services is limited.
Until the world decides that mortgage banking services are the
equivalent of oil, clothing, computers and food, the U.S. economy
will be mired in a structural goods deficit.
The structural
nature of the U.S. trade deficit and denial by U.S. policy makers,
in the form of Bernanke's Delusion, mean that the U.S. dollar is
going down in value over time. With
the housing bubble now deflating, the Federal Reserve policy will
move to further destroy the value of the dollar in an attempt to
prevent a financial calamity in the mortgage debt markets.
Pressure will increase on domestic prices, regardless of how the
government statisticians attempt to cover up the problem. Rates
are going higher and a Mega-Recession is on the way. Only twice
before has a major economy faced a collapse in demand, the U.S. in
1929 and Japan in 1990.
Ramifications for
many economies around the world of such a development could be
severe. Recessions are a problem for two reasons, people lose jobs
and debts are not repaid. That latter problem is the biggest
concern. Debts will be liquidated, and not by repayment. Gold,
as the only money not a debt, will obviously benefit from such a
situation. For the neighbor on the southern border of the
U.S., the unemployment problem will exacerbate the shift to the
left in Latin American politics. "Chavesism" will have a
fertile soil in which to breed discontent. Each nation that has
gained from the U.S. consumer boom will have to face the
consequences of their biggest customer unable to borrow money for
purchases.
The neighbor to
the north has related issues that need to be remembered. The
fourth graph looks at the balance of trade for Canada at the end
of 2004 and 2005. Canada has benefited tremendously from a
consumer gone mad in the U.S. The Canadian trade balance has
improved dramatically over recent years. That improvement, along
with the hostile nature of U.S. banking regulators, has caused the
Canadian dollar to enjoy an improvement few would have expected.
Remember, though,
to look behind the headline numbers. Two other sets of bars are
shown. One set shows the Canadian trade balance without the
benefits of the trade surplus with the U.S. In the coming
recession all will not be lost, but vulnerability of the Canadian
economy to a slump in U.S. consumption is high. Canadian dollar
could sink dramatically when the U.S. enters the coming recession,
especially given the depth and duration of it. Imploding asset
price bubbles in Japan sent that country into a recession that
lasted well over ten years.
The final set of
bars is the trade situation if the energy surplus is removed. Yes
energy is a good business, and likely will continue to be so. High
energy exports alone are not enough for a strong currency. No
Swiss banker has ever complained of depositors shifting from
francs to nairas or dinars. Regrettably more often than not the
bounties produced by natural resources are spent by the government
rather than long-term investment. How long will it take the new
government in Ottawa to discover the cash cornucopia of western
Canada? Republicans practiced fiscal responsibility right up to
the next election.
The
trade deficit of the U.S. is both structural and long-term in
nature. The spewing forth to the rest of the world
of green pieces of paper is not about to abate soon. Analytical
delusion on the part of the Federal Reserve has prevented and will
prevent actions before a dollar crisis is in full bloom. With the
U.S. housing market already showing the first signs of implosion,
the Federal Reserve will "toss dollars from helicopters"
in a vain attempt to stop the collapse of mortgage debt. As the
U.S. economy plunges into a policy created economic abyss Canada
will be dragged along, like the roped mountain climbers plunging
to their death.
Dollar
denominated investors, both of them, should be using all buying
opportunities to add to their Gold positions. As shown in the last
two charts on US$Gold and CN$Gold, those opportunities present
themselves on a regular basis. US$1,300
Gold and CN$2,000 Gold are both no longer fantasies about which
Gold Bugs write. They are real possibilities!

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© 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.
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