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.
Money serves many
roles in our lives. One of those roles is to subjugate us to the
control of the government which issues the money. We are bound to
our national money in many ways by our government. First, it
extracts taxes in the form of the national money. Governments
rarely will accept poultry in payment of taxes. Second, the
government pays the vast army of bureaucrats working for it with
the national money. Should we desire to do commerce with these
citizens, it must be done in the national money. The government
pays pensions, health benefits, and seizes our land and property,
all with the national money. We are forced to accept it in the
initial transactions.
From that initial
transaction on, citizens have choices as to which national money
they denominate their wealth. Latin Americans have traditionally
sought monetary haven in U.S. dollars, due to proximity. Russians
moved to the U.S. dollar after the rouble crisis. Canadians have
been hauling wealth out of the country for decades, so much so
that one would think it was a national hobby. Swiss banks at times
have been paid by depositors to take money, negative interest
rates. Individuals having
learned not to trust the value of all national monies, moved their
wealth to monies in which they have a higher faith.
Maintaining and
enhancing the purchasing power of your wealth requires
understanding the money illusion. Money
illusion is when the amount of money one has rises, but the
real value of that money is declining. The value of money is not
the accounting concept of how many dollars, pesos, or roubles one
possesses. The value of
money is an economic concept, or what that pile of money will buy.
Governments are
the masters of money illusion. Ever since sovereigns substituted
base metals for precious metals in coins, they have been trying to
fool the people about the value of money. The calculations on
consumer prices in many countries, especially the U.S., are
statistical manure. Why? So the citizens will not understand the
true destruction of money wealth. Governments prefer to steal by
stealth rather than overtly.

Some of the
recent monetary illusions have included that the U.S. dollar went
up 2005, and that the Canadian dollar has been stronger that the
other dollar. The first misconception comes from the attention
given to the dollar index, which is arbitrarily weighted toward
the money of some countries. It is not the value of the dollar,
just another arbitrary index such as the CPI. The misconception on
the Canadian dollar is typical of the conclusion reached when the
value of a national money is not viewed in a global context. Gold
is the global money. In the first chart the Gold price of both
dollars is plotted, or how much of an ounce of Gold is needed to
buy each dollar. Clearly,
the value of both national monies has declined. Finding a
national money that has indeed appreciated is difficult. Dollar
investors, Canadians in particular, should not allow money
illusion and misleading indices to misguide them.
Perhaps one of
the greatest monetary illusions of all times is in the recent era.
That being that the value of housing, particularly in the U.S.,
has risen. In simplest terms, the monetary value of one house will
buy just one house. Relative regional prices aside, the inflated
price of a house today in Anytown will do nothing more that buy a
similar house in that location. The purchasing power of those
dollars is simple one house. The victims of this illusion will
include those making loans based the illusionary price. Another
group that will lose is the borrowers that will be held liable for
the illusion created debt.
For some time, as
shown in the second chart, the
Gold price of a house has been declining. The
increase in nominal dollar value is an illusion. In that second
chart is also plotted the median price, in nominal dollars, of
homes that traded during the month. That series is plotted with a
line of triangles, and uses the right axis. The bars in that chart
are the Gold price, in ounces, of the median priced single family
home in the U.S. that traded in the marketplace. Left axis is used
for the bars. A year ago, about 440 ounces of Gold bought the
typical house that traded. In the latest month, only about 380
ounces of Gold were required. Since
July, the Gold price of a single family U.S. home has collapsed by
about 25%!

The following
table is part of an effort to fight News Illusion. Last week when
the February data was released on existing home sales, the popular
media and Street analysts tried to put a positive spin on the
data. Taking it as just another data point leads to the
information in the following table, which is aptly named. What is
unfortunate is that investors have to go to sites that specialize
in real money, Gold, to get such information.
U.S.
HOUSING BUBBLE BURST TRACKER
in Nominal U.S. dollars.
| |
Single
Family |
Condo |
| Peak
Price |
Aug
2005 |
Oct
2005 |
| Price
Decline - Annualized |
-10% |
-19% |
Data:
Median Prices from NAR
That table
suggests the danger in the "Can't lose money in real
estate" Illusion. Some of you are certainly thinking about a
condominium for retirement. The third chart portrays recent data
on the U.S. condominium market, in nominal or current dollars. As
is readily apparent, the rate of change in prices, plotted using
triangles and right axis, has a fairly ugly trend. The other line
is the inventory to sales ratio. That overhang of listed
properties is going to be "overhead supply" for a long
time. According to Paul Owers, writing in the Sun-Sentinel
on 24 March, for example, condo sales in Naples, Florida were down
50% from a year ago. Single family home sales did much better,
down only 47%. At current prices, about 390 ounces of Gold will
buy the median priced condominium. How much Gold should one put
away for that retirement life condo? About 100 ounces ought to do
it.
For
speculators, the unrealized losses are compounding.
Suppose a speculator bought the median priced condominium in
February of last year and sold last month. This speculator put
down 5%, borrowing the rest. For a year the speculator has been
making loan, association, utility, property tax, and insurance
payments. Rent for the period was zero, as qualified renters have
been rare. The seller pays a standard agent fee on the sale. The
cash return, before any and all tax ramifications, on the cash
investment is approximately NEGATIVE 200%. Now,
that is a great investment. This "never can lose money"
investment would have lost $2 for every $1 invested in the past
year. And, the downhill slide is just beginning! No, of course
they don't have to sell. The speculator can just let the losses
compound, like 1999 buyers of the NASDAQ.
Lastly for this
effort, is the Financial
Stability Illusion. Much talk is thrown about on
how the banking and financial system are so sound at the present. Such
is as it should appear at a secular economic peak. Minsky
tried, mainly in vain, to get us to understand that during a boom
financial fragility builds up in the financial system. Financial
institutions have gorged themselves on mortgage and real estate
loans and investments. Despite what many say, someone somewhere
owns all the mortgages that have been made.
Financial
fragility is the vulnerability of financial institutions to a
change in the economic status quo. Financial institutions
are today at the "maximum" exposure to the risks of the
Mortgage Bubble bursting. Yes, they look nice and stable. Yet
their financial fragility, or risk of loss, due to the mortgage
bubble is at the highest. They have been maximizing their exposure
to the most profitable investments and loans of the past decade
mortgages and real estate related. Kind of the reverse of
"its looks the darkest before the dawn."
The graphs so far
discussed make evident that the foundation of the Mortgage/Housing
Bubble is starting to crack. Investors need to understand how this
unwinding will play out. That unwinding has three phases. At
the end of this natural and often repeated progression,
housing prices in the U.S. will be 50-75% below current levels, or
the government will own the housing stock. That loss in value will
be split between those that own the loans and those that borrowed
the money.
The economy will
be in shambles at the end. Loans for any purpose will be near
impossibly to obtain. Dollar denominated investments will have
been ravaged. Foreign investors will be attempting to flee them.
Financial asset prices will be dramatically lower. Interest rates
in the U.S. will be rising dramatically. When bonds are sold the
dollar value or price declines, which causes the interest rate,
yield-to-maturity, on the bonds to go up. The dollar, both of
them, will plunge in value on foreign exchange markets. $Gold will
be appreciating daily. Let us consider the various phases so all
will understand the coming chain of events.
First is the Humpty
Dumpty Phase. If you have ever read this book you likely
saw a picture of Humpty sitting on a wall. The wall is not very
tall, and Humpty did not take a really big fall. His landing was
the problem. In the early phase of the housing crumble, the falls
are not really that big. But eggs are broken, and eggs cannot be
put back together again. Individuals and businesses are financial
damaged. Financial contagion develops as one person's financial
problems become someone else's when the bills cannot be paid. We
are in the Humpty Dumpty phase at the present. Little falls are
being taken and small eggs are being broken. In Florida, the
manifestation of this phase is evident in builders walking away
from contracts they cannot afford to do and buyers walking away
from contracts that now look like losers.
The Loan
Loss Phase comes second. In this phase the banks come to
realize that no matter how many phone calls they make or how many
letters they write, the borrower does not have the money to pay
the loan. The banks take the houses and businesses. A modest
amount of that is in process at the present. At first the banks
take the property, hoping for a full recovery of the loan's value.
Initially the bank tries to avoid selling at a loss. But if they
lent money to the speculator in the example above, they are going
to lose money. Slowly the banks realize that the loan value and
the market value of the house are far apart. The banks start to
write down the value of the loan, a loan loss. That hurts, in ways
we talk about later.
Finally, the Auditors'
Mentality Phase develops. In short, this phase is an
attitudinal one. The lenders freeze up. They are afraid to approve
loans. The "auditor" mentality takes over on loan
applications. Reasons to reject are found rather than reasons to
accept. Imagine being a loan officer that just got beat up by a
superior for some previously made loans gone sour. How would that
loan officer react to the next loan applicant? Round file! The
volume of loans to purchase housing becomes non existent. Now
remember the answer to this question. Where would house prices be
if all buyers had to pay with 100% cash, or even 50% cash?
Understanding how
the financial system works is important to comprehending the
consequences of the current situation. In this example,
MegaMortgageFinancial is our hypothetical financial institution.
As shown in the table, it has a billion dollars in equity and ten
billion in housing loans outstanding. The ratio of equity to
loans, shown in the bottom line, is 10%. Regulators are quite
pleased with this performance. That ratio is well above the
required, or desired, ratio of, say for example only, 8%.
At
the top
MegaMortgageFinancial.com
| Assets |
|
Liabilities |
|
| Loans |
$10000 |
Deposits |
$9000 |
| OREO |
0 |
Equity |
$1000 |
Equity
to loan ratio = 10%
With the slide in
housing, our financial institution takes a hit on some loans. Not
a lot, just 5% of their loan portfolio goes sour. They write off
five hundred million dollars of loans against their equity, as
shown in the next table. Yes, the accounting is simplified. Loan
loss reserve is just equity made to look like a contra asset
account. The loan account and equity are each reduced by five
hundred million due to the losses. The equity to loan ratio is now
5.3%. Since that ratio is below the required or desired level,
MegaMortgageFinancial can make no more home loans, or loans of any
kind. The only way left to buy a house is with cash. What do
prices do in that situation?
After
the slide
MegaMortgageFinancial.com
| Assets |
|
Liabilities |
|
| Loans |
$9500 |
Deposits |
$9000 |
| |
|
Equity |
$500 |
Equity
to loan ratio = 5.3%
The coming
economic slide in the U.S. will be based on the forced liquidation
of debt. Housing debt will be extinguished by the pencils of
accountants. Financial values that might have existed will no
longer exist. Financial institutions, those now owning the
mortgages, will be hemorrhaging red ink. The equity that many
consumers thought existed will have disappeared as do all mirages.
Consumer spending will collapse as consumers will be unable to buy
on debt. Cash will be the only way of making purchases.
Many, however,
believe that the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates and all
will be restored. But remember the poem, all the King's men could
not put Humpty back together again. Low interest rates did not
return the NASDAQ to over 5,000. Additionally, such a rosy
scenario ignores the ramifications of foreign investors. It
considers the U.S. in financial isolation, which is a false view
of the world.
Gold will be the
money to which investors migrate. Canadian $Gold, bottom chart,
rising to a new cyclical high is probably an indication of the
market's recognition of these problems. Opportunities for
dollar-based investors, both of them, to buy Gold regularly
appear, as shown in the graphs below. Do not miss these future
opportunities to participate in Gold rising to US$1,300+. Chart
also available in Euros.



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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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