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, It
is what it will buy.
Motivations for
today's writings are two events, one large and one small. The
first of those was the report on consumer prices for the month of
April 2006 in the United States that was released on Wednesday, 17
May. Subsequent to that release, paper equities took a horrible
slide. Gold and Silver followed those markets lower. These market
reactions seemed to surprise almost all.
Second, a
letter to the editor in a popular business publication caught my
attention. The writer had clearly ended the week poorer due to
owning paper equities. His lament was apparent in his question. He
wanted to know why stocks went down if equities were a hedge
against inflation. This inquiry is not rare, and shows a lack of
understanding of the fundamental theory of paper equity valuation.
This statement is not meant as a criticism of the writer but
rather the general state of understanding of how financial
equities are valued.
That inflation,
wherever one lives, is generally higher than reported by
government agencies is generally accepted. The statistical garbage
on inflation put out, for example, by the U.S. bureaucrats is
perhaps worthy of some special award. Oh well, we are all stuck
with our individual governments. However, we don't have to confine
our lives to either their statistics or the fiat money produced by
their central banks.
Since most of
us consume both petroleum and food, the headline number on the
U.S. CPI is most relevant. The first graph portrays the
year-to-year change in the total U.S. consumer price index over
the past ten years. That
the rate of U.S. inflation has broken out of the ten-year trading
range is fairly obvious. More important, little evidence
exists to suggest any moderation of a material nature in this
measure of inflation.
As we know, the
policy makers in the U.S. are addicted to the statistical nonsense
of core inflation. As they probably travel to work in government
furnished limousines and eat in government-subsidized cafeterias,
that is probably a reasonable view for them to take.
Indications that the core rate of inflation in the U.S. is likely
to move up can be found. For example, consider the second
graph.
The second
graph is of the median CPI calculated by the economics research
group at the Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank. In calculating the
CPI various individual components are created representing various
categories of goods. Food and energy are clearly the most well
known. A median is the value that divides the sample into equal
components. Half of the components are rising more than the median
and half are rising less than the median. Median measures are less
influenced by extreme values as is the case with the common
average or a weighted average.
What
may have spooked the financial markets is that such measures as
this appear to have broken out to the up side. Notice how
this inflation measure has penetrated the 2.5% resistance level.
The consensus forecast in the financial markets, and with many of
those deluded individuals running U.S. monetary policy, was that
inflation was low and/or moderating. Reality has a way of trashing
consensus estimates. With this development, expectations of lower
interest rates faded rapidly. In the short-term, the Federal
Reserve is motivated to raise rates again. In the longer term the
Federal Reserve will continue to have a preference for easy money,
which is why so many of us prefer Gold to fiat monies.
Equity markets
quickly reacted to this change in the outlook. What
was not expected by many was that this sell off would spill over
into the precious metals and other commodities. Markets are
financially connected, and that is more true today than ever
before with hedge funds dominated trading. To understand the
connection, imagine one giant margin account that owns equities,
metals and commodities. If the stock component declines in price,
the equity in the account shrinks. The margin account will need to
reduce overall market exposure. To accomplish that, metals and
commodities were sold. Surprisingly, in this situation inflation
hedges go down with higher inflation expectations. Note that this
is definitely a short-term situation, and that it may repeat
itself many times until the hedge fund monster is decapitated.
The recent sell
off in many commodities and precious metals has encouraged many of
the paper asset groupies. Caution is appropriate here. Leveraged
buying by hedge and commodity funds had pushed many commodity and
metal prices well above their trend. This "price
fluff," while making us all feel good, was artificial and
doomed to ultimately disappear. That "price fluff" has
now been largely eradicated. While an immediate renewal of the
uptrend for all is unlikely, the bull market in Gold and Silver
remains intact. The price of Gold is determined by inflationary
monetary policy, not copper and zinc prices.
Before moving
on to the second question, let us reflect on the recent record of
inflation about which so many analysts and economists applaud.
Many have commended the inflation record of the Federal Reserve.
Reality is a lot less kind. For the sake of discussion, let us
consider the CPI less food and energy. The moderate rate of
increase in this measure is in reality like being a little bit
pregnant. A low rate of
"inflation" simply means that the purchasing power of
the money is being destroyed at a moderate rate. Purchasing
power is still being destroyed.
The third graph
shows the purchasing power of a dollar based on the CPI less food
and energy. As is readily apparent from the graph, a U.S. dollar
of today buys only about 80% of what it did ten years ago. 20%
of its purchasing power has been destroyed. Federal
Reserve policy, if one were to accept the CPI less food and energy
as meaningful, has been effective only if one believes that
reducing the purchasing power of your dollars by about 20% is
commendable. Those holding U.S. dollars should realize that
the Federal Reserve has, one, not maintained the purchasing power
of the dollar, and, two, has no intention of doing so in the
future.
The
free market price of Gold should reflect any reduction in the
purchasing power of national monies. For that reason so
many over the years have moved their liquid wealth to Gold from
their national monies, the moneyization process. Gold is
inherently an inflation hedge while paper equities are not, as
discussed below. Gold is
efficiently priced in a free market to reflect purchasing power of
every national money. That process does not happen with
paper equities.
In the fourth
graph has been added the purchasing power of $Gold, again using
the CPI less food and energy. The results are quite pleasing for
those that have held Gold, and as was previously observed
unpleasant for holders of U.S. dollars. As we know, the
unfavorable periods in the 1990s was when central banks were
leasing and selling excessive amounts of Gold. That activity was
curtailed in 1999 when European central banks realized they were
hurting themselves by doing so.

The second
question mentioned at the outset was that investor's concern for
the merits of paper equities as an inflation hedge. That
misunderstanding is quite common. This view stems from those
occasional periods when the real, inflation adjusted, value of
equities has risen. No
theoretical reason exists for equities to provide a total return
in excess of inflation. They can, but not necessarily and
certainly not for all stocks.
Space prevents
the full exploration of the derivation of the following equation,
but we promise to do so in another article. The value of any
investment is the present value of the future cash flow to be
generated by that investment. The value of a stock is, therefore,
the present value of the near infinite stream of dividends to be
paid in the future by the company. To save time and space, the
value of that series converges on the value in the following
formula. All values in the denominator are decimals.
Value of a
stock = D1
k - gn
where: D1
= Next dividend
k = discount
rate, required rate of return, for stock
or, real rate
of interest plus inflation rate plus risk premium
gn =
infinite growth rate for stock
or, real rate
of corporate growth plus inflation pass through
Inflation
enters that formula in two ways. First, it raises the discount
rate. That flow through is near immediate in today's world. k
rises, and the value of the stock declines. Second, inflation may
increase the growth rate of dividends over time if companies are
able to increase their prices faster than inflation. No guarantee
exists for this latter process. Paper
equities can be in some periods of time inflation hedges, however,
do not count on that happening. Due to the way the value of
a paper stock is determined, the expectation of them being an
inflation hedge is likely to be disappointed.
Gold
is indeed the superior inflation hedge, but it still trades in a
market. At the present time the markets are unwinding
excessive short-term pessimism on the U.S. dollar and over
enthusiasm for commodities. These conditions had pushed both Gold,
and Silver, to over bought conditions that had persisted for
weeks. Funds that previously bought heavily in all commodities
have been scaling back those positions. Opportunities are being
created in the Gold and Silver markets as a consequence of this
selling.
This retreat of
speculative funds has broadly impacted commodity prices. That
selling will diminish in impact as time passes. The underlying
demand for individual commodities and metals will then again
dominate. In some cases, this support may come at lower prices.
The dominant component of demand for Gold, and Silver, is investor
demand which does not exist for other metals and commodities.
While investors may hoard Gold in their safety deposit boxes, few
will likely put a ton or two of copper or zinc in their basement.

This summer
could be one of some long lateral patterns in both Gold and
Silver. The World Cup, 9 June to 9 July, will likely make all
global markets somewhat more illiquid this year. Multiple buying
opportunities
will be
created, as the last two charts suggest. Those buying
opportunities in Gold should not be ignored. The inflationary
tendency of central banks continues to destroy purchasing power.
Price corrections will occur, and investors should take advantage
of these buying opportunities so that they are on board for the
ride to over US$1,300. Charts for Euro Gold and GDM also
available.

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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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