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,
Raining on the Parade
Last Monday we
watched rain, perhaps even some hail, fall on Wall Street's
parade. For two decades the Street had relied on a friend at the
Federal Reserve to keep the rain off them. The 20-year era of ever
descending rates protecting the paper asset groupies is over, and
that realization is shocking them. Around the world paper equity
markets are being ravaged by selling from hedge funds as they
withdraw back to hide under their rocks. As the first graph shows,
the sunshine has been in the Gold market and the rain has been on
the paper parade for more than eight years. Part of that
magnificent return was produced by the "sunshine" of
money from hedge fund and other funds. Now they are withdrawing,
producing a little rain on our Gold parade. That will pass, and
bull market to over US$1,300+ will resume!

That first
graph portrays the essence of the moneyization phenomenon. All
around the world investors have been moving out of fiat money and
paper assets into the one true global money, Gold. Wise investors
were able to foresee the change in the investment climate years
ago. The issue today is what the future holds, and that future is
also bright for Gold. In Barron's article, "Last
Laugh" by J. R. Lang, 5 June 2006, Jimmy Rogers's favorable
outlook, past and present, is recounted. From the article,
"According
to Rogers, new Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is 'an amateur with no
knowledge of markets' whose academic work revolved around how
nations could avoid depression by printing more money"(p.19).
With a Federal
Reserve Chairman willing to "print money and dump it from
helicopters," Gold bugs have a fairly secure future. The
Federal Reserve has not had an inflation hawk since Volcker, and
he was only appointed cause conditions were in a near crisis
stage. Until a crisis stage again returns, the monetary and fiscal
policy of the United States will hurt the value of the dollar and
help the value of Gold.
This morning
CNBC is reporting that Wachovia had downgraded homebuilder stocks.
Huh? Isn't this the company that just agreed to spend $26 billion
buying a giant mortgage portfolio? Maybe the management of
Wachovia does not talk to their analysts, just to their investment
bankers. While the statistics are still spotty, South Florida's
experience may be indicative of the success of buying a mortgage
portfolio. In Palm Beach county, for example, the value of
foreclosures has risen dramatically as shown in the second graph.
Note that the report is on "pre-foreclosure value,"
which will likely be well above "realized value."

The data for
that graph came from, "Risky loans come home to roost as
foreclosures" by Pat Beall of The Palm Beach Post,
28 May 2006, p. 1A, 10A. In that same article we find an
understatement, "'We know the whale is coming, we just don't
how big the whale is'," said Mike Flagg, a spokesman for the
Center for Responsible Lending, a Washington nonprofit that tracks
lending practices." Though to really get a taste for the
situation try Barron's "Second Homes: The Big
Glut" by R. G. Blumenthal (29 May 2006),
"It would
seem to have it all, four bedrooms, a guest house, a pool and a
rock waterfall. But the vacation home in Naples, Fla., hasn't been
drawing much interest from buyers, so the seller recently threw in
that most modern of amenities: the $1 million price cut. That's
brought the asking price down a full 25%"(p.21-23).
That article
also provided data from The Local Market Monitor on the
recent percentage of homes in some markets that have been
purchased by speculators. The speculative buying has ranged from a
low of 20% in Charleston SC to a high of 58% in Myrtle Beach SC.
In Naples, cited in the quotation above, the percentage purchased
by speculators is estimated at 45%.
So, how are the
speculators doing? The following table will help to answer that
question. A table is used because the appropriate descriptive
answer to that question would not be allowed on most web sites.
Perhaps an apt description would be that they are getting
hammered.
U.S.
HOUSING BUBBLE BURST TRACKER
in
Nominal U.S. dollars.
| April
2006 Data |
Single
Family |
Condo |
| Peak
Price |
Aug 2005 |
Jun 2005 |
| Price
Change - Annualized |
- 3% |
- 3% |
| Sales
Change - Annualized |
- 9% |
- 5% |
| Inventory
For Sale |
+35% |
+61% |
| Months
of Inventory |
5.9 Mos. |
7.1 Mos. |
| Speculator's
12 Mo. Total Return |
-174% |
-233% |
Data:
Median Prices from NAR; Return assumes 5% down payment.
As you can see
from this table, speculators are learning a painful lesson.
Speculating in real estate on margin is even more dangerous than
was the buying of technology stocks in 1999. Speculators using
margin take the risk of being wiped out, and that is what is in
process for many of them. Speculators that have bought
condominiums now can expect to bleed for seven more months before
being able to sell, on
average. Some local markets are in far worse condition.
The mathematics
of finance is why the pain is far from over for speculators in
housing. Because of the "math," prices are in the
process of only beginning a collapse that will ultimately exceed
50%, and last well into 2008. For example, suppose an individual
could afford a $2,500 per month housing payment, principal and
interest only. At a 5% rate and 30-year pay, this buyer could
borrow $466,000. The buyer would go out and bid $518,000, with 10%
equity, for a home. The price did not matter, only the monthly
payment.
If mortgage
rates rise to 7%, that same monthly payment will only allow a loan
of $376,000. No matter how much either the buyer or selling thinks
housing prices might rise, the new buyer can only bid $418,000 for
the house. The math alone drives the price down 20%. And at this
point no consideration is given to the ability of the borrower to
make the payments, the ability of the existing owner/speculator to
continue making existing payments, or forced sales by financial
institutions of foreclosed property.

The lesson is
simple, and little forecasting is involved. The "math"
of mortgage financing is what pushed up housing prices. The
"math" will be what pushes housing prices down. What
has not been yet factored into this thinking is that buyers might
not appear. As the third graph above shows, buyers
are disappearing.
Again, why care
about housing prices? Collapsing demand for housing means
construction workers out of work, workers not making car payments,
carpets that are not sold, and the closing of construction
businesses. Financial institutions will be taking losses, laying
of workers as they do. That brings us to the chamaeleon Chairman
now in charge of the Federal Reserve.
Last week he
was one thing, and this week Chairman Bernanke is an inflation
fighter. The Federal Reserve will fight inflation right up to the
point where the collapsing housing market starts to show up in the
headline statistics. At that point, the Chairman's true stripes
will be apparent. The FOMC will abandon their inflation fighting
immediately and adopt policies that will only lead to further
depreciation of the dollar. True
question is not what the FOMC does in June of 2006 but what it
will do in January of 2007 when the first major mortgage related
defaults occur. And what happens if one of those mortgage
market defaults is held by those gullible foreign investors? What
will the dollar do then?

The U.S. dollar
did get short-term oversold. Since then, many bearish bets have
been reversed on the basis of the Federal Reserve "getting
tough." However, the underlying negative trend has not been
reversed. The dollar index that is popularly quoted and traded is
a fairly useless measure, as we have written before. In the fourth
graph is an index of the dollar's value based on nine major
national moneys using the median change in exchange rates. This
median measure is probably a better indication of trends. The
recent bounce in the dollar's value is simply off a short-term
over sold level, and does not suggest a true bottom or the start
of a new trend. The bounce in the U.S. dollar is due to the
reversal of bearish trades by hedge funds, and cessation of
foreign businesses pre selling future dollar revenues.
As we write,
the penguins on CNBC are cheering as Gold prices go lower. They
are doing so with the same enthusiasm they did the day they
believed the Dow Jones Industrial Average was going to 12000.
Ignored is that the NASDAQ Composite has collapsed through
critical support at 2180. Now they have determined that a critical
bottom might be developing in the paper equity markets. They love
the recent slide in the prices of Gold and Silver. Perhaps so
should we, but for a different reason. The
departure of hedge funds and other funds from Gold and Silver is
creating a summer of repetitive buying opportunities.

US$Gold, as
shown in the above chart, is creating a buying opportunity with
this summer's bargain prices. The departure of leveraged momentum
money run by hedge and other funds has pushed prices down to
levels that investors should consider attractive. The indicator
has not been this over sold since the summer of 2005 when US$Gold
was below US$450. At that time, as now, the "market
strategists" on the Street were recommending the avoidance of
Gold, and Silver.

Last graph is
of Canadian $Gold. In that graph is also shown an over sold
condition not seen since last summer. The Canadian dollar has been
used as a "commodity play." That action has pushed the
exchange rate up to a level where Canadian investors should be
taking some profits, an opportunity not often presented. While of
course, the summer could continue choppy for CN$Gold. Canadian
investors should be buying for tomorrow's profits.

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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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