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,
Follow the Money
While advice to
follow the money has been given far too often, it remains good
wisdom. Money is moving to where it is safest, and likely to rise
in purchasing power. Individuals have understood for more than
forty years that they cannot trust their government to maintain
the purchasing power of their national money. That phenomenon of
individuals moving to money in which they have a higher faith,
moneyization, is a real world phenomenon. A small sample of that
shift in money is shown in the first graph.
The first graph shows the current investment in Gold and Silver
ETFs . The triangles in the graph represent the investment in Gold
ETFs, and use the left axis. The bars represent the size of Silver
ETFs, and use the right axis. This is indeed a small sample as it
does not include physical holdings of Gold by individuals or other
means of investing in Gold and Silver. However, it gives a picture
of what individuals have been doing with their money. A
significant number have moved from their national moneys to Gold
and Silver.

The principal
reason for this move to Gold is that national moneys like U.S. and
Canadian dollars have been losing purchasing power. The second
graph portrays the Gold price of the U.S. dollar, which is its
purchasing power. Shown is how much of real asset money, Gold, is
required to purchase a U.S. dollar, or how much real asset money,
Gold, can be purchased with one U.S. dollar. The trend is obvious.
In the third
graph is shown the recent experience for the Canadian dollar. Some
strength is shown in the first part of the graph. That experience
was not lasting as it was built on two special factors. The first
was the onerous enforcement of U.S. banking regulations which made
many Canadians feel like criminals at U.S. banks. Rather than be
insulted by these actions, they took their money home, or
elsewhere. Second, that period was marked by low U.S. interest
rates on deposit accounts and negative returns on U.S. paper
equities. That graph also casts considerable doubts that the
Canadian dollar is a commodity proxy. "Paper" money
unless convertible into a real asset or commodity is always just
"paper" money.
Investors are
prone to shift wealth to Gold for several reasons. First, and
probably most important, is that the returns on paper assets have
been so dismal. Those returns are portrayed in fourth graph. Over
the past seven years, investors in U.S. paper equities have barely
had a positive return. Were it not for Greenspan driving interest
rates to forty year lows, the recovery in the latter period would
not have occurred. As purchasing power has not been maintained by
paper equities, investors have shifted to Gold.

Investors today
are at a fork in the road, One road is the rosy scenario created
by the "good news" boys and girls in the business media.
This road is marked by such a high degree of wisdom and discipline
at the Federal Reserve that the U.S. economy will be guided onto
Goldilocks path with low inflation, modest growth, and lower
interest rates. Understand the real motivation for these
forecasts. This is the forecast necessary to keep the hedge fund
industry viable. Without this outcome, many of these forecasters
will be picking grapes next year.
Two important
factors are ignored by the "good news" boys and girls.
Those items are particularly important to the purchasing power of
dollar-based wealth. First, what happens to the value of the U.S.
dollar on international markets if the Federal Reserve does
attempt to ease U.S. interest rates? Second rather than modest
growth, what if the U.S. economy is about to enter free fall due
to the implosion of the housing bubble? What happens as financial
frailties, created by the housing boom, become financial failures
in 2007? What happens to the U.S. dollar as financial difficulties
spread through U.S. economy?
A lot of
possibilities are ignored by the "good news" boys and
girls. Possibilities that serious investors, managing their own
wealth, need to answer. Those boys and girls managing hedge funds,
mutual funds and other creations of the Street have the luxury of
making such forecasts. The money they are managing belongs to
someone else. They get their fees and their salaries regardless of
what happens. Look again at that fourth graph. It is after fees.
Gold pays no fees, and perhaps that is why the Street shuns it.
Motivation for
this writing was the explosive rally in the U.S. stock market last
week. That was followed on Thursday and Friday by a hammering of
Gold in New York trading. All of this happened because of the
happy spin put on the release of U.S. inflation numbers. Despite
the near uselessness of these statistics, that was all it took to
ignite the emotions of the small children managing hedge funds.
Those U.S. inflation results are shown in the fifth graph, above.
Admittedly the
second derivative is a powerful force. However, seeing a slowdown
in that series seems to be somewhat of a reach. A similar pattern
occurred in early 2004. This measure of inflation, phony as it is,
then went on to rise further. Too many dollars exist in
the world for dollar prices to weaken. Certainly
moderation could develop for a period of a few months. The
trend, however, will likely be dominated by the excess supply of
dollars in the world.
The real issue
is what will be the reaction of the U.S. dollar on foreign
exchange markets if the Federal Reserve does attempt to lower U.S.
interest rates. Expectations of lower interest rates in the U.S.
ignore the damage that such an action would have on the value of
the dollar. A weakening dollar would then tend to push inflation
up. The Federal Reserve has again painted itself into the monetary
corner.
And at the same
time the collapsing U.S. housing bubble is being ignored. The mass
of anecdotal evidence will not remain hidden long. Toll Brothers,
a U.S. home builder, recently reported that sales are off 47% from
a year ago. Paul Owers' recent article, "Rampant overbuilding
means condo boom may go bust," in the Florida
Sun-Sentinel, 20 Aug 2006, is informative on the developing
situation. Owers wrote,
"Today,
though, the meteoric rise of condo development is on the verge of
crashing down to earth. . . As of June 30, almost 52,000 condo
units in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties were either
under construction or finished and still vacant . . . More than
11,000 units remain unoccupied in South Florida, according to
Metrostudy. . . . In Palm Beach County, for example, more than a
quarter of the 379 condos at The Moorings in Lantana are for sale.
. . . Industry observers call these high-rises with many vacancies
'see-through condos'."
One lucky
investor was mentioned. He had reserved a two-bedroom unit at
about $800,000. Lucky? The whole project was cancelled by the
developer. Read complete article at www.sun-sentinel.com.
Today, too much
pessimism is felt by some Gold investors. Rather, the future is
bright for Gold investors. Reality
is that if the Federal Reserve eases, the dollar will plummet.
The price of your Gold will rise. At the same time the U.S.
housing bubble is imploding. Financial difficulties will become
acute in early 2007. Foreign investors are likely to flee dollar
assets, sending the dollar down. This
period is one of those rare ones, not seen for 30 years, when the
situation is near ideal for Gold. In either hand of the
economist, Gold is going to glow brightly.
Silver is a
good starting place to look for direction. Events like Lebanon do
not flow as directly into that market as occurs with Gold. Hedge
funds are more likely to play in Gold on imaginary inflation news
than Silver. Too many are still struggling with the rally up to
the creation of the Silver ETF. The creation of the Silver ETF was
an extraordinary event. It represented a discontinuity in the
market's structure. Therefore, it should likely be considered a
unique event that should not cloud our assessment o the future.
Take your hand
and cover the left-hand side of the Silver graph. The picture that
remains is of a new market structure slowly evolving. That new
structure has a decisively positive trend to it. Focus on the new
structure and the future. A
move above $12.50 on Silver would likely mean a new cycle high is
possible before year end.
That Silver
structure should help sort our thinking on Gold. Too much analysis
of Gold also focuses on the hedge fund driven move of earlier this
year. Too much thinking focuses on Lebanon, phony news on
inflation, or whether the price of oil was up or down in the past
twenty minutes. The Federal Reserve has demonstrated its easy
money tendency with the minutes of the last FOMC meeting. Policy
action by the Federal Reserve will likely err toward ease, and be
resistant to raising rates.
Gold investors
are well positioned. If Federal Reserve eases, the dollar will go
down and Gold's price will rise. With the housing bubble
imploding, any rate increase will exacerbate the coming financial
problems. As a consequence, dollar falls as foreign investors flee
U.S. investments. Gold would then rise in value. The former
mistakes of the Federal Reserve created an environment conducive
to the Gold Super Cycle when U.S. interest rates were pushed to 1%
to hype the economy. The long-term target for Gold is now slightly
below US$1,400. Gold belongs in your portfolio, and the only
decision that remains is when to buy it! As the chart below shows,
buying when fund induced selling occurs can be accomplished.
Charts of Gold in Canadian dollars, Euros, and British pounds 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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