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, Is
the U.S. Alone In The World?
The answer to
the above question has been received. We, meaning those of us in
the U.S., are alone in the world. Nothing exists beyond the
shorelines of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans are reached. Minutes
of the FOMC, the rate setting committee of the Federal Reserve
System, confirm that U.S. economic policy is set in isolation. No
interaction with rest of the world is presumed to exist. The U.S.
does not owe the rest of the world trillions of dollars and does
not rely on foreign investors to finance a deficit created by
excessive spending.
That
aside, the Federal Open Market Committee did Gold investors
another favor on 20 September. The FOMC left interest
rates unchanged. With only one member committed to a sound dollar,
the remainder showed their political stripes. The stripes have to
be political as the economic pronouncements coming out of this
group are dubious at best. The FOMC is fundamentally committed to
erring toward ease. The FOMC will attempt to lower rates at the
first realization of how sick the U.S. housing industry is
becoming. That view can only exist in a group that believes the
U.S. economy exists in isolation. Everything else in the world is
deemed to be exogenous, and therefore irrelevant to U.S. economic
policy.
Despite the
policies of the Federal Reserve being supportive of the Gold
market, a high level of concern seems evident in the hearts of
Gold investors. The pessimism has not been this high since early
2005. On the flip side is that optimism on the U.S. dollar has
likewise not been this high since early 2005. With the structural
nature of the U.S. financial outflows increasing, the only
reasonable direction for the value of the U.S. dollar is down.
False rallies such as the dollar has recently experienced should
be used as an opportunity to sell dollars and buy Gold.
Markets have
been clearly distorted by the Hedge Fund Mania that has swept
across the U.S., and much of the rest of the world. A trillion
dollars, guided by childlike mis-managers, has flowed in and out
of markets in a manner that has distorted the pricing function.
This giant pool of money is frantically searching for returns to
justify its existence. Mob psychology has taken over this group.
Group think leads to money flowing disproportionally in one
direction and then another, usually all at the same time.
That distortion is making it hard for investors to make rational
investment decisions. Rational technical analysis in such
markets is difficult, as the classic rules were built on naturally
functioning markets. With hedge funds running rampant, we do not
face naturally functioning markets. However, the swan song for the
hedge fund mania is starting to play.
The collapse of
Amaranth in about a week shows the lack of discipline that exists
within this sector. Clearly the industry's attempt at risk
management is in a near bankrupt state. While most of us have lost
money sometime in our investment activities, few can claim to have
lost $5 billion in a week. All the talk about risk management is
clearly just smoke to make it easier to mislead investors. The
process of vetting fund managers lacks the sophistication of the
process used to determine the sex of chicks. Imagine trusting your
money or the money of your company or the money of your clients or
the money of your college to a hedge fund. Or imagine doing
something really wild and crazy, like putting the money in some
firm's fund of funds. Send a cold chill down one's back to the
wallet just thinking about it.
But why does it
matter? The activity of hedge funds has been dominant in the
trends of various markets. The runs experienced in Gold and Silver
that have since given way to declines were driven by the activity
of hedge funds. Do not believe that the move of oil to $75 and
then down to $60 is how a natural market for oil should function.
The abrupt slide of Silver about two weeks ago, which coincided
with the demise of Amaranth's portfolio, certainly was not a
natural market action. More likely it was the result of hedge
funds scrambling elsewhere to participate in the picking of
Amaranth's bones.
Hedge funds
magnify risk through leverage. That leverage is how Amaranth
managed to lose $5 billion in a week. Each "Amaranth"
will have an incremental impact on investor psychology, or in the
case of hedge fund participants, "speculator
psychology." Given the massive leverage in hedge funds and
the results of Amaranth, ultimate losses to speculators in hedge
funds could be in the range of US$200-400 billion. That
implosion will have a dramatic impact on paper asset markets in
general. The beneficiaries will be the holders of Gold and Silver.
Recent action
in the Gold market has been blamed on optimism on the U.S. dollar.
One would seem to have real trouble developing any really
optimistic arguments on the dollar, but anything is possible.
Remember that the mangers of funds are only concerned with
performance over the next ten minutes. For that reason, any chain
of thinking on the dollar is possible, and will be traded with
enthusiasm.
The first graph
is of an index for the U.S. dollar created using the median
changes in exchange rates of the U.S. dollar against a basket of
important national monies. For that reason and others, it is
superior to the trade weighted dollar index in assessing the
dollar's strength or weakness. The Dollar Median Index is
attempting to break out to the downside. Should it fall below 92
we can expect a period of material weakness in the dollar, and
strength in $Gold. The move from about 99 in the middle of 2005
was followed by an irregular move lower. $Gold moved higher the
entire time. The slam to below 94 helped to create the move in
$Gold to more than $700. While covering only a short time period,
no evidence of support for the dollar can be found in that chart.
Both the
anecdotal evidence and fundamentals for the U.S. dollar continue
to point to a lower value. The Streets can have fantasies over
soft landings and the next rate move by the Federal Reserves, but
the facts on the dollar are pointing down. The second graph is an
example of just one small piece of the negative fundamentals.
Plotted in that chart is the amount of U.S. currency in
circulation. The world, perhaps for a long list of reasons, is
losing interest in using the U.S. currency. Around the world,
consumers have higher faith in other monies, including Gold, are
switching to them. This shift to monies of higher faith out of
dollars is the essence of the moneyization process. Another
problem with the U.S. dollar is that it is over owned, by almost
everyone.
One day a week
or so ago that old story that scares Gold investors so much came
up again. Fear of central banks selling Gold lives in the heart of
every Gold trader. Central banks own a lot of Gold, and if they
did sell in size the price of Gold would likely go down in the
short-term. The third chart, below, uses the latest data from the
IMF, and does include China. Note clearly that chart. Yes, central
banks have been reducing their Gold holding for a number of years.
However, the price of Gold has not gone down as a result of that
selling.

The price of
Gold went up despite this central bank selling. Why? The
deteriorating fundamentals of the U.S. dollar are bigger than the
market impact of central bank selling. Second, some central
bankers are brighter than those in England and Switzerland. That
higher level of understanding has actually restrained the selling.
Gold has provided a higher return than all those holdings of U.S.
debt. Additionally, every ounce they sell now means fewer ounces
to sell in the future. Markets
focus on tomorrow, not yesterday or today. What
investors should also know is that central banks own far more
paper assets than Gold. The situation is shown in the
next graph. The motivation for this graph was a recent article,
"The changing composition of official reserves," by
Phillip Wooldridge in the September 2006 issue of the BIS
Quarterly Review.
In the fourth
graph is plotted the percentage of central bank reserves
represented by Gold and paper assets. The small green portions of
the bars represent the percentage invested in Gold.
Over the years shown in the graph, the approximate percentage of
central bank reserves invested in Gold has been about 9-10%.
That level is down from 100% in 1900 and about 60% in the
1980s(Wooldridge,2006). The red parts of the bars
represent the percentage invested in paper assets, or about 90%. Therefore,
the really worrisome portion of central bank reserves for the
markets should be the size of their paper holdings.

The largest
piece of this paper asset overhang is U.S. government and agency
debt. A far greater risk exists to the market for U.S. debt from
the $1.7 trillion mass of U.S. debt held by the central banks than
that which their Gold holdings represent to the Gold market. This
data can be further explored, and will be in the October issue of The
Value View Gold Report. In that report will be argued that
the data suggests China may buy more than a 100 million ounces of
Gold in the coming years.
If any source
of risk really exists for the Gold market from these central bank
holdings it is that held by the U.S. government. When central
banks begin to reduce their exposure to U.S. debt, the U.S. dollar
will fall in value. A crisis is likely to develop in exchange
markets, sending the value of $Gold materially higher. At that
time the U.S. may need to use part of its Gold holdings to support
the dollar. The offset to this development will be that $Gold will
be priced much higher. However, a possible scenario could be that
the U.S. will swap Gold for the U.S. debt holdings of foreign
central banks. Could China and the U.S. simply swap U.S. debt for
Gold?
Inappropriate
optimism on the U.S. dollar and unnatural market action brought
about by hedge funds are coming together to create an opportunity
in $Gold rarely seen before in the past year. The selling down of
$Gold has created a level of pessimism that has not existed since
2005. Investors should be using these bargain price levels to add
to positions, or if new to the market to start a position. See
next graph on $Gold and one on CN$Gold which follows.

The last graph
is of CN$Gold. A clear price opportunity is being created. With
hedge funds pushing down the price of oil and Gold unnaturally, a
chance to buy Gold should not be ignored. Currency contagion
caused many Asian national moneys to plunge in value during that
area's currency crisis some years ago. Currency contagion is
likely to impact the Canadian dollar when the U.S. dollar falls
into crisis. Now is the time to use those over priced dollars to
buy Gold. Charts are also available for Euro Gold and GBPGold.

This article
was not intended to be about the collapsing housing & mortgage
bubble in the U.S., but habit seems to require some comments on
the subject. On Monday, the report on existing sales of homes in
the U.S. was released. Sales were down 13% from a year ago, and
prices fell 2%. (How can prices fall?) The
momentum of the U.S. housing bubble has been broken. The U.S.
housing industry is about to enter free fall.
Canadians that think they are insulated from this problem have one
big question to answer. Who will buy those two-by-fours?
References:
International
Monetary Fund(2006,August).International Financial Statistics.
Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund.
Wooldridge, P.D.(2006,September).
The changing composition of official reserves, BIS Quarterly
Review, 25-38.

GO TO TOP
© 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.
|