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.
The
Congressional election in the United States of last week has some
immediate ramifications that should not be ignored by investors,
especially those in North America. Foremost, the results have
serious negative consequences for the economic and global power of
the United States. To some childlike minds that may be good, but
the weakening of the global hegemon has never had positive
results. Those interested may want to see Kindleberger on the
causes of the Great Depression. Another hint that the People’s
Bank of China will diversify their foreign exchange reserves may
be, one, a partial consequence of that degradation of power, and,
two, encouraged by isolationist nature of the new Congressional
leadership. Quite simply, one does not buy the stock of a company
with weakened leadership and eroding market power.
Second
and of most concern, Nancy Pelosi is now two ‘heartbeats’ away
from being President of the United States. The President and Vice
President of the United States now become important and primary
targets of the radical Islamic clerics. The release of an audio
tape on Friday of Abu Hamza al-Muhajir, the leader of Al Qaeda in
Iraq, may not have been a chance event. In that tape al-Muhajir
said, “We will not rest from our Jihad until we are under the
olive trees of Rumeih and we have destroyed the dirty black house
– which is called the White House”(foxnews.com,10 Nov 2006).
This
statement may be no idle threat. Under the Constitution of the
United States, the Speaker of the House, which will be Nancy
Pelosi in January, is third in line of succession. In no time in
the history of the U.S. has the elimination of the President and
Vice President carried such reward to forces like Al Qaeda. This
group has openly praised the election results. A set of targets
with rewards for the Islamic terrorists is readily evident. Was
this audio tape a signal to operatives to begin implementing a
planned attempt?
Remember
too, their interpretation of the election is that the body politic
of the U.S. has rejected military action in defense of the U.S. or
its interests. Gold is insurance against the violent politics of
the world. Some in the world may see a violent transition from
Bush/Cheney as good, but reality is for different. While certainly
not predicting what Al Qaeda may do or not do, owning Gold in such
a world is certainly a good precaution. Remember, terrorism is not
a reason to buy Gold. Terrorism is a reason to own Gold.
Moneyization
is the movement of wealth to those national monies in which
investors have a higher faith. For the past decade central banks
accumulated a vast outpouring of U.S. dollars due to the Greenspan
induced consumption binge in the United States. With a mounting
pile of dollar denominated assets, central banks around the world
have been for sometime diversifying into debt denominated in other
national monies. The People’s Bank of China, with more than a
trillion dollars of foreign exchange reserve, is a “big
hammer” in the global financial markets. Diversification
of their foreign exchange reserves to investments not denominated
in U.S. dollars has serious and negative ramifications for any
investor foolish enough to be invested predominantly in assets
denominated in dollars.
The
details of the intentions of the People’s Bank of China are not
known, but the direction has been made clear. “‘We have had a
very clear diversification plan for several years,’ he[Zhou
Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China] said on the
sidelines of a European Central Bank conference in
Frankfurt”(Financial Times,10 June 2006,42) to Reuters. This
further reminder that the People’s Bank of China will diversify
its holdings of foreign exchange reserves should not be ignored by
investors.
One
foolish paper asset groupie was quoted as saying that this meant
they would buy U.S. corporate debt and mortgage backed securities.
To this near financial twit, such a move would be diversification.
In reality, such purchases would not be diversification. Adding
more dollar denominated assets to the already gigantic holdings of
such investments by the People’s Bank of China is not
diversification. Diversification
would be the movement of funds to assets not denominated in U.S.
dollars. The information in the following table can help
investors understand the possible direction of future investments
of China.
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WORLD
CENTRAL BANK RESERVE COMPOSITION
IMF,
MAY 2006
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|
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WORLD
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U.S.
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China
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%
Paper
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90%
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28%
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99%
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%
Gold
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10%
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72%
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1%
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Gold
Million Ounces
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876
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262
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19
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Paper
Investment $Billions
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$4,616
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$57
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$1,044
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The
above table summarizes the approximate investment in paper assets
and Gold by the central banks of the world. This data was derived
from the monthly International Financial Statistics(August,2006)
published by the International Monetary Fund. Naturally these
values are estimates, but are about the only reasonable numbers
available.
A
central bank, like the Bank of Canada or People’s Bank of China,
accumulates foreign exchange reserves when the nation runs a trade
surplus. Those inflows of money are invested generally speaking in
either investment grade government debt or Gold. For some time,
much of that money has been invested in debt issued by the U.S.
government and agencies. Currently about $1.1 trillion of U.S.
government debt and about $551 billion of bonds issued by U.S.
government agencies are owned by foreign central banks. The size
of these holdings is included in the weekly release of the Federal
Reserve, where these investments are held for the central banks.
Any
move by China to diversify foreign exchange reserves is reasonable
and to be expected given the inappropriately high investment in
paper assets. As the table shows, approximately 99% of China’s
$1+ trillion foreign exchange reserves are held in paper assets,
largely U.S. dollar denominated debt. Any
rational and logical diversification move would be away from paper
assets, principally U.S. dollar debt. The under owned asset in
China’s portfolio is Gold.
Central
banks of world have purchased U.S. dollar debt for two reasons.
First, dollars are what they have been receiving from U.S.
consumers in the purchase of goods. Second and most important,
U.S. debt is the largest and most liquid debt market. No other
nation has $8+ trillion of debt outstanding that trades on a
regular basis. The next step would logically be Gold purchases. Based
on the statistics in the above table, China would need to purchase
more than one hundred million ounces of Gold simply to be in the
same position as the average central bank of the world.
Those
running the People’s Bank of China are aware of the implications
of their current investment portfolio. They have been to the
schools. Some have advanced degrees. We are not talking about the
financially naive. They surely recognize that their dollar
denominated assets have been a bad investment for some time. As
the chart above portrays, the value of the dollar is near a cycle
low. As the value of the dollar has fallen so has the value of
their dollar denominated investments. Gold has and will likely
continue to perform better than their paper investments.
Also
shown in that graph is that when the value of the U.S. dollar
declines the dollar price of Gold rises. A
new low for the median dollar value is likely, and that should
push up the dollar value of Gold sharply. $Gold is in process of
positioning for a significant move higher. The results of
the U.S. Congressional election are part of the fuel for the next
significant move in $Gold.
Dollar
denominated investments have performed poorly for some time due to
the depreciation of the U.S. dollar. The managers of the PBC
realize that these dollar denominated assets have been losing
value in real terms, and will likely to continue to lose value.
Readily apparent in the above chart is that the U.S. dollar is not
much above its low for the last two years. Given the continued
outpouring of U.S. dollars, about $60+ billion a month, and the
already bloated holdings of dollar assets by central banks, the
value of the U.S. dollar has only one path of least resistance,
down.
The
above chart is of central bank holdings of U.S. debt, which are
held at the Federal Reserve. The solid line is the total of those
holdings, and uses the left axis. That total is approaching US$1.7
trillion. More important are the bars which portray the
year-to-year change in those holdings , using the right-hand axis.
While the size of the total holdings has continued to rise, the
rate of increase has clearly slowed. In late 2004 central banks
were accumulating U.S. debt at a $325 billion annual rate. More
recently the rate of accumulation has been at around a $225
billion annual rate.
As
central bank holdings have become bloated with U.S. debt, they
have been reducing the rate of purchase of additional U.S. debt.
Given that the U.S. trade deficit continues to be at about a $700+
billion annual rate, central banks must be diversifying their
holdings into non-dollar debt. That
lower rate of accumulation has caused the value of the U.S. dollar
to fall by 7% on the median-based measure in the earlier graph.
$Gold rose from about $400 to more than $600. The
potential fall in the value of the dollar and price appreciation
potential for Gold is considerable if these trends continue.
This
clearly negative situation will be exacerbated by an economic
recession induced by a housing market collapse that is now rapidly
approaching in the U.S. The major reason that interest rates have
remained so low in the U.S. is due to foreign central banks
purchasing U.S. debt at over a $200 billion annual rate. As
these purchase slow and then turn into liquidation, interest rates
in the U.S. will rise and the housing market collapse will be
accelerated. That will cause a further collapse in
conditions in the U.S. housing market.
The
national media has not really reported the developing situation
adequately. Perhaps talking about GOOG and other such nonsensical
speculations is more fun. According to RealtyTrac and reported by
sun-sentinel.com on 10 November 2006, foreclosures on home
mortgages in the third quarter were 318,355 nationwide in the
U.S., up 17% from the second quarter. Leader of the pack was
Detroit where one out of 80 homes was in foreclosure, up 42% from
second quarter. #2 was Broward County Florida(Ft. Lauderdale) with
one in 88 in foreclosure, an 87% increase. In Denver, Colorado one
of 90 was in foreclosure which is a 30% increase.
Wall
Street economists live in a fantasy world that believes the
Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in the early part of 2007,
and therefore engineer a miraculous saving of the U.S. economy
which will then glide into a soft landing. Did you ever see a
brick have a soft landing? That rate reduction will not make the
problems go away. Detroit is in housing collapse due to a
combination of auto industry job losses and mortgage excesses. An
interest rate reduction will not recreate those lost auto industry
jobs. The situations in Ft. Lauderdale and Denver are related
largely to speculative buying and inadequate underwriting
standards for mortgages which will not be reversed by some
interest rate reduction. When a boulder starts rolling down hill,
it will not stop rolling till it hits bottom. Such is the way
economic gravity works, regardless of any pixie dust spread by
Wall Street gurus.
As
the U.S. recession spreads and the credit problems become more
apparent, the U.S. dollar will come under further selling
pressure. Uncertainty over the credit worthiness of this debt will
increase, causing foreign investors to sell dollar assets. The end
of the dollar’s problems has not arrived, not even the beginning
of the end. Along with these fundamental problems for the U.S.
dollar, any attempt to lower interest rates will make U.S. debt
less desirable in a world where other interest rates are rising.
The European Central Bank and the Bank of England have already
indicated that rates are likely to be increased. Economists in the
investment world live in a fairy tale where in their thinking the
rest of the world does not exist. They and the other dollar bag
holders will find out different.
A
defense does exit against this dollar problem, and it is Gold. Now
that the Gold market has moved beyond the false rally caused by
hedge fund trading, real opportunities for investors are again
being created. The above chart, part of the regular charts in The
Value View Gold Report, portrays how the hedge fund impact was
unwound during June, creating a timely chance to buy. Another was
recently created in October. Given that $Gold is in the process of
creating a new formation separate and distinct from that false
pattern built on hedge fund buying, investors would be well
advised to prepare for participating in the unfolding Gold super
cycle that should carry to US$1400. Use all price corrections when
they come for buying.
Corrections
are a natural part of any markets, and corrections are likely in
$Gold. These corrections should be used for buying Gold. The
longer term fundamentals are too strong to ignore. Many are still
worried, and they must overcome that unnecessary worry. Part of
the positive feelings on Gold come from the continuing improvement
in Silver, shown in the chart above. Silver just continues to
build a nice chart picture. That unfolding improvement is due to
the fundamental buying by investors. Investors aware of the
future, and not being misled by CNBC’s paper asset groupies,
continue to demonstrate real demand for Silver.
Silver
was battered after the last hedge fund explosion. Since then, a
pattern demonstrating market rebuilding and resurgence has
developed. With Silver moving above $13, a test of the cycle high
is likely. Again though, remember that all markets are at the
present time somewhat over bought. These conditions often lead to
corrections which should be used to buy or add to positions.
The
GDM is portrayed in the above graph. This index can be found on
amex.com. The GDX, an ETF of Gold stocks, uses this index. GDX
also can be found on the Amex. Several distinct buying
opportunities have been created in the stocks. With the metals and
GDM over bought, the possibility of a correction exists. These
retracements, as shown in the chart, have been good times to buy.
A correction is likely, and would set up conditions for the next
advance. That move should carry through the 1150 level on the GDM,
and set the stage for a new cycle high in this measure of Gold
stock prices.
Markets
never go straight up. Many thought the false rally on the hedge
fund money would ever continue when $Gold moved above $700. Such
optimism was unfounded, and doomed to disappointment. Now that the
hedge funds are playing in the DJIA sandbox we can expect that
market to soon take the “cure.” Investors would be better
served by accumulating cash from paper asset sales and preparing
themselves for those times best suited for adding to positions in
Gold, Silver, and the Gold stocks.

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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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