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.
To
the joy of day traders, the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee,
the rate setting arm of U.S. Federal Reserve, announced again
their lack of commitment to sound money. For a day U.S. equity
markets were filled with joy and short covering. FOMC statement,
released after their meeting, suggested diligence on
inflation(wink, wink), and suggested some concern for weakening
U.S. economy. Easier U.S. monetary policy may require just one
more indication of the collapsing U.S. housing industry and could
be only one committee vote away.
U.S.
monetary policy continues to be set as if the U.S. lives in
economic isolation from rest of the world. Investors, consumers,
governments outside the U.S. simply remain outside the analysis of
the U.S. economic situation. Despite the downplay by many cable
news gurus, the U.S. mortgage & housing bubble is pushing the
U.S. economy into recession. Canadian recession will follow
shortly thereafter. The second major asset bubble bust in seven
years is now about to crush the U.S. economy. This focus on solely
domestic concerns means the Federal Reserve might attempt to lower
interest rates. Such an action would ignore the response of the
forex market and foreign investors. U.S. dollar would slump
immediately to a new low, and likely ignite the Gold market.
First
Chart

While
the Federal Reserve was winking and Street analysts were
rationalizing, the forex markets were voting on the U.S. dollar.
That first chart is of a proprietary measure of the U.S.$’s
value based on the median value change versus eleven major
national monies. Due to the method of construction, it is a better
measure of central tendency of the trend than the popular dollar
indices. As is readily apparent from the first chart, the U.S.$
is approaching a new cycle low versus the important monies of the
world. Such a development would likely set
the stage for the entire Gold/Silver/Gold stock complex to move
upward in a new leg in the bull market.
Individuals
around the world are shunning the U.S. dollar. The second chart is
of the amount of U.S. currency, green paper, in circulation around
the world, plotted with black circles and using the left axis.
More important line is the red one which is the year-to-year
percent change in the amount of U.S. currency outstanding, using
the right axis, and can be thought of as a momentum measure. That
percentage change has been moving irregularly downward and
recently was up only a little more than 2% from a year ago.
Second
Chart

In
short, that meager year-to-year change means the world is holding
fewer dollars relative to the size of the global economy. In
real terms, after adjusting for purchasing power, the value of
U.S. currency in the world is shrinking. The average person on
the street around the world simply has less interest, desire,
willingness, need to hold U.S. dollars. Other national monies
better serve them, and they are moving their wealth to those
national monies. The values of Euros in circulation exceeds that
of U.S. dollars, indicating the shifting money preferences of the
world. U.S. dollar is playing a smaller role in the world each
day and it will continue to do so. With declining ownership, the
value of the dollar will continue to fall.
An
imploding mortgage & housing bubble pushing the U.S. economy
into a recession along with declining preference for holding U.S.
currency should send U.S. dollar much lower. However, the U.S.
dollar apparently has some important friends around the world.
Many central banks may be worried about impact on their own
economies of the U.S. dollar’s value declining as the U.S.
economy enters a recession. Some of their citizens might not sell
as many goods to U.S. consumers. As shown in next graph, central
banks have been gorging themselves on U.S. government debt.
Third
Chart
Each
week in the release from the Federal Reserve can be found the
holdings of U.S. debt by official foreign institutions,
essentially central banks. That level of holdings is the solid
black line and uses the left axis. Very soon these central banks
will own $2 trillion dollars of U.S. government and agency debt. A
similarly large pile of this debt is owned by foreign investors
other than official institutions. Of more interest is the red
line, which is the year-to-year percentage change in the size of
these holdings, and uses the right axis.
For
some set of reasons, the volume of purchases of U.S. debt by
central banks has moved dramatically higher in recent times. In
the latest week, holdings were more than 18% higher than a year
ago. Without this massive buying of U.S. government debt, the
value of the U.S. dollar would already be much lower and Gold much
higher. Why has this buying exploded upward? Are central banks
truly worried about the value of the U.S. dollar? Is this buying
to support the dollar? What happens to the dollar when this buying
slows?
Another
possible motivation does exist for this rampant buying of U.S.
debt by foreign central banks. Second bottom in the year-to-year
change line occurred shortly after the U.S. Congressional
elections. With those election results, the countdown to U.S.
withdrawal from Iraq began. U.S. troops will be out of Iraq, or on
their way out, by November of 2008, the month of the U.S.
Presidential election. Iraq, and most likely the region, will
be plunged into instability at a level never experienced. The
theocracy of Iran will be free to act in Iraq as it wishes.
Stability of oil production from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait will be a
question. Israel and Iran will move toward a resolution of the
nuclear weapons balance in the Middle East. Are central banks in
the Middle East moving their funds to the U.S. in fear of this
threat? These developments and the responses that will follow have
a large forecasting error. Investors will not be able to buy Gold
at US$650 after the fact.
$Gold
gave an important short-term buy signal in the past month, though
the duration of this over sold condition was not sufficient to
cause the intermediate indicator to produce a buy signal. Recently
$Gold started to correct that over bought condition, but that
process was interrupted. The kidnaping of British soldiers by Iran
had not been discounted by the market, and has spurred Gold
higher. That action has returned $Gold to over bought. However,
investors should always use such developments to their advantage.
Each time Gold has moved up on such events it follows with a down
move, assuming the world will not actually end as a consequence of
this event. Investors should prepare themselves to use that down
move, when it develops, to buy Gold.
Fourth
Chart
Silver,
as shown in the next chart, recently gave an important
intermediate buy signal. At current prices, Silver has moved to a
short-term over bought condition. Given that Silver is positioning
itself for a move to above $15, investors not owning Silver may
not want to wait till next buy signal. An averaging approach may
be better. With the price of Silver only about fifty cents above
the last buy signal that argument has some merit. Additionally,
given the experience of the past year, the next buy signal is
likely to be at a higher price rather than lower than the current
one. SLV might be a good consideration for those new to owning
Silver, or those not willing to buy the physical metal.
Fifth
Chart
Last
chart of is of the GDM, the Gold stock index used for GDX Gold
stock ETF, is a excellent picture of the essential price structure
throughout the Gold markets. Skepticism has capped the GDM
repeatedly at the 1150 level. However, all popular and persistent
resistance levels are taken out with a vengeance. Each time this
index has sold off an opportunity to buy has been created. The
concern for potential buyers is that it has repeated itself so
many times that end of the string may be near. A move above 1150
on GDM means the Gold stocks, and Gold, will not look back.
Sixth Chart
Too
many are thinking that another opportunity to buy Gold, Silver,
and the Gold stocks will be created in the future, or that paper
equities will survive, With that type of thinking, some do not see
need to bother with adding Gold to portfolios at the present. That
short sighted thinking is going to cause many investors to find
themselves seriously left behind financially. Given the
fundamentals for the U.S. dollar and the potential for instability
of a historic proportion in the Middle East, Gold is essential for
any portfolio. 1400 is a good target price for both U.S. dollar
Gold and the NASDAQ Composite Index. And remember, the Gold bugs
were the ones that first warned about the collapsing U.S. housing
market. And again we were scorned by the cable business media!

© 2007 Ned W. Schmidt
Editorial
Archives
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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