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HALF
TRUTH?
One
often hears that gold does better in deflation than inflation. This is a
half-truth. By definition, under the gold standard that existed
throughout most of the 1800’s, gold must do well in a price
deflationary environment. After all, if prices are dropping, and gold
remains pegged to the dollar, and one dollar remains one dollar,
logically what else can happen? However, once gold was un-pegged to the
dollar and became increasingly demonetized in the 20th century, its
price behavior relative to inflation, deflation, and commodities became
increasingly erratic. The situation becomes even more complicated given
that the terms “inflation” and “deflation” have very different
meanings and imply different policies for different economists.
A few
paragraphs down I begin my discussion of various forms of “good”
and “bad” inflation and deflation. “Goodness” and
“badness,” is meant relative to a laissez faire or “bottom up”
approach to economics commonly referred to as the “Austrian School.”
I agree in principle with the Austrian
School that when we search for truth, there should be no
philosophical “disconnect” between the “bottom up”
fundamentalist principles of microeconomics that apply to small
businesses and Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and the
national macroeconomic policies practiced by government and central
banks. Therefore, the Austrian school provides an invaluable perspective
that I return to repeatedly in increasing detail throughout this series.
The
late Dr. Roy W. Jastram of UC Berkeley published a now out-of-print
landmark study of gold price behavior titled The Golden Constant – The
English and American Experience 1560-1976. Franklin
Sander, a Tennessee-based gold dealer, posted data from his book on
the Internet. In addition, I have supplemented his data with additional
data and commentary (provided by the time periods covered by hyperlinks)
by market strategist Dan
Ascani (designated as "DA").
Dr.
Jastram felt his data demonstrated a “retrieval phenomenon” where
“gold prices do not chase after commodities; commodity prices return
to the index value of gold over and over.” He demonstrated that for
short time periods, gold, commodities, and inflation do not necessarily
move together, although he concluded that gold has maintained its value
in terms of real purchasing power in the very long run. His data also
shows how gold tended to do well in periods of deflation during the era
of the gold standard.
The
stagflationary 1970’s provide an important precedent in recent
American financial history, particularly since I believe the decade
ahead will echo the 1970’s, only worse. After Nixon removed the dollar
from the $35 an ounce international exchange rate in 1971, gold began a
run up that culminated at a London PM fix of $850 an ounce Jan 21, 1980.
This might be interpreted as a variation of Dr. Jastram’s
“catch-up” theme. As a prelude, broad money supply growth (M3) had
increased to around 10% a year during much of the Johnson administration
(Nov 1963-Jan 1969) and the Nixon years (Jan 1969-August 1974). In the
mid to late 1960’s the Fed kept a lid on the price of
internationally-traded gold during an episode called “The London Gold
Pool” in which it sold off U.S. gold reserves as part of a campaign to
help keep inflation indicators suppressed while Johnson was
simultaneously funding the Great Society programs and the Vietnam War.
Eventually the lid blew off of government and Fed intervention. More on
this in Part IX, “The Leviathan State: From Consolidation to
Excess.”
It is
also worth noting that the period from 1951-1979, not to mention most of
the other economic periods provided in the chart above, actually
consisted of several distinct economic phases that need to be analyzed
in detail before one can draw rigorous conclusions. The data is provided
here simply to help provide an intuitive overview.
To get
a sense of how different phases of the business cycle impact on the
price of gold, we must first disentangle the very different and often
confusing meanings of the terms inflation and deflation
that are bandied about by the government and national media.
 |
The
Honorable Humpty Dumpty:
"When I use a word, it means just what I
choose it to mean -neither more nor less."
Alice responded:
"The question is whether you can make words mean so many different
things."
The Hon. Humpty Dumpty replied:
"The question is,
which is to be master -that's all." |
INFLATION
AND DEFLATION
THE “GOOD” AND “BAD” FORMS OF EACH
Bad
inflation. This type of inflation typically means an expansion
of the money supply and bank credit ahead of gains from productivity and
asset growth. More money and credit chasing fewer goods and services
typically means higher prices over the long run.
The
public often thinks that light to moderate bad inflation is good for the
overall economy both in the short term and the long term. It usually
thinks that any degree of bad inflation from its inception is
automatically good for gold. Both beliefs are demonstrably false in many
if not most cases.
Government
and central bank spokesmen typically call this good inflation. They
claim that credit expansion and government deficit spending
“stimulus” helps to generate full employment and full capacity
utilization. This in turn supposedly generates additional earnings and
economic growth that offset any increased indebtedness and long-term
price inflation.
From
their “top down” macroeconomic vantage point, this is definitely
good inflation to the extent that it allows government and Fed officials
to create money and bank credit out of thin air and spend heavily
without the aggravation of overtly raising taxes and receiving immediate
negative political blowback.
One
reason why this is really bad inflation is because it results in an
eventual loss in real purchasing power for the average consumer. This is
a hidden form of taxation. Creating more money and credit per se does
not in itself create any new wealth any more than a counterfeiting ring.
The act of simply increasing spending and the process of creating more
useful goods and services in a balanced economy are usually two very
different things. “Stimulus” spending typically creates the
short-term illusion of prosperity at the long-term price of distorting
the economy and debauching the currency.
In the
short run, the price inflationary impact of new money and credit is
usually muted and ignored by most investors. One reason often involves
governmental deceit. The article “They Are Lying to Us Again,”
archived at www.jimrogers.com
describes how government can selectively edit and misrepresent
statistics.
Price
inflation may also remain initially muted because excess liquidity can
first find its way into stock, real estate, or bond asset bubbles. It
may experience a prolonged delay in running up commodity and consumer
prices.
Lastly,
price inflation has been reduced because the dollar has served as a
global reserve currency since World War II. Dollars currently comprise
around 68% of global reserves. Foreign banks and trade surplus partners
have been willing to sop up excess dollars for their own reserve needs
or to try to humor the “last remaining global superpower.”
Gold
has historically been slow to react to the initial onset of bad
inflation. A likely reason is that the first waves of broad money supply
and credit growth (M3) tend to give a false impression of economic
health. M3 growth may take longer than a year to begin to show up in
price increases for consumer goods. In the initial phase of this cycle,
banks acquire more deposits, and in turn have more money to lend.
Spending increases, corporate earnings may rise, and the stock market
may be spurred on by accelerated business activity.
As
business activity picks up, the Fed may hike interest rates ostensibly
to “cool the economy” while insisting that it has inflation tightly
under control. Higher bond yields look even more attractive relative to
gold bullion, which pays no interest.
So-called
“bond vigilantes” at major investment firms may insist that the free
market is raising bond yields at the “whiff of inflation,” and this
in itself is adequate to help cut back excessive monetary growth. The
public usually buys off on this, and ignores the fact that investment
houses have their own axes to grind.
Investment
firms typically want to avoid “unnecessarily” scaring their fixed
income clients into another asset class such as gold that could help dry
up their bond business. Their bond departments are usually major profit
centers. Investment firms often use the attractiveness of bonds for
conservative investors as a means to open up new accounts and build up
their asset base.
Elderly
people, who control a major portion of this country’s wealth, tend to
perceive gold and other commodities as volatile and risky. It is not
uncommon for an elderly person to shop long hours among brokers to get
an extra 50 to 75 basis points in bond yields. He may need to be almost
hit over the head with very strong gold trend evidence and very bad
inflation news before switching over to gold. We may be talking about
the kind of person who is becoming increasingly reluctant to drive at
night.
In Part
X of this series I discuss evidence supplied by the Gold Anti-Trust
Action committee that major investment firms have other conflicts of
interest. As two examples, they have apparently been in bed with the Fed
through the repurchase agreement market that provides backup support for
them to manipulate certain markets. They also need to retain access to
Long Term Capital Management-type Fed bailouts to deal with the high
risks entailed by their very profitable hedge fund clients.
Adam
Hamilton charts the short term paradox where a rise in interest rates
can hurt gold in the short run in his July 20, 2001 article “Real
Rates and Gold.” In the long run, higher interest rates should
coincide with rising real inflation, and motivate people to buy more
gold as a hedge against inflation. However, in the short run, if people
think that interest rate increases are not part of a sustainable rising
trend, they may sell off their gold and drive it lower and jump into
bonds to try to capture higher yields. Once it becomes more obvious that
inflation is very real, is rising, and is no longer containable, then
gold starts moving up along with long-term interest rates. But that
usually comes very late in the bad inflation cycle.
Fraud
Note: Usually government and central bank authorities
never admit that spending stimulus and credit expansion is
“inflationary,” in fact, quite the opposite, even though M3 growth
may already be showing an upward diagonal line on the money
supply charts for a number of years. Inflation is always politically
unpopular, and politicians typically have to be dragged kicking and
screaming to admit to it. In addition, government tends to be a heavy
borrower, and does not want to hike its own interest rate burden. Nor it
is anxious to index upwards retirement, Social Security, and other
transfer payments in the social welfare state. Nor does it want to
excite union members and other workers into hiking wage demands. To the
contrary, inflation has always been the government’s sneaky way of
dropping real wages to bring the labor supply and employer demand curves
in alignment and increase employment while pretending to be “doing
something” to stimulate the economy and boost wages.
According
to “Austrian” economists, the short-term illusion of heightened
economic health created by the “stimulus” spending equivalent of a
“counterfeiting ring” has other negative ramifications. M3 growth
creates false pricing signals that can seriously distort the economy and
undermine entrepreneurial calculation and capital formation.
“Austrians” argue that artificial stimulus and artificially low
interest rates encourage speculative and wasteful economic activity
precisely at that time in the classical economic cycle when the
write-down of bad debt and more savings and more prudent investment are
required. “Stimulus” tends to help sweep underlying problems under
the rug where they may fester and grow larger.
But
even worse than false pricing signals and governmental deceit, however,
is the ability of the Fed and US Treasury to actively engage in active
interventions that further distort and compromise the free market.
According to the Gold Anti Trust Action Committee (GATA),
the Fed has orchestrated central bank dishoarding to artificially
suppress gold to create the illusion of low inflation. GATA also
believes that through the repurchase agreement market, the Fed has
induced its Wall Street allies to use the gearing of futures contracts
to suppress the price of gold and silver even further. As previously
mentioned, bullion dealer Blanchard & Co. has filed a $2 billion law
suit alleging that J.P. Morgan Chase and Barrick colluded in an
artificial gold price suppression scheme.
Good
inflation: Since I am discussing opposing concepts, I
necessarily have to mention “good inflation” to complement the
aforementioned discussion of “bad inflation.” The only problem is
that I have never seen anyone discuss such as thing as “good
inflation” in this context. At the risk of sounding academic, “good
inflation” could mean adding new assets to the system (asset
“inflation” in the sense of asset accretion or asset accumulation)
while keeping the money supply roughly the same, such as doubling the
land mass of the U.S. for nominal cost under the Louisiana Purchase or
adding more manufactured goods without raising prices due to enhanced
production methods. These accretions tend to drive down average prices
while adding tangible wealth and would tend to have the same positive
impact as good deflation mentioned later.
Bad
Deflation: This is the kind of environment where gold often
outshines all other asset classes, and merits extended discussion. This
is the overall underlying environment I believe we have been in since
the Nasdaq top in March 2000, and it could last for many more years. But
first some background on the bizarre situation that currently exists
with both the gold market and the stock market.
Bad
deflation is typically the back-side of the aforementioned bad inflation
cycle, where over-inflated asset prices created by excessive
“stimulus” start coming down. As discussed in my paper “Amidst
Bullish Hoopla: A Behind the Curtain Look at Fed Desperation and
Intervention Wizardry,” where I describe stock market overvaluation in
more detail, the Fed has been fearful that if the stock market bubble
starts deflating too quickly, this could lead to a negative wealth
effect, reduce consumer confidence and spending, undermine bank
collateral, dramatically increase bankruptcies and unemployment, and
risk a depression. However, by dropping the Federal Funds rate down to
1% and by gunning the money pump by about 10% a year over the past few
years to stave off asset bubble deflation, the Fed has risked creating
more bubbles elsewhere, such as in the real estate and bond markets.
This money supply growth has been showing up in rising consumer prices.
This is the type of inflation that the Fed and US Government try to
ignore. Hence, we are now simultaneously experiencing consumer price
inflation while witnessing overvalued stock, bond, and real estate
markets that threaten serious deflation.
As a
response to the Fed’s alleged anti-deflation activities (and related
factors), the S&P 500 has risen about 43% since March 2003.
Conversely, as a response to fears about long-term inflation (and
related factors), the unhedged gold stock index (HUI) has climbed over
500% in the last three years in a “stealth bull market” that most
Wall Street firms have downplayed.
Historically
the gold market and the stock market have been negatively correlated.
Rising long-term inflation is usually very good for gold, and very bad
for the stock market. The bullish activity of both markets may be
signaling two completely different outlooks for the US economy.
Negative
real interest rates are usually a crucial factor in a bad
deflation cycle to account for the out-performance of gold. Negative
real interest rates mean that the rate of real inflationary erosion in
purchasing power from the long-term impact of the underlying growth of
M3 is greater than the nominal interest rates one can get from CDs at
the bank. Although Americans have been in a negative real interest rate
environment since at least the mid- 1990’s, it has become particularly
dramatic since the Fed reduced the Federal Funds rate down to 1% by
summer 2003 while maintaining broad money base (M3) growth in the 8-10%
a year range.
An
important cause of negative interest rates is central bank intervention.
Let us compare how interest rates set by the Fed may differ from those
that might be created by a free market. The Fed has dropped its Federal
Funds rate to a 45 year low of one percent to ostensibly stimulate the
economy to avoid a collapse of puffed-up asset prices. The Thirty Year
Treasury bond hovered around 4.9% as of mid Jan 2004. In my Amidst
Bullish Hoopla article, I discuss how hedge funds can work with the Fed
and allied Wall Street firms to transmit lowered interest rates out the
yield curve with the bond carry trade. Also, the Fed can use Open Market
Operations to buy bonds to prop up bond prices and drive interest rates
down, often by making purchases with money created out of thin air that
ultimately create a hidden tax on the average American.
Contrast
all of this with M3 growth, a truer indicator of real long-term
inflation. This has been growing between 7%-10% a year since 1995.
Let’s say 8% on average. If the free market were to price a bond, it
would probably take into account this truer long term inflation rate,
and add on top of that a risk premium of let’s say a historical
average of around 2.50% . That gives us 10.5% as a rational hurdle rate
for setting a free market floor on expected interest rates. Now, let’s
deduct the aforementioned Thirty Year Treasury rate of 4.9%, and we get
a possible real negative interest rate of 5.6%. For individuals in money
market funds that pay less than 1%, the negative spread could be over
9.5%.
Gold,
which pays no interest but has the potential to appreciate, starts to
look very attractive compared to the negative real rates of return on
bonds, CDs, and money market funds. Better yet for gold, if interest
rates eventually go up, the resale value of bonds will come down, giving
bond investors double black eyes. They will lose both from their low
rate of current interest income combined with capital losses on the
reduced resale value of their bond holdings. (When interest rates go up,
bond resale values go down). Conversely, to the extent that rising long
term interest rates signal rising long term inflation, this becomes
another plus for gold. Last, but not least, once investors sense that
stocks have peaked and may be set for a price decline (deflation), gold
and other “commodities” begin to look relatively more attractive. We
live in era of central bank and government intervention whose continuous
stimulus efforts to arrest asset price deflation are likely to add
inflation to the pro-gold story.
There
is evidence that markets may tend to be inefficient in adjusting to an
environment of continually rising interest rates. British economist
Prof. Tim G. Congdon noted in his WGC
research study no. 28: “As the double-digit annual inflation rates
of the 1970s came as a shock to savers, it took them time to catch up
with the new investment paradigm. Interest rates lagged behind inflation
and real interest rates became negative, creating the ideal conditions
for rising prices of gold and other so-called "hard assets"
(oil, real estate, commodities).”
Fraud
note: From the Austrian viewpoint, bad inflation cannot go
on forever, even as a way to stave off bad deflation. Bad inflation
stimulates speculative mal-investment, excessive debt, and asset bubbles
that distort the economic system while debauching the currency. The
economy may become so distorted that new waves of money only generate
stagnation and inflation (“stagflation”), analogous to a drug addict
whose fixes start breaking down the body. Since summer 2003 the M3
growth and money velocity charts have been tapering off, partly because
the system is getting so saturated with cheap credit that the Fed is
beginning to push on a string. Also, a debauched currency may trigger a
currency crisis (a rapid exchange rate slide) that can cause foreign
imports (10% of US GDP) to become more expensive and contribute towards
prolonged malaise.
Austrians
believe that often the best thing to do is simply leave the economy
alone and allow the free market to sort things out. Go ahead and let
asset bubbles deflate on their own. After a period of brief but intense
pain from bankruptcies and collapsing prices, entrepreneurs and other
bargain hunters typically step in, reshuffle assets into more productive
enterprises, and economic growth will start again. That actually
happened in America during the Martin Van Buren administration
(1836-1840) that experienced a sharp stock market correction and a money
supply contraction of 30%, somewhat similar to the first two years of
the Great Depression beginning in 1929. The US Government actually
reduced its spending during this period, and the economy turned around
at the end of the painful two years. (c.f. Dr. Jeffrey Hummel, “Martin
Van Buren: What Greatness Really Means”). In contrast, the Great
Depression dragged on from 1929 to the 1940’s despite the Hoover
administration interventions and FDR’s New Deal. Dr. Murray Rothbard
claims in America’s
Great Depression that government intervention actually served
to prolong and deepen the Depression, and in fact created a second
depression within the Depression.
I
consider the aforementioned two paragraphs a “fraud note” under the
theory that many senior government and banking officials in America are
aware of all of this, but are afraid to educate the public for fear that
this could lead to the curtailment of pork spending and central banking
special privileges that I describe in Parts VIII and IX about the
history of gold in America.
Good
Deflation: This involves price level declines from
improved efficiencies and from asset accretions. The money supply is
held relatively constant. Earlier I discussed how the Industrial
Revolution helped drive down prices while Britain was on the gold
standard. It helped double the purchasing power of the British Pound
over a one hundred year period. When currency is pegged to gold, price
deflation must by definition be good for gold. Today we see another
dramatic example of good deflation in the computer chip industry in
which computing power has steadily declined in price in accordance with
“Moore’s Law.”
America
is also experiencing a form of price “deflation” from low cost
imports from Asia, which actually retard the rise in American consumer
prices. I hesitate to label this “good” deflation because of many
complicating issues. The theory of international free trade is supposed
to enhance the wealth and prosperity for all parties involved, and not
result in the lopsided situation we see in America today with a serious
loss in its jobs and its manufacturing base and a dangerous rise in
debt. (A worthy discussion of these issues would require another paper).
Most
countries today inflate their money supply at much faster rates than
productivity gains. This submerges the gradual accretive effects of good
deflation on the price action of gold. The big moves in gold prices
usually pertain to other factors such as the deflationary side of
business cycles, central bank interventions, fears of runaway inflation,
and changes in currency exchange rates.
HOW
GOLD REACTS TO CHANGES IN THE DOLLAR EXCHANGE RATE
In
August 2003, Newmont Mining President Pierre Lassonde commented:
“"Eighty percent of the variability of the gold price is due to
the U.S. currency valuation. So where the dollar is going is the key
determinant of the U.S. dollar gold price. And when you look at the
structural imbalances in the U.S. today, they are no different than they
were 12 months ago -- in fact they are worse,"
A
decline in the dollar can help create a rising floor underneath the
price of gold due to an arbitrage principle often referred to as the “Law
of One Price.” This can apply to other high unit value, highly
transportable goods in addition to gold.
Here is
an example of how it might work: Suppose that $1 US dollar equals 1 unit
of Foreign Currency (FC). Imagine that ounce of gold sells for US $400.
An ounce also sells for FC 400 units. Now suppose as a result of a
dollar slide, US $2 now equals FC 1 unit, but the gold price has not
changed in the US or in the foreign country. I can now buy an ounce of
gold for US $400 in the US, sell that gold at an FC bank for FC 400
units, and then swap the FC 400 units for US $800. By repeating this all
day long, I would put upward pressure on the price of gold in US
dollars, downward pressure on gold in foreign units, and upward pressure
on the value of the $US, causing a decline in the $/FC unit conversion
rate.
The
formula for the arbitrage is: $/ounce of gold = $/FC unit * FC
unit/ounce of gold.
If we
keep FC/ounce of gold constant, and increase the $/FC ratio because of a
slide in the value of the dollar relative to FC units, then $/ounce of
gold in the U.S. is likely to go up.
According
to gold analyst Paul
Van Eeden, currency exchanges changes are more likely to drag gold
along than gold prices changes are likely to impact on currency
conversion rates. This is because the gold market is relatively small
compared to the gargantuan size of currency markets.
While
currency exchange movements may have a high correlation with short to
intermediate term gold price swings, they do not explain how the price
of gold gets calibrated in the first place before the currency change
effects kick in. My history of gold in America in Parts VII to IX should
give the reader a better sense of how the baseline value of gold can
dramatically decline as the banking system reduces its gold reserve
requirements and engages in other “demonitization” processes. In
addition, currency traders arbitrage against a wide basket of goods, and
not just gold alone. Finally, it may be hard to distinguish between how
movements in gold prices and currency exchange rates may relate to
psychological expectancy effects among traders (also known as a
“self-fulfilling prophecy”) as opposed to mathematical relationships
based on hard fundamentals.
Analyst
Clive
Maund has noted that gold has tended to go sideways or slightly down
in foreign currencies such as the Euro, South African Rand, and in
Australian and New Zealand dollars as they have appreciated while the
dollar index has declined
dramatically over the last two years. They have indicated a weak but
not insignificant “Law of One Price” relationship.
Many
gold gurus have noted that the rise in the price of gold denominated in
US dollars in the last two years has actually reflected a dollar bear
market rather than a real gold bull market. Rick
Rule, President of Global Resource Investments Ltd, observes that
gold is the only form of money that does not have an inflationary
constituency. Currently all of the major industrialized nations of the
world, including Switzerland, are debauching their currencies to
maintain export competitiveness relative to the U.S. The next major
phase of a true gold bull market will probably take place when gold
starts moving up against all the major currencies of the world as
countries continue the game of “beggar thy neighbor.”.
To
better understand currency exchange movements, it is
helpful to disentangle their short term, intermediate term, and long
term causes. There are many different causes behind a slide in the US
dollar than may not be directly related gold, but nevertheless may get
transmitted into a rising gold price through the so-called “Law of One
Price” arbitrage.
In
the short run, currency exchange rates tend to be heavily
influenced by investment capital flows. Back in 2000 America received
capital inflows in the area of around two
to three billion dollars a day from foreigners. One important factor
was a desire to participate in the 1995-2000 stock market mania. Anther
important factor was a belief by foreign investors that the dollar would
continue to remain strong relative to other currencies, and not fall and
hurt the value of their non-repatriated US investments. Lastly, many
countries have been willing to continue investing their trade surplus
dollars in US securities to stay in the good graces of the world’s
“last remaining superpower.”
The US
stock and bond markets remain a risky bet that foreigners will
continually hold rather than eventually bolt for the door. The S&P
index is trading at a P/E multiple that is more than twice its historic
average. Its reported or “pro forma” earnings are often twice
“real” (or GAAP or core) earnings, as noted in my article “Bear
Case Overview.” Also, bond interest rates, at 45 year lows, seem
to have nowhere to go but up. A Forbes magazine charticle “Here
We Go Again” suggests that the US market could still be mimicking
the early phases of the Japanese market of the 1990’s. If the secular
bear market that may have begun in March 2000 returns, it could scare
foreigners into selling off their US securities and put further downward
pressure on the dollar.
In
the intermediate term, exchange rates tend to fall in line
with the Purchase Power Parity concept. The Economist Magazine’s
Big
Mac Index uses the Big Mac hamburger, representative of a basic
consumer item sold in over 118 countries as a rough yardstick to help
calibrate relative currency under-valuations or overvaluations. In 2002
it signaled that the dollar was very overvalued. Li Lian Ong, Senior
Analyst at Macquarie Bank, has authored The
Big Mac Index. According to the Amazon.com review of her book,
the index “…Could have been used to predict the Asian Currency
Crisis and the Mexican Peson stand-off where more traditional economic
measures failed.”
In
the long run relative currency valuations relate to
different rates of productivity gains and different levels of monetary
discipline of different countries. They bear a rough analogy to relative
values of shares of stocks in companies, in which inflation is similar
to stock dilution and rising debt is bad (to include trade deficits) if
it increases at a faster rate than sustainable earnings growth
(analogous to GDP growth). Professor Tim Congdon, Director and Chief
Economist of the economics consultancy Lombard Street Research in
London, published World Gold Council Research
Study 28 in 2002 which he modeled such factors as debt to GDP
ratios, interest rates, and growth rates for the US. He cites three
reports predicting the strong possibility of a serious currency slide
(more on this later), and asked whether the US could make the Herculean
shift of 5% of GDP to exports fast enough to halt deteriorating balance
of trade and indebtedness trends.
The
fundamental outlook for the US remains negative in this area. The
declining dollar is likely to have only a marginal impact in correcting
America’s balance of trade problems. America has lost about half its
manufacturing jobs in the last thirty years and is addicted to foreign
goods, plus certain foreign producers such as China and Japan loosely
devalue or peg in line with the dollar decline to maintain their export
competitiveness. There is no credible evidence that the Federal
Government can rein in runaway spending on any level, be it military or
social, and is arguably already bankrupt (discussed in more detail in
Part V). Fed Governor Ben Bernanke has announced that the Fed is
prepared to inflate without limit to smooth over problems. Asian demand
is putting steady upward pressure on commodity prices, which will likely
squeeze American incomes. China is becoming increasingly capable of
fueling its growth in Asia independently of the US, and Chinese
investors may become less inclined to support America’s trade deficits
and use their capital instead to fund internal growth. Other foreigners
will likely cut back on their US investment for fear of suffering
further losses from continued US dollar declines.
Eventually,
to fund America’s growing deficits, the Fed will have to accelerate
money creation to monetize part of America’s debt and also hike
interest rates to try to lure foreign investment back. Rising interest
rates will likely slow the economy and hurt the stock, bond, and real
estate markets. The magnitude of America’s trade deficits and
indebtedness suggest that the US will eventually wind up with
double-digit interest rates and hyperinflation.
HOW
GOLD COMPETES AGAINST OTHER INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES
I have
already discussed in my “bad deflation” section how gold tends to be
a late bloomer in the bad inflation cycle, often trailing commodities,
and how it tends to benefit in a negative
interest rate environment. James
Turk’s commodity chart shows us the explosive “generational”
bull market in commodities that took place in the stagflationary 1970s.
This followed the sideways commodities markets of the 1950s and 1960s.
This raises an interesting question regarding how explosively
commodities might move in the decade ahead if they become the focus of
another generational event proportional to the commodities bear market
that lasted from 1980 to 2000.
Like
gold, commodities in general can have a dual nature as investment
vehicles once investors perceive them as a store of value in an
inflationary environment. The 1970s era even showed how commodities
could become the focus of an investment mania.

[Source: "A
Commodity Bull Market" by James Turk]
Interestingly,
commodities cycles have been getting
longer in the last eighty years, as suggested below by the
Commodities Cycles chart provided by the Di
Tomasso Group. This may be an indicator that we could be entering
the early phases of a long term commodities bull market.
|
Commodity
Market Cycles
|
|
Begins
|
Ends
|
Duration
in Years
|
Change
|
Type
|
|
1921
|
1925
|
4
|
45%
|
Bull
|
|
1925
|
1932
|
7
|
-51%
|
Bear
|
|
1932
|
1937
|
5
|
70%
|
Bull
|
|
1937
|
1939
|
2
|
-25%
|
Bear
|
|
1939
|
1954
|
15
|
99%
|
Bull
|
|
1954
|
1970
|
16
|
-41%
|
Bear
|
|
1970
|
1981
|
11
|
106%
|
Bull
|
|
1981
|
1999
|
18
|
-68%
|
Bear
|
|
1999
|
??
|
??
|
??
|
Bull
|
Duration of Bull Markets: 35 years
Average Bull Market Return: 80%
Duration of Bear Markets: 43
years Average Bear Market Return: 46% |
[Source:
Di
Tomasso Group]
We
might also note the “generational" 30 year Treasury Note chart
below. Please recall that the Fed began to hike interest rates between
1998 and 2000 to help keep a lid on inflation and take some of the
speculative air out of the stock market mania. Jim Roger’s article “For
Whom the Closing Bell Tolls” criticizes Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan for not hiking margin rates and reducing monetary stimulus
much sooner. My guess is that somewhere around or prior to 1998 was
probably the real bottom of the generational trend in declining interest
rates. The artificially low interest rate environment we have been in
since 2000 could simply reflect a postponement of fundamental
inflationary realities.

[Source:
"The
Silver and Gold Train Wreck" by James Puplava]
The
chart below overlays the price action of gold on the exponential rise in
M3 and government spending. It provides another perspective on the
rising waters that may be filling a cracking dam to the brim.
Eventually, long-term interest rates, gold, and commodities may make a
dramatic upward move together as they did in the late 1970s.

Graph by Donald Lindley [source: "The
Once and Future Money" by Bob Landis]
WHERE
WILL IT ALL END?
James
Sinclair said in a July
20, 2002 interview with James Puplava that he exited gold in 1980 near
its top at $850 following its long run in the stagflationary 1970’s. He
took his cue when Fed Chairman Paul Volcker hiked short term interest
rates to 16%. To Sinclair, this showed that the Fed was finally serious
about stopping inflation. This was after the prime rate had held over 20%
for over a year. This dramatic Fed tightening created a credible positive
real interest rate environment and an air of certainty about interest rate
trends (stable to down). All of this was bad for gold, and suggested a
top.
IT'S
ALMOST LIKE THE BEREAVEMENT STAGES…
Today,
even though the M3 growth charts look scary, the government, central bank,
national media, and public at large are still in denial. Let us call this
stage the Phase I denial stage. We still have at least two more phases to
go. Phase Two entails general acceptance of a serious inflation problem.
Phase Three entails taking decisive steps to stop the problem, as Fed
Chairman Volcker did in the early 1980’s. Using the Sinclair method, one
might simply buy gold and silver stocks now and hold until America shows
credible evidence of achieving Phase III. This will probably be many years
from now.
In his
article “To
the Moon, Alice!” James Puplava wrote about how in the first phase
of a long term bull market, the smart money gets in. Then in the second
phase the institutional investors get in. Finally, in the third and last
phase, the little guy gets in. Puplava thinks we are in the tail end of
phase I.
Mass
media publications are often a contrarian indicator for when the little
guy is finally catching on. If Puplava is correct, one might still
consider accumulating gold and other precious metals stocks now and then
wait until someone like Pierre Lassonde, President of Newmont Mining,
makes the cover of Time magazine before inserting stop loss orders.
Part
1 l Part 2 l Part 3 l Part
4 l Part 5 l Part 6 l Part 7
l Part 8 l Part 9

© 2004 Bill Fox
Editorial
Archive
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America First Trust Financial Services
P.O. Box 820669
Vancouver, WA 98682
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Email | Website
Bill
Fox is VP/Investment Strategist and private client money manager,
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article. His web site: www.amfir.com.
Address: VP, America First Trust, Reg. Rep., Sammons Securities Co., LLC
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DISCLAIMER: Not all views referenced in this report are necessarily those
of the author, America First Trust Financial Services, or Sammons
Securities Co., LLC. Sometimes the author provides opposing
viewpoints to give the reader a greater sense of perspective. This
report is intended for informational purposes only and should not be
considered specific investment advice. It is not intended to be a
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|