|
THE
BRAVE NEW WORLD ECONOMY
Part 2: A Rejoinder to Mohamed
El-Erian
by Douglas V.
Gnazzo
February
18, 2007
“The woman whom you saw is the great city,
which
reigns over the kings of the earth.” [1]
“For all
the nations have drunk of the wine of her impure passion,
the kings of the earth committed fornication with her,
and the merchants of the earth grew rich from the abundance of her
luxury.” [2]
Introduction
This
is the second article in a series of three papers, which collectively
comprise the complete rejoinder to Mr. Mohamed El-Erian’s article: Complex Finance and the Brave New World Economy.
The
same format used in the first paper will be utilized again. The article
will be broken down into paragraphs, followed by a synopsis of the main
points of each paragraph, and then comments. This focuses on each
individual paragraph separately facilitates an easier understanding and
discussion of the complex issues involved.
Once
again I would like to emphasize that this rejoinder is to what was said
– not to who said it. Mr. El-Erian is a great scholar recognized and
respected around the world. This is not personal, it is simply business.
PARAGRAPH SIX
The interaction of these economic and technical
changes has altered market valuations, volatility, velocity and
liquidity. No wonder various markets seem to be sending conflicting
signals. No wonder market participants are having trouble predicting
central bank policies, which are becoming more tentative. No wonder
economists cannot resolve debates on the outlook for global payments
imbalances. [3]
The main points made are:
- The
interaction of these economic and technical changes has altered
market:
1. Valuations
2. Volatility
3. Velocity
4. Liquidity
- Thus
markets are sending conflicting signals
- Market
participants are having trouble predicting central bank policies,
which are becoming more tentative
- Economists
cannot resolve debates on the outlook for global payments imbalances
Comments:
Mr. El-Erian posits that four aspects or
segments of the market have been altered by the interaction of the
economic and technical changes transpiring (according to his analysis)
on the global stage.
Valuations
First on his list are valuations. Value is in
the eyes of the beholder, or as Carl Menger and Ludwig von Mises said:
valuation is a subjective phenomenon. What one man values as riches,
another man values as junk.
Take water for example. Water is valued by all,
as it is a basic element needed for human survival. All people, animals,
and crops require water to sustain life. Without water there would be no
life. Does this mean that all human beings value water the same? No it
does not.
For a man stranded in the Gobi Desert without
water, water becomes of great value. If he does not acquire it very
quickly he will die. Water will be at the top of his list of values.
Compare the man stranded in the desert with
another man who lives high in the Alps. He lives next to a lake of fresh
mountain water. There are very few people living in the area. He values
water, as he too needs it to sustain life.
But his supply of water is far above and beyond
his demand for water. He can never consume the supply of water within
the lake. He has a surplus of water, while the man is the desert has a
deficit of water.
The man in the Alps would gladly accept $1
dollar per gallon of water from any hikers that pass by his home and
want a drink of water or some for cooking. The man in the desert would
gladly pay $1000 dollars for a gallon of water – perhaps much more.
Because the supply and demand factors are vastly
different in the two examples, the two men value the water differently
and accordingly. Value is seen to be quite subjective.
So what is it that is altering the valuation
within the markets that Mr. El-Erian speaks of? All value is based on
need: the importance one places on any given commodity or service to
fulfill a need the person has: be it food, water, clothing, shelter,
heat or any other such desire.
Commodities are valued according to their
utility to fulfill a particular need that a market participant has. This
is the theory of marginal utility. The market dynamics of the law of
supply and demand weigh heavily in the balance, as the example above
regarding water shows.
Getting back to the alteration of today’s
market valuations, we can now discern what dynamics are at play.
Obviously, the law of supply and demand looms large in the equation. So
too does subjective value and marginal utility.
With the advent of indirect exchange within the
marketplace, where barter no longer rules the roost, money is the
preferred and most commonly accepted medium of exchange. Now the supply
and demand for money is part of the equation of subjective valuation. On
the other side of the equation is the supply and demand for whatever
goods or services are being considered for procurement.
If an individual is auctioning off his used car,
and the largest amount of money that any of the bidders in the crowd has
is $5000 dollars – the owner of the used car is not going to receive
more than that amount for his car, unless a bidder offers a higher price
based on credit or additional money he will obtain and pay to the owner
of the car.
The same would hold true if the largest amount
of money in the “economy of the auction” was $3000 or $1000. The
greater the supply of money there is amongst the bidders – the higher
will be the price the owner of the car may receive.
Likewise is the supply and demand for the car.
If there were one hundred cars about to be auctioned off, then there are
plenty of cars to fulfill the demand of the participants at the auction.
However, consider the instance where only one
car is being sold at auction. The supply of cars in town is low and the
demand for cars is high. The closest town with a large commercial base
of jobs is fifty miles away. There are no buses or trains. Cars are
needed to commute to work. You can bet your bottom dollar that the lack
of supply will play heavy on the price the used cars fetch.
Price is but the quantification of all market
participant’s subjective valuations: based on need and the marginal
utility of the good to fulfill that need (demand), compared to the
supply of the good.
The ratio of the supply and demand for the good,
is then compared to the ratio of the supply and demand for money. The
resulting ratio is the price of the good: the quantity of units of the
common medium of exchange needed to procure the item in question.
Money is valued by all market participants, as
it is the common medium of exchange by which all goods and services
within the marketplace change hands: from sellers to buyers. When one
buys a good they are “selling” their money. When one sells a good
they are “buying” money.
Thus price formation is had by comparing the
value of the good to the value of the money to procure the good. The
number or ratio of the units of exchange needed to exchange for the good
is the price of the good.
From this we can see that any alteration in
market valuations must be based on and due to the supply and demand of
the goods and services that make up the market, as well as the supply
and demand for money that is used to exchange and procure all goods and
services with. When either side of the equation is out of whack with the
other, it will distort the market dynamics and greatly alter the process
of price formation.
Consequently, when one says that market
valuations have been altered such that the alteration is sending
CONFLICTING signals to the market participants, and confusing them as to
what central bank policies and actions will be in response, let alone
the position of the expert economists who can no longer provide a
solution for the imbalance of global payments; and one can easily see
the problems looming over and within the markets.
I would be remiss not to add that conflicting
signals sound like they would be competing with one another. Perhaps the
themes mentioned at the beginning of the article are not competing,
although that is debatable, however, the effectual results of the
themes, as they play out in the marketplace, are producing conflicting
and competing signals – of that there is no question.
Also, perhaps debating such theme’s merits is
useless, but then why should it be of concern if economists cannot
resolve debates on the outlook for global payments imbalances?
Furthermore, why only be concerned with the
recalibration of the perspective employed to move forward, while
accepting that these themes have produced structural changes within the
marketplace?
If the changes being produced are sending
conflicting signals and causing confusion, then the cause that is
manifesting these various problematic results needs to be addressed and
fixed or eliminated. Otherwise, it is simply another case of treating
the symptoms of the disease, which may produce some fleeting relief or
comfort, when what is truly needed is a sustainable and lasting cure for
the disease, not a quick fix.
According to Jean-Claude
Trichet, President of the European Central Bank, the following remarks
he made from Davos show that he not only agrees with Mr. El-Erian’s
contention that market participants are having trouble in predicting the
actions of central bank policies, but that the central bankers
themselves are dazed and confused by the new proliferation of
derivatives and their UNKNOWN consequences.
Prepare
for Asset Repricing
As reported by Gillian Tett in Davos
“The recent explosion of
structured financial products and derivatives have made it more
difficult for regulators and investors to judge the current risks in the
financial system.
We are currently seeing
elements in global financial markets which are not necessarily stable
… low level of rates, spreads and risk premiums are factors that could
trigger a repricing.
There is now such creativity
of new and very sophisticated financial instruments that we don't know
fully where the risks are located. We are trying to understand what is
going on - but it is a big, big challenge." [4]
There will be more said on valuations later on,
for now this will suffice.
Volatility
Volatility is another market dynamic that is
being affected by the themes of global finance, as the participants play
out the hands dealt them. The dealer is a powerful man, as he deals out
the cards that forge the hands to be played. The house he works for is
of even greater power, as is he who owns the house. He whose altar the
owner of the house worships at is the top dog of this particular pack
– much like the temple priests of the old Babylonian Brotherhood.
Predict an eclipse or two, and you were a god amongst mere mortals.
Volatility is the measurement of changing
valuations – how far and how fast they go first one way and then the
other. It is similar to a puppy on a choke chain – first pulled this
way and then the other. Needless to say the puppy is not happy, can you
blame him, after all - he is on a choke chain.
Changing valuations result in changing prices.
Changing prices result in changing profits and losses. Such is today’s
marketplace. The easier it looks – the harder it hooks. There ain’t
no such thing as easy money. Come to think of it – in today's New
World Order there might not even be any money that’s real, accept for
gold and silver coin that is – Honest Money.
Certain
participants at last week's meeting in Davos were of the opinion that
the growth of the $450 Trillion derivatives market has helped reduce
market volatility by spreading credit risk. It should be remembered,
however, that this is no different then a bookie laying off risk. The
risk still remains – its just been dropped off onto someone else's
lap, as a sort of present. A present whose presence will be fully
presented in due time.
As
with all things however, there were others with a different opinion.
There were those who thought that the costs of borrowing credit at such
low levels as 0.25% in Japan was similar to a pusher giving free dope to
users to get them hooked, thereby creating a future income stream for
life. Some refer to it as the Yen carry trade, spun tight like a
spinning top - just before it starts to unwind.
Others
expressed concern that raising leverage and risk taking to such elevated
levels was simply increasing the probability of future financial crises.
As chaos theory states: everything is just fine until it isn’t – and
then it’s too late.
Velocity
Velocity in general refers to the speed of an
object, how fast it travels a given distance. The greater the velocity
the faster the speed. The lesser the velocity the slower the speed.
Irving Fisher elaborated on the concept and has been given the infamous
distinction of being the father of the theory of the velocity of money.
Yes that’s right – infamous, not famous. The
velocity of money is one of several constructs of the quantity theory of
money, which is an invalid and faulty monetary system that has done much
more harm then good in the overall understanding of monetary theory; and
even greater harm in its implementation as the curse of paper fiat
debt-money that now holds the entire world in its sinister clutches.
The quantity theory of money has been peddled to
the people by the hired guns or intelligentsia of the elite money
changers. They would have you believe in such nonsense, so that you buy
into their system of paper fiat debt-money, which is nothing but a
transfer of wealth mechanism, used to siphon wealth from the people, to
the elite collectivists in charge of the monetary system.
They would have you believe that to borrow and
to go into debt is the way – but it is not, it only makes them
wealthier and the common man poorer. Take the system of buying your home
via a mortgage. The word mortgage comes from the root mort, which means
death in French. Mortgage literally translates as a death gage or
pledge. Think about it – long and hard.
Things are NOT as they so would have you believe
– they are no different from the time of the Babylonian temple priests
who ruled the people by using misguided and false beliefs: illusion and
delusion.
There are too many complexities in the velocity
of money and the quantity theory of money to fully detail in the present
work. I will name some of the basics and refer to other papers that
cover the issues in much greater detail then can be had here and now.
The
velocity of money is the number of times an individual unit of currency
turns over (i.e., is spent) in a specific period of time. The theory
espouses the idea that the faster or more often any given unit of
currency is turned over or used, the greater is the economic activity
that results therefrom. The velocity of money is the faster pace of the
circulation of money.
The quantity theory of money stresses the
importance of the number of units of money (supply) circulating within
the economy at any given time. One of the basic tenets of the quantity
theory of money is that the greater the number of units of money one
has, the greater will be one’s wealth, as they will be able to
purchase more goods and services.
At first blush this may sound true, however,
let’s dig a little deeper. Money is only good for one thing: to use as
a medium of exchange for other goods and services. So what is crucial
for money is its PURCHASING POWER: the amount of goods that a monetary
unit can be exchanged for.
The purchasing power of
money is the quality theory of money. It is not the number (quantity) of
units of money that is most important to your wealth – it is the
purchasing power of the money – what it can be exchanged for in the
marketplace.
The more goods that can be had
the greater the purchasing power – the greater is the resulting
wealth. If all other things stay constant – the greater the supply of
money, the less is its purchasing power.
However, there are in several
other very important components, as we saw earlier. It is the supply and
demand of money in relation to the supply and demand for goods and
services that determines “price”.
Also, money is not that big of
a deal anymore in today’s Brave New World: credit is now the name of
the game. In today’s New World Order, money is debt and debt is money.
Money is created out of thin air by the extension of credit. Money,
credit, and debt have morphed into one and the same thing: the unholy
alliance.
In other words, the velocity of money (if such
exists), is a minor player in today’s paper fiat debt-money-credit
system. The extension of credit plays an even larger role than does
money in circulation. The velocity of money (if it exists) is a minor
subplot to a much greater play: the quantity theory of money.
Furthermore, the quantity theory of money has
now been surpassed by the quantity theory of credit, as the driver of
the paper fiat debt-money-credit system. The faulty quantity theory of
both money and credit is at the center of the many problems in today’s
global monetary, economic, and financial systems.
Money is the basis of the system, if the
foundation is unsound, the structure built thereon, is unsound as well.
It is but a house of cards – and the sisters of fate are blowing in
the wind: destiny’s child returning home.
Liquidity
To understand liquidity we are going to look at
the definition of the word itself. Note the word liquid is within the
word liquidity. Now, what does liquid have to do with money? Think of
liquid as water – water is a liquid, which flows through streams and
rivers that creates a current or movement of the liquid water supply.
The word currency is derived from the same root as the word current.
Liquidity refers to monetary vehicles that can
be used or spent immediately in exchange for other goods and services.
Cash is the currency in circulation. Cash is the most liquid of all
forms of money and money substitutes or fiduciary money. Other forms of
money are considered liquid if they can be easily and readily exchanged
for money.
On the other side are vehicles that are not
readily or easily turned into cash – things such as land or buildings
or businesses. These assets must first be sold, which can take weeks to
months to transact before they are turned into or exchanged for liquid
cash.
How
does the market or economy provide SOUND liquidity? – by labor or
work, which produces goods and services within the economy. Over time,
prudent market participants will accumulate their excess production and
resulting income as savings, and invest the savings in both liquid and
less liquid assets.
Sound
capital investment comes from curtailed consumption that is put off by
the saving (as opposed to spending) of excess income, which is then
invested to produce future income.
But
there is also another source of liquidity and capital formation, one
that is not as sound as income and savings: it is called debt or credit.
There is nothing wrong with sound credit and debt being extended as
loans properly collateralized and properly extended.
Which
means NOT by fractional reserve lending of money that is created by the
very act of lending – money that did not and does not exist; and was
never earned as income nor saved. This is unsound monetary policy that
creates untold miseries for the people that accept it – and untold
profits for those who create and issue it.
Malcolm
Knight, managing director of the Bank for International Settlements had
this to say on the subject:
“Financial
innovation has produced vehicles for leverage which are very hard to
measure . . . liquidity is increasing very rapidly and this is affecting
asset prices.” [5]
There will be more on this topic. For now we
move on.
Market Problems With Central Bank Policies
We
have already seen some examples above of the problems the proliferation
of debt derivatives is causing. Not only are market participants
confused by the excessive issuance of debt, central bankers themselves
are at a loss in understanding how it works. This is especially true of
unknown situations that are not readily quantifiable.
As
Stanley Fisher, Governor of Israel's Central Bank questioned:
“Who
takes responsibility for the [financial] system during a crisis
situation, especially now that the hegemony of the US is diminishing?”
[6]
Both
Robert E. Rubin and former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker have
warned of the possibility of coming crisis, as well they should, as they
both have contributed to the root causes of systemic risk of excess
credit that is now coming to fruition.
Volcker
said:
“The U.S. borrowing
requirements raise the risk of a crisis in the dollar as soon as the
next two and a half years. [7]
While
Rubin added:
“It seems almost inconceivable that this will continue
indefinitely.” [8]
Economists Debate
Global Payment Imbalances
As
well they should. To think that the present excessive global payment
imbalances are just part of the New World Order and should be accepted
as part of the structural change of the system, and then be dealt with
by recalibrating the way forward is naïve at best, and at worst shows a
complete lack of understanding and or denial of the actual cause of such
imbalances. It is tough to fix a problem if one does not know what the
problem is, or is unwilling to acknowledge the true cause of the
problem. Some call it denial.
Global
trade imbalances remain at unprecedented levels. The U.S. current
account deficit is expected to be almost 7% of GDP by the end of 2007. For
2006 the trade deficit was $765 billion.
Japan
& Germany had a cumulative trade
surplus of over $275 billion. China has the largest
trade surplus with the U.S., and the largest currency reserves at over
$1 Trillion dollars. From 2001 until 2004 the U.S. deficit with China
increased 95%.
Total global debt issuance in 2006 was $7
trillion. The U.S. portion of the total was $4 trillion. That leaves the
rest of the world’s debt issuance for last year at $3 trillion. The
U.S. gross domestic product was $12 trillion, which equates with the
U.S. borrowing 33% of the value of its GDP, and 57% of the total world
debt issuance for 2006. Thus the debt to equity ratio was about 3 to 1.
That is poor fiscal and monetary
mismanagement and cannot be sustained. It also means that if we did not
borrow the $4 trillion, then the economy would have been $8 trillion
instead of $12 trillion. Think about it – long and hard. Then vote
accordingly.
The world’s gross product is
approximately $55 trillion, with the U.S. accounting for 22% of the
total. World debt increased 14% from the year before (2005), yet the
world GDP did not increase by that rate, which means debt is
accumulating faster then wealth – and that’s if one accepts that
growth in GDP is the same as wealth accumulation.
I don’t believe it is, as will shortly
be shown. The U.S. share of the debt expansion increased 10%, but our
GDP did not - once again signaling a loss of wealth. There may be growth
– but At What Cost And Paid By Whom?
Gross domestic product may be growing,
however, debt is growing faster. This is a prescription for a
declining standard of living that is on the road to perdition, not on
the road to prosperity – the so-called American dream. It is all smoke
and mirrors – reflections of illusion and delusion.
According to conventional economic
theory, consumer spending accounts for approximately ¾’s of the gross
domestic product. Consumer spending has been on a steady increase, yet
the savings rate has been on a steady decline – a decline that for
almost 2 years running has registered NEGATIVE savings rates of up to
–1.6%. That is a national disgrace.
Incomes have been on a rise, however,
consumer spending has increased more. Where is the money coming from to
make up for the difference between spending levels that are higher then
income levels? Ah yes, it is that lovely four-letter word: DEBT. The
consumer has been able to keep spending because they have gone deeper
and deeper into debt.
Furthermore, just what does gross
domestic product really measure? Notice how conventional economic
analysis says that approximately 75% of GDP is consumer spending.
So the GDP is a measure of spending or consumption,
not of production, or savings, or real wealth accumulation.
The economy is said to be growing or
expanding, but what is really expanding is over consumption that is
being fed by increased debt levels, which in turn results in negative
savings rates. This is not wealth accumulation. This is death by debt.
It forces one into a life of debt servitude. It prostitutes are
children’s futures to a life of working to pay the man.
The economy is nothing more than a ponzi
scheme of wealth transference. The average worker is borrowing money to
maintain their consumption and debt service.
Banks are lending money that they do not
have. The money is created on the spot by the very act of extending
credit; and the extension of credit means increased debt and increased
debt service (interest payments). This is NOT wealth creation no matter
what they tell you. Do not be deceived. Do not accept the unacceptable.
And it gets even worse.
SEVENTH
PARAGRAPH
No wonder there is a sense that greater
international co-ordination is needed even though the global economy is
in the midst of an unprecedented phase of high growth, low inflation and
greater economic and financial convergence. [9]
The main points made by
Mohamed El-Erian are:
Greater international co-ordination is
needed in spite of:
- Unprecedented
high growth
- Low
inflation
- Greater
economic and financial convergence
Comments:
So, the global economy is said to be in an
unprecedented high growth phase. This sounds like a good occurrence –
but is it? What is meant by the global economy is growing? How is it
determined or measured to be growing?
The gross domestic product of the world is the
measure that is used. However, we have just seen that gross domestic
product is merely the measure of spending – of consumption. Where is
the money coming from to finance the increased consumption?
It is not coming from a commensurate rise of
income, nor of savings. The only other choice is credit and debt.
Consumption is being financed with excess credit and debt growth on a
global level. The global economy may be growing, but at what cost? At
the cost of ever increasing debt levels, of life prostituted to debt
servitude, feudalism the 21st century style.
And the saddest part is it is not only our
lives, but the lives of our children and their children, who will be
working to service the debts we are racking up. Think about it – long
and hard. It is not what it is made out to be. It is an illusion – no
different then the illusion in the Wizard of Oz – literally and
figuratively. The book was actually about this very same topic of gold
and silver versus the illusion of the emperor who stands naked behind
the curtain – the illusion of paper debt-money as being real.
Low Inflation
I have no idea what Mr. El-Erian is referring to
with his statement about low inflation. As I said in part one, not only
are we not on the same page regarding this topic, I don’t think we are
even in the same book.
As was shown in the first paper, there are many
types of inflation: price inflation, wage inflation, asset inflation,
and monetary inflation. None of the other flations can occur unless
there is first monetary inflation. Monetary inflation is the root cause.
The other inflations are a result or effect of the root cause.
The United States has gone on a huge consumption
orgy for the last several decades, fueled by ever increasing credit and
debt levels that have extracted liquidity from out of the real estate
market. The housing market has not been sucked dry by the Vampires
of the New World Order – there is nothing more to feast on: a new host is now needed.
This unwanton credit and debt expansion has
created record setting levels of dollars that are flooding the entire
world in an ocean of liquidity, causing ASSET INFLATION BUBBLES around
the globe. A huge amount of the created dollars gets recirculated right
back to the United States as payment for buying our Treasury Debt. Japan
and China alone count for almost half of our Treasury debt market.
Greater Economic &
Financial Convergence
I’m at a loss of words on this one. The only
thing I see converging are excessive credit and debt levels with a
global out-of -control debt financed boom – all headed for the
inevitable bust that follows such booms. The massive excess monetary
inflation and debasement of all paper fiat currencies is an accident
looking for a time and place to happen. It is not a question of if –
but when.
EIGHTH PARAGRAPH
We should view these themes not as competing but
as part of a fundamental change in the global economy. Consider five
issues that face the public and private sectors. [10]
The main points made are:
- We
should view these themes not as competing
- But
as part of a fundamental change in the global economy
- By
considering five issues that face the public and private sectors
Comments:
The themes are said not
to be competing, but just part of a structural change in the global
economic order. To be precise, the themes are:
- The
continued robustness of the global economy, as defined by sustained
high growth and low inflation.
- The
steady rise in economic and financial risks. [11]
We have seen that a robust global economy as
defined by high growth and low inflation is a chimerical illusion at
best, and deceptive enslavement at worst. An expanding gross domestic
product simply refers to increased consumption had by excess spending,
and the requisite borrowing needed to finance the buying frenzy with.
The only individuals creating wealth, are those
who collect the perpetual interest rate streams on the debt service, and
in truth, even they are not creating wealth. They are merely transferring
wealth from others to themselves. It is with good reason that it has
been written: never a lender nor a borrower be. It is a sinister game
being played out – of that
there is no doubt.
I agree that there has been a steady rise in
economic and financial risks. How could such not be the case in paper
fiat land: where money is debt, and debt money? With deriviatives
equivalent to seven years of the entire gross product of all goods and
service in the entire world, we are lucky that the system has not yet
exploded or imploded.
See Scylla
& Charybdis: The Scourge of Mankind for details on
deflation vs. hyperinflation. The
way out of this quagmire can be had, but it will not be easy. The answer
is Honest Money – the hard money system of our Constitution: gold and
silver coin.
This ends the second paper on Complex Finance and the Brave New World Economy.
There is one last article to come.

“The
kings of the earth, who committed sexual immorality and lived wantonly
with her,
will weep and wail over her, when they look at the smoke of her burning,
standing far away for the fear of her torment, saying,
For
your judgment has come in one hour.’ ” [12]
[1]
Revelations 17:18
[2]
Revelations 18:3
[3]
Complex Finance and the Brave New World Economy
[4]
Jean-Claude Trichet as
reported by Gillian
Tett in Davos
[5]
Malcolm Knight, Manager of
the BIS
[6]
Stanley Fisher, Governor of
Israel's Central Bank
[7]
Paul Volcker, Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve
[8]
Robert Rubin, Former Secretary of the Treasury
[9]
Complex Finance and the Brave New World Economy
[10]
Same
[11]
Same
[12]
Revelations: 18:9 and 18:10

© 2007 Douglas V. Gnazzo
Editorial Archive
All
rights reserved. Any republication without written permission
of author
and Financial Sense prohibited.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Douglas V. Gnazzo
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report, LLC
Canton Center, CT USA
Email
| Website
About
the author: Douglas V.
Gnazzo is CEO of New England Renovation LLC, a historical restoration contractor
that specializes in restoring older buildings that are vintage historic
landmarks. He writes for numerous websites and his work appears both
here and abroad. Just recently he was honored by being chosen as a Foundation
Scholar for the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
(FAME).
Disclaimer:
The contents of this article represent the opinions of Douglas V.
Gnazzo. Nothing contained herein is intended as investment advice or
recommendations for specific investment decisions, and you should not
rely on it as such. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not a registered investment
advisor. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and
using methods believed to be reliable, but Douglas. V. Gnazzo cannot
accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result
of your reliance on this analysis and will not be held liable for the
consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein
or any omission. Individuals should consult with their broker and
personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
Do your own due diligence regarding personal investment decisions. This
article may contain information that is confidential and/or protected by
law. The purpose of this article is intended to be used as an
educational discussion of the issues involved. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not
a lawyer or a legal scholar. Information and analysis derived from the
quoted sources are believed to be reliable and are offered in good
faith. Only a highly trained and certified and registered legal
professional should be regarded as an authority on the issues involved;
and all those seeking such an authoritative opinion should do their own
due diligence and seek out the advice of a legal professional. Lastly
Douglas V. Gnazzo believes that The United States of America is the
greatest country on Earth, but that it can yet become greater. This
article is written to help facilitate that greater becoming. God Bless
America.
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
|