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Hat Trick
Letter
Jim
Willie CB is the editor of the “HAT TRICK LETTER”
For specific detailed analysis of the Gold, USDollar, Treasury bonds,
and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and Fed monetary policy, see instructions for subscription to my
newsletter research reports, which include stock recommendations
positioned to rise in the commodity bull market.
Giant geopolitical
factors have been dominant toward the gold price in the last half of
2005 and the early part of 2006, having eclipsed trade deficits, absent
savings, price inflation, and other plebeian economic fundamentals like
consumer demand, job growth, or industrial output. Bond yield
differentials continue to be important, but lately, writing on the wall
clearly paints a picture of US interest rate advantage slowly fading
from springtime rains. Gold seems poised for a meteoric rise. A
confluence of powerful forces is at work, far more inter-related than we
might perceive or admit. Some of the crucially important listed factors
lie in the past, while some are in current status. Some factors lie in
the future, either on the cusp of tomorrow or just down the road.
Political demonstrations and weather storms provide a violent stir of
the global cauldron. Trade war serves as the nitroglycerine ingredient
within the cauldron.
- General
Motors and Ford Motors undergo debt rating downgrades
- Chinese
govt delinks the yuan currency directly from US$
- King
Fahd dies in Saudi Arabia, and Abdullah takes the reigns
- USGovt
blocks the Unocal deal from CNOOC acquisition
- Hurricanes
Katrina and Wilma devastate the US Gulf Coast
- Euro
Central Bank begins its tightening cycle with two rate
hikes
- Schumer
trade tariff bill against China gains support in US Congress
- Dubai
Port World deal to control US ports fails, resolved by compromise
- Iraqi
Civil War erupts, conflict festers with Iran, Persian Gulf
destabilized
- extra
USFed rate hikes threaten to pop the US housing bubble
- Yen
Carry Trade is slated for an orderly unwind
- Russia
and China accelerate official gold accumulation
- key debt
rating downgrades continue, such as for Iceland govt bonds
- master
inflationist Ben Bernanke makes his imprint as USFed Chairman
- the
USFed stops publication of the M3 money supply
- the
USFed hikes rate until the next LongTerm Capital Mgmt debacle
- Asia
agrees upon a currency for their new credit market (yuan basket?)
- coordinated
chaos seems orchestrated amidst rising nationalism &
protectionism
- General
Motors and Ford Motors suffer a broad union-led
- US Gulf
Coast hit by more hurricanes, after two hit Australia before April
The April report
(issued midmonth) for the Hat
Trick Letter will tie many of these factors together, in much the
same manner as past reports have. Let’s step back and take a
longer-term viewpoint. Several key landmark events have occurred in the
last nine months, as an acceleration has clearly shown itself in the
weakening to the USDollar worldwide foundation. The trend is sure to
resume. As the dominos have toppled, one by one, renewed momentum has
created a significant headwind for the world reserve currency. Taken in
isolation, each domino is of minor importance. Taken together, the
sequence spells bigtime trouble for the clownbuck. Several listed
factors actually are tied together by curious threads. One can learn a
lesson in modern day life: there
are few coincidences which involve truly large momentous events.
The bigger the event, the more likely its planned occurrence, the more
likely its integration with other critical events.
Since the year 2001,
gold has responded inversely to the USDollar. When the bloated buck
falls, the gold price rises, like a children playground teeter tawter.
The exception has been since midsummer 2005, not enough to establish a
trend. One can actually argue with some justification that the US$ rose
in the second half of 2005 from an oversold reaction. At the same time,
the gold price rose uninterrupted. Many analysts argued that gold
decoupled from the US$, here too in my scribbles, during this time span.
It might be more accurate to claim a semblance of continued inverse
correlation between gold and the US$ continues. As the bloated buck has
stalled versus other currencys in their exchange rates, gold persists in
rising.
Gold might be much more
driven by background management of foreign reserves than from the
marginal value of the US$ versus other major currencys. Asians, Middle
Easterners, and others are questioning their vast holdings of USTreasury
Bonds. The world has a vested interest in preventing a crash of the US$
on a global basis. There is plenty of incentive in bond arbitrage among
speculators to keep the pressure on reasonably strong US$ demand. That
bond yield advantage offered by the USTreasurys is not going to go away.
It cannot. High US rates are here to stay, with foreigners holding the
USTBond as hostage, the victim sure to be the US housing sector and
USEconomy itself. Foreigners have changed their reserves management and
have given a higher priority and ratio among holdings to gold.
The issue of gold
investment as an inflation hedge is always prominent. The manifestation
of monetary inflation is so diverse in its forms that confusion reigns
widely even as its omnipresent liquidity rains on the entire economic
landscape. Banks and the US Congress have proved themselves incapable to
rein in this inflation when our status quo depends so critically upon
it. To stop inflation, our nation must undergo a depression.
The United States
contains massive housing inflation, bond inflation, stock inflation
among its asset groups. Concurrently, the USEconomy contains massive
cost inflation from higher energy prices and a universe of higher costs
tied to living expenses. Asia contains massive expansion of industrial
production capacity which has exploited incredibly cheap labor inherent
to their sphere. The export of US inflation to Asia, and the conversion
of our paper inflation to excess production capacity has essentially
created a giant whirlwind of deflationary pressure to the USEconomy. It
comes in the forms of reduced import prices of finished products and
lost wages, from American to Chinese. We in the United States have a
cyclone of rising asset prices and falling real economy prices (product
and wage). Some can meaningfully label it a hurricane. As much damage
has been levied on our body economic from the abuse and dependence on
inflation, as was doled out by the hurricanes on the Gulf Coast.
Officials inside China
are grumbling about the bloated USDollar. The ground under their Chinese
financial feet is rumbling with public statements that China should use
some of its vast foreign reserves to buy gold bullion. A scheiss storm
this way comes, as in brown ice.
©
2006 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials.
Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
For personal questions about subscriptions, contact him
at “JimWillieCB@aol.com”
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