Breaking News

Yahoo nearing end of search for new CEO: repo...
11:08 PM  01/08/09

Asia stocks slip ahead of U.S. jobs
10:41 PM  01/08/09

Moderate earthquake hits Southern California ...
11:04 PM  01/08/09

Chevron warns of 'significantly lower' earnin...
5:14 PM  01/08/09

Sony's 3-D Dreams
11:30 PM  01/08/09

Wal-Mart Registers Disappointment
11:30 PM  01/08/09

Deal reached to end gas cut-off in Europe
10:47 PM  01/08/09

In hard times, White House replica goes up fo...
10:47 PM  01/08/09

more »

Revenge of the Barbarous Relic

By Kurt Kasun | November 20, 2008 | 11:57 AM | 17 Comments

Marc Faber’s latest report written on November 1 was titled “Why Market Interventions by Governments worsen Economic and Financial Conditions!” I might have called it "Vengeance of the Barbarous Relic". John Maynard Keynes granted gold with this pejorative, giving license to governments to intervene, print, and distort to their heart's content. In the long run we are all dead...right? Wrong! The long run is now and the chickens are coming home to roost.

Keynesian economics has forced us into this mess and Austrian economics will get us out...but not willingly. Only after the world's paper currencies has been totally trashed and nations are forced back to metals-backed currencies will the transformation and adoption of sustainable economic policies occur.

Clearly we are caught in deflation for now. The correct trade was and is to short the popular indices and buy gold. You would have made money doing this. See my commentary, "The Party Is Over." When I wrote the commentary the market still had not violated its bull market trend line dating back to 1982. We have since blown through that support line and just about every other support line you can imagine. There is no more support...only more plunges to come in the market averages and, since we have become such an asset-dependent economy, we should only expect extremely hard times. Negative feedback loops between the financial markets and the real economy are going to wreak enormous havoc.

Deflation and US dollar strengthening continues for now, but two points are in order concerning this. First, this is not a positive development. Paul Kasriel, director of economic research at The Northern Trust Company hammers home the point:

"In conclusion, falling consumer prices are a symptom of weak consumer demand, not a reason for hope of a rebound in consumer demand. To be sure, if consumer demand is contracting, it is better for consumers that the supply of consumer goods and services is not also contracting. But the circumstance of falling consumer prices would only be "good" for consumers if the decline were being brought about by expanding supply. Journalists can be excused for writing articles arguing how the current decline in consumer prices is good for consumers. Journalists are not economists. But it is inexcusable that economists would be spreading this malarkey!"

Secondly, as foreigners, companies, and investors continue to accumulate cash and the government continues to owe it, the only party which is harmed from a further strengthening of the US dollar is the US Government. There is just way too much incentive for the US Government to concoct a way to squirm out of its debt obligations. It is simply the only path. It will not default, but will inflate its way out, reducing the 'real' price of current obligations.

That is why it is important to be long gold and short the market. For now gold is holding up better than the market in the current environment of asset deflation. But when the pendulum swings back to inflation (I suspect months not years) the price of gold will rocket much faster than the nominal prices of stocks. I'll place my bet alongside the 5000-year history of failed paper currencies against hubris of economists who think they have figured out a better system. I have seen some estimates that would place the price of gold north of $50,000/oz. to back all of the money in the world. However, this number could come down dramatically with a few more months or years of asset deflation and/or issuances of new currencies to replace worthless ones.

Notwithstanding the drubbing portfolios have recently experienced, I believe there is still too much optimism out there..."the Great American spirit lives on...we have overcome worse than this...we made it through the Great Depression", etc. The levels of panic and fear are not as low as they were earlier in the year when the markets began to crater in earnest. See chart from Barron's below:

I would dub this unhealthy condition as "irrational optimism" (clearly no longer irrational exuberance). There are still too many financial media experts comparing this to 1929 or 1974 and calling for a short-term bottom and "tradable bounce" going into next year. There are too many people looking to morsels of good news in a sea of bad. Just a couple of days ago when Hewlett Packard announced their better-than-expected earnings and lifted guidance, the giddiness of the "objective" financial commentators reporting the news was palpable and the knee-jerk reaction of the futures market was to rise sharply higher. Well, ultimately, the markets ended that day lower as the reality of the other 499 companies (only a slight exaggeration) are expecting their fortunes to rapidly decline set in.

This morning news that Saudi Prince Alwaleed is boosting his stake in Citigroup is giving the bulls’ false hope once again. Futures have rebounded again as investors cling to their irrational optimism.

You should employ investment strategies that exploit this human fallacy to be optimistic when the evidence clearly points otherwise. Optimism is a virtue which propels society forward and moves individuals ahead in 'normal times'. The period we are entering is going to be unlike anything this country has ever experienced.

Comments (17)  |  Related Topics  » |

 
Use gold daily

Gold is having its revenge. It cannot be stopped. Economic law is being asserted.

One wise course of action would be to implement gold clauses into contracts like tenant agreements. 31 USC 5101-5118 is the applicable law.

The next would be to start using gold in ordinary daily transactions. This is possible and a viable alternative currency is functioning that is not subject to any of this counter-party risk. http://www.runtogold.com/goldmoney/

Submitted by RunToGold (not verified) on Fri, 2008/11/21 - 12:22pm » reply |
 
gold

so what is the best way to play gold. stocks, etf?

Submitted by robert (not verified) on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 11:37pm » reply |
 
It depends on your objective

If you simply want to buy a security that trades nearly parallel to the price of the metal, you can buy the gold etf (GLD). Gold stocks themselves have other risks involved and trade on their individual merits.

Submitted by Jim Slagle on Fri, 2008/11/21 - 8:16pm » reply |
 
gold

Buy physical gold and, especially, silver. Stocks are tricky and volatile, but have the largest potential upside if you can pick the right junior stock. ETF...wouldn't touch an ETF with a 26 and 1/2 foot pole. Far too manipulated and untrustworthy. Nothing beats holding the physical asset. And keep it in a safe place, NOT in a bank safe deposit box. Keep it in a Trust or a gold IRA or silver IRA, or a formidable home safe.

Submitted by Shrike (not verified) on Fri, 2008/11/21 - 1:56am » reply |
 
ETFs are "far too

ETFs are "far too manipulated and untrustworthy?" Huh? Name one example of any significant price divergence between GLD and the physical metal. There's nothing wrong with owning physical metal, but to suggest GLD is some sort of scam is the worst sort of scare-mongering typical from some in the gold crowd. Either that or this post is from someone who sells physical gold himself. Seen it 1000 times... cranks like this are the ones who give gold bugs a bad name...

Submitted by Chip Hanlon on Fri, 2008/11/21 - 12:27pm » reply |
 
etf

I suggest you read Ted Butler.. the etf's have been leasing the silver they are supposidly supposed to be holding for thier customers.. thus they are keeping the price suppressed to supply the industrial users.. I woul not be surprised if the gold etfs are doing the same thing as far as leasing. Best thing right now is to buy physical, fully paid for not on margin, and TAKE DELIVERY! anyone who thinks the gold and silver markets are not manipulated are pure morons! there is proof beyond proof in the COT'S.
the idiots in CFTC, SEC and other government officials are turning a blind eye to market manipulation by the huge banks.. JPMORGAN to be exact. BUY PHYSICAL, TAKE DELIVERY.. once these morons do not have the physical gold or silver to manipulate its Game over!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 2008/11/21 - 2:21pm » reply |
 
Another thing...

The U.S. will not inflate its way out of this because it would render all of the dollar-denominated assets held by various governments around the world worthless and would result in a potentially disastrous conflict. We will endure deflation before we attempt hyperinflation.

Submitted by Bulleri on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 2:49pm » reply |
 
But the holders of that

But the ones in Debt. (USA) suffer even greater when that deflation makes debt much more difficult to service. Inflation is the only way out. Foreign central banks will dump their holdings of debt and dollars making the situation of rising rates and inflation much worse here.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 2:57pm » reply |
 
Deflation is boosting demand

Deflation is boosting demand for treasuries big time and driving treasury yields down across the curve... the government's cost of borrowing is decreasing dramatically, it's easier for them to service debt than ever.

Submitted by Bulleri on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 3:02pm » reply |
 
Don't mistake fear with

Don't mistake fear with deflation. Fear is not wanting to own anything that is not sovereign debt. Deflation is a decrease in the money supply. Let;s see if the government can continue to print and spend and not send inflation higher.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 3:55pm » reply |
 
Good point Mike! Only time

Good point Mike! Only time will tell...

Submitted by Bulleri on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 4:00pm » reply |
 
By the way, it is so nice to

By the way, it is so nice to have someone as intelligent as you are posting comments to our site. Keep them coming.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 4:03pm » reply |
 
Thanks paisan! Will do!!

Thanks paisan! Will do!!

Submitted by Bulleri on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 4:10pm » reply |
 
Revenge...........

Kurt:
Nice job. Does all this mean the commodity bull market is dead for good? I mean many energy and metal companies are trading well below book value and liquidation value. How long can this continue? As Jim Rogers said commodity bulls die when supply finally catches up and swamps demand. I'm not sure we have that right now. The severity of this credit crisis is clouding our ability to predict future levels of economic activity. Your guess is as good as mine.

Best,
Chris M.

Submitted by Chris (not verified) on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 2:18pm » reply |
 
Welcome Back Kurt!

Very thought-provoking piece.

Submitted by Jim Slagle on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 2:12pm » reply |
 
I couldn't have written that

I couldn't have written that commentary better myself. It's has become common to couch those who advocate a gold standard as nuts. What is nuts, in actuality, is having a currency backed by nothing. The end of our 37 year experiment with a global fiat currency has endend badly. We just need to admit it and move forward, but I doubt that will happen. Only next time the result of continuing to believe a currency can exist by fiat will make this current economic mess seem like goldilocks.

Submitted by Michael Pento on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 1:56pm » reply |
 
Hey Kurt... "Pessimism is a

Hey Kurt... "Pessimism is a luxury during good times and optimism is a necessity during bad times." We did come out of the Great Depression and we became a better society because of it. I believe we are entering another one and it will last for years, but we will come out of that one too and it will make us strong again.

Submitted by Bulleri on Thu, 2008/11/20 - 1:14pm » reply |

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
More information about formatting options Captcha Image: you will need to recognize the text in it.
Please type in the letters/numbers that are shown in the image above.