Showing posts with label fiat currency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiat currency. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Gold Rallies Off Support; Inflation Threat Hasn't Gone Away

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


Gold had a strong rally the first trading day of February. This rally was significant for two reasons. First gold hit a significant support level last Friday and needed to bounce at that point if it is going to form a double bottom. Secondly, assets in bull markets should rally the first few trading days of the month. Despite a barrage of press coverage during the last several weeks, the threat of inflation hasn't diminished, nor are the world's governments likely to return to fiscal and monetary responsibility for many years into the future. Gold will continue its long-term rally until that happens.

The Credit Crisis has forced the U.S. and a number of other industrialized countries to risk either a long prolonged recessionary period or massive inflation. Modern democracies will always chose inflation because the voters will turn on any government that allows a recession to continue for a long time (unemployment rates will be what voters make their judgment on, not manipulated GDP numbers). While the Obama administration spent the last three weeks trumpeting deficit control, the 2011 proposed budget submitted by his administration on February 1st indicated deficit out-of-control instead. While there were supposedly an item here and an item there that would save $20 billion or so in the next many years, this is laughable. The budget deficit for fiscal 2010, which ends this Sept 30th, was revised downward on January 26th by $150 billion and then upward by $190 billion on February 1st. These people can't predict 10 days in advance, let alone 10 years and yet the mainstream press treated their multi-year predictions as something that should be taken seriously instead of as an item worthy of the comic pages.

Gold was also selling down because the trade-weighted U.S. dollar has been rallying since early December. The dollar rally first began because Japan and China were acting in concert to drive down the Japanese yen. In January, the euro has had the major sell off because of fears of a sovereign default by Greece. There is a real risk of this, but can the ECB let Greece default? It should be kept in mind that Greece represents only 2% of the euro zone economy. The euro has fallen by over 7% against the U.S. dollar because of the crisis. A sovereign default in Greece is likely to be much more costly than a bailout and so a bailout should be expected. It will also only be more expensive as time goes on, so an obvious question is why have the ECB leaders avoided it so far?  When this problem is resolved, both the euro and gold will rally strongly.

The press has also released items lately that are obviously meant to drive the price of gold down. The most interesting of these concerned comments made by legendary investor George Soros at the recent Davos conclave. Speaking about the excess money creation and govenment spending taking place globally, Soros said that gold would be the ultimate bubble because of these. Soros did not indicate that the bubble he foresaw was going to peak anytime soon, although the press slanted its coverage to indicate otherwise. Gold rose 25% in 2009 versus around 400% in its last year of the 1970s rally. Bubbles end in massive rallies and we have an approximate measurement of how large that rally amount is for gold because it previously ended a bubble three decades ago. When investors see gold going up several hundred percent in one year, they should worry about gold being in a bubble that is about to burst. Before then, they shouldn't. Expect to continually hear that gold is in a bubble for the next several years, especially every time it hits a new high.

In the short-term, gold is not out of the woods just yet. Investors should watch the $105.00 level on GLD. Any significant break of this would indicate that  GLD will drop to its 200-day moving average, which is around $100.00 and that spot gold would test the $1000 level. Silver would also break down from its trading range, roughly between the $16 to $19 an ounce level for spot (slightly lower for SLV). Seasonals are generally strong for both gold and silver in February, but weak in late spring. In any given short-term period, price drops are possible because of temporary liquidity restrictions from the central bank or government policy changes. Investors should particularly watch out for the increase in capital gains taxes that will take place in the U.S. on January 1, 2011. Many American long-term holders of the precious metals have big profits and if they want them taxed at a lower rate, they will have to sell before the end of 2010. Bargain hunters should take advantage of this as well as any other major sell offs in the precious metals. Gold has maintained its value for over 5000 years; paper currencies are usually lucky if they last 100 years.

Disclosure: Long gold and silver.

NEXT: Currency Markets - California Dreaming is Greek to Me

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Monday, November 17, 2008

T & A and the GS-20 Summit

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

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Last Wednesday Treasury Secretary Paulson announced the T&A would be taken out of TARP (the Wall Street bailout bill passed in early October). The raison d'etre given by the Bush administration to congress for passing TARP was that only by purchasing troubled assets on bank balance sheets could banks be freed up to lend again and get the economy going. After the legislation was passed, congressional leadership from both parties announced with great fanfare how they were saving the American economy with this program. The ink was barely dry on the bill however, before Paulson announced that preferred stock was going to be purchased in troubled financial institutions instead. While the first $250 billion will still be earmarked for that purpose, Paulson has now decided that the remaining funds should be used to support financial markets that supply credit for credit card debt, auto loans and student loans. Of course next week, there might be a better way to save the American economy and the six week old program could be changed even again. If all this looks like no one in Washington has the slightest idea what they are doing, it's because they don't.

This is not to say that the new ideas for TARP are not an improvement on the original provisions of the bill which were essentially a form of welfare for Wall Street. Unlike welfare for the poor though, welfare for the rich comes with fewer limitations. While TARP has a provision for 'restriction' of bonuses, it doesn't eliminate them, nor does it force companies that can't continue to exist without government support to pay their executives salaries that top government officials would get. Nevertheless, over the weekend seven top Goldman Sachs (Paulson's old firm) managers graciously renounced their bonuses for 2008. Why they would have been getting bonuses when the company's stock has fallen 70% in the last twelve months is not exactly clear. CEO Lloyd Blankfein received a Wall Street record $68 million bonus last year when he was making the decisions that lead to this year's disastrous performance.

Like everything else in the contemporary economy, lack of effective ideas for handling the credit crisis is global as well. The GS-20 meeting of world leaders this weekend in Washington produced mostly a commitment to free trade and further monetary and fiscal stimulus (in other words governments throughout the world are going to print more paper money which will be backed by nothing other than their leaders hot air). British PM Gordon Brown, who decided to sell half of Britain's gold at the bottom of the market in 1999 and has presided over a worse subprime crisis than in the U.S., led the charge for increased stimulus measures. Other ideas bandied about included multinational supervision for global banks, more oversight for credit rating agencies and regulation for hedge funds. These useful suggestions didn't get much beyond the bandying stage however. Essentially anything concrete was put off until the next meeting in April. The do-nothing summit was immediately declared a success by President Bush.

Shortly thereafter, Japan announced a second quarter of negative GDP confirming it was in recession as the euro zone did last Friday. Since this was not exactly surprising news, Asian markets were little changed overnight, even despite the drop in the U.S. on Friday. The out of the blue rally in American markets last Thursday faded almost as quickly as it arriveed with the Dow down 3.8% and the Nasdaq down 5.0%. Technically speaking this was another crash day on the Nasdaq, but as I have said many times, no one pays attention anymore to just a 5% or 6% drop - and that includes world leaders.

NEXT: Trojan Horse of Earnings Surprises

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.