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I'm often asked the question if rising interest rates will cause downward
pressure on gold prices. The answer is yes, but only if those rates are rising
in real terms and not in nominal terms only. But an even more important question
that needs to be asked is whether or not the Fed will be able to allow rates
to rise to a level that provides the market with a positive real return. The
answer, unfortunately, is no.
The average gold price increased from $41.09 an ounce in 1971 to $612.29
per ounce in 1980. During that same time frame, the constant rate on the 10-year
note increased from 6.16% to 11.46%. But it was not until 1981 that the
average yearly price of gold began to retreat. Its average price for that year
fell to $458.48, as the interest rate on the 10-year note continued rising
to a record high of 13.91%!
It took ten years of steady increases in interest rates before the price
of gold started to decline because it was not until then that investors in
the Treasury market began to receive something close to a real return on their
invested dollars. According to official Consumer Price Inflation data, the
rate of inflation which began in the early part of that decade at 3%, then
rose all the way to the low double digits in the middle of the '70's,
ultimately peaking at 15% in 1980.
Clearly, then, interest rates on government debt securities can appreciate
without causing the price of gold to fall because one of the most important
factors driving the price of gold is the real rate of return available
on Treasuries.
Today there is only a nascent rise in 10 year yields from their low of 2.08%
reached on December 18th 2008, to today's yield of 2.70%. The trenchant difference
from 29 years ago is not only the relatively small increase in yield, but that
the rise in yield is not the result of a rising Fed Funds rate.
The price of gold began its descent in 1980 from its then record high of
$875 per ounce. However, it was during that same time period that the Fed Funds
rate went from 4.5% in early 1971 to its all time high of its target between
19-20% reached in early 1981. But today we see this small rise in yield comes
without even the slightest hint of an inflation-fighting rate increase from
the Fed.
A flat or inverted yield curve exists only when the Fed is aggressively selling
Treasuries in order to absorb excess liquidity. This causes rates on the short
end of the curve to rise to levels that are at or above those on the long end
of the yield curve. In contrast, today Ben Bernanke is buying massive amounts
of bank debt in order to keep interest rates low. However, this inflationary
practice is causing the long end of the curve to rise as the free market is
trying to provide investors with a positive yield.
Regardless of what the Fed does, however, the point is made clear from the
current bull market in gold; the yield provided from government fixed income
instruments is still below what investors expect the rate of inflation to be.
But here is the unique problem facing the Fed this time. Unlike the Volker
Fed -- who crushed inflation with unprecedented hikes in the Fed Funds rate -- Mr.
Bernanke may find it nearly impossible to raise rates without causing massive
economic carnage. The reason is clear: the level of debt outstanding in both
a public and private sectors has increased to the point where servicing it
becomes impossible without artificially-induced low interest rates.
In the first quarter of 1980, the household financial obligation ratio -- a
measure of household debt service as a percentage of disposable income--was
15.9%. It is now over 19%. As bad as today's number is, it pales in comparison
to the level of consumer debt as a percentage of GDP, which is now nearly 100%
of total output. Back in the early '80's, by contrast, it was just over
50%. On the public sector level the numbers are just as grim. National debt
as a percentage of GDP has now reached 85% of output, while in 1980 it was
a mere 40%.
Just imagine the stress on the consumer and the government that would be
experienced if the Fed were to raise rates aggressively, as Volcker did. How
could the consumer continue to service his or her mortgage and how could the
U.S. Treasury finance the titanic national debt if rates were to increase much
above today's levels?
The problem with inflation is real. The Fed Funds rate is currently at an
historic low of 0-.25%. Meanwhile, the increase in the monetary base (high
powered money) is unprecedented in history and now stands at nearly $2 trillion
dollars, up from just $850 billion in September of 2008. The rate of increase
is now over 300% annually. The monetary aggregates (M1, M2, M3 and MZM) have
increased by double digit rates on a year-over- year basis and the fiscal 2009
deficit should eclipse $2 trillion for the first time in U.S. history.
This level of debt should lead to an even further expansion of the money
supply and cause the rate of inflation to increase significantly. Yet, as the
free market demands rates to rise, they must be kept under wrap by an intervening
Central Bank that is forced into printing money to keep them low.
But creating inflation in order to keep interest rates low is a diametrically
opposing force that cannot coexist for any extended period of time. On the
losing side will be government, as free market forces will ultimately prevail
in the long run.
So not only can gold appreciate in a rising rate environment, it now seems
clear that any increase in rates is a long way off (if the Fed has its way).
Thus, the only two bull markets that exist at this juncture are gold and U.S.
debt, a condition that cannot last for long either. Investors who believe in
the free market have to believe that one of those assets is in a bubble and
that one is undervalued, perhaps dramatically so.
Figuring out which one is which seems simple enough to this observer.
Be sure to listen in on my Mid-Week
Reality Check.
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