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Market Historian & Analyst Bob Hoye Explains
Bob
Hoye is chief investment strategist for Institutional Advisors, a firm he founded
and which provides research to financial institutions, mining, and petroleum
companies in a number of countries. The basic model integrates the behavior
of the stock markets, credit spreads, the yield curve, and industrial commodities
through what Bob considers as yet another new financial era, its usual dramatic
climax, and consequent contraction.
The approach used by Bob and his associates anticipated the significant trend
changes - usually with enough time to determine and implement policy. The models
used by Mr. Hoye are supplemented by proprietary technical analysis that is
used by stock, bond, and metal trading desks that pay a healthy fee for this
groups unique vision of world markets and uncanny market forecasts.
Given the success of Institutional Advisors in making some very key market
calls over the past two or three decades, the original conclusion that Bob's
thorough research would provide a most reliable guide for market participants
through new financial eras has been confirmed. For that reason alone, you need
to listen to what Mr. Hoye has to say. But I have been attracted to Bob's work
because of his unique deflationary research, which covered all significant
inflations and consequent deflations. While his approach to markets is from
a very different angle than the approach taken by Ian Gordon, who is frequently
mentioned in these pages, and different from other deflationist thinkers that
I revere, like Professor Emeritus - Memorial University of Newfoundland and of
course former central banker, John Exter, I am struck by the fact that the
unique views of these men are highly compatible with one another. Next month
we expect to explore the views of another deflationist, namely Robert Prechter,
who will provide yet another vision of an impending depression-induced return
to monetary reality.
But for now, we present the very unique and "spot-on" views of Bob Hoye. He
along with Professor Fekete was quite instrumental in your editor's February
5 decision to turn bullish on the Lehman Brothers 20+ U.S. Treasury Year ETF
(symbol TLT). While in Vancouver a few weeks ago for the Cambridge House Resource
Conference, I had the pleasure of dining with Bob. It was a most enjoyable
2+ hours of time as he covered a vast expanse of economic history. By the way,
for a "Dining with Bob" experience of your own, let me suggest you click on
the following link: http://www.institutionaladvisors.com/media-11-18-00.htm.
Here "Financial Post" columnist William Hanley describes a lunchtime conversation
with Mr. Hoye. The title of that article is: "Market in an Awful Stew? At the
Teahouse, Bob Hoye Sees Red for Danger." When I visited with Bob in Vancouver,
he insisted that an accurate study of history can only lead to the conclusion
that major bubbles like the one we are now in the process of working our way
out of, are always concluded with deflation, not inflation. It is deflation,
not inflation, that leads to the loss of control by the ruling elite when the
mathematics of an exponential rise in debt simply overwhelm the ability of
central bankers to inflate any further. I found Bob's insights to be very valuable,
and I trust you will, too. After you finish reading my interview with Bob,
click on the link above for more on his remarkable track record.
TAYLOR: Bob, I know that you provide a service for institutional clients
that is quite expensive. Do you serve retail investors as well or only the
professional investor?
HOYE: We got our start in the 1970s when the metals' side of the research
was retained by two big mining companies. With the prospect of yet another "New
Financial Era," in January 1982 we started an advisory letter for certified
investment officers (CIOs) as well as equity and fixed income portfolio managers.
Due to growing inquiry in 2000, we initiated a service for high-net-worth individuals.
Beyond subscribers with a long-term view, our research is used by stock, bond,
and metal trading desks.
TAYLOR: Tell us more about your background and how you got started
with mining and oil companies.
HOYE: Originally, I took a degree in geophysics, which got me into
mining exploration work. When I graduated, I began working on what turned out
to be the hot mining play of the day. I didn't have much money, but I bought
some stock at $1.18. When it went up to $5.25 I got out. Eventually it became
quite a darling in Canada, as it soared to $7.50.
TAYLOR: Which discovery was that?
HOYE: Western Mines, and it was a producer for 25 years. But the big
mistake is to make money on your first stock. You think, "This is easy." But
then I started with the premier investment dealer in Canada - on the trading
desk and in research as an assistant mining analyst. Eventually I got into
institutional stock and bond sales. Then in 1974, I went off on my own and
did all of the historical research on markets. At the time it was quite original,
and it led to our forecasting models.
TAYLOR: I note that you very accurately called the stock market bottom
in 2002. What prompted you to make that call?
HOYE: That was really in the hands of colleague Ross Clark who writes
the "ChartWorks" letter. At the end of 1999 when the stock market was really
building up to a frenzy, he came up with what we call the "Post Euphoria Model." We
looked back at previous examples of great excitement, such as the stock market
in 1929, gold in 1980, and the Nikkei in 1989. There were certain similarities
to those as they peaked and as they broke and then as they collapsed. So that
is what we started using. Now using that model, we ended up with an important
low about 30-some-odd months later. That worked out to October 2002. Beginning
in August, our "ChartWorks" page started to emphasize that we were looking
for stocks and corporate bonds to bottom out by late in the year. And then
in late September, Ross started to get what we call capitulation readings in
his proprietary model. You never know whether one of those is going to last
one or two weeks, but in early October 2002, we got the buy.
What we looked for then was a cyclical recovery in business and a cyclical
bull market in stocks until it ran out. Well, it looks like it ran out late
in 2004 and is in the process of topping now. As we all know, the market has
been rather heavy since the first of the year. In the first week of December
we started to look at the probability of a turn-of-the-year high. You had all
those speculations, all against the weakening dollar. And you also had narrowing
credit spreads, so we thought that would all culminate in the turn-of-the-year
window. There has been a history of major speculations terminating at the turn
of the year, such as gold and silver in 1980 and the Nikkei in 1989.
So that's how we got the '02 bottom and the '04 top.
TAYLOR: What do you think accounts for the end-of-the-year peaks? Do
you have a theory?
HOYE: When the major patterns recur so regularly, there is little point
in pondering the "whys."
TAYLOR: So what did you see here that said we are at a top? If I turn
on CNBC I hear a constant drumbeat that the good times are just getting underway
again. What was it that convinced you?
HOYE: Sentiment figures in December were at record highs on the stock
market with an exceptional low at only 5% bulls on the dollar index. We had
a capitulation reading on the dollar index in the beginning of November, and
we hadn't had that since January of 2004 when a six-month recovery in the dollar
followed. But all this came together in December, so it was a straightforward
call.
TAYLOR: We still have quite a way to go to reach the old highs in equity
prices that were set in the early days of 2000. So do you see this as a cyclical
call within a long-term secular bear market?
HOYE: Yes, that was the call back in 2002. We said it would be a cyclical
bull market within a secular bear. And that was important because the period
following previous financial bubbles has always shown a long financial economic
contraction until you get all the abuses in the credit and currency markets
washed out of the system. The usual business cycle will prevail, but the recessions
will likely be stronger than the recoveries. As in post-1989 Japan, some policy
makers may become perplexed.
TAYLOR: So, Bob, you don't see a new high?
HOYE: We don't see the senior indexes going to new highs. Bullish sentiment
for the stock market late in the year was actually at higher readings than
it was before the highs in 2000, which was the real blow-off top. So in December,
with the strongest sentiment figures, the best the markets could do was reach
a lower high.
TAYLOR: You take a really long view; so when do you think the old 2000
highs will be taken out?
HOYE: Oh, for an index like the NASDAQ, I would say 20 years or so.
It wasn't until 1955 that the Dow exceeded the 1929 high. A classic instruction
on just how long it takes to fully recover from a tech-mania is provided by
RCA. Radio Corporation of America was the big tech-darling, and it reported
earnings of 3 dollars per share going into 1929, when the long-term rave was
radio, gramophones, and talking pictures.
After reporting losses in the early 1930s, it took until 1957 for earnings
to get back to 3. A good portion was due to the Elvis Presley contract, which
was, of course, not seen by the long-term pundits in 1929.
TAYLOR: Richard Russell talks of a gigantic short position in the dollar,
and if I'm not mistaken, this is a concept you have also spoken of. Perhaps
Richard Russell acquired this concept from you.
HOYE: It could be, because I discuss that occasionally and published
it early last year.
TAYLOR: Could you explain the concept?
HOYE: First, let's talk about bubbles. It means a new financial era,
and each had the same setup. There was a huge blowout in inflation - that was
the old era. Then you had the crash of commodities and tangible assets that
then sets up the new financial era, and everyone thinks it is going to run
forever. Then it crashes. The key elements of the pattern include a great boom
in tangible assets, then a great boom in financial assets, and then a period
of long contraction. It has been running for 300 years.
TAYLOR: So we had the boom in commodities in the 1970s.
HOYE: There were two booms - gold, silver, and crude oil in 1980. Then
if you look at The Economist's commodity index, it had an important high in
1988. The way I ended up describing it was that the late 1980s' boom was the
last business cycle of the old era inflation. That then set up the new era
of financial asset inflation, which ran for nine years, which is typical. Then
you get the first crash, and then you have the rebound. But the point is that
after all those five previous stock bubbles, the feature of the contraction
eventually was a relentlessly strong senior currency. It was strong, relative
to most other currencies most of the time, and strong, relative to most commodities
most of the time.
TAYLOR: Could this be next? Might the dollar fool everyone and get
strong now?
HOYE: Quite likely. Back in previous bubbles, the financial capital
was in London. Underwriters went around to places like Bolivia, Turkey, Chile,
and Egyptian banks and everywhere else, because the demand for such paper seemed
endless. So they floated a whole lot of "junk." Then, once the party is over,
the debt becomes a burden.
TAYLOR: In the old days, their debt obligations were in sterling, which
was the senior currency; whereas now, with New York being the financial center,
the dollar is the senior currency?
HOYE: Yes. And all you need for this recipe to work is a bare majority
of all the debt that is floated in the bubble to be contracted in U.S. dollars.
Once the party is over, everyone then has to get their hands on U.S. dollars
to service their obligations in New York.
TAYLOR: So that is the dollar short position - a short squeeze, if
you will.
HOYE: It's going to be very interesting.
TAYLOR: You mentioned the South Sea Bubble. What were the others since
then?
HOYE: The first one was in 1720. The next was in 1772. The third was
1825. The fourth was in 1873. Number 5 was 1929, and number 6 was 2000.
TAYLOR: So was it the pound sterling until 1929 or the dollar that
was the senior currency in 1929?
HOYE: Well, 1929 was in the transition period. By the end of the war,
the dollar was the senior currency.
TAYLOR: Yes, and the dollar did get stronger of course during the 1930s.
At least, it did gain purchasing power in the 1930s.
HOYE: After the bear raid by Roosevelt in 1934. Remember, he confiscated
privately-held gold and then raised the price from $20.67 to $35. FDR was a
flake who fell for any concept touted by interventionist economists who still
are nothing more than financial adventurers in public policy.
Beyond that, he was a hypocrite. Bill Middendorf, who is chairman of the CMRE,
has an original and redeemed note whereby Roosevelt personally made a loan
to be repaid "to the order of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the sum of Five
thousand Dollars in gold coin of the United States of America of the standard
weight and fineness existing on the date of this note, without interest." The
date the loan was made was February 1, 1927, to the Warm Springs Foundation,
Inc. and it was due February 1, 1937.
TAYLOR: Do you see that same thing happening again in America? Do you
think our gold will be confiscated again?
HOYE: NO.
TAYLOR: Why?
HOYE: Normally, during the post-bubble contraction, the politics shift
away from the centralized government and toward the sovereignty of the individual.
The exception was Roosevelt's New Deal. So with more sobriety returning, everyone
is going to run their own household on a budget, and they are going to look
to their government and say, "Hey, you get on a budget, too." And then eventually
they will figure out that the central planners were very much at fault in promoting
the whole mania. And so the people will turn on the politicians and eventually
will demand the protection of a gold standard. It has happened before and it
will happen again.
TAYLOR: Alan Greenspan is revered almost as deity. He is given all
the credit for all the wonderful times we have enjoyed and yet it should be
obvious that the so called good times have been a result of the excessive creation
of money.
HOYE: Yes. The first big reckless central banker was John Law in Paris
during the bubble of 1720. He was celebrated so long as the financial party
was on and the market didn't crash. But when it crashed, he then had to have
a false passport and a disguise to escape France with his life.
TAYLOR: He may have lost his head.
HOYE: In more ways than one. For those who think a central banker can
keep inflation going forever, Law had 8 printing presses going in Paris. And
then when the mania collapsed, the public demanded to see the plates destroyed.
England was on a gold standard and was not printing money, but with the carry
trade running full blast and as asset prices soared, credit ballooned. Speculation
is fungible, and it doesn't matter what the tout is, so long as it soars, it
creates credit. Sterling was backed by gold, so London's bubble was accomplished
with a huge expansion of credit. Paris enjoyed that plus a huge printing of
currency. In the crash, agents of the boom suffered a devastating loss of esteem.
TAYLOR: Of course, now, Ben Bernanke has reminded us that with advanced
technology, we have digital money and helicopter money. We are not limited,
as was John Law, to just 8 printing presses!
HOYE: Well, I think the market will disappoint even the most ambitious
of today's central bankers. And the thing to understand is that unless they
go to a pure paper inflation - which would require them to chew through the
whole credit market - that would provoke such an uproar that it would force
them to quit it. So here we are: it's a credit inflation, which depends on
margin. As long as the prices are going up, everything is fine and it doesn't
matter that short rates are going up. The cost of money doesn't matter if you
know you can double your money every six months. And once the contraction starts,
I suggest that it overwhelms the ability of the Fed to pursue its portion of
credit creation. I'm not saying that the Fed is going to suddenly tighten.
No bloody way - not willingly! But the whole system is going to tighten as
all the leveraged "liquidity" disappears.
TAYLOR: Because the private sector or the economics don't allow it
to generate returns any longer. So, out of economic necessities, start to turn
their non essential items into cash and repay debts?
HOYE: As prices start going down, it gives undeniable power to the
margin clerks. And their job description is vastly different to that of your
typical central banker.
TAYLOR: The margin clerks and I would guess it also will involve the
fractional reserve banking system overall?
HOYE: Yes.
TAYLOR: Let me understand. As prices drop, the loan officers and margin
clerks at brokerage houses and in banks begin to worry that their clients won't
be able to repay their loans, so they ask for more and more margin - which
then triggers further liquidation because people have to sell non essential
items to raise cash to meet margin requirements. That then results in a collapse
in the value of less liquid assets relative to cash and the ultimate liquidity,
namely gold?
HOYE: That's happened many times but, at the top, the street ardently
believes that "this time it's different."
TAYLOR: But the argument is that the Fed can always expand
the money supply, as Ben Bernanke suggested when he said if need be, the Fed
could use its magnificent digital technology to create as much money as was
needed to escape deflation. He even said we could drop money from helicopters
if need be!
HOYE: That's credit, not money. It's a misnomer to call M-1, M-2, and
M-3 money. And so once the prices of the assets being speculated turn down,
then the margin clerk takes over.
TAYLOR: One of the economic dynamics I talk frequently about in my
letter, but which is almost never talked about in the mainstream press, is
the almost exponential growth in debt compared to income, as measured by GDP
and that in fact economic returns are simply not sufficient to generate enough
cash to service the debt. And when the debt can't be paid the loans are called
by as you say, the margin clerks and then the debt repudiation process gets
underway.
HOYE: That is what happened in every bubble. Credit is taken on because
of soaring asset prices. As the prices stop going up, you are left with the
debt. That kills the ability to promote any story. As we have seen in so many
promotions, so long as the trend is up the street will believe the most preposterous
of touts.
TAYLOR: In the recent interview in "Barron's," you talked about how
speculation has been rampant in stocks, bonds, energy, and industrial commodities.
Would you also including housing in that list of speculative items?
HOYE: Oh yes, exclamation mark! It's been part of the party!
TAYLOR: So when this thing unwinds, the housing market is likely to
go with it?
HOYE: Real estate indexes were hard to find. But one was farmland values
in England. Theirs is an annually posted index. From 1873 through 1895, it
went down every year - for 22 years - without relief. And according to other
measures, that marked the bottom of that depression. We don't have a similar
index in the United States, but at the top of the bubble in 1873, "The New
York Herald," which was then the leading newspaper, editorialized that because
the U.S. did not have a central bank, the Secretary of the Treasury could inflate
any amount of currency and credit, and there would never be any problem. The
1873 to 1895 contraction was widely described as "The Great Depression." Leading
economists were still analyzing it as such until 1940.
TAYLOR: Mrs. Taylor and I sold our two-family house in Queens, New
York, in September 2002, thinking we were near a top in the market. All we
have seen is the value of our house go up about 40% since then. While you may
be right about the housing market going down with the upcoming deflation, we
have been pulling our hair out because clearly with 20/20 hindsight our move
to sell was not a good one. How long do you think we might have to wait before
it looks like a good move - or will it ever?
HOYE: This has been associated with the speculation in corporate credit
spreads. Coming out of the tragedy of 9-11, it seems as though everyone has
been aggressively buying grand cars and the median home. That was helped by
the decline in short rates. Using Treasury bills, rates went from 6.4% down
eventually to less than 1%. The only time there has been that kind of a drop
in short rates is in the post-bubble period. But in previous post-bubble contractions,
such as what followed 1929, people were not inclined to aggressively buy cars
and homes. This time around, it was used to inspire a consumption spree.
As with any boom, it will be vulnerable to an important change in the credit
markets, which is typically indicated by widening of credit spreads and a steepening
yield curve. Corporate spreads have widened a little since late December, but
the curve is still flattening.
TAYLOR: Do you think we are going to continue to see a flattening of
the yield curve here?
HOYE: The trend is on until it reverses.
TAYLOR: Don't we usually have recessions after the inversion?
HOYE: Yes. We have the yield curve back to 1858. And the rule of thumb
is that whenever the curve inverts, a recession follows.
TAYLOR: And then you see a steepening before the recession comes on.
Or does the steepening occur as a result of the recession?
HOYE: The inversion is part of the speculation. Once it reverses to
steeping, it suggests that the contraction is underway. And in some cases it
didn't have to get the curve fully inverted. All it needed to do was to approach
inversion and then reverse.
TAYLOR: So the short end of the yield curve comes up because of the
speculative demand for money?
HOYE: Yes. And England actually experienced an inverted yield curve
in December. And now the chart is attempting to reverse trend.
TAYLOR: In the 1970s, we had very high consumer inflation as measured
by the CPI, but not now. Why do you think inflation is being seen in equities,
commodities, and housing, but not in consumer items?
HOYE: It goes back to the ancient pattern, which starts with the "old" era
of inflation when the prices of all hard assets head up, including labor prices
which resulted in a huge increase in the CPI. Everyone gets fully positioned
for that and then that mania crashes, and out of those ashes a great financial
boom arises and then you get the stock bubble. Then everyone speculates in
financial assets and to a lesser degree in tangible assets. Some CPI inflation
is seen, but it is ignored during the raptures of a financial bubble.
TAYLOR: The dollar index has held at the all-important 80 support level.
Do you see that as being safe for now or for quite awhile to come?
HOYE: Yes. When it bottomed in December at 80.5, that was in conjunction
with our capitulation reading. The last time when we had that was in January
one year ago, at which time the dollar rallied from 84.5 to 92. This one has
rallied from 80.5 to 84.5. Our next target is 87 this month. Then the telling
moment will be when the next correction comes in. But I think that we are probably
at the start of a very long increase in the U.S. dollar for the reasons that
I gave earlier. The dollar is still the world's senior currency. The next decline
could be a huge test of the 80 level again. So we will see how that works.
TAYLOR: Any prediction as to when that test might come?
HOYE: Originally we targeted 90 by February, but now we are looking
at 87 by late this month.
TAYLOR: Of course, conventional wisdom then suggests our favorite metal
- gold - isn't going to do very well if the dollar is on the rise.
HOYE: I should respond with a line that got "Barron's" attention in
late November: "The world is long inflation and short the dollar." Massive
depreciation was in the market. It was no secret that the Fed was leading a
bear raid on the dollar. It's worth noting that the official and continuing
bear raid on gold has left a number of unrequited shorts.
The "ChartWorks" did a study a couple of weeks ago, showing the number of
times the dollar rallied at the same time gold turned up. This seems possible
now. To understand this you need to realize that in every post-bubble period,
the senior currency eventually became chronically strong. But also in every
post-bubble period, gold also became chronically strong. By contrast, during
every financial bubble, the real price of gold went down; and in every long
contraction that followed, the real price of gold went up.
TAYLOR: So by real price you mean a CPI-adjusted price, or what?
HOYE: It can be deflated against the CPI or the wholesale price index,
but as both calculations of inflation are suspect, we use the price of gold
divided by the commodity index, which gives us a more true reading. That index
had a multi-year low in March a year ago at 183, and then it rallied up to
244 in December, at which point it has been correcting now to about 212. Gold
has been outperforming most commodities for almost a year now. And it could
go on for some time.
This brings us to the gold bugs - if it were not for the demented interventionist
economists, there wouldn't be any gold bugs. They really think the only way
you can make money in gold is to have the U.S. dollar crashing. Let's reverse
that around and say the only way you can make money in gold is if all the major
currencies rally. What happens if you are mining in South Africa or Canada
or anywhere else? One example is Placer where they had some disappointing quarters,
which were attributed to currency moves. At the time, the gold bugs thought
they had the best of all worlds when the dollar was being trashed against a
soaring gold price. But, naturally, there was no increase in gold's price in
stronger currencies. The gold bugs' nirvana of a collapsing dollar had finally
arrived, but it wasn't universally successful.
Conventional wisdom seems to assume that the consequent rally for gold prices
is isolated and does not wonder if other price-items may rally faster than
gold. In which case, increasing mining costs will eat into operating margins,
just in U.S. terms. This is why we use the real price. It is a proxy for profitability,
and it is universal in time and place.
TAYLOR: Well, the gold mining sector did quite well during the inflationary
1970s, though, didn't it?
HOYE: Yes, that was an extraordinary bull market for gold in real as
well as nominal terms in the senior currency.
TAYLOR: Before gold took off in the 1970s you had a suppressed gold
price until Nixon detached gold from the dollar in 1971. It was fixed at $35
back then. So then as it began to freely trade, you had a gold price that was
rising faster than costs.
HOYE: During certain inflationary periods of time, you can make money
in gold. When gold went to $850, it certainly went up faster than costs. But
the point is that when you are in a stock bubble, the real price of gold goes
down; and after the bubble, the real price of gold goes up. And then you start
to see improved operating results for producers, and that ultimately enhances
the value of the stock. One of the ways Mother Nature works is that during
the post-bubble credit contraction, there is a huge vacuum where real liquidity
is needed. And the only way Mother Nature increases that liquidity is through
an increase in the real price of gold so that people go out and find more of
it and produce more of it. Despite this, the gold establishment, during the
last 20 years, predicted the gold price would go up because mine production
was going down. Another point was that gold should have increased with falling
real interest rates. But such rates always decline with gold during a financial
bubble. Then, to continue the confusion to orthodoxy is that following a bubble,
real long rates and gold have increased together.
If the past continues to guide, we are in Year 5 of a 20-year
bull market for gold. On the near term, the "ChartWorks" (on February 8) notes
that the conditions of the "isolated" low pattern have been met and gold's
price in dollar terms is a "buy" now for an intermediate rally.
TAYLOR: You pay a lot of attention to the Baltic Freight rates,
while Richard Russell and others pay a lot of attention to the Dow Transports.
Can you tell our readers why you prefer looking at the Baltic Freight rates?
HOYE: It's a really good proxy on global business trends. The Transports
indicate U.S. business conditions and of course, it is a component of the Dow
theory.
TAYLOR: Stephen Roach recently worried about illiquidity that could
come into the U.S. markets from a diminished U.S. dollar carry trade, now that
interest rates are rising in the U.S. Certainly we have seen short-term rates
rise more than long-term rates. So based on our discussion so far here, I assume
you share this concern with Mr. Roach?
HOYE: Oh yes. January's sharp drop in the stock market and widening
credit spreads suggests a sudden loss of liquidity. The concept of liquidity
is badly abused. For example, in the summer of 2000, the street was fully bullish
because there was so much liquidity to buy the stock market. They didn't grasp
the importance that it was stock prices rising that permitted all speculators
to leverage up their positions. But that is borrowed money. That isn't liquidity.
While an asset price is going up it gives the appearance of liquidity and then
when that asset price heads down, all of a sudden liquidity disappears. So
that is what we are dealing with now. I think Stephen Roach is a good critic
of the financial excesses, particularly since he sits at such a high place
at Morgan.
TAYLOR: No doubt he is. Certainly the U.S. dollar carry trade is hurt
by a flattening of the yield curve, but we still see the Japanese carry trade
being alive and well. They can borrow in yen at very low prices at about 1%
and buy our Treasuries at 4%. Is that something that can continue for some
time?
HOYE: The carry trade has been around since at least 1720. It is usually
described as borrowing short and lending long (I call it the BSLL factor).
And there is a compulsion in any speculative boom to borrow short and lend
out long. Either to buy junk bonds or the stock market or whatever. The symptom
of that is the flattening yield curve. And the game is over when the yield
curve reverses to steepening.
TAYLOR: But with the Japanese being able to borrow so cheaply in their
own currency and then buy higher-yielding dollar assets, and with the dollar
getting stronger, wouldn't there be an inclination for them to keep doing that
for awhile?
HOYE: That is best answered by looking at the yield curve itself. This
is how the post-bubble scenario goes. The lower grade bonds are already selling
off. But at some point they will sell off further, and there will be no liquidity
in them, and then you get credit downgrading because weakening commodities
suggest weakening earnings; weakening earnings suggest inability to service
debt, and then you get into the credit rating problem. Following a bubble,
this process can get so bad that it even pulls down the prices of long Treasuries.
So once the mania ends, short rates will come down, long rates will go up.
TAYLOR: This is exactly John Exter's inverted liquidity pyramid. As
people look for liquidity they sell longer-term, less liquid assets, and go
to the most liquid assets so that people panic into liquid assets?
HOYE: Yes, so that gets back to the real definition of liquidity, which
typically has been found in gold and short-term bills in the senior currency.
We've advised bond traders not to even think about whether the Japanese are
going to stop buying the long bond or not. If they stop buying the long bond,
will that drive the dollar down? No, because when the curve reverses, where
they may have been buying the long bond, they will stop doing that and they
will begin buying the short end of the curve. And that is why I am not concerned
about any further downside in the U.S. dollar. The dollar crisis will occur
when it becomes too strong.
TAYLOR: Corporations have had great profits in 2004, and they are building
up a huge amount of cash or they are buying their own shares. But they don't
seem to be borrowing much or using the cash they have to invest in plant and
equipment. That, along with the fact that corporate insiders have been selling
their own shares en masse, suggests to me that the folks who manage corporate
America are not overly optimistic about U.S. business prospects, even though
profits have been so high. Would you agree and do you see any long-term significance
of the cash buildup of American corporations?
HOYE: Cash is at a 35-year high. You have had a huge buildup of plant
and equipment during the '90s boom. One of the features of past post-bubble
contractions is that corporations with cash keep it because they get concerned
about their AA or even AAA credit rating. And then at the same time, banks
will only lend to AAA accounts. So corporations stop spending, and banks stop
lending. It's classic.
TAYLOR: So the Fed can't expand the money supply when that happens?
HOYE: Yes. Central banks can increase reserves but if corporations
don't borrow, that's it, game over. That's why Keynes and all that bunch just
went crazy about people hoarding money in the 1930s. Keynes said that if you
saved a schilling, you put a man out of work. So now in the U.S. and Canada
where we have adopted the Keynesian model, we are now down to virtually a zero
savings rate. So if Keynes was right we should have 100% employment. He was
a flaming idiot.
TAYLOR: He was a flaming bunch of things, but . . . I'd like to get
back to the topic of commodities. Jimmy Rogers, who we interviewed on a couple
of occasions in this letter, is extremely bullish on commodities. He told me
that lead would outperform gold and so far, I think he has been right. What
would you tell Jim Rogers if he challenged you with that statement?
HOYE: The debate would likely be his opinion versus financial history.
TAYLOR: He sometimes reads this letter, so that statement might make
some sparks fly!
HOYE: Well, he is a perma-bull on commodities. And financial history
suggests that no one sector is good forever. Our gold/commodities index includes
crude oil, copper, lead, zinc, aluminum, nickel, as well as the grains, and
gold has been outperforming commodities for almost a year now. I concluded
the research by about 1980 and said that once that commodity blow-off was over,
a long bull market could start. When taking this concept to institutions in
1981 and 1982, the standard response was "no," the Fed will keep printing and
there will continue to be inflation. They had been dismayed by their returns
on stocks and bonds during the "old" era of inflation. So I came up with the
line that, "no matter how much the Fed prints, stocks will outperform commodities." And
that baffled the street for some time. Some are still unclear about the reality
of inflation in financial assets.
The only reason I could come up with that line was because in every new financial
era, stocks outperformed commodities. So then the next difficult part - it
is really difficult - is that no matter how hard the Fed tries to print, you
still get a contraction. And that I think we should know more about that by
October. But I would enjoy having a drink and discussion with Jimmy Rogers.
TAYLOR: Perhaps that could be arranged when you come to New York to
speak at the next CMRE?
HOYE: Sure.
TAYLOR: Part of Jim Rogers' argument hinges on China. He thinks, as
do most people, that economic growth in China will continue at a torrid pace
for as far into the future as the eye can see. Do you have any thoughts on
the influence of China in the post-bubble era? Might demand from China overwhelm
normal post-bubble dynamics?
HOYE: First step is that in the 70s and 80s it was Japan that was the
engine of growth and was buying industrial commodities. What's more, they had
the most brilliant policy makers in history. But then tangible asset speculation
collapsed so the world could enjoy another financial bubble.
But the best model is the U.S. after the 1873 stock bubble. There were huge
migrations of people into the U.S. The U.S. was building railroads and canals.
It was a very vibrant and innovative economy. But it was subject to its own
domestic speculative excesses. It was also subject to the availability of credit
from the world's financial capital in London. So until the global depression
bottomed in 1895, the U.S. had bull markets and very sharp collapses, but nonetheless,
England and Europe had a depression. The U.S. was within that envelope, and
I believe China is going to be vulnerable to its own speculative excesses and
vulnerable to the availability of credit in the world's financial capital.
It's nice to have them becoming more and more free, but we saw the same pitch
in 1929 when the end of socialism in Europe was seen to be a great opportunity
for the market and industry in the U.S. That came to play in the 1990s when
another collapse of socialism was again seen to provide a great stock market.
They were going to sell all kinds of BMWs to the people in East Germany. But
if we should go back to an economist by the name of Say, Say's Law said if
you must consume you must produce. The Chinese are in the anomaly of consuming
immediately a lot of raw materials from elsewhere. At some point they will
develop iron deposits, copper mines, and coal deposits on their own.
TAYLOR: I've noticed recently that the Chinese are cutting back on
some plans to build nuclear power plants. Might this be the start of a contraction
in China?
HOYE: It's possible that the authorities who are deciding on nuclear
power may be concerned about running out of money. Let me quote from St Luke. "Which
of you intending to build a tower has not sat down first and counted the cost?
Whether he has sufficient to finish it. Lest happily, if he has laid the foundation
and is not able to finish it, all behold and begin to mock him." (Luke
14:28-29).
But then again, perhaps the Sierra Club has opened a chapter in Beijing.
TAYLOR: It might be appropriate for the U.S. as well, no?
HOYE: Well, yes, for everyone who has become over-extended on the party.
TAYLOR: You have expressed the view that investors will seek gold as
liquidity along with T-Bills. But do we have any evidence of investors doing
that in recent times since policy makers have gotten rid of the barbaric notion
of gold as money?
HOYE: Yes we do. At each of those bubble tops I mentioned earlier,
from 1720 to recent, all participants including government agencies were caught
up in the party. Nobody wanted prosperity to end. But it ends anyway.
I might mention this for your gold readers who have the notion that the club
of central bankers can run gold down. The best argument against that is to
go back to 1946, which was the secular low in interest rates. Then they started
to rise, naturally. So when rates approached 3%, policy makers got concerned
because it was very easy to figure out that this was going to increase the
cost of servicing the debt. So then the Treasury started buying bonds off the
market in order to keep rates from rising above 3%. Then in the 1960s when
it was at 6%, they were still at it. And in fact they got all excited about
their promotion to buy bonds and called it "Operation Twist," whereby they
were going to drive long rates down. But eventually rates got up to 15%.
Now, the central bankers with the 1990s' bubble, had history on their side.
The price of gold was going to go down anyway. So then it looked like they
were doing it. But they have never been tested by a really big recovery in
gold that you can get following a bubble. But this next bear market in stocks
and corporate bonds will set up the conditions for a real move in gold
that will test just how powerful the central bankers are. And I think they
will be just as unsuccessful in keeping gold down as the U.S. policy makers
were in keeping interest rates down through the 1960s and '70s.
TAYLOR: In your "ChartWorks" publication of January 25, you addressed
the gold markets; you noted that the U.S. dollar and gold were poised for a
joint advance. Could you tell our readers what prompted you to predict that
and could you also provide some indication of what your target levels and time
frame are for the advance in both the dollar and gold?
HOYE: At previous points in the last 10 years or so there have been
a few times when gold and the dollar rallied together, and it looks like we
are getting to that point again. This tandem move just appears to be in the
charts. But then eventually, both gold and the senior currency become relentlessly
strong, relative to everything else. That defines the contraction that has
followed all previous financial bubbles.
TAYLOR: What is your best prediction in terms of timing for that to
happen?
HOYE: We are not there yet, but it sure looks like we are going to
get there. Once you get the bear, then it would be a natural that the first
lows would be the lows of October 2002.
TAYLOR: In your "Pivotal Events" issue dated January 27, 2005, in referring
to your gold/commodities index you talked about how the index surged from 183
in March 2004 to 244 in December 2004 before falling back a bit more recently
to 212. Then you said the following: "This not-widely-followed index is
an indicator of gold mining profitability. Someday participants in gold will
get over their fantasies about dollar depreciation and the intellectual nonsense
about using macro economic modeling to forecast gold prices and look to the
real price." Were you referring here to the likes of supply siders like
Larry Kudlow and Steve Forbes, who constantly suggest that when the price of
gold rises, the Fed should tighten, and when the price of gold falls, the Fed
should loosen monetary policy?
HOYE: The last sentence you spoke reveals one of the great blunders
in public policy - and I remember watching Kudlow on TV in late 1999 and then
through 2000. His line was that you just had to buy the stock market because
there wasn't any inflation. He didn't understand that the huge inflation was
in stock prices. And also "The Wall Street Journal" would have an op ed piece
that would say that because the price of gold isn't going up, the Fed shouldn't
be too tight. But it is so straightforward. The price of gold goes down during
financial bubbles. I remember looking at that and seeing that the policy makers
thought they could just keep on being "easy" so they were easy right through
the biggest stock mania in history. Not only that but the Rubin/Summers Treasury
was aggressively buying long bonds out of the market, which was aggressively
putting cash into the system. It was like pouring gasoline onto the fire. Those
were some of the most insane moments in the history of policy making.
TAYLOR: Well, I do hope the public will some day understand that, because
right now Bob Rubin and Lawrence Summers are almost as revered as Alan Greenspan.
HOYE: Now the next part of your question above deals with using macro
economic modeling to forecast gold prices. First they are forecasting the price
in dollars, which, as pointed out above, doesn't mean too much unless the price
of gold is going up relative to the cost of mining. Another point is that no
matter how many other price series are used in the regression analysis, to
come up with a forecast on gold it is necessary to have a "forecast" on the
key elements that are supposed to then influence gold prices.
Some years ago, a big mining company spent a lot of money to solve the problem
of forecasting the business cycle. In order to make sure the study was impartial,
none of the researchers had had any courses in business or economics. The top
macroeconomic models were then hired and, when tested, were found inadequate.
While those inadequacies were acceptable within the macroeconomic fraternity,
the modeling was considered impractical within such a cyclical industry as
mining.
Much of this work was done before the stock bubble launched and one program
was fascinating; this was the attempt to use 1920s data to forecast the monumental
reversal of the economy in 1929. A number of macroeconomic models were tried,
then modified with some breakthrough mathematics in geophysics, and one of
the most important events in financial history couldn't be anticipated.
The group did put together an approach to the big financial events that has
been reasonably successful. Within this were the conclusions that in the final
stages of a great inflation in either tangible or financial assets, the growth
curves become skewed. At the time, we tried to find proof that skewed curves
were mathematically unsolvable, but it could not be found.
Perhaps this proof may have been accomplished since, but the members of this
research group have gone on to other endeavors. But I found no reason to think
that macroeconomic modeling would be successful in our go-around with sensationally
skewed growth curves. That is just a fancy way of describing the high volatility
that has accompanied every bubble era.
TAYLOR: A big mining company was spending money and time to find a
mathematical proof that skewed curves were unsolvable. Why?
HOYE: Glad you asked. So that we could be confident that the economic
establishment would be unable to predict the top of the next great financial
bubble. It seems that to the establishment it was unanticipated, had an unpredictable
collapse and, as instructed by Alan Greenspan, et al., couldn't even be identified
until it was over.
TAYLOR: You used to be involved in the gold share markets in Vancouver,
so let me ask, why do you think the gold shares performed so badly in 2004
and what are their prospects for 2005?
HOYE: There was a really good party in small cap gold stocks going
right up to last April. In retrospect, it was a bit of a blow-off. We had a
good market. It blew out and then you ran into the problem that with the advance
of gold up to $456 was gold, but it wasn't rising vis-à-vis other currencies.
So then you were not having the same bull market in Canada and Australia that
you were having in the U.S. So the two countries that generate gold stories
were out of the play. So just look at it as a mini-bear market. That could
be ending right now.
TAYLOR: You were able to record an excellent track record for 2004.
Would you mind letting our readers know of your successes in 2004?
HOYE: On the big picture, it was identifying the series of big spikes
as they occurred during the first quarter. The blowouts went from nickel to
the Baltic to silver and then stocks and bonds. Then on July 27, we came up
with the line that it was party time again and that would probably run until
at least September; and then when we did the election stuff that got us out
to November, and then by the end of the November we saw a turn-of-the-year
top. I guess the one problem we had was that at the first of April we thought
the party in the gold stocks would run for another month. And then two weeks
later we realized that we made an error. Levente, with his "BondWorks," has
been bullish on long treasuries since the April low.
TAYLOR: I certainly remember the mood in January 2004 when I was at
the Cambridge House gold show. There certainly was a mini-euphoria at that
time as I look back at it.
HOYE: It was a good one. But in the next leg up in the junior golds,
one should think about 1997 in the high tech stocks. But I think the way to
play this for most retail investors is to own a gold fund that knows the players
in the exploration side. If you have that as a core position, this is a good
time to accumulate more. Then you might want a small group of stocks that you
own separately, so that come party time, you might want to blow them out and
take some profits. Maybe Newmont or something like that. The main thing is
to have a good position in the juniors, and I think one of the easiest ways
to do that is to buy one of the good gold funds either here in Canada or the
U.S.
TAYLOR: But the U.S. doesn't really have gold funds that get down to
the more speculative junior exploration plays. Do you have some Canadian funds
we might look at?
HOYE: John Embry, at Sprott Gold, is highly experienced and is well
known. In the U.S., those who can play an exploration market would include
Greg Orrell at Monterey Gold, as well as some of the bigger funds such as Van
Eck and Tocqueville.
TAYLOR: Uranium has been all the rage among the junior mining companies
in Vancouver. And now coal-mining firms are getting hot, too. Would you be
a buyer of these hot issues now? If not now, when?
HOYE: Generally, most of the energies are subject to market forces,
such as bull or bear. The next driver often is the seasonal moves for crude
oil. We don't want to go into too much detail, but we were looking for an intermediate
low around Christmas, with a recovery likely until around May. We advised in
January that the overall action in the energies had become briefly overbought.
TAYLOR: But if your deflationary scenario unfolds, are not energy stocks
likely to come under pressure?
HOYE: I would play it on an intermediate basis and take some money
off the table on an intermediate high in May.
TAYLOR: Bob I believe I have hit the major topics I wanted to cover.
Can you perhaps summarize our discussion by telling our subscribers where and
how they might best invest their money, given the deflationary views you expressed
above?
HOYE: Agreed, let's talk about an investor who is not a trader. He
should be long a good suite of gold stocks. And on the fixed income side, in
anticipation of the yield curve reversing to steepening, we should position
on the 4 to 5 years in long Treasuries. The reason is that once the curve changes,
short rates will go down, so if you are too short, you will lose on every roll
over. And then the other irony is that as long rates go up, you get killed
in price. So that takes care of term risk. So the other risk to look after
is credit risk. And we would definitely avoid lower-grade bonds; even on high-grade
bonds we would not be any longer than 4 or 5 years' maturity.
Then you have the huge new game in income trusts that people have been buying.
And perhaps the oil patch group will be okay, but you are still dealing with
something that is trading on a yield basis. So if long interest rates go up,
the price of the trusts will go down. So we would be a little wary of income
trusts.
TAYLOR: Where can people go to gain more information about your service
if they wish to do so?
HOYE: Our Web site at www.institutionaladvisors.com includes
some critical research studies, and it is open to all. Our subscription publications
include the weekly "Pivotal Events," which covers key strategies in the investment
markets and is published every Thursday. The "BondWorks," which says what it
is, goes out each Monday, and senior fixed income specialist, Levente Mady,
has been one of the very few who got the bond market right in 2004. Ross Clark's "ChartWorks" covers
stock, bond, currency, and commodity markets - frequently and reliably.
TAYLOR: Well, thanks again for taking the time to share your insights
with our readers.
HOYE: Anytime.
TAYLOR: Well, we might just take you up on that sometime down the line
to see how your unique research is panning out.
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