Moneyization: The global financial phenomenon of individuals and businesses
moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest confidence, or
money which has a higher store of faith.
Or, Mr. Shaw Might Have Loved the Federal Reserve
George Bernard Shaw might have loved the Federal Reserve. A source of good
material is highly valued by writers and philosophers. Perhaps only the Pentagon
could be better, but they manage to keep most of what they do to themselves.
If the Pentagon assured the public the sun would rise tomorrow, a wise person
would buy a candle. If the Federal Reserve released a study assuring all
that the sun would rise each day, stock in a candle company would be a sure
bet.
Probably no Chairman of the Federal Reserve has been criticized as much by
the Metal Mob as Chairman Greenspan. Some of us will certainly miss him. During
almost the last six years of his reign, Gold has run from $250 to $450. We
almost wish he had another six years. With the same success, Chairman Greenspan
could easily push Gold to over $800 during a short number of years.
Before we weep, Chairman Greenspan's chair may be filled with perhaps an equally
misdirected economist. According to Barron's, 11 April 2005, the next
chairman could be Ben S. Bernanke, a current Governor of the Federal Reserve
System. He has also been recently nominated to be the next Chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisors, the group dedicated to economic wisdom at the
White House. No jokes about his first two initials are permitted!
The inspiration for this message is a speech recently given, 10 March 2005
and updated on 14 April 2005, by Governor Bernanke, "The Global Savings Glut
and the U.S. Current Account Deficit." Both are available on the Federal Reserve's
web site, www.federalreserve.gov. Such events are valuable to investors for
they provide insights into the thinking of the individual. As not yet Chairman,
Bernanke still has some semblance of verbal freedom.
Around the world individuals enjoy the freedom to choose in which national
money to denominate their wealth. Markets and technology have freed consumers
from the Westphalian shackles of national monies. In recent years, consumers
have flocked to the new Euro. At the same time they have shunned the U.S. dollar.
Moneyization has been unleashed, and will not be put back into the bottle.
Your goal as an investor is to determine which national money, or international
money such as Gold, to use for your wealth. Which national money will have
a higher wealth value in the future is an important question. Which national
monies will prosper? Which national monies will survive? Which national monies
will disappear? Some will fall in each category, as not all national monies
will exist ten or even five years from now.
To make those decisions we turn to the economic policies of the nation. The
thinking of those that will formulate and implement those policies for the
individual nations may help in making these decisions. For that reason, what
Governor Bernanke has to say is worth reviewing. And
some good news can be found in that speech. Chairman Bernanke, should he rise
to that office, will be good for your Gold!
The current Chairman of the Federal Reserve has been in office so long that
we have become accustomed to the Federal Reserve failing to accept the blame
for its policy errors. Perhaps that is the way the world is the supposed to
be. The Federal Reserve could be the fourth monkey, with its head.... Perhaps
the hope that the next Chairman might be forthright is more than should be
expected. Hope and Federal Reserve excuses, both spring eternal.
That title for Governor Bernanke's speech implies his thinking. In short,
the U.S. current account deficit is not the consequence of policy errors
in the U.S. Rather, that deficit flows directly from policy errors
originating in other countries. Foreign nations and peoples are saving too
much money. What is bothersome about such a conclusion is that it absolves
U.S. monetary and fiscal policy from being in error.
If only foreign nations would embark on a debt financed consumption binge
like that of the U.S., the U.S. would not have a current account deficit. Technically
that is true. Though to argue that other nations should also act irresponsibly
seems hardly to be a good foundation for policy. Yet this argument is coming
from an individual giving advice to the U.S. government, and possibly the
next to lead the Federal Reserve. Misguided thinking has been good for Gold
thus far, and looks likely to continue.
Quite simply, this view is a rationalization of the monetary and fiscal policies
of the U.S. Rather than start with analysis leading to conclusion, this view
starts with a position and attempts to justify it backwards. In short, this
analysis sounds as if it is coming from someone drumming up support for his
candidacy for the Chairmanship of the Federal Reserve. This view though has
a populist ring to it that may make it fashionable, such as the silly idea
of blaming the value of the Chinese yuan for the U.S. trade deficit.
A global savings glut, according to Bernanke, is causing the U.S. current
account deficit. How? For one, many countries around the world have aging
populations. They are saving money to pay for those retirement years. Were
that true, the money would be in pension plans not in the currency reserve
accounts of the central banks.
Another reason for the global savings glut is that many nations that were
buffeted by the currency crises of the 1990s, and now are more cautious. These
nations are building a protective buffer. Presumably the Koreans, for example,
are just not buying U.S. goods in order to have a currency reserve. That position
assumes the U.S. produces something the Koreans want, rather than the other
way around. If only the Koreans would buy GM cars and eat more soybeans. Now
we have been enlightened, those Korean consumers saving too much money are
creating the U.S. current account deficit. Utter
nonsense!
To be fair to the Governor, higher oil prices are mentioned as part of the
U.S. current account deficit. That position has merit. Other points are made
that have merit, including the all-important one of the massive investment
in housing which is a nonproductive use of capital. However, that Federal Reserve
policies have been responsible for this nonproductive use of capital, the greatest
in history.
That role is ignored by Bernanke, and by most other Federal Reserve officials.
Again, the speech is recommended reading. However, the general theme of
pointing the finger at someone else is bothersome, but supportive of the future
price of Gold.
That the low savings rate in the U.S. might be due to Federal Reserve policies
is, however, given limited attention. Federal Reserve policies, acting
as a perceived guarantor of equity prices, allowed the U.S. saving rate to
plummet as the stock market soared. A little crash subsequently developed.
In recent years the low interest rate policies have acted again as a "guarantor" of
higher housing prices. The U.S. savings rate has again plummeted as consumers
have now really found the road to wealth, owning as many houses as possible
with as much leverage as can be obtained. Thanks again to encouragement from
the Federal Reserve.
What Governor Bernanke fails to do is follow the money. Following the
money, as is repeatedly the case in the movies and currently in Canadian politics,
can get us to the root cause. From where did the central banks of the world
and investors get the money that is causing this "savings glut?" That money
came from the excessive consumption by the U.S. due to the politically motivated
low interest rates that exist. No mention of the role of the Federal Reserve
in fostering the excessive consumption that has lead to the current account
deficit and this imaginary "savings glut."
In short, we have an individual stumping for the chairmanship of the Federal
Reserve. From this speech we can deduce that this individual will do nothing
but continue the policies of the Federal Reserve, while blaming all on someone
else. The continuing collapse of the U.S. dollar will not be the consequence
of internal policies, but will be blamed on the policy mistakes of foreign
governments. In particular, we can surely expect a study out of the Federal
Reserve that the collapsing U.S. dollar is due to foolishness of foreign consumers
not borrowing money to spend. Sounds like the Federal Reserve will continue
in a way that assures higher Gold prices in the future.
This imaginary "savings glut" has helped maintain the low interest rate environment
in the U.S., as has been written so much before. However, this imaginary "savings
glut" may be starting to lose its appetite for investing in U.S. debt securities.
In the first graph is portrayed the year-to-year change in the ownership of
U.S. government debt by official foreign institutions that is held at the Federal
Reserve. That data is reported each week in the Federal Reserve reports.
Each bar on the graph shows how much the ownership of U.S. debt by foreign
official institutions has changed. Clearly the year-to-year change is declining. The
size of their holdings is still rising, but at a much slower rate. The reason
for focusing at this time on this series is the scale. The year-to-year change
is just slightly over $200 billion, and investors tend to focus on round numbers. When
this series breaks below the $200 billion level, that foreign investors are
losing interest in U.S. government debt will be obvious even to mouse clicking
stock traders at hedge funds.
The second chart looks at this data in another way. Portrayed is the percentage
of the last 50 weeks in which the holdings of U.S. government debt have declined.
Recent the reading hit 26%, though fell in the latest week. In 24% of the past
fifty weeks, foreign official institutions reduced their holdings of U.S. government
debt. That level of selling is, as apparent in the graph, just one tick below
the highest recorded in over a year.
In short, the process of foreign investors moving
away from buying U.S. debt has started. Many are waiting for
that proverbial bell to ring, marking the moment when liquidation begins.
That, to some, will be the signal to sell the dollar and buy Gold. The
ringing of the bell will be too late. Markets discount the future well
in advance of the event. Did the bell ring at 5000 on the NASDAQ Composite?
Investors need to own their Gold and Silver before the bell rings.
As shown in the last chart, the Gold market provides periodic opportunities
for timely purchases. Investors should use these periods of price weakness,
created when the deluded believe the dollar is going up, for establishing positions
or adding to positions. With the liquidation of the U.S. debt by foreign investors
still in the early stages, investors have time to create positions in Gold
prior to it taking out the last high. When $Gold moves through $450 on the
way to $500, investors will not be as able to create Gold positions at attractive
prices.
On the contrary, the rough times for the U.S. dollar lie ahead. Liquidation
of U.S. debt has only started, and is not anywhere near an end. And despite
Governor Bernanke misguided views, the current account deficit of the U.S.
is due to Federal Reserve policies. Unfortunately, those misguided policies
have existed for so long that the U.S. current account deficit is now structural. Modest
slippage in the dollar, as has been experienced, does not alter a structural
problem.
And as written in the April letter, floating the Chinese yuan will not help. Floating
the Chinese yuan will likely only lead to the selling of U.S. debt by those
Asian nations which have a trade surplus with China. No easy
solutions exist. As Mr. Shaw said, I believe, "To every complex problem
there is a simple solution, that is wrong." However, Mr. Shaw never saw
a current account deficit as large as that of the U.S. Gold is the simple
answer today that is right, as $1,300 Gold appears almost to be a policy
goal of the Federal Reserve.