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, The Last Battles of Paper Debt
Last battle of paper assets is being fought. Paper assets appear to be losing.
Real assets are continuing to gain ground as the grandeur of investing in paper
fades slowly into history. Not many years ago investors were fed a huge dose
of nonsense in the form of "Buy and Hold Strategy." As the first
graph shows, it failed them. Now they gorge on trading schemes, paper and electronic.
The results will be as dreary.
For Gold to be providing the higher return, money must be flowing into it
from paper as s et s . Actually, decisions on several questions are being made.
The answers for most lead to an investmort preference for Gold and Silver.
First of these questions relates to what assets investors prefer to own. Investors
are looking to the global changes t aking place and quite frankly do not see
the preponderance of the equity markets offering the investments they desire.
Equity markets continue to be dominated by yes t erday's themes. Tomorrow's
investment opportunities are not represented in the existing list of stocks,
in large part. Yes, a few are able to nibble at the important trends of the
future but not feed directly enough. Too much talk though of yesterday's technology
darlings still dominates. Yesterday's popular technology plays are fading rapidly
in economic importance, slowly moving to low margin businesses. For example
if all the copies of MSFT software sold in the world are considered, the actual
economic margin on those sales is far below what the company reports.
While many fund managers continue to be bogged in the names of yesterday and
elaborate strategies doomed to failure, investors are moving on. Quite simply
U.S.-based companies are not in the mainstream of today's economic shifts.
Production and control of that production are moving to other countries. The
global shift in the center of economic activity is away from North America
and Western Europe.
Money around the world is trying to get in harmony
with the trends of the future. Those trends include moneyization,
China, and perhaps the finale for paper debt. Individuals have been and
are shifting to stronger monies. Gold is simply one of them. China is a
story well discussed, and clearly destined to be the epicenter of future
economic activity. Investors are slowly moving to alternatives that match
that shift. Commodity funds have become popular. Widespread is understanding
that the Chinese renminbi might be a better money choice than the dollar.
As of yet, investors can not buy the renminbi. Western financial markets
as they are constructed today, do not offer the investment alternatives
attuned to future.
Hedge funds losing money on "correlation trades" involving GM
stocks and bonds are examples of the lack of real investment alternatives in
markets. These funds do little if any investing, but focus on trading. Using
computers to bet on red and black, CDOs, CDXs, or whatever is not investing.
Today's trillion dollar hedge fund industry is simply creating fancy algorithms
with the hope of beating the trading roulette wheel. The house will get their
money, as it did with the GM trades. For good reason, trading of paper equities,
derivatives and esoteric combinations of fictional financial vehicles will
continue to provide inadequate returns. Lottery tickets have better odds.
Gold and Silver simply offer the best alternatives available. For that reason
they have done better than equities. For that reason, those superior returns
will continue into the future. Remember though that investment returns accrue
over time, not every day or week or month. Until the Chinese economy is truly
open for investment and until the dollar has its final crash, Gold should be
the investment of choice for investors.
The bell has not rung yet on the Great Housing/Mortgage Paper Debacle. A bell
did ring for the end of the technology bubble, but one had to be listening.
Iridium Satellite was a multibillion scheme to provide satellite phone service
to nearly every hill and dale in the world. Nice idea, but it was just a few
years ahead of itself. The company failed in near silent solitude. In and
of itself, the company's failure was not a monumental event. It was just a
little bell that warned of the end of the technology stock bubble. We should
all be listening for the tinkling of that little bell for the Housing Paper
Debacle. Many will ignore the tinkling. Others will not be listening.
We do not know who will be the first left standing when music stops on Housing
Paper. The source of the problem will be "debt." Someone owns that
debt. Someone will lose an unimaginable amount of money in it. Who might be
among the "someone" is t he really exciting question. When
the mortgage debt implosion arrives, paper debt will be worth little. Fiat
money is just debt of the government. In the case of the debt of the U.S.,
dollars, that debtor also will be striving to save itself from the billions
of dollars of collapsing mortgage debt. The U.S. economy will be imploding.
Who will be taken care of first? Those around the world that own those dollars?
Or, those domestic firms hemorrhaging from mortgage debt gone sour?
Many have a decision to make. Should they continue to hold dollars? Should
they continue to hold their national money? These worriers are not alone. Fiat
money may be a serious financial casualty of the next paradigm. With
China's currency not available, Gold and the Euro are what is left. Some of
you have money destined for oblivion, and doing something about it now is appropriate.
About 117 distinctly different brands of national money exist in the world.
Most of them make no economic sense, and have little reason for existing. Our
second graph gives us a way of looking at these global monies. For each of
those 117 brands of national money, the percentage each represents of the total
global money supply has been calculated, based on the latest complete data
available. As shown in the graph, the top five brands of national money represent
about 80% of the global money supply. The next five brands of national money
represent about 7%. The bottom 77 brands of national money represent a total
of about 2% of the total world money supply.
Over time Darwin will take his toll on this structure of national monies.
In the days before technology increased the speed of global finance, local
money was needed. In today's world, local monies are not needed except for
government imposed reasons. In the table below, the data for the top 11 money
brands is presented. No need exists to discuss the rest. Investors have no
business in the other brands of national money, except for filling scrapbooks
for grandchildren to someday take to 'show and tell' at school.
Again, if your national money is not on this list, what you have is something
that may someday have value to collectors. In short, some day it will not exist
as money. Who else wants it? Where does it have use? In short, its functional
domain is small and shrinking. Move your wealth and life to another brand of
money. What about those on the list? Hong Kong will eventually converts to
renminbi. Reason someday may develop in the UK, leading them to t he Euro.
Switzerland eventually also goes Euro. Only reason for franc once being popular
was financial privacy, the Gold backing and the inability to easily buy Gold.
Those reasons are all fading. The dollar will fade as the UK pound has. Do
you want to hold the dollar as it shrinks from over 20% of the world money
supply to 7%, like the British pound?
NATIONAL MONIES AS % GLOBAL MONIES(2003) |
| Issuer Ranked by Size |
% Total |
| US |
23 |
| EU |
21 |
| Japan |
20 |
| China |
9 |
| UK |
7 |
| Canada |
2 |
| Switzerland |
2 |
| Korea |
1 |
| Australia |
1 |
| Hong Kong |
1 |
| India |
1 |
At the present, the Euro is larger than the dollar. With Japan's economy in
recovery that currency is likely to remain large. The world now has four large
brands of national money, including Gold as one of them. When China joins fully
the world economy and the renminbi becomes convertible, the Chinese brand of
money will grow materially. In a number of years the renminbi may be competing
with the Euro for money domination. In this coming battle for brand leadership
between the renminbi and the Euro, how investors react is important. With collapsing
dollar hegemony, this battle may simply be ignored. Investors and central banks
after learning an expensive lesson on the value of debt and fiat money may
indeed return to Gold.
In short, the world will have five large brands of money. The remainder are
not necessary. Canada, so tied to the U.S., eventually will be forced to convert
to U.S. dollar. Australia eventually uses the renminbi. Russia, and likely
India too, move to the Euro. National monies representing 2% or less of
world's money are not likely to rise to the top. If you are an investor in
that group, two choices exist at the present: Gold or the Euro.
The central bank is the brand manager for a national money, or international
money brand in the case of the top four. What we are seeking is a brand manager,
central bank, that is aware of the world and the implications of its actions.
Do we have that in the Federal Reserve? Many of us have been critical of the
Federal Reserve's Housing Bubble Strategy. Federal Reserve policies of the
past decade have resulted in the central banks of the world financing the deficit
of the U.S. government. Had the Federal Reserve not created the problems with
current account this situation would not exist.
That at some point the central banks of the world will have no choice but
to let the dollar go where it may is generally now accepted. Central banks
around the world have been financing the U.S. spending spree, as we well know.
The Federal Reserve has not yet had to monetize the national deficit, but the
trend seems to point in that direction. Inflation has moved up and the dollar
has lost ground as central banks have simply slowed their buying. What will
happen to U.S. inflation and the dollar as the Federal Reserve must increasingly
fund the debt binge?
The longer term situation is well in place for Gold. Only crucial decision
for investors is when to buy. Those times to buy Gold
are when the optimism on the U.S. dollar has been pushed too far, as is the
recent situation. Dollar optimism is to
too high, and due for a sharp reversal. These are the times to buy
Gold, as shown in the last graph. Now is the time to get on for the next leg
of the journey to $1,300.