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, Good Time To Sell The Dollar
The recent defeat, by French and Danish voters, of the EU's new constitution
has provided an excellent opportunity for dollar handicapped investors to sell
dollars and buy Gold. Market action that increases the over valuation of the
dollar are rare, and should not be ignored. In short, dollar optimism has been
pushed to an extreme by this event. Sell your dollars to the dollar bulls,
and buy Gold.
This article, intended as a short one, is not a defense of the EU treaty,
but rather a note that the dollar's optimism is over extended. Nor is the idea
that the EU's economic fundamentals are ideal put forth. Rather, this writing
is simply a reminder that the U.S. is the one that owes the rest of the world
about two trillion dollars not the EU. The European Central Bank, the EU's
central bank, is not the entity that has engineered two massive speculative
bubbles that have destroyed the economic competitiveness of the nation. The
Federal Reserve is the central bank that has done that. We should be always
selling the currency of the more weakly managed central bank when over optimism
provides an opportunity to do so.
The first graph portrays several measures. The triangles are $Gold, plotted
using the left scale. The second is an oscillator of sentiment for the U.S.
dollar. This latter measure has been inverted and is plotted on the right hand
axis. The oscillator's range is plotted so that zero(0) is maximum pessimism
and -100 is maximum optimism. Reason for this method of plotting is so that
the lines give a more easily understood visible picture. The oscillator is
a measure of longer term relative sentiment using a stochastic calculation.
As it is intended as a longer term measure, short term readings are neither
calculated nor available.
As is apparent in the graph, the oscillator reached maximum pessimism in the
early part of the graph. At that time, $Gold was in the $450 range. About that
time the mouse clickers residing at hedge funds decided that the dollar was
on the verge of a major bottom. Around the globe, the mouse clickers all fixated
on the same graph of the dollar index. The mice all clicked at the same time,
declaring a major bottom for the dollar. All that need be said about that is
one of the unfailing technical rules is that all popular support and resistance
levels are taken out. That overly popular bottom in the $ index will fall to
this rule too.
The dollar has now reached, as shown in the first graph, an extreme level
of optimism. $Gold has moved down from the $450 level to about $415, and started
to bounce as a result of the extreme level of emotions. That
the dollar has reached such a level of optimism and that $Gold is now turning
suggests that dollar handicapped investors should be moving into Gold. Euro
denominated investors should not be moving into Gold.
That all said, part of the motivation for this article is to discuss the vote
on the EU treaty and any possible meaning. Such a goal can not be achieved
in one short writing. The most vicious emails we have ever received have been
a consequence of comments about the French. So be it, for if one is too be
criticized that criticism might as well come from someone in an insignificant
province of the EU. In short, the French no vote on the EU treaty was largely
a vote by the spoiled brats on the left in that nation. Despite the headlines,
only about 39% of French and Danish voters were opposed to the treaty. 61%
of the voters in those countries were either in favor of the treaty or felt
it so unimportant that they did not vote. That out of the way, we will now
be nice to our French readers for the remainders of this article.;)
Should the EU treaty be approved? The Economist, one of the favorite
magazines of Gold bugs, has opposed approval of the treaty. A recent article
in that magazine went, "No would be the right answer in the next week's French
and Dutch referendums and a good one for Europe" (Economist,2005,11). The treaty
runs from 200-300 pages, depending on the language and printing and the source.
Any referendum that long put to the voters should probably be rejected. Would
the U.S. or Canada vote to approve a new 200 page constitution for their country?
Is the EU destined for collapse? The answer would have to be no. Formation
of a new "nation", if that is what the EU is to be, takes time and pain. For
a good history lesson, read of the writing of the U.S. Declaration of Independence.
Had one opponent, a true gentleman in all the meanings of the word, not left
the room during the vote, it might have not been approved. The Articles of
Confederation was a non starter even as the ink dried. Any reading of the local
news of that era would have suggested that the U.S. was bound to collapse.
Imagine the wisdom and results of shorting the U.S. in 1799.
The popular press keeps being misled by a few ostriches which teach economics
in modern academia. A recent Business Week article "Squeezed by the
Euro" is a good example, 2 June issue, One of their delusions is called Optimal
Currency Area(OCA) theory. Do not waste any time reading articles on the matter.
In short, the theory says that only those people with perfect correlation of
their economic activities should have the same currency. Applied strictly to
the U.S., the nation would still have a minimum of 13 currencies. Good idea?
Applied to Europe, the theory says that the Euro should not have been introduced
until all and every possible improvements in the laws, regulations, labor relations,
and cultural differences in Europe had been achieved. Canada and the U.S.,
under the application of their thinking, would still be waiting for one common
currency for their nations. Good idea?
The critics of the Euro essentially say that everything should have been made
perfect, like their graphical delusions on the blackboard, before the Euro
was introduced. Perfection is only possible by one entity, and certainly politicians,
economists and labor leaders in Europe are not that entity. The Euro was introduced
before economic perfection, and there lies the rub.
The EU is primarily a monetary union. The new EU constitution was a move toward
political unity. Clearly, the citizens of part of Europe are not ready for
the latter. That decision is understandable. That France is not ready to accept
being a province of the EU rather than an independent nation is a view that
can be appreciated. Political unity, and submission to that unity, takes time.
The EU's new treaty was too much too soon.
The Euro has removed a crutch from the economic policies of many European
provinces. Currency depreciation is no longer possible. Fundamental change
must come in Europe as a result of the EU, and many voters do not like it.
France, with the second highest tax burden in the EU, can not achieve economic
growth without cutting taxes. Cutting taxes means that some one with a soft
job and early retirement will now have to really work. Scarey thought for some
voters.
Change will come to France just as it has come to workers and firms in the
U.S. Companies no longer competitive on a world scale will fail, and the jobs
will disappear. Survival of the fittest is a rule of the global market place,
and is the source of long term prosperity for the greatest number of individuals.
Frits Bolkestein summed it up best, "Before the euro it[Italy] could compensate
for the loss [of competitiveness] by devaluing from time to time. It now faces
the need for adjustment in the real economy, which is painful" (Bolkestein,2005,17).
Some voters are unhappy that currency devaluation is no longer available, but
to investors that is good news.
The Euro is now the largest national money brand in the world. Nations
have been pushing to join. Their citizens already use the Euro in their daily
lives. Russia is likely to move to the Euro, and may some day price Russian
oil in Euros rather dollars. What nations are lining
up to join the dollar? Answer is none. Are Chavez and Lopez likely
to push their nations to drop their national monies and convert to the dollar?
This article was intended as a short one, and it will be. These matter will
be explored more in the monthly letter. The failure of the current EU treaty
means that political unity in the EU is not imminent, and that it will be a
demographic rather than democratic process. Monetary union will remain.
The EU treaty vote pushed dollar optimism to a extreme. As shown in the last
chart, such times are excellent buying opportunity for Gold investors. That
said, $Gold is short-term overbought. Use any price
corrections to add to positions. One must be on the train to arrive at the
$1,300 station!
REFERENCES:
A song for Europe. (2005, May 28), The Economist,11-12.
Bolkestein, Frits. France's verdict tells us that Europe has been oversold.(2005,
May 31), The Financial Times,17.