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Housing prices are booming. The NASDAQ and S&P 500 stock indices are at
four-year highs. The Russell 2000 index is at an all-time high. The unemployment
rate is not far from near-decade lows. This is the legacy that Alan Greenspan
wants to leave.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Greenspan became addicted to the attention he
was receiving from the highest levels in the White House and on Wall Street.
It was in those years that he began selling out his sound money principles
in exchange for a lifestyle of private jets and fancy limousines. When the
Internet bubble imploded in 2000-2002, Greenspan's magnificent legacy was in
danger. Fortunately for him, he held the keys to a 21st century electronic
printing press giving him the ability to create and make available more cheap
money than this country knew what to do with. This unprecedented liquidity
injection bailed out equity investors, junk bond hedge funds, and major banks
and created a massive real estate bubble that still exists today.
After cutting interest rates to record low levels, inflation began to rear
its ugly head. Despite the government's best attempts at doctoring the Consumer
Price Index, the average American could feel that something was different.
Whether it was rising gas prices, higher electricity and grocery bills, or
increasing healthcare costs, inflation started to creep into society. These
inflation fears have caused Greenspan to raise rates in a bite sized fashion
over the last few months. The yield curve has become flatter than a pancake
as long-term rates refuse to budge despite the Fed's best attempt at jawboning
the long end of the curve up.
We believe that Greenspan's recent testimony to Congress was his final attempt
to jawbone long rates higher. The financial press was certain a few months
ago that rate hikes would end by summertime, now it is a given that rates will
be hiked for the remainder of the year. We continue to predict that something
in the economy or financial markets will break in the coming quarters. At that
time, the Fed will have no choice but to stop hiking rates and likely begin
lowering them again. There is no way Greenspan (or his successor) will take
the heat for a recession or a deflationary depression. Stagflation is much
more politically acceptable as people tend to remember nominal numbers rather
than real numbers. A weakening Dollar and $500/oz. gold price are small
prices to pay for the Greenspan legacy to be solidified.
The problem is that putting Humpty Dumpty back together again is no small
task. While some additional weakening in the Dollar and $500/oz. gold may be
palatable to financial markets, the ability to contain the Dollar's further
destruction from those levels will be no easy task. Greenspan has helped create
structural spending problems in the U.S. that cannot be fixed overnight. Couple
this with gigantic wage gaps between the U.S. and Asia and the recipe for a
currency disaster is born. Until the U.S. consumer restrains his penchant for
spending every nickel he makes, a widening trade deficit and Dollar weakness
loom. In fact, as we rapidly approach seven and eight percent current account
deficits, the odds of the Dollar decline becoming disorderly only increase.
Once again this points to the benefits of owning gold and silver. Gold seems
destined to break $500/oz. in the current environment, but if people begin
to see through the problems with the Dollar and the interest rate box the Fed
is in, then gold prices may quickly leave 500 bucks an ounce in the rear view
mirror.
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