Moneyization: The global financial phenomenon of individuals and businesses
moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest confidence, or
money in which they have a higher store of faith.
Or, Waiting Around for Nothing
Around the investment world this week, many sat waiting for nothing to happen.
Listening to the business media one might have thought some event of importance
was occurring these last days of June. The Federal Reserve's meeting will not
change today's world. Markets will react to the FOMC announcement, though no
reasons exists for that reaction.
Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve, and some other central banks,
are suddenly inflation hawks. They are now believed to be determined to keep
the evil monetary dragon from destroying "paper" money's purchasing power.
All that fantasy thinking would be fine if the Federal Reserve's actions this
week had any influence on today's or the next day's inflation.
Somehow a widespread belief has developed that a technologically advanced "inflation
machine" sits in the basement of the Federal Reserve. On the front is a big
dial labeled "monetary policy." After the FOMC meets, Chairman Bernanke goes
to that basement. He faces the machine. Taking that big dial in his hand he
twists it ever so slightly, about 25 basis points, and smiles. Around the nation
the next morning, according to this dream fantasy, inflation will slowly creep
down.
Due to the really great technology of this magic machine, a year from now,
according to the faithful, inflation will be so low and life so slow that the
Federal Reserve, and other central banks around the world, will be able to
lower interest rates. Paper equities will scream upward in price. The hedge
fund managers will be saved. All will be well. Horse droppings! Today's
monetary policy has nothing to do with today's inflation rate.
Graph one, below, is a plot of the ten-year compound rate of inflation in
the U.S., using the full CPI not the manipulated measure. That plot is the
solid line, and uses the right axis. The red triangles, using the left axis,
are the ten-year compound rate of increase in the U.S. money supply, measured
by M-2. As is readily apparent, the plotted lines match up fairly well.
A strong correlation exists between the ten-year compound rate of growth of
the money supply and the ten-year compound rate of change of the inflation
rate. Note that the money supply plot extends further out than the inflation
rate. The reason for that portrayal is that changes in today's money supply
influence tomorrow's inflation rate. The money supply plot is advanced
sixty months.
That last plot for money supply growth, which is today's, will impact tomorrow's
inflation rate in a few years. For that reason, whatever the FOMC does this
week will have no, repeat no, impact on today's inflation rate.

The inflation rate for the next few years has already been determined by the
mistakes of the FOMC in the past. The trend for U.S. inflation is up, meaning
that the trend for your dollars' purchasing power is down. That is one of the
reasons for owning Gold.
Graph two, which can be found below, portrays the year-to-year change in the
U.S. CPI, solid line using right axis, and CPI Less Food & Energy, using
triangles and left axis. All the attention is focused on that CPI-F&E,
which has clearly broken out to the upside. That upside breakout suggests
that higher inflation lies ahead, as we learned from looking at the first graph.


Note the interesting divergence in the latest plot, with CPI-F&E moving
up while other measure declines. Owners Equivalent Rent(OER) is the measure
of housing costs, and it is a large part of the CPI-F&E. With housing sales
sliding, rents are moving up. Statisticians at the U.S. government now says
housing costs are rising. Where have these statistical clowns been for the
last few years? One other interesting note is that the way energy costs are
used to calculate OER, the rising cost of energy to heat and cool has actually
reduced the cost of housing and, therefore, reduced the inflation rate, according
to government statisticians. Presumably, the Federal Reserve will soon have
to use the CPI Less Food, Energy & Housing.
As the third graph portrays, this inflation problem is evident in other nations.
Canada's consumer prices, shown in this graph, are experiencing the same inflationary
developments. In that graph are plotted the year-to-year changes in the annual
average consumer price index with the exception of the 2006 plot. That last
plotted point is the year-to-year change for the month of May 2006. That approach
then gives the picture of the marginal rate of inflation versus the average
rate of inflation. The Canadian inflation rate, as shown in that graph, has
clearly moved to a higher trading range, and is too likely to breakout to the
upside. Most important is understanding implications of these higher rates
of inflation.
Inflation is the destruction of purchasing power that occurs when governments
allow too much money to be created. Inflation is not caused by higher
oil prices. Higher oil prices are a consequence of the inflation process.
Oil prices are higher because too many dollars have been created over the
years, allowing dollar prices to be bid up. Oil prices are not at $70+ because
of Chinese demand or SUVs. If the quantity of dollars in the world were half
the current amount, the price of oil could not be bid to $70+ because not
enough dollars would exist to allow that to happen.
Inflation is the creation of money which pushes down the value, or "price" of
that money. The world today has a glut of dollars that have been created
over the years to sustain the Technology Stock Bubble, the Housing/Mortgage
Bubble, and the Hedge Fund Mania. With their bathtubs now full of dollars,
consumers and foreign countries are allowing that continuing flow of dollars
to slosh out into the markets for goods, like oil. Those excess dollars are
now pushing up the dollar price of goods and services around the world.
The implications of rising inflation, or falling purchasing power for paper
money, are two in number. First, the central banks, most importantly the Federal
Reserve, will "over shoot" as the Street likes to call it. Second, the falling
purchasing power and the recession from higher rates will push down the value
of both American dollars, as recessionary forces overwhelm interest rate factors.
We learned from the discussion of the first graph that inflation, particularly
in the U.S., now has an embedded upward trend. The Federal Reserve, driving
while looking in the rearview mirror, will see nothing but a rising inflationary
trend. While "pauses" will come and go, the trend is for higher rates that
will create economic problems. Housing is already headed down. Forgotten is
what happens on Main Street. As housing activity slows, sales and construction
businesses lay off workers. Businesses are closed. Carpets are not sold. Washing
machine salespersons lose their jobs. A real Main Street event takes place.
Turning interest rates back down a quarter of a point next "March" will not
reverse the process.
Higher inflation is going to lead to higher interest rates in the U.S.,
and, therefore, higher rates in other countries. At the end of 2007 interest
rates will be higher not lower. Economic activity in the U.S. will be sliding
into what will look like an abyss. Tax revenues will be declining as unemployment
creeps upward. If foreign investors do not buy more U.S. debt the whole situation
will become worse than expected. With a near collapsing U.S. economy will
come a near collapsing U.S. dollar. That long-term resistance line on
the dollar index, which is of course nonsense, will be violated and a traumatic
experience will develop in the foreign exchange markets.
Connected to the health of that U.S. economy and dollar is the Canadian economy.
By the end of 2007 Canada will understand well the meaning of a really big
U.S. economic problem. That brings us to the Canadian dollar. To better understand
the situation, look at a map. Canada has water on two sides, ice on one side,
and the U.S. on the other. The Canadian dollar is surrounded by an environment
that has no interest in owning it. No other investors in the world really want
the Canadian dollar. Canadians are the demand for Canadian dollar. Canadian
dollar is a long term sell cause no long term buyers other than Canadians exist.
The same would be true for a Texas "peso" or a Californian "franc."
In this process of moving to higher interest rates, the value of paper equities
will be damaged beyond most expectations. As graph four portrays, below, the
NASDAQ Composite Index broke the fantasy support level at 2180 and has only
hope of pausing at 2050. After that, hope will again rise at 1920 before breaking
down completely. The rally in the equity markets of the past few years was
created by the central banks lowering interest rates. That interest
rate support is now gone. The bear is hungry from this forced hibernation,
and she will have to be fed.

2006 will mark the resumption of the bear market in paper equities on a global
basis. Financial "optimism" has reached the levels of 2000. Mergers
and acquisitions, according to Association for Corporate Growth and Thomson
Financial, in 2006 will break the record set in the year 2000. That year was
the last major top in the paper equity markets. $100 billion of M&A have
been announced in the past week. Unbelievable hunger for Chinese equities by
institutions is another mark of financial frenzy often seen at historical peaks
in equities. Look at all the exchanges being bought, sold and prepared for
listing.
Speculators in Chinese securities and those of the developing markets will
be punished unmercifully. Locals were more than willing to sell paper
stocks to the foreign funds. When the funds try to unload those foreign securities,
the telephones will go unanswered. Electronic market screens will show an
absence of bids. Buying of foreign securities has always risen to an extreme
at the end of bull markets when speculators seek out the last sources of
return. Afterwards, they learn no one is there to buy them back. Losses to
be experienced in these securities, particular Chinese equities, will be
a major surprise and shock.
Paper equities face a rather dismal future. That future beholds a world good
for owners of Gold. Some have called recent events the end of the bull market
in Gold. However, Gold has not been in a bull market. Gold is in a super
cycle to correct the economic and financial events of the past 20 years.
Gold at US$700+ was the completion of the first of five waves, and was brought
about by the frenzied buying of the Hedge Fund Mania. This summer Gold is experiencing
the end of the second wave with the purging of the hedge fund devils. The third
wave is beginning to develop, and investors should be taking positions in Gold,
and Silver. 1,350 is a good number for both the future price of US$Gold and
the support level for the NASDAQ Composite Index.

US$Gold, as shown in the above chart, is at prices with characteristics rarely
seen. This summer's low price, created by the purging of the hedge funds, is
a true bargain. Only twice before in the past year have US$Gold prices been
this oversold. Investors that have previously missed opportunities to purchase
Gold should be doing so at this time. While the "market strategists" on
the Street are still talking about what the FOMC did or did not do, or did
or did not say, move onto the money in which the world is now denominating
its wealth, Gold.

Canadian $Gold, as shown in the above chart, is also providing an investment
opportunity for Canadian-based investors. The entire hype from the recent hedge
fund mania has been removed from the price of Gold. The Canadian dollar has
served as a proxy for commodity prices during the recent run in those markets,
and is at a level where profits should be captured. Those profits should be
reinvested in Gold.