Much talk about this index or that index making a new high, or near a new
high. The level for an index is interesting, but the return being earned is
more important. A stock market index could conceivably make a new high each
and every day without providing a desirable return. Today's graph compares
the return over the past five years of an investment in $Gold and U.S. stocks,
as measured by the total return on the S&P 500. As is readily apparent
from that graph, $Gold has substantially outperformed an investment in U.S.
equities. Why these results? Gold's price is a mirror reflection of the global
purchasing power of the U.S. dollar. As the Federal Reserve has grossly mismanaged
U.S. monetary policy over the years, the global forex market has pushed down
the value of the dollar. That depreciation of the dollar's value is not reflected
in the equity market.

Is this situation like to change? The unwinding of U.S. monetary mismanagement
will take some time. The housing & mortgage bubble implosion has much further
to go. That bubble represented a massive misallocation of funds, not reversed
in just a few months. Additionally, the U.S. economy is slowly moving into
the recession necessary to purge the housing & mortgage excesses. The risks
for U.S. financial markets are not limited to the aftershocks of the mortgage
earthquake. The massive foreign currency mismatch evident in the carry trade
loans remains an overhanging danger to financial markets. Borrowing in one
currency to invest in risky assets denominated in another currency is a sure
way to ultimately destroy wealth. Gold is perhaps the only insurance against
the financial agony to come from unwinding of the carry trade loans, and two
decades of monetary mismanagement.