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Next week may hold some unpleasant surprises - you may profit from an early
warning.
YESTERDAY WE LEARNED that the British government's guarantee to bail
out Northern Rock's creditors is worth a staggering £100 billion. That's £5,000
[$10,000] per British household. This week the European Central Bank made $500
billion available through money market operations. And only last week $110bn
of new money was created by central bank loans with artificially low rates
and reduced-quality security. This is money creation on an epic scale.
Why is this happening now? Here's my theory: 31st December is a major day
on the financial calendar. If you take a sample of bonds you'll find that a
disproportionate number of them are due for interest and/or redemption on 31st
December. Redeeming bonds is very cash intensive, and cash is not freely available
in the banking system right now.
So it seems likely that some frantic finance directors will be working long
hours to find the cash that will enable them to avoid a default next week.
If that's right the festive season could see the announcement of some nasty
shocks. June 30th won't be much fun either, for the same reasons. The credit
crunch is deepening, and will go on doing so until at least next summer.
For those of us who like to take responsibility for ourselves (it's called
freedom by the way) it's getting just a little tiresome that money creation
is diluting our savings, and making us pay - again - for the excesses of the
buy-now-think-later generation. Some of us would prefer to see the government
react with a shrug and a sympathetic "bad luck" to the losers in the next financial
train wreck. But it's not the mood of the nation. Politicians have begun one
of their competitive caring phases, and they're rescuing victims everywhere.
Every clapped out bank, every busted pension scheme, every industrial zombie,
and absolutely every government department will be nurtured in the warm embrace
of the public purse.
This causes a natural backlash. Issuing new money reduces depositors' returns,
prompting savers to switch to better stores of wealth. This capital flight
should be easy to spot, but modern economic statistics can obscure it. You
see, the main way economists measure economic health is by counting the money
spent in the economy, and now that savers are dumping currency (and buying
better wealth stores) the effect is tough to distinguish from the economist's
beloved GDP growth. Our healthy GDP figures are a distortion, and the economy
is not making a steady booming noise but an ominous hissing - the noise of
savers abandoning the currency.
You can see this at the key entry points to the real economy:
- Oil is multiplying in price.
- All the grains are multiplying in price.
- All the base metals are multiplying in price.
- Gold is multiplying in price.
- Producer prices are through the roof.
In spite of this the monetary authorities are racing to issue more money,
and economists are clamouring for cuts in interest rates. They're caught 'twixt
the devil and the deep blue sea, because although they could address these
serious inflationary indicators, doing so risks the revenge of a giant economic
threat - a rout in the housing market. And that would mean depression.
So it looks increasingly likely that low rates are staying, and the hot global
investment money, sucked in by Britain's recent and comparatively high interest
rates, is about to quit Britain and send the currency into a tailspin. This
produces higher prices for imported goods. At the same time our public finances
are in a serious mess, and the biggest contributor to our service-based economy
- the City - is the main victim of current turbulence. And please don't ask
about the trade figures because they're just ugly.
It is becoming genuinely possible that people will refuse to hold sterling
for more than a fleeting moment. Inflation could turn so severe that the 'hyper'
prefix is justified.
I know - it's too far-fetched to be believable. Or is it? For 150 years the
values of Western currencies have stayed way above purchasing power parity
levels with Asia. Being a developed country is what drove this premium, as
money flowed down a one way street to our advanced economies. These were the
only places where sophisticated products could be built or bought.
Today things are different. You could measure circuit board production in
two factories in Indonesia and in Britain, and get the output per worker priced
in local currency. Multiply both by their conversion rate into US dollars,
and the British factory seems to have produced 5 - 7 times more US dollar denominated
output. So our GDP looks good, but only through the distorting lens of a western
currency conversion. There's another way to measure that same output: simply
count the circuit boards. Do that and you'll see there's no material difference
in productivity between a British and an Indonesian worker. Perhaps the root
cause of western currency premium has evaporated, and the anomaly is now that
sterling really is 5 - 7 times overvalued against Asian money.
You could switch to euros. But looking at their policy they're creating as
much money as the Bank of England. And the US Federal Reserve is doing it too,
while all of Asia is battling to hold down their currencies so that their exports
can continue apace. It's a bizarre race to the bottom for the world's currencies.
It's time to sidestep the financial consequences of this largesse. What can
we savers do?
If you're as bothered as I am, then currency should be struck off your Christmas
list and replaced with something more reliably rare. I think gold could soon
look so highly priced in sterling that many of us will be too frightened to
buy it. But it isn't there yet, so perhaps buy just a little now, and if it
makes you a small profit it will be easier to buy a little more next month.
If that makes you a profit too, then allow yourself to build a proper stash.
I'm not sure we'll ever again be able to buy it for much under £400 an
ounce.
I have just instructed my bank to transfer all my remaining cash deposits
to BullionVault to Buy Gold, and
I look forward to spending 2008 long gold and completely sterling free.
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