"A dead, defunct currency says the world's money supply is about to unleash
an awful inflation..."
AMID ALL THE BROU-HA-HA over gold hitting $1,000 an ounce for three
short days this month, another milestone in this nine-year bull market went
completely un-noticed.
Like the media-friendly $1,000 mark, this level offers a nice round number
for evening news anchors to proclaim. It even comes with an extra digit - and
it also remains to be reached and breached decisively, too.
But this level may prove much more important than $1,000 per ounce - and for
plenty more people, too - because it shows just how strong and solid the uptrend
in Gold Prices has
been to date. Historically, it points to the underlying trends of both Dollar
weakness and gold strength.
Trouble is, this new level for the Gold
Price comes in terms of a dead, defunct currency. So it speaks to ages
past, rather than trying to shout above the short-term noise of talking heads
on CNBC.
And whispering in a voice of paper ashes, it says currencies come and go,
but metal can only be buried for so long...

That tired old war-horse of Germany's glorious inflation-fighting past, the
Deutschemark was finally put to sleep by the Bundesbank on New Year's Day 2002.
That was day when Germany - along with the rest of the 12-nation Eurozone
- finally swapped its currency for the Euro. The new pan-continental notes
and coins were to be used in cash transactions and settlement of debt, while
the word "DM" was scratched off shop signs and the paper itself was stuffed
into a blazing furnace.
The new Euro would rise from its ashes and bring German-style stability to
the currency union's 300 million citizens. Or at least, that was plan.
Now Jean-Claude Trichet, current president of the European Central Bank, warns
that Eurozone inflation will stay "significantly" above his 2.0% for the rest
of 2008. Track the price of gold forwards from 1999 in Deutschemarks - the
last entry in the Bundesbank's list of daily Frankfurt Gold Fixes - and you
can see that the Gold
Price, a leading indicator of inflation to come, agrees.
Ask any technical analyst with a blunt 2B pencil and a shatter-proof ruler.
Now back at 40,000 DM per kilo, the price of gold has touched very long-term
resistance. Since 21st Feb., in fact, gold has recorded an Afternoon Fix in
London equivalent to 40,000 DM or more on ten separate occasions.
In the days of the Frankfurt Gold Fix, gold managed that feat only 15 times
in total. And if you think the Gold
Market action so far this month has been frantic, just check how violent
the action was either side of those DM peaks back in the early 1980s.
"Monetary stability is linked up with general social stability - and with
political stability," as Otmar Emminger said in his inaugural speech upon becoming
president of the Bundesbank in 1977. Who could ask a bundle of notes and coins
to do more?
"The German public," as the economist Rudolf Richter noted in an essay of
1999, "after losing their savings twice within 25 years (1923 and 1948), definitely
wanted a stable currency. No Bonn government in its right mind would have put
the Bundesbank under pressure."
Hence the West German central bank's mandate to cap consumer prices by capping
the supply of money itself. Memories of the Weimar inflation that followed
World War One - plus the worthless Nazi Reichsnotes piled up during World War
Two - still stand in sharp contrast with the American media's obsession with
the Great Depression.
Where Ben Bernanke now sees soup kitchens and deflation, the central bankers
working to defend the German currency in Bonn for five decades could only see
runaway inflation of the money supply. Twice.
"In 1923, when Germany could no longer pay its First World War reparations," writes
Mike Hewitt on his DollarDaze blog, "French
and Belgium troops moved in to occupy the Ruhr, Germany's main industrial area.
Without this major source of income, the government took to printing money
which resulted in hyperinflation.
"At its most severe, the monthly rate of inflation reached 3.25 billion per
cent, equivalent to prices doubling every 49 hours. The US Dollar to Mark conversion
rate peaked at 80 billion."
Sick of inflation yet? Come World War Two, incredibly, the German people had
to learn their lesson again. The Nazi state converted its debts into banknotes,
pushing the volume of currency in circulation up from 11 billion Reichsmarks
in 1939 to more than 70bn by the time Hitler poisoned and then shot himself,
his dog, and his mistress. The survivors were forced to use cigarettes, chocolate,
tinned beef and soap as money once more - because the government-ordained notes
and coins had lost all currency thanks to their huge over-supply.
With global inflation ticking higher three decades later, the Bundesbank adopted
its first money-supply target in 1973. In December of 1974, it began announcing
the target to the public each year, and inflation was whipped. By the fall
of 1978, and with inflation in the US and United Kingdom lurching back towards
double-digits, consumer prices in West Germany were rising by barely 2% per
year.

But the initial relief allowed a flirtation with looser money to creep in.
By 1981, inflation had reached 6.3%, and so the Bundesbank set about slashing
its money-supply target.
It cut the target from a maximum of 9% growth to just 5% annual growth by
1985. "Only in one year of this period, 1983, did money growth slightly exceed
the target range," says Robert L. Hetzel, writing in the Economic Quarterly of
March 2002.
"Broad money (M3) growth fell from 10% in the 1970s to 6% in the 1980s. By
retaining price stability as its primary objective despite the high unemployment
rates of the 1980s, the Bundesbank gained credibility for its policy of price
stability."
Come the end of the 1990s, the Bundesbank had whipped inflation for more than
five decades. Politicians in Rome, Paris, London, Madrid and Dublin looked
to the West German model - but refused to apply it themselves.
So why not get the Germans to apply it, instead...now that was an idea! Only
thing was, that pesky money-supply target kept getting in the way of growth,
of debt, of real estate prices. And so with inflation - like interest rates
- sitting near or below the 2% annual target, Europe quietly did away with
its limit on money supply growth.
The M3 measure of the Eurozone's money supply - the same M3 measure that the
US Federal Reserve stopped tracking and reporting at the start of 2006 - was
supposed to grow by no more than 4.5% per year. This initial target represented
one of two "monetary pillars" supporting the entire Eurozone project when the
European Central Bank took over the reins of policy at the end of the 1990s.
At last count, however, Europe's M3 money supply was ballooning at a near
three-decade record of 11.5% per year in January 2008.
What does that mean for you, me, and the rest of the world trying to defend
our savings and income against the global upturn in consumer prices? All too
often, short-term traders looking for quick gains in gold will point you to
a very short-term connection between gold and the Euro. And fair's fair.
It's a fact that gold and the Euro often do move together against the US Dollar
day to day. Between the start of 2007 and late-March 2008, for example, the
Euro and gold moved in the same direction on 291 out of 310 trading days according
to Reuters data - some 94% of the time.
But the Euro moved in the same direction as crude oil prices on 300 days -
fully 97% of the time. And no one would claim that the Euro's rise versus the
Dollar has stopped the price of petrol from going up on Germany's autobahns.
What's more, both the Euro and gold rose against the Dollar on 170 trading
days between Jan. 2007 and late-March 2008. So their apparent correlation is
built on the plain fact that the US currency has consistently lost value, drip
by drip and tick by tick.
On average, the Dollar has lost 0.05% of its value against the Euro every
trading day since the start of 2007. Measured in gold, it's lost a little bit
more each session, down by 0.06% on average.
Put another way, gold's gain over the Dollar has consistently out-stripped
the gain for US investors holding Euros. All told - and trading just shy of
DM 40,000 per kilo-equivalent today - the Gold
Price in Euros has risen by more than 24% for French and German investors
since the start of last year.
Will it push higher, breaking new ground above the all-time record peak of
DM 46,530...? Or might gold now turn tail, falling in the face of below-zero
real Dollar interest rates and a three-decade surge in the European money supply?
The long-term chart says gold faces resistance. Either that, or it's about
to break into historic new territory as the world has to re-learn to conquer
inflation.