Bring Out Your Dead


By David Galland, Managing Director, Casey Research


Last week, the price of gold again broke below its new base at $1,200, and the U.S. stock market was again under strong pressure, due to a confluence of fears, most of which point to a deflationary double-dip. The fears were fanned by disappointment in the just-released early quarterly results, by the latest CPI reports that show inflation continuing to moderate, and by yet another poll revealing faltering consumer confidence.

 

The market is also spooked, no doubt, by notes from the latest Fed Beige Book that make it clear that the Fed is (finally) beginning to understand the entrenched and endemic nature of this crisis. While the notes are written in shamanic double-speak, the point is unambiguous – members of the Fed don’t expect the economy to get back on track until 2015 or 2016.

 

 

The simple reality the Fed is waking up to is that the structural underpinnings of the economy are damaged beyond any quick or easy fix.  

 

That’s because until the debt is wrung out of the system, either through default or raging inflation – there’s no chance of it actually being paid in anything remotely resembling current dollars – the equivalent of an economic Black Death is going to plague the land. 

 

Each new government initiative, the latest being financial reform, that doesn’t decisively address the debt, but rather tightens the dead hands of politicians around GDP, only serves to spread the wasting disease like so many flea-infested rats running through the economy.

 

And so, each new day will find the carts freshly laden with failed homeowners, businesses, and banks that have succumbed.

 

Pundits are fond of saying that things are never really “different this time around”… yet there is something truly unusual now going on. See if you can spot the disconnect in the following descriptions of the current economy.

 

 

Anything strike you as out of place? 

 

The current setup with massive debts and low, low interest rates is like making an uncollateralized loan to an acquaintance at a very friendly, low interest rate. Then he comes back again for more, and more, and more. Because you live in a small town, you know he’s putting the touch on a bunch of other people too. And because you know his loose-lipped accountant, you also know what his income is, and even what his total debts are – and it is blatantly obvious that he won’t be able to repay his debts in a dozen lifetimes.

 

So would you keep lending him money? And, if you did, would you do it at the same friendly interest rates?

 

Not hardly. And therein lies the almost Twilight Zone caliber disconnect in the world as we know it.

 

In a conversation yesterday, my dear partner and friend of several decades, Doug Casey, made just that point – that the situation today should only exist if the fundamental laws of economics had been suspended. Interest rates should be going up, but they aren’t – rather, they are bumping along at the very bottom of the possible range.

 

In my view, this is testimony to the truly extraordinary lengths – involving trillions of dollars – that the U.S. Treasury and the Fed have gone to in recent years. But they can only suspend reality for so long before the fundamentals again rule – and when that happens, the entire system could literally collapse. Not to sound dramatic, but it could happen almost overnight.

 

As frustrating as it may be to all of us, the world is still locked firmly in the jaws of a powerful bear market. While the bear may loosen its bite now and again, it’s really only temporary – to get a better grip. 

 

That being the case, it’s worth remembering the single most important thing about bear market investing – it’s hard. Or, put another way, it’s hard to make a decent return without taking extraordinary risk.

 

As Doug points out, in the current environment, everything – including commodities – is overvalued. And they are going to remain that way until they aren’t. Maybe the Fed actually has it right this time, and the bottom won’t be reached until 2015 or 2016? I wouldn’t discount it at this point.

 

But what of the inflation we see as inevitable? And gold, in the interim?

 

Let me quickly tackle the second question first. 

 

In any debt crisis, the foremost concern of creditors is to get paid back. Compared to that, returns on investment come in a weak second. In a sovereign debt crisis, the question of repayment is complicated by the fact that the debtors control the creation of the currency units that will ultimately be used for payments.

 

Individual and institutional holders of U.S. Treasuries, along with other assets amounting to trillions of U.S. currency units, can see with their own eyes what’s going on. To continue holding such large quantities of instruments denominated in these unbacked currency units – or those labeled “euros” or “yen” – is to risk being left with a lot of worthless paper as the governments try to repay debtors by creating the stuff, literally, out of thin air.

 

And so these holders diversify their portfolios into alternative, and far more tangible, assets – gold and silver included. That is the fuel that has sent gold higher over the last ten years and that will keep it high – short-term corrections notwithstanding.

 

It is, however, when the inflation from all the money creation starts to appear that we’ll begin to see the shift into gold begin in earnest, and the price will really take off. When might that occur? Rather than trying to answer that question myself, I’ll refer you to the latest, excellent edition of, Conversations with Casey, in which Louis James interviews Casey Report co-editor Terry Coxon on the outlook for inflation.

 

Here’s an excerpt…

 

 

For now, the key is to get through this period in the best possible shape. That means watching your debt, keeping well cashed up, buying gold on dips, and, when you venture into investment markets, it’s never been more important to understand what you are investing in and why. 

 

There’s no need to chase anything – which means you have the luxury of building your portfolio over time, on exactly the terms you want. 

 

While it may sound contradictory, I think this is also a good time to learn more about speculating. In the simplest terms, a speculator risks just 10% of their portfolio in the hopes of receiving a 100% return. By comparison, most investors put 100% of their portfolio at risk in the hopes of getting a 10% return (actually, these days, most people would be happy with just 5%).

 

In the case of the speculator, 90% of their portfolio can be largely kept in cash and gold. So, who’s more at risk – the investor or the speculator?

 

And where are the best speculations found today? Personally, I like energy, and I very much like bottom fishing in the junior gold sector. That’s because there are some terrific micro-cap Canadian junior exploration and mining companies (which you can buy using your U.S. discount broker) sitting on large known deposits – but their share prices periodically fall back based on nothing more than investor emotion. That’s called a buying opportunity.

 

(For our best bets in this sector, check out a risk-free 3-month trial to the International Speculator – it’s no coincidence that every single stock Senior Editor Louis James picked in 2009 has turned out to be a winner. Details here.)