| |
|
THE FED CAN'T STOP INFLATION
|
| |
By Kenneth J. Gerbino
May 18, 2004
|
 |
|
|
The following is an excerpt from a recent client
letter.
Here are some hard-core facts that you need to consider.
Starting in 2000, the U.S. has created $1.5 trillion
new dollars (M2), and has a cumulative trade deficit of $1.6 trillion.
This totals $3.1 trillion on the negative side of the dollar equation.
To say the least, this is bad monetary karma and will lead toward
a very strong gold price.
From 1973 to 1981 the inflation rate in the U.S.
averaged 9.2% per year ! The Fed raising interest rates during
this time, on balance did nothing ! Why ? Because the money increases
from prior years were already in the system…the horses were
out of the barn. For most of this time gold went up, interest
rates went up and inflation went up. Prior to this time the money
supply (M2) from 1965 to 1974 increased 101%. This caused the
inflation from 1973 to 1981. The Fed could not stop it. Gold went
from $100 to $850.
Here is a reality check on the above mentioned $1.5
trillion created from the year 2000. I will refer to the U.S.
money supply (M2) in 1980. It was $1.5 trillion. All the tangible
wealth in the United States, every bridge, office building, home,
car, television, plane, everything was created over 200 years
with a money supply that ended up at $1.5 trillion. 200 years
of blood, sweat and tears to create all the tangible wealth in
the U.S. Our country in a bit more than four years has created
the same amount of money! $1.5 trillion! This new money has not
created anything near the tangible wealth of the first 200 year’s
$1.5 trillion. This is currency depreciation on a grand scale.
This is economic madness and this is the madness
that has made people like Warren Buffet recently increase his
foreign currency investments (out of dollars) to over $12 billion.
Bill Gross, who manages the largest bond portfolio
in the world and is considered on the same world class investment
level as Buffet, was on CNBC just last week and in response to
Ron Insana’s question of “what to do now” stated,
“Move money elsewhere to a central bank in Euroland that
is more rational.”
Warren Buffet, Bill Gross, and hopefully you understand
this situation. The smart thing to do is to protect oneself with
assets of real monetary value….gold. One of the best ways
to own plenty of this time tested asset is with gold and silver
mining companies that are sitting on mountains of resources and
reserves in the ground.
Here is something else important to understand.
The dollar is not always that good a barometer of the gold price.
From 1976 to 1980 the dollar index went from 106 to 92, down only
13%, yet gold during this time went from $103 to $850, up over
700%.
From 1985 to 1995 the dollar index collapsed from
140 to 80, down 43%. Gold during this time went from $325 to $390,
up only 20%. Gold should go opposite to the dollar but the magnitude
of the move has a life all it’s own and regardless of all
complexities and theories…the bottom line is that it is
the world’s heavyweight champ of money and liquid wealth,
regardless of whatever everything else is doing. Besides, the
price of gold is based on supply and demand of gold not dollars.
If the top 10 gold mines in the world closed down for any reason,
that would take 20% of the mine supply off the market. Regardless
of the dollar, you could bet gold would go up. The gold/dollar
relationship has merit, but it is not the key determinate to the
ultimate value of gold.
Gold is headed higher regardless of the dollar,
the Fed, or interest rates. The gold stocks are also. The current
sell-off in the mining shares is a buying opportunity.
The U.S. stock market is worth about $13 trillion
and the bond market about $22 trillion. That would be about $35
trillion. Since the U.S. has about 30% of all the liquid wealth
in the world, we could assume that the global stock and bond markets
would be about $100 trillion.
The market value of every gold mining company in
the world on every stock market in the world is $200 billion.
For comparison General Electric’s market value is $300 billion.
The point is that there is an awful lot of money that could potentially
flow into these gold mining shares and most likely will. The wake
up call will certainly be there when the economic repercussions
of all the past and current monetary and economic mismanagement
manifest themselves. Not only are the chickens coming home to
roost but in the next few years the debt levels and the printing
of money will most likely have to increase even more to keep the
show on the road.
Despite all this bad news, the world will still
turn, people will get up in the morning and eat breakfast, the
cereal makers will still be in business, their employees will
still shop at stores, the store owners will still buy cars, the
PGA Tour will go on, etc., etc. A depression of productivity will
not be the end result. Life will go on . But the big change will
be the value of everyone’s assets. Here is where a massive
shift of value and wealth will take place.
M2 just since 2000 is up 32%. Since 1995, up 73%.
This means plenty of inflation in the next 5-10 years, and although
hard to imagine, the bond market could lose 30-40% of it’s
value. Raising interest rates couldn’t stop inflation from
1973 to 1981 and it won’t stop it now. All the money printed
in the late 60’s and early 70’s was already in the
system. Today it is no different. This time it could be much worse
because of all the debt, which dwarfs the debt levels of the 70’s.
Also the new economic power, China, has increased it’s money
supply (M1) by 84% just since 2000. All this is bullish for gold
and the mining stocks.
The monetary insurance of gold mining stocks, coupled
with the growth and value attributes of this investment group
make a compelling and logical rationale in this day and age for
investment capital. It is your life jacket on a sinking ship.
In 2004, we just could be seeing the last real great
buying opportunity in the mining shares for a generation. I would
encourage clients to contact our office and add funds to your
gold mining stock account this quarter and take advantage of this
opportunity.
Kenneth J. Gerbino
www.kengerbino.com
|