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| Here's What I See: When in Doubt, Stay Out |
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In this business, I don't call 'em the way
I want 'em, I call them the way I see them. And here's what
I see.
First, consumers are continuing to spend –
big time. Retail sales in March rose 1.8%, the biggest increase
in a year. U.S. consumer spending was led by purchases of
autos, furniture and building materials.
Second – inflation is running wild. This
from today's San Diego Union headline, "Median Housing
Price Hits Record in Country – San Diego Country's housing
market, far from settling down, heated up last month to reach
a record median price of $424,000, up nearly 17 percent from
a year ago. Meanwhile, prices for resale condos rose even
more, up 24 percent.
This from the front page of today's LA Times
– "Home Prices in LA Soar at Record Rate. The median
leaps 29 percent to $375,000 in March as Buyers Scurry to
Act Before Interest Rates Rise."
Third, as I reported yesterday, the dollar is
rising against all the major currencies. The dollar's new-found
strength began in February. The strong dollar has hit the
precious metals hard. The dollar opened 105 points higher
this morning with the euro down 140 points and closing in
on 119.
The strong dollar hit the precious metals like
a slap in the face. At the opening, gold was down over 12
to 407 and silver crashed 54 cents to 7.40.
The strengthening dollar hasn't helped the bonds.
The 30 year T-bond broke wide on April 12 smashing below its
50-day moving average. Today the long bond was down again
– and less than a point above its 200-day MA, which
stands at 108.05.
I'm going to give you my broad opinion on the
whole picture (this after going over all the charts prior
to the opening). I believe the upward momentum of the metals,
and the stock market is over. I believe the bonds have topped
out. I believe interest rates are heading up, and refinancing
in the housing market is over. I believe my original opinion
on the stock market was the correct one – the stock
market is in the process of building a major top.
I've said that my own basic position is in cash
and gold (two-thirds coins, one third gold stocks). My reason
for this position – the old adage, "When in doubt,
stay out."
I didn't like this wildly-overvalued stock market,
I didn't like the fact that everybody was "unfriendly"
to the dollar and was on the other side of the equation (meaning
they were in foreign currencies). As far as the universe of
gold, I don't trade it, I sit with it. As for bonds, I haven't
liked bonds for months or longer – not with the Fed
hell-bent to inflate. And inflate they are doing – nonstop.
As for the big picture, I believe the government
has about "shot its load." Look what's happened
over the last 12 months, and still the major stock averages
have been unable to rise to new highs.
- Eleven rate reductions taking short
rates down to a Great Depression level of 1%.
- Massive refinancing of home mortgages
to the tune of $2.5 trillion in 2003.
- Fed injecting over a trillion dollars
in liquidity into the banking system over the last 12
months. Over the last four weeks we've seen M-3 rise
$100 billion or at an annualized rate of over $1 trillion.
- Massive foreign buying of US Treasuries,
which has (up to now) kept long rates down.
- Series of tax cuts by the Bush administration.
- Weekly "happy news" propaganda
from various Fed governors.
- Huge government deficits which tend to stimulate the
economy.
- All-out spending spree by US consumers.
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So what the Fed and the US government have done
is to build the greatest edifice of debt ever seen by one
country in history. And this debt continues to build. For
the US government, the debt build-up is continuing at the
rate of over $13 billion a WEEK. The current rising trend
in interest rates will bear down on this ocean of debt.
This pits the forces of deflation directly against
the forces of inflation.
This impending battle of inflation vs. deflation
is going to be one of the most critical economic confrontations
seen in decades. Frankly, I don't know how it's going to turn
out – and neither does anyone else. In fact, I'd say
99 percent of the US population is unaware that it's even
happening.
The inflation-deflation battle will express
itself in waves – of first inflation, then deflation.
These are two mighty forces militating towards
deflation.
1 – Overproduction brought on by the entrance
of China, India and much of Asia into the global economy,
2 – Massive US and world debt which must
be carried with the help of low interest rates, if indeed
this debt (particularly the US debt) can be successfully carried
at all.
And of course, we have the forces of inflation
working to reduce the power of overproduction and deflation
via the printing presses of the Federal Reserve and the central
banks of the world. Without the discipline of gold, the central
banks can create any amount of money they want any time they
want.
However, the central banks cannot control the
"bond market vigilantes." When the vigilantes become
frightened about inflation, they dump bonds and rates go up
(which is what's happening now).
The price of real money, GOLD, will fluctuate
wildly as the inflation-deflation battle goes on. In the end,
the great casualty will be intrinsically worthless, paper
money. In the end, irredeemable paper money will be distrusted,
and it will go down. The only power evil has is the power
to destroy itself. I call paper money evil. In the end, it
will destroy itself as it has done all through history.
And in the end, what I've warned about all along
will come to pass. "In a bear market everyone loses,
and the winner is the one who loses the least."
(April 13, 2004)
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