| |
| Gold or the Government, which do you believe?
|
| |
Earlier this week, Wall Street Pollyannas
reacted with glee to the release of seemingly mild producer
and consumer prices data. While August PPI and CPI rose
.6% and .5%, annualizing to 7.5% and 6% respectively, the
completely meaningless, highly manipulated, “core”
numbers, which have conveniently become the only figures
making headlines, were far less alarming. According to the
government, August “core” PPI was unchanged,
while “core” CPI rose a scant .1%.
However, not to be fooled, the price of gold,
considered by many to be the ultimate inflation indicator,
rose to a new seventeen year high, gaining about ten dollars
this week, and over twenty dollars in the last three. The
Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index (XAU) gained about 7%
on the week, bringing its three-week gain to 17%. Gold’s
recent surge confirms the break-out that I first wrote about
on June 6th “Gold & Oil Could Force Surprise ECB
Rate Hike” and again on June 17th “Gold’s
Trifecta Reveals Dollar’s Diminished Status”
available on my web site at <http://www.europac.net/archives.asp?year=2005&qtr=2>
As the price of Gold tends to rise in inflationary
periods, economists should ask themselves if they believe
the government or gold. History and recent anecdotal evidence
certainly favor gold. On Thursday, the Philadelphia Fed’s
manufacturers report for September revealed that despite
a sharp slowdown, its prices paid index surged 257 points
to its highest reading since January. In addition, this
week the national average price of unleaded gasoline breached
the three dollar per gallon level for the first time ever,
exceeding the inflation adjusted peak of $2.94 set back
in 1981. Actually, today’s average would be even higher
if it reflected the same percentage of gas sold at full
service prices as was the case 1981.
Also the week saw fresh releases of trade
and current account deficit data. As an example of the power
of diminished expectations, July’s horrific $57.9
Billion trade deficit was greeted as good news, as it was
less than the slightly more horrifying $60 billion that
had been feared. The second quarter current account deficit,
which came in at a higher than expected $195.7 billion,
would have been a new all-time record, had it not been for
the upward revision of the first quarter current account
deficit to $198.7 billion. The $3 billion narrowing in the
quarterly current account deficit (the first time since
2003) can hardly be seen as progress, as it resulted entirely
from a $4.4 billion reduction in foreign aid. Widening trade
and current account deficits will exert additional downward
pressure on the dollar and upward pressure on consumer prices.
Finally, President Bush’s “Marshall Plan”
for the Gulf Coast will only fuel inflation’s fire,
as the money needed to fund it will either be created by
the Fed, or borrowed from abroad.
Perhaps the most important reason to be skeptical
of government inflation numbers is that the government,
like a fox campaigning to guard a hen house, has many reasons
to be disingenuous. As the world’s largest debtor,
the Federal Government is inflation’s primary beneficiary.
More importantly, for America’s bubble economy to
continue expanding, politicians must keep consumers borrowing
and spending. By transferring wealth from creditors to debtors,
inflation helps makes this possible. For debtors, inflation
reduces the real burden of debt service, while simultaneously
increasing the prices of their assets, particularly their
houses. Unfortunately for creditors, the vast majority of
American voters are debtors, and monetary policy is therefore
conducted specifically to benefit the latter.
Considering the fact that so many creditors are foreigners,
and therefore ineligible to vote, this amounts to a political
no-brainer.
However, this policy can only “succeed”
as long as the Government can con America’s creditors
into believing that inflation is not a threat, even as it
creates it with increased veracity. Recent evidence suggests
that this propaganda campaign is beginning to wear thin.
This week’s pronounced weakness in the bond market,
despite soft economic data and “benign core”
inflation numbers, reveals that more investors are getting
wise to the con, and looking to gold rather than the government
as a reliable indicator of inflation.
The best defense against inflation is not
to own the currency being inflated, in this case the U.S.
dollar. Download my free research report “The Collapsing
Dollar: The Powerful Case for Investing in Foreign Equities”
at www.researchreport1.com
and protect yourself.
Peter D. Schiff, President
Euro Pacific Capital, Inc.
10 Corbin Drive, Suite B
Darien, Ct. 06820
phone 203-662-9700
toll free 888-377-3722
email schiff@europac.net
web www.europac.net
*****
If you have not yet done so, download my free
research report at www.researchreport1.com,
and get out of the dollar before the race turns into a stampede.
|