Moneyization:
The global financial phenomenon of individuals and businesses
moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest
confidence, or money which has a higher store of faith.
Or, The
Great Wall of America.
Finding something
to read which does not include reference to the financial disaster
in the making called the United States would be nice. That seems
to be a near impossibility. Course a group of delusionists remain
committed to rationalizing the economic mess created by the
Greenspan/Bush team. Fortunately, their remaining tenure is
limited. That the replacements for both might not be an
improvement is the scarey part of the whole situation.
Most recently, The
Exhaustion of the Dollar by H. Peter Gray and A Closer
Look at Foreign Investment Behavior in the U.S. by Douglas R.
Gillespie (www.gillespieresearch.com)
managed to further depress any residual hope for the U.S. dollar.
Both are recommended reading. And if residential real estate is
still viewed as your financial savior, try The Mortgage Trap
by Dean Foust in the 27 June issue of Business Week.
Course I flung
that magazine against the reading room wall when another reference
to Bernanke's Delusion was discovered. Bernanke is to head the
Council of Economic Advisors and some have said he is on the short
list to replace Greenspan. He is a major advocate of the view that
the U.S. current account deficit is the fault of foreign
countries. In this delusion, the U.S. has a current account
deficit cause some nations have a surplus of money to invest. Or,
she got a DUI cause the bar had a surplus of liquor to sell.
The coming crisis
involving the U.S. current account deficit is a much documented
phenomenon. Only the policy makers at the U.S. government seem to
be unable to grasp the stark reality facing the country. For those
that have not seen a recent chart of the current account situation
consider the first graph. The bars represent the current account
deficit, using the left axis, and triangles are that deficit
divided by GDP, using the right axis. The negative 6% line is the
much discussed danger level. Some forecasts have the deficit/GDP
ratio rising to 8 or 9 percent, which the dollar would not
survive. Regardless of the forecast, the situation is dire. Serious
dollar devaluation will be necessary to correct the situation due
to the structural nature of the U.S. trade deficit.
The current
account can be thought of as part of the income statement for the
country. Financial statements have another important schedule, the
balance sheet. Gray, in his book mentioned above, notes that the
international net worth of the United States has been in deficit
for some time. The international net worth of the country can be
viewed as the equity in the country's balance sheet. A nation's
individuals and businesses have investments in other nations.
Those investments are the asset side of the balance sheet.
Liabilities exist in the form of claims on U.S. assets by foreign
investors. Assets minus liabilities equals net worth, or equity.
What a nation owns minus what it owes is international net worth,
or the nation's equity.
The second chart
portrays the U.S. international net worth, and comes from data
produced by the BEA, or Bureau of Economic Analysis. Black circles
are the U.S. international net worth, and use the left axis. Red
squares are that net worth as a percentage of GDP, and use the
right axis. Note also that this data is soon to be updated and
data for 2004 has not yet been released. These are not small
calculations and even with computers takes them a while to do
them.

Two observations
can be made from this chart. First, for most of the period shown
the U.S. international net worth has been negative, and is
currently just shy of negative $3 trillion. Interestingly that
period of negative net worth for the nation seems to coincide with
the reign of Greenspan at the Federal Reserve. The presidency
changed hands during this period so blame cannot be directed at
that office. Federal Reserve policies seem to be the most likely
influences that destroyed the equity of the U.S. By
the way, how many of you would buy a stock that has a negative
book value?
The second
observation relates to the size of the negative equity relative to
GDP. That percentage is approaching 25%. Perhaps that might be
some good news. Citizens of the U.S. would only have to surrender
three months of national income to eliminate the negative net
worth. If the U.S. would give up everything produced by the entire
nation from July 1 to October 1, the negative equity could be
"eliminated." What a relief! No wonder the Federal
Reserve ignores what now seems a trivial matter.
The two largest
national monies available for investors are the dollar and the
Euro. Both have a fundamental and political problem. The dollar's
fundamental problems have been well discussed, as done above. The
political problem we discussed in one of our recent articles. If
one needs to borrow money from the world, one should make that
easier rather than harder. One should not create political and
legal hurdles that make it difficult for investors to lend you
money.
However, the U.S.
government continues to "fight the war on terrorism" by
making the use of the dollar and the U.S. financial system harder
for people, particular foreign ones. The USA Patriot Act, Bank
Secrecy Act, court rulings and overly enthusiastic bureaucrats are
serving to criminalize the use of dollars and the U.S. financial
system. While the U.S. needs to borrow a couple billion dollars
each day, the nation is making it harder for the world to use
dollars. The fundamentals may be bad, but the drive by the U.S.
government to put a wall around the U.S. financial system will be
as effective protecting the nation as the Great Wall was in
preserving the Chinese emperors and empresses. The
Great Wall of the America is "terrorism" of investors,
and the dollar will pay the price!
These
policy actions will serve only to foster a parallel international
financial system from which the U.S. will be excluded, and in
which the dollar does not participate.
The Euro's
fundamental problem is that whatever positive trends might exist,
it is still fiat money. Euro is still a debt not an asset.
Potential for politics to interfere with the evolution in this
monetary union became clearly evident after the French and Dutch
votes. However, the impact of the vote has been on the
entire fiat money framework, not just the Euro. Yes
the Euro went down against the dollar, but all currencies have
been going down.
Consider the
table below, in which all values have been rounded for simpler
presentation. For each national money the value of Gold in the
local money is calculated for the end of May and today. Gold
went up in each of these local monies, every one of them. That
means each national money went down in value. The final
column refers to the Gold price of the money, simply another way
of looking at the value of money. For each national money, how
much Gold was required to buy a unit of the national money was
calculated. That last column is how much that Gold price of the
national money changed. Each
and everyone of them became cheaper in terms of Gold, meaning down
in value.
Gold
in Local Money & Gold Price of National Money Change
(Values are rounded.)
| Money |
Gold
Local
End of May |
Gold
Local
Current |
Gold
Price of Money
% Change |
| Australia |
547 |
570 |
-4 |
| Mexico |
4525 |
4734 |
-4 |
| Canada |
520 |
540 |
-4 |
| Russia |
11965 |
12529 |
-5 |
| South
Africa |
2797 |
2912 |
-4 |
| Switzerland |
516 |
559 |
-7 |
| U.S. |
414 |
439 |
-6 |
| UK |
227 |
240 |
-5 |
| EU |
332 |
360 |
-8 |
What
this table tells us is that investors have been moving away from
fiat monies, all of them. The vote on the EU constitution
reminded investors around the world that fiat monies are not
really secure investments. Investors around the world are shifting
to the only money that is an asset rather than a debt. Is the era
of debt money approaching an end? Is the era of debt as an asset
about to be snuffed out by massive losses on housing loans?
The Euro offers
an intermediate step for the world's monetary system in the longer
term transition from the dollar to Gold. Structurally the world's
financial system is probably not prepared to shift immediately
from fiat money to Gold. Needed infrastructure for using Gold as
money remains to be built. Technology has reached the level where
the use of Gold as money is possible, but providers of financial
services are not prepared.
In the monthly
letter a discussion has been started on the wisdom in Gray's book.
He wrote it because of his belief that the world is not prepared
for a shift from one monetary hegemon, the U.S., to another,
perhaps the Euro. A smooth transition may not be possible. The
inability of the U.S. to adequately exercise its rights and
responsibilities as the new monetary hegemon in the 1920s and
1930s contributed to the coming of the Great Depression. That
immaturity as a monetary hegemon certainly exacerbated the
situation.
We
again face a shift from one monetary hegemon to another.
The French and Dutch votes may suggest that the EU does not yet
have the unity needed to exercise effectively the new monetary
role for the Euro. In short and as Gray points out, no
world entity stands ready to manage the situation. The world is
not preparing for the problems associated with the failing of the
monetary hegemon. Gray suggests that the impact on global
economic activity of the U.S. financial situation may be a serious
matter. Is Great Depression II just around the monetary corner?
Many investors
have discovered the future role for Gold in the world's monetary
system. They are using price weakness to gain early entry into the
future monetary paradigm. The last graph shows that timely
purchases of Gold, created periodically by rallies in paper money,
can be identified. While Gold is over bought on the EU vote,
another opportunity will arrive. Investors should be positioning
themselves to buy Gold on the next, and any future, periods of
price weakness. Think $1,300 Gold, not which piece of paper buy.
And, a final note
to Silver investors. Technology will allow Gold to substitute for
national monies in the future. Gold will be the most prevalent
"denomination" of world money. However, that will be
true only for electronic transactions and large real transactions.
Silver coins were originally created so that the most typical
daily transaction could be completed. Even a coin worth only a
tenth of an ounce of Gold is too large to be practical for
purchasing normal stuff, like a case of beer. Silver coins will
again be necessary in the future. With Silver approaching an over
sold condition, investors should be adding Silver to their
portfolios. And do not forget, the Silver ETF is coming!

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© 2005 Ned W. Schmidt
Archived
Editorials
Ned
W. Schmidt,CFA,CEBS is publisher of THE VALUE VIEW GOLD
REPORT. That report now includes a weekly message, TRADING
THOUGHTS, to help investors identify timely points for
buying Gold and Silver. His monumental report, "$1,265
GOLD", with 255 pages and 98 graphs, is now widely known,
and is available at www.amazon.com
or from the author by clicking HERE
This work has now been read by investors in over twelve countries
around the world. Ned welcomes your comments and questions. His
mission in life is to rescue investors from the abyss of financial assets
and the coming collapse of the U.S. dollar. He
can be contacted by Email.
Please remember that no method is perfect nor is the one
running the model.
All estimated returns are for the model portfolio and
do not reflect those earned on actual portfolios.
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