This Youtube video, made by Guardian Films, has been around for awhile. It shows the suffering in Zimbabwe. But it shows that when fiat money fails, gold –that barbarous relic — becomes currency.
gold
Aggresivity or Gold: what is needed in the current investment climate
These are difficult times for investors. They are wonderful times for speculators. Speculators will make (and lose) a lot of money over the next couple of years. In my opinion, investors are likely to lose. Prudent investors might better avoid financial assets for awhile. Traditional wisdom is apt not to apply to what is coming. Monty Pelerin, “Speculators Only”
There is the saying, “Those who remain calm while others panic, don’t know what the hell is going on.” It is a troubled time and I genuinely feel bad for what central banks are doing to people’s savings. But as Pelerin says, speculators will make and lose a lot of money. The biggest winners today are those upon whom Bernanke shines his favor, such as the big banks that borrow money from the Fed and lend it back to the US federal government, which is perhaps the biggest Sopranos-type racket going: but it’s not some kind of under the table payoffs, but it’s being done right in front of all of us and with impunity.
The 2008 market crash has been particularly devastating on people’s savings. They were forced by inflation to buy so-called “risky” instruments, esp. stocks. Then that bubble burst twice in less than a decade. Stung by this double whammy to their savings, many are still too scared to bet on the market again, and so Bernanke, and the other sovereign banks around the world are robbing them blind through their loose monetary policies; the euphemism for excess money creation is “Quantitative Easing”–it used to be called just simply “inflation”.
Loose money is also created by low interest rates. In Canada, for example, there has been something like a 20% increase in the cost of houses since the summer of 2008, due to the Bank of Canada keeping the rates at ridiculously low rates. So you can’t sit on cash–because the riskiest investment in an inflationary environment is cash in a savings account that pays 1%. Here in Canada since the nadir of the stock market crash, such cash has lost about 19% against real estate and much more against stocks and gold. Commodity prices on world markets are rising rapidly too. Or rather, fiat currencies are losing their symbolic value quickly. A interest bearing GIC, savings account or bond is recipe for a portfolio with a rapidly declining buying power.
I’ve devised an aggressive and flexible investment style to beat the coming inflation, if possible. The stock portfolio I manage is now almost all commodities (oil and gas, gold mining), 100% Canadian-based (as I live in Canada), and I am shorting the US dollar to buy these companies. I am selling cash or margin covered puts on oil and gas, gold-mining companies (etc.) for income (which gives from 5-10% downside protection) and, because I can’t trust my margin to stay high in market downturn, I am accumulating unused lines of credit (notably my HELOC) as my hedge against deflation,with the view of seizing the day if there is a market crash. I believe the investor must be aggressive and engaged–you can’t have a “lazy” portfolio today (John Mauldin said the same in his most recent interview with Steve Forbes). The goal must be to beat inflation, and the higher that goes, the more aggresivity is necessary. Or if I had to sit out as you suggest, then I would put most of my funds into silver, gold, non-perishable foods, or other commodities–things with durative and intrinsic value (gold and silver are liquid and so are excellent choices, but you have to have a safe place to put it).
Most people’s best hedge against inflation is still their mortgage, as Bernanke’s devaluation of the dollar will also reduce everyone’s debts. It’s the Year of Jubilee, when everyone’s debts will be canceled, especially the Federal government’s. Or as Dickens says, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times … ”
This post is a revised comment that was featured today at Monty Pelerin’s blog, “One man’s approach to investing in dangerous times“. Thanks Monty!!
Please read my financial disclaimer, if you haven’t already.
The Gold Bubble? What Gold Bubble?
Monty Pelerin produced the following list on his blog today:
COMMODITY PRICE % INCREASES YEAR OVER YEAR
| Agricultural Raw Materials | 24% |
| Industrial Inputs Index | 25% |
| Metals Price Index | 26% |
| Coffee | 45% |
| Barley | 32% |
| Oranges | 35% |
| Beef | 23% |
| Pork | 68% |
| Salmon | 30% |
| Sugar | 24% |
| Wool | 20% |
| Cotton | 40% |
| Palm Oil | 26% |
| Hides | 25% |
| Rubber | 62% |
| Iron Ore | 103% |
Commentators are often speaking about Gold as the mother of all bubbles. Gold is up 30% over the same one-year period. Why do people talk about a gold bubble? It would make more sense to talk about an iron ore bubble, a rubber bubble or a cotton bubble. What about the oranges bubble? The gold bubble? What gold bubble?
The education bubble IV: In celebration of $1300 gold
To celebrate gold hitting $1300 per ounce today, I dedicate this post to the schools that trained the beaming luminaries who have helped to make it all happen. It was a group effort and we commend your universities for the brilliance of their alumni:
Barack Obama, Columbia, Harvard
Ben Bernanke, Harvard, MIT
Alan Greenspan, Columbia, NYU
Hank Paulson, Harvard (MBA)
Paul Krugman, Yale, MIT
Tim Geitner, Dartmouth, John Hopkins
Larry Summer, MIT, Harvard
By the way, I attended what is now the top ranked university in the world. John Maynard Keynes was also a Cambridge man.
Invest in gold or gold stocks?
David Berman of the Globe and Mail writes about the pros and cons of owning gold versus gold stocks. Sometimes I wonder how much experience financial journalists have in investing. Usually, I think that they don’t really invest much besides perhaps their own RRSP’s. I would guess that many of them, particularly the full-time staff writers, have very little hands-on experience, though they do watch the industry closely and this makes them knowledgable. But there is no substitute for experience and competence.
One thing Berman doesn’t discuss is commissions. I’ve had some experience trading gold mining stocks but very little with physical gold; the reason for that is the expense and risk that is involved in buying and owning gold. If you visit the Kitco site, you will see that gold sells at a premium of about $60 or more per ounce, plus shipping and handling of $30 plus $4 per $1000. So if I were to purchase about $10,000 of physical gold, my expenses equal 10 x 4 = $40 + $30 (for shipping) and 8.33 oz *60 = $500 premium on the gold itself = $570 total costs. That’s roughly 5.7% commission. Then one has to consider storage costs. I would leave it in my house, which could be broken in and the gold stolen. Thus, I find that gold mining stocks are much more attractive than physical gold, since the discount brokerage fee of $9.99 per transaction means that I can take possession of $10,000 worth of stock at a commission of 0.1%. Thus, commissions are an important factor when deciding what to invest in.
But I think there will come a time when I will want to own physical gold. If I lived in the US, I would consider storing a few thousand in gold, but I’ve more confidence today that the Loonie will maintain a semblance of its value, probably losing no more than 2-7% per annum. That’s why I am shorting the US dollar in favor of the Loonie. But if I were an American, I would consider having some gold on hand, because paper money becomes worthless when hyperinflation hits, and then people resort to alternative currencies. At that point, silver and gold coins may come back into circulation. These will not necessarily be government approved currency, but coins with intrinsic value minted by third parties. Once the Federal Reserve has discredited the US dollar completely, people will have no choice but to barter or do transactions in other currencies. In Austria after WW I, the Swiss Franc was a sought after currency. For us in Canada, it will be a very funny irony if the Loonie ever becomes a currency of preference in the US.
