The
Bank of Bernanke
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
The financial
markets are beginning to heat up. After a long lull, the action
is beginning to mount and commentators are expecting a major showdown:
Ben Bernanke vs. Inflation. They buy the dollar because they think
they know the outcome: Bernanke will win.
This week,
the Bank of Bernanke is expected to stuff a few more rounds into
the ammunition chamber. Its key lending rate is supposed to rise
from 5% to 5.25% – the 17th slug since the Fed began "reloading
the gun."
Stockpiling
this kind of ammunition is supposed to make the dollar a little
safer. And a little stronger. And so, it is in the currency markets.
You can buy a euro for less than $1.26. While the dollar "should"
go down – heavy trade deficits and federal deficits are wrapped
around its neck like millstones – it isn't going down yet. For the
moment, speculators can earn more from U.S. dollar bonds than from
its rivals. They're banking on Ben. And they're entitled to think
that he can hold off inflation, with his trigger-ready arm.
But the plot
needs clarification.
There are two
kinds of inflation. There is the kind that everyone hates: when
prices for cigarettes and beer go up. And there is the kind that
everyone likes: when prices of their houses and stocks go up. The
Fed has become an "inflation hawk," they say, because it is becoming
vigilant about increases in consumer prices. Raising interest rates
is supposed to mean it's girding its loins to fight them. But depending
on how you measure it, cost of living is rising no more than it
has been for years – each year, consumer dollars lose two to five
percent of their purchasing power. And who complains? No one.
The risk from
consumer price inflation is only more consumer price inflation.
But we don't think that is the risk that the Fed really fears. We
don't think that is why Ben Bernanke is loading the gun. And we
don't think it's what he intends to shoot. No. Americans aren't
upset about consumer price inflation. They desperately need it.
Without it, they wouldn't be able to pay their bills. Without it,
they would not be able to refinance massive debts. The whole economy
needs the sweet bubbly of inflation to keep effervescing. Imagine
if debtors had to make payments in money that was costlier and harder
to get hold of.
It's the risk
from the second type of inflation that is the real danger, because
asset price inflation is usually chased by asset price deflation.
After prices go up, they must go down. A bear market follows a bull
market. Bubbles are popped. And all of a sudden, investors don't
feel so wealthy. They cancel new investments. They cut off new projects.
They pull back, and the whole economy pulls back with them. This
is what happened in Japan...and it is what Ben Bernanke has had
his eye on for many years.
Only, today,
asset price inflation threatens much more serious damage in America
than it ever did in Japan. Japan's lower and middle classes were
never lured into outrageous levels of debt as they have been in
America. In the land of the free, the lumpen mistook the Fed's bonanza
for real wealth. They thought they could "take out' money from their
houses, even though they couldn't remember ever putting it in. They
began to believe that this brand of inflation was the same as the
other and that they could depend on regular, reliable increases
in their house values. Why not just spend the money, they asked
themselves.
And they borrowed.
And now they have to pay interest on their debts. And now pistol-packin'
Ben is making it much costlier for them to do so.
And so, we
watch the news for the denouement. We notice that mortgage rates
are back up to their highest level in four years and consumer confidence
is going wobbly. Headlines report rising default rates. Regional
papers warn that housing inventories are increasing. And hearsay
evidence pours in every day:
"Nothing seems
to be selling," complains a friend from Maryland. "I don't know
if there are actually more houses on the market. But you definitely
see more 'For Sale' signs up. They go up; they just don't seem to
come down like they used to."
Ben Bernanke,
once in charge of Princeton Economics Department and now in charge
of Americans' economic future, is not only loading the pistol...he
is pointing it at their heads.
• While the
dollar rises against euros, gold rises against the dollar. After
dipping down below $550, the yellow money is gaining ground on the
green stuff. August contracts were trading at $588 per ounce on
Friday.
"I figure the
metal 'should' be worth something like $1,000 an ounce now to be
in a rough equilibrium with the value of other things the dollar
can buy," says our old friend, Doug Casey. "That's an arbitrary
guess; there's no exact method I know of to determine gold's real
dollar value. But, assuming that the government were to make good
on dollars held by foreigners – forget about Americans – how high
a gold price might be needed?
"First we need
to know how many dollars are outside the United States. Nobody knows
exactly. They constitute the reserves of most foreign central banks
and the de-facto currency of record in dozens of countries for ordinary
citizens. The amounts are almost beyond belief; it's said that,
in Moscow alone, there are more US$100 bills circulating than in
the entire United States. Could $5 trillion be the number? If so,
and if there are the reported 261 million ounces in the U.S. Treasury,
the value of that gold comes to about $20,000 an ounce. Just to
make good on the reported U.S. trade deficit of $800 billion for
the last year, we're talking $3,000 gold. Forget about what the
numbers would be if you added in the domestic money supply, M-3.
Especially since they don't even publish it anymore.
"But the numbers,
at this point, are academic. My basic view on gold is unchanged.
And the fact it had a 37% gain this year, reaching a peak of $725
on May 12, or has given back 22% since then is meaningless in the
big scheme of things...before this market is over, gold isn't just
going through the roof; it's going to the moon. And the market is
by no means over. It's just starting to wake up from a generation-long
slumber.
"It's unwise
to try picking tops and bottoms in the market. But, the way I see
it, gold has made its bottom as you read this. The fundamentals
haven't changed; there's only been a swing in traders' sentiments."
• We were proud
of ourselves last week. Why? We flew off to Madrid on Thursday and
conducted a business meeting in bad Spanish. Then, on Friday, we
took the train to Paris, where we held meetings in bad French. This
may seem like a minor achievement, but we'll take what we can get.
"Dad," began
Maria, commenting on our career as international businessman, "You
must be crazy. You got home from Madrid at midnight and then you
got up at 5:00 a.m. to catch the train to Paris...that can't be
good for you. Why do you do it?"
"To put bread
on the table," we replied earnestly. "We have to work hard to support
you and your brothers and sisters. If we didn't work so hard, we
couldn't afford to send you to that drama school of yours. And we
certainly couldn't afford to live in London...at least, not in this
neighborhood."
Our
actress-in-residence was not convinced.
"Dad, I'm not
buying it," Maria continued. "I think it's just bad organization..."
• And a reader
wonders why we wandered around Scotland looking for a boarding school
for Edward. The message was titled: How to save Edward from boarding
school while saving yourself tens of thousands of pounds in tuition:
"Why
subject your son Edward to a life of regimentation at boarding school
when he can probably get a better education right in your own home?
Gary North
recommends Dr. Art Robinson's program for students to educate
themselves at home; here
is Art Robinson's Web site.
"Using this
program, according to the Web site, one of Dr. Robinson's children
went on to earn a PhD from Cal Tech. So, students can excel after
following this program."
June
27, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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