Nature’s
Antidote to Financial Chicanery
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
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As long-time
sufferers know, we are not exactly bullish on gold. We buy gold,
but we have no real opinion about what the price will be or when
it will be there. We like to own gold, in other words, not speculate
on it.
Gold is nature's
antidote to human financial chicanery. The more distorted and stretched
the world's money system becomes, the more important it is to own
gold to protect yourself.
The FunnyMoneyReport.com
keeps us abreast of the latest distortions:
"For starters,
our country has become a nation of debt where anybody can get
a line of credit. Once reserved for the select few, many Americans
are now relying on credit to purchase the essentials of everyday
life. Americans no longer save what they earn. Second, the U.S.
government for all intensive purposes is bankrupt with a debt
in the trillions. Third, the Federal Reserve throughout its existence
has continuously devalued our currency by expanding the money
supply. They continue to do so, but since they stopped reporting
the M3 money supply numbers we no longer know exactly how much
they are destroying the currency. Fourth, foreigners are looking
for ways to withdraw from U.S. currency holdings into something
more stable. Fifth, the housing boom Alan Greenspan created is
in the midst of crashing. Anyone with adjustable rate mortgages
or home equity loans are getting slammed. Sixth, real wages are
going down and the price of tangible assets is going up. Seventh,
the Government Accountability Office is warning of a future economic
disaster. Eighth, U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson is now
organizing more frequent meetings of the President's Working Group
in Financial Markets otherwise known as the Plunge Protection
Team every six weeks. The question is why would Paulson be organizing
additional meetings of this group if the economy is in good shape?"
Gold is pulled
out of the ground only grudgingly and reluctantly. Each year, the
total amount of it above terra firma increases by only about 1.7
percent. But paper or electronic wealth (of nominal dollar-based
assets) is lighter than air. It puffs, floats, soars, zooms, orbits...and
pretty soon, it has lost all connection to the on-the-ground reality
of the real economy.
But
gold never gets too far from it.
Recently, we've
been watching an HBO series on the history of the Roman Empire.
In last night's episode, we saw how close the fight between Caesar
and Pompey for control of Rome really was. There was cunning and
bravery on both sides. But only one side had the gold. When Pompey
fled Rome, he made sure that the treasury went with him. But the
treasure was waylaid...lost...and then recovered by Caesar. So,
in the end, while Pompey may have had more troops, he had no way
to pay them. We'll have to wait until tonight to find out what happens,
but we have a feeling that it's the yellow stuff that will decide
what happens.
Every government,
before and since, has succumbed to the "Golden Rule" –
he who has the gold makes the rules. When things are going well,
a government can get by on paper money, I.O.U.s and credit. But
when the going gets tough, suppliers, soldiers, and creditors lose
faith in paper and promises; they want real money. And gold is real
money.
Gold is up
in price now simply because there are too many paper and electronic
promises floating around. The Financial Times, for example,
reports "panic selling" in the derivatives market. It
seems that what's hopping out of everyone's hands is credit default
swaps. Well, credit default swaps are what institutional investors
buy when they fear the going might get tough. But now, instead of
buying them, they're selling them...and selling them down to record
low prices.
Apparently,
a lot of people don't think a lot of credit will go bad for a lot
of time.
But of course,
that is just what most people tend to think...right before the gods
let out a belly laugh...and things go bad in a big way.
•
Now, here's a real negative for gold. Bloomberg reports that 27
out of 35 analysts are now bullish on the metal. They expect a weaker
U.S. economy will drag down the dollar – and boost gold in the process.
Rarely do prices rise when experts expect them to. But maybe this
time, it will be different...and maybe gold will rise much more
than the experts expect.
• Expectations
for housing, meanwhile, continue to be rosy...if not downright peachy.
Everyone admits housing is coming down...but they insist it will
come down in a "soft landing." Soon, we expect to see
them begin redefining what soft is.
November
7, 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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