Doug
Casey on 2013
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently:
Doug Casey
on the Fiscal Cliff
L:
So Doug, the world didn't end in 2012, so it's onward into another
new year. It's time to tune in to your guru-vision and tell us what
trends you see shaping up and what actions they imply taking.
Doug:
Yes, it looks like the Mayans missed this one; perhaps they'll get
another kick at the cat a few millennia from now when it's once
more time to turn the page on their calendar. Better luck next time,
Mayan astrologers! But although nothing seems to be happening on
that front, it's appropriate that I'm speaking to you from Punta
del Este in Uruguay, which is one of the most happening places in
the world at this time of year – North American and European winter,
South American summer. I went to a New Year's Eve party last night
with some rather interesting temporary denizens of the place, and
of course this was the subject of much conversation. None of them
happened to be American, incidentally, and all but one – who is
very involved in local politics – is extremely bearish on 2013.
L:
Do you mean bearish on the global economy? Bearish on geopolitics?
Or bearish on civilization itself?
Doug:
All of the above. A "Mad Max" type outcome is definitely
a possibility, as much as I hate to anticipate something really
serious – as opposed to just a financial/economic meltdown. But
the West has a huge amount of accumulated capital that it can still
dissipate – a task the politicians are working on diligently. I
expect the US will get a VAT, and/or an asset tax. Perhaps they'll
take a page from Cristina Kirchner's book and nationalize everyone's
pension – for the good of the government, as well as the safety
of the pensioners, of course. In the near term, we're looking at
increased tensions of every kind around the globe, and greater market
volatility.
By the way,
we enjoyed a professional-grade fireworks display put on by our
host in his back yard. It struck me that I was witnessing exactly
the kind of freedom that makes me like living down here so much,
and makes me dislike returning to the US. In the US, you'd have
to be a city to put on that kind of fireworks show, or go through
God-know-what sort of licensing to get the explosives involved.
The smell of gunpowder at midnight is most invigorating, especially
mixed with the smoke of Cuban cigars.
I'm not saying
Uruguay is totally free, especially not economically – the president
is actually a communist. But he's a surprisingly mellow communist,
and not at all corrupt. Most unusual, actually. He lives on a small
farm and drives an old car. Of course the things he's doing – raising
welfare benefits, eliminating financial privacy, initiating an income
tax, and letting petty thieves run wild, among many other things
– are making the place much less desirable to hang out.
L:
So, aside from economically stupid laws, they let people do pretty
much as they will with their personal lives?
Doug:
That's the good news. It's a quiet, unambitious, backward, bureaucratic
little country. But they still pretty much leave you alone. And
strange things can happen. At the party I mentioned, a friend who
mostly lives in Argentina told me about what was in Sunday's El
Pais, the national paper. It turns out that a top local politician
– most of whom are socialists or ex-communists – just discovered
Frederic Bastiat's book, The Law. He was so taken with
the free-market ideas in it, he had the entirety of the book published
as an insert in the paper, at his own expense. I don't know how
many people will actually read it, and I doubt it will have much
effect, but as a possible straw in the wind, it's pretty interesting.
Shocking, actually.
L:
A hundred years ago you might have seen a copy of The Communist
Manifesto, so perhaps the pendulum will swing back in our direction
in the next hundred years. A good reminder that it's important to
internationalize both one's assets and one's lifestyle. It's hard
to predict what will happen in any given country, although the trend
is going from bad to worse just about everywhere.
Doug:
Yes; as the Greater Depression deepens, governments all around the
world are going to get increasingly desperate, take increasingly
stupid measures, and the people on the bottom rungs of the ladder
– the very ones the governments will claim to be helping – are going
to get pushed off in greater and greater numbers. That's going to
make for more social unrest, vandalism, and violence all around
the world. It's wise to find a crib away from likely epicenters
of turmoil. You still have to look at the world objectively, and
prepare to be, or move to wherever there's the least trouble on
the ground, among the places you actually enjoy being in. This is
especially so for Europeans and their cousins in the US, where things
are deteriorating fast.
L:
So, what are your own reasons for bearishness?
Doug:
I'm exceptionally bearish because we've been in the eye of this
hurricane for going on three years. It seems to me that the bigger
the eye of the storm, the bigger the storm must be. We are definitely
heading for the trailing side of the hurricane soon. And it will
be vastly bigger, and last much longer, and be much different than
the leading edge.
I can't emphasize
enough that all these trillions of currency units that governments
all around the world are printing up by the truckload…
L:
Or helicopter load.
Doug:
[Chuckles] Yes, well, bank-wire load, as it were, these days. They
no longer need to bother with the printing press; they can just
create more out of nothing with the stroke of a key. All that cash
in the US, the EU, Japan, and elsewhere is going to come out of
the banks where it's sitting at some point, and the inflation that's
been masked so far will kick into a much higher gear.
Take Uruguay,
for instance, which is actually a very expensive country – to go
out to dinner here in Punta del Este costs considerably more than
in the US. When I first came here, things were very cheap. I've
seen the same thing in New Zealand, Hong Kong, Spain, and other
markets in which I've made a lot of money in real estate, based
on the same trend. This is happening all over the world. The US
has been so successful at exporting its inflation – abusing the
reserve currency status of the US dollar – that it's become a relatively
cheap place to live, at least among the more developed nations.
The local symptom
of this global sickness is that here in Punta, very expensive condominium
buildings are popping up all along the coast, spreading faster than
dandelions in springtime. Nobody lives in most of them, though some
are occupied for a month or two in the summer, and yet, year-round
you have to pay maintenance and security costs of at least $2,000,
and sometimes $3,000 or $4,000 per month. The only reason people
would pay that kind of money to maintain empty condos, as far as
I can see, is to hide money.
L:
Why do they need to hide it?
Doug:
Each will have his own reasons. Sadly, Uruguay is no longer the
Switzerland of South America it once was. There was once no income
tax here and financial privacy – which no longer exists anywhere.
A government run by ex-communists destroyed all that. That was shooting
themselves in the foot, of course. But real property rights are
still pretty strong here, so people are building all these condos
as a place to stash money in the form of bricks and mortar. Unfortunately,
I don't think it will work out for them, because as the global Greater
Depression deepens, people are going to have to start liquidating
them, and the local market is going to crash. The monthly maintenance
costs plus a need to retrieve the invested capital is going to result
in a wave of selling. A lot of people are going to get burned. Not
just here – almost everywhere. As my friend Richard Russell has
said, in a depression everybody loses. The winner is the one who
loses the least.
L:
Maybe you can let us know when that happens – sounds like it will
be a great contrarian buying opportunity at that time.
Doug:
Sure. Most people will be too nervous to act, but I keep an eye
on several real-estate markets for just that sort of contrarian
opportunity. Meanwhile, I may just head for the exits now myself,
not wanting to be unable to liquidate the real estate I've got in
Uruguay later.
At any rate,
I view this developing situation as an example of what's brewing
in many markets all around the world.
L:
Can you give us more specifics?
Doug:
I think the most important thing to bear in mind is that we are
approaching the absolute peak of the bond bubble, which has gotten
vastly bigger than I ever imagined it could. Interest rates in the
developed economies around the world are two percent, one percent,
or even negative. This is fueling a bond bubble of truly catastrophic
proportions. When it bursts, it will be an order of magnitude worse
than the tech stock-market crash of 2001 or the real-estate bubble
that burst in 2008.
When this one
goes, it won't just wipe out the people who thought they were being
prudent savers. Because it's a financial market, it will also hit
stocks and real estate again, at least in Europe and the US. Here
in Uruguay and places like Argentina, real estate is largely a pure
cash market. But in the so-called more developed economies, real
estate still floats on a sea of debt.
It amazes me
that people in the US are elated because the real-estate market
is supposed to be up 4.3%, as of the latest figures. Well, of course
it is; you can borrow money for effectively zero, given where interest
rates and inflation are.
L:
Is that a sign of the bulging piles of money banks have been sitting
starting to leak out into the economy?
Doug:
Looks that way. And when interest rates start rising steeply, as
they'll have to do once inflation sets in, rising to double digits
as they were in the 1980s, it will crush real estate further and
deeper than we've seen so far. It will do so all around the world,
but the US will be hardest hit, I think.
There's no
question in my mind: the bond bubble is by far the largest distortion
we're facing in the economy today. Bonds are incredibly dangerous,
insanely risky speculations today. They're reward-free risk. Bond
owners are facing huge default risk, huge interest rate risk, and
huge inflation risk. But nobody seems to see it or talk about it.
L:
I understand. But honestly, Doug, you've been saying that for a
while. What makes you think this will be the year the bond balloon
finds the pin it's been searching for?
Doug:
You're right – that particular bubble should have found its pin
two or three years ago. I admit I thought it'd pop last year. It's
like watching a clown over-inflate a balloon; the longer he inflates
it, the more you wince, because you know it's going to blow up in
his face. And the longer it takes, the closer the inevitable comes
to being imminent – and the bigger the explosion becomes.
It would have
been so much better if the idiots who run the US government had
allowed the market to fully liquidate past mistakes and distortions
back in 2008. If they'd let all the big banks, brokers, hedge funds,
and corporate welfare junkies fail, it would have been very unpleasant,
but the country could have survived it, and come out stronger and
with a healthier balance sheet as a result. The real wealth – buildings,
farms, technologies, the skills of workers – would still be there.
And the financial elite would have been wiped out – which would
have been a good thing. But instead, they've ensured that the rich
have gotten even richer, guaranteed by the government. They tried
to drown a fire with a flood of gasoline, and it's going to burn
the country down.
You know the
old saw about not predicting both an event and its timing, but I
don't see how this thing can go beyond 2013.
L:
Well, you were right about the politicians in Washington preferring
to compromise than to allow the fiscal
cliff to hit the fan, so maybe you're right about this one too.
So, we should
beware of the bond bubble bursting. Beware of real estate getting
crushed when interest rates go up. What about stocks? Wouldn't a
lot of money fleeing falling bonds go into the stock market?
Doug:
Yes, a lot would, but a lot of companies would be failing as well,
so I'm ambivalent about equities in general. Earnings could collapse.
Companies with many millions – or even billions – in cash on their
balance sheets could still get hit fast and furious by high inflation.
P/E ratios are not low these days; Wall Street is not a bargain.
So I'm generally neutral to bearish and therefore out of the stock
market. That's the best policy when you can make an equally compelling
case for something going up or down.
L:
That's exactly how I see copper and the other base metals these
days. But gold is another matter.
Doug:
Of course. And even though gold has hit new highs in nominal dollar
prices, gold has still not matched its previous peak in inflation-adjusted
dollars. Really, in practical terms, nobody knows or cares about
gold yet. The average guy doesn't even know it exists – and the
average guy on Wall Street thinks it's only good for paperweights,
of which the world already has a surplus.
L:
Gold is cheap at $1,670?
Doug:
No. But it's got to go higher. The fact is that precious metals
are the only financial assets that are not simultaneously somebody
else's liability. The huge counterparty liability in today's markets
has yet to make itself evident, but it will – it's in the hundreds
of trillions. That's what the derivatives that Buffett has been
talking about for a decade are all about.
That makes
the best single speculation I can think of today gold and silver
mining stocks. For the last two years, gold stocks have been getting
cheaper, even though gold has continued rising, year-on-year. That
makes these stocks a better deal than they've been for many years.
And it's such
a tiny little market, the upside when the larger world catches on
will be breathtaking. My sense, based on watching these markets
for 40 years, is that we're coming up on an explosion of resource
stock prices of historic proportions. The kind of stocks you and
Jeff cover are absolutely the place to be.
[Ed. Note:
Doug is talking about the BIG
GOLD and Casey
International Speculator portfolios.]
L:
The data support you on that. If you adjust for inflation by looking
at the price of gold stocks in terms of gold, they are selling for
less than they have for years – almost as low as during the crash
of 2008, or even back in 2001, before this bull cycle for metals
got going.
Doug:
They are now extremely high-potential and relatively low-risk speculations
– despite mining being a crappy, 19th-century choo-choo-train
industry.
L:
[Laughs] I used that phrase of yours in the International Speculator
coming out Thursday and make the same point.
Doug:
You provide a shopping list?
L:
Of course. Jeff's got one in BG too.
Doug:
Good. This may be the last chance for people late to this bull market
to get in at prices similar to what they could have paid before
it got going. And as a matter of fact, gold was cheaper in real
terms back in 2001 than it was at $35 per ounce back in 1971. People
seem to have forgotten that these are the most volatile stocks on
the planet. There have been a half-dozen markets I've personally
seen over the years where junior miners and explorers went up 1,000%
as a group.
Perversely,
people are afraid to buy these stocks now –
L:
The very reason they should; you have to be a contrarian to buy
low and sell high.
Doug:
– at precisely the time when they should. I promise you, when the
Mania Phase of this gold market kicks in, everyone will be piling
in, and it will drive share prices not just through the roof, but
to the moon. Then they'll collapse 95% later, of course, the way
they always do. But now is the time to buy them. However, since
there are several thousand of them, it's critical to be highly selective.
L:
Well, if speculating when others dare not were easy, everyone would
do it, and there would be no speculative opportunity, so of course
I agree.
But back to
2013 – if you don't think the global economy will collapse this
year, can you say when?
Doug:
As I said last time, 2013 is going to be ugly, but it will just
be a warmup for 2014. Back at the New Year's party I went to here
in Punta del Este, I asked my best friend down here the same question.
He's very rich and very shrewd. He's of the opinion that the world
will see catastrophic events of historic proportions – not just
one, but several – over the next ten years.
I think he's
right, and that brings us back to another point we started with:
I cannot stress strongly enough that anyone who hopes to survive
financially, and perhaps even physically, needs to internationalize.
L:
There's the Mr. Cheerful we all know and love.
Doug:
Hey, I'm looking at the bright side...
L:
Okay then. Thanks, and we'll talk again next week – and soon in
person, in Vancouver.
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January
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