Doug
Casey: Precious Metals vs. the USD
An
interview with Karen Roche of The
Gold Report
Recently
by Doug Casey: Debunking
Anti-Gold Propaganda
One sure
upshot of the quantitative easing money flooding the stock market
will be further distortions, chaos and unpredictability that make
the value-investing proposition difficult, if not impossible, according
to Casey Research Chairman Doug Casey. On the eve of a sold-out
Casey
Research Summit in Boca Raton, Florida, Doug returns to The
Gold Report. In this exclusive interview, he warns,
"Like it or not, you're going to be forced to be a speculator."
The
Gold Report: When the average investor turns on the
news, even on financial channels, they hear that the U.S. economy
is in the best shape it's been in for three or four years. While
the experts say the recovery is slower than anticipated, they expect
its slow recovery will equate to a long, slow growth cycle similar
to that after World War II. You have a contrary view.
Doug
Casey: The only things that are doing well are the stock
and bond markets. But the markets and the economy are totally different
things – except, over a very long period of time, there's no necessary
correlation between the economy doing well and the market doing
well. My view is that the market is as high as it is right now –
with the Dow over 12,000 – solely and entirely because the Federal
Reserve has created trillions of dollars, as other central banks
around the world have created trillions of their currency units.
Those currency units have to go somewhere, and a lot of them have
gone into the stock market.
As a general
rule, I don't believe in conspiracy theories, and I don't believe
anything's big enough to manipulate the market successfully over
a long period. At the same time, the government recognizes that
most people conflate the Dow with the economy, so it is directing
money toward the market to keep it up. Of course, the government
wants to keep it up for other reasons – not just because it thinks
the economy rests on the psychology of the people, which is complete
nonsense. Psychology is just about the most ephemeral thing on which
you could possibly base an economy. It can blow away like a pile
of feathers in a hurricane.
TGR:
So, you're saying we're confusing the market's performance with
the economy's performance?
DC:
Yes. The fact is that the economy itself is doing very badly. The
numbers are phonied up. I spend a lot of time in Argentina. Anybody
with any sense knows you can't believe the numbers coming out of
the Argentinean Government Statistical Bureau, nor can you (any
longer) believe the numbers that come out of Washington D.C. The
inflation numbers consider only the things the government wants
to look at and are artificially low. It's the same with the unemployment
numbers. None of these things is believable.
TGR:
Isn't the unemployment figure a lagging indicator of a rebounding
economy?
DC:
If you look at the way unemployment was computed until the early
1980s – something that John Williams from ShadowStats
does – the numbers would indicate about 20% unemployment today.
Besides, even while the population keeps rising, the number of people
reported as actually working is level or even lower. Most indicators
of the economic establishment, in my view, don't really make any
sense. GDP, for instance, includes government spending – much of
which amounts to paying some people to dig ditches during the day
and other people to fill them in at night. So-called "defense" spending
is almost totally wasted capital. The practice of economics today
is pathetic and laughable.
TGR:
So, the economy is not rebounding?
DC:
No. My take on this is that we entered what I call the "Greater
Depression" in 2007. And now, because the government has printed
up trillions of dollars in the last couple of years, we're in the
eye of the hurricane. We've only gone through the leading edge of
the storm. People think this will just be another cyclical recovery
like all the others since WWII. But it's not. It's going to wind
up with the currency being destroyed. It's going to be a disaster…
a worldwide catastrophe.
TGR:
You indicated that the government is using these mass infusions
of made-up money to prop up the stock market due to the psychological
factor – that people will think the economy's doing well because
the market is doing well. However, we hear that a lot of that money
has been caught up in the banks. Would you comment on that?
DC:
As I said, that money has to go somewhere. The banks have been borrowing
from the Fed at something like 0.5% and investing it in government
securities at 2%, 3% or 4%, depending on the maturity. So, much
of that money has been a direct gift to the banks; and they're basically
making an arbitrage spread of 2%–4%. So, yes, that's happening with
some of the money. Still, it doesn't all just sit in these Treasury
securities. A great deal of it, inevitably, goes into the stock
market.
TGR:
You also said that psychology isn't the only reason the government
wants to see the stock market go higher.
DC:
Right. Pension funds have a great deal of their assets in stocks.
Certainly, many funds run by government entities, such as the state
and city employee pension funds, are approaching bankruptcy despite
the fact that the Fed has driven interest rates to historic lows,
artificially pumping up both stocks and bonds. And, I might add,
keeping property prices higher than they would be otherwise. When
interest rates rise eventually – and they will go up a lot – it'll
be something to behold in the markets.
TGR:
You mentioned John Williams who's in your speaker lineup for the
Casey Research Summit, The Next Few Years. Another of your
speakers is Stansberry Associates Founder Porter Stansberry, who's
been making two points about the devaluation of the U.S. dollar.
One point he makes in his The End of America video concerns
the quantitative easing (QE) you mentioned –those trillions of dollars.
But Porter also anticipates the U.S. government announcing a devaluation
of the currency similar to what England did in 1970. Do you see
that type of scenario occurring, as well?
DC:
When the U.S. government last officially devalued the dollar in
August 1971, it had been fixed to $35 per ounce to gold. In other
words, before that, any foreign government could take the dollars
it owned and trade them in at the Treasury for gold. Nixon devalued
the dollar by raising it to $38/oz., and then to $42/oz. It was
completely academic, anyway, because he wouldn't redeem gold from
the Treasury at any price.
But because
the dollar isn't fixed against anything now, the government can't
officially devalue it. It's a floating market. The government's
going to devalue the dollar by printing more of the damn things
and letting them lose value gradually – actually the loss will no
longer be gradual, but quite fast from here on out. But it's not
going to do so formally by re-fixing the dollar against some other
currency or against gold. I'm not sure Porter's phrasing it in the
best way, but he's quite correct in his conclusion and his prescriptions
as to how to profit from it. At this point, the dollar is nothing
more than a floating abstraction, an IOU nothing on the part of
a manifestly bankrupt government.
TGR:
Another abstraction is the fact that the Treasury says the money
it is printing has a multiplier effect when it gets into the U.S.
economy, so it can pull those dollars back when the time comes.
Is that a viable alternative to offset the devaluation caused by
printing more money?
DC:
You have to look first at the immediate and direct effects of what
the government's doing, and then at the delayed and indirect effects.
And sure, just as it's injecting all this money into the economy
– mainly by the Fed buying U.S. government bonds – theoretically,
it can take it out of the economy by doing the opposite. But I just
don't see that happening.
TGR:
Why not?
DC:
One of the reasons is that the U.S. government, itself, is running
annual trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. I think
those deficits will go higher – not lower. So, where's that money
going to come from? Where will it get trillions of dollars to fund
the U.S. government every year?
China isn't
going to buy this paper, and Japan will be selling its U.S. government
paper because, if nothing else, it'll need to buy things to redo
the northeast part of the country. Nobody else is going to buy that
trillion-dollar deficit either, so it'll have to be the Federal
Reserve. In fact, the Fed will have to buy much more and, therefore,
create more money. That's what happens.
TGR:
This currency crisis isn't unique to the U.S. You just brought up
Japan. And aren't all the European countries doing the same thing?
DC:
The U.S., unfortunately, is not unique. This is going to be a worldwide
catastrophe. It's been a disaster for every country that's done
this in the past – Zimbabwe, Germany, Hungary, Yugoslavia and countries
in South America – but those were within only those particular countries.
In most of those cases, people never trusted their governments;
so, they had significant assets outside the country in a form other
than the local currency. The problem now is that the U.S. dollar
is the world's reserve currency and all of these central banks own
USDs as the backing for their own currencies. All these other countries
will wind up finding that they don't have any assets after all.
That's going to happen all over the world.
TGR:
With countries around the globe facing the same issue, should anyone
hold currencies?
DC:
No. Sure, you need local currency to go to the store and buy a loaf
of bread. But for liquid assets you're trying to save, it's insane
to own currencies at this point because they're all going to reach
their intrinsic value. I've been recommending for many years that
people buy gold and own gold for their savings – serious capital
they want to put aside in liquid form. With gold now over $1,500/oz.
and silver at $48, people who followed that advice have made a lot
of money. That's the good news. The bad news is that very few people
have done so. Newbies to the game are paying $1,500/oz. for gold.
It's going higher, but it's no longer the bargain that it was. The
important thing to remember, though, is that gold is the only financial
asset that's not simultaneously someone else's liability. That's
why it's always been used as money and why it's likely to be reinstituted
as money.
TGR:
From your viewpoint, how does a person with any wealth preserve
it during this tumultuous period other than by investing in gold?
DC:
Frankly, I don't know. I own beef and dairy cattle, which are a
good place to be; but that's a business, and it's not practical
for most people. I think it boils down to gold.
TGR:
But what investments should they be looking at these days?
DC:
There really aren't investments anymore. With trillions of newly
created currency units floating around the world, things will become
very chaotic and unpredictable shortly. It's very hard to invest
using any kind of Graham-and-Dodd
methodology when things are that chaotic. Whether you like it
or not, you're going to be forced to be a speculator in the years
to come. A speculator is somebody who tries to capitalize on politically
caused distortions in the marketplace. There wouldn't be many speculators,
or many of those distortions in the marketplace, if we lived in
a free-market society. But we don't.
TGR:
So, speculation will supplant value investing?
DC:
Well, investing is best defined as allocating capital in a way that
it reliably produces more capital. The government is going to make
that quite hard in the years to come with much higher taxes, much
higher inflation and draconian regulations. You will actually be
forced to speculate. That's a pity, from the point of view of the
economy as a whole. But I kind of like it, in a way. Few people
know how to be speculators, so I should be able to make a huge amount
of money in the next few years. Unfortunately, it'll be at a time
when most people are losing their shirts. But I don't make the rules.
I just play the game.
TGR:
As you look over the next year or two with your speculator hat on,
what sectors do you expect to experience the most distortion and,
therefore, offer the most opportunity for the speculator?
DC:
One sure bet is the collapse of the U.S. dollar. Always bet against
the USD and you'll be on the winning side of the trade. A very direct
way to make that bet is by shorting long-term U.S. government bonds
because, eventually, interest rates will go to the moon, which means
bond prices will collapse.
You can also
look at the precious metals because, at some point, when people
panic into them, their price curves will go parabolic. Mining stocks
are likely to draw a lot of money, so they could go wild as they
have many times over the last 40 years.
TGR:
Your summit has presentations scheduled on silver, gold, currencies,
Asia, real estate, agriculture and even more. What do you expect
to be the major takeaway this time?
DC:
What we're facing now is something of absolutely historic importance
– the biggest thing that's gone on in the world since the Industrial
Revolution. Many things will be completely overturned in the years
to come. What's happening now in the Arab world, with all of these
corrupt kleptocracies being challenged and overthrown, is just the
beginning. We haven't seen the end of this in any of these countries
– Tunisia, Egypt, Syria, Algeria. Of course, Saudi Arabia will be
the big one. Everything's going to be overturned. And all these
stooges that the U.S. government has been supporting for years could
very well lose their heads. It's going to be the most tumultuous
decade for hundreds of years, bigger than what happened in the 1930s
and 1940s.
TGR:
Any last things you'd like to tell our readers?
DC:
Yeah. Hold on to your hats. You're in for a wild ride.
At the Casey
Research Summit in Boca Raton, 35 of the most renowned economists,
investment and natural-resource pros convene to talk about the U.S.
and global economy, the fate of the dollar, the threat of rampant
inflation… and the best ways to make it through that “wild ride”
in the next few years. Among them are big names like ShadowStats’
John Williams, investment legend James Rickards, financial author
Chris Whalen, and “Rich Dad” advisor Mike Maloney.
Though the
summit is sold out, you can hear all of the presentations, including
specific stock picks by our all-star cast – in more than 20 hours
of audio recordings. Learn
more about the pressing topics and the top-notch speakers here.
April
30, 2011
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
and Associates
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