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Geezer
Investing
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
It is not unusual
to hear about the virtues of hard money and the evils of the paper
variety at a gold conference. However, Austrian business cycle theory
is rarely cited given the audience is only interested in hot stock
tips. But at the Las Vegas Hard Assets investment conference held
last week at Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, the Austrians were
mentioned prominently in two separate presentations.
Keynote speaker
John Dizard, columnist for the Financial Times, told the
gold crowd that Austrian economists believe in "free markets
and evidently, bow ties." He admitted that he was initially
skeptical of the Austrian argument but has since come around. Austrian
business cycle theory is based on intertemporal misallocation of
resources. Excessive credit creation lowers interest rates below
the natural rate, spurring malinvestment.
Dizard believes
the effects of the misdeeds of the worlds central bankers are about
ready to be felt. No financial crisis since 1994 has been allowed
to run its course without central bank intervention. These crises
are needed in order to liquidate malinvestments.
The FT
columnist believes Fed Chair Ben Bernanke has read the Austrians
and knows deep down that they are right. But, the Fed will inflate
away a portion of the massive debt build-up leading to an increase
in the price of gold. However not right away. Dizard said the gold
price will head up six to nine months from now and he has even delayed
the release of his forthcoming book entitled Gold Now to
coincide with that prediction.
A couple hours
after Dizard’s presentation, newsletter writer Jay Taylor made the
case that John Maynard Keynes and Milton Friedman were wrong and
that Ludwig von Mises was right. Inflation and depression are caused
by excessive credit creation. The Austrians advocate for a gold
standard while bankers and politicians hate gold.
Of course conference
attendees are gold fans, but judging by the attendance our legions
are not growing despite the ongoing bull market. The original gold
and uranium bug James Dines described attendance as "sparse"
and remembered the days when it was standing room only. "The
show is not as zippy as I thought it would be," silver guru
David Morgan said during his presentation.
Only a small
portion of a huge hall was curtained off for Hard Assets presentations,
and often speakers were forced to compete with the rumble of forklifts
operating just a few feet away.
Investing in
natural resources and the companies that mine the stuff has clearly
not caught on with young people. One presenter referred to investing
in hard assets as "geezer investing," and indeed the conference
crowd resembled the cast of Boynton Beach Club, sans Dyan Cannon
and Sally Kellerman.
Plus, Mandalay
Bay is not an easy layout for those depending on walkers, canes
or scooters. Plenty of walking is required at Mandalay, as presenter
Richard Sacks joked, "the hotel should provide a bicycle with
each room."
Investment
newsletter legend and author Howard Ruff made a comeback at the
conference promoting his new book, Ruff’s
Little Book of Big Fortunes in Gold & Silver: A Middle Class
License to Print Money. Ruff is most famous for recommending
the purchase of gold at $120/oz in 1975 and more importantly recommending
that people sell the yellow metal near its peak of $850/oz in 1980.
"I’m a has-been that’s here now," Ruff said, and believes
that investors will earn 500 to 1,000 percent in gold over the next
eight years, twice that in silver and a multiple of that in the
right mining shares.
Virtually every
speaker was positive on the precious metals and commodities markets.
Although, technical analyst Ian McAvity sees the potential for a
meltdown in the stock market that would take all other markets with
it. But broker Ben Johnson cautioned in his workshop session that
newsletter writers have to be bullish, because if they don’t have
any stocks to recommend they’re out of business.
Global Resources
Investments Chairman Rick Rule said investors have a choice between
being contrarians or victims. Rule pointed out that Levi Strauss
and the Hearst family made the most money during the California
mining boom, one selling britches to miners the other selling newspapers.
On that theme, Rule sees financial services and intellectual capital
for the mining industry as cheap, as well as, profitable alternative
energy, micro-cap Canadian natural gas producers, and mining companies
with perceived political risk. "The Congo exhibits no more
political risk than California does," Rule quipped. His company’s
head office is located in Carlsbad.
Numerous small
mining companies were at the conference to make slick PowerPoint
presentations full of drill results, maps, and slides of guys in
hard hats standing in front of holes in the ground in the middle
of nowhere. More than a few conferees wisely used these stock hustling
presentations for napping.
Much more of
last week’s conference was devoted to oil than in the past. Craig
R. Smith, co-author of Black
Gold Stranglehold was a keynote speaker and also shared
the stage with University of Houston professor Dr. Michael Economides
for a panel on energy’s future. Both Smith and Economides contend
there is plenty of oil in the world, but that it’s just harder and
more expensive to get to. Smith doesn’t believe decaying dinosaurs
created oil. He thinks oil and gas are being created constantly
and is brought to attainable depths by the centrifugal forces of
the earth’s rotation. Refining capacity is another thing however.
It has been 29 years since the last refinery was built in the US,
probably because it requires 800 permits to gain approval to build
one.
Dr. Economides
told the crowd that ethanol is the biggest scam ever, that it takes
1.6 gallons of gas to produce just a gallon of ethanol. He called
it the dotcom of the energy business. Economides is a naturalized
US citizen and emphasized that the biggest freedom he enjoys in
this country is "the freedom to drive my car and not be forced
to take any cockamamie public transportation." He loves global
warming and thinks the planet will freeze over before it burns up.
Economides sees lots of upside for the price of natural gas, and
thinks the price of oil should be $40 per barrel based upon supply
and demand, but points out that it could go to $100 per barrel if
Israel attacks Iran, Al-Qaeda does something nasty to Saudi Arabia,
or Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez makes a deal to sell all of that country’s
oil to China.
But the primary
theme of the conference was the pitiful state of the overleveraged
world economies, and the coming weakness in paper currencies. Goldmoney.com’s
James Turk stressed that gold is not going up in price so much as
the dollar is going down in value. Because of central banking chicanery,
Turk predicts the dollar will collapse leading to $8,000 per ounce
gold and $400 per ounce silver.
"We are
being lured into a massive debt pyramid that will eventually collapse,"
Gary North wrote on LRC back in 2002, "either into deflationary
depression or, more likely, into what Mises called the crack-up
boom, in which the nation's currency is destroyed by the central
bank."
It
was Mises who predicted both the Great Depression and the fall of
communism. Now, while but only a few notice, the Fed continues to
set the stage for another of his predictions to come true: the crack-up
boom and the destruction of the dollar.
September
11, 2006
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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