Canary
in the Coal Mine
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
Devil We Know
Like
a battering ram in a medieval siege, gold keeps hammering away at
the gate. For the third time in less than twelve months, the yellow
metal is once again crashing into the $1,000 per ounce level. As
of press time, it looks like gold will close above that level today
and will set a new record in the process. Even if the breach is
fleeting, who can doubt that it will mount another assault soon?
In the meantime, there is no shortage of market analysts who are
not buying gold while questioning the motives of those who are.
Although they offer a variety of strained reasons, they nearly all
agree that it has nothing to do with inflation, which is nearly
universally considered dead and buried. As a self-confessed gold
bug, I can assure all that inflation is the only reason I buy gold.
And recently, I'm buying a lot.
When individuals
choose to accumulate savings in the form of gold rather than interest-bearing
paper deposits in government-insured accounts, there is only one
reason for doing so: they fear that the interest will not be enough
to compensate for their expected loss of purchasing power through
inflation. This fear reflects both current inflation and the expectation
for future inflation. While there are those who buy gold to speculate
on its appreciation, the underlying factor that drives that appreciation
in the first place will always be inflation. If governments were
not creating inflation, there would be little investment advantage
to owning gold.
Some believe
that gold investors are primarily motivated by fear. It is often
assumed that gold is the one asset class that holds its value when
all other asset classes are falling due to market uncertainty. But
this explanation brings us right back to inflation. When economies
move into recession, there is always political pressure for governments
to intervene. Their one tool is the printing press.
When governments
act to prop up sagging markets, or bail out investors or depositors
of failed institutions, they create inflation (print money) to pay
for it. This, in effect, transfers capital from prudent investors
to speculators. At the same time, it pulls the rug out from under
the safest vehicles of traditional investment bonds and cash.
It becomes hard for investors to protect their principal, much less
grow their wealth. Some turn to gold, with its historically guaranteed
floor against losses, and others start making ever riskier
investments to try to beat the inflation rate.
Golds
appeal as an asset of choice during times of political uncertainty,
particularly during wartime, is again a function of its being a
hedge against inflation. Wars are always expensive. They are also
often unpopular, which makes paying for them through tax increases
politically dangerous. As a result, they are almost always financed
through the secret tax of inflation. For a nation that
loses a war, or suffers revolution or systemic civil conflict, there
is always the chance that its currency could become worthless. While
this may not be the kind of inflation that we read about in the
business section, it is the ultimate form of the monetary malady
whereby a currency loses all of its purchasing power.
Whenever the
price of gold rises sharply, I always take it as an early warning
sign that inflation expectations are rising. If those expectations
are not met, its price will fall. If the market is correct, gold
will maintain its gains. And if the inflation continues to intensify,
so too will golds rise. Most analysts, however, simply look
at the dubious CPI to determine the presence of inflation and inflation
expectations. They perennially forget that prices are a lagging
indicator and only a symptom of inflation, and may in fact not be
rising at the moment when inflation kicks into high gear.
The anti-gold
camp takes their greatest solace from the bond market, where things
have been eerily quiet. They maintain that since bond yields have
not risen much, inflation must not be a problem, and so the gold
bugs are simply paranoid. The bond market, they tell us, is populated
by vigilantes who sound a bugle call at the first whiff
of inflation. But this argument ignores the fact that central bankers
themselves are the biggest bond buyers and are in effect vigilantes-in-chief.
Their outsized participation in the market has led to gross distortions.
When the Fed or another central bank buys treasuries, real returns
are not considered. Purchases are made for political reasons rather
than investment merit, which renders meaningless the signals current
bond prices are sending.
The gold-bashers
also believe that reduced consumer demand due to unemployment will
keep inflation pressures at bay for the foreseeable future. However,
inflation will ultimately act to reduce the supply of goods much
faster than unemployment reduces demand for goods, sending prices
up despite lower demand. The stagflation of the 1970s is an example
of such an outcome.
The bottom
line is that gold is continuing its long-term bull run, and those
who dismiss the message behind its rise do so at their own financial
peril. When it comes to inflation, gold is the canary in the economic
coal mine. Just as unseen toxins kill the canary before the miners
succumb to the fumes, a spike in gold is a harbinger of reckless
monetary devaluation. Our leading commentators think that since
they cant see or smell the gas, all those canaries (gold prices,
commodity prices) must be dying of natural causes. Good luck to
them when the toxins flood the mine.
September
12, 2009
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2009 Euro Pacific Capital
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