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Gold Narrates The Real Story: World Is Going Downhill Despite Flood Of Money

  • Additional quantitative easing isn’t going to produce any good effects even temporarily.
  • The world might well be at the footsteps of what Ludwig von Mises described as a Crack-Up Boom.
  • Gold sales the world over have been soaring as the market cleansing process of decapitalising the western central banks is underway.

Shanmuganathan NagasundaramFeb 23, 2016, 06:02 PM | Updated 06:02 PM IST
Gold (Getty Images)

Gold (Getty Images)


The phrase “it’s different this time” had been used so many times during the good old days of the New Economy, India Shining, the housing boom etc, that any experienced investor will tell you that it’s never really different any time. As soon as the euphoria induced by cheap money (Alan Greenspan, YV Reddy and Ben Bernanke respectively) wears off, all that remains is the devastation of the bust and the reality of the debt accumulated without any of the good effects of the boom.

But I do believe that it’s really different this time, although not in a positive sense. The usual proponents of “this-time-it’s-different” would claim that the good times will last for the foreseeable future, but I am saying that good times for additional quantitative easing (QE) and/or Keynesian stimulus are over, and we have pretty much entered the phase of the Crack-Up Boom. It’s different this time in the sense that future additional QEs, which will undoubtedly be unleashed, aren’t going to produce any of the good effects even temporarily. Instead, they will bring upfront all of the undesirable consequences that have hitherto been dormant.

Since the teeny-weeny 25 basis points (one quarter of a percent) hike by the US Fed in December 2015, markets the world over have been on a massive downward spiral. After the initial knee-jerk upswing, most markets have corrected by more than 20 percent. Perhaps with the notable exception of gold and related equities. Not only the stock markets, the world economy itself seems to have gone into a tail-spin just prior to and subsequent to the rate hike. As Maersk, the world’s largest container shipping company reported last week, “it’s worse than in 2008”.

Stock prices of major banks in the US and Europe are lower than they were in 2008. The Empire State manufacturing survey has reported their 6th consecutive monthly contraction – a record of sorts. I can add several more, but I presume the trend is clear.

As I wrote in a previous article, the US Fed rate hike will only accelerate the already set recessionary trends. Readers should understand that the much touted low US unemployment numbers mean little – the U-6 unemployment still remains in double digits (the U-6 unemployment rate includes those people looking for full-time jobs and also those with part-time work and those who have stopped looking for jobs despite wanting one).

Given the way the US Bureau of Labour Statistics calculates employment numbers, I wouldn’t be surprised if the US soon reports unemployment numbers comparable to what the former Soviet Union reported decades ago. Maximum employment and minimum production.

What Next For The US Fed?

With two out of the three major Central Banks (the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan) following a negative interest rate policy (NIRP), it’s only a matter of time before the US Fed joins the bandwagon. Given how incredulously the bond markets have capitulated into becoming one gigantic bubble today, I am sure the central bankers aren’t much threatened by the nearly absent bond vigilantes.

As to why the market places any confidence on the utterances of central bankers is a mystery; as Jim Grant pointed out, the US Fed has predicted zero out of the last 10 recessions. It’s the role of the markets to call the bluff and I think it’s about time the bluff of central banking is pronounced loud and clear.

Janet Yellen in the next few weeks/months will come out with some outlandish reason(s) on why the nascent interest rate liftoff has had to be terminated for the common good of all humanity. Time is of the essence and to avoid a full blown recession, the US Fed has few options left.

They have reacted under conditions of much smaller threats and not moving would be inconsistent with their actions of the last two decades. Even more, stopping at zero wouldn’t help the moribund world economy, or so they would say, and get into NIRP along with QE4.

But getting to be consistent doesn’t make their actions right. Or even produce similar results as the earlier round of QEs. The typical reaction to QE has so far been to bring forward the good things (i.e. consumption) and postpone the bad things (debt repayment, savings etc).

But as I have said at the beginning, it could well be different this time. We might well be at the footsteps of what Ludwig von Mises would describe as a Crack-Up Boom. Quoting Mises:

The After Effects

To me, the issues are as much economic as moral. A policy of continuous inflation transfers wealth from the poor/middle-class to the wealthy and the very fact that leading industry associations have not taken up this issue points to the depraved state of morality. It’s almost an inconceivable situation for businessmen to demand ‘sound money’ as a policy – maybe it is sheer ignorance or blatant misappropriation. Neither is forgivable.

The society at large isn’t too far behind. Rather than thriving on the virtues of self-reliance and hard work, the masses have become lazy slaves to government handouts of free food, medicine and education (perhaps indoctrination is a better word). Never do they ponder for a second about “who is the government taking this money from to give us these free goods and services?” or “why should somebody’s productivity be forcibly used to subsidise my requirements?”

Liberty, prosperity and character go hand-in-hand and a society that lets government confiscate somebody’s wealth in the name of societal welfare is doomed to failure. History has shown that repeatedly and on that front, it will be no different this time as well.

Lest I end on a pessimistic note, I should point out that gold sales the world over have been soaring. As Sprott Asset reported recently, India and China alone account for as much as 3,200 tonnes (and rising) of annual demand while the annual supply is at 2,700 tonnes (and falling).

The market cleansing process of decapitalising the western central banks (who have to be this additional supplier from existing inventory) is well on its way and we might well see who is swimming naked when the tide flows out within the next couple of years.

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