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Tangled Webs and Currency Chaos
In August, our hypothesis was that we would see falling US stock markets and rising gold prices as the dominant trends of fall. So far, we haven't seen much in the way of trends at all. Last week's Federal Reserve 'no taper' announcement should have been followed by robust increases in stock and gold prices. But what happened instead? After the first day, both stocks and gold headed down. Some possible causes... What if the economy were not really recovering at all? You've seen the evidence. Lowest household income since 1984. Falling wages. Fewer people working (as a percentage of the working age population) than ever. Industrial output barely positive. And what if Federal Reserve policy is the main driver of US stock prices? And what if investors had already priced in 'QE Forever'? Then where could they go? Only down, right? Every government wants to manipulate the value of its currency. It will always say it's acting in the name of some public good - to protect citizens' savings...to promote employment...or to stimulate a recovery. You don't have to be a crusty cynic to understand the real reason: to help the ruling elite transfer more power and money to itself. Rarely has that been more apparent than in Venezuela, where Hugo Chavez restricted free trading in the local currency, the bolivar, to promote his own political ambitions. Most prominent among those ambitions was his desire to be re-elected. And the way to be re-elected is to give (or appear to give) something to the masses that they couldn't get on their own. That, dear reader, is why seven out of ten American families get more from the feds than they pay in taxes. Government confers on its favourites the right to lie, cheat, steal...and even to murder other people. In a democracy, the will of the majority must be won with these tools; they are all government has to work with. (Government produces no wealth, so it has nothing to offer otherwise.) Typically, shrewd leaders offer giveaways to the poor; dollar for dollar, their votes come cheaper than those of the rich. One of those giveaways is artificially low consumer prices. The demagogue announces to the masses, for example, that he will 'not permit the evil capitalists to raise prices on milk and bread and other basic food items'. That's always a crowd pleaser. But the demagogue runs into problems when he is simultaneously ripping off rich and poor by exploding the monetary base. This can cause prices to rise. If he isn't careful, people will catch on. So, he is forced to lie about the source of inflation and put on price controls. Shortages inevitably follow, causing inappropriate investment, consumer binges and other problems...which eventually overwhelm the economy. But the lying, cheating and stealing can be fun while they last - which can be a long time. In Mr. Chavez's case, they lasted longer than he did. And here we have an update from Caracas from Reuters:
The poor travel agent has it wrong. The dollars are not nearly as stupid as the bolivars. But both are ignorant in a crucial and destructive way. Prices are information. They are supposed to give us important cues. Low farm prices tell farmers to plant less on the lower 40. High prices of old phonographs tell householders to go look around in the attic. High prices for credit tell lenders to lend more and borrowers to borrow less. Lying about the real value of the bolivar, the Venezuelan feds have created an awkward mess. But the US Federal Reserve lies too. Prices are set, not by willing buyers and sellers for their mutual benefit, but by the Fed for the benefit of the feds' favourites. The Fed swaps newly created bank reserves for Treasury and agency-backed mortgage bonds, thus artificially driving up bond prices (and driving down yields). Low yields tell borrowers a fib: that there are more resources available to be borrowed than there really are. Borrowers take the miscues. They add more debt. And the entire web of yields, currency values, consumer prices and asset values becomes even more tangled. Eventually, it is so tangled that it cannot be untangled. Like the Gordian knot, it must be cut... Regards, Bill Bonner
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