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Watching the US markets, including the dollar, rally of late in light of the
stream of horrific economic news, including this past weekend's announcement
of a historic US government bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, was sort
of like watching Barry Bonds chase down Hank Aaron's all-time baseball home
run record last year.
One watched him being cheered at his home base of AT&T Park in San Francisco
as he got closer to that record, but Bonds was booed most everywhere else he
played in light of the steroids revelations and his alleged use of them. Human
nature and emotions being what they are, the reaction of his "home crowd" was
understandable; but surely, they too, in time, would come to realize what everyone
else did, despite any short-term hysteria.
That is where I believe we are today with this ongoing dollar rally and continued
decline in the gold and commodities sector. Despite the news of physical shortages
and delivery delays for the precious metals, their paper prices continue to
plunge. Short term "noise" can distort and throw for a loop the best laid out
strategies and investments, to be sure.
The external financial shocks of the late 1990's brought on a financial crisis
that rocked the world financial system. The Mexican, Asian, Russian, Argentinean
and Brazilian financial contagions, as they came to be known, saw investors
fleeing to the "safety" of the US dollar and other US denominated assets.
Countries with currency pegs to the US dollar, but also with burgeoning debt,
had to follow the US lead and start raising interest rates in the mid-1990's.
This led to overvalued currencies through policies deemed by many investors
at the time, including George Soros, to be unsustainable. The trap door let
go in Thailand, when the Thai government decided to float the Baht, cutting
its peg to the USD. Thailand's foreign debt burden had made the effectively
bankrupt - the peg had to go.
Fearing a spreading contagion with similar roots, investors soon followed
suit with other currencies as well, opting for the safety of the US.
Today we have the reverse of the 1990's. It is the US that is the "home base" of
the current financial contagion and has a teetering currency. An increase of
short-term US interest rates to support the dollar is off the table -- US debt
levels and banks' financial condition simply doesn't allow that as an option
-- yet the dollar has seen fit to rise anyway, as we continue to see a flight
to "safety" and "quality" by investors.
Investors are choosing to buy the dollar and dollar denominated investments
despite the fact negative real interest rates prevail in the US. That is akin
to fleeing one burning building -- the Euro and other foreign currencies that
will suffer the consequences we are told -- into the "safety" of the inferno
next door, completely ignoring the shining beacon of light and safety that
is gold.
We have been told for the longest time that gold is a horrible investment
since it pays no interest. I don't know about you, but I will take no interest
over negative interest rates any day of the week and twice on Sunday.
We therefore continue to believe that gold and silver, as well as oil and
natural gas, offer the best protection against the current economic climate.
When the markets finally come to their senses, those brave enough to have stuck
it through should be richly rewarded.
The MurkyMarkets.com website
by Christopher G Galakoutis is a running macroeconomic commentary on the
state of the financial markets with emphasis on gold, silver, the currency
markets and energy. Visitors to our new site are always welcome.
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