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In an earlier article Backward Thinking on Backwardation I explained
that backwardation in gold is the flipside of the phenomenon of a drastic contraction
of world trade and employment. This brings out the danger in denying the fact
of gold backwardation or to belittle its significance, as most observers seem
to be doing. I am reminded of the saying of the Swiss educator F.W. Foerster: "if
you don't use your eyes for seeing, later you will use them for weeping." In
this article I want to enumerate the reasons why I believe that permanent backwardation
in gold would bring about the descent of our civilization into lawlessness
similar to that following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.
The consensus seems to be that, even if backwardation in gold occurred at
one point, it would not be a significant event given the zero-interest environment.
Forward thinking on backwardation shows that this is wrong.
Tom Szabo observes (see References below): "If somehow short-term interest
rates were to go into significant backwardation, it should be no surprise that
gold and silver may go into significant backwardation. THIS WOULD NOT BE A
SIGN OF IMMINENT MONETARY COLLAPSE [his emphasis]. In fact, a pretty strong
argument could be made for the opposite - that the negative interest rate is
a sign of excessive monetary demand (in relation to demand for capital goods
and investments). I've looked but have been unsuccessful in finding an historical
example of a monetary collapse that occurred while money was actually in high
demand. Of course, high demand for money could be extremely deflationary and
the only known cure for this is to create a high supply of money, otherwise
known as hyperinflation."
While I would disagree with the use of the word "imminent" in describing the
coming monetary collapse, I must maintain my stand that a durable backwardation,
such as we have experienced for two weeks earlier this month, is a premonition
that there will be repeated episodes of the same kind, ever more frequent,
ever deeper, ever longer, each episode significantly weakening the monetary
system - regardless of the zero or negative short term interest rate. (Let
us leave the question aside that zero or negative interest rates in and of
themselves show an alarming pathology of the monetary system!)
I have argued that we must carefully distinguish between a fiat money regime
with an undisturbed flow of gold to the futures market; and a fiat money regime
where the flow of gold to the futures market has been blocked by an unprecedented
surge in the demand for cash gold. In the first case confidence in fiat money
is high; in the second, it is low and waning fast. In the first case paper
gold is an effective substitute for physical gold in most applications; in
the second, paper gold has been unmasked as a fraud, and discredited beyond
repair. In the first case the economy works pretty well the same way as under
a gold standard; in the second, all hell is turned loose as the exchange of
goods and services is on the decline and autarky on the rise.
Tom says that "it is incorrect to claim that gold and silver could be in true
backwardation without at least some inversion of the futures price curve where
the nearer contracts are trading at a higher price than the further out contracts.
Well, exactly that's what has happened at Tocom during the first two weeks
of this month and is happening still. Tocom publishes its trading summary at
the close of trading every day on the Internet: www.tocom.or.jp/souba/gold/index.html.
I don't understand how Tom could miss it. Backwardation is jumping off the
Internet page covering the standard kilobar contract, even as I write this,
on December 19.
Tom is complaining that the spot price for gold is difficult to ascertain: "the
spot price for gold is elusive... because they are third-party quotes that
suffer from a variety of problems that can make them unreliable and imprecise." I
disagree. I have asked my student, Mr. Sandeep Jaitly of Soditic, Ltd., London,
U.K., who is tracking the gold basis for me, to explain. Here is what he had
to say on December 15: "Tom Szabo comments that spot prices are difficult to
obtain. Not true! They are not. You just have to be plugged into the right
feeds. My spot price quotes include all the five price fixers at the LBMA,
plus everybody else worthy of quoting... The spot gold price I use is the best
or highest bid (and the best or lowest offer) from 300
banks world-wide [list attached, not reproduced here]. The data I use is directly
from the exchange, and the prints I see for the carry available are super precise.
I can get 90¢ per oz profit on the December contract versus my spot quotes
that come from every bank on earth..." Sandeep goes on, dateline December 18: "Everybody
of note is inferring that gold is in backwardation because of the zero interest.
Let us explore that a little further. One can achieve 0.25% annualized by carrying
gold for 190 days till June 26, 2009. 190 days in maturity is about equivalent
to a 6-month T-bill with a current yield of 0.18%. The cost of carry for 190
days is 0.25 - 0.18 = 0.07%. If we compare this with the cost of carry for
11 days till December 27, 2008, and, again, for 69 days till February 27, 2009,
[calculation included, not reproduced here], then we get that the cost of carrying
gold is as follows (all percentages are annualized)
for 11 days: |
1.005% |
for 69 days: |
0.9% |
for 190 days: |
0.07% |
That is pathological without any need of further explanation! It costs
more to carry gold for shorter periods of time than for a longer period -
according to the futures market. That puts a hole in the zero interest-rate
argument, and explodes the explanation that the extra-low contango or outright
backwardation in gold is nothing more than "normal backwardation" of a non-monetary
commodity!"
Tom says that he does not see things evolving in the same catastrophic manner
as I do. For example, he believes that "there will always be willing buyers
and sellers of gold in some quantity if the price is right." Buyers - si,
sellers - no! That's just the whole point. The lack of credibility of
irredeemable currency will be such that no one in his right mind will accept
it in exchange for gold, the ultimate liquidator of debt. Previously, people
were willing to trade their gold because they could always replenish their
supply from Comex warehouses. That means, in other words, that the irredeemable
dollar could still be used as a liquidator of debt (i.e., gold still has a
competitor). But let them close the Comex gold warehouses. This is a quantum
jump; it means that the irredeemable dollar can no longer be used to liquidate
debt, e.g., debt incurred by those holding short positions in gold futures.
It is essential not to belittle the import of this observation.
Tom thinks that I am an alarmist in believing that the permanent closing of
the gold window at the Comex will mean a cessation in gold mining, loss of
segregated metal deposits, and institutionalized theft of ETF holdings.
To answer this I have to go back to the collapse of the Western Roman Empire
after the abdication of the emperor Romulus Augustus on September 4, 476 A.D.
It was followed by the Dark Ages when the rule of law, personal security, trade
of goods against payment in gold and silver could no longer be taken for granted.
Gold and silver went into hiding, never to re-emerge during the lifetime of
the original holders. It is plausible to see a causal relationship between
the fading of the rule of law and the complete disappearance of gold and silver
from trade. Virtually all observers say that the first event caused the second.
I may be in a minority of one to say that causation goes in the opposite direction.
The disappearance of gold and silver coins as a means of exchange was a long-drawn-out,
cumulative event. In the end, no one was willing to exchange gold and silver
coins for the debased coinage of the empire. At that point the empire was bankrupt;
it could no longer pay the troops that defended its boundaries against the
barbarians threatening with invasion. This is not to say that the empire did
not have other weaknesses. It did, plenty of it. But the overriding weakness
was the monetary weakness. Centuries after centuries the Mint of the empire
could attract less and less gold and silver. Because of this, the empire was
forced to debase its coinage and the deterioration continued until the bitter
end, when the gold flow to the Mint completely dried up.
Compare this with the Eastern Roman Empire that lasted until the fall of Constantinople
to the Ottoman Turks in 1453 A.D., or almost one thousand years longer than
the Western half, and during most of this time it could keep its Mint open
to gold, producing the gold bezant, which also became the coin of the Muslim
world. Is this difference between the two empires trying to tell us something
about the importance, from the point of view of political and economic survival,
of keeping the Mint open to gold?
The history of the monetary system of the United States shows an ominous parallel
to that of the Western Roman Empire. As long as gold and silver was still used
in trade at least to some extent, the Western Roman Empire was limping along.
The modern equivalent of the disappearance of gold and silver is epitomized
by the progressive vanishing of the gold basis.
There is simply no continuous transition from the paper dollar cum contango
to the paper dollar cum gold backwardation, Tom's prayer notwithstanding.
The transition will necessarily involve a sudden and fatal weakening of the
legal system. Remember, the legal system works only as long as most citizens
are law-abiding. It breaks down as soon as the majority of the citizens find
that the law protects thieves in high places, but offers next to no protection
for the honest hard-working middle class. I am not going to elaborate here
on the proposition that irredeemable currency is a system that protects thieves
in high places, but robs the little guy by plundering his savings.
Tom notes that it may be technically possible to delay the collapse of the
fiat money system by "allowing" gold to appreciate in a hyperinflationary
scenario. That is precisely the phase that will end with the entrenchment of
backwardation in gold. Thereafter one can no longer talk about an "appreciating
gold price", or any gold price for that matter, as the pricing mechanism will
have self-destructed, at least as far as the price of gold is concerned. As
Tom himself observes in the same article, local prices in India, China, and
in the jungles of Papua are not relevant. Only gold prices in New York and
London are, and the arbitrage between the two.
I have nowhere said that the end of the fiat money system will follow the
closing of the gold window at the Comex in a matter of days. Sure, finance
ministers and central bankers will try to "muddle through". It is not possible
to predict how long the death throes of fiat money will continue. Tom may be
right in suggesting that it will take many years, and claims of an imminent
monetary and economic collapse will again turn out to be wrong.
But where Tom is certainly mistaken is his suggestion that all this agony
will take place while the Last Contango in Washington is still going on. You
can't have contango and backwardation at the same time. Backwardation is like
a black hole, once it grabs a currency, it will swallow it, and gold quoted
in that currency will never return to contango.
I think Tom's greatest mistake is to interpret the move into backwardation,
or gold to enter the 'fever phase', as "gold's regaining fully-recognized monetary
status". Unfortunately, just the opposite is the case. Whether officially recognized
or not, gold's monetary status was never in doubt. Gold has always been the
monetary commodity par excellence, due to the fact that it has constant
marginal utility (or, if you will, the fact that the marginal utility of no
other commodity declines at a rate slower than that of gold).
What we are witnessing is a transition that deprives gold of its monetary
qualities. Gold in hiding cannot and will not act as money. More to the point,
absent gold, nothing else can or will. The disappearance of money, that
can be trusted, fatally undermines the legal system, the sanctity of contracts, habeas
corpus, any and all provisions of law and order that we take for granted.
Under these conditions nobody can operate a gold mine, nobody can run a gold
refinery, nobody can guarantee segregated gold deposits, and nobody can prevent
the institutionalized theft of ETF holdings. Welcome to the Madoff economy!
(See References below: Paul Krugman's column in The New York Times).
Jail one Madoff, two others will jump into his shoes.
As a consequence of the permanent backwardation in gold, we shall have a world
gone Madoff.
References:
Tainted Research: Lysenkoism -- American Style, June 4, 2003
Monetary versus Non-monetary Commodities, April 25, 2006
The Last Contango in Washington, June 30, 2006
Red Alert: Gold Backwardation!!! December 4, 2008
Has the Curtain Fallen on the Last Contango in Washington? December 8, 2008
There Is No Fever Like Gold Fever, December 10, 2008
Backwardation That Shook the World, December 14, 2008
Backward Thinking on Backwardation, December 18, 2008
These and other articles of the author can be accessed at
the website: www.professorfekete.com.
Backwardation Update - Still No in Gold, but Maybe in Silver!
by Tom Szabo, www.silveraxis.com,
December 12, 2008
The Madoff Economy by Paul Krugman, www.nytimes.com,
December 19, 2008
Acknowledgement:
The author wishes to express his thanks to Mr. Sandeep Jaitly
of Soditic Ltd., London, England, (e-mail: Sandeep.Jaitly@soditic.co.uk)
for tracking the gold basis for him.
Calendar of events:
Szombathely, Martineum Academy, Hungary, March 28-29, 2009
Encore Session of Gold Standard University Live.
Topics: Is There Life after Backwardation?
Will the Gold Standard Be Released from Quarantine?
The Vaporization of the Derivatives Tower
Labor and the Unfolding Great Depression
San Francisco School of Economics, June-August, 2009
Money and Banking, a ten-week course based on the work of Professor
Fekete. TheSyllabus of this course is can be seen on the website: www.professorfekete.com.
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