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With $Gold now trading firmly above US$1,000, at least on a temporary
basis, all are joyous that the Gold Bugs have won. The paper equity
charlatans have been vanquished, at least for now. Those fanning emotions
with stories about cabals, price suppression, and manipulation may now
have to find some other drivel to pedal. GATA, the Gullible and Truly Amateurish,
has now firmly been proven a purveyor of fantasy. Those that have opposed
Gold and Silver ETFs can now, with knuckles dragging on the ground, return
to the back of their caves
But yet, my mailbox continues to be filled with fictional stories such as
those about OPEC abandoning the dollar. That happened despite the story being
quashed by Reuters the same day it appeared. Is analysis of $Gold to continue
as the equivalent of fantasy football? Or, shall we now move to a higher plain?
Are we prepared, after an $800 GATA defying bull market, prepared to be rational
investors? The spring has sprung. A goodly part of $Gold's under valuation
has been corrected. Are we ready for analysis, or shall we continue to play "fantasy
Gold?"

Our first chart this week is of Federal Reserve Bank Credit, the base fuel
for U.S. money supply. The blue line, using the leftt axis, is the total of
that monetary base, adjusted. Red line, using the right axis, is the year-to-year
change in that monetary base.
In the past two months, far right portion of blue line, the Federal Reserve
has added about $200 billion to the monetary base. That injection has been
the fuel for the robust move in the paper equity markets and $Gold. For without
that monetary fuel, markets would not advance. Forget discussions of fundamentals
and earnings and deficits and products. Money is what moves markets.
While the blue line is encouraging, the red line is
a giant red flag. The year-to-year change in the monetary base is collapsing. Regardless
of the blather from the Federal Reserve leaders and economic gurus, Federal
Reserve policy is already performing the equivalent of tightening. The
second derivative of Federal Reserve Bank credit is decisively negative. In
fact, Federal Reserve policy since February has contributed to the failure
of the U.S. money supply to grow.
The failure of the supply of U.S. dollar to grow is attributable to the lack
of demand for money, and an improperly designed monetary policy. Quite simply,
the demand for, and perhaps the willingness to make, loans in the U.S. continues
to fall. According to marketwatch.com's Rex Nutting(9 Oct), "U.S. banks
are reducing their lending at the fastest rate on record, . . ." If
loans are not made, the U.S. money supply will not grow without draconian monetization
by Federal Reserve! If the money supply does not grow, the economy and financial
markets will both weaken due to lack of fuel.
As a consequence of the lack of demand for loans, the unwillingness of banks
to lend money, and subsequent response of U.S. monetary policy, effective U.S.
monetary policy is one of tightening. That lack of growth in the U.S. money
that followed from all this will ultimately have an impact on financial markets,
the value of the U.S. dollar in the short-term, and the price of $Gold. Further,
inflation is not likely to flow from this monetary policy, and deflation is
again a risk. Importantly, the consequences of this situation may not
be that of the broad consensus.
With no growth in the quantity of U.S. dollars since February, the dollar
is becoming rarer relative to other currencies. Ultimately, unless corrected,
the value of the U.S. dollar should rise in the short-term. Such an event might
come as a surprise to those plunging into Gold and Silver on the back of margin
debt.
Money is the fuel for markets, all of them. Money flowing into markets is
the only way market prices rise. That is true for paper equities, Gold, Silver,
and the price of land in North Dakota. Since the quantity of U.S. dollars in
total is not rising, the only way for these markets to rise is by an increase
in the share of the total money supply going into those markets or by market
participants borrowing money. That latter act, of borrowing money, seems the
primary fuel for paper equities, Gold, and Silver prices in recent times.
On one U.S. exchange alone, the December Gold contract is financed with roughly
$12 billion of borrowed money, margin debt. Those are borrowings that require
winnings, and losses cannot be tolerated. Any rally, even of a short-term nature,
in the value of the U.S. dollar will send those borrowers of all those billions
scurrying for the door.
Neither politicians nor central bankers are going to develop financial
religion, and that is certainly true of the failing Obama Regime. Keynesianism
continues to dominate both economic thinking and policy. No greater
intellectual failure exists than Keynesianism, but it continues as the
dominant economic ideology. Keynesianism has
demonstrated neither an ability to foresee the economic future nor the
ability to serve as a tool for successfully managing the economy. Gold
has served as a successful defender of wealth from the disastrous Keynesian
policies of the past decade, and will continue to do so. However, do not
let one be trampled by the momentum traders as they rush into the room.
GOLD THOUGHTS come from Ned
W. Schmidt,CFA,CEBS as part of a joyous mission to save investors from the
financial abyss of paper assets. He is publisher of The Value View Gold
Report, monthly, and Trading Thoughts, weekly. To receive these
reports, go to http://home.att.net/~nwschmidt/Order_Gold_GETVVGR.html.
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