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This essay was first published by Whiskey
and Gunpowder.
"Everything in the world may be endured except continued prosperity." -
Goethe
"The path of least resistance and least trouble is a mental rut already
made. It requires troublesome work to undertake the alternation of old beliefs.
Self-conceit often regards it as a sign of weakness to admit that belief
to which we have once committed ourselves is wrong. We get so identified
with an idea that it is literally a "pet" notion and we rise to its defenseman
stop our eyes and ears to anything different." - John Dewey
Every day I get numerous e-mails from well-informed readers of my newsletter
commenting on the housing market. Some support my view that Anglo-Saxon countries
rein a colossal home price bubble, while others argue articulately that there
is no such bubble.
As a result, I continually have doubts about my own views and concede that,
as John Dewey remarked, "Self-conceit often regards it as a sign of weakness
to admit that a belief to which we have once committed ourselves is wrong.
We get so identified with an idea that it is literally a 'pet' notion and we
rise to its defense and stop our eyes and ears to anything different."
I occasionally try to forget my economic background and rationalise investment
bubbles. We all know that investment bubbles involve easy money, excessive
credit growth, lax lending standards, leverage, "new era thinking", and a loss
of touch with reality, excessive expectations about future profits, and so
on.
However, often bubbles also involve a loss of faith in the value of paper
money. Let me explain.
In the late 1970s, investors became increasingly concerned about accelerating
consumer price inflation. Since consumer prices were rising at more than 10%
per annum, the then prevailing view was that cash was depreciating by approximately
10% per annum.
People rushed into precious metals and drove the price of gold and silver
to US$850 and US$50, respectively, in January 1980. At the same time, investors
were dumping bonds, which became known as "certificates of confiscation". US
long-term government bond yields soared to more than 15% in September 1981.
I would argue that there was at the time a real panic about the role of paper
money as a store of value.
Loss of Paper Money's Purchasing Power as a Result of Asset Inflation
Today, we have a similar situation. However, people are not concerned about
paper money losing its purchasing power as a result of consumer prices rising,
but as a result of paper money losing its value because of rising asset prices.
If, on given income of 100, consumer prices rise from 100 to 110 the real
income will have declined by 10%. But if on an income of 100 and cash assets
of 1,000 which only yield 2%, real-estate prices rise by 10%, both the income
and the cash assets will have lost their purchasing power compared to real
estate.
Therefore, if real estate prices rise for an extended period of time at a
faster rate than incomes and interest rates on cash deposits, it is only natural
that people become concerned that they won't be able to afford to purchase
their own home in future.
Their concern about future affordability, which is nothing else than the fear
of their income and savings losing their purchasing power, then induces them
to purchase their homes now rather than later.
This incremental demand drives prices even higher and attracts speculators
who want to capitalise on the rise in prices, which is driven first by the
genuine buyers and later by themselves as well.
As a result, prices then overshoot and lead to even deeper apprehension about
the loss of purchasing power of paper money on the side of the household sector.
A general rush from liquid assets to" illiquid assets" inevitably follows and
creates a bubble.
This is nothing new. The first well-documented instance of such a loss in
the purchasing power of paper money was John Law's Mississippi Scheme. In 1716,
John Law had opened, under the patronage of the French regent, a bank (Banque
Generale), which issued paper money backed by gold. With the help of the regent,
the bank became an immediate success. Its banknotes were very convenient, since
the government accepted them for tax payments.
Based on this first success, in 1717 Law managed to convince the regent to
grant his new venture, the Mississippi Company, a monopoly on all commerce
between France and its French territories in North America, which included
the present states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois,
Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, in return for accepting outstanding notes of
the French government in payment for the Mississippi shares.
This arrangement basically amounted to nothing other than a partial conversion
of France's government debt into shares of the Mississippi Company.
The operations of the company didn't prove to be profitable, partly because
when it issued shares it hadn't received cash, but debts of the French government,
which had been converted into shares of the Mississippi Company, and partly
because very few French wanted to emigrate to the territories in America.
Still, the shares of the Mississippi Company performed well after the regent
took over Law's bank and began to run its money printing press around the clock.
(Presumably, Law gave him the bank in exchange for having obtained so many
privileges.)
But, whereas John Law had always maintained a small balance of gold reserves
to back up the paper money the bank issued, he now advised the regent that
the public had gained sufficient confidence in paper money and, therefore,
gold reserves in the bank's vault were no longer necessary.
As a result, in 1719, the government increased the money supply dramatically
and lowered interest rates by lending money for as little as 1-2%.
The vast increase in the supply of paper money, combined with the ability
to purchase shares in the Mississippi Company on margin, led not only to the
shares rocketing towards the end of 1719 to over 20,000 livres (from 300 at
the beginning of the year), but also to rapid price increases across France.
The cost of bread, milk, and meat had risen six-fold, while cloth was up by
300%. The horrendous inflation made the holders of Mississippi Company shares
and of paper money nervous.
In January 1720, just two weeks after John Law had been appointed as comptroller
general of finance(minister of finance), a number of large speculators decided
to cash out and switch their funds into "real assets" such as property, commodities,
and gold. This drove down the price of the Mississippi Company shares since
the speculators could only pay for real assets with banknotes.
As confidence in paper money was waning, the price of land and gold soared.
This forced Law, who still enjoyed the backing of the regent, to take extraordinary
measures. He prevented people from turning back to gold by proclaiming that
henceforth only banknotes were legal tender. (By then the Banque Generale had
practically no gold left.)
Thus, payments in gold and silver above 100 francs were prohibited; in addition,
the ownership of gold exceeding 500 livres in value was declared illegal.
(Severe penalties were imposed on people who hoarded gold. To enforce this
most blatant expropriation, Law encouraged the public to turn informer by handing
out large rewards to those who assisted in the discovery of gold, which was
then confiscated.)
At the same time, he stabilised the price of the shares of the Mississippi
Company by merging the Bank Generale and the Mississippi Company, and by fixing
the price of the Mississippi stock at 9,000 livres.
With this measure, Law hoped that speculators would hold on to their shares
and that in future the development of the American continent would prove to
be so profitable as to make a large profit for the company's shareholders.
However, by then, the speculators had completely lost faith in the company's
shares and selling pressure continued (in fact, instead of putting a stop to
the selling, the fixed price acted as an inducement to sell),which led the
bank once again to increase the money supply by an enormous quantity.
The result was another round of sharply escalating prices. (In four years,
the supply of circulating medium had been trebled.)
John Law suddenly realised that his main problem was no longer his battle
against gold, which he had sought to debase, but inflation. He issued an edict
by which banknotes and the shares of the Mississippi Company stock would gradually
be devalued by 50%.
The public reacted to this edict with fury, and shortly after Law was asked
to leave the country. In the meantime, gold was again accepted as the basis
of the currency, and individuals could own as much of it as they desired.
Alas, as a contemporary of Law's noted, the permission came at a time when
no one had any gold left. The Mississippi Scheme, which took place at about
the same time as the South Sea Bubble, led to a wave of speculation in the
period from 1717 to 1720 and spread across the entire European continent.
When both bubbles burst, the subsequent economic crisis was international
in scope.
Still, although accounts are not available about real estate prices during
the monetary inflation and the subsequent bust of John Law's experiment with
paper money, I suppose that early buyers of real-estate fared better than the
holders of paper money, which lost all its value.
The economist Richard Cantillon fared even better. He kept his wealth intact,
which he acquired from successfully speculating in the shares of the Mississippi
Company, by converting his profits into gold and moving to Holland.
By doing so, Cantillon inadvertently followed an important investment wisdom,
which states that once an investment mania comes to an end, the best course
of action is usually to exit the country or sector in which the mania took
place altogether, and to move to an asset class and/or a country that has little
or no correlation with the object of the previous investment boom. Modern Day
John Laws.
I have no faith whatsoever in the Federal Reserve Board, nor in any other
central bank around the world, doing anything other than printing money over
the long term.
In fact, I believe that, given the very high levels of debt we have in the
US and other industrialised countries compared to the size of their economies,
the central banks have no other option now but to print an ever-increasing
quantity of money.
I am a firm believer that Mr. Greenspan, Mr.Bernanke, and their colleagues
in other central banks around the world are modern-day John Laws who, like
him, will not only manipulate and intervene in markets but, over time, will
also totally destroy the value of paper money.
Whereas John Law tried to fix the price of the Mississippi Company by printing
money, the Fed chairman has tried (and managed - at least so far) to inflate
asset prices through an extraordinary money and credit expansion.
Therefore, while long-term US government bonds could rally somewhat further
in the near term, as the economy slows down, I very much doubt that they will
provide a satisfactory return over their future life span, as money printing
will lead to a loss of purchasing power of money. Future Loss of the Dollar's
Purchasing Power.
Countless speculators and future funds have lost much money this year by betting
that the US dollar would depreciate against the Euro and other currencies.
The mistake these speculators made was failing to understand that a currency
can also depreciate or lose its purchasing power against other assets than
just other currencies.
Thus, if all the central banks in the world were to increase their money supply
in concert annually by, say, 20%, currencies could remain stable against each
other but lose in value against consumer prices, precious metals, commodities,
art, real estate, and so on.
I point this out because, although I have been positive for the dollar for
the last six months, I remain a firm believer that it will go down or continue
to lose its purchasing power, as it has done since the establishment of the
Federal Reserve Board in 1913 - however, not necessarily against the Euro.
I recently had the pleasure of being on a panel with Jimmy Rogers, founder
of the Rogers International Commodity Index (RICI) and cofounder of the Diapason
Rogers Commodity Index Funds. The subject of the discussion was commodities.
As my regular readers will know, I am presently not particularly positive
about industrial commodities (see also below), whereas I believe that agricultural
commodities offer significant upside potential with about 15% downside risk.
Jimmy, however, argued that he was the world's worst market timer and that
in his view this commodity up-cycle would last for at least another 10 to 15
years.
Based on the past, commodity cycles (Kondratieff price cycles) tend to last
45 to 60 years. Therefore, if we assume that the last peak of the cycle was
in 1980 rally somewhat further in the near-term, as the economy slows down,
I very much doubt that they will provide a satisfactory return over their future
life span, as money printing will lead to a loss of purchasing power of money.
Hence, if Jimmy Rogers is right in saying that we are in the early stage of
a commodity bull market that will last for another 10 to 15 years, a view that
I share, then we should also assume that consumer price inflation will gather
steam in the years ahead.
Needless to say, rising CPI inflation would further reduce the purchasing
power of paper money and be negative for long-term bonds as well as for the
valuation of equities (P/E contraction as a result of rising interest rates).
And while I don't think this will happen right away, as I shall argue below,
in the absence of one's ability to time market events, the risk is obviously
that even industrial commodity prices could continue to rise without much of
a correction. This could be particularly true of oil.
We have argued for a number of years that oil prices (and uranium as well)
have a significant upside potential. We based this view on Asian demand (3.6
billion people)doubling from 21 million barrels a decurrently to around 40
million barrels a day in the next 10 years or so.(Current daily global oil
production is around 84 million barrels a day.)
Recently, however, I sounded a note of caution about oil prices, because some
froth had developed as oil prices, at around US$55 to US$60 a barrel, were
clearly not as inexpensive as they were a few years ago.
In 1998, the S&P was expensive and oil ridiculously inexpensive. Today,
however, when about 20 barrels of oil are required to buy one S&P index,
the undervaluation of oil compared to the S&P 500 is less compelling.
Still, we shouldn't rule out that we could go back to the S&P 500/oil
ratio, which prevailed in the 1970s and early1980s, when less than five barrels
of oil were required to buy one S&P index.
At the last major oil peak in 1980, it took less than three barrels of oil
to buy the S&P 500!
If this were to happen again, it would imply - assuming an S&P 500 index
of 1200 - an oil price of US$400....I mention this because I recently came
across a paper by Eric Sprott, of Sprott Securities in Toronto.
Eric analyses the oil market with particular emphasis on the supply side.
As our readers will see from Sprott's study, if he is right about the supply
of oil diminishing and I am not totally out of line with my forecast of Asian
oil demand doubling over the next 10 years or so, then prices will rise dramatically.
As energy prices rise, geopolitical tensions will increase and lead to even
higher prices. Eventually this will lead to World War III in the 2010-2015
period, as energy shortages become acute. Few Bargains and a Volatility Spike.
In the 1970s, money's purchasing power was eroded by high consumer price inflation
rates. Since the early1980s this loss of purchasing power of paper money has
continued as a result of asset inflation. In particular, over the last few
years, depositors have been penalised as real short-term interest rates have
been negative
As we have maintained for sometime, there are very few bargains in today's
world of inflated asset prices. In fact, I only find relative values. Asian
property prices ex Japan and Hong Kong are inexpensive compared to US and European
property prices.
Asian shares are reasonably valued compared to equities in Western industrialised
countries. Asian currencies are cheap compared to the US dollar and especially
the Euro.
Grains are a bargain compared to oil and copper (farm product prices are at
a 200-yearlow compared to energy) I should like to remind our readers that
in drought periods grain prices can rise dramatically.
From their lows in 1968/69 to their highs in 1973/74, wheat rose by 465%,
soybean oil by 638%, cotton by 317%, corn by 295%, and sugar by 1290%. Gold
is also relatively cheap compared to oil. It now takes only seven barrels of
oil to buy one ounce of gold.
These relative values aside, I continue to be concerned about several issues.
Despite the fact that I always question my own views, it increasingly looks
as if we have a gigantic bubble in selected real estate markets.
All the symptoms typically associated with an investment mania and bubbles
are there. Can the bubble become even larger?
Possibly, but the end result will be even more painful than if the bubble
begins to deflate shortly. The Economist concluded the editorial I referred
to above by stating: The whole world economy is at risk.
The IMF has warned that, just as the upswing in house prices has been a global
phenomenon, soapy downturn is likely to be synchronised, and thus the effects
of it will be shared widely.
The housing boom was fun while it lasted, but the biggest increase in wealth
in history was largely an illusion. (The Economist, June 18 -June 24,
2005) assets such as homes and commodities have risen substantially in value.
Given the propensity of central bankers to print money, I find it difficult
to envision an environment in which paper money would not continue to lose
its value over the long term. The only question is: against what will paper
money lose its value in future?
The US dollar remains vulnerable, but possibly not so much against the Euro
as against gold and silver and other commodities such as oil and grains. At
the same time as we have had a housing boom in the US, we have experienced
an unprecedented investment boom in China.
If both turn down at the same time, the global economy could weaken more than
is now perceived. Such a synchronised downturn in the US and China would almost
certainly badly depress industrial commodity prices. This would, however, not
alter our long-term favourable opinion of the commodities complex.
In a global downturn, the bond bulls might very well have the upper hand for
a while longer. But I have no doubt whatsoever that central banks, led by the
US Fed, would, faced with economic weakness, print money like never before.
However, this time the money printing operation may not work.
In the same way that asset price inflation - unexpectedly, I might add- replaced
CPI inflation in the early1980s, in the near future CPI inflation and rising
commodity prices could begin to exceed asset inflation rates, and in particular
home price inflation.
This would likely depress long-term bond prices and lead to a very unappealing
global economic and financial environment and eventually discredit central
bankers and bring about the end of central banking as we know it today.
Given these uncertainties and the potential for oil prices to continue their
ascent, I am surprised at the low-level of volatility. Low volatility, we pointed
out at that time, tends to lead to big market moves, whereby the direction
of the move isn't indicated by the low volatility.
Still, looking at the shape of stock markets around the world and at industrial
commodity prices, some significant downside volatility wouldn't surprise us.
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