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Historically, one of the primary reasons for owning gold, silver or platinum
bullion has been their ability to preserve purchasing power during inflationary
periods. Over the long term, inflation robs us of purchasing power. If not
addressed, inflation also destroys the long-term value of personal wealth.
"The arithmetic makes it plain that inflation is a far more devastating tax
than anything that has been enacted by our legislature. The inflation tax has
a fantastic ability to simply consume capital. It makes no difference to a
widow with her savings in a 5 percent passbook account whether she pays 100
percent income tax on her interest income during a period of zero inflation
or pays no income tax during years of 5 percent inflation. Either way, she
is "taxed" in a manner that leaves her no real income whatsoever. Any money
she spends comes right out of capital. She would find outrageous a 100 percent
income tax but doesn't seem to notice that 5 percent inflation is the economic
equivalent."
- Warren Buffett, "How Inflation Swindles the Investor," Fortune,
May, 1977
This chart, prepared by Michael Hodges of the Grandfather Economic Report, http://mwhodges.home.att.net/,
shows the US dollar's loss of purchasing power based on the Consumer Price
Index (CPI). This 87 percent decline means the 1950 US dollar could buy only
13 cents' worth of goods today.
The picture is similar in Canada. The inflation calculator on the Bank of Canada's website shows that a basket
of goods costing CDN$100 in 1950 now costs CDN$863. This represents an 89 percent
decline in the purchasing power of the Canadian dollar.
Today, most investors are not concerned about inflation because politicians
and central bankers have done an excellent job of persuading us that inflation
is under control and represents no threat. The core inflation rate in the US
is reported to be 1.1 percent - a 38-year low. It certainly sounds good, but
is it true?
What is inflation?
There is much confusion and disinformation about what inflation really is.
The 1983 edition of Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary defines inflation
as:
" An increase in the amount of currency in circulation, resulting in a
relative sharp and sudden fall in its value and a rise in prices: it may
be caused by an increase in the volume of paper money issued or of gold mined,
or a relative increase in expenditures as when the supply of goods fails
to meet demand. "
But The Encyclopedia Britannica defines inflation as: "An inordinate rise
in the general level of prices."
Today, that's what most of us think inflation is: a rise in the price of goods
and services as measured by the CPI. This definition, however, confuses the
cause and effect. The cause of inflation is an increase in the money supply
- the effect is an increase in prices.
Since 1971, when Richard Nixon eliminated gold convertibility for the US dollar,
there has been no practical limit on the amount of money that could be created.
As a result politicians are able to increase the money supply through credit
expansion by ever increasing amounts. Today, the annual increases in the money
supply are equal to the total money in 1971.
Over the last year the money supply in Canada, as measured by M3, has increased
by 9.8 percent. With all the media interest surrounding the increasing US money
supply (4.3%), it is surprising that the Canadian increase, at more than twice
the US level, receives little attention. What we do hear from the media is
that core inflation rates for both countries, over the same time period, is
increasing by less than 2 percent annually.
What is the explanation for this disparity?
First, a large proportion of the increased money supply has gone into the
equity markets and real estate. In those cases it is called "capital appreciation",
but in reality it is just inflation of those asset classes.
Second, the reported CPI rate is carefully designed to understate to true
rate by minimizing key expenses, such as energy costs, food and housing, which
affect everyone's lives. In fact, energy and food costs are completely excluded
from the CPI, because they are deemed too volatile.
A number of questionable tactics are used to distort other real price increases.
Quality changes, euphemistically referred to as hedonic adjustments, are one
method. Because a 2005 model computer has twice the speed and memory of a 1998
model, its purchase price is reduced by half for CPI calculations. The Wall
Street Journal reports that hedonically adjusted computer prices have dropped
25 percent a year. Today, 46 percent of the CPI's weight comes from hedonic
adjustments.
Over 30 percent of the CPI is devoted to rental prices. However, thanks to
reduced mortgage rates and low downpayment requirements, many former renters
are purchasing homes, suppressing rental demand and keeping rents artificially
low.
Similarly, 30 percent of the CPI is devoted to used-car prices. Because of
zero interest-rate financing and cash-back incentives, however, buyers are
flocking to purchase new cars, thus increasing used-car inventories and suppressing
resale prices.
Together, these tactics result in a CPI rate that is purposely distorted to
reflect a modest inflation rate. A recent article by Jim Puplava entitled The
Core Rate provides an excellent analysis of how the Boskin Commission recommended
adjusting the method of calculating the CPI in 1996.
Bill Gross, managing director of the giant Pimco bond fund, recently stated: "My
sense is that the CPI is really 1 percent higher than the official numbers
and the GDP is 1 percent less. You're witnessing a haute con job."
Since every household must deal with double-digit increases for gasoline,
utilities, food, professional services and housing costs, not to mention taxes
and government fees, it seems obvious that the real inflation rate cannot possibly
be 2 percent, but is more likely in the 6-8 percent range. This is confirmed
by the fact that the Commodity Research Bureau Index (CRB), representing a
basket of commodities has risen 77% in the last three years, US Agricultural
products have risen 21% and oil has risen 223%. Since the price of oil affects
nearly all products and services, increases the oil price will ultimately have
a profound affect on all prices.
If the true inflation rate is 8 percent, then even those risk-averse investors
who believe they have secured their capital by investing in Guaranteed Investment
Certificates, at the current yield of 3 percent have, in fact, a guaranteed
method of losing money on a daily basis.
Investors must not only minimize the risk of capital loss, but also seek returns
that exceed the (real) rate of inflation, thereby maintaining the future purchasing
power of their capital. Without accounting for both, investments can become
a recipe for losing money. If inflation is in fact running at 5 percent above
an investment yield, the capital will have eroded by 55 percent over ten years.
After 20 years, it will have lost 93 percent of its original purchasing power.
No wonder Lord John Maynard Keynes said:
"There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the basis of society
than to debauch the currency. The process engages all of the hidden forces
of economic law on the side of destruction and does it in a manner which not
one man in a million is able to diagnose."
Erosion of financial wealth
Loss of purchasing power isn't the only consequence of high inflation. Over
the long haul, inflation can erode the value of accumulated wealth as well.
There are two reasons for this.
First, as the money supply is increased through credit expansion, the compounding
effects of interest payments can ultimately lead to hyperinflation, and eventually
a complete economic breakdown. Goods and services become so costly that no
one can afford them. A country's currency becomes worthless, international
trade ceases and economic chaos ensues. A classic example of this occurred
during the reign of the German Weimar Republic from 1919-1923. In 1919, one
ounce of gold was 75 marks. By 1923, it was 23 trillion marks.
The second reason concerns side effects of the strong medicine used by governments
and central banks to control high inflation rates.
In the past, inflation has been curtailed through domestic interest-rate manipulation.
When inflation rises, the central bank imposes higher interest rates on the
economy. In the 1970's, then Fed Chairman Paul Volker, raised the Fed Funds
rate to 19% in 1981 in order to tame inflation. This action slows consumption,
lowers price pressures on goods and services and brings inflation to heel.
Unfortunately, a high interest-rate monetary policy can play havoc with a
country's capital markets particularly when the overall debt levels are as
high as they are today.
Bonds and debentures are interest-rate sensitive. As interest rates climb,
the market price of bonds, debentures and other debt instruments, such as income
trusts, declines.
Mortgages can lose value just as bonds do. Rising interest rates choke off
mortgage markets as borrowers look for alternative means of raising capital.
Mortgage-based securities, such as mortgage mutual funds, see the value of
their net assets drop along with their market valuations.
Although real estate is a tangible asset, it is very interest-rate sensitive.
As rates ratchet upwards, the costs of buying, financing, maintaining and renting
real property increase. Eventually, as interest rates rise, the market value
of real estate begins to fall.
Increasing interest rates negatively impact the value of stocks, too. Rising
rates crimp consumer spending. This slows corporate sales of goods and services
and causes inventories to increase, profits to evaporate, stock dividends to
shrink and stock prices to weaken.
Considering the total US debt, at over 305% of GDP, is more than twice the
debt level of the 1970s raising interest rates today could have a devastating
impact on today's over leveraged economy.
This puts Alan Greenspan squarely between the proverbial rock and a hard place.
If he raises interest rates to subdue inflation and support the US dollar,
he risks triggering an economic collapse. If he maintains current interest
rates the US dollar may collapse, causing inflation to spiral out of control.
If oil prices continue to rise, as a result of hitting Peak Oil, then monetary
policy may not be enough to counteract the inflationary affects of rising oil
prices.
Considering that the bulk of Canadians' wealth is typically distributed across
bonds, real estate and stocks, there is a real risk that rising interest rates
could depress all of these asset classes and destroy investor wealth.
Precious metals as a wealth preserver
"In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from
confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value."
- Alan Greenspan
The above quote is from an article written by Allan Greenspan in 1966 entitled "Gold
and Economic Freedom" in which he discusses the role of gold as money. Wealth
preservation has long been an attribute of gold and silver bullion, and the
reason they have functioned as money for over 3,000 years. Although prices
of gold and silver, in local currencies, may have fluctuated during both inflationary
and deflationary periods, precious metals have maintained or even increased
their purchasing power in both instances.
During the 1970s the average annual increase in the CPI was 7.8 percent, while
the average annual compounded increases in the prices of gold, silver and platinum
were 42 percent, 43 percent and 29 percent respectively.
We are all familiar with the premise that you can always buy a man's suit
with an ounce of gold. Well, I can remember that in 1971 the price of an average
car was about CDN$2,300, or 66 ounces of gold, which at that time was CDN$35
per ounce. Since then, the dollar price of the car has increased 6-fold to
CDN$14,000, but for the same 66 ounces of gold, priced at CDN$530 per ounce,
I can now buy two cars. In 1971 the average price of a house in Canada was
CDN$24,600, or 694 ounces of gold. Today the average house price is CDN$219,700
and with the same 694 ounces of gold I can almost purchase two houses. This
relationship holds true for most other assets and commodities, including the
Dow Jones Industrial Average, where the cost in gold ounces has either remained
the same or decreased over the last 30 years. People purchase precious metals
when the risk of owning other assets outweighs the opportunity for gain, profit
or reward. When used this way, gold is like cash. But unlike cash and other
asset classes, precious metals tend to hold their value during periods of high
inflation.
This is because precious metals are negatively correlated to most other
asset classes, and to cash and cash equivalents, bonds, mortgages, real estate
and stocks in particular. This means that the value of precious metals tends
to increase as the value of these other assets declines. This has recently
been confirmed in a study by Ibbotson & Associates. An executive summary
of the report is available at http://www.bmsinc.ca/component/option,com_akoforms/func,showform/formid,3/Itemid,65/.
In an inflationary environment, an allocation of at least 10 percent to precious
metals in a diversified investment portfolio helps to preserve the value of
the portfolio by offsetting losses in other asset classes.
In periods of very high inflation, where interest rates have skyrocketed,
precious metals have at least maintained and usually increased their purchasing
power, because their value can never go to zero. Conversely, other asset classes
have been completely destroyed by periods of hyperinflation.
This underscores the important distinction between precious metals, in actual
bullion form as stand-alone assets. Cash, cash equivalents and currencies,
bonds, mortgages, stocks and even real estate are all secured by a promise
to pay the bearer. Bullion is not.
Maintaining purchasing power with gold
In his report entitled Gold as a Store of Value, Research Study No. 22 (London:
World Gold Council, 1998) British economist Stephen Harmston proves a number
of important points about gold's ability to maintain its purchasing power.
First, Harmston's analysis shows that, despite short-term fluctuations in
price, gold has maintained its purchasing power over the very long term in
Britain, France, Germany, Japan and the US.
Second, while gold has not held its purchasing power during every period of
economic and social upheaval, it has held its purchasing power every time financial
assets have declined in value.
Third, the inflation-adjusted price of gold has increased since 1971 and,
as of 1997, gold's purchasing power remained in parity with the long-term rise
in the cost of a typical basket of goods as represented by the CPI.
Harmston's fourth conclusion about gold is particularly noteworthy. Gold's
surge in purchasing power during the 1970s occurred partly because of the removal
of fixed pricing by the US government. As well, there was a general inflation-driven
rise in the prices of other commodities during the 1970s and 1980s, and an
increased worldwide demand for gold. As gold supplies expanded to accommodate
this demand, gold's purchasing power reverted back to its historic mean which,
according to Harmston's studies, was always equivalent to the long-term average
rate of inflation.
Inflation rising
Today, there are signs that inflation is on the rise again, and that an inflationary
spiral may be about to begin. Both the Bank of Canada and the US Federal Reserve
Bank have indicated they will raise interest rates in response to increasing
inflationary pressures.
If the money supply continues to grow as it has been, and the price of oil
continues to increase inflation is sure to follow. It may now be a good time
to allocate at least 10% to the ultimate form of inflation hedge - gold, silver
and platinum bullion.
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