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Believe It or Not
For the longest time, those who contended that the gold market was rigged
[the Gold Bugs] were looked upon with disdain - almost exclusively - by the
mainstream media and mainstream financial outlets alike. The Gold Bugs' claims
were widely dismissed as a chimera - concoctions by aggrieved speculators with
active imaginations or too much time on their hands.
This widely held mainstream view was challenged recently when the brokerage
arm of one of Europe's most venerable institutions - Cheuvreux,
the brokerage arm of French banking giant Credit Agricole - published a 56
page research report that not only outlines, but then throws its substantial
support behind the central thesis of the gold bug's "conspiracy against gold" theory
- that prices have long been rigged by Western Central Banks.
It was convenient and easy for the collective mainstream to ignore the gold
conspiracy arguments - so long as gold bugs were isolated, alienated or otherwise
relegated to the fringes of economic thought. This conscious denial on the
part of the mainstream is becoming a much trickier notion now that one of their
respected members - Credit Agricole - is singing from the same hymn book.
This is clearly a conflict, as yet to be resolved.
Cutting Through The Fog
To accept the Gold Bug's assertions about the rigging of gold's price, brings
with it at least tacit acknowledgement [because it's woven into the design
of the fabric of the same argument] that inflation numbers - as reported by
officialdom - are misreported through understatement. After all, it was the
suppression of the gold price that was intended to make the "fudged" inflation
numbers believable, no?
Acceptance of this assertion creates another disturbing dilemma - one that
interestingly envelopes Alan Greenspan's infamous interest rate conundrum - that
of what prudent or proper asset allocation is or should be. If inflation
has been systematically under reported, then it follows that interest rates
are erroneously low. Nobel Laureates have asserted that asset allocation models
are built from a foundation of assumptions
or truths,
For each asset class the user forecasts an expected return, a standard
deviation, and a correlation to each of the other assets. Given these
inputs, the software uses mean-variance optimization to build an efficient
frontier. The frontier represents the efficient set of portfolios that
can be created using the selected asset classes. Each portfolio on the
frontier has the maximum expected return for a given amount of risk.
Inherent in this modeling - correlating assets - is the assumption that real
interest rates are positive as evidenced by the efficient frontier always being
plotted in the upper right quadrant. Under reporting of inflation has rendered
this base assumption false [false data implies that the "efficient frontier" is
a misnomer]. Empirical evidence in the real world supports this contention
- in that large capital pools [pensionable assets of large companies like GM,
Ford, IBM and the airlines] invested along traditional lines - steeped in fixed
income securities - are proving to be woefully inadequate to fund current obligations.
This has created confusion that is begging for clarity.
Clear Vision From A Disciplined Mind
While deceptions, like those outlined above, abound - I've got to hand it
to Mr. Llewellyn [Lew] H. Rockwell
Jr. In a paper published just last week, What
Economics Is Not, Rockwell - the reigning chief Austrian economic academic
in North America - states,
And just as economic structures are best managed by property owners and
traders, the entire society contains within itself the capacity for self-management.
Any attempt to thwart its workings through the coercion of the state can
only create distortions and reduce the wealth of all.
Rockwell's words, which mirror or embody the wisdom of Mises, go on to articulate,
Anyone familiar with current economics texts and journals knows that this
is not the view that they promote. They are still stuck in an era where bureaucrats
imagined themselves as smarter than the rest of us, where central bankers
believed that they could end the business cycle and inflate just enough to
cause growth but not ignite inflation, where antitrust experts knew just
how big businesses should be.
Before anyone dismisses these words as "unimportant meanderings" by academics
for academia, you'd be well served to consider,
The most common misunderstanding about economics is that it is only about
money and commerce. The next step is easy: I care about more than money,
and so should everyone, so let's leave economics to stock jobbers and money
managers and otherwise dispense with its teachings. This is a fateful error,
because, as Mises says, economics concerns everyone and everything. It is
the very pith of civilization.
So there you have it folks, in three short, very succinct stanzas - in true
Austrian form - Rockwell - consciously or not - has dissected, analyzed and
laid bare the essence of the Greenspan Era as chairman of the Federal Reserve.
This is a mess which needs to be sorted out.
Time Is Of The Essence
The clock is ticking folks. Next month, the Federal Reserve is due to discontinue
reporting M3 money supply [and related] statistics. They would have us believe
that it's their intention to save us a few nickels. Many in the mainstream
are as reluctant to see this ruse as they were to recognize gold rigging or
corrupted inflation data.
Oil is also slated to begin trading for Petro-Euros next month too. Many pundits
feel that this is a non issue as well. I beg to differ.
I view both of these near term events as "hair pin" corners on a treacherous
road - both great candidates for an accident when piloting an un-roadworthy
car. If you think not - perhaps you should first ask the folks at GM or Ford
- then give it a second thought.
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