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January 01, 2009 Best Quotes of December 2008 |
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Adrian Ash,
Bullion Vault Fact was, however, there was nothing stable or moderate about the 10 years to summer 2007. Joy it may been to live through that phase of history, that final blow-off in the seven-decade bubble of spending and debt that followed the last Great Depression. But "non-inflationary" does not apply - not when you remember that, just like it's evil twin (deflation), inflation in truth refers to a trend in the money supply... a growth in this case, which - if it outpaces production, as the last 10 years so clearly did, winds up in prices. That then requires a deflation to get costs back to even. Unless you play Faustus, repeatedly damned, yet somehow believing that you might yet escape. "The current weakened state of the economy is such that it could not withstand a body blow like a disorderly bankruptcy in the auto industry," said a White House press secretary after the Senate rejected the 'Big Three' bail-out today. "Because Congress failed to act," chips in a Treasury wonk, "we will stand ready to prevent an imminent failure until Congress reconvenes and acts to address the long-term viability of the industry." Never mind how much it costs. This is just money after all. And there's always more to be printed in a world free of gold. Right up until the cost of the wood-pulp outstrips the value of cash, and money reverts to its base purpose once more. Scarce resources made vivid by a rare, precious asset. Adam Hamilton,
Zeal Negative real rates were the monetary foundation of the biggest secular gold bulls in modern history, the 1970s and the 2000s. And just as it took radically high 6%+ real rates to end that 1970s gold bull, this bull isn't likely to end until we see sustained hugely positive real rates as well. In the meantime, gold will continue to thrive on balance despite big pullbacks from time to time driven by capricious sentiment. Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph You cannot drop below zero. So what next if the credit markets refuse to thaw? Yes, Japan visited and survived this policy Hell during its lost decade, but that was a local affair in an otherwise booming global economy. It tells us nothing. This time we are all going down together. There is no deus ex machina to lift us out. Certainly not China, which is the most vulnerable of all. As the risk grows, officials at the highest level of the British Government have begun to circulate a 6-year-old speech by Ben Bernanke -- at the time of its writing, a garrulous kid governor at the US Federal Reserve. Entitled "Deflation: Making Sure It Doesn't Happen Here," it is the manual of guerrilla tactics for defeating slumps by monetary means. "The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost," he said. Critics had great fun with this when Bernanke later became Fed chief. But the speech is best seen as a thought experiment by a Princeton professor thinking aloud during the deflation mini-scare of 2002. His point was that central banks never run out of ammunition. They have an inexhaustible arsenal. The world's fate now hangs on whether he was right (which is probable), or wrong (which is possible). Robert Higgs, Independent Institute In short, given the monetary conditions now prevailing, the greater threat by far is inflation, not deflation. And contrary to what the investment "experts," the politicians, and the mainstream economists believe, inflation is not a benign element in the economy's operation. It is, as it has always been, the most dangerous and destructive form of taxation. James
Howard Kunstler, Kunstler.com President-elect Obama has announced his intention to kick off a massive "stimulation" program when he hits the White House "running" in January. Early indications are that it will be directed at things like highway repair. If so, we will be investing long-term in infrastructure that we probably won't be using the same way in ten years. But I doubt there is any way around it. The American public can't conceive of living any other way except in a car-centered society. Anyway, some parts of our highway-bridge-and-tunnel system are already so decrepit that they pose a menace right now, and the clamour to direct "stimulation" there is already very strong -- backed by all the fraternities of engineers. Stimulus aimed at perpetuating mass motoring will be a tragic waste of our dwindling resources. We'd be better off aiming it at fixing the railroads (especially electrifying them), refitting our harbors with piers and warehouses in preparation to move more stuff by boats, and in repairing the electric grid. Unfortunately, our tendency will be to try to rescue the totemic touchstones of everyday life, things familiar and comfortable, regardless of whether they have a future or not. The ominous forces gathering out there will defeat these efforts and everyday life will reorganize itself some other way consistent with the single greatest trend: the force of contraction. Every sign we see is pointing in that direction, from the inability of the earth's ecology to support more human beings, to the dwindling of mineral and energy resources, to the destruction of farmland, to mischief in the climate. We just don't know how badly things will fall apart in the meantime, or how kind (or cruelly) people will act in the process. The economy we're moving into will have to be one of real work, producing real things of value, at a scale consistent with energy resource reality. I'm convinced that farming will come much closer to the center of economic life, as the death of petro-agribusiness makes food production a matter of life and death in America -- as opposed to the disaster of metabolic entertainment it is now. Reorganizing the landscape itself for this finer-scaled new type of farming is a task fraught with political peril (land ownership questions being historically one of the main reasons that societies fall into revolution). The public is completely unprepared for this kind of change. We still think that "the path to success" is based on getting a college degree certifying people for a lifetime of sitting in an office cubicle. This is so far from the approaching reality that it will be eventually viewed as a sick joke -- like those old 1912 lithographs of mega-cities with Zeppelins plying the air between Everest-size skyscrapers. Greg
McCoach, GoldWorld But there's a problem. A big problem. For the past several weeks, bullion dealers around the world, including myself, have been restricted in how much gold we can order from our distributors. The distributors are allocating gold orders to dealers because the mints have had to significantly cut back on -- and even completely halt -- production of gold bars and coins due to boisterous demand and the shortage of supplies that I just mentioned. As a result, it has become very difficult -- sometimes impossible -- for bullion dealers like AmeriGold to fill all customer orders because of the veracious appetite for gold in the market. In fact, when I receive new inventory, it's out the door the next day. Back in March, when gold prices climbed over $1,000 an ounce, the business was about 70% buyers and 30% sellers. Now, it's 99% buyers and 1% sellers. People are buying whatever is available. Axel
Merk, Merk Funds Doug
Noland, Prudent Bear It is impossible to know how much remains of the Crowded Dollar Bear Unwind. But if this dollar buying hasn't yet about run its course, when it eventually does global markets will again face the specter of massive and seemingly unending dollar liquidity flows. At the end of the day, I expect the dollar to suffer from its relative dismal position with respect to both financial flows and our economy's deep structural maladjustment. Years of egregious Credit and spending excesses have left an economic structure uniquely dependent upon, on the one hand, huge ongoing public sector Credit injunctions and, on the other, huge unending imports. This is a terrible predicament for a currency. Texas Congressman
Ron Paul The irony is that even had the ancient practice of alchemy been successful, and gold was suddenly, magically made abundant, alchemists still would have failed to create real wealth. Creating gold from lead would have cheapened its status to that of rhinestones or cubic zirconia. It is unnatural and dangerous for paper to be considered as precious as a precious metal. Our fiat currency system is crumbling and coming to an end, as all fiat currencies eventually do. Julian Phillips,
Gold/Silver Forecaster Steve Saville,
Speculative Investor By preventing or delaying necessary adjustments and destroying real savings, the government's counter-cyclical economic policies lead to greater imbalances, slower real growth during the next economic upturn, and, quite likely, an even bigger bust in the future. Furthermore, the monetary inflation stemming from the attempts to counteract the bust will eventually cause boom conditions to emerge somewhere in the economy, which, in turn, will promote more mal-investment. But whereas busts are considered bad, inflation-fueled booms -- the natural precursors of busts -- are considered good. Therefore, monetary and fiscal policy will typically be framed with the aim of extending the boom for as long as possible, even though the longer the boom the greater the misallocation of real savings and the more devastating the ensuing bust. The logical consequence of government intervention designed to prolong booms and curtail busts should be a long-term boom-bust cycle with increasingly large oscillations, which is exactly what is occurring (it's nice when the data meshes with the theory). Peter Schiff,
EuroPacific Capital In the end, rather than filling our stockings with Christmas goodies, our foreign creditors will likely substitute lumps of coal. Of course given how high coal prices will ultimately rise as a result of all this inflation, in Christmas Future perhaps our stockings will be stuffed with nothing but our own worthless currency. It might night burn as well as coal, but at least we will have plenty of it. Mike
Shedlock, Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis Christopher
Whalen, Institutional Risk Analyst While we see the turmoil besetting members of the "bubble in trouble" club, we also see the grassroots movement to fence off the problems of high finance moving along nicely below the radar screen. America adapts and learns quickly. We hear from corporate and non-profit treasurers that they are paying stricter attention to asset preservation. They are voting with deposits and direct placements that the volatility and leverage has been trumped by tangible and sustainable value. Just under the skin, America is as alive as ever. BUY GOLD AND SILVER ONLINE AT GOLDMONEY
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John
Rubino John Rubino is author of Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green Tech Boom (Wiley, December 2008), co-author, with GoldMoney's James Turk, of The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday, January 2008), and author of How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003). After earning a Finance MBA from New York University, he spent the 1980s on Wall Street, as a currency trader, equity analyst and junk bond analyst. During the 1990s he was a featured columnist with TheStreet.com and a frequent contributor to Individual Investor, Online Investor, and Consumers Digest, among many other publications. He now writes for CFA Magazine and edits DollarCollapse.com and GreenStockInvesting.com. Copyright © 2006-2009 John Rubino Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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