As stated several times in the past there is a breaking point between how low the dollar can go before it will negatively start impacting the market. As my kids ask all the time, are we there yet? I think we are close, very close. As the dollar closes in on that 75 handle and the EUR/USD crosses the 1.50 mark it is becoming a major problem.
Why? A cheap dollar is great, in the short run, for international earnings, i.e. see Intel and Google’s positive FX results. However, long-term it is horrible for the US because it boosts productivity on false pretenses. Sure, our trade deficit decreases, but did it really? No, it did not. It also increases energy costs which is a huge problem when we have wage deflation and 10% unemployment. I believe that the administration’s goal was to devalue the dollar to boost manufacturing, but like all plans there are unintended consequences and those consequences are real and devastating to the people.
In effect, the devaluation process will wipe out the middle class and the Fed will certainly lose control over the process. Also, what does it matter if companies have record profits if the value of the currency is worthless? That is the potential problem we are facing right now. If the USD breaks below the 71 handle there is no bottom, none. Computers will then take over and without severe intervention then we are in big trouble. Unfortunately intervention means the printing of more money which means a weaker currency, see the problem?
The Chinese would help because they hold dollars? Oh yeah, why? Their currency is pegged to the USD so if the USD is devalued then their currency is cheaper to making their products cheaper to their largest client, Europe. So, why would they intervene? They would not. Perhaps Japan might, but I would not hold my breath they got their own problems. Your only hope is Korea and other smaller Asian countries and they do not have the buying power to stop it, they already tried to intervene a week or so ago and it did nothing. Getting back to China, they also hold large quantities of gold and other commodities, so they are hedged they really don’t care, I don’t think anyhow.
With that said, the Dow was up and then the dollar got pounded and we are seeing a down trend as that happened. We are at the point where the value of the dollar matters and that is a very good thing, finally. While I have done very well with gold and other metals, I care about the dollar’s value and so should you because a 60% rally means nothing if the value of those dollars is reduced by roughly the same real return. Right now I believe a move in either direction is bearish for stocks, but especially a lower dollar as it moves energy higher.
There is no question that the cheap dollar has had its benefits for the US in the short-term. It has propelled earnings higher for most firms who deal internationally, narrowed the trade deficit and pushed stocks higher at the expense of our buying power. It has also pushed oil and commodity prices, mainly gold and other metals higher, as well as the dollar continues to touch new 52 week lows.
There is a point where the cheap dollar begins to lose its appeal and begins to concern traders and we have to wonder if we are there yet. After we breached the 76 level on the DXY I actually expected to see a rebound in the greenback simply because it is such a crowded trade and other countries have also printed vast amounts of their currencies as well. However, this seems to not be happening and we are at the point where the 75 handle is in jeopardy of being breached.
Frankly, at this rate we are heading right to the 2008 lows of the 71-72 levels and there is not much there to stop it from going lower. All I have to say is if you thought $147 barrel oil was bad, try $200 or more a barrel. Yes, it could get that bad and food prices could go up as well, even though we technically have deflation energy prices would and could create inflation. This would be catastrophic considering we have massive wage deflation and a huge unemployment problem right now. I am inclined to believe that the treasury or the Fed would intervene if we breached those levels, but my faith is not strong and given the trading programs and deep pockets of the banks, ironically, because of the Fed it could become a crisis.
The odds are against this happening, but it does exist. If this does happen it would also not be good for stocks as there is a difference between cheap money and worthless money. It is not like I am the first to warn of such a problem, Jim Rodgers warned of this type of currency crisis in the recent past and thought it could be either the USD or the Sterling, since we both started down the same destructive paths. I will say that I believe the next 2 weeks will be critical for the greenback and everyone should keep an eye on it for an indication of its direction. A steep move in either direction would mean a selloff in equities.
A new low was made on the DXY today, which should make you very concerned about the stability of our currency as we enter a new paradigm of inflation. While we do not have actual money velocity inflation we do have devaluation of our currency which is unsettling to say the least. What is perplexing is the fact that the dollar is way off today, stocks are up and gold is flat to down, what gives?
Here is an honest answer, I don’t know. I could give into the conspiracy theories which makes sense on such days when we have such a steep decline in the greenback and no movement in gold. On the other hand I could accept the esteemed economists view that gold moved too far too fast with no inflation, but why would that explanation of too far too fast work for gold, but not stocks? So, I give in to no one and accept the fact that someone is just shorting gold today and running into buyers causing a flat market.
However, deep down inside I have a sneaking suspicion that the conspiracy folks are probably right. The only reason I would ever concede this is because the inflation aspect of gold is one part of the argument to own it, the other part is currency devaluation. Plus, who doesn’t like a good conspiracy theory? Gold should be up $20 today, but I digress.
I have been reading this all over the internet over the past couple of days mostly from folks who receive the Webbot Prediction alert, or whatever it is called. Essentially, this program scans the internet for predictions of the future based on some algorithmic method. It was first developed in the 1990’s to find hot stocks, but then was used for such useful things as finding out the end of the world.
Now, do I believe such predictions? No. Basically, the creator even says its accuracy is as about as good as flipping a coin, so I guess we are all just as good as this multimillion dollar program if we just have a mere quarter in our pocket. Could something happen on October 25, 2009? Sure, who knows. Certainly the news today is not encouraging and the DXY is in dangerous territory again, but a complete collapse is not really likely in the near-term. There is simply too much liquidity in the market right now.
However, the value of that liquidity is a completely different question and issue. The value of the USD can fall to zero in one tick, we know that to be a fact, but even that is unlikely. As stated before, I believe we are in more danger of a bank run than a collapse of the currency in the near-term, but even that seems to have sorted itself out. In fact, what has saved all the currencies of the world, including the USD, is the fact that they all printed their way out of this mess almost equally debasing their own currencies. Even though that is a true statement it is also true that the US is definitely guilty of printing more money than most other countries and it is also true that we have poor leadership and dismal fiscal policies which is why the USD is the poster child of a weak currency.
Super power or not, we are in the last throws of glory days thanks to decades of selfishness and political indifference to fiscal sensibility. You cannot borrow and spend your way to prosperity, regardless of what Ben Bernanke, Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi and Obama thinks. This means that we will eventually suffer the decay of currency collapse, perhaps “soon” and that depends on your definition of soon, but it is unlikely on October 25, 2009.
I would encourage you to be prepared for currency devaluation, because we are experiencing it now in a very small way, by investing in hard assets such as gold, silver, palladium, and platinum. I believe that silver and palladium represent the best value at this time, silver is at $17 when gold just made a fresh high, the last time gold was at $1030 silver was at $20/oz. Palladium could easily be trading higher given the green push we are in and the rarity of the metal. Either way, if you won it and things do get worse and the headlines are true, you will have your wealth preserved and protected.
Everyone is talking about gold over the past 24 hours mostly because it went parabolic today. Those who follow me know that I am a big gold fan, but we are seeing many others jumping onto the bandwagon about the yellow metal. The big question is why is it having these giant leaps and will it continue.
I believe you are seeing gold increase because of economic uncertainty and the fact that it has strong fundamentals right now. I am not sure if it will break above the $1,000 mark and hold, it has always sold off when it reaches this area. However, based on the action we are seeing I do believe now is the time it will break and hold that threshold. I believe that China is the driving factor behind the sharp increase lately as they diversify their holdings and are hedging their dollar assets.
Another rumor, strictly a rumor from where I stand, is that the Chinese will revalue their currency and perhaps peg it to the Euro as the EU is now China’s largest trade partner. People cite the movement in the CNY for the latest rumor, but I do not know if that is really going to happen. I do think it could happen, but who really knows, rumors are just rumors. If this did happen then gold would go parabolic overnight and the dollar would take a bath, but I do not foresee this happening. Regardless, what we do know is that if you owned gold for some time you have done very well.
I think what we are seeing is a lot of short covering and the Chinese middle class stepping up to the plate and buying gold. All throughout history China and India have been huge fans of gold and many believe it brings luck, but more importantly they see it as money. Whether it brings luck or not, who knows, but what we do know is that the population of both China and India could easily suck up existing supplies if they are indeed buying the metal.
Surprisingly we saw gold and silver hold up very well in the face of a strengthening dollar, which is unusual, a few days ago. Usually when the dollar increases all precious metals take a nice nose dive, but not lately, although the strength in the dollar is not very impressive to say the least. I think that people are moving towards gold as a safe haven as they realize that gold has maintained its value this year and that the crisis is still not over yet. Having gold during uncertain economic times has always been a good bet and that, in my opinion, is what we are seeing.
In the recent past I said I liked gold and recommended picking it up under $960 an ounce. It did go below that mark so I hope people did buy it, but I am not so wild about buying it after such a sharp move upwards today. I think we will see a selloff tomorrow for those taking profits and after the selloff I would then consider buying it, no specific price target, but I would dollar cost average in. While I am bullish on gold, I am more bullish about silver.
Traditionally the gold to silver ration, GSR, has been tighter than it is right now. From 1792-2002 the GSR has a mean of 31, 31 ounces of silver to 1 ounce of gold, but currently we have a GSR of 63. That means that silver just about half the price it should be according to the traditional GSR. If the GSR returns to its traditional average silver should be trading at about $31.40 an ounce, double its closing price. To me that looks very bullish especially because the fundamentals are there. All the easy silver has been mined and we do not recycle it while every piece of electronics you have contain silver in order to make them work.
My point is, yes buy gold in a cautious manner, but also buy silver as you will get more bang for your buck. Essentially, silver can double in price when gold may only go up a few percentage points. It is also about diversification and if you buy precious metals then you need to diversify between them. I am currently a buyer of all precious metals in this order; palladium, silver, gold and platinum. While gold usually gets the spot light, silver and palladium usually get ignored which makes them a good buy as their prices will follow the majors, gold and platinum.