An
eye-opening interview with renowned speculator Doug Casey, conducted
by Karen Roche and JT Long of The Gold Report. Doug explains why
fiat currencies around the world are destined for collapse
and what investors can, and should, do to protect themselves.
If dollar-dumping
turns from a trickle into a flood, look out. Exploding prices
(aka exorbitant inflation) resulting from the devaluation of the
dollar will compound the problems we saw in 20072009. Catastrophe
will come when everybody realizes that the dollar is an "IOU
nothing." That's the downside in the decade(s) ahead, according
to Casey
Research Chairman Doug Casey. But an optimist at heart, in
this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, Doug also
identifies some reasons to be hopeful.
The Gold
Report: You've been talking about two ticking time bombs.
One is the trillions of dollars owned outside the U.S. that investors
could dump if they lose confidence. And the other is the trillions
of dollars within the U.S. that were created to paper over the
crisis that started in 2007. Are these really explosive circumstances
that will bring catastrophic results? Or will it just result in
a huge, but manageable, hangover?
Doug Casey:
Both, but in sequence. One thing that's for sure is that although
the epicenter of this crisis will be the U.S., it's going to have
truly worldwide effects. The U.S. dollar is the de jure national
currency of at least three other countries, and the de facto national
currency of about 50 others. The main U.S. export for many years
has been paper dollars; in exchange, the nice foreigners send
us Mercedes cars, Sony electronics, cocaine, coffee and
about everything you see on Walmart shelves. It has been a one-way
street for several decades, a free ride but the party's
over.
Nobody knows
the numbers for sure, but foreign central banks, and individuals
outside the U.S., own U.S. dollars to the tune of something like
$6 or $7 trillion. Especially during the recent crisis, the Fed
created trillions more dollars to bail out the big financial institutions.
At some point, foreign dollar holders will start dumping them;
they are starting to realize this is like a game of Old Maid,
with the dollar being the Old Maid card. I don't know what will
set it off, but the markets are already very nervous about it.
This nervousness is demonstrated in gold having hit $1,900 an
ounce, copper at all-time highs, oil at $100 a barrel the
boom in commodity prices.
Some countries
are already trying to get out of dollars, but it could become
a panic if the selling goes from a trickle to a flood. So, yes,
it's a time bomb waiting to go off, or maybe a landmine waiting
to be stepped on. If a theatre catches fire and one person runs
out, soon everybody rushes toward the door and they all get trampled.
It's a very serious situation.
TGR:
If panic erupts on the U.S. dollar, would products manufactured
in the U.S. become super-cheap or super-expensive?
DC:
They would become super-cheap. Everybody says that devaluing the
dollar will stimulate U.S. industry because the products will
become cheaper and foreigners will buy them. This is a huge canard
everybody repeats and nobody thinks about. Yes, it is true for
a while, but if devaluation were the key to prosperity, Zimbabwe
should be the most prosperous country in the world as it has already
collapsed its currency.
A strong
currency is essential for a strong economy. Sure, a strong currency
can hurt exporters for a while. But, a strong currency encourages
manufacturers to invest in technology, and become more efficient.
It rewards savings and results in the growth of capital that's
critical for prosperity. A strong currency allows businessmen
to buy foreign companies and technologies at bargain prices. It
results in a high standard of living for the country, and yields
social stability as a bonus. The idea that decreasing the value
of currency to stimulate exports is a short-lived, stupid and
counterproductive solution to the problem. People seem to forget
that while the German currency was rising about sixfold from its
level of 1971, and the Japanese yen about fourfold, those countries
became the world's greatest export economies. It didn't happen
despite a strong currency, but in large measure because of it.
TGR:
Given that the U.S. is the world's biggest consuming nation, wouldn't
fleeing the dollar create a big consumer vacuum in the international
community? Doesn't the rest of the world want to keep up the high
level of exports to these U.S. consumers?
DC:
That's exactly why the U.S. is in such trouble; it's idiotically
focused on consumption, while only production can create prosperity.
The world doesn't need to stimulate consumption. This is another
canard, because everybody has an infinite desire for goods and
services. I know for myself, I'd like not just a car, but 10 Ferraris,
a couple of Gulfstreams and 10 houses around the world. So, by
myself, I have an infinite desire for goods and services. Multiply
that by 7 billion other people. The only way to gratify those
desires is by producing enough to trade with other people to give
you what you want. When so-called "economists" think
the problem is that we don't have enough consumption, that shows
that the profession itself is bankrupt. It's actually quite embarrassing.
TGR:
But other countries currently produce enough of what the U.S.
wants. With U.S. dollars, that trade won't look good on their
side eventually.
DC:
The problem is the U.S. doesn't produce enough in return. The
U.S. has been lucky to have a currency that has, so far, been
accepted by everybody. But when everybody realizes that the dollar
is an "IOU nothing" on the part of a bankrupt government
and a society that doesn't really produce anything anymore, it's
going to create a worldwide catastrophe. Those $7 trillion held
by foreigners are going to become instant hot potatoes.
TGR:
Considering what you said a moment ago, that the world doesn't
need to stimulate consumption, you must find some irony in the
Obama administration's plan to stimulate consumption again in
the U.S. as a way to spur some economic growth.
DC:
I'm afraid that after being counseled by the fools that surround
him, Obama talking about economics is like the blind leading the
doubly dismembered. They want to spend $450 billion trying to
create new jobs but these are government jobs, where you
have people digging holes during the day and filling them up at
night to create the appearance of employment. No government has
any idea what the market really wants and needs. There should
be zero government involvement in this. The government cannot
and should not even try to create jobs. If Obama wants to stimulate
the economy, he can decrease the size of the government. I would
say a 90% reduction would be a good starting figure.
TGR:
But that will create even more unemployment. That's one of the
big concerns. States laying off employees could increase unemployment
even more.
DC:
It is wonderful that states are starting to lay off employees.
Once they lose their state jobs, which suck wealth from taxpayers,
maybe those people can find real, productive jobs providing goods
and services that people actually want and will pay for voluntarily.
So I'd argue that getting rid of state employees is essential
to a sound recovery plan.
TGR:
You warned early on in the 20082009 economic crisis that
it would really be more of a hurricane. In the last year or so,
we've been in the eye of the hurricane and there's more turmoil
to come. Will the other side of the storm be worse than the first?
And given the recent economic news, do you think we have moved
out of that eye?
DC:
Yes, I think we are moving out of the eye and going into the other
side of the storm. This storm will be much more severe because
we haven't solved any of the problems that caused the hurricane
in the first place. The fact that governments all over the world
have created trillions of currency units has only aggravated those
problems. Now, I expect exploding prices to compound the problems
that we saw back in 2007, 2008 and 2009. That will devastate the
prudent people in society who saved money. They saved it in the
form of currency, and wiping out their savings will be catastrophic.
TGR:
Will this affect only North America and Europe?
DC:
Mostly North America and Europe, but it's going to be very serious
in Japan, too. It could be even more disastrous in China. The
Chinese real estate market bubble is very inflated, driven by
the lending of Chinese banks that won't be able to recover their
loans. They will all go bankrupt, taking out the Chinese populace's
savings with them. At the same time, those who own real estate
will find it worth vastly less than what they paid for it. Those
problems will create social disruptions in China, leading to riots,
perhaps even revolution, and who-knows-what. The fallout is going
to be terrible.
TGR:
Many pundits and economists still project growth in China, albeit
at a lower rate, and anticipate further expansion of the middle
class.
DC:
The 21st century will be the Chinese century, but the distortions
and misallocations of capital that have occurred over the last
30 years notwithstanding the truly phenomenal progress
the country has made are serious and have to be washed
out. I am a huge bull on China for lots of reasons, but I am bullish
for the long run. I think it is going to go through the meat grinder
over the next 10 years. I don't know how it will come out; maybe
China will break up into five or six different countries. Actually,
that would be a good thing. Most of the world's nation-states
are artificially constructed and too big to be manageable as political
entities.
TGR:
Your outlook on China fits right in with something you've been
saying for years about this being the "Greater Depression,"
which is also the topic of your upcoming presentation at the sold-out
Casey Research/Sprott Inc. "When Money Dies" summit
next month in Phoenix. Your opening general session talk is entitled,
"The Greater Depression Is Now." We are now four years
into it, based on your 2007 start date.
DC:
Actually, depending on how long a historical scale you look at,
you could say that, for the working class in the U.S. anyway,
the depression started in the early 1970s. After inflation, after
taxes, their take-home pay hasn't risen in real terms for 40 years.
But the definition of a depression that I use is "a period
of time during which most people's standard of living drops significantly."
Net savings
shows that you're living within your means and putting aside capital
for the future. In the U.S., people have been living above their
means for many years that is what debt is all about. Debt
means that you are borrowing against future production, which
is exactly what the U.S. has been doing.
TGR:
So, how long will this Greater Depression last?
DC:
It doesn't have to last long at all. It could be quite brief if
the U.S. government, which is basically the root cause, retrenches
vastly in size and defaults on the national debt, which is essentially
an enormous mortgage, an albatross around the neck of the next
several generations of Americans. The debt will be defaulted on
one way or another, almost certainly through inflation. I simply
advocate an honest, overt default; that would serve to punish
those who, by lending to the government, have financed its depredations.
Distortions and misallocations of capital that have been cranked
into the economy for many years need to be liquidated. It could
be unpleasant but brief. The government is likely to do just the
opposite, however. It will try to prop it up further and make
it worse compounding the problem by expanding the wars.
So, it could last a very long time. In that sense, I'm not optimistic
at all. I think there is little cause for optimism.
On the other
hand, I'm generally optimistic for the future. There are only
two causes for optimism. First, smart individuals all over the
world continue, as individuals, to produce more than they consume
and try to save the difference. That will build capital, which
is of critical importance. They should just save by holding paper
currency. Second, expanding and compounding technology will increase
the standard of living. Remember that there are more scientists
and engineers alive today than have lived in all previous history
combined. Those two factors countervail the government stupidity
around us. Whether they will be overwhelmed and washed away by
a tsunami of statism and collectivism, I don't know.
TGR:
You say that the U.S. government is the root cause of this problem.
Isn't that putting too much blame for a worldwide problem on one
nation?
DC:
The institution of government itself is the problem, and the problem
is metastasizing like a cancer all over the world. But, sad to
say, the U.S. is the most serious offender because it is currently
both the most powerful and the most aggressive nation-state. It
has been greatly abetted by the fact that the U.S. currency has
been accepted globally. The U.S. dollar is, in effect, the reserve
that backs all the other currencies in the world. That is why
the U.S. government has been the most destructive from an economic
point of view. Furthermore, military spending which in
the U.S. equals that of all the other militaries in the world
combined is purely destructive. It serves no useful economic
purpose at all. The military is no longer "defending"
anything least of all liberty. It's actively creating enemies
and provoking conflict. So, yes, I think the U.S. government is
actually the most dangerous force roaming the world today.
TGR:
Do you see that changing after the next election?
DC:
No. I think the chances of Obama being reelected are high, simply
because more than half of Americans are big net recipients of
state largesse. The U.S. has turned into a larger version of Argentina
politically, where the electorate is effectively bribed to vote
for the biggest thief. It is likely to turn out much worse than
Argentina, however. Unlike the Argentines, the U.S. government
is fairly efficient. And, unlike Argentina, the U.S. is rapidly
turning into a police state.
Electing
a Republican might be even worse, though. With the exception of
Ron Paul and Gary Johnson, the potential Republican candidates
absolutely make my skin crawl. So, no, there is no help on the
horizon. The U.S. government is spending about $1.5 trillion more
this year than it takes in, and it is not going to cut that. In
fact, foolish spending to bail things out will increase. And,
worse than that, the Fed has artificially suppressed interest
rates for three years. Interest accounts for roughly 2% of $15
trillion official national debt, or $300 billion per year. As
interest rates inevitably rise, that interest amount will grow.
At 12% and I'm afraid they'll have to go even higher than
that it would add another $1.5 trillion just in interest
payments.
I absolutely
see no way out without a collapse of the U.S. currency and a total
reordering of the U.S. economy.
TGR:
When Money Dies, the title of your summit, implies some return
to a gold standard. How do you see that playing out?
DC:
Nothing is certain, but when the dollar disappears and
it's going to reach its intrinsic value soon what are people
going to use as money? Will we gin up another fiat currency like
the euro? The euro is likely to fail before the dollar. My suspicion
is that people will want to go back to gold. It's not because
gold is anything magical, but simply the one of the 92 naturally
occurring elements that for the same reasons that make
aluminum good for planes and iron good for steel girders
is most useful as money. In fact, the reason that gold has risen
as high as it has is that the central banks of third-world countries
places that don't have large gold reserves, such as China,
India, Korea, Russia, even Mexico have been buying the
stuff in size.
TGR:
The concept of going to a gold standard seems impossible in the
sense that there is only so much gold above ground 6 billion
ounces? Maybe $11 trillion worth? But it's only a fraction of
the U.S. GDP. Even with gold at $2,000 an ounce, that leaves an
immense gap. In that scenario, how do you convert to a gold standard?
DC:
In terms of today's dollars, gold should probably be a lot higher
than it is. I don't know what the number will be, because a lot
of those dollars will disappear in bankruptcies; they will dry
up and blow away. It's like a real estate development that was
worth $1 billion on somebody's books; when it fails, that's $1
billion destroyed. It's a question of the battle of inflation
(with the government creating dollars to prop things up) against
deflation (where businesses fail and wipe out dollars). But put
it this way: the U.S. Government reports it owns about 265 million
ounces. Its liabilities to foreigners alone are at least $6 trillion.
If they were to be redeemed for a fixed amount, that would require
roughly $22,000/oz. gold. And that doesn't count dollars in the
U.S. itself.
I'm a bargain
hunter and a bottom fisher, and bought most of my gold at vastly
lower prices. But I think gold is going much higher because most
people still barely even know that the stuff exists. As inflation
picks up, they are going to want to get rid of these dollars
but what other monetary commodity can they turn to? So, gold is
going higher. I'm still accumulating gold.
TGR:
You said that the storm as we emerge from the eye of the hurricane
will be worse than it was on the other side. If they don't own
gold, how do investors protect themselves?
DC:
It's very hard to be an investor in today's world because an investor
is someone who allocates capital in a way to create new wealth.
That is not easy in today's highly taxed and regulated economy.
It's late in the day, but not too late, to buy gold, silver and
other commodities. Productive assets are good to own. Of course,
the easiest way to buy most productive assets is through the shares
of publicly traded companies, but the stock market is quite overvalued
in my opinion, so that's not the best option right now.
In addition
to trying to build personal holdings of gold and, to a lesser
degree, silver, I think people should learn to be speculators.
This is not to be confused with gamblers, who rely on random chances.
Speculators position themselves to take advantage of politically
caused distortions in the marketplace. In a true free market society,
you would see very few speculators because there would be few
such distortions. But regulations, taxes and currency inflations
are likely to keep markets very volatile. Good speculators will
position themselves to take advantage of bubbles, and identify
bubbles that have been blown to their maximum and are about to
deflate.
Government
actions are going to force people to become speculators, whether
they like it or not. Most won't like it, and very few will be
good at it.
TGR:
What bubbles might speculators look to exploit?
DC:
I'd say the world's biggest bubble is real estate in China, but
real estate bubbles are just starting to deflate elsewhere, too
in Australia and Canada, for example. It's relatively hard
to short real estate, of course. Shorting bank stocks is an indirect
way to play it. I'd say bonds are the short sale of the century.
They're going to be destroyed. Bonds pose a triple threat to capital
because:
- Interest
rates are artificially low, and as interest rates rise
which they must bonds will fall.
- Bonds
are denominated in currencies, and most currencies, let's say
dollars, are going to lose a lot of value.
- The credit
risk of most bonds, certainly those issued by governments, is
high.
On the long
side, mining stocks are very cheap relative to the price of gold
right now. I'd say there's an excellent chance of a bubble being
ignited in gold mining stocks, especially the small ones; in fact,
I'd put my finger on that as likely being the easiest way to make
a killing.
TGR:
Technology was one of the two areas of optimism you mentioned
earlier. Do you see a bubble forming there?
DC:
You have a point, but I'm not sure you can talk about technology
stocks as a whole; technology is too variegated, too vast a field.
Although, I've long been a huge believer in nanotech, which is
likely to change the world as we know it. With gold stocks, however,
you can jump into a discrete universe, that's likely to become
a mania.
TGR:
Thank you for the tips, Doug, and as always, for your thoughtful
insights.
At the sold-out
Casey/Sprott Summit When
Money Dies, more than 20 seasoned investment pros,
economists and freethinkers provided their insights and advice
on the coming currency collapse
and what investors can do
to protect their assets. Listen to the timely investment advice
and specific stock recommendations of North America's top financial
experts from the comfort of your home in 20+ hours of power-packed
audio recordings on CD (or MP3). More
details.
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