Don't Catch Recovery Fever
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Trade
Rains on the Jobs Parade
Gold has been
holding steady in the the $1,600-$1,800 band since early October.
This could be attributed to consolidation after last summer's historic
run up to $1,895, but I think this wait-and-see attitude reflects
current market sentiment toward the US dollar.
In fact, the
first few days of April have seen a sharp dollar rally and decline
in gold. This is rooted in deflated expectations of a third round
of Quantitative Easing (QE3) after the most recent Fed Open Market
Committee (FOMC) meeting. Once again, the markets are responding
to the headlines while losing sight of the fundamentals.
This is especially
peculiar because the Fed did not explicitly take QE3 off the table.
In fact, according to the minutes, if the recovery falters or if
inflation is too low, the Fed is already prepared to launch QE3.
While there is not much chance of low inflation, I'll explain below
why the recovery is not only going to falter it's going to
evaporate like the mirage that it is!
Trade Deficits
The Obama Administration
is touting recent job growth, and while this is a pleasant story
to hear in an era of massive unemployment, it disintegrates when
put in context. The 227,000 jobs gained which merely kept
the unemployment rate steady at 8.3% were counterbalanced
by a much worse trade deficit tally: $52.4 billion, the highest
level since just before '08 crash.
The trade deficit
is a real measure of whether our jobs are producing enough wealth
to pay for our consumption. If we were adding productive jobs, I
would expect the deficit to be shrinking. A look at the data shows
that employment increased by only 16% in the primary and secondary
sectors, where we need them the most. The majority of new jobs are
still inflated sectors like healthcare (26%), temp work (20%), hospitality
(19%), and consulting (16%), which will disappear as fast as they
appeared when the bubble collapses. This is what we saw in finance
and real estate when the housing bubble burst in '08.
Imagine the
trade deficit is like a corporate balance sheet. You hire a bunch
of new employees for your company, but instead of making bigger
profits, you find yourself losing even more money than when you
started. Are you going to hold on to those people?
Stress Tests
While President
Obama is focused on jobs, the Fed has been promoting a recent round
of "stress tests" that show the financial system to be
in good shape. Unfortunately, yet again, the headlines are not what
they seem.
The recent
tests were designed to measure big banks' ability to survive another
significant drop in housing and stock prices; but those bubbles
have already largely popped. What the tests failed to account for
is what I consider the most likely scenario: rapidly rising interest
rates amidst a dollar crisis.
Interest rates
are the real risk. I think the Fed knew the banks would fail this
test, so they simply ignored it. It wouldn't be the first time the
Fed has turned a blind eye to a bubble market. For years, Chairman
Bernanke and other Fed officials denied the housing bubble existed;
and as late as 2008, well after it popped, they assured us the damage
would be contained.
Supporters
say the Fed knowingly didn't account for interest rates because
the central bank has complete control over them. Many in Washington
and on Wall Street honestly believe that the Fed can continue to
print money to buy Treasuries without increasing inflation. A scenario
in which the Fed is forced to choose between US government bankruptcy
and US dollar collapse seems impossible.
In fact, higher
interest rates are not only possible, but probable. The stress tests
assume long-term Treasury note yields stay under 1.8%; but that
figure is the current six-month low on the 10-year, which is already
dragging along its historical floor. As I write, yields are already
up to 2.2%. The post-war average is about 5.2% high enough
to crater today's banking system.
Remember, the
rate needed to break the back of inflation in 1981 was a whopping
20%. At that level, there wouldn't be federal tax money left for
the military, Medicare, Social Security, or even law enforcement
it would all be going to interest payments.
Even now, interest
rates are a complete farce. In 2011, the Fed purchased 61% of new
Treasury debt, compared to virtually none before the financial crisis
started. This shows that at current rates, demand for US debt is
already drying up.
Extended
Interest Rates Pledge
It should be
no surprise, then, that the Fed has paradoxically celebrated economic
recovery while pledging to keep interest rates near zero through
2014.
First, even
with an economic recovery, these low rates will continue to drive
precious metals higher. Anyone who says this "recovery"
will sink the gold market is misunderstanding what drives the gold
prices inflation.
Second, the
Fed wouldn't be keeping rates so low if the recovery were genuine.
If I say to you, "Yes, you can now ride a bike," but I
refuse to take off the training wheels, would you believe me?
The truth is
that Bernanke knows the recovery is phony and is using inflation
to mask it. This bodes doubly well for gold.
CPI
Another fever
notion is that inflation isn't really a threat, no matter what the
Fed does. This is borne of the belief that "deflationary forces"
are so strong that no amount of printing will overcome them. Core
CPI figures are cited as proof.
Last quarter,
Core CPI was up only .01% in February (the latest figure). This
sounds low until you add in food and fuel then it jumps to
.04%, yielding an annualized figure of over 5%. This is well above
the Fed's self-proclaimed target of 2% per annum, yet we hear no
explanation or apology.
The reality
is even worse, as the true rate of inflation as calculated by independent
observers is closer to 10%. This means you can expect gold to rise
10% per year just to maintain your purchasing power.
Consider the
price of gas which is almost $4 a gallon. President Obama is pledging
to release oil from the strategic reserves to keep the price down
but it's not a supply problem. Those reserves are for a short-term
crisis that disrupts the oil supply, but there is no disruption
oil is flowing. Oil production in the US is the highest it
has been since 1993 and consumption is down below '97 levels due
to the recession. After all, there's no reason to buy gas to commute
if you're unemployed. The problem is inflation making the money
we use to buy gas worthless.
Proof? A couple
of pre-'65 silver dimes can still buy you a gallon of gas, while
a couple of post-'65 base metal dimes won't even buy you a pack
of gum in the convenience store.
The dollar
has lost so much value that the government actually loses money
on every penny it creates. Not because they're made of copper, that
became too expensive long ago. They're actually made of zinc
a metal so cheap it's priced by the metric ton and they're
still too expensive.
So, where's
the inflation? Everywhere!
Recovery
Fever Will Be Broken
It's becoming
very easy for a skeptical observer to poke through the veil of recovery.
Unfortunately, most market participants still seem to hang on Uncle
Sam's every word. This is a great danger for our economy and a great
opportunity for the wise investor.
When an asset
like gold moves sideways for a while, even those with good instincts
get complacent. They start to view this as the "price level"
rather than an extended dip below true valuation.
Recovery fever
will wear off as Washington is forced to release propaganda that
is more and more incongruous with facts on the ground. And gold
will resume its climb in earnest.
April
9, 2012
Peter
Schiff CEO of Euro Pacific
Precious Metals, a gold and silver dealer selling reputable,
well-known bullion coins and bars at competitive prices. He is author
of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Precious
Metals
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