Riding Into the Sunset or a Brick Wall?
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
Fed Plays All Its Cards
A month ago, I
presented the case for why Fed Chairman Bernanke would have strong
motivation to launch another round of quantitative easing (QE) before
the election. In short, it would save him his job. Now, I didn't
predict with certainty that he would do so – only the few men at
the FOMC knew that for sure – but it seemed likely. Shortly thereafter,
Bernanke not only announced more stimulus, but promised to keep
it flowing to the tune of an additional $40 billion a month until
conditions improve. As I had written, this is essentially the election
platform of the Obama-Bernanke ticket: we will keep the party going
indefinitely.
Unfortunately,
though these are two powerful men, they are not above the law of
economics. While critics have dubbed this program "QEternity" or
"QE-Infinity", it will end much before that. We are witnessing a
massive bubble in US government debt, and we've reached the point
where no one in charge believes it will ever end – an excellent
contra-indicator.
Rather than
going on for eternity, this third round of QE is only hastening
the day when there is a flight of confidence from the dollar and
US Treasuries. This will cause a sharp rise in market interest rates
and surging consumer prices across America. If you think $4 a gallon
gas is bad, wait till you see it going up by 25¢ or more per week.
At this point,
the Fed Chairman will have a choice to make: keep printing, which
will push the dollar into uncontrollable hyperinflation, or begin
tightening, which will bankrupt the US government and banking system.
I have long
written about this Sophie's choice confronting the Fed, but so far
the printing option has been too easy. With the world only slowly
abandoning the dollar as the reserve currency and the euro crisis
offering a distraction, the Fed has been able to more than double
the money supply without US consumers seeing out-of-control price
hikes at the store. Not that there hasn't been inflation – look
at housing, gas, or the stock market – but it hasn't reached crisis
proportions. When prices start rising fast enough for the average
person to figure out he's being screwed, then there will be riots
in the streets.
The good news
for precious metals investors is that either scenario is
bullish for gold and silver.
If the Fed
pushes this insanity to the point of hyperinflation, precious metals
will quickly be seen as a form of money that can purchase the same
amount of goods week-after-week, month-after-month.
If there is
tightening, prices might stabilize, but the federal government and
its banking cartel will likely go bankrupt in tandem. That means
no bailout money will be forthcoming, no FDIC insurance can be paid,
and banks may go on holiday for lack of reserves. This is what happened
in Iceland in 2008, when its big banks had debts 10X the size of
the country's GDP. There was no way for the government to offer
a bailout, so the whole edifice came crashing down. While the 320
thousand citizens of Iceland didn't make a big dent in the currency
markets during this transition, you better bet the 320 million citizens
of the United States will.
As we've seen
in cases like Argentina's in the '90s and Hungary's in the '40s,
when the banking system freezes, hard assets trade at a premium.
Gold and silver coins may be at a disadvantage in terms of convenience
in an era of credit cards and Paypal, but what happens when those
funds are no longer available? Already, regulations and lower profit
margins have driven banks to add fees to debit card transactions.
Not to mention that every digital transaction is traceable by the
tax authorities.
If everyone
starts to carry rolls of cash everywhere, it's not a big leap to
carry coins. A silver coin the size of a dime is currently worth
about $3.50. Two could buy you lunch.
While I believe
a tightening and national default would put the US on the road to
recovery, the transition period will be messy. Bread lines, rampant
foreclosures, and a spike in crime are likely results. In this situation,
gold and silver may be the only things people can count on. In fact,
they are likely to not only hold their value, but dramatically appreciate
as millions of people flood the metals market and the dollar economy
deleverages. In plain English: maybe it will only take one of those
dime-sized silver coins to buy lunch. Maybe that coin will buy lunch
for you and a friend.
Bernanke and
his Wall Street supporters see cheap money until the horizon – but
that horizon is really a painted brick wall. So it's not QE-Infinity,
it's QE until the Fed either recognizes the brick wall and slams
on the brakes, or doesn't and crashes into it. Either way, the only
way to get off this locomotive is to invest in hard assets.
October
10, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and 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 The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
The
Best of Peter Schiff
|