Deflation could be the biggest threat to the economy, but gold — usually an inflation
hedge — is reaching new highs. That’s because smart investors aren’t
playing the inflation trade, they’re buying currency crisis insurance.
With the amount being spent by the public sector, with the huge
amounts of leverage still in the system, there’s a palpable fear that
America won’t be able to meet its obligations. Relative to GDP, the amount we’re borrowing to finance deficits makes us look irresponsible.
When such economies hit a wall, investors make a run on the currency,
typically moving their assets to a stronger currency, like the dollar.
But this time the problem is the dollar, along with other leading paper currencies, all of which are threatened by profligate fiscal and monetary policies. So some investors want out of the system entirely. Gold, as my colleague Neil Collins noted earlier, is a way to do that.
The gold market
is small enough that a decision by a handful of money managers to
increase their asset allocation from, say, zero to 5 percent can move
the market. All the gold ever mined would fit aboard an oil tanker; its
total weight of 125,000 tons amounts to a few hours’ output for the U.S.
steel industry.
But economists tell us that inflation isn’t a risk now. Are they wrong? No and yes.
The conventional way economists view inflation is to look at things
like “output gaps.” When the economy falls below a level of output it
previously achieved, it is said to have unemployed resources. If you
think of inflation as workers demanding and getting higher wages, which
leads to higher prices for the goods and services they produce, then
inflation isn’t a threat.
So economists tell us more borrowing and money printing won’t be inflationary as long as people are unemployed.
One problem: Their models ignore the fact that peak output was
artificially inflated by a credit binge. Borrowing more to sustain an
unsustainable level of spending borders on insanity, yet that’s
precisely what such economic models tell us we need to do.
There’s an extra variable these models don’t account for — the Chinese and all major lenders to the United States.
They don’t much care if our employment rate is below desirable levels.
At a certain point, they may recognize that the United States is acting
like a banana republic and choose to stop lending.
When that happens, we might see a “sudden stop” event: Capital
inflows to the private and public sector cease as everyone races to get
out of dollars.
Eric Sprott, CEO of Sprott Asset Management has $4.5 billion under
management, $2 billion of which is invested in physical bullion — silver
and gold — stored at banks in Canada. Another large chunk is invested
in gold stocks.
He views gold as an insurance policy against both inflation and deflation. Central bank quantitative easing policies mean “we’re printing paper currency like crazy,” so he doubts the long-run value of fiat currencies.
On the flip side, if central banks
pull back, you could enter a deflationary spiral, essentially a banking
collapse, in which case “your deposits wouldn’t be returned to you.
Better to have physical gold in your control.”
Most economists and investors still labor under the illusion that
there’s a way out of debt that doesn’t involve a drastic reduction in
the paper value of wealth. Smart investors aren’t so sure and want at
least a portion of their assets out of the financial system.
A dollar crisis isn’t necessarily coming tomorrow, so there’s no
guarantee gold’s price will keep going higher. Still, gold is a decent
insurance policy against economic Armageddon.