www.armstrongeconomics.com
QUESTION:
Mr. Armstrong, the pegs are breaking everywhere. It appears that what
you have warned about is unfolding right on time. The emerging markets
seem to have a choice. If they do not float they will end up with the
same crisis as in 1997.
China seems to react quickly to their numbers
showing their economy is slowing down by more than 8%. Will they too
eventually float?
ANSWER:
The
Kazakhstan national currency, the tenge, dropped 23% on Thursday,
following the government’s decision to allow a freely floating exchange
rate. We are seeing the Russian rouble and Mexico tax a hit as well.
Fixing currencies means the government must take on all sellers. That is
a guaranteed trade. They always fail.
China will eventually have to allow the reminbi float. There is no
choice in that matter if they (1) want to avoid being accused of
engaging in a currency war, and (2) they want to make the renminbi a
world currency. That is the end game.
This is pushing the dollar higher. So why is gold rising? They are
attributing this to the dovish Federal Reserve minutes and as sliding
global stock markets increased the metal’s safe-haven appeal. But that
is all nonsense. This is what I mean about fundamentals. They select
what they need to fit the move. Why is gold rising with a rising dollar?
Eventually, when the cycle shifts, gold will rise with stocks and with
the dollar. It is not much of a short-term safe-haven when it pays no
interest. The only thing that will create inflation is rising interest
rates for that will decouple the world economy. The Fed is totally
trapped and we have a massive pension fund crisis on the horizon. Gold
is doing what our model projected and it is a short-cover rally for the
near-term. When we elected the monthly bearish reversal of 1155 by some
$60+ away, you typically rally back to retest that number before
proceeding. I have stated that countless times. It is just the way
markets move. At the Movie showing on August 1st, I answered questions
how it was good news to see articles calling gold the “pet rock” from
the WSJ there and the computer issuing a buy signal. That was perfect
timing.
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