kingworldnews.com
As
we approach the end of the third week of trading in January, in what
has been an extremely tough environment in the gold and silver markets,
a legend in the business that is connected in China at the highest
levels just predicted that the price of gold will see a staggering 83
percent spike.
Price Of Gold To Surge More Than 86%!
By John Ing, Maison Placements
January 20 (King World News) – The
economic elite exemplified by the Davos participants have done much to
undermine their credibility, suffering from the backlash for
cheerleading the governments’ experimental monetary programs of
quantitative easing, to negative interest rates and of course
globalization which neither lifted the world economies nor provided the
promised jobs. Weathermen had a better batting percentage. To be sure
the rich got richer and the poor, poorer, providing the fodder for
President Trump’s victory. Already chastened for failing to predict the
2008 crash and Trump’s election, they have again misread the tea leaves…
It
is a mistake to dismiss Trump’s missives or tweets as random missteps
which Clinton and Trump’s Republican opponents made consistently. Trump
in hindsight was simply posturing, sometimes testing the waters and
sometimes obscuring his message, leaving him to negotiate on his terms
rather than his opponents’. To be sure governments, pundits and the
populace should be prepared for his “bully pulpit” and not the literal
message itself. Investors would be wise to take a deep Pranayama (yoga)
breath.
The
New Year has brought increased volatility with the low interest rate
environment fading away replaced by the politics of rage, a hard Brexit
and, the Trump trade. But beneath the veneer of Trump optimism lurks
high anxiety about a toxic, divided nation and deepening global concerns
over multi-lateral trade wars with Europe, Middle East and China. The
root causes of the Trump trade are much deeper and, underlying the lofty
market optimism are wider deficits, more government intervention and an
increase in protectionist measures.
Buy On Mystery, Sell on History
In
a classic “buy on mystery, sell on history”, we believe Trump’s
inauguration will turn the “Trump bump into the Trump dump.” Investors
are anxiously anticipating Trump tax cuts and business friendly policies
to spur Trump growth and ultimately more inflation. However, the market
has yet to figure out the consequences of this path to growth,
particularly when debt is so high. The Federal Reserve has already
changed tack with the second of many interest rate increases to come.
Risks
abound. Yet spreads in the bond market have not reflected these risks.
Key European elections are scheduled this year. China may or may not be
in the midst of a currency war that no one wins and the US dollar
strength, while illusory has exacerbated the problems in Europe and
Mexico. Brexit festers away. And the solutions? Not from the economic
elite, to be sure. Nor from the media elite. Voters are right to sense
that the answers are not to be found in the old familiar places.
In
the eurozone, Italy recently nationalized the world’s oldest bank,
Monte de Pesci, with a bail out by Italy’s Resolution Fund which
contravened the EU’s edicts and was conveniently overlooked by the
regulators. One of the reasons is that Wall Street’s exposure to the EU
is a reported $2 trillion exposure and roughly half of that exposure are
off balance sheet items according to the US independent financial
monitoring unit, the Office of Financial Research (OFR). And, despite
promises of, “doing whatever it takes”, the European Central Bank (ECB)
is close to the legal constraints on the amount of bonds it can buy.
Then there is the two-year experiment of “pump and dump” oil markets
ending when OPEC, hurt by lower prices and exploding deficits, reset the
first production cut in about 13 years to raise prices, difficult since
non-OPEC producers have replaced Saudi Arabia as the swing producer.
Still prices have risen 25 percent since the agreement and oil is back
from the dead. Investors should therefore not be in much doubt. Elevated
risks and uncertainty lies ahead. To the market this is unwelcome.
Clearly, though it is the reality.
Mr. Trump’s “Art of the Deal”
Mr.
Trump’s complaint about America is really a structural problem.
Governments over the past eight years doubled down on deficit spending,
money printing and regulations, to revive their economies but those
attempts haven’t worked. The American economy is chronically sick. Costs
are too high, making exports uncompetitive so that America has become
more of a service economy with improvements in productivity difficult to
achieve.
Mr.
Trump inherits a divided country, some no doubt of his own making but
much due to his predecessor. Mr. Obama has been a major disappointment
at home and abroad and despite the hope, rhetoric and trillions of debt,
America remains stuck in a subpar recovery. Promises of income
redistribution, favored the wealthy, not the poor. His foreign policy
was a disaster with this Noble Prize winner at war longer than any other
American president, longer than Johnson, Lincoln and George W. Bush. In
fact, some of those wars were conducted without congressional approval,
an act in itself unconstitutional. Race relations are worse and, his
party paid a heavy price, losing not only the White House but the House
of Representatives and the Senate.
One
could argue that President Trump will shake things up and in rejecting
the status quo and longstanding norms both domestically and
internationally, his world order would appear to trump the postwar
blueprint that hugely benefitted the United States. In serving American
interests, disputes were generally handled with a mutually of interest
or common ground. While Trump’s appeal is the chaos that he threatens to
bring, that chaos in the form of a protectionist trade agenda could
only undermine America’s geopolitical influence, particularly at a time
when America’s ability to remain the world’s most powerful economy is
weakened by a balance sheet in shambles. And the long standing network
of alliances, once dependent upon on trade, trust and pocketbook issues
is now threatened. Trump’s threats are as important as money, and
bullying allies or trading partners won’t be as easy as terrorizing
Washington’s mandarins or auto companies.
America’s Debt is Its Achilles Heel
While
Trump’s ambitious fiscal plans will entail a big expansion of the
budget deficit, that deficit will require financing and the “king of
debt” will certainly launch another round of debt which will unnerve the
market. However, we believe Trump’s team will seek alternatives such as
extensions of longer dated securities or even, gold backed debt or
other exotic securities. Where Trump has made points is that there is
too much regulation. It was hard to achieve the economies of scale
sometimes because of the increased regulatory tightening. Mr. Trump has
sworn to take a wrecking ball to regulatory policy and will undo much of
Obama’s legacy on everything from the 2,700 page ObamaCare to his
nuclear deal with Iran to the Paris climate change accord using the same
Executive Orders that Mr. Obama used to circumvent Congress. What can
be done by the pen, will be undone by the pen.
Yet,
America has been running deficits for years flooding the world with
cheap dollars. The Fed has yet to unwind its swollen crisis-era balance
sheet of bonds and mortgage-backed securities. Financial leverage today
is much higher than 2008 and the systemic risk is greater. Instead of
subprime mortgages, we have subprime auto debt for example. US treasury
debt issuance doubled in size over the last eight years. Until recently
there was no problem for America to finance the deficits with foreign
money. In the first nine months of 2016, foreigners purchased almost $3
billion every day. However, foreign appetite has been waning and the
dependence upon the largesse of foreigners is America’s Achilles heel.
In
addition, foreigners have adopted a more cautious wait-and-see attitude
with respect to Mr. Trump’s policies. Should Trump decide to clash with
America’s trading partners, they might not be so willing to finance
“America First” agenda of tariff barriers and competitive devaluations.
The very real prospect of a currency war where both sides seek a trade
advantage has forced each country to focus on their domestic economies
and to look for alternatives.
Russia and China’s Plan B
A
global stampede into US assets pushed the Trump dollar to near 14 year
highs, but swiftly corrected on Trump’s musings and weakening economic
fundamentals. Mr. Trump’s musings about the strong value of the dollar,
raised fears that his presidency could set off a new round of currency
wars in a “beggar thy neighbor” fight that could set the ground for a
broader trade war. In the Middle East, the Saudis have run a fiscal
deficit of almost 10 percent of GDP. To fund their deficits, the Saudis
and other Gulf countries have been selling their reserves, dumping US
treasuries. China too has sold $150 billion of US treasuries to support
the renminbi, dipping into its $3 trillion stockpile. Still, China’s
reserves are twice its foreign debt. Russia also has been selling US
assets. Since July 2014, China has seen a near $1 trillion dip in their
reserves as they also bought euros as a means to finance recent
acquisitions and prop up the renminbi. Today, US interest rates are
above those in the euro area which remain negative with the European
Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan both setting their benchmark rates
below zero, continuing to print money with no end in sight.
During
the Dirty Thirties, rounds and rounds of competitive devaluations and
trade barriers in a “beggar thy neighbor” policy gave rise to the
disastrous Smoot-Hawley legislation which led to the Depression. A new
trade war is in no nation’s interest, particularly America. Not only is a
tariff for tariff war expensive but risks spreading where no one wins.
While fundamentally a lower renminbi would help Chinese exports, it
certainly would widen the trade deficit with America at a time when both
countries are each other’s major trading partner. China’s depreciating
renminbi has also impacted its neighbors, giving the renminbi an added
export advantage. Post election US trade policies under Trump’s
presidency will be key. So far the rhetoric and threats may just be
Trump’s way of an opening bid ahead of negotiations, but risks of an
escalation have increased significantly and the critical variable will
be the dollar. Currencies, commodity levels and legislation will be top
of mind as the US dollar’s share of currency reserves slipped to 63
percent last year, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
A Return to a Gold Standard?
Today,
China and others have their currencies pegged to the dollar and its
strength is hurting their economies leading to talk of a return to
protectionist barriers. With a debt load at 100 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP), America’s balance sheet is in shambles. They not
only have massive debts but are still running big deficits. At $20
trillion, nearly half of that debt is owed to foreigners. The United
States is the world’s most privileged nation, with the privilege of
paying their bills in a currency it prints, allowing them to consume
more than they produce. Significantly, that privilege rests on the
confidence of its creditors but lately that confidence has been frayed.
Mr.
Trump’s ambitious policies are clear, but it will cost money. America
has very little savings and so their deficits are set to grow again. The
stock market? It is built on sand and higher rates to attract foreign
dollars will be needed which will remove yet another prop under the
overvalued market. Looks deceive. Today America’s trading partners are
pursuing a Plan B. Exporters of oil are taking euros, renminbi or yen
for their oil. China has become less dollar dependent and central banks
are adding to stockpiles of gold leftover as legacy assets from prior
gold-backed currency regimes. We believe China could make the renminbi
backed by gold. After all, one time its currency was backed by silver.
For
the past two years, China and Russia have been adding to their gold
reserves reducing their dependence on the dollar. China has become the
sixth largest holder in the world at 1,833 tonnes but is only 2 percent
of reserves in contrast to the 10 percent average held by most western
central banks. Yet China’s total holding is much larger since they have
been adding to their gold hoard both officially and unofficially.
It
has been reported that Chinese banks hold some 2,000 tonnes for their
customers and last year over 1,200 tonnes were withdrawn from the
Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE). China is the world’s largest producer and
consumer of gold in the world. We believe that its massive $3 trillion
hoard of foreign exchange is slowly being invested in gold which is
denominated in dollars, but does not have the purchasing power risk of
US treasuries. Russia too has accumulated 1,542 tonnes ranking seventh
in the world. In total, Russia and China hold more gold than the United
States, the world’s largest holder at 8,134 tonnes. Mr. Trump would be
wise to remember the golden rule when he next threatens these two from
his bully pulpit.
Gold Is Money – War Is Declared On Private Savings
Lastly,
desperate for revenues, countries have declared a war on “private
savings.” In the West, closure of tax havens, targeting offshore
companies and even negative interest rates have confiscated savings.
Some countries like Greece, Venezuela and even Iceland are experimenting
with capital controls because of their need for revenues as an
alternative to debasing their debts. China too recently introduced
restrictions on forex outflows to slowdown the renminbi’s depreciation.
Iceland imposed capital controls to protect the krona, but soon imports
became too expensive causing Iceland’s foreign debt holders to be
concerned about the repayment of Iceland’s debt.
And
then, taking aim at savers. India demonetized its high-value bank
notes, targeting the cash- driven black market. The cash-canceling move
caused chaos in the Indian banking system with lineups frustrating
everyone since more than 86 percent of the cash in circulation became
worthless overnight. Nearly 80 percent of India’s consumer activity is
in cash and while the country’s tax base is only 10 percent of the
economy, cheap loans were offered to stimulate India’s $2 trillion GDP
which collapsed because of the money grab.
Embarrassingly
with nine-tenths of cancelled notes returned there was neither an
increase in economic activity nor a rush in government revenues. Car
sales actually fell 19 percent. Notable was that short term imports fell
after the demonetization but gold ownership actually increased.
Ironically, Indian refiner incentives introduced gold ownership as
tender – a de facto Indian gold standard. Venezuela, followed India’s
example by demonetizing nearly half of that country’s bank notes to
fight the black market, hurting its people who are suffering from
hyperinflation, cash shortages and an economic meltdown. Gold of course
skyrocketed. In the Middle East, the new Shari’ah gold investment
standard will encourage gold purchases. Money is no longer money Gold is
a protector from this war on savings.
As
a result, gold is back in demand amid increasing concerns over the
health of the global economy and doubts that Trump can make America
great again. The belief that there is a worldwide war on savings,
geopolitical and trade concerns has caused money to chase gold. Mr.
Trump does not seem to be bothered by debt. America’s deficits are
unsustainable. The deficit has risen to the point where the US must
borrow $115 billion every month. We are concerned that foreign investors
may go on strike because they already have too many dollars and he may
give them a reason to pursue Plan B.
Price Of Gold To Surge $1,000 – More Than 83%!
The problem is not new. After eight years, we continue to warn about
America’s vulnerability. America’s debt load is unsustainable. The world
has too many dollars. America does not have a Plan B. Gold is a
barometer of currency fears. If investors believe that the dollar is an
overvalued currency, and also lack the confidence in other currencies,
gold is a natural haven. Without confidence in the dollar, the world has
no valid reserve currency. If confidence is not restored, the pressure
will be to pursue tried and unsuccessful measures like competitive
devaluations, protectionism or again, money printing. Both the dollar
and gold are telling us that an adjustment lies ahead. Gold is a good
thing to have. We continue to believe, once it breaks above $1,250 an
ounce, that gold’s new bull run will reach $2,200 an ounce – a perfect
Plan B.
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