www.armstrongeconomics.com
QUESTION:
Mr. Armstrong; I believe you said at the WEC in 2017 that central banks
will diversify and increase their gold reserves going into the currency
crisis coming in 2021. China has continued to increase its gold
reserves. You would please update on that development.
Thank you
PK
ANSWER:
Central banks are in a very difficult position. The ECB has really put
the entire world at risk. Draghi is now realizing that negative interest
rates have seriously harmed the European economy and led to a major
growing liquidity crisis in European banking. The euro is regarded as a
time bomb for it is neither a national currency nor a stable unit of
account. The failure to have consolidated the debts from the outset has
simply left the euro vulnerable to separatist movements and sheer chaos.
This is what has been behind the strength in the dollar. Central
banks outside Europe have been caught in this dollar vortex. They have
been selling dollars and buying gold in an effort to stem the advance of
the dollar. China also has a debt problem with many provinces and
companies who borrowed in dollars. Here in 2019, there is $1.2 trillion
in Chinese dollar borrowings that must be rolled over. There is a
rising concern that this year there could be a major threat of a dollar
funding crunch. The total debt issued in US dollars outside the USA
approached $12 trillion at the end of 2018. That is about 50% of the US
national debt. The forex risk is huge, no less the interest rate risk on
top of that. The more crises we see in Europe, the greater the pressure
on the dollar to rise regardless of the Fed trying to stop capital
inflows by delaying raising rates.
China has added to its gold reserves in a desperate attempt to try to
keep the dollar down, which also has an inverse trade problem as the
yuan declines. At the end of January, China’s gold holdings stood at
59.94m ounces, which was up from 59.56m a month earlier, according to
figures released by the People’s Bank of China. Of course, the gold bugs
think this is because China hates the dollar and sees the world
returning to a gold standard. In reality, none of that is true. China is
smart enough that they are trying to keep the yuan from crashing
against the dollar, but by selling the dollar they also do not want to
buy euros or Japanese yen. With the chaos of BREXIT, the neutral
political place is gold. Over the past year, central banks emerged as
big buyers of gold with purchases up almost 75% as the private
institutional market ignores gold and retail trade has shrunk. The main
buyers have been Russia, Turkey, and Kazakhstan who all shifted their
reserves away from the US dollar for political reasons in 2018,
amounting to $27bn worth of bullion.
I used to help the Arabs buy gold and lease it out to circumvent
their religious laws against earning interest. Leasing gold was
effectively the interest rate but it was trading commodities and thus
did not violate their religion. With the Japanese, to reduce the trade
crisis, I instructed them to buy gold in New York and export it to
London to be resold. It did not matter what they bought in the USA; as
long as it was exported it reduced the trade surplus. The same tactic is
in play here with China, but they have been accumulating gold to reduce
the trade surplus. It is a neutral trade within their reserves that
avoids problem currencies.
China is now the world’s biggest consumer and producer
of gold. China only begun to buy gold again, which is also supporting
its mining industry as the US did during the 19th century with silver.
Prior to December 2018, the last time China bought gold was back in
2016. Nevertheless, as geopolitical tensions rise pointing toward world
war, we should expect the former Soviet Union region to continue
accumulating gold and avoiding the dollar. The Democrats seem to be
increasing the tensions all to remove Trump from office.
Tensions between the US and China are nowhere near as bad as they are
with Russia. China is strategically moving to develop their own
consumer economy. They realize that what made the US dollar the reserve
currency was not a force of arms, but the domestic consumer market.
Japan and Germany rose from the ashes after World War II using the
mercantilist model designed to build things to sell to Americans. China
realized that is a dead-end and they have turned inward to develop their
own consumer market to replace the United States.
In Italy, Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini has raised the
possibility of taking control of Italy’s sizeable gold reserves away
from the country’s central bank. The Bank of Italy has the third-largest
central bank holding of gold reserves in the world after the US and
Germany, owning 2,452 tonnes at the end of 2018. This is also reflective
of the tensions with the entire dictatorial approach of Brussels.
Brussels tried to create a central government, but one that refuses to
accept responsibility for member state’s debts. That conflict is why the
euro will never be ready to compete on the world stage of currencies in
a serious manner.
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