As the Global Economy Stumbles, Gold Goes for a Touchdown

Via Birch Gold Group

As the Global Economy Stumbles, Gold Goes for a Touchdown

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

Before we get started, congratulations Kansas City Chiefs fans!

This week, Your News to Know rounds up the latest top stories involving gold and the overall economy. Stories include: The global economic stumble makes a strong case for gold, man’s search for value, and what would the end of fiat currency do for gold?

Thorsen Polleit: “What economic recovery?”

Thorsen Polleit, Degussa’s chief economist and Kitco contributor, isn’t optimistic on global economic prospects. As he notes, the real money supply is shrinking. His recent in-depth analysis features many apparent contradictions, which actually very much paradoxically fall into place. Although it seems that pumping money into the economy (also known as “quantitative easing”) should increase the money supply, well, yes, it does. If we’re talking about the nominal money supply.

“Nominal” in this case refers to the economics definition of the word:

prices or rates that are correct at the present time but do not show the effect of inflation

Conversely, real money supply refers to the purchasing power of currency. We might call it “the value of money.”

Here’s the shocker: as calculated by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the real money supply contracted by 7.3% – the biggest loss of value on record.

On its face, this doesn’t quite make sense… You’d expect the prices of goods and services to increase in direct proportion to any increase in the nominal money supply. But that’s not what’s happening.

Rather, today’s rising prices are outpacing the inflation of the global money supply. At the same time, global monetary tightening is slowly reducing the money supply.

These kinds of macroeconomic conundrums can seem as surreal as a Zen koan. Polleit does a decent job of summarizing the cycle:

The initial increase in the quantity of money results in a rise of the real money supply, which fuels consumption and production. Then, goods price inflation takes off, and, at the same time, monetary expansion slows down. The result is a very sharp decline in the real money stock, which, in turn, leads to lower economic activity, even recession.

The contraction of output and employment, in turn, exerts downward pressure on rising goods prices, establishing a new relation between the outstanding money stock and goods prices in accordance with peoples’ preferences. Once this adjustment has run its course and the nominal money stock remains unchanged, goods price inflation dies out. The economy ends up with a higher level of goods prices when compared with the situation before the nominal money supply had been increased.

Makes sense so far, right? Supply and demand seek a balance, just as Adam Smith told us.

Here’s the problem: this decline in real money stock leads to a “stabilization recession, an economic contraction to break the inflationary wave.”

The problem is that central banks only know of one way to relieve an economic recession.

That’s right: money-printing.

When the recession occurs, Polleit tells us:

…the political pressure on central banks to lower interest rates again and keep the economy afloat with new credit and more money would be foreseeable. In the hour of need, governments and the public at large will likely see the policy of the least evil in increasing the money supply. Even a sky-high inflation policy becomes acceptable from their point of view to escape a perceived even greater evil.

He goes on to remind us of both the Great Financial Crisis and the Pandemic Panic, two very clear examples of the central bank-sponsored boom-and-bust cycle.

Over and over, we’ve seen this cycle play out…

  1. Money-printing fuels the boom
  2. The boom leads to inflation
  3. Monetary tightening creates a collapse in the market and a recession
  4. Which is relieved by money-printing

The problem is that each boom and bust in the cycle are getting bigger, more severe.

Here is what Polleit expects might transpire when central banks can no longer tighten:

If central banks are not stopped from doing what they are doing – causing booms and busts by manipulating market interest rates downward and relentlessly expanding the quantity of money created out of thin air – their actions will eventually lead to a level of inflation well beyond what we have witnessed over the past year and a half. From this perspective, the sharply contracting real money stock in the world economy is – it has to be feared – the harbinger of a new round of super-easy monetary policy and super-high inflation, even hyperinflation, further down the road.

Well, now you know why central banks bought a 70-year record quantity of gold last year. Apparently, they see the writing on the wall, too.

Why gold and intrinsic value are inseparable

The Wyoming Reserve’s Miguel Perez-Santalla’s recent podcast, Man’s Search for Value, was fantastic. Either a “must-read” or a “must-hear” depending on your preferences. It’s a lengthy, highly-detailed look into what went wrong with the financial system, when it went wrong, and some forecasts on what to expect next.

Since practically everything Santalla covers in the 24-minute-long piece is relevant, we’ll try and stick to what’s important to precious metals investors.

For starters, as Santalla points out, currencies don’t work. Anyone who’s paying attention to their own bills agrees that the official 6.5% annual inflation number is laughable. Holding paper money, Santalla says, cost you 20% of its purchasing power last year. And if you’re paid in paper money (alas, I am!) it’s worth 20% less than it was a year ago.

Santalla goes very deep into history, and as we know, the further we go, the more history becomes myth, speculation and guesswork.

Even so, these points stand out as almost self-verifying:

  • In 1694, the Bank of England was created for seemingly the sole purpose of increasing the government’s wealth at the expense of the populace. It took all of two years until the government had to bail it out for the first time, creating the still-ongoing tradition of “banks make the loans, taxpayers pay the bill.”
  • The Bank of Amsterdam filed for bankruptcy in 1790, the same year the public learned the bank didn’t have the gold and silver bullion reserves it claimed to back its paper money.
  • In 1913, the Federal Reserve was born – and took less than 60 years to break the two century-old link between gold and the U.S. dollar. Santalla believes this was an inevitable consequence of its creation.

Santalla says that America became a superpower because of three things: blood from WW2, sweat from the industrial revolution and using gold and silver as money. Even just examining the nation’s holdings when the Bretton-Woods agreement was signed tells us precious metals weren’t consigned to just one of those three themes. Gold was a requirement to participate in the global economy (and the U.S. owned 75% of the world’s monetary gold).

The Fed eventually brought on the current speculative foreign exchange (forex) market, which Santalla describes as follows:

That is why we have such volatility in prices and exchange markets. This benefits only the wealthy and traders, that brings no real value to the world economy. This part of the financial market which was recorded in 2016 by the Bank of International Settlements at $5.4 trillion daily, exists only for price discovery. How does that feed the people, keep them warm or enable growth?

Santalla’s primary focus is actually cryptocurrencies, bitcoin but also altcoins, because of the autonomy they bring to individuals. He has a fundamentally bullish take on them. Despite the recent “crypto winter,” I won’t dare question his perspective.

But for all the praise he heaps on crypto, he cannot imagine gold and silver moving from their current role as the safe-haven store of value everyone should own – and not just due to crypto’s roller-coaster volatility.

The two, he says, go hand-in-hand. Both are government-agnostic types of money not subject to central bank tampering.

How realistic is a collapse of fiat currencies in the near future?

James Turk, founder of Canada’s Goldmoney Inc. recently appeared on KingWorldNews. The resulting interview is a little difficult on the listener. Turk moved out of the U.S. in the 1970s to work in Asian banking. This gave him both an American and an international perspective on the high inflation that was going on then, as well as the one that is going on now.

I’ll save you a few minutes and cover the prominent themes.

Denial, whether on behalf of the government or its citizens, was a common theme back then. The U.S. dollar was the global reserve currency, so there was a belief it couldn’t realistically lose too much value. That was as far as domestic affairs were concerned.

Abroad, faith in the dollar eroded to a point where some banks wouldn’t accept dollars in exchange for the local currency.

Global crisis was avoided by the Federal Reserve hiking rates. Here is where we must arrive to some difficult conclusions, which aren’t exactly new ground for us but are ignored often in the mainstream.

Interest rate increases worked back then because “elevated” rates meant double digits. The Fed’s effective rate reached 20%. That’s what worked back then.

Today we’re already hearing talk about recession, seeing political leaders call the Federal Reserve a pack of economic terrorists due to interest rates less than 1/4th as high as the peak of the last severe inflationary episode.

In the 1970s, the long-extinct German currency, the Deutsche Mark, was considered a safe haven from U.S. dollar inflation. And the very pro-gold German people were firm believers in their Deutsche Mark back then.

Turk believes that the destruction of unbacked currencies is an expected part of the long-term economic cycle. (History would tend to agree with him.)

Eventually, the global economy will have to go back to being fueled by production instead of money printers. When it does, gold and silver will return to their role as money in a more formal sense. In the meantime, Turk says gold will stay above CAD$1,950 and silver above CAD$24 (Canadian dollars or “loonies” as my forex-trading friends say). He also says, if you haven’t bought gold already, you probably should now.

After 8 long years of ultra-loose monetary policy from the Federal Reserve, it’s no secret that inflation is primed to soar. If your IRA or 401(k) is exposed to this threat, it’s critical to act now! That’s why thousands of Americans are moving their retirement into a Gold IRA. Learn how you can too with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals the little-known IRS Tax Law to move your IRA or 401(k) into gold. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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16 Comments
mark
mark
March 10, 2023 7:59 pm

Start the discussion with the 100 year actual history.

GOLD PRICES – 100 Year Historical Chart
Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) gold prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base. The current month is updated on an hourly basis with today’s latest value. The current price of gold as of March 10, 2023 is $1,868.10 per ounce.

https://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chart

WilliamtheResolute
WilliamtheResolute
  mark
March 11, 2023 10:59 am

Nothing should be based on the CPI…except fairy tales.

mark
mark
  WilliamtheResolute
March 11, 2023 12:11 pm

Ask and Ye shall receive:

THE STAGGERING LEVELS OF REAL ‘INFLATION ADJUSTED’ GOLD AND SILVER PRICES

https://www.bullionstar.com/blogs/ronan-manly/the-staggering-levels-of-real-inflation-adjusted-gold-and-silver-prices/

In economics, a real value refers to any value that has been adjusted for inflation. A nominal value is a value that has not been adjusted for inflation. Inflation here refers to the general increase in price levels.

Many will be familiar with inflation adjustments that are applied to GDP, wages, interest rates, security returns, and of course consumer prices and asset prices. The resulting data is usually referred to as “real (inflation-adjusted)” data.

Economic data is adjusted for inflation so that data measured over time takes into account the inflation rate over that time period, and removes the distortive effect that this inflation would have on comparisons of data points over time. Inflation is measured by calculating the rate of change in the prices of a basket of goods and services, such as a consumer price index (CPI) or a cost of living index (COLI).

However, the critical variable in any inflation adjustment is what inflation rate to use, and whether the calculation of this inflation rate and its methodology and resulting outputs can be trusted. Governments have a vested interest in generating a low inflation rate so that economies appear healthy and that inflation-linked government payouts in the form of pensions, social security, and inflation-linked debt will be minimized.

Central banks have a vested interest in a low inflation rate as it makes the purchasing power of their fiat currencies looks less weak than they actually may be, while hiding negative interest rates during low interest rate environments.

Is the US, the most widely used calculation of inflation is the US government’s set of consumer price indices (CPI) calculated by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). However, these indices are widely lambasted as being a fiction in their construction if not an outright lie, the motivation of the BLS being to understate inflation for their political paymasters for the reasons mentioned above.

This is why alternative inflation rate providers such as ShadowStats have emerged to counteract the government version of inflation and to provide a more truthful and factual alternative.

For example, the Bureau of Labor Statistics latest release, published on 13 January 2021, will tell you that annual inflation based on its flagship Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for 2020 was a mere 1.4%.

Whereas, the ShadowStats Alternate CPI (1980 Base) in its daily update of 14 January 2021 finds that “annual average inflation was 8.9% in 2020”.

The difference is massive and striking. And when these differences between the increasingly US government massaged CPI numbers and the previous 1980 methodology are compounded over the years, the differences in inflation rates and inflation adjustments is staggering.

ShadowStats explains that its Alternate CPI:

“reflects the CPI as if it were calculated using the methodologies in place in 1980.
In general terms, methodological shifts in government reporting have depressed reported inflation, moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living.”

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
March 10, 2023 8:31 pm

Au & Ag are useless w/out Pb.

mark
mark
  lamont cranston
March 10, 2023 9:02 pm

Everything is useless without defense/offense and the guts to die fighting.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 10, 2023 8:51 pm

Ha – wouldn’t you rather have actual gold as opposed to gold ira?

mark
mark
  Anonymous
March 10, 2023 9:02 pm

If it is not in your hands…it is not in your hands…

An IRA is just an IOU…

A promise from the Promise Breakers…

A worthless piece of paper with numbers on it.

Gold (and Silver) have a history…that past will be tomorrow’s reality.

Here is what I thought about my 401k in 1999…and Gold and Silver.

https://www.theburningplatform.com/?s=One+Man%E2%80%99s+Contrarian+401K+Adventure+By+TBP+Mark+++r.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  mark
March 10, 2023 10:02 pm

I enjoyed that contrarian view, mark. You gave away your age (1 month shy of 50 in 1999).

mark
mark
  Svarga Loka
March 10, 2023 10:46 pm

Thanks Svarga,

I have completely reinvented myself twice since 1999. If I am anything it is a contrarian.

I’m 73 and can still out work most 50 year olds. Weigh 12 pounds more than I did at 20.

Made about 500% on that PM move in 1999 by 2010…and the third PM Bull market of my lifetime is on the launch pad…the first real moonshot will happen after the dust settles…cuz sooner or later the dust always settles.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  mark
March 11, 2023 11:38 am

Great read, mark. That was about a year before I found the Platform that Burns. I had a premonition about the stock market in ’08 and figured it would tank when HiLIARy won, so took 90% of my 401k money and put it into money market funds. When 0bama got the nomination, I figured I had pulled off a miracle, plus I was sitting on cash to invest when the market bottomed. It was a good run, but I pulled everything out again just before the ’20 election.

I never had the balls to pull my 401 money because of the penalty. Glad it worked for you. I know it took a lot of discipline from you and your wife.

mark
mark
  TN Patriot
March 11, 2023 1:49 pm

TN,

Good for you on listening to your gut!

I prayed about it for six months as it went against all the conventional wisdom.

Coupling it with a complete change of spending habits, driving beaters, paying down principle on the house we had at the time (paid off a 30 year mortgage in 13 years – most of it in the last 5 – the Latin meaning of the word mortgage is ‘Death Grip’) and sticking to a budget combined to bring practical-tactical success. Gold and silver sky rocketing in value was the icing on the cake. I was ahead of the curve on that one…and was again in 2015 (big PM dip buyer).

I know many people my age who in-between stock market crashes and the housing bust in that coming decade lost so much net worth they are forced to still be working (well into their 70’s)…as their retirement nest eggs never recovered, and they are living on thin gruel in their old age.

I submitted a vid to Admin this morning on the current financial/economic/PM status, if he puts it up watch it – it is powerful! Worth the time.

Empty
Empty
  Anonymous
March 10, 2023 10:50 pm

I am pretty certain an anything metal IRA is a total scam. Yep, we show you have these certificates, but no one can get their hands on the metals right now. We’ll call ya if it changes. Take care.

James
James
March 10, 2023 8:58 pm

I have metals,that said,do not want them to make a huge jump financially,when they do,it is hitting the fan and soon going to hit hard.

I would like for my metals to just hold a inflation value but not be necc.,eh…….,see yas on the other side!

This might be a good time to once again see your preps and if needed fill any holes in said preps.

Those not prepared,you can still (@ moment)get it together a bit or a lot depending on money situation,the smalls add up and having some extra food with some shelf life will not hurt you whether things go south or not,so…..,get at it!

Prepper Duck will be glad to answer any questions you have if new to prepping.

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Empty
Empty
March 10, 2023 10:48 pm

This is not a genius thought on my part, but I learned a while back if the markets or rather vendors are pushing any commodity, sell yours; if they’re buying it, buy more. Obviously not everyone has this ability or they wouldn’t be taking granny’s old silver to more or less pawn to a precious metals buyer whose sign they saw in front of some place. But for those who can….

WilliamtheResolute
WilliamtheResolute
March 10, 2023 11:27 pm

I have no idea how much paper fiat exists in the world…knowing the criminals that print it makes me believe that it is exponentially higher than anyone can imagine. I envision quadrillions of off book printing, I sleep well because I know exactly how much gold I own…dollars, who cares.

Walter
Walter
March 11, 2023 2:58 pm

What’s best about gold and silver is they are real physical items recognized pretty well universally, not especially per trade value but just for what they are. Silver more so than gold as silver isn’t really worth counterfeiting… yet.

Then we have paper currency, everyone can tell the difference between a US hundred and a Zimbabwean billion note. The Zim includes an image of two rocks stacked on another, apparently a significant feat of human endeavor in Africa. The US hundred has an image of a pyramid with an eye in it, and a dead white male. Almost everyone would prefer the US hundred over the Zim billion at the moment. They are equally valuable rolled into straws for snorting powdered substances.

Both paper instruments are counterfeits. How do we know? It takes varying amounts of each or both to obtain certain amounts of gold or silver. The fact that one paper instrument is ridiculous and the other sound is a social construct.

I hold a krugerrand I gave two and a half US hundreds for in one hand and an Austrian philharmonic of the same weight I gave twenty two and a half US hundreds for in the other, which one is worth more? Why, neither, they’re the same.

This by itself tells us that production of goods is the basis of wealth, and nothing else is. Fifty Zim billions won’t buy the krugerrand, twenty three US hundreds will. Product matters, exists, is, paper with numbers is relative to that.