Money, Gold, Capital Controls and Your Future
Eternal truths about the outlook for gold and mining stocks...
MONEY, in whatever form it is held, has uses, writes Tim Price at Price
Value
Partners.
Traditional economists assign money three
characteristics.
- Money is a unit of account – we can price things with it;
- It is a medium of exchange – we can use it as a helpful replacement to the barter system, exchanging one good for another;
- And it is a store of value – it retains its purchasing power over time.
Our modern electronic money still retains the first two characteristics. But as for the
third!
Since the
establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913, the US Dollar, for example, has lost roughly 98% of its
purchasing power. The Pound
Sterling has fared no better. Indeed every unbacked paper currency in history has ultimately failed. The
Dollar will be no different.
It is only a question of time.
Gold and silver developed as money in a free
market. Throughout human history
we have used all kinds of things as money – cattle, shells, nails, tobacco, cotton, even giant stone
slabs. But gold and silver always
won out over the competition.
People tended over time to favour the precious
metals as money because of their
scarcity, durability, malleability and beauty. Their use arose without coercion. Gold is the money of
freedom. Gold is also scarce.
And it is horribly expensive, in both capital and human terms, to dig out of the earth and
process.
To
produce one ounce of fine gold requires 38 man hours, 1,400 gallons of water, enough electricity to run
a large house for ten days, up
to 565 cubic feet of air under straining pressure, and quantities of chemicals including cyanide, acids,
lead, borax and lime. But
once produced, being chemically inert, gold lasts.
Peter L. Bernstein (in his
somewhat sceptical treatise
'The Power of Gold: The History of an Obsession') points out that you can find a tooth bridge made of
gold for an Egyptian 4,500 years
ago. Its condition is good enough that you could pop it into your mouth today.
And it is wonderfully
malleable. If you have just an ounce of gold, you can beat it into a sheet covering one hundred square
feet. Or if you prefer, you
could draw it into a wire 50 miles in length.
Clearly, gold is also a thing of
beauty. "Oh, most excellent
gold!" said Columbus on his first voyage to America. "Who has gold has a treasure [that] even helps
souls to paradise."
But gold is heavy, dense and impractical to carry around. So using paper certificates to
represent gold held safely in
reserve was a logical next step. The problem arose when greedy bankers realised that they could print
more certificates than they had
gold in reserve to back them.
The language associated with gold is invariably
derogatory today. Those of us
who see any role for gold in the modern world are dismissed as gold bugs. Our response is to label those
sceptics paper bugs: they
have to believe that unbacked fiat money will last. History, however, is on our side.
In recent monetary
history 1971 amounts to Year Zero for gold, because that is when President Nixon finally took the US
Dollar off the gold standard.
This has led to a 50-year-plus experiment in money that remains unprecedented. When Robert Mundell was
made a Nobel Laureate in
Economics in 1999, he pointed out that the "absence of gold as an intrinsic part of our monetary system
today makes our century, the
one that has just passed, unique in several thousand years."
Robert Mundell
could see the way the world was
going. In March 1997, two years before receiving his Laureate, Mundell would remark, ominously, "Gold
will be part of the
international monetary system in the twenty-first century." The author Nathan Lewis agrees. The title of
his 2007 book on the subject?
'Gold: The Once and Future Money.'
Government debts throughout the world are
simply too high – perhaps so
high that it is now impossible to reconcile them. As gold investor Egon von Greyerz puts it:
"In 1971, Nixon,
by closing the Gold window, started the most spectacular bonfire of the US government budget books. How
wonderful, no more
accountability, no more shackles and no more gold deliveries to de Gaulle in France who was clever to
ask for gold instead of Dollars
in debt settlement from the US. So from August 1971, the US embarked on a money printing and credit
expansion bonanza never seen
before in history. Total US debt went from $2 trillion in 1971 to $200 trillion today – up 100X! So we
are getting very close to the
end of the current monetary system which will die just like they all have throughout history. GOT
GOLD?"
Strategist Russell Napier:
"If central bankers' manipulation of prices fails to
generate strong private
demand and inflation, then the necessary debt to GDP reduction must come in highly destructive ways for
the owners of capital. Society
will have to choose between austerity, default, or the creation of a government demand-driven reflation.
These are the only three
options if central bankers fail to boost growth and also inflation. Austerity would bring depression;
default would bring bankruptcy,
and a government demand-driven reflation would bring some degree of suspension of the market economy.
These are painful and difficult
choices if central banks fail. [I] believe that society will most likely choose the apparently least
painful route and thus we now
face a massive structural shift away from a market-orientated economic system."
In short, Napier predicts the
reintroduction of capital controls, as governments simply elect to replace the central banks in the
cause of stimulating inflation.
The reintroduction of capital controls (last seen in the UK, for example, in 1979, after which the newly
elected Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher wisely and boldly abandoned them) would be a terrible metastasis of the financial
crisis.
Russell Napier again:
"There are many who see the above scenario as 'the end of
the world' but of course it
isn't. For the man in the street it involves another economic shock but then a 'democratic' reflation
without the assistance of the
discredited [central] bankers. The cycle that results will be full of growth and mainly inflation. It
would reduce the debt burdens of
many and feel a lot better than the deflation wrought by market forces. The inevitable massive capital
misallocation that results from
any government-driven investment cycle would take many years to become evident and produce negative
impacts. This will not seem like
the end of the world for most people. However for the stewards of private sector capital there will be
little to do in such a world of
mandated prices and conscripted capital."
If you're unfamiliar with precisely
what 'capital controls' might
be, they could plausibly include taxes, tariffs, outright legislation and restrictions on trade. Capital
controls could be imposed
across equities, bonds and the foreign exchange markets. Let us consider for a moment the implications
of Russell's
warning.
"A shift to the conscription of capital by government to force a
government-led investment cycle
would be very positive for gold. Gold, the form of capital that is easiest to move without trace, is the
most difficult form of
capital for governments to conscript. Those qualities will produce many buyers as the nature of the
authorities' response to our
deflationary bust become ever more apparent. So how do we weigh up the negative impacts for gold of a
rising US Dollar and rising real
interest rates with the positives associated with increased government intervention in markets? We wait
for the gold price to rise
even as the US Dollar is rising. That should provide sufficient evidence that the threat of a
government-instigated reflation is more
than offsetting the negatives associated with the current deflation. Should that reflation succeed, then
gold would likely be a major
beneficiary as positive real rates of interest would turn into negative real rates that would be
sustained by financial repression for
perhaps a few decades."
We note, in passing, that gold is now trading at new
nominal highs even in US Dollar
terms.
We would argue that central bank monetary policy in terms of the fight
against inflation has failed
ever since the height of the Global Financial Crisis. In terms of economic growth, the central banks'
efforts at providing recovery
have come to naught. If Russell Napier's analysis is right, governments will soon take over, and the
money printing will then resume
in earnest. In such an environment, gold, being a finite and precious commodity that is also no-one's
liability, is in prime position
to enter a sustained bull market. We believe Napier is right.
Why own gold?
Because it makes sense, within a
properly diversified portfolio, to have portfolio insurance. If you inhabit a home, it makes sense to
have home insurance. Your
investments are no different. In a world of paper assets (like certificates of deposit or corporate or
government bonds), some of
gold's attributes are unique. When it comes to credit and counterparty risk, gold comes with neither.
Gold does not rely for its value
on the solvency of some third party. It is not a claim against anything. Which is why gold is the
perfect insurance against the
failure of conventional money or the default of conventional debt. It is why gold is a more perfect form
of money than any
government-issued alternative.
How best to describe gold? The investment
consultant Andreas Acavalos has
provided the best definition we have so far heard:
"Gold is not even an
investment. It is a conscious
decision to refrain from investing until an honest monetary regime makes the rational calculation of
relative asset prices
possible."
Our friend Charlie Morris offers a variation on this theme. He
compares gold to a conventional
bond. He describes gold as a zero coupon, perpetual, irredeemable bond. With no credit risk. With no
counterparty risk. Issued by
God.
Continuing this theme, one quotation from the world of economics fills us
with more concern than any
other. It comes from Ludwig von Mises. As someone with first-hand experience of the notorious Weimar-era
hyperinflation, von Mises
warned:
"The credit expansion boom is built on the sands of banknotes and
deposits. It must collapse. There
is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative
is only whether the crisis
should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a
final and total catastrophe of
the currency system involved."
Our central bankers have made it abundantly dear
that the credit expansion
must and will continue. If von Mises is correct, then the ultimate resolution of the crisis is also
clear: "a final and total
catastrophe of the currency system."
Which is why you need to own gold now. You
buy fire insurance before
your house is already ablaze. It is too expensive, if it is even possible, to buy it once the fire has
broken out.
Faith in paper currencies, and in the governments that issue and consistently degrade them,
doesn't follow a linear
progression. Avalanches don't happen in tidy stages. Snow continues to pile up until the system tips
from being stable to unstable,
whereupon one random snowflake will cause the entire snow mass to collapse. We just don't know which
snowflake it will be. Similarly,
we don't know which act of monetary insanity will cause the financial system to implode.
In summary, why
gold? Because it's been a store of value for thousands of years. And it represents a form of money with
no credit or counterparty
risk. Why gold now? Because the risk of a global monetary fiasco rises by the day.
Depending on the extent of
one's savings and one's risk appetite, there are three ways of getting exposure to the investment merits
(and risks) of gold:
- Physical metal. This is the purest form of gold ownership, but it involves counterparty risk if held with a third-party custodian.
- The largest and best capitalised gold mining companies. This offers the potential of higher returns than from the gold price alone given the operational leverage of many gold miners, but it also involves equity market risk.
- Depending on the size of your wallet and your attitude to risk, there are the junior miners too. In a gold bull market, the returns from owning smaller-cap miners are likely to be higher, but they'll come with additional risk of corporate failure.
Each of the above can also be held in the form of low-cost ETFs (exchange traded funds) or actively
managed funds [albeit without any
direct ownership, Ed.]. We favour some diversification into mining company stocks because of what has
happened in the history of
gold.
For example, Executive Order #6102, signed by President Franklin
D.Roosevelt on 5 April 1933, made the
private ownership of gold illegal in the United States, punishable by a fine of up to $10,000, or up to
ten years in prison, or both.
Clearly we no longer operate within a gold standard but we'd rather not take any chances – hence the
merit of ownership of interests
in gold mining concerns as well as the physical asset itself.
If you elect to
own gold, you probably want to
give some thought to where it's custodied. It makes no sense to own gold within the onshore banking or
financial system – where
national governments might ultimately start to display distinctly unconventional attitudes to the
sanctity of private investors'
property. It does make sense to hold gold in safe custody offshore.
Our
preferred foreign jurisdictions (from
the perspective of a UK-based investor), in no particular order, would include Switzerland, Singapore,
Australia and
Canada.
If you elect to own gold, ensure that you own allocated gold – that is,
gold owned outright by you
and held in your name. You don't want exposure to unallocated gold – which is the property of the
custodian. That's like being a
depositor/unsecured creditor all over again.
There are far too many paper
claims on gold and simply not
enough of the physical asset to support them. Paul Mylchreest, editor of The Thunder Road Report, a
specialist gold publication, wrote
some years ago warning of a potential short squeeze in the physical market:
"The next major leg up in the
gold price will prove to be a religious experience for those people unfortunate enough to find
themselves short."
Another thing to watch out for if you hold gold in the form of a fund is that that gold
can't be lent out, or
'rehypothecated'. Again, there are too many people playing too many games in the fractional gold
physical market – and there is
insufficient supply of the physical asset to support all the contingent claims upon it. You don't want
to be caught short as and when
the next run to gold begins. (And it probably already has.)
To sum up the
argument for gold, we'd like to
share some words by an asset manager and friend, Tony Deden, who may have thought about the parlous
state of our financial system and
its implications more profoundly than anyone else we know:
"Substance is
something that is real. It does not
necessarily have to be tangible, but that would be preferable. Whether it is in gold – a form of money –
or honest entrepreneurship,
substance is rooted in economic reality. And so, understanding substance, whether it is in money or in
entrepreneurial and
wealth-creating activity, is the most important practical skill we must acquire.
"Indeed, the price of gold
in money may increase. It may also decrease. When do you sell it? You ought to first decide why you own
it. But even then, let me ask:
'What sort of substance will you acquire with the proceeds from the sale?'
"One
of the greatest lessons in
classical economics is that value is subjective. It is subjective to the aims and criteria and judgment
of the person doing the
valuing. And frankly, in our dishonest world, such subjective value is the cornerstone to what kind of
capital you are likely to
command in the future."
We face grave threats and growing uncertainties within
the financial markets. Gold
doesn't solve all of the world's problems and it would be silly to believe it does. But as an
alternative to keeping flawed money in a
flawed banking system, it's a useful start.
It's a hedge against both inflation
and systemic financial
distress. And it's the best performing money in counterparty risk and purchasing power terms that you
can own.











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