The Dollar Can’t Survive This Crisis… Buy Gold Now
Sep 30th, 2008 | By Justice Litle | Category: Featured, Financial NewsYesterday, traders sent the Dow down a record 777 points. Today, the mood is more upbeat. The Dow is up 363 points. Traders clearly still want to believe the government can still help sort out Wall Street’s problems.
Justice Litle isn’t fully sold on the bailout. But he says it isn’t an option to let Mr. Market sort himself out this time: the US is too leveraged to follow Andrew Mellon’s “liquidationist” approach during the Great Depression.
That’s why the feds will do whatever it takes to prop up the system… and run the dollar into the ground. And that’s why you should buy gold now.
This from Taipan Publishing:
The problem, in a word, is leverage. Rightly or wrongly, we all got leveraged up to the eyeballs these past few years. Not just the Wall Street banks (though they were the worst offenders) but everyone, including U.S. consumers.
As we all know by now the offending financial institutions – be they bought out or bankrupted or absorbed – were leveraged by as much as 30 or 40 to 1. That’s the equivalent of making a $100 bet with two or three bucks in your pocket, declaring yourself “good for it” if the bet goes bad.
So now, thanks to the laxity of Greenspan, Bernanke, the SEC, Congress and others, we’re saddled with “capitalism on the upside and socialism on the downside,” as some have aptly put it. Wall Street’s stupidly big bets have become everybody’s problem.
But you know what? Joe Sixpack got himself nicely leveraged, too.
Spengler of the Asia Times observes, “Leverage is the secret of American wealth. The average American family in 2004 had a net worth of US$448,000 on an income of $43,000, according to the Federal Reserve’s survey.”
When Americans talk about their net worth, they are largely talking about two things: the value of their homes and the value of their investment portfolios. Both those numbers are greatly inflated by the built-in leverage of the system.
For example, what is a house worth? Whatever someone is willing to pay for it… the “multiple” of which depends greatly on a few key things. (Like functional credit markets, for one.)
And what is a stock worth? Whatever multiple someone is willing to pay for the company earnings stream… again based on a handful of key factors.
The upshot is that the average American is leveraged, too, by a factor of 10 to 1 or more. And we’re only talking about Americans with positive net worth here — not to mention the trillions in pension funds.
If the financial house of cards comes crashing down, it doesn’t just crush Wall Street. It crushes Main Street, too. This is what the Cool Hand Lukes who want to say “screw the system” don’t understand: We as a country are too deep in the system to survive its sudden demise. When you’re in up to your neck, you can’t walk away.
The Mellon Plan: Not an Option
Andrew Mellon was the only Treasury secretary to have served under three U.S. presidents. He held office from 1921 to 1932.
After the crash of ’29, as the Great Depression got underway, Mellon made his position known as a “liquidationist.” Mellon’s famous advice in response to the budding ‘30s crisis: “Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate farmers.” In short, liquidate everything in sight. Let the weak fail… and let God sort them out.
That’s simply not an option today. Our entire system is built on leverage. That is the Achilles’ heel of modern financial markets.
In normal times, it’s a good thing that a young couple with a promising future can buy a house on 20% down. In normal times, it’s a good thing that a single mother can get a low monthly payment on a car so she can drive to her new job. In normal times, it’s a good thing that an entrepreneur can get a loan to start up a small business.
But all those good things require debt and leverage… on at least one side of the equation, if not both.
Leverage, like debt, is not an inherently bad thing. It’s a tool that can be used or misused. The ability to use leverage efficiently has played a large part in our current prosperity. But as a result, the use of leverage has become too common and too widespread to just say, “liquidate.” We’re in too deep… we no longer have access to the “Mellon plan.”
The Nuclear Option
This is why I think the powers that be will go “nuclear” in a way we haven’t yet seen.
That is to say, when the depth of the danger really hits home… when it sinks in that the viability of the entire system is at stake, and that we are all at risk of being sucked into the deleveraging vortex… the public and political resistance to a full-blown, no-holds-barred rescue will evaporate.
We haven’t seen the full-blown response yet, only shades of it. But it is coming.
On Monday we got news that Wachovia (NYSE:WB), another major American banking institution, would disappear. The Fed took great pains to clarify it was “not a failure” like WaMu (NYSE:WM)… but another giant bites the dust nonetheless. We also got word that Fortis (EBR:FORB), a Belgian bank, is on the brink. (Welcome to the party, Europe.)
In response to all this, the Fed announced plans to pump $630 billion into the global financial system, according to Bloomberg. By the time you read this they may well have pumped a lot more. (Tell me again why $700 billion is supposed to a big number?)
The plumbing of our global financial system is rotten. Pipes are bursting left and right. A bunch of fat-cat bankers may be the ultimate culprits, but we all played a part… and it’s the only system we’ve got.
Really, what other option is there?
We cannot just “ride this out.” We cannot just “let it pass.” Full-on liquidation would be the equivalent of economic and political suicide. It is going to keep getting worse until the powers that be come up with the most dramatic response they can muster.
We haven’t gotten to that point yet. The “nuclear” option — in terms of flooding the system with enough dollars to flood the Panama Canal, or even writing outright checks for U.S. equities a la Hong Kong in 1998 — has not been tried.
It’s going to get worse from here. And so the government is going to do more. And they will keep doing more until things have been turned around, at least on paper.
“This Sucker Could Go Down”
“This sucker could go down,” as President Bush so eloquently put it last week.
The U.S. electorate and Congress did not really believe the Commander in Chief, seeing as how he has been so dead wrong on so many other things. They thought the crisis could be handled with a helping of provisos and quid pro quos — a little urgency with a little temperance, too. They didn’t really believe that the entire global financial system as we know it was at stake.
But, like it or not, it is at stake. As much as I find it surprising to agree with Dubya, this “sucker” really could “go down.” I view this not as a moral assessment, but a structural assessment… like an engineer testing the joints on a suspension bridge and finding it in danger of collapse. It doesn’t matter whether the situation is fair or unfair, or who screwed up the bridge or built it poorly in the first place. It just is what it is.
When the truth sinks in, the powers that be will do all they can to prevent collapse from happening. The blame game will by sidelined by emergency the task at hand.
And how do I know Washington et al haven’t “done all they can” yet? Because the dollar, heading into its twilight days as the world’s reserve currency, has not yet been destroyed.
That’s the final outcome of the von Mises prophecy… the final reality of the Austrian Endgame. And it’s where we are headed. When the dust clears, it may be recognized that we had to pass through this panic point, to reach the height of realization of what’s at stake, before the true “nuclear” measures were implemented.
Gold Shines Here and Now
There are few areas where I’d be willing to buy with both hands right now. There are some incredible bargains out there to be sure. But as the market bleeds, they are just becoming even more incredible.
I still think the “stocks in the stratosphere” scenario as laid out last week is likely to play out, as the flipside of a U.S. dollar meltdown plus hyperinflationary stimulus.
I think that, with the Dow in full-blown crash territory, we are closer to that “nuclear” trigger point now than we were before. It’s a bit of a counterintuitive thing… before we get paper asset lift-off, things have to get bad enough to panic the powers that be into creating the inflationary conditions that fuel lift-off.
In other words, you don’t walk the path of Zimbabwe and Weimar Germany if you can avoid it. A big part of my thesis is that America’s path is predestined — and we’re being forced onto that path now.
Being a trader at heart, I prefer to buy when the prices of things I like are going up, even when I’m buying for long-term investment purposes.
Today, what’s going up is gold.
Gold stocks aren’t following suit in the short term, but that’s because frightened hedge funds continue to dump assets left and right. We are witnessing a fire sale of epic proportions. I believe that hard on the heels of this we will see a stimulus injection of epic proportions, and that will push a lot of hard assets higher.
So you could do far worse now than to get your hands on gold: physical gold, gold ETFs, gold stocks. That’s the general ranking in order of safety vs. risk. I like them all now. Gold and gold stocks also make a compelling case for a trade from the technical side.
On the fundamental side, as the reality sinks in of what’s ahead of us, I believe gold will punch through its old highs and keep going (and going… and going… and going…).
Keep a cool head, and I’ll do my best to keep you informed.
Source: Why the “Nuclear” Response to the Crisis Is Still Coming… and What to Buy Now
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Justice Litle is Editorial Director for 
Justice,
I think dumping more money into the system is what is going to make things worse. People deserve what they get for their stupidity. A generation ago people believed in saving up for what you wanted and buying it with cash. People believed in keeping the savings account full of money because you never knew when you’d need to fall back on it.
These days, we’re literally surrounded by idiots. Walk through a mall and watch people pay for things. How many credit cards do you see in that wallet or purse? Want to bet on how little they have in savings? This “I want it now” generation is going to get exactly what they deserve and there’s nothing anyone can do about it. I personally am indebted to no one. I have savings. I have taken steps to ensure I’ll ride the wave rather than be drowned by it. Every “solution” to this financial catastrophe just makes it more fun to watch. Only idiots would flood the system with more currency. Perhaps you ought to put a picture of those Germans with a wheelbarrow of money needed to buy a pair of shoes on your next post. Perhaps you ought to take a picture of an open window in a skyscraper and post it next. They deserve what’s coming to them. There is no solution but to let it all crash. An ounce of Gold is $20. Anything more is inflation. An ounce of Silver is $1. Anything more than that is inflation.
Good luck to you Justice. I hope you’re not “leveraged”. Keep the yellow metal in hand and some lead in the other. It’s gonna get interesting. Wonder what the “October Surprise” is yet? Me too.