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	<title>Contrarian Stock Market Investing News - Featuring Bargain Stocks &#187; reflation strategy</title>
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		<title>How Fed&#8217;s &#8216;Reflate At All Costs&#8217; Will Destroy The Dollar</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-feds-reflate-at-all-costs-will-destroy-the-dollar/8756</link>
		<comments>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/how-feds-reflate-at-all-costs-will-destroy-the-dollar/8756#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2008 16:57:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Laura Cadden</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[US Dollar & Forex Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ben Bernanke]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fed Rate Cuts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Federal Reserve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gold Prices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[investing in gold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Justice Litle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Money Supply]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[precious metals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reflation strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US dollar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Us Inflation Rate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US recession]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.contrarianprofits.com/?p=8756</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Forget talk of a slump in gold, says <strong>Justice Litle</strong>. The precious metal is still on a long-term uptrend that started in 2001. And the &#8220;reflate at all costs&#8221; strategy of the Fed will eventually send gold soaring again as the world wakes up awash with dollars that it doesn&#8217;t want.</p>
<p>This from <a href="http://www.taipanpublishing.com"  class="alinks_links" onclick="return alinks_click(this);" title="Taipan Publishing"  style="padding-right: 13px; background: url(http://www.contrarianprofits.com/wp-content/plugins/alinks/images/external.png) center right no-repeat;" rel="external">Taipan</a> Daily:</p>
<blockquote><p>Take a look at this long-term gold futures chart.</p>
<p align="center"></p>
<p>Stepping out to a longer-term chart is a bit like seeing the  world from a higher altitude. As you head further out, the drama begins to  recede. (From a far enough distance, the world is little more than a pale blue  dot – as Carl Sagan liked to point out.)</p>
<p>So, too, with gold. There has been a lot of yellow&#8230;</p></blockquote>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Forget talk of a slump in gold, says <strong>Justice Litle</strong>. The precious metal is still on a long-term uptrend that started in 2001. And the &#8220;reflate at all costs&#8221; strategy of the Fed will eventually send gold soaring again as the world wakes up awash with dollars that it doesn&#8217;t want.<span id="more-8756"></span></p>
<p>This from <a href="http://www.taipanpublishing.com"  class="alinks_links" onclick="return alinks_click(this);" title="Taipan Publishing"  style="padding-right: 13px; background: url(http://www.contrarianprofits.com/wp-content/plugins/alinks/images/external.png) center right no-repeat;" rel="external">Taipan</a> Daily:</p>
<blockquote><p>Take a look at this long-term gold futures chart.</p>
<p align="center"><img src="http://www.taipanpublishinggroup.com/images/web/taipandaily/20081119tdimg1.jpg" alt="Gold Futures Monthly" width="445" height="284" /></p>
<p>Stepping out to a longer-term chart is a bit like seeing the  world from a higher altitude. As you head further out, the drama begins to  recede. (From a far enough distance, the world is little more than a pale blue  dot – as Carl Sagan liked to point out.)</p>
<p>So, too, with gold. There has been a lot of yellow metal  angst in light of the recent credit implosion. But if we look back to the  genesis of the gold bull market in 2001, we can see that the long-term uptrend  is still intact. Gold would have to close below $650 to break it.</p>
<p><strong>Hedge Fund Deluge</strong></p>
<p>What, then, about gold stocks, which have been hammered  through the floor?</p>
<p>As we now know, the carnage in gold stocks – as in the  entire market – had a lot to do with investor panic and forced hedge fund  selling.</p>
<p>Third quarter data on hedge fund stock sales recently came  available, and the numbers are staggering. Among the larger players, fund after  fund with holdings of $5 to $10 billion slashed equity exposure by 90 percent  or more. At the same time, very few new positions were picked up. Almost to a  man, asset managers have been bracing themselves against the threat of further  investor redemption.</p>
<p>With that kind of deluge – not to mention forced margin-call  selling on the part of many company execs – it’s no wonder hard asset stocks  got crushed. The funny thing, though, is that this is<em> exactly</em> the kind of thing the old hands talk about when they  chuckle over tops and bottoms. Near the top, the public can’t buy enough. Near  the bottom, they refuse to buy for love or money. And so it goes.</p>
<p>But anyway, now let’s take a look at another chart.</p>
<p align="center"><img src="http://www.taipanpublishinggroup.com/images/web/taipandaily/20081119tdimg2.jpg" alt="1-Year U.S. Treasury Yield" width="445" height="284" /></p>
<p><strong>Money is Getting  Cheap (Again)</strong></p>
<p>As you can see above, the yield on 1-year treasuries (the  rate you get loaning money to Uncle Sam for 12 months) currently hovers above 1  percent. It hasn’t been down this low since 2003.</p>
<p>During the time when “Easy Al” Greenspan was cutting rates  and keeping them low, interest rates just kept on falling. Money went from  super cheap to ridiculously cheap to insanely cheap. Then, beginning in 2004,  yields slowly began to rise again. (But not fast enough to wreck the party that  was by then in full swing.)</p>
<p>Now we’re back on the old downward slope, with rates on a  kamikaze path towards zero. (“Turning Japanese” as <a href="http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/author/bill-bonner/"  class="alinks_links" onclick="return alinks_click(this);" title=""  style="padding-right: 13px; background: url(http://www.contrarianprofits.com/wp-content/plugins/alinks/images/external.png) center right no-repeat;" rel="external">Bill Bonner</a> likes to say.)</p>
<p>The upshot is that right now the Fed and the Treasury are  absolutely flooding the system with money. They do this because they are  desperate to jumpstart the U.S. economy.</p>
<p>You’ve seen it before in these pages, but it’s still hard to  beat this chart for shock value:</p>
<p align="center"><img src="http://www.taipanpublishinggroup.com/images/web/taipandaily/20081119tdimg3.jpg" alt="Adjusted Monetary Base" width="450" height="360" /></p>
<p>That is a chart of the adjusted monetary base, courtesy of  the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. It shows how the Fed has rolled up its  sleeves since September. Boy howdy, have they rolled up those sleeves.</p>
<p><strong>Holy Balance Sheet  Batman!</strong></p>
<p>Rolled-up sleeves aside, it might even be fair to whisper  that the Fed has gone nuts.</p>
<p>Proof of nuttiness, you say? Ask and you shall receive.</p>
<p>As Jim Grant of <em>Grant’s  Interest Rate Observer </em>recently observed, it took the Fed a full 75 years –  from 1914 to 1989 – to get its balance sheet up to $100 billion.</p>
<p>From there (under care of The Maestro) it only took another  10 years to hit $500 billion.</p>
<p>Eight years or so later, the Fed’s balance sheet hit the big  “T” for the first time – a whopping $1 trillion – and within the space of just <em>three weeks </em>in late 2008 doubled that  from $1 trillion to $2 trillion. (Do I hear a bid for $3 trillion?)</p>
<p>“So a second order effect which might not be subtle,” Grant  suggests, “might be inflation.”</p>
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<div style="text-align:left;padding:10px;border:1px solid #DEBE7C;background:#F2EAD7">
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<p><span style="font-size: 14px; text-align: left; font-family: Arial;">(Over the next five years, you could see 10 times that amount&#8230; maybe more)</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: 14px; text-align: left; font-family: Arial;"> </span></div>
</div>
</div>
<p><strong>Enter the Gnomes</strong></p>
<p>The “Gnomes of Zurich” was originally an insult term,  dreamed up by a British politician named Harold Wilson to disparage Swiss  Bankers.</p>
<p>Mr. Wilson didn’t like the fact that the “gnomes” were  gunning against the British Pound in the 1960s. As it turns out, the gnomes  were gunning against the U.S. dollar too – and one of the ways they did it was  by buying gold.</p>
<p>To understand the Gnomes’ frame of mind, you have to  remember that the old gold standard didn’t disappear all at once. It was  progressively weakened (the first blow taking place in the 1920s) and receded  in stages from there.</p>
<p>In the late ‘60s – when Bretton Woods was intact, the dollar  was king, and LBJ was spending like a drunken sailor – the United States  remained quaintly determined to defend the dollar’s virtue. That virtue was  defined by convertibility into gold, for all comers, at a fixed market price of  $35 per ounce.</p>
<p>The problem was that more and more dollars were making their  way into the world. As the world’s gold supply did not see a similar rapid  increase, the yellow metal’s price began to twitch. The Gnomes and their  speculative friends had begun casting votes against the soundness of the dollar  by purchasing gold in the London market.</p>
<p>In order to put the kibosh on this misbehavior, the powers  that be set up the “London Gold Pool.” This gold pool – made up of eight  central banks led by the United States – would sell to all comers in the London  market, in order to keep the yellow metal’s price fixed firmly at $35 per  ounce. “We will use our gold down to the last bar,” declared the U.S.  Undersecretary of the Treasury in 1968. (Nixon proved him a liar of course.)</p>
<p>The tide-fighting central bankers also sought to raise  interest rates, knowing gold’s achilles heel is the fact that it bears no  interest. But they couldn’t raise rates too much, as that would hurt the  various economies in question&#8230; and the Gnomes had a powerful edge.</p>
<p>Simply put, the Gnomes knew they couldn’t really lose. There  were too many dollars sloshing around, and the fixed $35 per ounce of the time  meant gold’s false ceiling was also a floor. So if the Gnomes failed in driving  the price of gold higher, their holdings would stay at $35&#8230; no real harm  done.</p>
<p>But if the Gnomes were <em>successful</em> in their gold-buying drive, the London gold pool would have to throw in the  towel. The price of gold could then break free from the $35 ceiling – and rise  higher from that point on.</p>
<p><strong>A Skip and a Hop to  1971</strong></p>
<p>To make a long story short, the Gnomes succeeded in their  campaign. They bought so firmly and resolutely that the London Gold Pool gave  up on trying to keep the $35 per ounce ceiling intact.</p>
<p>After finally letting the yellow metal rise to $40 an ounce  and beyond, the authorities sent out a pooh-poohing statement suggesting they  didn’t <em>really</em> care about the market  price of gold anyway.</p>
<p>The monetary rules were than quietly changed (surprise,  surprise) so that the U.S. government no longer had to bother with redemption  requests based on the market price of gold.</p>
<p>After that it was all a slippery slope. From the Gnome’s  London victory it was just a hop, a skip, and a jump to President Nixon’s  closing of the gold window. That infamous event in 1971 gave birth to our  modern-day fiat currency system – a slap in the face to Gnomes everywhere.</p>
<p><strong>Falling Rates, Rising  Stimulus</strong></p>
<p>But regimes come and regimes go, including monetary ones&#8230;  and now it feels like the balance of power is shifting once again.</p>
<p>The whole world continues to mop its brow with the sweat of  deflation worries – but that is precisely the excuse the world’s central  bankers use as they chug out fresh stimulus like mad.</p>
<p>As for gold’s achilles’ heel, high and rising interest  rates, remember which way rates are going now (straight down). The U.S. and  Europe have embarked on an aggressive “reflate at all costs” program, and it is  still too early to register those costs. The piper may take his time, but he  always gets paid.</p>
<p>What’s more, the mandarins that whisper into Obama’s ear are  warning him not to be conservative&#8230; not to hold anything back&#8230; to remember  that FDR’s near-fatal mistake in the 30’s was doing too little rather than too  much.</p>
<p><em>New York Times </em>columnist  Paul Krugman (a recent Nobel Laureate) has even said this: “My advice to the  Obama people is to figure out how much help they think the economy needs, then  add 50 percent.”</p>
<p>So we can bank on another round of jaw-dropping government  stimulus being thrown into the mix. Dollars, dollars, dollars. “Don’t worry about  the deficit this year or the next,” our President-elect tells us</p>
<p><strong>A Gift to Wise Hands</strong></p>
<p>For those who can take a Gnome’s eye view of things, the  dollar’s late 2008 short-covering rally is a gift. It has given the powers that  be a false sense of complacency as their printing presses run deep into the  night.</p>
<p>We will soon wake up to a time when the world is awash in  dollars it neither needs nor wants&#8230; and when interest rates drag along at  rock bottom, Japan-style, in a bid to prop up the struggling U.S. economy.</p>
<p>When that time comes, the Gnomes will have their revenge.</p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.taipanpublishinggroup.com/Taipan-Daily-111908.html">Source: The Gnomes of Zurich Shall Have Their Revenge</a></p>
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