by
Taki T.
History
repeats itself. Although it does not repeat exactly in the same way,
it rhymes. Consider this, exactly one year ago, on March
16th, Cyprus reached
the newswires globally with the announcement of its bank bail-ins.
One
year later, the geopolitical escalation between Ukraine and Russia is
front stage. Just moments ago, the long awaited referendum in Crimea
resulted in an overwhelming 95% of votes to join Russia, according
to Reuters.
The Western world, even before the closing of the referendum, has
officially stated that it denies the results.
Think about this. Crimea has 2 million
inhabitants, a GDP of $4.3 billion, an average monthly salary of
$290, a budget deficit $1 billion. Its GDP is 0,02% of the US GDP.
Yet, the US government, along with “its friends and allies”,
feels the need to intervene in Putin’s backyard. Why?
Motives of the West become much more clear when
looking below the surface, in this case literally. It appears that
Crimea has a capacity of 7 million tons of oil production per year.
Moreover, ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch Shell have closed a deal
(although currently on hold) worth $1 billion. As far as Ukraine is
concerned, it is a central hub of energy supply to the West, in
particular gas.
Now there is nothing new to this. All
geopolitical tensions of the last decades were centered around oil,
gas or other commodities. Think of Iraq two decades ago, Syria very
recently, and a dozens of other examples in between. However, there
are important reasons why “this time could really be different.”
Next to the tensions in Russia, there are signs
that the Chinese credit bubble, the biggest credit bubble in history,
is cracking. Chinese bank assets expressed in US Dollars currently
exceed 25 trillion, while US bank assets are close to 14 trillion
USD. Chinese credit doubled since 2009. The most concerning news,
however, is under the hood. Zerohedge cited Bank of America, when
they discovered that one of the large trusts (CITIC) “tried to
auction the collateral but failed to do so because the developer has
sold the collateral and also mortgaged it to a few other lenders.”
The fundamental issue here is that an economic
crisis, which seems developing, could be very different this time.
The effect could really be dramatic. The reason why “this time is
different” is directly related to the worsening debt crisis, which
is inherently linked to the currency wars. The US is playing a key
role here. Why? During all previous escalations, the US, with its
global dominance, was in a better economic shape than it is today.
And so was the rest of the world. Think about these global facts and
figures:
- Global debt in the financial system is at historic highs. It recently surpassed $100 trillion, as reported by Bloomberg based on BIS data.
- US government debt alone has surged to $12 trillion up from $4.5 trillion at the end of 2007.
- The interest rates on government debt, especially in the US with a zero interest rate policy, is at 5,000 year lows.
- Global derivatives have a notional value of around $700 trillion (latest official BIS data from mid 2013), the highest point historically.
What this means in plain simple terms is that
the financial system is extremely leveraged, highly sensible to an
external shock. All major economies and, hence, the whole world, is
inherently vulnerable. Unfortunately, the first signs of cracks are
there, as evidenced by several facts in the last two weeks.
First,
Friday’s reported data about US Treasuries from foreigners held by
the Fed, has shown a drop of $104.5 billion. Zerohedge notes:
“This was the biggest drop of Treasurys held by the Fed on record,
i.e., foreigners were really busy selling. This brings the total
Treasury holdings in custody at the Fed to levels not seen since
December 2012, a period during which the Fed alone has monetized well
over $1 trillion in US paper.” The following chart says it all.
Why is this important? US Treasuries are the
backbone of the world monetary system, at least as long as the US
dollar is the world reserve currency. Think about this: China held
$1.269 trillion of US Treasuries and Japan $1.183 trillion at the end
of December, while Russia held $138.6 billion. After the US sent out
warnings to Russia, China openly chose the side of Russia. Below the
surface, however, “someone” sent a very strong signal to the US,
and, by doing so, to the world, by withdrawing record amounts of US
Treasuries. This is economic warfare at a level not seen to date,
because of the current extremes in the monetary system.
Second, in the context of international
currencies, Russia is likely to engage with China more actively in
bilateral trade with the ultimate goal to transact in their own
currencies, bypassing the US Dollar. It is not unthinkable that they
will use gold.
As
Ambrose Evans noted this
week, the latest financial ructions go beyond Russia, they reek of
stress in the international system. “Countries are intervening all
over the place to defend their currencies, which means they are
tightening. Their central banks built up huge war chests of reserves
for a rainy day, and now it is raining,” said the currency chief at
HSBC.
One
of the biggest concerns for the US in particular would arise when
Russia, backed by China, will start trading oil for gold, as we wrote
in “Russia
Touches U.S. Achilles Heel: Petrogold instead of Petrodollar.”
Similar attempts of other countries in the past were not very
effective. Think of Iraq or Turkey recently. But with major countries
like Russia or China front stage, this has the potential to truly
disrupt the US Dollar, and, hence, the world monetary system.
Note
that the US Dollar has been a safe haven currency in the last years
and even decades. Political tensions and wars have resulted in a
flight to the dollar. Not so this time. In fact, since the tensions
in Ukraine started a couple of weeks ago, the US
Dollar index has turned down.
Now what is the key take-away of all this? In
our view, the current situation highlights three fundamental trends
in the big picture.
First, central bank control is an
illusion. As hard as central banks are trying to achieve some
specific goals, think of zero interest rates, inflation or GDP
growth, it is ultimately the market that will determine what will
happen. Look at the recent evolutions as described above. Even the
most powerful countries on this planet cannot control market forces.
Their power looks convincing in “normal market circumstances,”
but the truth is they are powerless in times of stress in the market.
In
that context, we think it is appropriate to quote John Williams,
researcher at Shadowstats.com,
when he recentlyexplained what
would happen if there was a massive dollar dumping globally. “It
would be disastrous for our markets. All those excess dollars coming
in, with bonds being sold, interest rates would spike. The stock
market would sell off and we would see inflation. To prevent that and
try and keep things stable, the Fed would tend to buy up those
Treasuries. It would intervene wherever it could to stabilize the
circumstance.”
Second, paper assets are in a secular
decline. It really does not matter that US and some European
equities are at trading at all-time highs. They are doomed to fail
till the bear cycle is over. Why? Because the inherent weakness of
our financial system, with the US Dollar vulnerability at its heart,
built on fiat.
The
fact that Russia’s stock market is being hit recently seems not to
be of the highest importance for Putin. We agree with Zerohedge when
they wrote that
“for Putin it is orders of magnitude more important to have the
price of commodities, primarily crude and gas, high than seeing the
illusion of paper wealth, aka stocks, hitting all time highs.”
It really is no coincidence that most
countries, including Russia, China, and the likes, have been adding
to their gold reserves for several years. This brings up the third
long term trend: gold is in a secular uptrend. Yes, the
gold price sold off in 2013. No, the price of gold is not the only
aspect that matters. What is far more important is the protection one
gets from physical gold.
Gold’s protection serves individuals as well
as countries. The “Golden Rule” will continue to be relevant to
countries: he who holds the gold rules. Quoting Michael Noonan: “The
transition of physical gold from West to East is disrupting the
elites domination of the entire financial world. The East has been
saying “Enough is enough.” In our view, that is reflected in
Eastern physical gold accumulation.
To individuals, what matters is that physical
gold is immune to counterparty risk. And this, ladies and
gentlemen, we believe is the key take-away from the ongoing economic
and financial turmoil. All those dollars, Treasuries, stocks,
derivatives, e.a., running a risk to become the object of the new
economic warfare, in the context of extreme leverage and excess
liquidity, has one and only one antidote: unencumbered ownership of
physical gold and silver.
Precious
metals in physical form, outside the banking system, are the antidote
against what is happening in the world today. Protect yourself, there
is still some time to do it (before it is too late). Here is one
excellent way to protect
your savings with physical gold and silver outside the banking
system.
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