NFTRH
Fast
Forward
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com
Biiwii.blogspot.com November
17, 2008
Excerpted
from the November 15 edition of Biiwii.com's Notes
From the Rabbit Hole
Oz
Every
week brings new financial and economic chaos and further cementing
of perceptions (that should have been adopted years ago) that all is
not right in Oz. The wizard is simply human and he is not an evil
overseer. He is worse
than that. The wizard
is incompetent and that is what scares the hell out of people, or at
least it should.
There
is no master plan coldly implemented by secret illuminati, banksters
or any other global fascist alliances.
The truth is worse; the people in control do not know what
they are doing. They are simply the latest generation of bureaucrats
unquestioningly operating the controls of a doomed system.
At the moment they are being presented a canvas (deflation)
on which to paint their policy (inflation policy, same as it
has been throughout the history of the current system).
If
policy works yet again, it will manifest itself in rising prices, again. But prices will not rise equally. They are likely to rise based on the real value they provide
to real human beings. Yes,
food, water, energy and materials in the practical world and
precious metals in the monetary world.
If policy makers are successful yet again, it will
come at the expense of societies’ faith in paper money created out
of thin air and backed by confidence in the wizard, or the
government he represents.
Think
of modern day Oz as a bunch of stage props from the original
production sitting out on an old abandoned Hollywood lot that is now
used by junkies as a place to shoot up and nod.
Yes, I suppose there is some value left here, but it is
seriously diminished from the heyday when the original production
premiered and enchanted millions.
The current boom-bust-boom system is fated to continue
delivering ever diminishing real returns until the day comes when it
just rusts up and ceases to function, gets cast out to the back lot
and is inhabited by said users on the nod.
Is
that day here? Deflation
proponents claim it is. The
system of inflate… bust… inflate… ends here and now with this
final bust. Inflation
proponents say there is another round left in the chamber and this
is the round the system will use to blow its head off
(hyperinflation). Given
policy makers’ gargantuan efforts to fight the current deflation
impulse and with nearly a century of history under its belt, I am
inclined to think the current system will grind on to – as most
trends do – a final blow off.
This blow off would take the form of the most intense
inflation problem to date and could ultimately break the system.
Recent Past
As
my wife and a few friends and acquaintances know, I had a bee under
my bonnet for several years (the bee has always been there but it
was aggravated by my then-‘guru’), looking forward in dread at
what I knew was coming. I
am personally relieved that it is here because the manufacture of
ill-conceived and unsustainable credit systems is and has been real,
which means it would eventually be dealt with.
The reckoning has been and will continue to be severe, but I
am glad to simply not have this thing hanging over my head any
longer. I review the
recent past because when I write about the present and potential
future, this provides perspective.
Present
Deflation
is everywhere. Confidence
is lost. People have
been scared back into the ‘safe’ paper issued by those in whom
confidence has been lost. Think
about that. In the short term, in the present, safety means
liquidity and refuge from price destruction.
This is a necessary refuge.
But the same crowd that could not wait to get aboard the
commodity mania now lusts after worthless paper.
Are they suddenly right in the big picture?
I know I am like a broken record with this theme, but you
have simply got to consider a way to establish a contrary focus if
you want to survive financially in the future.
Fast Forward
How
many people were worried about inflation in late 2001 and 2002?
Relatively few, that’s how many.
Die-hard gold bugs, the Austrians http://mises.org
(who understand the dynamics of money creation) and a thoughtful few
others. Fast forward
from 2002 to 2007 and you have manic hysteria and the
‘resources’ trade going full steam.
This trade seemed more valid then the previous mania in
revenue-free dot coms. In
fact, many commodity companies appeared to be undervalued even at
the height of the boom. But
were they? No, they
were not considering that the entire commodity bull train was
steaming down a track that ended at a cliff.
But investors did not see a cliff out on the horizon.
They saw a China growth story.
They saw an ascending India and developing world.
They saw what they thought was an unstoppable global
apparatus being constructed. But
it was an illusion. The
illusion was built upon a foundation that really was never there to
begin with; this foundation was the idea that America could keep
borrowing its way to prosperity and fueling the global system.
Sober, forward-looking people knew this had to end.
But
what are we here for at NFTRH?
We are here to do what we have always done; look ahead once
again. My personal
belief is that the new unsustainable story is that people can hide,
en masse, in various global paper, the only value of which is the
value that respective governments say it holds.
Therefore, I am an ‘inflationist’ as some people have
described me because when I look forward I see a realization out on
the horizon – perhaps as faint as today’s deflationary crash
episode looked to most in early 2007 – that the current rush to
cash will have been only a knee jerk race for short term liquidity
even as global authorities did all they could to destroy the units
in which this cash was denominated.
So,
with the same hazy timing (it took longer than most of we doomsayers
expected for the current crisis to arrive) I look forward and NFTRH
assumes the stance of balancing short term needs for ‘safety’
with long term needs for a very different kind of safety; protecting
oneself from the devaluation of global currencies.
Understand that the stance is monetary first and foremost and
while I can see a new commodity boom well out on the long term
horizon, I remain focused on the producers of the monetary metals
first. The great
commodity boom, part II will have to wait until still declining
economies experience their next upturn due to today’s policy now
being carpet bombed globally, 24/7.
As for the economies themselves and associated stock markets,
the returns are likely to be diminishing indeed.
But there could be select opportunities there as well.
Only
a few are watching for this today.
It is as it always has been and tomorrow’s counterparty
remains secure in its conventional wisdom.
More
analysis, including a technical status update on global markets,
gold fundamentals and a look at a trading opportunity in a uranium
producer follows in the November 15 edition of Notes
From the Rabbit Hole (NFTRH8).
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