Another lazy summer day. The Dow sold off a few pennies on Friday. Gold rose $8.

The airport in Paris must be the most efficient in the world. Our cab drove up at exactly 6 a.m. By 6:04, we were having a cup of coffee, waiting to board the plane. In just four minutes, we’d gotten our ticket, been inspected by security and made it to the gate.

Now we’re on the plane, flying over the Pyrenees… thinking…

 Good As Gold

Over the last 10,000 years, humans have tried two different kinds of “money.” They began with exchanges based on credit – “You give me a chicken… I’ll pay you back later, maybe by helping you build a new wigwam.”

Then, when society became too large and extensive, they switched to gold and silver. The advantage of this was obvious: You didn’t have to remember who owed what to whom. You could settle up right away. “You give me a chicken. I give you a little piece of silver. Done deal.”

Periodically, governments were tempted to go back to credit systems. Essentially, they issued pieces of paper – IOUs – and declared them “money.” Usually, these hybrid systems began with some collateral backing up the paper. Issuers typically had gold in their vaults and agreed to exchange the paper for metal at a fixed rate. Holders of the paper money were told that it was “good as gold.”

In some cases, people believed the IOUs were better than gold. When John Law began modern central banking in France, he backed his paper money with shares in a profit-seeking business – the Mississippi Company. You could take his scrip and imagine that it would grow in value along with the profits of the company.

Trouble was, the Mississippi Company never made any profit. It was a failure… and a fraud. Great prospectus. Few real investments. When people realized, they wanted to get rid of their paper money as soon as possible. In 1720, the system collapsed, and John Law fled France.

Later in the 18th century, the French tried again. This time, the revolutionary government backed its new paper money with revenues from the church properties they had seized. This didn’t last very long, either. The system blew up in 1796. Napoleon Bonaparte, on the scene at the time, declared, “While I live, I will never resort to irredeemable paper money.”

Richard Milhous Nixon didn’t seem to get the memo. In 1971, he changed the world monetary system. Thenceforth, it would be based on irredeemable paper money. We are now in year 42 of this new experiment with modern, credit-based money.

All right so far? Well, yes… as long as you don’t look too carefully.

Nothing More Than Promises

When you have a system based on credit, rather than bullion, deals are never completely done. Instead, everything depends on the good faith and good judgment of counterparties – including everybody’s No. 1 counterparty: the US government. Its bills, notes and bonds are the foundation of the money system. But they are nothing more than promises – debt instruments issued by the world’s biggest debtor.

A credit system cannot last in the modern world. Because, as the volume of credit rises, the creditworthiness of the issuers declines. The more they owe, the less able they are to pay.

As time goes by, the web of credit spins out in all directions, entangling not just the present, but the future too. It stretches out over the entire society… one person owes another… who owes a third… whose debt has been pledged to a fourth… who now depends on it to pay a fifth… and all calibrated in the IOUs of sketchy value from a sixth. Have you got that?

Total debt in the US now measures more than twice what it was – in proportion to GDP – in 1971. And GDP itself has been goosed up by credit. Every time someone borrows money to spend… the spending shows up in GDP.

It looks great… on paper. There’s only so much gold. But there is no reasonable limit on how much of this new credit-based money you can create. As it increases, it gives people more spending power. GDP goes up. Employment goes up. Prices – especially asset prices – go up.

Naturally, everybody loves a credit system… until the credits go bad. Then they wish they had a little more of the other kind of money. Wise governments, if there are any, take no chances. They may feed the paper money to the people. But they hold onto gold for themselves. Throughout history, the most powerful governments were those with the most gold.

“Remember the golden rule,” they used to say. “He who has the gold makes the rules.”

When push comes to shove, governments need gold, not more IOUs with their presidents’ pictures on them.

Which brings us to the point of today’s Diary.

Unraveling an Unruly Skein

Britain famously and foolishly sold much of its gold at the very worst time, at the end of the 1990s, when gold was trading at a 20-year low.

But how about the US? Does it have any gold left? That is the question recently posed by Eric Sprott:

Central banks from the rest of the world (i.e., non-Western central banks) have been increasing their holdings of gold at a very rapid pace, going from 6,300 tonnes in Q1 2009 to more than 8,200 tonnes at the end of Q1 2013. At the same time, physical inventories have declined rapidly since the beginning of 2013 (or have been raided, as we argued in the May 2013 Markets at a Glance), and physical demand from large- and small-scale buyers remains solid.

As we have shown in previous articles, the past decade has seen a large discrepancy between the available gold supply and sales. The conclusion we have reached is that this gold has been supplied by central banks, which have replaced their holdings of physical gold with claims on gold (paper gold).

Analyzing the gold sales figures over the last 12 years, Sprott noticed that there was far more gold sold than mined. Where did it come from?

Some of it is easily accounted for in jewelry and private holdings. But, generally, the private sector is a buyer and an accumulator of gold, not a seller. And the quantities released to the market have been so great, Sprott believes they could have come only from central banks.

But if they have sold such massive quantities over the last 10 years, how much do they have left? Maybe not much.

Which wouldn’t be surprising. Western central banks are committed to their credit-money system. They intend to stick with it. And they know that unraveling this unruly skein of credit would be extremely painful.

Selling gold into the bull market of the last 12 years probably seemed like a very smart move. We’ll see how smart it was later, when the credit-based money system blows up.

Dear Readers are advised to hold onto their gold. It’s the kind of money that works.

Regards,

 

Bill

 


Market Insight:

Is the Great Rotation a Contrarian Indicator?

From the desk of Chris Hunter

Is the US stock market is climbing a wall of worry… or a wall of stimulus?

We don’t know.

But we do know that, since the March 2009 lows, there is a nearly 90% correlation between rises in the S&P 500 and expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet.

And we do know that the S&P 500 is up about 18% on the back of less-than-stellar global growth. (The IMF has trimmed its global growth forecast for the fifth time since last year… mainly due to weakness in the emerging markets.)

We also know that more and more individual investors are pumped with the prospects of higher stock prices still.

Last week, stock market funds saw a $7.6 net billion inflow, as bond funds saw a net outflow of $6 billion (on top of net redemptions of $8.1 billion).

This suggests the Great Rotation is finally underway. The herd of Mom-and-Pop investors is once more afraid of missing out on losses in stocks than it is of losing money in future crashes.

There’s something ominous about the big rush into stocks by the “dumb money” just as the growth-sensitive tech sector loses steam. Second-quarter earnings from Google, Microsoft, Intel, IBM, eBay (not to mention industrial bellwether GE) were disappointing… even as the big brokers such as Goldman Sachs posted stellar results.

Therein lies a tale…

A big surge in financial asset prices on the back of massive stimulus as underlying growth gets soft and squishy. We suspect the Great Rotation could turn out to be a great contrarian indicator on stocks.