Casey Files:
It's the End of the World As We Know It
(and I Feel Fine)
By Doug Casey
Chairman, Casey
Research LLC.
The International Speculator
Mar 12, 2007
That's not just the title of
an R.E.M. song. It's how today's gold and silver investors feel
every time they get a reminder from a newspaper or news program.
They see what you see, and
anyone paying even a little attention can't help but notice the
stunning array of problems that are menacing the global economy
and threatening traditional investments. In fact, I can't say
I've experienced the like of it before. And that's saying something,
considering I've made crisis (and how to profit from same) the
focus of my life's work.
This time around, the unfolding
crisis carries several especially dangerous features - and a
locked-in profit opportunity available to anyone even moderately
fleet of foot.
Intractability
First, the intractability of
the situation. That's the word Paul Volcker, former Chairman
of the Fed, used to describe things, and it's a perfectly good
word meaning, simply, that the underlying problems can't be fixed.
In the Middle East, for example,
even if we pull all our troops out today, the situation won't
settle down for years... or maybe even decades. And each day
of turmoil will cost the U.S. more tens of millions in direct
and indirect costs -- and keep the global economy in a state
of chronic worry over energy supplies. Then there's the collapsing
housing bubble. For years a galloping real estate market was
the primary driver of our economy. Now real estate is hobbling
on three legs and has become the primary driver of personal and
corporate bankruptcies.
Even more serious is the 6
trillion or so U.S. dollars in increasingly twitchy foreign hands.
Hardly a day goes by without some government or another announcing
plans to diversify out of the dollar. And no wonder, given the
record levels of personal and government debt in the U.S.
And even more debt is baked
in the cake. We have a freshly-elected slate of Democrat law
makers looking to "do something"... from universal
health care, to global warming, to confronting the "unfair"
trade practices of China and Japan (the very people who own much
of the above mentioned $6 trillion). Those projects are just
for starters, of course. Congress's "must-do" list
goes on and on, and for politicians, "do something"
never means "do something cheaply."
So far, so bad.
But it gets worse. Much worse.
Over 20% of the U.S. population - the baby boomers - are now
beginning to retire, and most of them have nowhere near enough
savings to enjoy their senior years. So they'll be absolutely
dependent on the Social Security and Medicare promises they've
been hearing all their lives. Politically, those promises are
impossible to renege on. Financially, they're impossible to pay.
And along with the government's other unfunded entitlement programs,
they add up to $50 trillion of off-the-books debt.
Mr.Volcker spoke well.
Intractable is the word.
There's more, but that's enough.
We're in a box canyon with a floor of quicksand, and the only
exit is blocked by a landslide. Investors who take a business-as-usual
attitude are not going to have a nice day.
The Magnifying Effect of Modern Finance
In case that litany of problems
isn't enough to get the sweat beading on your forehead, ponder
derivatives. While these hybrids have been around for decades,
the rocket-shot rise of hedge funds and the advances in financial
modeling techniques have spawned something of a competition among
the so-called best and brightest to find ever-more-complex ways
of skimming pennies from very large piles of money.
The collective result is that
our financial system has been wired up to $370 trillion dollars
of privately negotiated investment contracts. They're usually
written to shift risk from one bank, pension fund, insurance
company or brokerage firm to another. And many are linked together
in long chains, with each contract providing collateral for the
next.
It's all very clever, but layering
the enormous size- $370 trillion dollars, far more than the net
worth of all the financial institutions in the world - on top
of all that complexity is downright scary. In simpler times,
a home loan going bad would affect only the particular lender.
Enough defaults would put the lender out of business. And that
would be the end of it. But today a wave of defaults can send
a shock through the portfolios of financial institutions around
the globe, including hedge funds, banks and pension funds far
removed from the troubled borrowers.
Imagine an electrical circuit
with thousands of connections. No one designed it. No one tested
it. No one has a diagram for it. It just grew. Now, because of
its size and power and pervasiveness, everything depends upon
it. So what happens when one of those thousands of connections
burns out? No one really knows, but I say it's a circuit you
should disconnect from before the world learns the answer.
If you are relying on traditional
investments to pad your nest for the future, the problems stalking
the world economy should be a matter of serious concern.
Especially given that as bad
as we think things are about to get, there remains the potential
for things to spin entirely and un-recoverably out of control.
That's because so many wildcards are now in play. A war in Iran?
New York hit by a freelance nuke? A worldwide panic exodus out
of the dollar? Traditional investments would be the first casualty.
The $2 trillion or so loss
in stock market valuations during the recent correction is a
precursor of what's to come in a best case. The worse case is...
much, much worse.
Gold? What Gold?
Working apart from the investment
multitudes, a very small minority of investors over the past
few years have been building portfolios of precious metals and
Canadian precious metals stocks. It's a minority I'm happy to
be a part of, as it allows me peace of mind and the considerable
advantage of viewing these crises somewhat dispassionately.
That doesn't mean I'll enjoy
standing on the sidelines and watching the impact of a monetary
crisis on the lives of the unprepared. Of course not. Yet I would
be a fool, having recognized a crisis shaping up, not to take
the fairly obvious steps to profit.
Which brings me to the opportunity
that the crisis is carrying on its back.
For any number of reasons,
but first and foremost its use as money in all the world's cultures,
throughout all recorded history, gold has begun to find renewed
favor with in-the-know investors as the currency of last
resort.
Make no mistake, despite gold's
rise from its $255 low in April of 2001 to over $650 as I write,
so far, only the thinnest of trickles, a minor fraction of global
capital, has made it into gold. When the flight to safety really
heats up, the real fun will begin, and the price of gold won't
just add dollars, it will add digits.
If that sounds like hyperbole,
remember that, unlike the U.S. dollar, which can be created at
the speed of light, the available supply of gold is finite and
is painfully slow to change.
You can't print gold the way
you print paper money. And you can't just build a gold mine the
same way you might build a Starbucks almost anywhere and on short
notice. Instead, you first have to find a promising ore body
- which is, without exaggeration, like finding a needle in a
haystack... a haystack buried "somewhere" in the earth's
crust.
Then you need to go through
the immensely complex and expensive exercise of confirming that
the ore body is economically viable. Then, years after you started
exploring, you can start the even more time consuming and expensive
process of actually building your mine. That entails finding
a labor force, bringing in power, roads, mills, etc., etc...
with every step hindered by environmentalists waving court injunctions.
The long and short is that
there are hardly any gold mines of size scheduled to come on
stream... and we are not talking about just over the next year
or two, but ever. Most people in the know see annual gold
production falling from here on.
For proof, there was news recently
out of South Africa, the most world's prolific gold producer.
Despite the loud incentive of higher gold prices, South African
gold production in 2006 dropped to the lowest level since 1922.
And, above ground, there just
isn't much gold to go around either. The U.S. government, for
example, possesses the world's largest gold reserves... and those
reserves amount to only about $170 billion at today's prices...
not even a rounding error on the trillions of dollars in debt
the government has guaranteed.
Put simply, the amount of gold
available to investors and central banks is like the number of
beachfront home sites at Malibu -- it's not going to change much.
As a result, when the rush for the lifeboats begins in earnest,
the upward pressure on gold will be unimaginable. As will be
the profits for anyone who acts now, ahead of the crowd.
And I Feel Fine
If you haven't yet started
accumulating precious metals, you still have time. Start by picking
up some bullion coins from a reputable dealer (silver should
do as well as gold).
Then build a portfolio of the
better small companies exploring for new deposits -- the ones
with the best management teams, working on the best projects,
in the best geology. These stocks are the true profit gems -
in part because of an accident of recent history.
During the long bear market
that ended in 2001, the large mining companies all but eliminated
their exploration departments. Now they urgently need new deposits
to restock their declining ore reserves. But rather then scouring
the world themselves, the majors let the more agile and entrepreneurial
junior explorers - often Canadian firms, due to the resource
orientation of that country's economy -- invest the capital and
sweat needed to find a new deposit. Then, when a junior company's
project seems ripe, the majors compete to buy the deposit or
to acquire the junior explorer itself - and they pay up in a
most serious way.
Pick your companies right,
and you can pay pennies today for shares in a junior exploration
company that history has shown again and again will sell, with
a little success, for $10, $20 or more when the market gets rocking
and investors at large rush into all things gold.
While there's no such thing
as a sure thing, there are times - like now - when the deck is
heavily, massively, stacked in your favor.
You are, therefore, left with
a relatively simple choice. Do nothing and hope that all the
world's troubles just drift away-and risk personal financial
disaster if they don't. Or take action, if even with a modest
share of your portfolio, and position yourself for extreme profits.
[Editor's note:
Doug Casey is the author of the New York Times Best-Seller,
Crisis Investing, and Chairman of Casey Research, LLC., publisher
of the highly respected International
Speculator
newsletter, now in its 27th year. International Speculator is
the most profitable source of unbiased research on investments
with the real potential to double or better in the coming year,
with a focus on the best managed junior gold and silver exploration
companies. Learn more about a risk-free trial subscription to
International
Speculator by clicking here now.]
Doug Casey
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