Casey Files:
The Iranian
Gold Card
By David Galland,
Managing Editor,
BIG
GOLD from CaseyResearch.com
May 14, 2007
In the minds of most, an attack
by the U.S. or its allies on Iran would be an act of extreme
foolishness. And that's putting it charitably.
Not that the U.S. would actually
lose, at least not in military terms. While the precarious position
of the U.S. armada in the Persian Gulf -- the narrow shores of
which are crowded with all manner of ship-killing missiles, including
the deadly Chinese C-802 with its 98% hit rate -- all but assure
a loss of American life on a scale of Pearl Harbor, the Iranians,
like the Japanese in WWII, have no real chance of prevailing.
The U.S. might lose the battle
for the Persian Gulf, but it would certainly win the short conventional
war that would follow.
But that assessment doesn't
mean the U.S. would come out a winner in the long run; as the
minor-league skirmish in Iraq demonstrates on a daily basis,
boots on the ground - a prerequisite to proclaiming victory -
are boots that quickly become muck-bound.
In fact, the only real winner,
should hostilities break out, would be investors in precious
metals and energy plays.
The True Cost of War
While the upside for oil in
a shoot-out with Iran is clear, there are several reasons why
gold and silver will also rally, and strongly so.
One, of course, is the long
and unblemished history of the precious metals as a crisis hedge.
Another, less obvious, is that
an expansion of the war in the Middle East could very well be
the load of straws that break the back of the U.S. dollar. Or,
less metaphorically, the direct and indirect costs associated
with the war would hurry along the monetary crisis that is already
inevitable.
You see, war is not cheap.
The price tag on the Iraq War alone is already credibly estimated
to ring in at over $2 trillion by the time the sand eventually
settles.
The cost of expanding the war
to Iran, a conflict that would invariably boomerang back to the
"new" Shi'ite-controlled Iraq - as well as Muslim populations
from Pakistan to Indonesia and everywhere in between - would
put immense pressure on the U.S. Treasury. The raging river of
U.S. deficit spending would, almost overnight, turn into a Niagara
Falls.
Especially as the war - which,
given its scope, could rationally be called WWIII - would be
accompanied by upward-spiraling oil prices.
As the chart below shows, gold
tracks oil fairly closely. The world runs on energy, and for
the foreseeable future, most of that energy comes from oil. As
oil prices rise, therefore, so does price inflation... an environment
that decidedly favors gold.
War or No War?
Just because attacking Iran
would be an invitation to disaster doesn't mean that an attack
won't happen. Governments are capable of the most egregious blunders,
blunders that in the 20/20 hindsight of history are viewed with
incredulity. Among the very long list, we could point to the
decisions of both Napoleon and Hitler to invade Russia. And Kennedy's
choosing to step into the boots abandoned by France in the rice
paddies of Vietnam. And those are just the palest of scratches
on the surface.
In the case of Iran, our grandchildren
may some day look back and identify October of 2006, when the
U.S. deployed a carrier battle group led by the U.S.S. Dwight
D. Eisenhower to the Persian Gulf, as being the first spark of
the flame that led to conflict. That carrier group has since
been joined by the U.S.S. John C. Stennis (March 27), and the
French carrier Charles De Gaulle. On May 10, the nuclear powered
U.S.S. Nimitz super carrier, the lead ship of its class and one
of the largest warships in the world moved into the gulf to relieve
the Eisenhower. This is only the second time in history that
the U.S. has maintained two carrier groups in the narrow and
dangerous waters of the Persian Gulf: the first was during the
Iraq war in 2003.
And the saber rattling goes
on. At a recent UN conference, the U.S. warned that the Iranians
may plan to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
as North Korea did in 2003. The underlying message: "And
look what the Koreans have done since." At the same time,
Iran's president is touring the Persian Gulf states, doubtlessly
trying to rally support for his cause.
Even if the U.S., or Israel,
is not intending to strike, who's to say the Iranians, feeling
threatened, won't give themselves a fighting chance by striking
first? Or, that a terrorist cell won't unleash missiles from
the Iranian shores to get the ball rolling. Once the shooting
starts, who fired the first shot won't much matter. What will
matter are the consequences.
And among the most immediate
of those consequences will be, according to the Iranians, a closing
of the Strait of Hormuz, the only sea route through which oil
from Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and most of the
United Arab Emirates can be transported.
That means a halt in the shipment
of the approximately 16 million barrels of oil that transit through
the Strait every day, roughly 20% of the world's daily oil production.
By conservative estimates, this alone could send oil to $100
per barrel.
As a preview, consider the
oil crisis in the '70s, when members of the OPEC announced they
would no longer ship petroleum to nations supportive of Israel,
i.e., the U.S. and its European allies... crude spiked 134.6%
increase in a 30-day period. Simultaneously, gold rallied for
a 72% year-over-year increase in price.
But today, the situation is
far more dire. That's because, today, the U.S. dollar is already
under extreme pressure due to decades of prolific government
spending, spending only made worse by the Iraqi war.
Today, there are over six trillion
U.S. dollars in foreign hands, and worse, those dollars now serve
as the world's de-facto reserve currency, littering the vaults
of central bankers from Australia to Zanzibar and all the letters
in between. That is an unprecedented occurrence in the history
of humankind. A further loss of faith in the U.S. government,
an inevitable reaction to an expanding war, and sure knowledge
of the extraordinary direct and indirect costs of that war would
only accelerate and exacerbate the monetary crisis now looming
on the horizon.
Bet on war? Despite the saber
rattling, it's still a coin toss. But it seems to us, a coin
toss gold investors can't lose on.
That's because, on one side
of the coin we have the status quo - an inevitable monetary crisis
- while on the other we have a war with Iran, sending gold straight
to the moon.
Either way, it seems extremely
rational to be diversifying into gold - and for the real upside,
quality gold stocks - at this critical point in time.
We are in uncharted waters,
every bit as dangerous as the overcrowded Persian Gulf.
David Galland
is the Managing Editor of BIG GOLD, from Casey Research. For
over 27 years Doug Casey and his team have been helping investors
profit from contrarian opportunities with the potential to deliver
100% or better profits within the next 12 months. BIG
GOLD,
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