Currency Regime Change
By Doug Casey
The
International Speculator
Jul 28, 2006
There is a major change coming
that will catch most investors by surprise: the end of the U.S.
dollar as the de-facto world reserve currency.
Play it right and you can make
life-changing returns.
Central Banks Looking to Exit the
Dollar
In the International
Speculator, we've often mentioned the inevitable move by
central banks to diversify their reserves out of the U.S. dollar.
We've noted that, apart from the current situation, there is
no precedent for any non-redeemable paper currency being
held as the primary reserve of the world's central banks.
That diversification out of
the dollar, with a lot going into gold, has begun. A regime change
is afoot - though few have yet recognized it.
Recently, Russian President
Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian central bank to raise the
gold share of its foreign reserves from 5% to 10%. That's no
small matter, given that Russia's reserves have surged to $247
billion - the world's fourth largest.
Accomplishing the shift to
10% gold would require purchasing 21 million ounces of bullion,
which is about one-quarter of the world's annual mine production.
And thanks largely to oil exports, Russia is accumulating additional
foreign currency reserves at a rate of about $100 billion per
year. With reserves growing so rapidly, just keeping the gold
portion at 5% would require Russia to absorb a big slice of the
world's mine output.
Meanwhile, in China, Monetary
Committee member Yu Yongding is not alone in calling for Beijing
to diversify its $875 billion reserves into gold to protect against
a tumbling dollar. We quoted him last month, saying: "We
need to use some of the reserves to buy other assets such as
gold and strategic resources such as oil." More recently,
Zhao Qingming from the Chinese central bank's Financial Research
Institute and Luo Bin from its accounting department wrote in
a note published in China Money Market that using some
of China's forex reserves to buy gold could "maintain and
raise the value of China's dollar holdings." That conclusion
seems questionable, but the important thing is that more Chinese
officials are jumping on this bandwagon. It's an idea whose time
is coming - soon.
Given the trillions of U.S.
dollars washing around the world's monetary system, these are
not inconsequential developments. Quite the contrary. They greatly
favor gold and other tangibles. What's the alternative for a
dollar-heavy investor or central bank? The Who-Owes-You-Nothing
euro? Or the yen, which is the proximate cause of the current
bubble? How about the Zambian kwacha or the Vietnamese dong?
I think not.
What's Next?
As explained in the April 2006
International
Speculator article, Seasons of Gold, thanks to the
traditional seasonal pattern, buying will pick up in August,
which should kick gold solidly back into gear. After that, as
the wheels start to come off the global economy, I expect gold
to gain serious upside momentum. That's not to say there won't
be corrections, even substantial ones, along gold's trek to $2,000
and beyond. There will be. But the trend for higher gold prices
is firmly entrenched.
While there are many reasons
for that trend to accelerate, the most important is the desire
to hold the metal. That's why it's so significant that investment
demand for gold is up 37% over the past year, much of the latter
flowing into the more easily accessible and convenient Exchange
Traded Funds.
Demand will only rise as the
months go by and everyone from central bankers to oil sheiks
to hedge fund managers to everyday Joes piles into gold out of
distrust of the U.S. dollar... and of the government that purports
to stand behind it.
And pile in they will, because
money debasement is still very much the name of the game. If
you were one of those resource stock investors who started to
panic at the depths of the recent gold correction, take heart:
the big-picture, fundamental reasons for holding gold - and especially
high-quality gold and silver shares - are as much with us now
as they were a month ago, and gold's continuing march upwards
is far from over. In fact, I suspect in the historical context,
it has hardly begun.
Central banks bailing out of
the dollar, the wheels coming off the U.S. economy-the nightmare
of every investor. Or maybe not... If you invest wisely now,
the emerging paper bear market will eventually prove in your
favor. As foreign governments look to avail themselves of more
gold for their reserves, you should do the same. And investing
in gold and other natural resource stocks is a strategy that
promises even higher returns... if you pick the right companies.
For more than
a quarter-century, Doug Casey has traveled across the globe and
kicked rocks at remote mine sites. His goal: to find the best
opportunities that can generate double and triple-digit returns
(and sometimes much more)... usually within 12 to 24 months.
Learn
more here.
-Doug Casey
The International Speculator

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