Casey Files:
Time Machine:
A Trip Back in Time to Profit from
the Unfolding Crisis Today
David Galland
Casey Research International
Speculator
Nov 1, 2007
At one point or another in
your life, you've probably fantasized about going back in time.
Such fantasies typically involve
visions of truckloads of easy money. From, say, buying beachfront
property in Hawaii when it was still affordable. Or positioning
yourself in the dot.com boom early on, then selling out before
the collapse.
Well, I'd like to take you
on a quick trip in a time machine, to when the team here at Casey
Research looked into the future and saw the unfolding credit
crisis, then told readers how to protect their portfolios and
lock in extraordinary profits.
Then we'll return to the present
and I'll demonstrate that the profit opportunities spotted then
are still firmly intact, just waiting for you to grab them.
First the time machine part.
For that, we turn to a direct excerpt from the "Users
Guide to Fiscal Calamity," the lead article of the
December 2006 edition of our International
Speculator.
Admirers claim that the rapidly
expanding use of derivatives helps to decrease overall economic
risk by shifting particular risks toward the investors that can
most easily bear them. It's a nice idea. And it's not really
a bad idea. But it's launched a very big ship that has never
had a real shakedown cruise. Derivatives may give an appearance
of decreasing risk on a case-by-case basis, but when taken together,
the risks to the economic system are not decreased but made worse.
A typical participant in the
derivatives market is busy buying with one hand and selling something
slightly different with the other. Whatever risk he takes on,
he tries to offset with a derivative from someone else. And that
someone else is doing the same thing with another someone else.
And so on. The simple fact is that no one knows where the long
rows of dominoes begin or end, or just how much shaking it would
take to knock over the least stable of them.
To take just one example: Credit
Default Swaps (CDS) provide guarantees against a bond defaulting.
They carry the rating of the party granting the guarantee, which
is usually AA. But if such an issuer were forced to make good
on a big default, its credit rating could drop, lowering the
value of every other piece of paper it has guaranteed - many
of which are wrapped up in derivatives sold by other issuers...
many of which are wrapped up in derivatives sold by still other
issuers. The chain reaction could run far beyond the initial
default.
By mid-2006, CDS issues had
grown to $16 trillion, a 100% increase over the year before.
The individuals who manage
banks and dealers in the derivatives market don't want rules
so confining that they can't do business. We suspect most of
the derivative operations are sturdy enough to withstand anything
that has happened in the lifetimes of the people who run them.
But they're not ready for anything rougher than that. If "6
sigma" is their standard, 7 sigma has implicitly - but dangerously
- been assigned a probability of zero.
What happens when unprecedented
events make the markets even more volatile? No building can be
made absolutely quakeproof.
In that same article, we provided
a summary of what's coming...
What This Means for Investors
The rapidly approaching dilemma
for the Federal Reserve comes down to a choice between (1) engineering
a standard sort of recovery from the next recession by speeding
up monetary growth and reducing interest rates and (2) keeping
the dollar afloat.
Choose the "solution"
behind Door Number One and trigger a monetary crisis. Open Door
Number Two and our heavily indebted economy is devastated by
the higher interest rates needed to support the U.S. dollar.
For all the reasons discussed above, and with the next presidential
election season now kicking off, the odds heavily favor inflation.
In fact, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
virtually gave the game away in a speech in Frankfurt on November
10, 2006.
"It would be fair to say
that monetary and credit aggregates have not played a central
role in the formulation of U.S. monetary policy."
In other words, the total amount
of money in the system - what we "print" - plays no
serious role in current U.S. policy. That's a politic way of
admitting that the U.S. government is planning to paper over
all its many obligations and accelerate a trend that has been
in motion since the creation of the Fed in 1913.
Casualties
As the dollar loses purchasing
power, interest rates eventually will rise - inevitably as lenders
demand some compensation for inflation, and intermittently as
the Fed attempts to slow the wholesale abandonment of the dollar
by foreign holders. That will make bonds the worst investment
and garden variety stocks the next worst.
That inflation should hurt
bonds - with its double-whammy of rising interest rates and declining
purchasing power - is obvious. But the damage that inflation
does to stocks is nearly as bad, as a comparison of market action
during the Great Depression with the sell-off during the inflationary
1970s makes clear.
As you can see, there are two
noticeable spikes, in 1929 and in 2000. But most of the movement
in stock prices is hidden by changes in the value of the dollar
(deflation in the 1930s and inflation in the 1970s). Correct
for a fluctuating dollar, as in the next chart, and you see a
whole new picture.
A raging inflation - and we
believe what's coming will be much worse than that of the 1970s
- can have the same devastating impact on stocks as a depression.
It is also worth noting how long the peaks loom over the years
that follow. If you buy at precisely the wrong time, it can take
two decades or more just to break even.
Beneficiaries
The biggest beneficiary of
the flight from the dollar will be commodities.
A preview of what's to come
can be seen in what has already occurred since the U.S. government
gave the gold standard its last kiss goodbye in 1971. Fiscal
restraint ended, the dollar became nothing more than a floating
abstraction, and commodities took off.
While commodities in general
will do well during the flight from the dollar, the biggest winners
will be precious metals. Gold's story is the simplest: the flight
from the dollar will be a movement toward a reliable store of
value.
And, just in case you are reluctant
to eliminate all stocks from your portfolio (other than those
in the resource sector), we believe that certain industries in
the U.S. and certain areas will be helped by a cheap dollar.
Export industries, e.g., agriculture, will be helped.
It might seem shrewd to try
to leverage your profits from a declining dollar by borrowing
dollars to finance investment purchases. But that's a risky strategy.
The flight from the dollar won't be a straight-line process.
It will go in fits and starts, and there will be temporary reversals
that can cut the legs off a trader who's playing with borrowed
money - especially if it's margin money or any other kind of
credit with a floating interest rate.
We prefer to find leverage
from a different source - the kind of selected junior resource
stocks that we follow in International
Speculator. Their prices tend to far outrun the prices of
the underlying commodities... without the risk of margin calls.
The bottom line is that we
are in the early stages of a serious monetary crisis, a crisis
you can make your friend by steadily and cautiously building
a portfolio of resource stocks, the kind of investments we bring
to your attention each month in this letter.
Back into the Time Machine for a Return
to the Present
As you have just read, in December
of 2006 we were convinced a credit crisis would unfold and gold
would do particularly well, both of which have now come to pass.
Back then, gold was $648 per ounce. Today, it sells for about
$730. Given our view that the budding credit crisis will soon
morph into a genuine currency crisis -- thanks to the unprecedented
six trillion U.S. dollars held by foreigners showing increasing
displeasure with the easy-money policy of the Fed -- we think
gold is going much higher.
But what about the performance
of the junior resource stocks? After all, that is the sector
that got our nod as the most profitable way to play this crisis.
Those stocks have largely underperformed. Could we have missed
something?
Or has the opportunity somehow
been frozen in time, allowing you to jump in today at yesterday's
prices for spectacular profits as the current crisis regains
momentum? While we are not afraid of admitting mistakes, in this
case we remain convinced the big move is still ahead.
Here's why...
The junior resource sector
is dominated by Canadian stocks, specifically those that trade
on Toronto's Venture Exchange. These stocks have several attributes
that give them explosive upside. In no particular order...
A) They are thinly traded.
A lot of buying can quickly send prices to the moon, with
daily moves of 10% or even 100% not that unusual. Great when
a lot of people are trying to get in (and you are in ahead of
them), the opposite of great when a lot of people are trying
to get out. The rush for liquidity this past July and August,
therefore, triggered an especially sharp correction in the illiquid
juniors. Which makes sense, given that gold was still flying
under the radar of most investors... and the next leg up in bullion
prices had not yet begun.
B) The industry is full
of perma-skeptics. Ninety-nine percent of the Vancouver resource
community, including brokers and exploration company executives,
if pumped full of truth serum and asked four years ago - in the
early days of gold's run-up -- how long they thought the bull
market in gold would last, would have confessed the end is nigh.
Why? Because experience shows
resource cycles are short-lived. That has created a near DNA-level
pessimism about the prospects for metals prices in general, and
stocks in particular, over any period longer than it takes for
the morning cup of coffee to cool.
The consequences of this widely
held attitude is an industry that speaks out of both sides of
its mouth, cheering on investors with one side as gold prices
rise, while calling their brokers to dump highly appreciated
shares with the other. It is not possible to overstate the impact
of this "psychological overhang" on the junior resource
market.
(By contrast, the stocks of
larger producers that trade on the big exchanges operate mostly
on fundamentals - for example, an actual P/E ratio - something
totally lacking in most juniors... for the simple reason that
until they actually discover something and go into production,
the juniors have no P, or E.)
C) The old adage "sell
in May and go away" rings especially true up north. During
the summer months in the Northern Hemisphere comes the melting
of snow, and access to remote exploration targets returns (and
these days, most of the remaining good ones are remote). Exploration
companies grab their gear, load up the helicopters, and get back
to work searching for the glory hole that will secure massive
quantities of bubbly well into old age. Canadian brokers, knowing
that the mine finders are absent and that news will slow as a
result, take full advantage of the short summer months with long
vacations.
Completing this vicious cycle,
the exploration companies tend to hold their news, figuring why
send a report to an empty desk. In the midst of this self-reinforcing
news vacuum, investors grow bored and then impatient, leading
to widespread weakness.
I mention all of that, because
as we headed out of July and into August, the junior resource
sector was at its most illiquid and therefore most vulnerable.
And as the red line in the chart below shows, while there was
evidence of the normal summer doldrums in the junior sector,
it was not excessive and, in fact, by early July the shares as
a whole were turning up (that usually doesn't happen until the
fall).
But then, as you can also see,
in late July/early August, financial Armageddon peaked its horned
head over the horizon. In the scramble for liquidity in all things,
the seasonally illiquid junior resource stocks were elbowed off
a high cliff. (Or, looking to the Thesaurus for further guidance,
we learn the junior resource sector was "devastated, killed,
collapsed, destroyed, slaughtered, ceased, withered and ruined.")
Important point #1: The devastation to the junior resource
stocks was quick and punishing, a loss of 27% nearly overnight.
The S&P 500 would have needed to fall from 1,553 to 1,133
to equal such a loss, far more than the frantically discussed
fall to 1,406 that the index actually suffered over the same
period.
Historically, of course, the
faster and steeper the excesses in any market are corrected,
the sooner said correction ends. This is especially the case
when the underlying sector, in this case gold - shown with the
blue line -- is in a solid uptrend.
Canaries in the Gold Mine
Further evidence of that contention
comes from a glimpse at the recent performance of the large-cap
producing and near-production stocks. These are the "canary
in the gold mine" stocks that institutional investors look
to first after deciding to move into gold.
The chart below shows the Gold
Bug Index (the blue line) against the S&P 500
over the one-year period ending September 25. As you can see,
after a somewhat sloppier dive than the one so crisply executed
by the junior team, the large-cap gold stocks clearly caught
the attention of the Wall Street herd and popped back up like
a blue whale with wings and on steroids. That, no doubt, after
a collective slapping of foreheads as realization dawned that
the only hope of economic salvation remaining in the Fed's mostly
empty tool chest was to reach for a wrench to turn on the money
spigots - creating inflation - while also recalling the six trillion
dollars in foreign hands and positing that they might be none-too-happy
about the "fix."
Important Point #2: Looking over these present-day charts,
one is drawn to an Aristotelian line of reasoning that goes something
like this: If (A) gold is going up, as it has been pretty much
throughout the period, and (B) stocks of gold producers are beginning
to run ahead of the pack, then isn't it logical that (C) the
recent momentum in the juniors will soon accelerate, providing
the triple- and even quadruple-digit returns that are the hallmark
of the junior resource sector in a gold bull market.
And, make no mistake, we are
in a gold bull market.
Returning to the chart of the
junior resource stocks, you can see they are starting to also
track gold, clawing slowly back. They still have a long way to
go to get back to the step-off point in July/August... the seeds
of an opportunity, if you ask us.
In fact, not only do we remain
unconcerned about whether prior recent highs for the juniors
will be revisited, we remain, per our discussion from December
2006, convinced those highs will be greatly exceeded as the credit
crisis turns into currency crisis that is now all but inevitable.
(Especially as we are expecting to hear news any day of the next
big discovery... that is all but inevitable given the amount
of exploration money that has gone into the ground over the past
few years.)
At the beginning of this modest
treatise, I offered up the notion that the opportunity in the
junior resource sector has been frozen in time. As you can see,
a thaw is beginning. The time to take your positions is here
and now. Waiting even a few months from today, while still not
too late to profit, will be viewed with perfect hindsight as
money lost.
The trend remains our friend.
David Galland is the managing editor of Doug Casey's
International
Speculator, now in its 27th year of helping independent-minded
investors with unbiased recommendations on investment with the
potential to double or better within a 12-month horizon.
An example from the most recent
edition, Oct 1, 2007: within 14 day's of being placed on the
BEST BUY list in the International Speculator, this junior gold
exploration company's stock went up 25%, then on news that company
would be acquiring a new producing gold mine its up 45% after
30 days.
Most investors risk 100% of
their money in the hope for a 10% return. The International Speculator
reverses that formula, helping you reduce overall portfolio risk
while boosting performance. To find out how you can give it a
try, risk-free, click
here.
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