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Twisting the Perpetual Gold Bubble: A Look at Hedging

September 22nd, 2011 by Alex

Well, for the time being, the Federal Reserve is shying away from blatantly bailing out Banks with more quantitative easing to instead concentrate on buying more time for the government. This action is being called Operation Twist. The Fed said it is going to sell $400 billion in short term US government debt to buy $400 billion in long term debt. The intent is to drive down long term interest rates and buy the government a little more time. The Fed also said it will reinvest proceeds from maturing mortgage-backed securities back into mortgage-backed securities, instead of its previous practice of buying Treasuries with the proceeds.

Wall Street didn’t initially respond well to this news, especially considering the Fed is now saying there is “significant downside risk to the economic outlook.” It is looking like the Bailout Bubble created out of the 2008 credit crisis has finally fizzled.

Gold and silver (especially silver) have been selling off big on this latest news, which is fine by me since it just spells an opportunity to buy more. I see these sell offs as gifts. Dollar cost averaging is the key to buying metals. However, a lot of the time when silver in particular goes way down in price you can’t find much because the physical market isn’t really as volatile as the paper market; the paper market can be manipulated with things like margin calls and leveraged shorting but not the physical market. This sell off is just a knee jerk reaction to no new immediate blatant quantitative easing (money printing) from the Fed; it is short term noise.

There is no new news indicating that the bull market in gold and silver is anywhere near over. For the last several years, every time gold has had a run up in prices, hack financial commentators with way too much faith in paper money have come out calling the end of the gold bubble. I don’t know about what you see, but I still see a hell of a lot more ads and signs around for “we buy gold” than “we sell gold,” which means the smart money is still accumulating. Relative to fiat money, gold has been in a perpetual bubble since the advent of fiat money. Just following the government’s own bogus inflation numbers, gold should be at least double the price it was 25 years ago in 1986, which means it should be at least $800 an ounce. When you consider all the people in the world and all the fiat money floating around the world, gold is still very cheap. Only 1/3 of an ounce of gold is available for each person on the planet (and due to industrial use, there is only 1/14 of an ounce per person of investment silver available). Therefore, the more distrustful people become of fiat money the higher gold can go. If gold simply repeats its last bull market back in the 70s, it should reach $8000 before settling down around $3000-4000 (and silver should reach $250 before settling down around $75-$100).

Every 30-40 years the monetary system becomes screwed up so bad that it needs to be reordered. We are entering one of those reordering periods. And until we know what money will be for the next 30-40 years, we can’t be sure what the price of gold should be. Eventually, gold will truly be in a bubble and it will be time to bail. But I haven’t seen anything lately that says to me that the dollar has been saved or the appetite for gold has gone crazy. I’m certainly still bullish on gold and silver, in fact, as events have unfolded over time I’ve become more bullish. However, I personally was a hell of a lot more comfortable with the idea of investing in gold and silver when gold was $800 an ounce and silver was $15 an ounce. Unfortunately, I put way too much money in gold stocks at that time instead of into physical metal. So, I know what it is like to have to buy at these higher prices. And for anyone still hesitant about taking the plunge and putting some dollars into gold and silver I’ve been pondering an easy way for people to hedge and thus minimize risk. Because we could see another 2008 or something where everything drops in price except the dollar.

Fortunately, there are two simple tools any person with a US brokerage account can use to cheaply hedge their physical bullion purchases against the absence of monetary collapse and inflation. For gold you can use the double short gold etn with the symbol DZZ. And for silver, you can use the double short silver etf with the symbol ZSL. Taxes on DZZ are the same as with a regular stock and thus simple, but with ZSL, taxes are a bit more complex since you are given a schedule k-1 form annually that you have to report on your taxes regardless of if you sold your position or not. So, if ZSL appreciates, you could have a tax burden regardless of if you sold or not. DZZ has a 0.75% annual fee and ZSL has a 0.95% annual fee; both fees are negligible, unless you are betting big money. DZZ and ZSL are very cheap these days, especially ZSL ($1200 at inception, $15 today). Say you buy a one ounce gold eagle for $1850. You can rest easy if you put 5% of that, or about $100, into DZZ. Then, even if the price of gold collapses, you could still potentially make a profit. With silver, at current prices, you could possibly protect 50 ounces of silver from a huge silver collapse with perhaps as little as 10 shares of ZSL. Those are just estimates though; I can’t know for sure how DZZ or ZSL would preform under a gold and silver collapse. However, something like that would likely remove your risk without stifling the upside if you don’t have the cojones and conviction to buy at current prices without some insurance. And those two tools, DZZ and ZSL, could be used to help avoid selling too early or too late as the price of gold and silver rises. In a total economic collapse DZZ and ZSL could blow up and become worthless, but that’s more of an argument for not going long gold and silver using etfs or etns rather than short. But regardless, this bull market isn’t going to last forever. So, not only do you have to have an entrance strategy but you also have to think about an exit strategy. I’m not giving financial advice, I’m just letting you know the kinds of things I think about doing with my own extra money.

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Peter Schiff Finally Testifies Before Congress

September 21st, 2011 by Alex

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The American Debt Crisis Roundtable

September 15th, 2011 by Alex

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Silver! Final Warning!

August 28th, 2011 by Alex

This is a cool, dramatic narration, attempting to make the case for buying physical silver ASAP.

Just consider this: Alan Greenspan admittedly doesn’t think gold is in a bubble. “Gold, unlike all other commodities, is a currency,” Alan Greenspan said recently. “And the major thrust in the demand for gold is not for jewelry. It’s not for anything other than an escape from what is perceived to be a fiat money system, paper money, that seems to be deteriorating.”

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Debt Collapse: $20,000 Gold Mike Maloney

August 18th, 2011 by Alex

 

If you think gold at $1800 and silver at $40 is expensive, this excellent presentation may change your mind. I just wish that when this bull market in precious metals started I wasn’t a moneyless college kid. Oh well. Nonetheless, in due time, current precious metal prices could too easily seem cheap.

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Raising the Inflation Ceiling: The Monetary System Is a Pyramid Scheme

July 18th, 2011 by Alex

All this talk about the government defaulting on its debt if the debt ceiling isn’t raised is a farce. It’s just like all the dire whining Wall Street and Wall Street pandering politicians did during the 2008 credit crisis to postpone the country from taking the medicine needed to actually fix the problem. Now the government and business interests dependent on government spending are whining for a bailout so they can once again postpone taking medicine. Bailouts don’t solve the problem, which is debt.

Even if the debt ceiling isn’t raised, the U.S. will only default on August 2 if it chooses to do so (according to guys like Lindsey Williams, the plan is to eventually default but perhaps not quite yet). Saying that not raising the debt ceiling means immediate default is saying that U.S. bond holders are the lowest on the economic priority list of the U.S. government. I don’t believe that is the case, because, if that were the case, I don’t know who would want to buy U.S. debt. There is a lot of spending to cut before there is no choice but to default.

The U.S. has defaulted before in 1971, when the gold standard was finally completely abandoned. The result was inflation. But default would be different this time since the scheme used to keep the debt pyramid scheme going would be without a new scheme. I hear people suggesting the dollar would collapse in value in a default scenario, but I doubt it unless the government purposely made all the moves necessary to destroy the dollar. Overall, raising the debt ceiling makes the dollar a bigger joke than toying with default. There is a lot to default on domestically (like military spending and medicare) and a lot of taxation that can be implemented before a full default on debt needs to be made.

The only thing not raising the debt ceiling would really mean immediately is that the government would have to shrink itself in order to not default, which it will have to do eventually anyway (unless it wants to opt out of the debt monetary system sometime soon). We’d see deflationary forces take hold rather than inflationary forces due to a scarcity of money — since the money in our monetary system comes from ever-growing debt. Deflationary forces would be good in the long run, because deflation is economic medicine in the current system. The sooner the country takes that medicine, the better off we’ll all be in the long run. And as a young guy, I happen to be most interested in the long run, not the next election cycle or the next government check (since I don’t get any).

There is very little chance that the debt ceiling won’t be raised in some way. Washington pretty much never has the guts to do the right thing, unless the right thing is part of some kind of conspiracy making it not really the right thing. The right thing is technically monetary reform, but not raising the debt ceiling is at least more the right thing than continuing the debt pyramid scheme known as the modern monetary system. Back when Obama was cool, he actually voted against raising the debt ceiling. But now that he’s at the helm, he just wants to make the status quo move.

The problem with the national debt is not in paying it off. Paying off the debt would mean shrinking the money supply, because the national debt represents the base money supply of the country. Thus, that is never really going to happen. The real problem with the national debt is that it is the driver of inflation. It drives inflation on two interrelated fronts. Since debt comes with interest, the money to pay the interest requires more debt (hence why the debt ceiling needs raised). More debt means more money in the system and more money in the system, beyond what real economic growth can absorb, means the eroding of the purchasing power of the dollar and thus inflation. That’s how the debt pyramid scheme that passes for the modern monetary system works.

Unless the U.S. starts running some kind of massive export surplus, or the Fed starts monetizing the U.S debt to make it interest free, real default is mathematically inevitable without deep spending cuts or more debt. Because if the pyramid scheme doesn’t grow, a deflationary spiral develops due to interest. Conversely, if the pyramid scheme continues to grow, the inflationary spiral that started with the birth of the Federal Reserve will continue until interest rates get too high to keep it going leading to hyper-inflation.

The current out of control government spending in the U.S. in the name of propping up the debt economy, is just a symptom of using inflation as a tax, rather than using actual direct taxation. Inflation is what they are currently using to fund government, avoid economic medicine, and basically buy votes from an economically unsophisticated public that doesn’t understand why gold hit $1600 an ounce. Without a monetary system that allows for inflation, the government would have to stay honest with its spending. Neither the democrats, who serve as the minions to the corporate welfare state, nor the republicans, who serve as the minions to the corporate warfare state, want to give up inflation. If they did, they’d all be talking about monetary reform right now instead of simply trying to extort each other in order to keep the pyramid scheme going. The fact that they aren’t even talking about cutting military spending is probably a sign that more war is in the cards. Perhaps it’s bye bye dollar and hello Petrodollar that is in the works.

Check out this video by Bill Still on the Debt Ceiling debate.

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Ron Paul: The Debt Ceiling Farce

June 8th, 2011 by Alex

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