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The Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury, with the aid of the U.S. Congress, have embarked on a massive monetary inflation that will only weaken or destroy the US Dollar. By supporting asset prices of failed institutions and inflated home values entering foreclosure, they will rob a nation of its wealth. We will live to see either a rapid devaluation or progressive hyperinflation of the US Dollar.

Normally, Gold and Silver provide an early warning of a pending Inflation. The Federal Reserve chief has stated that he intends to use "whatever means necessary" to correct a deflationary crisis. Using its Emergency Powers, we believe the Federal Reserve is intervening to manipulate the "paper" price of Gold and Silver lower in order to fool as many possible into thinking the US Dollar is a better safety net at a time when they are inflating the money supply faster than at any time in human history.

In a FREE market, there has never been a time when gold and silver dropped in price when the wholesale market experienced global bullion supply shortages, at the very same time as the Federal Reserve embarks on the LARGEST monetary infusion in the history of the world. You should consider obtaining physical gold and silver at any point at or below 100 day moving average...Note, we do not consider Gold and Silver ETF's physical metal. If you cannot obtain the physical metal, try either BullionVault.com, Goldmoney.com, or shares in the Central Fund of Canada (CEF) as the next best thing.

In advance of the 2004 Asian Tsunami, the water level receded before the 100 ft waves hit the shore. Few animals were killed and others who understood the signs were saved...

We believe the short term rise of the US Dollar reflects a coming Financial Tsunami. The "unsinkable" Titanic rose before it sank to the bottom of the North Atlantic. Thousands perished since little importance was placed on lifeboats.

Gold is a hard currency with a 3,000-year history and no liability, and therefore it will never default. The dollar is a paper currency that lost all backing of gold 37-years ago. It has $10 trillion of debt behind it (and growing). It is an IOU whose value can only fall over time.

It all comes down to trust. Would you rather be holding physical gold and silver today or a fiat currency backed by nothing, tinkered with by the folks pictured at the top of this page including a former College Professor now FED Chairman, a former CEO of Goldman Sachs now Treasury Secretary, and the (easily intimidated with fear) US Congress with NO transparency, NO accountability and NO shame? You have a choice today that you may not have when you wake tomorrow.

Jim Waters
kwaves.com
Oct.26.08




Deflation Scare the Perfect Camouflage
By Christopher Galakoutis
Friday, October 17 2008 12:48 PM

It is said the market can sniff out prospective problems and price itself accordingly.  If so, then someone needs to get this dog some nasal spray, lickedy-split!

Inflation and Deflation are Monetary Phenomenons

The deflation scare currently hovering over the entire market, particularly in the metals and commodities sectors, has been brutal.  But the key question today is whether this “scare” will evolve into a genuine deflation threat to the US and the world?

Inflation and deflation are monetary phenomenons.  Monetary inflation occurs when the supply of money increases faster than the supply of goods and services.  This is different from the concept of price inflation, which, depending on several variables that may impact inputs along a given production chain, can cause an increase in the price level for certain goods and services at any given time.  Otherwise said, monetary inflation causes price inflation, but a price rise isn’t always a result of monetary inflation.

With monetary deflation you have the opposite effect, in that it relates to a contraction in the money supply.  If the supply of money contracts, while the supply of goods and services either remains constant, increases, or contracts at a slower rate, then that can lead to price deflation.  Otherwise said, a contraction in the supply of money will in most cases cause asset prices to fall, but falling asset prices are not always the result of a monetary deflation (the oil price can rise if the supply of oil is falling at a faster rate than a money supply contraction, for instance).

We Do Not Have Monetary Deflation

What we have today is falling asset prices in, specifically, real estate and stocks, and a rise in the value of the US dollar.  This has led many to wrongfully conclude that we are not only experiencing a deflation scare, but that a depression brought on by a deflationary collapse is imminent. 

I don’t see it that way.  Stocks and real estate are collapsing because the US was on a debt binge for many years.  Given that real estate purchases are mainly financed by debt, and that many have used margin in stock portfolios, as well as, in the cases of hedge funds and others, dangerously high levels of leverage, the deleveraging that was forced upon the market following the collapse of debt instruments tied to bad loans is what is causing the dramatic declines in these asset prices today.

In a fiat money world with governments controlling the money printing presses you can be sure those governments will do everything in their power to fight off depressions.  Anyone who continues to doubt this must have been living under a rock the past couple of months. 

We Cannot Borrow Our Way Out of This

With much of the world holding the same toxic instruments and in similar, but not as horrific shape as the US, the ability of the US Treasury to tap its foreign creditors and borrow its way, to the tune of trillions, out of this mess has been severely impacted.  On the domestic front, the savings rate is approximately zero, and increasing levels of unemployment will cause tax receipts to collapse.  The only alternative will be the printing of money.

Fed is Forced to Create MASSIVE Amounts of Money

The US is the world’s greatest debtor.  Money printing will bring on monetary inflation, which will wipe out those debts, savings, as well as the US dollar.  That is the real scare that markets today, as well as foreign creditors, should be pricing in.  It is only a matter of time.  To borrow a line from the classic film ‘The Usual Suspects’: The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist.

© 2005-2008 Christopher G. Galakoutis
Website: Murkymarkets.com

Disclaimer: The commentary on MurkyMarkets.com is not intended to constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security.  It is also not intended to meet your specific individual investment needs and it is not tailored to your personal financial situation.  Commentary found on this website reflects the personal views and opinions of Christopher G. Galakoutis -- and/or any guest writers -- and that is all it purports to be.


IS IT INFLATION – OR IS IT DEFLATION?
Peter Degraaf
Nov 5 2008

Almost daily I receive emails from subscribers who worry about deflation. Here is my simple answer: “Watch what they do – not what they say!”

The above chart (courtesy Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis), is up-to-date. It reflects a monetary increase of 305 billion dollars into the US money supply in the short space of under 2 months. Nothing like this has ever happened in the USA before! The little bumps on this chart between August 2007 and August 2008 include Bear-Sterns, Northern Rock, Lehman Bros, Fannie and Freddie and AIG, yet none of those monetary shocks compare to what the FED is doing now.
This is inflation with a capital ‘I’!

Quite often when the monetary authorities inflate the system, it takes a while before the newly created funds filter down, and before people catch on. Large numbers of people believe what the officials are saying (communications like: “we’re more worried about deflation than inflation”).

They want you to believe that ‘asset inflation’ (lower prices for stocks and commodities) translates into monetary deflation.
The two are quite different.

The current asset deflation is caused primarily by gross mistakes made by people in the banking industry. This ‘assets deflation’ continues while monetary authorities worldwide are adding to the money supply. Meanwhile fear then sets in and the decline in asset values continues till it exhausts itself.

As soon as enough people catch on to what is happening, scarce commodities, (and the stocks involved in bringing those commodities to the marketplace), will rise and rise much higher than most people anticipate.

It behooves those of us who understand what is going on, and to position ourselves to benefit from the rise to come by investing in gold, silver, oil, natgas, copper, coal, uranium and agricultural commodities. Just about anything that the government does not have the ability to produce. (Government’s specialty is cutting down trees into thin slices, adding some ink, superimposing a picture of a former ruler and adding a number, and voila their product is ready for circulation).

Featured is the weekly gold chart, courtesy www.stockcharts.com

The call-out boxes on the chart represent the ‘net short’ gold positions of the commercial traders. The report issued October 31st showed a decrease of 162,000 from the 247,000 at the top, to the current 85,000. This is where corrections end, and the next rise begins.

Price has found support just above the 200 week moving average (rising red line), and the target for this next advance in the gold price will be a challenge at the previous high of 1,030.00 attained in March 2008.

The RSI (top of chart) is turning positive, and the MACD (bottom of chart) is very much oversold at -.32 (the most oversold since the bull market began in 2001. In order to make a profit in any investment, it makes sense to ‘buy low and sell high’. The time to buy low is at the bottom of a correction. The seasonal tendency is for gold to bottom in July – August and again in November. So here we are, just in time for the annual Christmas rally. If we are not at the exact bottom, we are no doubt very close.

Featured is the LIBOR chart, courtesy www.stockcharts.com

The watershed drop in assets that we saw in September and October was to a large extent fueled by the rising LIBOR rate. This rate reflects the trust or lack of trust, which banks have in so far as inter-bank lending is concerned. Near 4.6% all lending ceases. The rate is slowly returning to normal, as is the Ted Spread which opened today at 2.65 after having risen to 4.34 on Oct 15th. Investors around the world were spooked by the rising LIBOR and Ted Spread rates and began to sell just about everything, including commodities. With some degree of normalcy now returning to the markets, we can expect those items that have become ‘oversold’ to begin to bounce back, and after a while the commodities that I referred to in the opening section of this article to outperform everything else.

Please remember that the ‘real rate of interest’ (T-Bills less CPI), remains very negative. As long as the rate is negative, gold can and will rise (with hiccups in between).



DISCLAIMER:

Please do your own due diligence. I am NOT responsible for your trading decisions.

Happy trading!

Peter Degraaf is an on-line stock trader with over 50 years of investing experience. He issues a week-end report for his many subscribers. A sample copy of a previous report is available upon request. He can be reached at itiswell@cogeco.net.

At his website www.pdegraaf.com you will find a number of long-term charts that are updated regularly. 47 pages of worthwhile quotes are proving to be a very popular attraction as well. Subscription information is also available at the website.

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"Deflation" in Global Trade and "Inflation" of Central Banks

Global Trade Slowdown

The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) is a barometer of Global Trade. You can see it has fallen over 90% in the last 90 days. I guess this is an indication of deflation.



BDI certainly is indicating a sharp slowdown, but also a lack of faith in the creditworthiness of bulk buyers. BDI is a shipping and trade index created by the London-based Baltic Exchange that measures changes in the cost to transport raw materials such as metals, grains and fossil fuels by sea. The Baltic Exchange directly contacts shipping brokers to assess price levels for a given route, product to transport and time to delivery.

Letters of Credit and Confidence

Letters of Credit are the backbone of international trade in commodities. As a direct result the problems in the credit markets, the letters of credit being used to back up the purchase of raw materials are coming under the same scrutiny of sellers as if they were unsecured I.O.U's. If the banks don't trust lending to other banks, why would sellers trust letters of credit issued by banks?

Bank Monetary Infusion

Central banks (US Federal Reserve and Other Counterparts) have just "added liquidity" to the tune of $3 Trillion new dollars and have offered banks "unlimited" lending. There is a concern that the infusion of money by the central banks will not lead to inflation of the money supply because the banks are not lending the money prolonging the credit crisis. This is a short-sighted approach to the power and motives of central bankers. They create money out of thin air! That's what they do.

Monetary Infusion - Think Tank

Even as you are reading this insignificant article, the central bankers are hard at work thinking of thousands of new ways of getting money into the economy. They could decide to start a project to go to the center of the earth, build a road from Los Angeles to Hawaii, put a new statue in New York Harbor with a foot on the neck of the Statue of Liberty and call it "Statue of Public Enslavement", decide to convert the State of Oregon to a 24/7 real-time reality show, drive Gold and Silver to 2 cents per ounce every Monday and Wednesday, have a global lottery and let everybody win. Unfortunately, they will probably do what the old playbook says and just start more wars.

Mssrs. Bernanke and Paulson are very bad poker players, they have already shown the taxpayers their losing hands ( by their recent actions ). They will continue to create more money out of thin air and put it in the pot until the Asian pit boss refuses their incredibly worthless pieces of paper, and kicks them out onto the street. The pit boss will figure out that one fortune cookie is more valuable than all their dollars.

That's what I call Inflation...

Jim Waters
kwaves.com
Oct.31.08






The Truth About Deflation
by Eric Janszen
October 28, 2008

from: iTulip

With all of this panicking into dollars we get asked a lot about deflation. "Why don't you just admit that a 1930s style depression and deflation spiral has begun and soon there will be soup lines and we'll be buying cars for $2,000 and gold will trade at $100." The reason is that we are 100% certain that dollar appreciation that we call "Ka" as part of Ka-Poom Theory will not turn into a deflation spiral. Cars are not going to cost $2,000, although there will be plenty of cheap used cars for sale, and gold will not go to $200. Here's why.

The essence of Ka-Poom Theory is that after the phony credit-based boom ends, first the dollar rises and inflation falls before dollar repatriation and government reflation policies kick in. We don't think the transition from disinflation to inflation is trade-able because we expect it to be chaotic. But we don't blame readers for trying, or wanting to.

This ain't deflation

We're not nit picking terminology here. We’ll show you what a real deflation spiral looks like: nothing whatsoever like the deflation we are seeing today that we have long forecast and call disinflation to distinguish it from the run-away deflations that occurred under the gold standard in the pre Bretton Woods era.

Deflation was common back in the days when there was something for a currency to deflate against for more than a brief period of time before the government got involved: gold. Even then, governments often abandoned the gold to inflate the money supply to stop deflation, especially in times of war. If you are a government and need to inflate and there's no war to fight, then make something up–like a oil shortage in the 1970s.


Note the early 1920s deflation reached -30% in some months and on and off for years at a time. Note also the massive inflations produced as the US government temporarily suspended gold convertibility and printed money to fund wars. Many forget that these huge swings occurred: 80% inflation during WWI and 100% inflation after WWII.

Governments can always produce inflation. Always.


The period of deflation that occurred in the early 1930s is the one that most people think about when they hear the word "deflation." What they really mean is a deflation spiral, with the money supply imploding, credit contacting, large scale bankruptcies, rising unemployment, and falling economic output. Note that there was not a single month of inflation from 1930 to 1933. Prices went down and down and down. For years.

The 1930s deflation spiral ended abruptly in 1934. Why? FDR took the US off the gold standard and devalued the dollar against gold which remained the international currency for trade transactions. And–this is key–there has never been another similar period of deflation since then, in any country. Ever.

There is a reason for that: since the 1930s no country has been on a national gold standard.

Only one other government made the choice to stay on the gold standard at the time, Germany. Every other government got off the gold standard in the 1930s and inflated. Many, such as the US, finally resorted to currency depreciation when the pain got bad enough, exporting deflation. That was the impetus for Bretton Woods after the war: don't allow a repeat of competitive currency devaluations because nations in a global depression that fight each other with currencies are soon fighting each other with guns.


There were a very brief few months of deflation after WWII as the government attempted, Paul Volcker style, to wring inflation out of the post WWII economy. But note the deflation scale in this post-Bretton Woods period has now changed from the post-gold standard era where deflations exceeded 30% in some periods. Since then, no more 30% deflations. Rarely, for short periods when deflation has happened since Bretton Woods deflation has only once exceeded 10% in one month and has generally been limited to less than 5%.

Take-away: No gold standard, no deflation spirals. Ever again.


The first years of the 1960s were the golden era of monetary stability. In fact, life was so good the US government decided to ruin it by starting a war, building the military industrial complex, and launching numerous entitlement programs that we are to this day still kidding ourselves into thinking we can pay for. After running up a trade deficit that our trade partners feared we intended to pay with devalued dollars, the Europeans figured we were cheating and called our bluff by demanding payment of debts in gold. So we defaulted. US to the world: Thanks for playing!


This was the ugly era of birth of the FIRE Economy. I won’t go into the details here but, clearly, deflation was not the problem. I will mention that this is when we came up with the dollar cartel to knock back OPEC and Nixon got to tell OPEC: "Thanks for playing!"


As the Volcker Fed raised interest rates, the US economy experienced a short spike of deflation around -5%. Since the technology stock bubble popped in 2000, the US has had several months of deflation like that in 2002, 2004, 2006, and 2007.

If you want to call today’s period of low inflation a "deflationary period" then you must also call 2002, 2004, 2006, and 2007 deflationary–actually more deflationary than today if you look at the graphs. Meanwhile oil increased from $20 to $147 over that period, which is not exactly a typical symptom of deflation.

Japan also has never experienced a deflation spiral. They could end their modest deflation, never exceeding -2% in a quarter off and on for more than a decade in short order, but the trade-off for them is a crashed yen– so they don't. I think we'll crash the dollar fighting off deflation.

The critical take-away is that we are indeed experiencing short term deflation. We call it disinflation here in the context of Ka-Poom Theory to keep readers from confusing the process with the start of a deflation spiral–which cannot happen under a floating exchange rate, fiat money system. The only way it could is if governments around the world all got together and decided to crash the global economy. That strikes us as unlikely. More likely one or more will move to reflate using currency devaluation.

If the Fed so desired the US could have 100% inflation by the middle of 2009 as the US did in 1946. All that is needed is for Congress to borrow a few more trillion into existence to fund old and new liabilities and have the Fed print it because our government cannot borrow the money from overseas or raise taxes, or devalue the dollar, or both.

It’s just that simple. Wish it wasn’t so. Trust your government not to do it?

Neither do we.

If not deflation, then what? Stagflation?

Keep an eye on producer price index, commercial lending rates, and wage rates. These tell you how much your local grocery stores, restaurants, gasoline stations, and other businesses have to pay–their input costs–as the recession drags on. As recession deepens, businesses have to cut prices to their customers to meet lower demand. If input costs don't fall quickly, many of these companies will either go out of business or be acquired by stronger rivals that have more cash or access to credit. If this goes on for years, as we expect it to, instead of a short drive to the local Home Depot it's a long drive, instead of 10 restaurants to choose from in the area there are five, instead of four grocery stores to visit there are two, instead of four daily flights to your favorite destination from the nearest airport there is one. The plane is crowded. You are packed in like a sardine. The fare is expensive.

Inflation comes not only from surfeit of money relative to goods and services but also a shortage of goods and services relative to the supply of money.

In a couple of years when you get to the one remaining Home Depot in your area that has not closed you will find that it's crowed. As most of the goods that Home Depot sells are imported, and the dollar continued to decline after the current short term panic into dollars ends–and the impact of net negative capital flows exerts its natural downward pricing on the dollar–the wholesale prices Home Depot pays will not decline much if at all. The government will welcome the devalued dollar, as it has since 2002, because the inflationary impact helps counter the deflationary impact of debt deflation and helps the US export position. Wage rates will not rise because recession will have caused higher unemployment and reduced wage earner's pricing power. However, at that point there will be few stores (boom market in plywood to cover plate glass windows?) and two or three times as many consumers vying for the same goods, and the cost of imports is up because the dollar had depreciated further; prices may actually rise.

In response, consumers will buy fewer things and will substitute lower quality products for higher quality products, hamburger for steak. The golden age of the American consumer ends.

Let's say you are an American visiting an indebted country years ago that has lost its ability to extend its purchasing power via foreign borrowing because that is the situation that the US faces today. For example, Mexico in the early 1980s. What do you see? You spend your strong dollars so experience prices there as cheap. You see crowded stores and low prices–crowded because the equilibrium price between the cost of goods that stores pay and prices that customers can afford creates only enough demand to support a small number of stores for the local population. But the people who live there experience the same stores as crowded but with high prices. Why? Because while the new equilibrium price for goods is now the same as before or maybe higher, but the purchasing power of consumers has fallen due to lack of access to credit and falling incomes.

That is our future in the US once the spike in the value of the dollar ends and the dollar continues its decline through this recession. This picture may, however, be distorted by government intervention to support the housing and credit markets to slow debt deflation. Government spending may further weaken the US dollar. Then there is the possibility that immigration and trade policy will change to address wage deflation by lowering competition for jobs via restrictions on outsourcing and immigration.

For my take on where the financial crisis and economic recession are going see Global Finance Disneyland Demolition ($ubscription). The fantasy is over.

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