Economics

Jack Farchy in the FT on $5000 gold

FT – Bullion bulls talk of $5000 gold

Historically, gold and silver were the money of choice, freely chosen by the people as the most marketable commodities. The value of your labour was measured in these precious metals.

Wicked Kings through the ages debased the people’s money for their own profit. The last English king to do this was Henry VIII. Our money was free from debasement for many years thereafter; the value of our work undebauched.

Today, governments around the world assume the powers of kings of old as they embark on the “monetisation” of their debt, minting new money from nowhere. They call it QE.

Since 1971, when Nixon severed the last link to gold (struggling to pay for the latest war), paper currencies have been the most extreme derivatives, resting on a mere memory of underlying value. CDO squared has nothing on paper fiat.

So the people are voting with their feet, and returning to ancient currency — to gold and silver.

How much does an ounce of gold buy you today? $1800 worth of goods and services. And a year ago? $1200 worth of goods and services. How much purchasing power been taken away from you?

How long will governments around the world, with no political will to tackle their dangerous debts and zombie banks, be able to maintain confidence in their paper systems? I do not know, but I feel that we’re fast approaching a day when the whole western monetary system will fundamentally change.

I hope the new paper will be redeemable in gold or silver. Governments can’t mint this stuff up like magic. They will be forced to raise money through taxation alone, according to what the public will bear. No longer will they be able to kick the can down the road, while stealthily confiscating the fruits of our labour.

I am delighted that even the FT, that stalwart of conventional economics, is now asking ‘how high could gold go?‘. Let us hope they consider the fundamentals, and recall our long, sorry history of debasement.

Economics

Some people doodle pictures

Some people doodle pictures, but I’m the type who mucks around random bits of historical price data just to see where it goes.  For example, I love charts of the Dow Jones Stock index in the 1920s – it me it tells a vivid story of hopes and dreams and pain mixed with desperation.  The wild fluctuations in the early 20’s, the solid gains of the mid 20’s then the euphoria and ensuing panic, well.. you know the rest.

A while a go, I came across a quote;

With an ounce of Gold, a man could buy a fine suit of clothes in the time of Shakespeare, in that of Beethoven and Jefferson…

What does a ‘fine suit’ cost today?  Well, an ounce of Gold is just short of £700.  If you went into Harrods, and asked for a fine suit, would that see you into an Armani or Zegna number?  I think so.

So, the maxim seems to ring as true today as it ever did.

So my mind got to thinking – if an ounce of gold seems to buy the same stuff over the centuries as it does today, then it would seem to be a great proxy for true purchasing power.

The problem with looking at historical charts of stock movements, especially if you are trying to learn the lessons of history, is that the picture is muddied by the fact that the unit of account – i.e. money, does not do a very good job.  It is rapidly decaying so when you compare over time, it just gives the wrong impression of what is going on.

For example, look at the stock market over the whole of the 70’s, and you think that equities didn’t do too badly.  But adjust for inflation, and you soon realize that stocks lost over three quarters of their value in the first half of the 70′s!

So, the idea dawned on me: the price of stocks and shares are only represented in terms of money.  What if you priced them in Gold instead of pounds and dollars?

Firstly: what data?  Well, I stuck to the UK, and I chose the FTSE all share index.  I took the index value for each day, going back a few decades.  I then converted them into ounces of gold.  The chart gave me a pretty shocking picture.

But then I realised I’d missed something pretty important.  Stocks pay dividends.  So, I added a 5% annual dividend return, and then reinvested it into my index.  Surely that’d make my chart look less ridiculous?  Erm, a bit… but not by very much.

What I was left with was a completely different view of history, and some pretty worrying revelations.

Firstly, my chart had nothing to say until the 70’s.  This is because until then, money was gold – therefore priced in money or gold – it didn’t make a difference.  In essence, the chart had no surprises.

But in the 1970’s, money was cut loose from gold, with some pretty shocking results.

FTSE All Share in terms of in oz of Gold (click to enlarge)

Some salient observations.

1. The mayhem of the early 70′s had some pretty catastrophic consequences for the world, and recovery only came in the 1980′s.  From over 12 ounces of gold, down to nearly 1 ounce of gold is a pretty insane move.

2. Real growth took off in the 80′s, but something happened in the mid 90′s – the internet.  This was a period of real economic growth, that morphed into a bubble, thanks to some pretty silly policy mistakes by Greenspan et al.

3. What happened in the 00′s?  Wasn’t that supposed to be the ‘NICE’ decade?  Wasn’t the stock market supposed to have risen back to its peaks?

My answer to this is that the noughties were a period of stagnation, economic misalignment, and we were all swamped by a money fraud.

The authorities were in such a blind funk in 2001, with the overriding perception that we were facing a 1929 style collapse, that they turned on the money gusher, and flooded the whole world with liquidity.  This found its way into the greatest worldwide property bubble the world has ever seen.

But… this was not true growth – at least for the Western economies.  Sure, great advances were made in some sectors of their economies, but huge misalignments of capital were occurring, and this decade of false signals  to producers, but especially to Western consumers, is why we had the economic crisis of 2008.

Look where we stand now.  In ruinous debt.  Shackled to low interest rates and nervously watching retail sales and property prices.  This is a direct consequence of our societies living the high life for ten years, without actually realising we were in decline.

We have been living like cannibals.  Hollowing out ourselves out, yet living the high life.  And this is all down to a pseudo neo-Keynesian/monetarist aggregate kabala fetish.

I feel a sense of panic looking at this chart, so what is the solution?

Free markets built on the bedrock of honest money.