
In the short term, gold bugs are in pain. The last 3 weeks
have seen a pull back to the Dec. 22 low of $1,075 and have created a lot
of short term anxiety. We have two possibilities. Either gold will continue
down to the $1,000 support level, or it has already made its turn, will
leave a gap above $1,000 and then break out above $1,229, April contract
(the Dec. 3 high).
When the short term is a puzzle, I take refuge by studying
the long term, and so I thought that this week might be a good time to
review the long term situation. Above is the 15 year, monthly basis chart
of the CRB index, which gives us a good handle on the (second upswing of
the) commodity pendulum. The horizontal line in the middle of the chart is
at 337, and this was the top of the (first upswing of the) commodity
pendulum in 1980. Note that this level, which was then resistance, was
penetrated in 2005, and this was followed by the blow-off of 2008.
As is normal in technical formations, a resistance level,
when penetrated, turns into support. Therefore, in Dec. 2008, when the CRB
once again came down to 337, this level provided massive support, and the
commodity markets turned on a dime. Also note the double bottom of
1999-2001, which is serving as the bottom pattern for commodities and is
similar to the 4½ year saucer pattern in gold (1998-2002).
The key to the CRB chart is the sudden collapse in the 2nd
half of 2008 (from just over 600 to a little under 337). This period
stands out on the chart, and the normal chart interpretation would be that
some important (bearish) news item had occurred at that time and caused the
decline.
But of course we know that this was the period when massive
fears of “depression” swept our society. The media began to
scream “financial crisis,” and commodity speculators ran for
the hills. Even gold was hit, although it declined less than other
commodities and was the first to bounce back strongly. An analysis of the
panic of ’08 shows the following:
The panic was started by the New York Times, which
was ringing the alarm bell as early as mid-September. What was the
Times’ source for this news item? The sources were Secretary
of the Treasury Henry Paulson and President George Bush (Jr.). We now know
that Paulson used his public office to persuade Congress to steal (a stated
amount of) $750 billion from the working people of America and give it to
(creditors of) Goldman Sachs (Paulson’s former firm). That is,
Goldman Sachs donated money to the Republicans (and probably also to the
Democrats) in return for which they were given influential positions from
which they can persuade politicians to steal money from the public and give
it to them. Also, the Times had been carrying on in the most
disgraceful fashion for the previous 7 years saying that President Bush was
stupid. (Although I cannot land a jet airplane on the deck of an aircraft
carrier, and I don’t think that anyone on the Times can do
so either.) If President Bush was stupid, then why cite him as an
authority with which to throw the country into panic?
In this regard, it must be pointed out that recessions and
depressions do not exist. They have the same reality as witches and
dragons. And debating whether the country is in a recession is similar to
debating whether unpopular women in Salem, Massachusetts in 1693 were
witches. This is why it is so important for you to understand that the
economics taught in our nation’s colleges and universities is (to
quote Shakespeare):
“a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing.”
These events, wrongly called depressions and recessions,
can be traced back to the days of Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln could not
persuade Congress to lay the taxes for the Civil War. So he paid for the
war by printing money (the greenbacks). The U.S. money supply approximately
doubled from 1861-65, and the price level did likewise. The gold
standard was temporarily suspended. Now it is important to understand that,
when prices rise, wages also rise but much more slowly. Thus the real value
of wages declines. Therefore, all employers are making bigger profits, and
all workers find that their wages have less buying power. In such a
period, employers are looking to expand, and unemployment is driven down
very low. However, after the Civil War Congress and the new administration
withdrew the newly created money from circulation. By 1879, prices were
back down to their level of 1860. This period of declining prices had the
opposite effect. Prices fell, but wages fell more slowly, and therefore the
real buying power of wages rose. With real wages higher, employers started
to hurt, and unemployment rose. The economists of the day had one
concern: to further their careers by kissing the hindquarters of the rich
and powerful. What was happening was that wealth was flowing back and forth
between two classes. During the money expansion wealth flowed from the
workers to their employers. During the money contraction wealth flowed from
the employers to the workers.
How did the economists of the day deal with this
situation? They asked, “How can I serve the interests of the
rich?” Well, the rich were hurting during the money
contraction. “Therefore, I can kiss up to the rich by renaming
this money contraction as though it were bad for society as a
whole.” And so the word “depression” was invented.
They were, they told us, academics who studied depressions and made
scientific commentary. Conversely, they called the periods when the rich
were benefiting at the expense of the poor “booms” or
“periods of economic growth.”
In short, these economists were the leeches of society.
They defined their job as helping the rich to steal from the poor, and to
that end they made up nice sounding words for the periods (and policies) to
the advantage of the rich and bad sounding words for the periods (and
policies) to the advantage of the poor.
Was there any real economics here? All we have to do
is to look at some facts. The “boom” of the early 1860s
occurred during the Civil War. Millions of men were pulled off the farms
and factories and put into the army. These men, to say the least, did not
produce any wealth. Many of the goods that were produced, furthermore, were
not wealth. What wealth is represented by a bullet, a cannon or an
explosive? Nothing except to destroy other wealth. A war (if we set aside
the loss of life) is simply two groups of people destroying each
other’s wealth. One side creates an explosive and destroys some
buildings and equipment of the other side. Then the other side does the
same thing. At the end, both sides are poorer. In what sense is this a
period of economic growth?
After 1865, there were a series of
“depressions” which were caused by a long contraction of the
money supply. This lasted until 1896. This period of
“depressions” was the most productive in the economic history
of any nation. It was the age of Thomas Edison and Nikola
Tesla. It was the age of railroad expansion. The automobile, the
telephone, the electric light and many other inventions were created. From
1866-1896, the real wages of the average American worker increased by 90%.
People from other countries (my great grandparents among them) flocked to
America because the streets were paved with gold. This was true in more
than one sense. Despite the opposition of the railroad interests the
country returned to the gold standard in 1879. It was also the period
when America took the world economic leadership from Britain. I ask all of
the economic idiots, in what sense was this a period of
depression?
The same thing happened in the early 20th century. The
Government increased the money supply during WWI. The economic leeches
called this a boom although the real wages of the working man fell sharply.
The Republicans of that day figured out what was happening and realized
that the extra money had to be taken out of circulation (a good 5¢
cigar). In the period 1920-1933, they reduced the money supply and brought
the average price level down to that of pre-WWI. During this time real
wages rose, per capita meat consumption increased (from 129 lb in 1930 to
144 lb in 1934), people switched from margarine to butter and gave more to
charity. And yet the idiots tell us that this was a depression and the
nation was poorer. Statistics available from Historical Statistics of
the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, published by the U.S.
Department of Commerce.
So you see what the nation barely escaped in 2008. And you
see what Ben Bernanke has spent his life studying and wherein lies his
field of expertise. He is an expert in dragons and witch
infestations. Greenspan at least knew that he was a liar and a fraud
and acted ashamed. He is on record (before he became Fed chairman) as
condemning the policies he later practiced. But you can bet your life that
the national and world media did not report a word of this. Greenspan
was repeatedly on the record as favoring the gold standard.
AND YOU CAN TRUST ALL OF THE MEDIA WHICH REPORTED THIS
CRUCIAL FACT (which is very close to none).
Now let us return to the commodity collapse of 2nd half
2008, which itself was caused by the media in general and the New
York Times in particular as these media were screaming “Great
Recession” and “depression” at the top of their
lungs.
What happens to human beings who go through a
panic? During the panic they are wildly irrational. But as the emotion
gradually subsides, there is a return to reason. That is what we have
seen in the commodity markets since early December 2008. The CRB first
formed a small head and shoulders bottom and has now recovered almost 2/3
of its loss. There is no recession or depression. It is all a figment of
our society’s imagination.
The State of the Union Address was used by Obama to shout
defiance against the newly emerging conservative movement, and this can be
taken as evidence that he will pursue his policies, including massive
budget deficits, as long as he can. This printing of money has to cause
both gold and commodities in general to make massive further advances. The
chart of gold indicates this with several aggressively bullish patterns.
The CRB will not be aggressively bullish until it breaks above its July
’08 high of 618.
Right now gold is hanging just above its Dec. 22 support
area at $1,075. If the gap between $1,075 and $1,000 remains open,
this will be an aggressively bullish signal. If gold returns to
$1,000, closing the gap, it will still be bullish (but less aggressively
so). $1,000 is strong support, and the odds that it will be broken are very
small. Meanwhile any analysis of the long term, as above, shows that
commodities are extremely bullish, and that is the place for the astute
speculator to be.
My economic newsletter is the One-handed
Economist: price $300 per year. I use Austrian economic analysis,
technical analysis and my theory of the commodity pendulum to decide what
to buy and when to buy it. I am trying to discourage use of Paypal
because the company has no regard for customer good will and has never
heard the expression, “the customer is always right.”
However, I will continue my relation with them for the sake of customers
who are some distance away. For the remainder, I offer a $5.00 discount for
paying the old fashion way (via the post office). Send $295 to the
One-handed Economist, 614 Nashua St. #122, Milford, N.H. 03055. If
you wish to use Paypal, go to my web site, www.thegoldspeculator.com.&nbs
p; (My political and social blog has been suspended for the time
being.) Thank you for your interest.
Howard S. Katz