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The Ultimate Bubble and
the Mother of All Carry Trades
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Among the many opinions expressed by billionaire investor
George Soros over the course of the 2010 World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland was his statement on January 28 in an interview with Maria
Bartiromo, host of CNBC's Closing Bell, that "When interest rates
are low we have conditions for asset bubbles to develop, and they are
developing at the moment. The ultimate asset bubble is gold."
New York spot gold closed at $1085.40 down $1.80, but the price of
gold is not as much about gold as it is about the value of currencies,
particularly the US dollar.
Since new currency is created through lending activity,
very low or 0% US interest rates and government deficit spending are
fueling a US dollar carry trade and monetary inflation in the US dollar
resulting in rising asset prices and global speculation. According to Zhu
Min, deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China, “[The US
dollar carry trade] is a massive issue; estimates are that it is $1.5
trillion, which is much bigger than Japan’s carry trade.”
The close relationship of global commodity prices, particularly the gold
price, to the value of the US dollar can be seen by comparing the changing
value of the US Dollar Index to an inverted US dollar spot gold price
chart.

Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com
The inverted gold price chart follows the USDX closely and
while the fluctuations are not strictly proportional the overall trends as
well as the peaks and troughs generally correspond, thus the asset price
bubbles noted by Mr. Soros are reflections in asset prices of both the US
dollar carry trade (the effective value of the US dollar) and, ultimately,
of the long-term devaluation of the US dollar, thus the value of the US
dollar in real terms.

Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com
An “ultimate bubble” in gold could be an
offspring of the mother of all carry trades, but its magnitude would depend
not only on the effective value and rate of change in value of the US
dollar while the carry trade is booming, but also on the actual, eventual
value of the US dollar (in real terms) after the carry trade has come to an
end. Although the value of the US dollar will certainly recover to
some degree when the carry trade ends, it will remain significantly lower
in value for other reasons.
US Dollar Devaluation
In the above mentioned interview, Mr. Soros went on to say
that "Some countries, like the US and European countries have
plenty of room to increase their deficits; [although] the political
resistance to doing so increases the chances of a double dip [recession] in
the [global] economy in 2011 and after that." Since further
monetary inflation as a consequence of government deficit spending may be
necessary to maintain economic stimulus measures and financial system life
support, Mr. Soros anticipates further devaluation of the US dollar.
Devaluation of the US dollar will have both beneficial and harmful effects
on the US economy.
Devaluation of the US dollar will reduce the value of debts
in real terms, reducing the overall debt to GDP ratio of the US economy,
and stimulate nominal GDP growth as domestic prices and wages (at different
rates) adjust to the altered value of the US dollar, while at the same time
helping to create conditions where US banks can resume lending to consumers
and small businesses. Unfortunately, currency devaluation also has
deleterious effects, such as higher prices, a loss in the value of savings
and a reduction in the real value of wages. There is also a risk of
uncontrolled domestic price inflation (although prices can be held in check
without raising interest rates by curtailing the flow of money and credit
to consumers and small businesses).

Chart courtesy of Karl Denninger
In addition to reducing the US debt to GDP ratio,
devaluation of the US dollar will lessen the risk of higher interest rates
resulting in greater deficit spending by the US government as a consequence
of increased debt service ($145.4 billion in fiscal 2009) since it will
allow the US federal government’s tax receipts grow faster than the
increase in debt service resulting from higher interest rates.
Currently projected US federal government borrowing (or,
alternatively, quantitative easing) will maintain downward pressure on the
value of the US dollar through the year 2019. According to the US
Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) baseline projection of
current policy, federal deficits will total between $7 and $9 trillion for
fiscal 2010 through fiscal 2019 and the US public debt will grow from $12.3
trillion to more than $16 trillion in 2019. If debt held by
government accounts is included, total US federal government debt will
exceed $23 trillion in 2019, setting aside the net present value of
unfunded federal liabilities based on Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP). According to David M. Walker, former Comptroller
General of the United States from 1998 to 2008 and current President and
CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, current federal liabilities and
unfunded obligations total approximately $63 trillion. As a result, further
devaluation of the US dollar is inevitable.
Disparate US Dollar Values
Curiously, the US dollar has two different and diverging
values, one within the US financial system and another in the broad US
economy. As a result of the US financial system rescue, which
included purchases of various assets from banks at book value by the US
Treasury and Federal Reserve, the US monetary base has expanded roughly
150% since the beginning of the global financial crisis in 2008, but the
newly created currency has not filtered into the broad US economy where, in
contrast, deflationary pressures persist.

Chart courtesy of Federal Reserve Bank
of St. Louis
Although it is not apparent in the broad US economy, the
value of the US dollar has been dramatically altered and its devaluation
cannot be isolated indefinitely within the financial system independent of
the broad US economy. The counterbalancing, but much smaller,
contraction of the broad US money supply, as measured by the M3 monetary
aggregate, also cannot continue indefinitely.

Chart courtesy of Shadow Government
Statistics
At some point, the two disparate values of the US dollar
(that found within the financial system versus that found in the broad US
economy) will be reconciled and, unless current policies are reversed, the
outcome will be a substantially less valuable US dollar. The
consequences of the eventual reconciliation will certainly include price
inflation in the US, higher US dollar prices for commodities that are
subject to global demand, such as oil and gold, as well as higher nominal
values for US dollar denominated assets. However, the potential
unintended consequences of a falling US dollar include high domestic price
inflation, a further reduction in international demand for US debt or a
collapse in demand, a disruptive decline in trade, i.e., US imports, or in
the worst case, rejection of the US dollar as the world reserve currency or
a hyperinflationary collapse of the US dollar.
Is Gold in an Asset Price Bubble?
Diversification for the purposes of risk mitigation and
wealth preservation is a rational response to unstable market conditions
and is not comparable to a market mania, like the dot-com bubble.
Similarly, a long-term shift in asset allocation favoring one general
category of assets over another based on fundamentals, while it may result
in rising prices, does not by itself describe an asset price bubble.
An asset price bubble, such as the Dutch tulip mania of the
1630s, is an irrational and economically unsustainable investment trend
that holds sway over investors only temporarily and that inevitably
collapses violently. Asset price bubbles end when a tipping point is
reached where the awareness of and tolerance for escalating risk exceed
irrational exuberance producing a panic. So long as the great
majority of market participants discount risk, individual participants may
rely on the irrational exuberance of others. In contrast, rational
confidence does not depend on a majority of market participants behaving
irrationally and is based instead on sound fundamentals.
The view that rising global commodity prices,
fundamentally, are asset price bubbles in various stages of formation
unreasonably discounts the risks associated with financial institutions,
governments and currencies. If we are to learn anything from Iceland, the
Baltic states, Dubai, and Greece it is that if irrational exuberance exists
in the financial markets today it is exactly confidence that is not based
on sound fundamentals in financial institutions, governments and
currencies.
In the 1980 asset price bubble, gold rose from an inflation
adjusted low using constant 2009 dollars of $392.57 per Troy ounce on
August 31, 1976 ($104 1976 dollars) to its January 21, 1980 peak of what
would have been $2,358.04 in 2009 dollars ($850 1980 dollars), a gain using
constant 2009 dollars of more than 500% in 4 years. The 1980 asset price
bubble in gold violently collapsed in same year, returning to 1979 levels
by 1982.

Chart courtesy of Bianco Research, L.L.C.
On April 4, 2001, the gold price would have been $315.78 in
constant 2009 dollars, the lowest value since 1970 adjusted for
inflation. From that point, the gold price rose from a nominal low of
$255.95 on April 4, 2001 to a nominal high of $1,212.50 on December 2, 2009
(London PM fix), a gain of roughly 375% over approximately 10 years (284%
using constant 2009 dollars).

Chart courtesy of Kitco Metals Inc.
Over the past decade, the US dollar has declined from its
2002 high by roughly 33% compared to other major currencies and
approximately 40% from is 2000 high compared to the Euro. At the same
time, most of the currencies in the major indices have been debased
alongside the US dollar since 2008 for the same reasons, thus the value of
the US dollar in real terms is not apparent from the index alone.

Chart courtesy of Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis
The alternate US Dollar Indices published by Shadow
Government Statistics(SGS) suggest that the Federal Reserve’s trade
weighted exchange index of major currencies, which includes the Euro zone,
Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Australia, and Sweden, may
be an optimistic formulation.

Chart courtesy of Shadow Government
Statistics
The decline of a national currency, particularly that of a
nation with a large trade deficit, is first apparent in international trade
while domestic prices do not at first fully reflect the devaluation of the
currency. As a result, the prices of commodities that are subject to
global demand tend to rise before the general increase in domestic prices
that results from currency devaluation, thus the prices of commodities such
as gold would be expected to rise faster than domestic measures such as the
US Consumer Price Index (CPI).

Chart courtesy of Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis
The alternate CPI measure provided by SGS may represent a
more accurate method of estimating the US dollar prices of commodities that
are subject to global demand. The SGS alternate data show
accelerating price inflation over the past decade leading up to the global
financial crisis in 2008.

Chart courtesy of Shadow Government
Statistics
If the SGS alternate CPI data are applied to the gold price
it is apparent why Shadow Government Statistics’ John Williams stated
in an interview with Bloomberg reporter Pham-Duy Nguyen that if the same
methodology of measuring inflation were used today as in 1980, the 1980
gold price would be equivalent to $7,150.

Chart courtesy of FGMR
While gold certainly has enjoyed tremendous gains over the
past decade, including the effect on the gold price of central bank gold
demand, the current gold price, following on the heels of an unprecedented
global financial crisis, has little in common with the 1980 asset price
bubble. The current gold price reflects a rational diversification into
hard assets for the purposes of risk mitigation and wealth preservation and
can be explained in terms of monetary inflation and associated loss in the
value of the US dollar independent of the US dollar carry trade. The
continuing devaluation of the US dollar will result in a further rise in
the prices of commodities that are subject to global demand, thus the gold
price will continue to rise also.
Mr. Soros is certainly correct in that low interest rates
contribute to the formation of asset price bubbles, but neither the value
of the US dollar or the price of gold depend only on interest rates or on
the US dollar carry trade. The view that a gold price over $1000 per Troy
ounce represents the “ultimate bubble” ignores the ongoing
devaluation of the US dollar, discounts risks associated with the stability
of financial institutions, governments and currencies, and does not reflect
confidence consistent with sound fundamentals.
Ron Hera
January 30, 2010
©2010 Hera Research, LLC
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