|
The Path to
Hyperinflation
|
|
By Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT
May 27 2010 4:44PM
|
 |
|
|
As we’ve discussed recently, persistent deflationary
forces do not augur for a repeat of Japan circa 1990s or the US in the
1930s. Instead, because of the inability of government’s to finance
their current and future debt burden (there is a dearth of domestic savings
and global capital), deflationary forces will ultimately lead to severe
inflation or hyperinflation. In today’s missive, we explain how this
will happen but in various stages.
In the first stage, the economy enters a recession after a
large credit bubble. The recession and end of the credit bubble lead to
deflation. As a result, the US Dollar and US Treasuries outperform. Think
2008.
Policy makers (a term for interventionist bureaucrats) then
provide stimulus via monetary easing and deficit spending. Gold and gold
stocks outperform with silver not far behind. Think late 2008 to early
2009.
The economy gets a bump from the stimulus and economically
sensitive markets such as commodities and stocks outperform. Think 2009.
This brings us to where we are now. The market is starting
to sense that Europe’s debt burden is too high as its economies
struggle to recover under the weight of excessive debt. The market is
beginning to sense a rising probability of default. Precious metals are
soaring against the Euro, the Pound and the Swiss Franc.
Meanwhile, with money moving back into US Treasuries, the
US will have the ability to attempt another stimulus and announce further
quantitative easing. Europe is currently ahead of the US on its track
to currency depreciation, rising inflation expectations and rising CPI/PPI.
The US still has time before the market begins to worry about its debt
burden.
The next stage is the transition from the initial outbreak
of price inflation to severe inflation. Inflation accelerates due to a loss
of confidence in governments and currencies. A failed economic recovery
leads the market to realize that the debt burden is too large and will
ultimately be defaulted upon or inflated away. At this juncture, all
commodities begin to perform well again. It may take anywhere from six to
18 months for this stage to be evident.
Finally, inflation is exacerbated as supply shortages
emerge. Tight credit restricts new production and consumers begin to hoard.
During such a period, precious metals and commodities will continue to
perform well but the agriculture sector will be the real leader.
In order for an investor to maximize returns, they must be
able to hold their convictions and adapt to the changes in the coming cycle
of inflation. Currently, precious metals are obviously far and away the
best play. While more and more investors are waking up to gold, they are
not embracing it enough. If it is clear that Gold is a safe haven, why are
you only devoting 5-10% of your portfolio to it? Moreover, why do you have
zero or 5% exposure to gold stocks when their outlook is superior to
commodity stocks and emerging market stocks?
Of course market timing is important and we are here to
help. Our combination of technical analysis and sentiment tools has allowed
us to catch the last two short-term bottoms in the precious metals sector.
Good luck and protect yourself!
By Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT
http://www.thedailygold.com
Jordan@TheDailyGold.com
****
For more of this kind of analysis and for actionable
information, and gold/silver stock analysis, consider a 14-day trial to our
premium service, by visiting: http://www.thedailygold.com/n
ewsletter.