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Doug Casey: Exception
Among Equities
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Source: Karen Roche of The Gold
Report 08/18/2010
As the world sinks deeper into what he
calls the Greater Depression, Casey Research Chairman Doug Casey sees
default on the U.S. national debt as inevitable—albeit probably in
the guise of currency destruction. He anticipates further contraction in
real estate, particularly on the commercial front. As long as stocks remain
overpriced, he'll shy away from equities—except perhaps in favored
sectors, such as gold. In fact, in this exclusive interview with The
Gold Report, Doug posits that gold juniors might "go up by an
order of magnitude or more, even while most other stocks are going
down."
The Gold
Report: Doug, at a recent conference you said that the U.S.
ought to default on its national debt now. Why that rather than letting it
play out?
Doug Casey:
Several other things almost equally radical should be done besides
defaulting on the debt. I recognize that an outright default is most
unlikely, but the national debt should be defaulted on for several
reasons.
To start with, once the U.S. government
defaults on its debt, people will think twice before lending it any more
money; giving politicians the ability to borrow is like giving a teenager a
bottle of whisky and the keys to a Corvette. A second reason is that the
debt is an albatross around the necks of the next several generations; it's
criminal to make indentured servants out of people who aren't even born
yet. A third reason would be to overtly punish those who have been lending
money to the government, enabling it to do all the stupid and destructive
things that the government does with that money.
The debt will be defaulted on one way or another. The trouble is they're
almost certainly going to default on it through inflation, by destroying
the currency, which is much worse than defaulting on it overtly. That's
because inflation will wipe out the relatively few people who are prudent
in this country, those who are actually saving money. Because they
generally save in the form of dollars, they're going to wipe them out
financially.
It's just horrible. Runaway inflation
will reward the profligates who are in debt—people who've been living
above their means. And punish the producers who've been saving and trying
to build capital. That's in addition to the fact it will destroy millions
of productive enterprises. A runaway inflation is the worst thing that can
happen to a society, short of a major war. They just should default on it
honestly, as it were.
TGR: But your belief is we'll try to inflate our way out
of it to pay for it.
DC: Don't say "we." Say the U.S. government. I
don't consider myself part of the problem. Americans have to learn that the
government isn't "us." It's an entity that has its own interests,
its own life, its own agenda. It views citizens as milk cows—or
perhaps even beef cows—strictly as a means to its ends.
TGR: Whether it's overt or by
default, doesn't that end up in the same place down the line?
DC: There are two ways they can
default—one by saying, "We don't have the money and we're not
going to pay you," and the other by continuing to print up money and
giving people the number of dollars that they're owed, except the dollars
are worthless. The first alternative is by far better, for many reasons we
can't fully explore now. But it's going to be traumatic either way.
TGR: But the assumption that
we could actually just print more dollars and pay off the debt implies that
somewhere the debt will stabilize.
DC: Oh no. It doesn't have to stabilize. To pay interest
on the national debt, and to pay for additional spending, all the Federal
Reserve has to do is buy bonds from the U.S. government. It doesn't have to
stabilize at all. The government is most unlikely to cut back on its
spending, most of which has become part of the social
fabric—Medicare, Social Security, unemployment benefits, food stamps,
corporate bailouts, continuing foreign wars, domestic
"security"…These people are crazy enough that it could get
like Germany in the '20s or Zimbabwe a few years ago.
TGR: At what point do we tip over and turn
into a situation such as Zimbabwe or the Weimar Republic?
DC: At the moment we're in an economic
twilight zone or, if you wish, the eye of a hurricane. There is apparent
stability in the economy. The stock market's high. The bond market's high.
Only the real estate market is in visible trouble. Retail prices are level;
they're not going up and maybe they're even going down in some cases. This
is a temporary situation. We will inevitably—and soon—hit the
other side of the storm. At some point those trillions of dollars created
by the U.S. government—and many other governments around the world
have created trillions of currency units—are going to have an effect.
When will that be? The timing is uncertain. But I think it's going to be
soon.
TGR: Will it be
rapid?
DC: If these
things were perfectly predictable, it would be easier to dodge the bullet.
This is an almost unique time in world economic history, and I think we're
not only going to have economic consequences, but social and political
consequences, and very likely military consequences. So hold on to your
hat.
TGR: To protect
what individual wealth we may have, you've recommended selling real estate
and renting, holding assets outside the United States, owning gold, etc.
When we're out of the eye and in the thick of this economic hurricane, what
types of equity investments should people be holding?
DC: Now is a very bad time to have most
kinds of equities; stocks in general are very overpriced, by almost every
parameter. I'm not looking to sell my gold until I can buy solid blue chip
stocks for dividend yields in the 8% to 10% area. That's after they cut
their current dividends. Although it's certainly not the bargain it was 10
years ago. Nonetheless gold will go higher. Stocks will go lower. I don't
know exactly when I'll sell my gold and buy stocks, but it will be when
there's a panic into gold and when stocks are bargains. I'm sure I'll be
afraid to make the trade when the time comes—but good trades almost
always run counter to your emotions. Perhaps the tip-off will be when
Newsweek or Time—if either still exists
then—run a front cover with a golden bear tearing apart the New
York Stock Exchange.
I think it will be a
generation before American real estate is a solid buy again. And the world
at large will likely have quite a different character then.
TGR: I take your point about equities
in general, but are you also staying away from gold equities? Or do you
maybe see an opportunity there?
DC: They're a special situation; on the one hand they are
a play on gold, but on the other hand they're stocks. There's an excellent
chance that with the trillions of currency units being created, the
government inevitably will wind up inflating other bubbles. There's a very
good chance for a bubble in gold and a very big bubble in gold stocks. So I
would say that they are an exception to other equities. We could see these
juniors go up by an order of magnitude or more, even while most other
stocks are going down.
Historically,
junior resource stocks are the most volatile class of securities in
existence.
TGR: Might
other sectors also be in that situation?
DC: My crystal ball is hazy, but it seems to me that
junior resource stocks are the best speculative place in the equities
market. There'll probably be others, but I don't see them very clearly at
this time. I'm waiting to see what materializes. You have to look at all
markets of all types, everywhere in the world, to find things that are
overpriced, as well as things that are underpriced.
Most of the time the trend in any given market is uncertain. I prefer to
act only when, in my subjective opinion, the odds are greatly in my favor,
and when the potential return is a multiple of my investment. In other
words, most people invest 100% of their capital in hope of a 10% return. I
prefer to wait until I can invest 10% of my capital for a 100% return.
As to what's going to happen over the next few years,
I feel confident that we've entered upon the Greater Depression in earnest.
It will be an extended period of time when most people's standard of living
drops significantly. But as I said, I think there's an excellent chance of
a bubble igniting in resource stocks. That will build on the bubble that's
going to come in gold.
High levels of inflation
make "investing," in the Graham-Dodd sense of the word, very
hard. And inflation makes speculation almost necessary. Just don't confuse
speculation with gambling—they're very different. Speculation is the
art of capitalizing on politically created distortions in the market.
TGR: What's your definition
of resource stocks? For some, it's very broad and includes metals,
agricultural commodities and such. Are you referring specifically to
gold?
DC: I'm most
friendly toward gold; it's the only financial asset that's not
simultaneously someone else's liability. I'm friendly toward silver, too,
because silver is kind of poor man's gold. I'm very friendly toward oil
because I do believe a good, solid argument can be made for what was first
defined by M. King Hubbert as "peak oil." Also, oil is likely to
be a major player in the next major Mideast conflict. I like uranium;
nuclear is certainly the safest, cheapest, and cleanest form of mass power
generation.
There's an excellent case to be made
for agricultural commodities in general, and live cattle in particular. I'm
not very friendly toward base metals such as lead, zinc, copper, aluminum,
iron and so forth. Usage of industrial metals could drop considerably in
the ongoing depression.
TGR: You mentioned earlier that you thought it would be a
generation before real estate represents a good investment again. Many
economic theories, though, tell us that real estate is a good thing to have
in an inflationary environment. How do you reconcile those two schools of
thought?
DC: The
problem is that we've just finished a decade-long real estate boom.
Actually, there's been a property boom, largely driven by debt, since the
end of World War II. There's been immense overbuilding and it's got to be
absorbed. A lot of the overbuilding will have to be bulldozed, quite
frankly, because it's completely uneconomic. I think the economic
contraction we're going into is so serious that in this country you'll be
able to buy real estate for back taxes, much like in the last
depression.
But it's much more serious
than what happened in the 1930s when real estate taxes were de
minimis. Now many people have to pay $10,000, $20,000, even $30,000 a
year in taxes on their houses before they even start paying the mortgage
and the utilities and maintenance. And municipalities are likely to try
raising the mill rate, because they're largely bankrupt, and assessed
values are way down.
There's a great deal more I
could say about what's yet to come in the real estate sector. But let me
just say the real estate bubble has a long way to deflate yet.
TGR: Is it both residential and
commercial or is it worse in one sector?
DC: That's tough. Is emphysema worse than Parkinson's? I
suspect, however, that commercial is going to be worse than residential.
People's shopping habits are one of the things that
the Internet has changed and will continue to change. It makes more sense
to buy things online and have them delivered to you, than to take the time
and expense of going shopping, and the merchant having to deal with retail
space, inventory, a geographically limited clientele and so forth. I
wouldn't be surprised to see prices on a lot of commercial property come
down 80% or 90%. You'll see a lot of properties permanently shuttered.
That's a disaster for owners, who will still have to pay taxes. There will
be no money for maintenance.
TGR: We spoke earlier about inflation and the likelihood
of the U.S. government printing its way out of debt. Do you see a point in
time where the United States or even other governments will go back to the
gold standard?
DC: It's
both essential, and inevitable. That's because they have no reason to trust
one another. They need a medium of exchange and a store of value that's not
faith-based.
All the other governments of the world
know that the U.S. is bankrupt and the dollar is nothing but a floating
abstraction. Why should they hold billions or in some cases trillions of
these things on their balance sheets? They're going to go back to gold
because it's the only financial asset that's not simultaneously somebody
else's liability.
It's not because gold is magic in
any way. It's just because it has characteristics that among the 92
naturally occurring elements make it uniquely well suited for use as money.
It's durable. It's divisible. It's convenient. It's consistent. It has use
value in and of itself. And it can't be created out of thin air by some
government. It's a better combination of those things than any of the 92
elements. It's infinitely better than paper. So yes, I think they'll go
back to gold within this generation.
TGR: You were speaking of buying things online. Most
people today don't even use paper bills. We do everything electronically in
terms of banking. Aren't those properties of gold that you described
irrelevant in the electronic era?
DC: To the contrary. Gold is an asset. You can put it in
your bank account and transfer it. You can buy and sell it electronically.
The fact that it can be transferred electronically today makes it a better
money than ever before. So no, not at all, gold is quite relevant. It's not
in any way an anachronism. I pity fools like Bernanke and Geithner who
don't understand that. If they totally destroy the dollar, they may end up
hung by their heels from a lamp post.
TGR: You said you're very partial to oil and uranium. Are
you attracted to any other energy resources?
DC: Yes. My friend Rick Rule has justifiably and very
intelligently been a big promoter of geothermal energy, because it's
actually superior to even nuclear in some ways. It should have a huge
future. There's very little geothermal being generated right now, and a
great deal could be generated in the future. Many other forms of power
generation are possible—tides, ocean currents, heat differentials in
the ocean, solar microwaved down from collectors in high orbit—there
are many, many innovative technologies out there.
Of course as technology keeps advancing, conventional solar will become
cheaper and more efficient. Energy shortages, and high energy costs, are
totally caused by political issues. In a true free market world they
wouldn't even be worth talking about.
TGR: But will technology-reliant sources such as solar and
wind power be able to sustain through this downturn that you're
expecting?
DC: Well,
most of the power we have is now generated via coal. Coal is very
problematical as an energy source—it's dirty, bulky and could be used
for better things than burning. Stupidly, most new plants will be running
on coal, not nuclear.
That said, you can expect
that the average guy will be cutting his standard of living, driving less,
turning down his heat in the winter, turning down his air conditioning in
the summer and turning off the lights when he leaves the room. So I'm not
sure that electricity consumption will be going up for years to come,
especially with a lot of stores being shuttered and so forth.
Wind and solar are trivial sources of power. Good for certain
applications in certain locations, but not suitable for mass power in an
industrial civilization with anything like our present technology.
TGR: So if electricity
consumption goes down. . .wind and solar are barely economically viable
now.
DC: That's right.
It's just a question of the alternatives. You weigh what you pay for a
kilowatt hour on the grid versus what it costs an individual to put up
private wind or solar, or for utility to put up commercial wind or solar. I
see no reason to invest in these alternatives other than economics.
The way I see it, arguments made about saving the planet
and so forth are basically ridiculous, even if naively well intended. All
the blather about "carbon footprints" is scientifically
nonsensical. It's not a matter of tree hugging. If you're paying more for
something than necessary, you're misallocating capital. You're destroying
capital. That's a real crime against humanity.
To
me, it's strictly a matter of economics. If at some point technology makes
a great breakthrough, maybe solar will become the best and cheapest power
source; that would be wonderful. That's not the case right now. As I said
before, maybe they'll be able to put solar collectors into geostationary
earth orbit and beam down solar to earth by microwave. There are lots of
possibilities for solar to become economic. It's just that right now, it
costs several times what other forms of power do. It doesn't make sense,
except in certain places, in certain applications.
TGR: Given that, would we expect to see any
solar in your portfolio?
DC: If somebody makes a cosmic breakthrough, I'm happy to
buy the stock. I'm certainly not inclined against solar on any
philosophical grounds.
TGR: The Chinese recently announced that they will start
selling gold coins through their banking system. What do you make of that?
Is it really big news?
DC: I think it is. The Chinese know that one of the
reasons Mao took over is because the government of Chiang Kai-shek
destroyed the national currency. The Chinese can see the problems with the
U.S. dollar. That it could blow up in their hands. They also see the
problems they're creating for themselves by creating trillions of new
renminbi. So I think that they're encouraging the average guy in the street
to do some saving with gold so that if things go sideways with these paper
currencies, the average guy isn't left too destitute and too angry. At
least he'll have some gold coins. I think they're being quite intelligent
about encouraging their people to buy gold.
TGR: What do you make of the fact that a country with a
communist orientation encourages its citizens to buy gold, while the
world's supposedly premier democracy does not?
DC: First of all, let's recognize that communism was
a very short-term aberration in the 5,000-year grand screen of Chinese
history. Mao only ruled the country for about 30 years. Since the late
'70s, China's been returning to its old ways. Everybody knows that the
Communist Party in China is nothing but a scam for its members to cream
something off the top of everything. It's ludicrous to say China is a
communist country. It's easier to do business in China than it is in the
U.S.—lower taxes, less regulation, less legal hassles.
In point of fact, the Chinese are reverting to the mean. For many
centuries, up until the Industrial Revolution, China was much wealthier
than the West. Now it's rising again.
As far as the
United States is concerned, unfortunately it's going the other way. The
issue has nothing to do with democracy. Democracy is just mob rule dressed
up in a sports coat. It's much overrated. The U.S. government is becoming
more powerful, and the U.S. is radically departing from the economic
philosophy of free markets that made it great. It's simultaneously becoming
more politically repressive. The Chinese are just reverting to their
traditional economic philosophy, which is not communism, it's capitalist
trade and production.
TGR: Presumably, participants will get a lot more of
what we've been talking about at the Casey Summit that you have scheduled for October 1–3
in Carlsbad, California.
DC: For sure. We're going to be talking about specific
ways to take advantage of the problems that we have today. It's important
to remember that as the Greater Depression deepens, most of the real wealth
in the world still will be here. It's just going to change ownership. The
key for this conference is we're going to examine why things are the way
they are. But perhaps even more important is how to capitalize on them, how
to take advantage of them.
TGR: Of course you'll be at the conference too. And your
lineup includes Bob Bishop, Eric Sprott, Richard Russell, Bob Prechter, and
obviously Rick Rule.
DC: And Neil Howe, who with William Strauss wrote
The Fourth Turning and Generations: the History of America's
Future, 1584 to 2069. It's among the most brilliant, and original,
analyses of long-term trends of history I've ever seen.
TGR: And I understand you'll be
introducing the Casey NexTen. How does that complement your Casey
Explorers' League?
DC:
When Ross Beaty, Bob Quartermain, Simon Ridgeway and the other members of
our Explorers' League come out with a new deal, it automatically carries a
huge premium because they're proven commodities; highly technically
competent, honest guys with good work habits, who have found and made
economic more than three mines.
With the Casey
NexTen, we've done a lot of work on finding the next generation, guys who
have all the makings of these veterans, the young editions of our
Explorers' League. With this group, you can still buy in cheap and get them
as they're just moving into the most productive stages of their lives as
opposed to moving toward retirement.
Getting to
know them personally, which is possible for people who attend the
conference, would be one of the most financially productive things that
you'll be able to do if you have any interest at all in resource stocks.
Doug Casey, chairman of Casey Research,
LLC, is the international investor personified. He's spent substantial
time in over 175 different countries so far in his lifetime, living in 12
of them. And Doug's the one who literally wrote the book on crisis
investing. In fact, he's done it twice. After The International Man:
The Complete Guidebook to the World's Last Frontiers in 1976, he came
out with Crisis Investing: Opportunities and Profits in the Coming
Great Depression in 1979. His sequel to this groundbreaking book, which
anticipated the collapse of the savings-and-loan industry and rewarded
readers who followed his recommendations with spectacular returns, came in
1993, with Crisis Investing for the Rest of the Nineties. In
between, his Strategic Investing: How to Profit from the Coming
Inflationary Depression broke records for the largest advance ever paid
for a financial book. Doug has appeared on NBC News, CNN and National
Public Radio. He's been a guest of David Letterman, Larry King, Merv
Griffin, Charlie Rose, Phil Donahue, Regis Philbin and Maury Povich. He's
been the topic of numerous features in periodicals such as Time,
Forbes, People, US, Barron's and the Washington
Post—not to mention countless articles he's written for his own
various websites, publications and subscribers.
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