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How to Speculate Your Way to Success: Doug Casey
Doug Casey Website: Casey Research Date: 04-20-2012 Subject: Casey Research Articles Source: JT Long of The Gold Report (4/20/12) So
far, 2012 has been a banner year for the stock market, which recently
closed the books on its best first quarter in 14 years. But Casey
Research Chairman Doug Casey insists that time is running out on the
ticking time bombs. Next week when Casey Research's spring summit gets underway, Casey will open the first general session addressing the
question of whether the inevitable is now imminent. In another
exclusive interview with The Gold Report, Casey tells us that
he foresees extreme volatility "as the titanic forces of inflation and
deflation fight with each other" and a forced shift to speculation to
either protect or build wealth. The Gold Report: You told us about two ticking time bombs last September, Dougâ€"the
trillions of dollars owned outside the U.S. that could be dumped if the
holders lose confidence, and the trillions of dollars in the U.S.
created to paper over the 2008 liquidity crisis. It's been six months
since then. Have we averted the disaster or are we closer than ever? Doug Casey: Things are worse now. The way I see it, what's going to happen is
inevitable; it's just a question of when. We're rapidly approaching that
moment. I suspect it will start in Europe, because so many European
governments are bankrupt; Greece isn't an exception, it's the norm. So
we have bankrupt governments trying to bail out the European banks,
which are bankrupt because they've loaned money to the bankrupt
governments. It's actually rather funny, in a perverse way. If it
were just the banks and the governments, I wouldn't care; they're just
getting what they deserve. The problem is that many prudent middle class
people are going to be wiped out. These folks have tried to produce
more than they consume for their whole lives and save the difference.
But their savings are almost all in government currencies, and those
currencies are held in banks. However, the banks are unable to give back
all the euros that these people have entrusted to them. It's a very
serious thing. So European governments are trying to solve this by
creating more euros. Eventually the euro is going to reach its intrinsic
valueâ€"which is nothing. It's the same in the U.S. The banks are
bankrupt, the government's bankrupt and creating more dollars so the
banks don't go bust and depositors don't lose their money. I'm of
the opinion that if it doesn't blow up this year, the situation is
certainly going to blow up next year. We're very close to the edge of
the precipice. TGR: Is the problem the debt, or all of the currency that has been pumped in? DC: It's both. We have to really consider what debt is. It's the opposite
of savings because savings means that you've produced more than you've
consumed and put the difference aside. That's how you build capital.
That's how you grow in wealth. On the other side of the balance sheet is
debt, which means you've consumed more than you've produced. You've
mortgaged the future or you're living out of past capital that somebody
else produced. The existence of debt is a very bad thing. In a
classical banking system, loans are made only against 100% security and
only on a short-term basis. And only from savings accounts that earn
interest, not from money in checking accounts or demand deposits, where
the depositor (at least theoretically) pays the banker for safe storage
of his funds. These are very important distinctions, but they've been
completely lost. The entire banking system today is totally corrupt.
It's worse than that. Central banking has taken what was an occasional
local problem, a bank failing from fraud or mismanagement, and elevated
it to a national level by allowing fractional banking reserves and by
creating currency for bailouts. Debtâ€"at least consumer debtâ€"is a bad
thing; it's typically a sign that you're living above your means. But
inflation of the currency is even worse in its consequences, because it
can overturn the whole basis of society and destroy the middle class. TGR: What happens when these time bombs go off? DC: There are two possibilities. One is that the central banks and the
governments stop creating enough currency units to bail out their banks.
That could lead to a catastrophic deflation and banks going bankrupt
wholesale. When consumer and business loans can't be repaid, the bank
goes bust. The money created by those banks out of nothing, through
fractional reserve banking, literally disappears. The dollars die and go
to money heaven; the deposits that people put in there can't be
redeemed. The other possibility is an eventual hyperinflation.
Here the central bank steps in and gives the banks new currency units to
pay off depositors. It's just a question of which one happens. Or we
can have both in sequence. If there's a catastrophic deflation, the
government will get scared, and feel the need to "do something." And it
will need money, because tax revenues will collapse at exactly the time
its expenditures are skyrocketingâ€"so it prints up more, which brings on a
hyperinflation. We could also see deflation in some areas of the
economy and inflation in others. For example, the price of beans and
rice may fall, relatively speaking, during a boom because everybody's
eating steak and caviar. Then during a subsequent depression, people
need more calories for fewer dollars, so prices for caviar and steak
drop but beans and rice become more expensive because everybody is
eating more of them. Inflation creates all kinds of distortions in
the economy and misallocations of capital. When there's a real demand
for filet mignon, there's a lot of investment in the filet mignon
industry and not enough in the beans and rice industry because nobody is
eating them. And vice-versa. And it happens all over the economy, in
every area. TGR: But inflation rates don't seem
to reflect the vast amounts of currency that central banks have injected
into the U.S., European and other economies. The U.S. inflation rate
was 2.93% in January and 2.87% in February. We haven't seen signs yet
either of a hyperinflation or a serious deflation that we were warned
would come with quantitative easing (QE). Does that mean QE is working
after all? DC: No. It's not just the immediate
and direct consequences of what they doâ€"everybody loves it when
trillions of dollars are created. It feels good to have lots more
purchasing media. The problem arises with the indirect and delayed
consequences. All these dollars and eurosâ€"and Chinese yuan and Japanese
yenâ€"that have been created have basically gone into the banks, but the
banks are not lending them out. The banks are afraid to lend and a lot
of people don't want to borrow because they're afraid of taking on more
debt. So the dollars that have been created, mostly invested in
government paper, sit on the banks' balance sheets. They are not
circulating in the economy at the moment. That's why prices aren't
skyrocketing right now. That's point number two, though. Point
number one is that I wouldn't trust those inflation figures in the first
place. The governments of Western Europe and the U.S. fudge inflation
figures as certainly as the Argentine government fudges them, just less
overtly and outrageously. They do that because they want to keep the
perception of inflation down; they don't want people panicking, which is
a pity, because the public should urgently do something to protect
their capital. They also don't want to see Social Security payments and
other payments that are tied to the consumer price index go up. They
don't have the tax revenues to pay for them and will have to print even
more money, which just exacerbates the problem. Official inflation
numbers are unreliable; only somebody very naïveâ€"like a TV
anchorpersonâ€"could possibly believe them. If you think of
inflation as an increase in the money supply above the increase in real
wealthâ€"which is actually what the word meansâ€"the inflation rate is
actually quite high at the moment. Real wealth is being created at lower
rates than it historically has been, while the money supply is
increasing tremendously. It's just a question of when that inflation
rate manifests itself on a retail level. You've got to think like a real
economist, not a political hack like Joseph Stiglitz or Paul Krugman.
You have to see not just the immediate and direct consequences of
something, but the indirect and delayed ones. TGR: Given that this is an election year in the U.S., won't the government
do everything possible to maintain a stable market and stop inflation? DC: Sure, the government wants things stable. I have no doubt it is trying
to keep the stock market up. It wants the stock market to stay high
because pension funds and insurance companies and the public at large
are invested in the stock market. It wants interest rates low, although
artificially low interest rates are an economic disaster in that they
encourage people to borrow more and save less. It would prefer to see
precious metals, and all other commodities, at low levels. The argument
is made that the governments of the world, especially the U.S.
government, are manipulating the prices of gold and silver to keep them
down, because when they increase, it's like financial alarm bells going
off. But they can't control the prices of the precious metals. In
the real world, cause has effect. When you create trillions of currency
units, eventually the price of those currency units relative to other
things will go down. That's called inflation. Whether he's lying or he
really believes it, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said he can control the
levels of inflation. When it gets too high, he thinks he can rein it in
somehow. The current world monetary system is going to come undone. That's my prediction, and I'm betting on it massively, personally. TGR: You've talked about the possibility of abandoning paper currency altogether and going to a digital system. DC: The most important thing is to get the government out of money. There
should be a high wall between the state and religion and an equally high
wall between the state and the economy. I don't even like to talk about
what governments "should" do as far as money is concerned because the
governments shouldn't be involved in moneyâ€"period. Money is a medium of
exchange and a store of value. It shouldn't be a political football, nor
should it be used as an indirect form of taxation, which is what
inflation is. It should be a pure, 100% market phenomenon. Central banks
should, therefore, be abolished. Paper currency should cease to
existâ€"except as a receipt for money held on deposit. Historically,
that's how it originated. You could use any kind of commodity as
money, but gold has proven since the dawn of civilization to be uniquely
well suited for use as money. It's a market, which is to say a
voluntary, phenomenon. Whether you represent that gold with bank notes
printed by individual banks or by digital currencyâ€"which I'm sure the
world is going toâ€"makes no difference. But having the state in charge of
currency is idiotic. TGR: You've written about
China moving away from the dollar. Do you see that happening gradually
or all of a sudden? And would it be in favor of its own currency or more
investment in gold? What impact would that have on gold prices? DC: First of all, I think the nation-state as a form of organization is on
its way out, and that a 100 years from now people will look back at
countries like China and the U.S. the way we look back at medieval
kingdoms today. In the meantime, the dollar is important because it's
the numéraire for trade all over the world. At the same time, fewer and
fewer people trust it, and they increasingly realize that it's the
unbacked liability of a bankrupt government. Eventually, it's
going to be replaced by something else. India and Iran are trading
between each other using gold and oil. Why use a piece of paper issued
by a hostile and unreliable third party? The Russians and the Chinese
can see how crazy it is to trade between each other using dollars, which
all have to clear in New York. But people are still accustomed to using
currencies issued by nation-states, and the U.S. dollar is everywhere
and is therefore convenient. But it's a hot potato. People no longer
trust it. I suspect the Chinese yuan will replace the dollar
graduallyâ€"assuming the Chinese don't destroy the yuan as well. They're
also creating trillions of the things to keep the economic bubble in
China from imploding. Before the Chinese yuan can replace the
dollar, people must have confidence in it. The best way they can gain
confidence in it is if the volume of yuan is limited and redeemable by
the issuer in something real, something tangible. That's going to be
gold. So I expect China will continue buying large amounts of gold to
back its currency. China is already the world's largest gold producer.
Considering that only about 6â€"7 billion ounces of gold have ever been
mined in all the world's history, China alone could drive the price of
gold much higher. TGR: At your Recovery Reality Check summit in Florida April 27â€"29, you'll be talking about how business
cycles have been turned on their heads. Is this the time for investors
to sit tight, making only small adjustments to portfolios, or must they
take more drastic action to protect their wealth or, better yet, profit
from volatility? DC: I think volatility is going
to go way up in the future as the titanic forces of inflation and
deflation fight with each other. This is a very poor time to make big
bets in almost any conventional market because it's impossible to tell
how things will finally settle, where the next major war will be and so
forth. Stock markets around the world are not cheap now and bond markets
are fantastically overpriced. Currencies are no more than floating
abstractions. Commodities have been in a long bull market, so they're no
longer a low-risk bet. Real estateâ€"the most obvious thing for bankrupt
governments to taxâ€"is dangerous. In the developed worldâ€"especially in
the U.S.â€"it floats on a sea of debt, which has driven it to artificially
high levels. It's coming down as we speak, but it's nowhere near a
bottom. So there are very few places where people can still
attempt to preserve capital. Everybody is going to be almost forced to
be a speculator to try to stay in the same place. Speculating means
capitalizing on politically caused distortions in the marketplace.
That's the proper definition of the word. TGR: What can people speculate on? DC: Unfortunately, they have to second-guess where the money will go. I've
always liked resource stocks, especially resource exploration stocks.
It's a tiny market. If a fire gets lit under gold and silver, and I
think it will, companies in this nanosector could explode 10, 20 or 50
times upward in price. It's happened many times in the past. Right now,
these stocks are relatively cheap, so I like that as a speculative
vehicle. TGR: Rick Rule has cautioned against
generalizing about the entire junior mining sector as a whole, because
so many of these companies don't find anything. How do you decide which
resource investments are worth looking into? Are there criteria? Is
there some kind of a litmus test that you use? DC: Rick is absolutely correct about that. Although the sector is capable
of going upwards 10 or 20 times as a whole, most of the stocks in it are
total garbage. The only gold, uranium, silver or whatever appears on
their stock certificates, not in the ground they control. There are
thousands of these little stocks, and yes, we have criteria we use to
evaluate them. We use a tried-and-true due diligence process we call The Eight Ps of Resource Stock Evaluation to separate the wheat from the chaff among speculative investment opportunities. TGR: Would you share that with us? DC: Sure.
This is a guide to help investors ask the right questions about every
individual company they're considering. This list comprehends the
essential, but you could write a book about each of these eight points. TGR: How hard is it to find a company that passes muster on all eight counts? DC: It's very hard. It's hard enough to look at the basic statistics of
thousands of companies. Then you look at the people behind them.
Generally, we try to find the people first. We stay away from those who
have no history of success and have established that they have
questionable characters. We look for people with long histories of
success or appear to be about to embark on a lifetime of success. The
most important piece is people. That's what we really look for most of
all. TGR: Based on all the calamities that could occur, how will you adjust your investing philosophy? DC: Let me put it this way. We're going into something that I call The
Greater Depression, much worse and much different than what happened in
the 1930s. I think my friend Richard Russell said it best: "In a
depression, everybody loses. The winner is the guy who loses the least."
It's very tough to keep capital together today, much less make it grow
in the years to come. But I think it's possible. The thing to
remember is that most of the world's real wealth will remain in
existence regardless of what happens. The key is to position yourself so
that more of it falls into your hands as opposed to falling out of your
hands. That's what we're trying to do, to increase our relative share
of the wealth in the world. We're not looking at boom times. What's
coming will be the opposite of what we experienced during the artificial
inflationary boom of the 1990s, where everything was going upâ€"stocks,
real estate and so forth. This is a time when, in real terms, most
things will lose value. Most people will experience a real decline in
their standard of living. TGR: As we've
discussed, at its root, paper currency is a substitute for something of
value. Energy, similar to gold, has intrinsic value. It's always in
demand. In the past, you've expressed optimism about uranium, natural
gas and oil. As the dollar becomes suspect, do you foresee sources of
energy becoming more valuable? DC: Absolutely.
I'm very bullish on oil. The world runs on fossil fuels today because
they're ideal sources of highly concentrated energy. Unfortunately, all
of the easily available, cheap fossil fuels have basically been found.
The low-hanging fruit is gone. This is what the peak oil theory is
about. Plenty of oil remains, but it's going to be more expensive to get
it. To find oil now requires going to exotic places without
infrastructure and with big political problems. It requires going much
deeper into the ground, exploring under the ocean, using new
technologies, and so forth. Gas is secondary to oil when it comes
to concentrated sources of energy. Of course, with the development of
new technologies, primarily horizontal drilling and new fracking
techniques, a huge amount of natural gas has become available all over
the world. But it takes tremendous capital to retrieve it, and it also
faces political problems. But in summary, I'm bullish on energy of
all types. There is plenty of fuel out there. It's just a question of
the price level, so it becomes economic to retrieve it. TGR: So how do you invest in finding the rest of what's out there? DC: You look for companies that are exploring for it. One of the important
things that makes me very bullish on oil is that most of the oil in the
world todayâ€"something like 80%â€"is not owned and produced by BP Plc
(BP:NYSE; BP:LSE), Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM:NYSE), Royal Dutch Shell Plc
(RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE) and companies like that. It's mostly owned and
produced by national oil companies such as those in Mexico, Iran, Saudi
Arabia and Venezuela. These state oil companies are universally corrupt
and inefficient. The profits from the oil are generally used as
piggybanks by those governments, not to build capital and find more oil.
Furthermore, where governments allow private exploration, such as Iraq,
they take about 80â€"90% of the potential profits from oil, which of
course discourages exploration and exploitation of the resource. The
problems are almost entirely political, but they're big problems. TGR: Speaking of the politics of energy, are you still bullish on uranium in
light of the politics of what's gone on since the Fukushima meltdown? DC: Yes. I've said it before and continue to say it. There's no question
that nuclear power is by far the safest, cleanest and cheapest type of
mass power generation available. Fukushima survived one of the most
severe earthquakes in recorded history with no problem; it's just a pity
they didn't adequately plan for a 45-foot tidal wave on top of it. In
addition, those plants basically were 50-year-old technology. If it
weren't for political obstructions, we'd be using vastly improved
technology. But it's not just uranium. Thorium is actually a much better
fuel from many points of view and probably would have been used as a
fuel instead of uranium except that the governments of the world found
uranium useful for nuclear weapons as well as nuclear power. Nuclear
power is definitely the answer, but as you point out, it's a question
of political problems. Across the resource industry, in fact, it's all
politics. When you find a gigantic resource of some type, you can count
on lawsuits, not-in-my-backyard opposition and political theft. Those
are among the reasons that I don't see the resource industry as a place
to make investments. It's only a place where you can speculate. TGR: So what should long-term investors do to protect themselves? DC: Because the big problems in the world today all are political, the
critical thing is to diversify politically and internationally. You
can't have all your assets under the control of one government or in one
country. Then, of course, you have to find the right place to put the
money within that framework. TGR: How do you do that? DC: I can write a book on that. TGR: Or stage a summit? You have quite a faculty lined up. DC: It is an impressive group. Actually, this summit has dual overarching
purposes. As we've discussed, the massive amounts of money the world's
governments have unleashed in their economies have lit a small fire of
recovery. We're going to talk a lot about whether the world is truly on a
path to recovery or whether investors wouldn't be wise to develop and
implement Plan B now, given that the extreme levels of debt that were
such a major factor in creating the current crisis have not been
reduced. To me, that strongly suggests that this so-called recovery is
unsustainable and calls for moving into Plan B. Part of Plan B involves
identifying optimal investment strategies for the markets ahead. TGR: What sorts of takeaways are in store for people who attend? DC: Let's have David Galland, who's been instrumental in preparing for this
summit, respond to that. (A senior market strategist, Galland is
managing director of Casey Research LLC, managing editor of The Casey Report, International Speculator, Casey Investment Alert author of Casey's Daily Dispatch.) David Galland: We expect the takeaways will be good answers to many burning questions.
As Doug has suggested, the government says the recovery is real and
your broker will tell you it is, yet the underlying data suggests that
it may be a paper tiger. So, what's the hard truth? Should you be moving
aggressively into rebounding equities? Or is the recovery a mirage that
will dissipate in a second crushing leg down for the economy and
traditional investment markets? What are the road signs you need to pay
close attention to? How can you position your portfolio to do well in
either scenario and, most importantly, to hedge against the worst case?
Should you worry about inflation or deflation? Neither? Or both? Will
the gold and silver you've been holding turn to lead and pull your
portfolio down? Or is loading up on corrections still the right thing to
do? TGR: These summits are always sold-out affairs. Is this one full already? DG: Just a few spots remain as we speak. Even if you can't make it to the Casey Research Recovery Reality Check Summit April 27-29, you can still listen to every piece of actionable investment advice attendees will hear with the Summit Audio Collection.
This expansive audio set will feature every recorded Summit
presentation, including those from David Stockman, director of the
Office of Management and Budget under President Reagan. . .Harry Dent,
author of The Great Crash Ahead. . .Casey Research Chairman Doug Casey. . .and 28 other financial luminaries. Pre-order before the Summit starts and get the entire collection for $100 off. Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you'll learn when new articles have been
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