The First Steps to
Hyper-Inflation
by Paul Tustain
BullionVault
Thursday, 4 June 2009
Choose your poison: the trickle of excess cash or the
trickle of excess bond redemptions...
NOT FOR THE
first time the Financial Times says
we gold buyers are "nuts" – a word which all too often follows on from "gold" in
the financial media.
I
should rise above this sort of thing. What does it matter if the FT thinks me nuts? But I find I'm
irritated, both for myself and on the collective behalf of successful gold
investors. I don't think we deserve to be called "nuts" after our
gold has for 6 years so consistently outperformed all those other serious
investment classes so diligently analysed on Wall Street and in the City.
Gold
continues to strengthen against the Dollar. Faint hopes of a swift
"V-shaped" recession are dwindling, which is hardly surprising.
Global economic activity up to 2007 was driven by rich world consumers buying
things even they couldn't afford. In the US alone they have since lost about
$12 trillion of private wealth – $120,000 per family. Judging by estimates
published in The Economist this should
induce a demand slump of about $500 billion per year, for 10 more years.
That
means a typical family will be cutting back spending at the rate of $5,000 per
year for a decade. So our economies will stay shrunk, threatening deflation.
To
combat this governments are trying to engineer some inflation. Deficit spending
here, quantitative easing there, and zero interest rates everywhere; with all
of it geared to stimulating more production in a world already suffering
over-capacity. This is where they step into dangerous territory.
Retail
prices inflate in an overheating economy when there is a supply shortage of
consumer goods. Because demand outstrips supply the producer has the whip hand,
and he exploits it by asking more money for his goods. But look around you
today and you will see there is no supply side shortage in the world economy.
So if we do get inflation it's not going to be because of overheating.
Hyper-inflation,
on the other hand, has little to do with supply side shortages and overheated economies.
It happens when a currency dies. Once the realization grips savers (not
consumers) that their money is losing its purchasing power then they exit money
and look for better stores of value.
So while 'normal' inflation is driven by consumer-pull for goods,
hyper-inflation is driven by saver-push of money, and this explains a big
qualitative difference between inflation and hyper-inflation.
Modest
inflation through undersupplied goods has a negative
feedback because new supply pulls prices back, bringing the economy back to
equilibrium. Hyper-inflation does the opposite. Once it starts it suffers a positive feedback by encouraging more
and more savers to dump cash. What starts as a trickle accelerates into an
unstoppable torrent of savings pouring into circulation.
The
unusual problem we now have is that after using cash rescues to protect the
overcapacity in our economies we are not going to be able to create normal,
controllable, supply-shortage inflation. It's increasingly likely that the only
style of modest price rises which the central banks can engineer will be the
trickle which precedes a hyper-inflation.
Indeed,
what caused the Financial Times to
wheel out the old "gold nuts" phraseology was the strange case of
last week's bond markets. Bond prices – the best proxy for the future value of
cash – were falling when they should have been rising. The markets are telling
us that cash 10 years forward is becoming less valuable. This is a hint of
savers losing faith in their currency.
And
why wouldn't they? Their deposits will pay them no interest for the foreseeable
future. Inflation and tax will eat into their savings. The economy looks mired
in recession. Governments, which are now welcoming devaluations as a trade
benefit, are deep in debt and are toying with hyper-inflationary policies like
quantitative easing. It all points to the inflationary transfer of the
government's enormous debt into plummeting values for depositors' cash and
investors' bonds.
An
insight – courtesy of Bill Bonner – suggests what could soon happen. There is
an $11 trillion bond mountain, which is $96,000 of issued US Dollar bonds per US family. With total federal obligations now reaching above $63 trillion, this is the polar icecap of
contemporary finance, and it holds the bulk of the savings of two generations,
all denominated in dollars which are frozen solid until their redemption date.
If the Fed gets what it wants, then a modest dose of inflation now will
forestall a depression. But inflation will heat that icecap and make the bond
market more jittery, and at exactly this point the Fed says it will reverse its QE policy
and sell bonds back into the market, because this is how it plans to get
cash back out of circulation to control the inflation it has created.
Choose
your poison: The trickle of excess QE cash or the trickle of excess bond
redemptions, both in a world of over-supply. It seems all roads lead to
inflation. Don't assume it will be the manageable kind.
Regards,
Paul
Tustain
BullionVault
Paul
Tustain is the founder of BullionVault.com – with 13,000 customers and $600m in gold bars, now the world's largest
store of privately-owned investment gold bullion.
(c)
BullionVault
2009
Please Note: This article is to
inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your
money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or
data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be
verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.