Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Watching the Dollar Die


This piece should be read carefully. If Roberts is correct, somewhere ahead there's going to be a run on the dollar. The run could be in a few months or a few years, I have no way of timing it. But common sense tells me that there will be a run. This is one of the main reasons why I believe we must hold gold -- and forget the timing. There is no sense or excuse for timing, since I don't hold gold for a potential profit, I hold it as a store of wealth. Gold is the only money (currency) that does not need the backing of some nation or some central bank. Gold is wealth on its own, accepted as wealth at any time in any quantity in any situation.

Gold is not only the "anti-dollar," gold is the "anti-fiat currency." From a financial survival standpoint, gold is the ultimate insurance policy in a debt-laden world of ultimately worthless paper.


Watching the Dollar Die

Paul Craig Roberts
Mar 17, 2008

I've been watching the dollar die all my life. I sometimes think I will outlast it.

When I was a young man, gold was $35 an ounce. Today one ounce gold bullion coins, such as the Canadian Maple Leaf, cost more than $1,000.

Our silver coinage was 90% silver. People sometimes melted coins in order to make silver spoons, known as coin silver, which can still be found in antique shops. Except for the reduced silver (40%) Kennedy half dollar which continued until 1970, 1964 was the last year of America's silver coinage. The copper penny departed in 1982. As Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, I opposed the demise of America's last commodity money, but I couldn't prevent the copper penny's death.

During World War II (1941-1945), nickel was diverted from coinage to war, and the US mint issued a wartime silver (35%) nickel.

It is not easy to find items to purchase with today's US coins, but the silver coins of the same face value still have purchasing power. The 10 cent piece of my youth contains $1.42 worth of silver at today's silver price. The quarter is worth $3.55, and the half dollar contains $7.10 of silver. The silver dollar is worth 15.2 times its face value. These are just the silver values of coins that might be worth far more depending on condition and rarity. The silver in the wartime nickel is worth $1.10, which is 22 times the coin's face value. Even the copper penny is worth 2.5 cents.

When I was a young man enjoying travels in Europe, the German mark or Swiss franc traded four to one US dollar. The euro, which is today's equivalent to the mark or franc, costs $1.55.

People who haven't accumulated much age have little idea of the corrosive power of "acceptable" inflation. Unlike gold and silver, fiat money has no intrinsic value. When money is created faster than goods and services it drives up prices, thus driving down the value of the money. If freely traded currencies are excessively printed or if inflation, budget deficits, and trade deficits drive currencies off their fixed exchange rates, prices of imports rise as the foreign exchange value of the currency falls.

Today the US, heavily dependent on imports, is subject to double-barrel inflation from both domestic money creation and decline in the dollar's foreign exchange value.

The US inflation rate is about twice as high as the government's inflation measures report. In order to hold down Social Security payments, the government changed the way it measures inflation. In the old measure, inflation measured the nominal cost of a defined standard of living. If the price of steak rose, up went the inflation rate. Today if the price of steak rises, the government assumes that people switch to hamburger. Inflation doesn't go up. Instead, the standard of living it measures goes down.

This is just one of the many ways that the government pulls the wool over our eyes.

With the dollar value of the euro rising through the roof, today a vacation in Europe is far more costly than in the past. Thanks to China, so far Americans have been sheltered from the greatest effects of the dollar's declining value. Our greatest trade deficit is with China. The prices of the goods from China have not risen, because China keeps its currency pegged to the dollar. As the dollar goes down, China's currency goes with it, thus holding down price rises.

The resignation of Admiral William Fallon as US military commander in the Middle East probably signals a Bush Regime attack on Iran. Fallon said that there would be no US attack on Iran on his watch. As there was no reason for Fallon to resign, it is not farfetched to conclude that Bush has removed an obstacle to war with Iran.

The US is already overstretched both militarily and economically. An attack on Iran is likely to be the straw that breaks the camel's back.



Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Sonoma: Sales down 44% - Price down 22%

Sonoma County home prices continued their plunge in February as sales slowed to a crawl.

Only 254 new homes, resale homes and condominiums were sold in February, down 43.9 percent from a year ago.

The median price tumbled to $400,000, down 22.3 percent from a year ago — the biggest drop in the nine-county Bay Area.

In an attempt to pump more money into the housing market, federal housing agencies agreed last week to temporarily back loans up to $662,500 in Sonoma County and as high as $729,750 in pricier parts of the Bay Area.

The program could stimulate sales of higher-priced homes, Prentice said.

The Federal Reserve is trying to pour Draino into the lending system.

A year ago jumbos accounted for 59.8 percent of all Bay Area home loans. Last month they were just 28.9 percent.

Is this going to help in Sonoma County? Can the jobs support the current lower housing prices yet?

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Banks: "systemic margin call"


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street banks are facing a "systemic margin call" that may deplete banks of $325 billion of capital due to deteriorating subprime U.S. mortgages, JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), said in a report late on Friday.


JPMorgan, which sent a default notice to Thornburg Mortgage Inc. (TMA.N) after the lender missed a $28 million margin call, said more default notices and margin calls were likely. The Carlyle Group's mortgage fund also failed to meet $37 million in margin calls this week.

"A systemic credit crunch is underway, driven primarily by bank writedowns for subprime mortgages,"
according to the report. . "We would characterize this situation as a systemic margin call."

The credit crisis that began about a year ago will likely intensify after Friday's weak February U.S. employment report "that most definitely signals recession," JPMorgan said.

Indeed, corporate bond spreads widened to a new record on Friday, surpassing levels seen in October 2002 during a boom in bankruptcies following the dot-com crash. U.S. employers cut payrolls in February for a second consecutive month, slashing 63,000 jobs, the biggest monthly job decline in nearly five years, the U.S. Labor Department reported on Friday.

"The weak February employment report points to an economy in recession," JPMorgan said.

The JPMorgan report included a revised bleaker forecast for subprime-related home prices. The bank now sees home prices falling 30 percent, from its prior 25 percent forecast. Those prices have declined 14 percent since mid-2006, JPMorgan said.

The U.S. jobs results also came after the Federal Reserve expanded the amount of its short-term auctions to $100 billion in total in the central bank's latest effort to ease credit concerns. Ongoing concerns about bond insurers, known as monolines, and their effort to save their top ratings also are weighing on market sentiment.