The mighty U.S. dollar’s fall from economic grace didn’t happen overnight. It’s been a long and painful process driven by bad judgment, irresponsible fiscal policies, and arrogance.
Like many fiat currencies before it, the greenback’s paper and the ink printed on it is only worth what individuals are willing to assign to it. Otherwise it becomes as worthless as green wallpaper with numbers on it, just as happened in Rome.
Devaluing the Currency—
A Proven Recipe for Collapse
Nero and other Roman emperors debased the currency in order to supply a demand for more coins. Sound familiar? By debasing the currency, instead of a coin having its own intrinsic value, it was only representative of the silver or gold it had once contained. That’s all well and good as long as the silver content is what they say it is.
But by the time Claudius II Gothicus (268-270 A.D.) took power, the amount of silver in a “100 percent” silver denarius coin was only 0.02 percent. This led to widespread severe inflation and instability. The chart below shows just how that inflation occurred, eerily much like it is today in the U.S.
Soldier’s wages went up. But silver content went down,
making the currency worth less — considerably less.
Source: mappinghistory.uoregon.edu
Tax and Spend —
Didn’t Work Either!
In addition to recklessly devaluing the currency, the Roman Empire tried to ratchet up revenue through extreme taxation and finding new sources of wealth. We’re now seeing this in the U.S. as municipalities boost taxes while home values plummet. Plus they’re slapping citizens with fines and tickets for even the most minor violations, all in a desperate effort to stop the flood of red ink.
In Rome, the poor and wealthy alike were taxed extensively. Eventually the wealthy and powerful were no longer rich or powerful.
To escape the burden of tax, some small landowners actually chose to sell themselves into slavery, since slaves didn’t have to pay tax and freedom from taxes was more desirable than personal liberty. Eventually that didn’t even work, and Rome essentially imploded. The once mightiest empire on earth simply disappeared.
The same thing could happen to the United States. Let’s face it: The middle class and business owners are struggling, and disappearing fast! Unfortunately they’re also vital to the U.S. economy, and any hope of recovery.
Printing and Borrowing
Failed, Too!
One modern day example of inflation run amuck is the African nation of Zimbabwe. The country is famous for having issued 100 trillion dollar notes during a period of inflation, which reportedly reached 231 million percent at the height of the disaster.
Much like Rome, and the United States today, the inflation was largely self-imposed.
The Zimbabwe government resorted to slashing 12 zeros from its currency as hyperinflation eroded its value. |
And the main cause of hyperinflation, whether in Rome, in Zimbabwe or in the U.S. today: The massive and rapid increase in the amount of money in a system that is not supported by growth in the output of goods and services.
Can you imagine walking into Wal-Mart and a gallon of milk going for more than U.S. $150? This is what it was like when Zimbabwe’s currency was destroyed by inflation.
When hyperinflation occurs it results in an imbalance between the supply and demand for money, including currency and bank deposits. Eventually a complete loss of confidence in the money is almost inevitable. The public panics, and global market participants dump the currency.
Just like in the U.S. today, Zimbabwe’s hyperinflation was a result of the monetary authority irresponsibly borrowing money to pay its expenses and obligations.
History Repeats Itself
One of the biggest factors that has gotten the U.S. into the disaster we’re in, is the arrogance of the nation’s leaders. The belief that what happened in Rome and Zimbabwe could not happen in the U.S.
Fed Chairman Bernanke has said over and over that the United States can always just print more money as needed. I’m pretty certain that the people of Rome had a hard time believing that their empire would collapse too. After all it ruled the majority of the known world. But that’s exactly what happened.
So as the powers that be grapple over how to raise the debt ceiling, the money pit is sinking deeper and deeper. Prices for most everything we buy, especially food and energy, are soaring! And it seems the dollar loses more and more ground each day.
Indeed, the dollar is skating on very thin ice. Already many nations are shifting out of dollars and into gold and other forms of hard assets; I expect that trend to continue. Another way countries are avoiding trading in dollars is to barter instead.
Abandoning the Dollar
Most recently China and Iran have forged a deal to barter oil for goods from China.
According to The Financial Times …
“Tehran and Beijing are in talks about using a barter system to exchange Iranian oil for Chinese goods and services, as U.S. financial sanctions have blocked China from paying at least $20bn for oil imports.
“The U.S. sanctions against Iran, which make it extremely difficult to conduct dollar-denominated business, mean that China could owe the oil-rich nation as much as $30bn, according to people familiar with the problem.”
OPEC has also repeatedly discussed trading oil in another currency, instead of dollars. A move such as this would shake the very foundation of the dollar and certainly have an adverse impact. In fact, OPEC members have called for a fully convertible, gold-backed dinar for oil sales, instead of U.S. dollars. So the possibility of this happening remains a real risk.
As investors what can we do to protect ourselves from this hyperinflation and collapse in buying power of the dollar?
There are a few key ways to …
Be Smart While
Rome Burns
The risk to your dollars is real. The time for self defense is now. |
I’m pretty sure those Romans who saw the true writing on the wall, converted their wealth into tangible assets such as gold, silver and hard commodities. They knew the Roman coinage was basically becoming worthless and that rule of law and order was evaporating.
A similar situation is occurring in the U.S. right now. Individual liberties are being taken away, higher taxes are crushing small businesses and consumers, and the value of the currency is collapsing.
So we must look at ways to move some of our paper dollars into precious metals and other tangible assets that have real physical value. I also suggest ETFs that are actually backed by physical assets.
Here is my 3-step action plan to help hedge against the inflation disaster:
Step #1— Reduce your U.S. dollar holdings. Move into precious metals … gold, silver or both.
Step #2— Once you’ve made the decision to add precious metals to your portfolio, do it in a diverse way. Some physical gold and silver bars are good; coins are good too if you know how to buy them.
Step #3— In addition to physical gold and silver, you may want to add key ETFs. I prefer ETFs that are backed by physical gold and silver.
Remember though, when you buy gold and silver physically backed ETFs, you do not own the physical metal, you own a paper representation. Depending on the ETF, the amount per share can range from one ounce to one tenth ounce.
Five physically backed ETFs traded in the U.S. are the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD); the iShares Comex Gold Trust (IAU); the ETFS Physical Swiss Gold Shares (SGOL); the iShares Silver Trust (SLV); and the ETFS Physical Silver Shares (SIVR).
ETF options are what I like best …
They offer you leverage, and a bonus: Limited risk. And they’re the tool I use to help my Master Trader members seek gains in any major asset class in the world — stocks, precious metals, commodities, bonds and even foreign currencies — no matter what event or trend is happening in the world!
The bottom line is that the dollar’s risk is real. And investors must take control of their own destiny, or face seeing their wealth disappear along with the once mighty greenback.
Yours for resource profits,
Kevin
Kevin Kerr has successfully traded commodities professionally for the last 22+ years. His unparalleled expertise in commodity and resource futures, options, and equity trading, has made him a regular contributor to news outlets like CNBC, CNN, FOX News, CBS Evening News, Nightly Business Report and many others.
{ 6 comments }
Hi Kevin,
I liked your well though out post. I would like to make a suggestion. At the end of your article you mention the use of ETFS to acquire physical metal as they are physically backed, which I agree with. I do however disagree with using GLD, SLV or IAU. The reasons are two fold. First, the custodians of said ETFs are some of the largest Wall Street players and also the largest shorts in the Gold and Silver space so to me it seems that there is a conflict of interest there regardless of what the prospectus states. Second, the fact that the metals are under control of these large bullion banks makes me uncomfortable. The reason it makes me uncomfortable is not only the fact that the bullion banks have a less than stellar track record when it comes to protecting the general investing public but also if times get real tough and the rapacious Federal government is looking for gold these funds under bullion bank control are some of the largest concentrations of gold\silver and could be confiscated for the public good forcing you to cash out in their paper dollar terms. I do not believe that the Government would try and confiscate the few gold shekels that mom and pop have stored away when these huge caches of gold are far easier and less disruptive to annex.
A couple closed end funds you did not mention that trade on the exchanges like ETFs are Central Fund of Canada (NYSE : CEF) which is physical allocated silver with a gold kicker, Sprott Physical Gold Trust (NYSE:PHYS) all gold, Sprott physical Silver trust (NYSE:PSLV), Central Gold Trust(NYSE:GTU). The re are advantages and disadvantages to these funds as well
Advantages:
1) The metal is held in allocated form and audited
2) The metal is held outside the US so you get geographic and political diversification(all in Canada) This would apply for SGOL as well.
Disadvantages:
1) somewhat less liquid that funds like GLD so they are not necessarily good trading vehicles
2) Because they are Closed End Funds they can trade at a premium or discount to net asset value vs the ETFs which reflect more or less the fluctuations in the spot price
If you are an investor and not a trader the closed end funds may serve your purposes better. Rather than buying physical and paying a premium of around 5% you can acquire the metal via the click of a mouse at times for less than spot or less premium than you would pay for physical. Currently, CEF, GTU and PHYS are all selling for between 2.5-3.5% over NAV which is less than buying physical. I am attaching a link to a spreadsheet that I obtained from Jesse’s american cafe website (it is public domain) that he is no longer updating. I have updated the spreadsheet and it reflects the current state of the closed end funds. The spreadsheet updates itself on a delayed basis but it does calculate the premium\discount so your followers can determine if the fund is expensive or cheap relative to buying the metal out right. Here is the link it is a public Google document http://bit.ly/odVKcT
Thanks for the great article!
Best,
Roger
And Bryan Rich is $ bull – Is D. Weiss getting there communication lines crossed – what page are you guys on.
Would be nice to know if you guys are $ bull or $ bear or is it you have a long term view and Bryan is short term view.
Just a little insight here – after the Hyperinflation of Zimbabwe came the collapse into a depression –
Some more insight to Zimbabwe – It was the best perform stock market in world during the time of the financial Crisis as they were going through Hyperinflation – even so companies were not earning more in real term they were hard assets and were bought none the less – hence if D. Weiss and Co thinks that hyperinflation is the play then you guys should be advising to buy stocks all this time and telling people in your Free news letter to Sell inverse ETF.
Also if this scenario plays out then just forget it no-one’s safe – their will be no trade and no need for all the gold you have or any other assets you will be killed for it and so will the guy who killed you.
Sounds more like mad Max moving playing out – and you know what that look liked.
I don’t know how or what is going to trigger $ rally but it will be the next massive risk off trade and all go back to the $ – not the best choice but it’s the ugly sister contest (Agree with Bryan unless he has changed his mind)
I find this sight very informative and a good read and it’s just that a good read. As your Free newsletter have to many ambiguities, This has made me reluctant to take up any subscriptions with D. Weiss and CO. That and i live in South Africa and you have don’t have anything that suites my needs.
First mistake is comparing with some banana republic ‘Zimbabwe’. What impact will it have on world. Vitually nothing. IF the same happend in US it will have far reaching consequences.
Stright and simple
Printing more money- Increase in debs –> devalue currency–> increase cost of real assets–> life become misarable. It is true in any part of the globe.
Thats not what Bryan Rich keeps saying. I heard from him that the USD is a bull market. That is what he writes about each week.
Isn’t it interesting that these kinds of articles all come from people selling gold and silver?
There will be no hyperinflation, more likely deflation. The deficit and spending caps will be held or reduced; real estate is collapsing, including commercial. Unemployment is up, and consumption is down. Consumer debt is trending down, and banks are not lending despite low interest rates.