Gold Rallies in the Ugly Face of Financial Markets

There is beauty in life, and there is truth. The two are not mutually exclusive, necessarily, though a coincidence can be rare. Often times, the truth is not as attractive as we would like for it to be. And sometimes beauty is but a lie. But every once in a while, the two converge…and the result is rarely displeasing.

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It’s the End of the Dollar as we Know It (Do we Feel Fine?) Part 3 of 3

Continued from part two.

As far as investors are concerned, merely reducing exposure to dollars and dollar financial assets may not be enough. To what extent the dollar devalues versus other currencies is, ultimately, a speculative guessing game.

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It’s the End of the Dollar as we Know It (Do we Feel Fine?) Part 2 of 3

Continued from part one.

So what might such a ‘dollar crisis’ look like, how would the US government likely respond, and what impact should we expect this to have on financial markets? While we do not purport to have the specific answers to these questions, there are some general considerations we can discuss with some reasonable confidence.

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It’s the End of the Dollar as we Know It (Do we Feel Fine?) Part 1 of 3

The dollar has been in focus of late, primarily due to its substantial decline in value versus other currencies and most major commodities. Indeed, when measured in broad, trade-weighted terms, the dollar’s April decline is one of the largest monthly drops of the past decade and extends what has now become the largest cumulative decline since the US economy exited recession in 2009. When measured versus a broad basket of global commodities, the recent decline has been even more dramatic.

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The Inflation Tsunami (Part Three of Three)

While we are confident in our ability to understand the deleterious effects that the current set of suboptimal policies are likely to have on the global economy over time, we nevertheless don’t purport to know exactly how these policies might change from here or what impact or on what time horizon financial markets will adjust accordingly. There are too many unknowns, too much pure uncertainty. As such, when seeking to protect and preserve wealth, we need to rely primarily on the most fundamental form of insurance available to investors: Diversification.

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The Inflation Tsunami (Part Two of Three)

Notwithstanding our critical view of Japanese economic policy described in part one, clearly they did not bring the recent earthquake and tsunami upon themselves. The same cannot be true of western governments and central banks, which bear full responsibility for the credit crisis of 2008-09 and the counterproductive policy responses implemented in its aftermath. Having sowed the monetary wind with a massive expansion of the money supply in 2008 and early 2009, they are now reaping the inflationary whirlwind, as recent commodity, producer and consumer price data make increasingly evident.

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The Inflation Tsunami (Part One of Three)

Over the past year The Amphora Report has written extensively on the topic of inflation, including in Guess What’s Coming to Dinner: Inflation! and The Inflation Tipping Point. While we prefer the monetary definition of inflation as growth in the supply of money and credit, we note that, beginning around mid-2010, the monetary expansion of 2008-09 began to feed through into consumer price inflation. This has continued to the present day and at an accelerating rate. Consumer price inflation data are now surprising to the upside just about anywhere one chooses to look: in Asia, Europe and, more recently, even in the US. To use a timely if tragic metaphor, the inflation ‘tsunami’ set in motion by a massive monetary expansion in 2008-09 is now making landfall around the world, pushing up prices for a broadening range of goods and services.

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Debt Makes a Comeback: The New Bubble in the Financial Sector

As we signed off on Friday, the Saudis were suppressing a ‘Day of Rage’ in Arabie… Gaddafi was mopping up the resistance in Libya… And an earthquake and tsunami left thousands dead in Japan.

But that didn’t stop the stock market. The Dow rose 59 points.

Now it is Monday. And in all the excitement we kinda lost track… But we gots to know…

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The Inflation Tipping Point (Part Four of Four)

[Continuing from Part Three...]

The Fed, already deep into a dilemma largely of its own making, is about to find itself facing an even more unpalatable choice before long: Accommodate the surge in demand for real goods with a continuing easy money policy or, alternatively, slam on the brakes sufficiently to force an end to the incipient behavioral changes behind the growing stagflation, thereby running the risk of causing another acute round in the ongoing financial crisis.

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