Gold Says 'I Told You So' London, England Thursday, January 17, 2008 --------------------- *** Stuck between a rock and, well, another rock...leading presidential candidates take a page from Bill Clinton's book... *** Mitt Romney and the outrageously stupid lie...the 79th slot of the periodic table has its day... *** Shipping industry going under...advice from a lawyer on the selling of an Argentine's car...and more! --- Special Offer --- $900 Gold Still Only Costs You a Penny So far, gold has been one of the best performers of 2008, hovering consistently around $900 an ounce for the first few weeks of the new year. And that price is likely to rise, as stocks continue their downward spiral. Right now is the time to act on this wonderful yellow metal, but instead of paying $900, we've found a way for you to buy it for just one cent. Read this report to find out how... Penny Per Ounce Gold --------------------- The battle rages! Unstoppable inflation on the one side; immoveable deflation on the other. And what's in between? You are, dear reader...keep your head down. At least you know where you are. Most people have no idea. Most middle class Americans are caught in this no man's land. Inflation is shooting holes in their family budgets. While deflation blows up their assets. The headline inflation number for 2007, in the United States, was announced yesterday at 4.1. Still manageable...but it was the biggest annual increase in 17 years. But yesterday, deflation was on the offensive. The Dow edged down...and when we look at the charts of almost any market France, England, Japan, tech stocks, shipping stocks (keep reading), retail stocks we see bear markets. And yesterday, we thought we saw the first signs of a bear market in commodities too. Oil dripped below $90...and materials and energy stocks suffered, as investors bet that a slowdown would mean less demand for primary products. France's Le Monde chose this for its leading story today: "The Menace of Recession in the U.S. Grows Clearer." And now, even the candidates for the White House are taking a page from Bill Clinton's playbook, entitled: "It's the Economy, Stupid." As Ed Hadas puts it: now the candidates are saying stupid things about the economy. Mitt Romney won in Michigan, largely by telling an outrageously stupid lie. According to Le Monde , which is our source for American political insight, Romney pledged $20 billion of taxpayers' money to revive America's auto industry. We take this readily from Le Monde , because the French know how these tricks work; they have more experience with them. You take the money from the people who earn it, pass it out to the unions, insiders and party supporters; the auto industry goes wherever it is going anyway...but the insiders travel in style. The voters are ready to believe anything...especially if it sounds as though someone else's money is headed their way. Besides, everyone feels entitled to a bailout...from the lowest assembly line worker to the richest Wall Street bank. "The source of the problem is debt," Lord Rees-Mogg explained at Wednesday's lunch. "There's too much of it . There's so much that the financial authorities and Britain and America have no choice. They have to try to bail people out. They have to inflate the debt away." Too much debt is precisely what you'd expect to find at the end of any credit boom. When you give money away, you have to expect that people will take it. At least, as long as they believe they will be able to pay it back. Presently, the yield on 10-year treasury notes is lower than the consumer price inflation figure. Which means, they're giving money away. A shrewd investor would probably sell Treasuries and buy something with a higher return say, gold . Gold does not typically have any return at all. While its price was fixed to the dollar it had a rate of return of zero. Which was a good reason not to own the stuff; you'd get a better yield from almost anything. But when the dollar was tied to gold, you didn't need to own it. Every dog has his day. And it looks to us that the mangy cur that sits at the number 79 slot on the periodic table is having his day at last. He is worthless at producing a profit, a dividend, or an interest coupon. Most of the time he just lies around, doing nothing...like a rich man's pet. But there are times when he earns his keep...when he is worth every pound of meat you give him: he can be one mean junkyard pooch when he has to be. If we are right, that stocks are in a bear market...and that the nation is headed for a slump...the wise Daily Reckoning reader will stop worrying about making money and begin to fret about keeping it. He will wish he had befriended gold when the price was around $300...or $500. He will think twice about taking it in at $900. He will think even a third time on the day after gold goes down $20...as it did yesterday. (Yes, deflation hit gold too...) Still, our guess is that this gold bull market has a lot further to go . How many of your friends own gold? Probably not many. How often do you see articles in the mainstream press about buying gold coins...or gold stocks? Almost never. The last time a major credit contraction and bear market came around, circumstances were different. A top in stock prices was reached in 1968. From there, stock prices fell while loose monetary policy goosed up consumer prices. In nominal terms, stocks held up fairly well. But in real terms, the losses were staggering about 70% to 80%...from the top in '68 to the bottom 14 years later. Meanwhile, gold soared...up to a high of $850. Gold and the Dow actually came within a few cents of each other in 1980 when a single ounce of gold could have bought nearly the entire Dow. Adjusting the gold peak to today's dollar, it would be about $2,500. Adjusting the Dow to its '82 low, it too would be about 2,500. Is that where the Dow is headed? Is that where the price of gold is going? We don't know. We don't know the destination...but we suspect that's the right direction. *** "Shipping shares sink" says the London Telegraph . All of a sudden, investors are putting two and two together. A recession in the United States would be bad for the shipping business. Americans are the world's champion consumers. One out of every five consumer sales on the globe is made to an American. It may begin as ore dug up in Western Australia...melted down in smelters fired by oil from the Mideast...or coal from Korea...and worked up into rolled steel in Guangzhou and assembled into a finished products in Shanghai. Which means, a lot of stuff has to move around in order to deliver the goods to New Jersey or Long Beach. And if the American consumer decides he doesn't really need a new gadget, there is suddenly a hole in a shipping container where formerly there had been paying freight. China's COSCO fell almost 10% on Tuesday. Pacific Basin a similar amount. And China Shipping Container Line was down 8%. This sell-off followed two months of declines in the Baltic Dry Index, which registers freight rates for bulk commodities, mostly iron ore. The index has dropped a third from its high. And last Friday, it suffered its worst one-day fall since it was born in 1985. *** In Britain, housing prices just showed their worst monthly decline in 17 years. "Returns plunge to all-time low," says another headline in The Telegraph . The paper defines "returns" as capital values combined with rental income. Over the whole of '07, returns went down 5.5%. "Confidence in housing market drops to lowest level since 1992," adds the Financial Times . The results come from real estate agents and have proved to be a reliable early indicator of trends. Agents report that many owners are rushing to sell property in order to avoid more losses. *** We were telling you about our vacation. Not for any particular reason...just for the hell of it. It all ended well...no one was seriously hurt. Your editor can walk without a crutch. As to paying off the other driver after the accident at the last minute, he came to his senses. He had signed a legal document, in Spanish...in a country whose legal system he did not fully understand...without the aid of counsel. In a near panic he called a trusted lawyer, who rushed to his aid. "Bill, you really shouldn't do this," he said. "Let the insurance companies handle it." "I didn't even know if the truck was insured...and the poor man...I didn't see how insurance was going to do him much good. He was stuck in the middle of nowhere." There was really nothing wrong with the terms of the settlement. We had just forgotten to get all the parties to sign off. "Look, you're a foreigner. And to these people you're a rich foreigner. They're not from here. They're from Buenos Aires. They're from the big city. Up here, we say that when there's an accident between two locals, there's never a problem. But when a 'porteno' (someone from Buenos Aires) is involved, there's always a problem. "You got him to sign off that you had paid him for the damage to his car and that the two of you had settled up. But you didn't get the woman to sign anything. She could come forward at any time and claim she had nightmares...or she couldn't work anymore...or she had pains in her chest. You would have to settle with her. And the expense could be a lot more than fixing a fender-bender." In the end, it all worked out. The man and woman were actually very reasonable. Nobody seemed to want to take advantage of the situation. Our lawyer showed up with 26,000 in pesos...in cash, of course...and everyone left happily. And then, we were able to sell the damaged car for 21,000 pesos...which left us with a total cost of 5,000...or less than $2,000 US. "Here," said our helpful lawyer. "Take my card. Keep it with you. If you get into any more trouble in Argentina, call me." A few days later, we were on our way back to London (where your editor and his daughters live)...to Paris (where his wife and two boys live)...and to Los Angeles (where Jules is studying the film business). "It was an eventful trip," Elizabeth judged it. "But I liked it quite a bit. Argentina is a marvelous place. I'm looking forward to going back. "The difference I notice between Argentina and Europe is that Paris and London Paris particularly seem dead, in comparison. All over Buenos Aires, people are setting up shops...selling things...hustling this or that on the street...fixing up old houses...building things. Things change so fast. In Paris, nothing ever seems to change. I guess people are right when they say it is a museum. "And for young people, Buenos Aires seems like a much better place to live. If you don't have money, you just can't live very well in London or Paris. But you don't need much money to live well in Buenos Aires. Everything is cheap. And lively. And the weather is nicer." Until tomorrow, Bill Bonner The Daily Reckoning P.S. Our friends at Agora Travel have a terrific way for you to see this bustling country up close and personal. They've set up a tour of Argentina that will show you just what South America has to offer both as a vacation spot, and as an investment opportunity. Of course, the last tour of South America sold out, so we advise you to sign up now before someone else scoops your spot up. Click here for details... 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