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Gold vs Debt, The Hidden Link Explained

Commodities / Gold and Silver 2011 Jul 20, 2011 - 03:46 PM GMT

By: Ben_Traynor

Commodities

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleHow the US and Euro debt crises are making the gold price rise...

EUROPE & WASHINGTON'S debt ceiling squabble has seen the gold price breach $1600 per ounce and €36,500 per kilo.


The financial media's standard line is that investors are scared and gold represents a "safe haven". But how? What are investors scared of that's led some of them to bid the gold price higher?

First off, a little context. Over the last decade, US national debt has more than doubled, rising 138% in Dollar terms. That doesn't account for inflation, however – and as we'll see below, inflation is viewed by some as part of the 'solution' to the debt problem.

Yet measured in terms of gold bullion – the nemisis of Uncle Sam's debt, apparently – US national debt has actually fallen for the last ten years:

Put another way, the average annual Dollar gold price has risen faster than Uncle Sam has been able to write his IOUs. Which is no mean feat!

The US now only owes the equivalent of 340,000 tonnes of gold – still more than the total sum of gold ever mined (twice as much, in fact, according to best estimates) and way above the 8,113.5 tonnes the United States Treasury says it holds between Fort Knox and the New York Fed.

But why would gold demand rise – pushing the gold price higher – in response to the growth of national debt?

Like money itself, debt – whether a personal loan or the kind racked up on our behalf by our elected representatives – represents a claim on resources, otherwise known as wealth. At some point in the future, the debtor is expected to hand some wealth back to his or her creditor, ideally the principal plus some level of profit. Trouble is, debtors don't always follow the script.

Now, when it comes to resolving its national debt, the US government has five options:

#1. Economic growth – The economy produces more real wealth. The government, through taxes, takes a slice of this growing pie, and pays back the bondholders from whom it has borrowed in the past;

#2. Raise taxes – The economic pie doesn't need to grow. Uncle Sam could simply raise the rate of taxation, and use that bigger sum of cash to repay its debt;

#3. More borrowing – As interest or debt repayments fall due, the Treasury simply goes back to the bond market and borrows from Peter to pay Paul;

#4. Default – Just don't pay. Tell the creditors to get lost;

#5. Pretend to pay – The US Dollar is the world's No.1 reserve currency, giving foreign central banks (especially in fast-growing Asia) little choice for where they might store their burgeoning savings. The US Treasury borrows in Dollars. The Federal Reserve has the power to create Dollars. The more Dollars there are, the less each one is worth – but when you're handing them over to someone else, who cares?

The first option tends to be the one creditors bank on, in order to get back what they lend. Right now, however, the prospects for strong growth look bleak. Check out these scary numbers:

  • The Congressional Budget Office reckons this year's deficit will be $1.5 trillion;
  • US national debt was an estimated $13.4 trillion in 2010;
  • This implies a growth rate for debt of around 11% per year.

Economists may quibble at the margins about the data, the methodology, and so on. But a stark fact remains – the US will need to post some stellar growth rates just to stand still. Unless, that is, its government picks one of the other four options. Besides the highly contentious Option 2 of raising taxes, in fact, this is exactly what America's been doing for years.

Option 3, more borrowing, has been exceedingly popular, leading to accusations that Washington is running a Ponzi scheme. The problem with a Ponzi scheme comes when you run out of new schmucks to help pay profits (or simply repay the principal) to early investors.

Is $14.3 trillion that point? Clearly not – the debt ceiling is an artificial, political construction, not a reflection of any financial reality. Investors remain willing to hold US sovereign debt, as shown by – and despite – the appalling rates of return it offers. (Bond yields fall when prices rise, and US debt has never paid so little in interest.) This may not always be the case, though, especially if creditors start to fear that Option 4 is on the table and a true default is looming.

One thing the debt ceiling squabble has achieved is to make the once notional concept of a US default frighteningly real. Ratings agencies – never the quickest on the draw, as the subprime disaster proved – have repeatedly issued warnings that they might strip America of its AAA status, the "triple-A rating" which signals no risk of default. Standard & Poor's even went so far as to say there is a 50-50 chance this downgrade will happen before the end of October.

Newspapers meanwhile have been full of stories of what will happen if the debt ceiling isn't raised. Will the Treasury refuse to pay bondholders or veterans? Social Security claimants or military contractors? Suddenly we have a much clearer vision of what an America that can't pay its debts might look like.

The artificial "debt ceiling" aside, a true US default still seems unlikely, at least for now. But bondholders should have perhaps taken fright, and nor should they forget this scare too soon. The fact that they keep backing Uncle Sam – paying such high prices to buy his debt that Washington is paying them record-low interest rates – is nothing unusual, however.

Complacency is the bondholder's biggest risk, but also his most common trait. August 1914 "came like a bolt from the blue" to Europe's creditors, despite the loud and clear warnings of war. From 1979, when US price-inflation breached double-digits, it took another two years for 10-year US bond yields to catch up.

Today, several leading US economists repeatedly (and rightly) ask "Where are the bond vigilantes?" The answer is Europe, where they're driving up bond yields at their own expense by pushing bond prices lower, causing a rise in refinancing costs which will force a change of debt policy – or at least force the issue – in the increasingly less "peripheral" Eurozone states.

Two-year Greek government bond yields this week reached 39% as prices cratered once more. But again, bondholders were late to the game, as yields only began rising 18 months ago, first rising from a decade-long average below 3.5% in January 2010. Athens had long been subject to "special measures" from the European Commission, aimed at forcing it to reduce its annual deficits. Perhaps the fact that virtually every other European state was also in breach of the 3% deficit, 60% total-debt-to-GDP ratios meant Greece's problems looked unexceptional. But the absence of rising bond yields to date does not mean that there's nothing to fear in US debt. It simply means, just as in 1914 and 1979, that bondholders haven't got scared yet.

How long before America's creditors start insisting on higher interest rates to compensate for the risks that come with lending to the States? If they do, Option 3 – more borrowing – may become prohibitively expensive. And Option 5, meantime, is already happening. Lend the United States government $100 today, and you'll get $100 back when your government bond matures. You'll also pick up interest in the meantime. Unfortunately, though, at current interest rates this won't compensate you for inflation in the cost of living.

Official consumer price inflation for June was running at 3.6% for June. Unofficially it could be much higher, as John Williams of ShadowStats suggests. The yield on a 5-Year US Treasury bond, meanwhile, is currently around 1.5%. So the $100 plus interest you get back over five years will buy you less than your original $100 would have if you hadn't lent it to the government. The purchasing power of your wealth has been eroded – with Uncle Sam enjoying the profitable side of the deal.

The US government's plan – if you can call it a plan – for dealing with its debt mountain is thus a combination of Option 3 and Option 5. Keep on borrowing, while devaluing the money you plan to pay back. Option 1 is still needed, therefore. Because the burden is not shrinking, and won't shrink, without the economic growth which the US so clearly lacks.

Which brings us back to the gold price. Ten years or so back, a handful of investors started to realize that US debt was simply getting too big. It could not be paid off via the conventional method (Option 1) of growing real wealth. Option 2 (raising taxes) was then, as now, too hot to handle (indeed, by not cutting spending, Bush's tax cuts made debt-growth very much worse). But Option 3, many of these gold buyers felt, could not last forever – there comes a time when investors wise up, and even a sovereign nation printing the world's number one reserve currency loses its access to cheap credit. 

This is exactly what is happening right now in Europe, and why bond buyers are demanding higher interest rates for lending to Greece, Ireland, Portugal and even Italy and Spain, the Eurozone's third and fourth largest economies.

So with Options 1 out of commission, Option 2 at an impasse, and Option 3 looking increasingly shaky, only default and devaluation remain. And gold has traditionally been an excellent hedge against both.

Let's take default first. For one, gold simply can't default – you own it. It's not a promise to pay you, it's a possession.

Secondly, a US default would be a highly deflationary event. It would introduce unprecedented levels of uncertainty to the credit markets. We saw how they seized up in 2007 as the subprime bubble burst. Any signal from the world's most powerful nation that it's okay to not pay your debts would cause immeasurably more damage. And as credit markets seize up, default sucks money out of an economy, lowering prices of everything from labor (wages) to a carton of milk.

In his seminal book of the mid-1970s, The Golden Constant, Professor Roy Jastram – looking at 350 years of economic data – showed that gold has historically gained purchasing power in periods of deflation. This makes gold an attractive portfolio hedge for anyone who fears a US default may one day become too clear a threat to be dismissed as a media scare story.

More likely – and the one the Treasury and the Fed have gone with so far – is the inflationary Option 5, eroding the value of the Dollar. Gold has a historical advantage here too. It has been a recognized store of value for most of human history – not something that can be said for any paper currency. It also can't be created, and is naturally in limited supply.

So investors looking to preserve what they've earned see gold as a convenient, proven way to store their wealth.

Recent analysis by British economic consultancy Oxford Economics, commissioned by our friends at the World Gold Council, suggests that gold would perform well in both deflationary and inflationary scenarios. Today's national debt problem, just like every other (only more so, since it's trans-Atlantic) threatens both.

And now the political theater has drawn attention to the gargantuan size of America's debt, more investors are opting to take money out of the firing line – pushing the gold price to this week's new record highs.

The fact that gold has risen more than national debt is good news for US investors. Because while you don't have a say in how big that debt gets, that doesn't mean you and your children won't have to pay it. The rising gold price means that those who bought gold will have something left after they've picked up the tab.

By Ben Traynor
BullionVault.com

Gold price chart, no delay   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK's longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

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.


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