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Phil De Carolis
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| Phil De Carolis' Weekly Update: January 12, 2008 |
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Please Watch These Two Must See Peter Schiff Interviews!!
Peter Schiff On Glenn Beck Monday Jan 7, 2008 (6:07 mins)
Peter Schiff On Bloomberg Wednesday Jan 9, 2008 (6:12 mins)
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Peter Schiffs' Economic Commentary
"It's Inflation Stupid"
Friday January 11, 2008
By Economist Peter Schiff

Holding onto its "all is well" bias like a terrified cowboy on an enraged bull, Wall Street has managed to convince itself, and much of the world, that inflation is a non-issue. When confronted with facts to the contrary, their rationalizations come fast and thick. Nowhere is this spin more pronounced than in their dismissal of the surging price of gold as a relevant indicator.
Rather than favoring the logical conclusion that the rise in gold prices results from an inflationary expansion of money supplies around the world, Wall Street has credited its rise to other factors. The most common explanations include strong economic growth, rising jewelry demand, speculative buying, higher oil prices, the weak dollar, terrorism, uncertainly, middle east tensions, volatility, supply and demand, etc. Every possible explanation is offered save one, inflation.
Some explanations, such as a weak dollar, have some validity, but miss the point that the dollar is weak as a result of inflation (i.e. too much money creation by the Fed). In my commentary from September 30, 2005, I noted that rising gold prices were the inflationary equivalent of the canary in a coal mine. However, rather then fleeing for better air, Wall Street miners merely go about their business confident that the bird succumbed to natural causes.
Given Ben Bernanke's promise yesterday to supply substantive interest rate reductions, despite his belief that the U.S. economy is not headed toward recession (a claim that even the Fed Chairman obviously does not believe), inflation has been given much more room to run. Of course, the Fed's free money fest will not be sidetracked by today's data that showed the November trade deficit surging to $63.1 Billion (some export boom), limit-up moves in commodity prices, and 2007 import prices rising by 10.9%, the largest calendar-year increase since 1987. Basically the Fed is sending the message that inflation is going to get a whole lot worse and that it couldn't care less. As the price of gold continues to climb as a result, look for more excuses to minimize the significance of the move.
Further, as the price of gold approaches the historic $1,000 level, get ready for the pundits to proclaim the market a bubble. Of course, those same experts could not see the bubble in tech stocks in the 1990s or the larger one in real estate that followed, but they have no problem spotting a non-existent bubble in gold. The bubble crowd was particularly vocal back in April of 2006 when gold first broke $600, prompting me to write a commentary that parodied David Letterman's Top Ten List with respect to the signs of a precious metals bubble, and another which poked fund at a commentator who confidently promised to eat his hat if he was not witnessing a precious metals blow-off top in the making.
It also amazes me how every time a guest on financial television suggests gold as a sound alternative investment, the host invariably points to the 1980 price of $850 to discredit the recommendation. Such was the case again this week when CNBC's Mark Haines, who three years ago told me on the air "who cares about the price of gold," pointed out that if an investor bought gold at $850 dollars per ounce in 1980 that he finally broke even. He compared "speculating" in gold to "investing" in General Electric, claiming that buying and holding the former for ten years assures investors a good return, but that buying and holding gold for a similar time period was much riskier and would likely produce losses. I don't know if Haines has noticed but GE shares are still trading at the same price they were eight years ago while the price of gold has tripled!
I agree with Mark Haines on one point. Watching gold go from $35 per ounce in 1970 to $850 in 1980, then buying at the absolute peak price and holding on though the entire bear market was pretty foolish. However, how many people actually did that? Certainly those who understood the problems the Fed created in the 1960s likely got in much earlier; say when prices were still well below $150 per ounce, and though they probably did not cash out at the peak, they likely sold above $450 sometime in the early 1980's. As a result, they protected their wealth during the inflation ravaged 1970s and were well positioned to acquire other financial assets at depressed prices.
Now, as then, gold's warning is crystal clear and obvious to anyone who honestly evaluates it. Those who heed it will be rewarded while those on Wall Street who rationalize it away will likely share the canary's fate.
For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse."
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Click The Icon To Listen To The January 9th Installment Of Wall Street Unspun With Host Peter Schiff
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Interest Rate Cuts
(Sep 18, 2007)- "A Fed bailout in the form of rate cuts will neither prevent the recession nor keep house prices from collapsing. It may slow the process down a few quarters, but it will cost us dearly" -Peter Schiff
"Fed Chief Talks of 'Decisive' Action"- Washington Post
Jan 11 -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke yesterday signaled that the central bank will cut interest rates aggressively to try to prevent a serious economic downturn, using unusually direct and forceful language. In the past two weeks, new evidence has emerged that the United States is at risk of entering a recession. Just yesterday the nation's largest retail chains reported weak December sales, and credit card companies American Express and Capital One said they are seeing more unpaid bills............
Click Here To See The Entire Article
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Recession
(Sep 19,2007)- "We borrowed trillions of dollars to remodel our kitchens, buy SUVs and plasma TVs, and there are consequences. We are in serious trouble. The piper has to be paid" -Peter Schiff
"Odds of Recession Seen Rising" -Wall Street Journal
Jan 11 -- Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal see increasing odds of a recession this year along with mounting inflationary pressures, an uncomfortable mix that could play a role in shaping the 2008 presidential campaign and complicate life for the Federal Reserve. In the latest monthly survey, economists put the chance of recession at 42%, up from 38% in December and 23% just six months ago. On average, the 54 forecasters who participated see the economy expanding at less than a 2% annual rate in the first and second quarters. Last month's survey estimated 2007 growth at 2.5%.....................
Click On This Link To View The Entire Article |
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Dollar
(Sep 18, 2007)- "If the dollar loses value too quickly, it could wreak havoc on the economy and financial markets - driving up interest rates and inflation and slashing Americans' purchasing power" -Peter Schiff
"Precious metals sparkle as US dollar continues slide" -The Sydney Morning Herald
Jan. 12 -- GOLD rose to a record and silver matched its highest level since 1980 as a weakening American dollar increased demand for alternative investments. The US dollar, meanwhile, was headed for a third weekly loss against the euro on speculation that benchmark borrowing costs in the United States would fall below those in Europe this month for the first time in more than three years..............
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Inflation
(Sep 19, 2007)- "People keep talking about a Fed bailouts as if there is no cost. All the Fed can do is create new dollars. What that does is diminish the value of all the dollars everybody already has. They try to socialize the losses among all the holders of dollars" -Peter Schiff
"ECB Bank Remains Committed To Fighting Inflation" - Bloomberg
Jan. 5 - European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said financial-market tensions are receding and the bank remains committed to fighting inflation. ``Tensions have receded while remaining significant,'' Trichet said today in a speech at a convention of Germany's Christian Democratic Union party in Wiesbaden, near Frankfurt. ``The ECB's Governing Council stands ready to counter upside risks to price stability, in line with its mandate...........
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Real Estate
(Aug 16, 2007)- "The housing bubble has burst. Prices are going to collapse and sales are going to fall through the floor." -Peter Schiff
"Lennar's New Homes Fetch 60% Less as U.S. Market Slump Deepens"- Bloomberg
Jan. 10 -- Lennar Corp.'s November sale of 11,000 properties in eight states set a price that may mark the bottom for the U.S. housing market: 40 cents on the dollar. That's how much Morgan Stanley Real Estate paid for an 80 percent stake in the 32 communities, 60 percent less than the price at which the properties were valued just two months earlier. That's also what some investors say they would pay for distressed land, condominiums, homes and whole developments, whether it's now or later this year..............
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Gold
(Sep 21, 2007)- "With the Federal Funds Rate cut, the Fed revealed that it has no interest in defending the dollar or containing inflation. This kind of irresponsibility is all gold needs to move higher from its current levels unless the Fed somehow finds its backbone within a year or two, then gold has a good chance to take out its inflation-adjusted high of nearly $2,000 per ounce within this decade." -Peter Schiff
"Gold tops $900 on possible rate-cut; up $32 in week" - Dow Jones
Jan. 11 -- Gold futures closed higher for a fourth session on Friday, earlier topping $900 an ounce for the first time ever, on speculation that the Federal Reserve will further cut its key interest rates to stave off economic recession, weakening the value of the dollar and increasing the appeal of gold as an investment haven.Gold for February delivery ended Friday' trading up $4.1, or 0.5%, at $897.7 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It rose $6.5 to $900.1 an ounce in mid-morning trading. For the week, gold gained $32............
Click On This Link To View The Entire Article
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Oil
(July 31, 2007)- "It's going to soon hit $90 and go north of $100 next year. We should see $150 to $200 oil in the next two to three years because of the drop in the dollar.'' -Peter Schiff
"Traders betting oil will hit $200 a barrel"- Chicago Tribune
Jan. 10 -- The fastest-growing bet in the oil market these days is that the price of crude will double to $200 a barrel by the end of the year. Options to buy oil for $200 on the New York Mercantile Exchange rose tenfold in the past two months, to 5,533 contracts, a record increase for any similar period. The contracts, the cheapest way to speculate in energy markets, have appreciated 36 percent since early December as crude futures reached a record $100.09 on Jan. 3.............
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Futures Prices
Todays Prices (January 12, 2008)
*Gold Futures $897.7/Ounce (Up)
Last Weeks Prices (January 5, 2008)
*Dollar Index 75.94/Basket Of Currencies
*Gold Futures $865.7/Ounce
* Crude Oil $97.91/Barrel
Federal Funds Rate 4.25%
Federal Discount Rate 4.75%
30yr Fixed Mortgage 5.66%
Thank you for taking the time to read this e-mail and don't hesitate to contact me at (909) 910-9618 or by e-mail at Info@PhilDeCarolis.com if you have any questions or concerns. Feel free to forward this e-mail to anyone that will find this information useful.
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| Prudential California Realty
Phil De Carolis
Realtor/Investor
Cell (909) 910-9618
Fax (909) 752-5353
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