Marc Faber soes not think the dollar will drop that much against the Euro and yen, but still is very bullish on gold.
THE CATALYST! By Marc Faber
Although we are, in fact, in a deflationary environment for manufactured goods, principally because of the rising supply of "cheap" consumer goods from China - a shift has taken place in the last two years from a bull market for equities to inflation of hard assets: residential real estate and commodities.
But whereas it would appear that housing inflation in the U.K. and the U.S. is nearing an end, commodity prices appear to have completed a multi-year base and are poised for further gains.
According to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, a federal agency that regulates Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, its index of prices for single-family homes rose just 0.84% in the third quarter, compared to a rise of 2.39% in the second quarter. Moreover, with the exception of a brief period following the September 2001 terrorist attacks, this index has been rising at a rate of about 2% per quarter during the past two years as declining interest rates boosted house prices.
The report by the Office of Federal Housing actually found that home prices fell in seven states in the third quarter, which compares to price falls in only three states in the second quarter. Similarly, prices fell in 33 of the 185 metropolitan statistical areas studied, compared to 22 in the second quarter. Still, compared to a year ago, house prices rose by 6.2%, which is far higher than the annual average increase of 4.6% since 1980, but is down significantly from the recent 12-month appreciation peak of 9% recorded in the first quarter of 2001.
According to the National Association of Realtors, assembling their reports from a different set of data, home prices rose 9.8% in the 12 months ended in October 2002 - the fastest such pace since 1987.
The point remains...at present, housing prices are rising far more rapidly than incomes, a phenomenon that is obviously not sustainable in the long run, as affordability will become a problem sometime in the future - at least in areas where prices are rising by close to 20% per annum. So, whereas the flight into real estate may be nearing an end, the outlook for commodities is far more appealing. It is worth noting that despite weak global economic conditions and weak stock markets around the world, the CRB Commodity Futures Index has risen by more than 20% this year.
Commodity prices have also been in a bear market for more than 20 years and, in the age of capitalism, have never been as low as just recently.
Therefore, once fundamentals improve, prices could run away on the upside. For example, if synchronized growth around the world should materialize - a scenario about which we have serious reservations, but which is nevertheless a possibility for the short to medium term given central bankers' propensity to print money - then obviously the demand for all commodities should improve and drive prices higher.
But more importantly, with people like Mr. Bernanke at the Fed, and actually even being a serious candidate for future chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, depreciation of the dollar and a rise in commodity prices is almost guaranteed - particularly if the economy weakens.
In fact, Bernanke's declaration to the National Economists' Club in Washington that "The U.S. government has a technology called a printing press," didn't go unnoticed by the believers in sound money (gold), who subsequently pushed gold prices through an important resistance level. [Editor's note: Gold traded to $351 at the opening in Hong Kong this morning...and has gained $36 in the last month, or roughly since Bernanke made his speech. Next stop? Who knows, but $414 is the ten-year high set on February 5, 1996...no doubt, an important level to watch. Addison.]
It is unlikely the U.S. dollar will depreciate significantly against the euro and the Japanese yen, although I am of the view that the bearish sentiment towards Europe is overdone. For one, I am a believer that the inclusion of the ten countries from Central Europe and the Mediterranean (Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania, Estonia, Cyprus, and Malta) into Euroland will be highly beneficial in the long run. It will add to Euroland about 70 million people who will be only too eager to work for far lower salaries than Western Europe's union-controlled workers. There is finally hope that the workers' union power in Western Europe will be badly shattered and that growth prospects for this economic zone of more than 450 million people will be very exciting.
Nevertheless, it is not likely that the Euro will appreciate by more than another 10% or so against the U.S. dollar in 2003, since the beneficial impact from this European enlargement will only be felt very gradually. Equally, it is unlikely that the Japanese yen can appreciate much against the U.S. dollar, given Japan's own economic problems.
Therefore, it is more likely that the dollar will depreciate against hard asset prices, including commodities.
Furthermore, Barry Bannister, in a very comprehensive study on commodities for Legg Mason Wood Walker Inc., shows how per capita oil consumption soared in Japan in the 1950s and 1960s, and later in South Korea from the mid-1970s up to recently.
In other words, when countries industrialize, the demand for commodities inevitably increases very rapidly. Economies that are based on manufacturing and the production of goods tend to be heavier users of industrial commodities than service-based economies. Therefore, if the rapid pace of industrialization in China continues, and picks up in India and Vietnam, then per capita demand for oil and other commodities is likely to increase very dramatically and drive all commodity prices much higher.
Lastly, commodity prices have always had a tendency to spike up during wars. With the prospects of a war in the Middle East increasing, we would not be surprised by a strong rise in commodity prices in 2003.
Thus, the following potent combination makes for a fairly convincing case that we're on the eve of an explosive rise in commodities prices: the 20-year commodities bear market coming to an end; characters like Mr. Bernanke at the Fed; rising budget deficits not only in the U.S., but also in other industrialized countries; rising demand for commodities in Asia; and the possibility of a nasty and long-lasting conflict in the Middle East, which may in the end involve the entire region, including Saudi Arabia and Iran.
Indeed, if commodity prices do continue to rise, then interest rates will rise and bond prices will decline. Interest rates and the CRB Index are closely correlated - that is, when commodity prices rise, interest rates tend to follow, and vice versa. The recent rise in commodity prices, which so far has not been accompanied by rising interest rates, is therefore unprecedented and would suggest that, sooner or later, commodity prices will collapse once again in a serious bout of deflation...or interest rates will suddenly increase meaningfully.
I am leaning towards the latter scenario, thanks to Mr. Bernanke, who reflects very much the thinking of mainstream American policy-makers and self-promotional economists - such as CNBC's Larry Kudlow - who continue to believe that easy money and aggressive interest rate cuts can solve all the world's economic ills and that a new, powerful equity bull market is just around the corner!
If commodity prices are indeed at the very beginning of a secular bull market, as I believe, then such a rise will inevitably be accompanied by rising interest rates.
In fact, the very big surprise for American economic policy-makers, investors, and consumers who have just been on a borrowing spree could be that, in 2003 and 2004, interest rates will rise quite considerably and "kill" the refinancing boom that has taken place in the last couple of years as a result of rapidly declining interest rates. If interest rates were to rise, refinancing activity would inevitably slow down...and with it "consumption" growth.
Peace on Earth,
Marc Faber, for The Daily Reckoning
P.S. I might also point out that refinancing activity could decline even if interest rates didn't rise but just stayed at their present level, as it is likely that most homeowners have already refinanced their homes.
Editor's note: Dr. Marc Faber, editor of The Gloom, Boom and Doom Report, has been headquartered in Hong Kong for nearly 20 years, during which time he has specialized in Asian markets. Dr. Faber is a member of Barron's Roundtable and a major contributor to: |