US Money Supply Versus The Gold Price
Throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, American  investors were gripped by a fear that their national currency would  continue to lose purchasing power .   There was a complete lack of  confidence in the government's ability to restrict the expansion of the  money supply, culminating in panic buying of precious metals in  1979/1980 as investors desperately sought to protect themselves from the  effects of inflation.
The response of the US Federal Reserve at the time  was to put the brakes on money supply growth through the instigation of  extremely high interest rates.   This policy achieved its purpose and by  1982 the rate of increase in the money supply was trending downwards,  interest rates had fallen from their peaks, and the fear of inflation  had abated.   Investment capital had responded to the changed situation  by moving from commodities into financial assets, and the great equities  bull market had begun.
Below is a chart showing the relationship between the  total US money supply (M3), M3 growth rates (shown as annualised  monthly figures), and the gold price, from 1972 to present time.   It  can be seen from this chart that the gold price tracked the increase in  money supply from 1972 until 1982, apart from the 1979/1980 spike.    Between 1982 and the early 1990s the M3 growth rate trended downwards to  a low point of zero in 1992.   During this period money flowed into  financial assets as confidence was restored in the ability of the Fed to  control inflation, whilst the gold price remained relatively stable  (apart from the 1985 to 1987 period when the G5 tried to "fix" the US  trade deficit by engineering a 40% depreciation in the US dollar, which  in turn led to a rising gold price and culminated in the 1987 share  market crash as foreign capital panicked out of US assets) . 
Since 1993, the M3 growth rate has been trending  upwards and is currently around 9%.   Studies have shown that increasing  money supply growth rates lead the commodities markets by 1.5 to 3  years.   This means that we should have seen a rising gold price in US  dollars by 1995/1996.   What we have actually witnessed, however, is a  declining gold price.   In fact, with money supply now increasing at  rates not seen since the early 1980s and the gold price falling almost  continuously since February 1996, the chart shows a distinct divergence  between the two .   This has contributed to the currently popular belief  that increasing the quantity of money no longer results in rising  prices.
As mentioned at the beginning of this article, gold  has performed quite well during recent years when measured in terms of  almost any currency with the exception of the US dollar.   In other  words, gold has performed its historical function as a store of value  for anyone living outside the US.   However, since 1995, the time at  which we would have expected to see the increasing supply of US dollars  begin to have an impact on the gold price, a massive shift of investment  into the US dollar has occurred.   The excess dollars which have been  created due to expanding US debt levels and trade deficits have been  absorbed by foreign investors looking for stability.   The seemingly  insatiable demand of foreign capital for US dollars has been stimulated  even further by the Asian financial crisis.   The US is now seen as the  only safe place in the world for investment.
The demand of foreign capital for US dollars and US  debt has allowed US interest rates to remain at relatively low levels,  given the money supply growth rate and the strength of the economy, and  has supported a speculative boom in the US stock market since 1995.    The US stock market is itself supported by debt, and that debt is in  turn supported by the value of the stock market.   A  significant downturn in the stock market would most likely lead to  widespread defaults on loans, a financial collapse and a severe  recession. 
 This situation will be avoided at all costs by  the US political and monetary authorities using the power of the US  Federal Reserve to  "discount loans and other assets of banks or other  private depository institutions, thereby converting potentially illiquid  private assets into riskless claims on the government in the form of  deposits at the central bank."   If the Fed must purchase every  non-performing loan in the US in order to avoid a serious recession, it  will be done.   A boom feeds on itself and is always propelled by  liquidity.   Once a speculative boom has occurred, liquidity must be  maintained in order to avoid a bust.  Look for continued high levels of US money supply growth.
Conclusion
The entire US financial system is based on confidence   -  the confidence of foreign investors who continue to pour money into  US dollar assets, and the confidence of local investors who are betting  their life savings on a continued stock market boom.
 

 
No comments:
Post a Comment