Why is this happening? Two reasons …
The falling demand for products like cars. Auto sales are falling in the U.S., Germany, France, Japan and more. The pace of car sales growth is also slowing down in China.
International shipping works on “letter of credit.” These financial guarantees are issued to buyers of bulk cargo by their banks. This system has greased the wheels of global trade for the last 400 years. With the collapse of the credit market — and banks now sitting on their hands, refusing to lend — the wheels of global shipping are grinding to a halt.
How bad is this? Peter Kerr-Dineen, chairman of Howe Robinson shipbrokers, didn’t mince words when he described the crisis to the British press:
“This is a nuclear bomb in the freight market and in world trade. Liquidity has to return because if there is insufficient money to provide standard finance, world trade will be sharply cut back and economic growth will implode.”
Or as the London Banker blog put it:
“If cargo trade stops, a whole lot of supply chain disruption starts. If the ore doesn’t go to the refinery, there is no plate steel. If the plate steel doesn’t get shipped, there is nothing to fabricate into components. If there are no components, there is nothing to assemble in the factory. If the factory closes the assembly line, there are no finished goods. If there are no finished goods, there is nothing to restock the shelves of the shops. If there is nothing in the shops, the consumers don’t buy. If the consumers don’t buy, there is no Christmas.”
In my view … and perhaps the view of the Saudis who are buying gold … there is an even worse risk. If bulk shippers can’t buy cargoes, then a lot of U.S. grain could end up rotting in warehouses while big portions of the world go hungry.
The Saudis, by the way, are the biggest importer of food in the Middle East. They probably have the money to pay cash for their food shipments. But for the approximately 2.7 billion people in the world who spend 80% of their income on food, a disruption in the global shipping trade could mean the difference between quiet poverty and all-out rioting.
In addition, the Saudis are also worried about …
The Collapse of U.S. Oil Imports The oil producers are used to a world where U.S. oil imports always go up. But that world has been turned on its head. In September, crude oil imports dropped to 8.4 million barrels per day, down a whopping 16.5% from the average of 10.1 million barrels registered a year earlier.
This is helping the U.S. trade deficit, but for all the wrong reasons. I’ve often said the way to get lower oil prices is through conservation. Now though, Americans are being forced to conserve by economic hardship.
And since the U.S. uses one-fourth of the world’s oil, our falling imports are a major driver of cratering oil prices …
There is strong support for oil at $50. But you know that the Saudis, Iranians, Venezuelans and other OPEC heavyweights made their budget plans based on much higher prices. And cheap oil means the only way they can make up revenue is by pumping more oil … which should weigh on prices even more. Looking forward, it gets worse for the oil producers
Just last week, the Energy Information Agency projected that OPEC could earn $595 billion in 2009. That’s way, way down from projections of $979 billion of net oil export revenues in 2008, and even lower than the $671 billion it earned in 2007.
Saudi Arabia earns 29% of OPEC’s total revenues. If their revenues go back to 2006 levels, what will that do to the political situation in a country that is already sitting on a fundamentalist Islamic powder keg?
Yeah, that might be a really good reason for the Saudi fat-cats to buy gold! These are just two of the world-class problems that may be scaring Middle East investors into gold.
I could go on. There are plenty of good reasons people might want to buy gold. Sure, deflation is putting downward pressure on gold … on paper. But just try buying physical gold anywhere near the paper price.
Pricing in a Government Default?
While gold is traditionally a haven of safety, that’s not how it played out over the past couple months. Instead, we saw risk-adverse investors dump gold along with other asset classes and flee to the safety of cash. Maybe the mighty dollar has more upside. But remember that the U.S. dollar is backed by “the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.”
Do you have a lot of faith in the U.S. government? I’d say the faith of the world has been shaken by recent events. And apparently I’m not the only one who thinks that. Take a look at my next chart, which shows the 10-year credit default swap spread on U.S. Treasuries — a form of insurance contract against issuer default.
The cost of insuring against a U.S. government default is soaring. And similar trends exist in the bond markets of Germany and Britain.
I think this is because investors are pricing in the massive bailouts that central banks are throwing at their markets. For instance, the U.S. bailouts will add enormously to our country’s already staggering national debt. According to CNBC data, the cost of all the bailouts that have been going on for months has now hit a total of $4.2 TRILLION!
In fact, Morgan Stanley recently estimated that the 2009 fiscal deficit in the U.S. would reach 12.5%. That’s more than twice the previous record of 6% set in 1983.
As a percentage of GDP, the U.S. national debt should pass 70% next year. That’s lower than the 122% at the end of World War II. Yet we aren’t fighting World War II, are we? That ended rather abruptly — this crisis won’t. And the odds are our fiscal picture will get worse, not better.
Under the circumstances, maybe investors in Saudi Arabia and Dubai may just be ahead of the curve. Maybe having some gold — the ultimate safe haven against troubled times — is the right thing to do.
I’m not saying the U.S. government is going to default … I’m saying the possibility of that happening could be priced in more ways than one. And that’s the kind of environment where gold could really shine.
Consider Buying Gold on Dips …
And Hold for a Wild Ride
Physical gold is always nice. But exchange-traded funds have made gold buying a lot easier.
I’m talking about the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD) and the Barclays iShares Comex Gold Trust (IAU). They are fixed at 1/10th the price of gold, minus a small amount to account for fees.
That means if gold is trading at $730 an ounce, you can buy the GLD or the IAU for about $73. And they are backed up by gold bullion in a vault.
There are scary forces on the march in the global economy. A little golden insurance may help you sleep a whole lot better.
All the best,
Sean
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