Gold and silver prices have not reacted the way some investors expected considering the rate of inflation. It seems a
lesson learned back in the early 80s has been long forgotten and that is
high-interest rates trump inflation. At least they can or did in that
era. I remember this well because as a young investor both believing in
and
seeing the effects of inflation I jumped into the markets not so much
trying to catch a falling knife but believing silver would come back
after its massive fall. This was after the Hunt brothers' historic
attempt to corner the silver market causing silver to soar from a spot
price of around $6 per
ounce in early 1979, to $50.42 in January of
1980. On
“Silver Thursday,” March 27, the silver futures market dropped by a
third to $10.80. These same contracts had been
trading at four times that amount just two months earlier.
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Jan 1980, Hunts controlled 69% of all COMEX silver futures |
To those unfamiliar with the story, back in 1980, Bunker, his younger brother Herbert, and
other members of the Hunt clan owned roughly two-thirds of all the
privately held silver on earth. When the futures contracts they bought
expired, they took delivery and arranged
to have the metal flown to Switzerland. This created a shortage of silver for industrial supply which drove the price higher.
Their
historic stockpiling of bullion wasn’t a ploy to manipulate the market,
they and their sizable legal team insisted later. Instead, it was a
strategy to hedge against the voracious inflation of the 1970s and a
monumental bet against the U.S. dollar. Whatever the
motive, it was a bet that went very, very wrong.
The debt-fueled boom
and bust of the global silver market not only decimated the Hunt
fortune but threatened to take down the U.S. financial system. It is
important to put this all in perspective, the 1970s were not kind to
the U.S. dollar. Years
of wartime spending in Vietnam coupled with unresponsive monetary
policy pushed inflation
upward throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s. Massively adding to
America's problems was that in October of
1973, war broke out in the Middle East and an oil embargo was declared
against the United States. This caused inflation to jump above 10% and it
remained high for years. It peaked in 1981 following the Iranian
Revolution at an annual average of 13.5%.
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Do Not Underestimate Volcker's 1980 Reset |
Only by taking interest
rates to nosebleed levels was then Fed Chairman Paul Volcker able to
bring inflation back under control and in doing so he broke the back of
those speculating that rising metal prices would continue higher. Paul Volcker, a
Democrat was appointed as Federal Reserve chairman
by
President Carter and reappointed by President Reagan. Volcker is widely
credited with ending the stagflation crisis and causing inflation to finally peak.
He did this by raising the fed fund rate which averaged
11.2% in 1979 to 20% in June of 1981. This caused the prime rate to hit
21.5% and slammed the economy into a brick wall.
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Low Rates Lower The Cost Of Speculating
|
Volcker's action also affected and shaped the level of interest rates and the "value of money" for decades. The increased interest rates are
credited by many to have caused Congress and the President to
eventually balance the budget and bring back some sense of fiscal
integrity and price stability to America. As the debt from the Vietnam war and soaring oil prices became
institutionalized interest rates slowly dropped and the
budget came under control. What has occurred over the last twenty years is a different story.
|
Note The Power Of High-Interest Rates On Prices |
This post, however, is not about the Hunt brothers but a lesson from the past that has been forgotten by many investors.
Decades
of interest rates drifting ever and ever lower have allowed many
investors and the general public to forget the power of high-interest
rates exert on defining prices. Whether it is a case of birds of a
feather flocking together or strictly a coincidence the prices of
different metals tend to move in the same direction more than they
should.
I say this because some metals are a byproduct
of mining another more valued metal and supply and demand should
override this link.
Another factor these metals face is that when prices
rise new sellers often emerge as people rifle through their dresser drawers to find dimes and quarters with silver content to sell. Gold
jewelry broken or no longer worn is gathered up, and garages are turned
upside down to find metal to melt down. Also, industrial demand has a
way of falling away as less expensive substitutes are used.
The
bottom-line here is that higher interest rates drastically increase the
carrying cost for those holding not only metals but any item in
inventory that sits idly with no real utility value. This means the
"higher cost of money" has a negative effect on the value of precious metals.
Republishing this article is permitted with reference to Bruce Wilds/AdvancingTime Blog
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