Don Coxe excerpts from his 3/15/11 Update - seems to like those PMs
posted on
Mar 15, 2011 09:16AM
Edit this title from the Fast Facts Section
"The 1970s experienced three recessions because (1) central bankers tried to ignore the effects of food and fuel inflation and respond to rising unemployment with cheaper money, and (2) soaring prices for necessary goods had such devastating impact on those with incomes below the nations’ medians, necessitating new, and ultimately burdensome, government aid and stimulus programs. This time, most governments are not only tapped out, they face furious voters who call for spending restraint. There will be few new litters of acronymic offices and programs in most of the industrial world, even if the current slow growth turns sharply down. As for commodity-oriented investors, a few cautionary words amid the celebrations of wondrous prices: • surging oil prices choke off demand for the kinds of goods and services on which most OECD economies depend; • surging food prices are catastrophic for the very poor in the world, and particularly for those in the very poorest countries with unstable governments; • surging base metal and coal prices were spawned by rising demand among the successful economies that have defined the new global economic order; widespread political and economic disorder across much of the world threatens the economic models of even the most superlative of the new economic engines of the world. And, last, and, in recent months, least of the leading commodities, what to these perturbations mean for gold? • Goldilocks hates gold: the triumph of the Goldilocks consensus of good growth with low or zero inflation and low or zero interest rates has driven gold into underperformance at a time nearly all commodities are basking in booms. If Goldilocks turns out to be yesterday’s fairy tale, a new boom in gold is inevitable. In the stagflation era, gold and silver outperformed everything, and balanced commodity stock portfolios overwhelmed S&P-linked funds. It could happen again."