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“By March 19, 2019 Donald Trump Could ‘Reboot’ the U.S. Dollar” sez Jim Rickards

Ad says: "When the President Signs This Secret Money Deal, One Investment (NOT GOLD) Could Soar by as Much as 1,000%, Creating Huge Windfalls for Investors Positioned Correctly Ahead of Time..." Rickards sees $10,000 gold, what's the "Dollar Reboot Composite" and what does he think you should do to prepare?


I continue to get lots of questions about this Jim Rickards ad from Agora, and the ad itself has been (clumsily) updated a few times since we covered it back in November of 2017 (the latest “by March 19, 2019” ad even suggests that Yellen is still President of the Federal Reserve, and the date under the signature is still July, 2017), so I’m (lightly) updating my coverage here…

I’ll cut to the chase at the start and say that no, President Trump did not nominate a “gold bug” to run the Federal Reserve, and the US did not cooperate with the world’s other major economies to form a new gold standard on January 1, 2018… and I’d bet you whatever you want that they won’t do it on November 8, 2018 or on March 19, 2019 either (those are all ‘critical deadlines’ that were hyped in previous versions of the ad).

So that’s a long way of saying that most of the article below was first published on November 7, 2017, when I first covered this ad. It has been lightly updated, with some additional sarcasm applied to cover the interim 15 months or so… indeed, I’d say it has been more carefully updated than the ad itself, which seems to have been updated solely through the use of a “find and replace” change for the dates and still refers to Janet Yellen as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, but, well, that’s just a little extra snarkiness from me — no charge.

This ad is so ridiculous I resisted spending time with it for a while… but the questions are piling up again, so let’s dig in and see what Jim Rickards is peddling. Be warned, I’ll probably use too many words and may do a bit of ranting.

The basic premise is the same one he has used for years now in his ads — the dollar is going to weaken (or collapse) and be replaced by some variation of the gold standard, because that’s the only way to solve the US dollar’s problems and reset the global economic balance (and deal with our massive debt). He used to refer to this idea as “Reagan Gold,” since Ronald Reagan was a proponent of returning to the gold standard but was reportedly talked out of it by his advisors… and the fearmongering for a while was focused on the Yuan supplanting the dollar as the world’s “reserve currency” … now it’s “Trump’s Reboot” that features as the ad headline.

I’ll go out on a limb and let you know my bias up front: I think that’s ridiculous. The notion that any government will willingly give up control of its money supply and be restrained by a gold backing of any sort is laughable. The cat is out of the bag, we’re not going to be able to catch it and stuff it back in.

I do agree that “fiat currencies” (that’s “all currencies,” in case you’re wondering — there are no asset-backed currencies currently) are going to lose value over time, and that we might see that accelerate into real inflation at some point, but I can’t see Donald Trump or Xi Jinping deciding that fixing the currency to some arbitrary amount of gold and giving up the ability to print and borrow from the future is a good idea. Those who have control don’t easily surrender it — candidates are happy to talk about the gold standard and a return to monetary discipline, but once they’re actually in office no one wants discipline if they’re told that it will hurt their ability to increase military spending, or provide tax cuts, or constrain their options in whatever way they care about.

If gold is used to somehow back a formal currency again, I suspect it would be by China in an effort to competitively leverage the yuan into prominence, as the US did with the dollar in the first half of the 20th century… and I suspect it wouldn’t work for long, because China is going to have to go on a deficit spending spree to keep its own population mollified in the next few decades, too, as their country ages and increases its consumption.

US debt and consumption and Chinese industrialization and manufacturing will no longer be the twin pillars of the global economy in the decades to come, most likely, but I don’t expect that the world will give up on its addiction to growth (which is partially fueled by inflation, and currency devaluation, because that makes people feel that they’re making progress), or that countries will surrender their ability to undercut their neighbors by devaluing their currencies — the world monetary order will probably evolve in some way none of us can predict, but it’s hard to imagine Germany and Japan and China lining up behind the US to support US consumption or monetary leadership again, as they have in the past, or even just to prop up their US customers.

So that long-winded screed is where I’m coming from… now that I’ve got that off my chest, let’s see what Rickards is actually recommending….

“I believe President Trump will host an international monetary summit at his ‘Winter White House’ in Florida, the historic Mar-a-Lago resort.

“Using his stature as leader of the free world, he’ll bring the financial leaders of the globe together.

“This would include delegates from the U.S., China, Japan, Germany, Italy, France, the UK and the International Monetary Fund.

“Then, they’ll agree to simultaneously revalue all of their currencies against gold until the price reached $10,000 per ounce. (If you’re skeptical, I’ll give you ironclad proof that this could happen in a second.)

“The Federal Reserve board will then call a special board meeting… vote on the new policy… walk outside and announce to the world that effective immediately, the price of gold is $10,000 per ounce.

“The Fed will make the $10,000 price stick by using the Treasury’s gold in Fort Knox and the major U.S. bank gold dealers to conduct ‘open market operations’ in gold.”

And dammit, he plays unfair by saying he’s going to use math! People hate math!

“For mathematical reasons I’ll explain in just a second, gold will need to be $10,000. No more, no less.”

And, of course, you’ll get rich from this if you own the right assets:

“This will immediately put an end to the currency wars and the debt-based dollar system.

“It will be a one-time “reboot” period that will put the world on solid footing for economic growth for decades to come.

“The immediate adjustment would create a massive windfall for gold bullion holders and owners of gold mining shares (though that’s not the true opportunity here).”

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You can’t create value out of nothing, of course, not on a grand scale, so if this does turn out to happen it would not be because gold suddenly becomes four or five times more valuable… it would be because the value of the US dollar is slashed versus gold. So yes, the gold price would go up dramatically in dollar terms — but in that case, there would also likely be massive stock market inflation in US$ terms. Everything would go up in dollar terms, but the dollar would collapse (as it arguably should… but who would vote for that?)

I think the problem, at least in Trump’s view and in the view of most recent Presidents, if they were being honest behind closed doors, is not that the US economy needs a stronger backing to the dollar… it’s that the US needs a weaker dollar to help deter imports and encourage exports and make it more feasible to service the mounting federal debt and meet other financial obligations. Rickards cites a Stratfor article about Trump’s interest in a new global monetary accord to reset exchange rates (with or without gold being involved), like the Plaza Accord of the 1980s or the Bretton Woods Accord after World War Two, and that’s worth a read if you want a broader perspective.

I’m not an internationally renowned economist, I haven’t written any books about monetary policy… that’s just my opinion and assessment. I might be wrong, I’d just urge you to keep an open mind to the many different possibilities that exist — the same story about the end of the US dollar has been peddled with vigor by newsletter and TV pundits since the financial crisis (well, really since the 1970s, off and on), and the return to some sort of gold standard, and wealth for those who choose the right gold-related investment, is the common thread that runs through most of those pitches in recent years.

So far, those predicting the collapse of the dollar have all been very, very wrong — or, at the least, absurdly hyperbolic. The dollar is collapsing… it’s just happening very, very slowly.

Unsustainable debt in the 1980s became catastrophic deficits in the 1990s and the end of the world in the 2000s and the rise of the Yuan and Euro to crush the US$ in the 2010s, and we’ll soon find out what the predicted calamity is for the 2020s… sometimes some of the predictions of doom will be right, at least for short periods of time, but taking all of them seriously and being frightened out of the market for any big chunk of the last thirty or forty years could easily have been catastrophic for your portfolio.

So yes, read the doomsayers, sure, but don’t believe everything you read — for the past thirty-plus years it has been pretty easy to build a logical argument for the collapse of the US dollar (or of the United States in general), and for the past 30 years that has been the wrong argument to follow. That doesn’t mean it will always be wrong… but it means making a big bet on the timing is foolhardy.

And this is the risk of so many investment teasers that sound smart and logical. Logical-sounding arguments are easy to build in complex systems, especially when the writer is (or sounds like) a well-informed expert in areas that the reader doesn’t understand fully… and even more so when the people who are reading that argument already have an ideological axe to grind (as most of us do in this poisoned partisan environment, where “winning” is better than being intelligent or correct).

In general, if you find yourself nodding at these kinds of ads and saying to yourself “that’s what I’ve been telling everyone all along!” … you’re being played.

Newsletter ads use political figures as attention-getters — they know that if you love Reagan or Trump or Obama or Clinton (or loathe them), using those names will get your attention, and if you agree with the ad’s premise (that Obama destroyed the economy and Trump is heroically trying to save it by switching to a gold standard, in this case), then you’re almost on the hook — that’s how they use the tribalism of the American voter to get you to type in your credit card number (this guy agrees with me, he must be smart! Us smart guys gotta stick together! We’re the only thing keeping the world from falling apart! Thanks for letting me send you $79, Mr. Rickards, please send me the ad for your $2,000 service next!)

It works the other way, too — it’s just not as clean, and not as lucrative, because the core of the modern newsletter business is built on appealing to the people who are most likely to be active investors and have extra money, which, on average, is a 60-year-old white man who leans conservative. That’s not true of every newsletter, of course, nor of every subscriber, but I think age and wealth are the most reliable demographic indicators for “might want to subscribe to a newsletter,” and they’re also the most reliable demographic indicators for “conservative politics” … and if you can appeal to someone’s instincts and form a bond with them, you’re halfway to a sale. All you have to do after that, is convince them that you’ve got the secret to make them rich.

So let’s move on to that, shall we?

“By January 1 November 8 March 19, President Trump Could Have Total Control Over the Federal Reserve. The First Time for Any President Since 1914

“Actually, January 1 November 8, 2018 March 19, could end up being a conservative date.

“Everything I’m explaining could conceivably happen much sooner than I’m explaining here…”

Yes, President Trump has the opportunity to fill more seats on the Federal Reserve, though he picked his new chair in Jay Powell ages ago now, got him approved, and then spent much of last year complaining about Powell raising interest rates and hinting that he wanted to fire him (the ad still says that Rickards thinks a “total gold bug” has the inside track to be the next Fed Chair after Janet Yellen, but that obviously didn’t happen).

They didn’t even bother to update the ad, other than using that new “subscribe now!” March 19, 2019 date — Rickards’ ad still refers to Janet Yellen as a Fed Governor, though she retired more than a year ago when Powell was sworn in to replace her. So take those dates with a HUGE amount of skepticism, they’re designed to spur action on the subscription, not to predict the future — Rickards probably wouldn’t be right in predicting the future with any specificity anyway, of course, because he’s a human being, but this date is almost certainly coming from the marketers. They sent out essentially the ad back in November of 2017 with a January 1 2018 “deadline”, then again in March of 2018 with a March 21 deadline (also failing to update for Jay Powell succeeding Yellen as Fed Chair), and now I’m getting the latest version again with a March 2019 date. It’s all marketing hooey.

Presidential candidates hate the Fed, Presidents love the Fed, and Powell is very much a moderate Fed insider and has followed Janet Yellen’s path pretty precisely in raising rates over the past year, and then becoming dovish as soon as it appeared the global economy and trade wars might be slowing things down at home, with no sign of inflation ramping up… and the Fed’s policies and leadership have not been particularly partisan, we’ve seen the same easy money and dollar devaluation policies hold pretty strong sway under both “Republican” and “Democratic” Fed Governors for decades now.

Incidentally, the tea leaves that Rickards is reading to determine Trump’s plans are also hopelessly out of date — it’s probably completely worthless to waste time trying to figure out what President Trump’s opinion on something will be a few months from now, given how quickly his “gut” changes, but this is the Tweet Rickards cites:

@realDonaldTrump: “The Fed continues to flood the market with US dollars. Wrong move.”

Which is a real Tweet, but what he doesn’t quote is that it’s from 2011, well before Trump ever even started campaigning for the Presidency. Reading Trump’s incredible barrage on twitter over the past decade is a lot like reading tea leaves — it can give you evidence of just about whatever sentiment you want to find.

More recently, of course, President Trump has been complaining about rising interest rates and tightening from the Fed (the reverse of that “flood”), and about the weakness of the Chinese Yuan and the strength of the US Dollar — which has been strong compared to other major currencies partly because the US economy is relatively strong and attracting global investment dollars, and partly because higher interest rates make it more appealing to park your money in US bonds instead of zero-yield (or negative yield) European or Japanese bonds. Money goes where its treated best, and it can move right on to the next thing very quickly if that calculus changes.

And President Trump does still have two vacant seats to fill on the Federal Reserve, though that doesn’t seem to be a priority and I don’t think anyone other than Jim Rickards thinks he’s itching to get new nominees in there who will push for a new gold standard. There have been two or three vacancies on the seven-member board since late in Obama’s presidency, and the two nominees Trump had before the Senate were essentially left to languish (one, Marvin Goodfriend, was controversial), and were not renominated this year, with, according to Larry Kudlow, no urgency to name new nominees… and, of course, we’d likely see a tighter battle for any controversial nominee to any post these days because the House has changed leadership and seemingly half of the democrats in the Senate have launched nomination campaigns for the 2020 presidential election (only the Senate has to confirm nominees, to be clear, but the tenor on Capital Hill in general has surely changed).

Remember that math we threatened? Here’s where Rickards re-introduces it:

“If they choose more than $10,000 per ounce, we’ll have severe inflation.

“And if they choose less than $10,000 per ounce, we’ll have severe deflation.

“It needs to be $10,000 per ounce.

“That’s a mathematical certainty….

“($26.5 trillion x 40%) ÷ 1 billion oz. of gold = $10,000 per ounce.”

$26.5 trillion is what Rickards things “Global M1” is, the total money supply. I don’t know where he gets that — the US M1 is, as reported by the Fed, about $3.7 trillion, and I’ve seen “global money supply” numbers that range from $20-40 trillion, though that only counts actual paper (and coin) currency and “demand deposits” (checking accounts, pretty much) so it excludes a vast amount of what most people would consider “money” (CDs, money market accounts, etc., probably totaling about 3-4X that amount). More broadly, the total value of all the money plus non-physical deposits and money market accounts and similar cash equivalents is probably in the $80-100 trillion neighborhood.

The 40% is the “gold backing” percentage that he thinks will be implemented (since that’s in the original Federal Reserve authorization legislation), and the one billion ounces is roughly how much gold currently exists in the world (above ground). That’s fine, and we know what numbers he’s working with — but to say that this equation has only one possible set of inputs and one possible answer as a “mathematical certainty” is to ignore that any possible “reboot” of the world’s monetary relationships would be the result of a negotiation performed by human beings. It also somehow sets this theoretical standard for all the gold and all the world’s money, not just US gold and US money.

Rickards is arguing that gold is critical and is the only “real” money… but he also says that arbitrarily increasing the gold price by more than 600% and fixing the gold price won’t cause deflation or inflation? If gold is going to go up, then the value of the dollar has to go down… right? There have to be two sides to the equation.

But anyway, if the gold price is set by the US government in some new “Mar a Lago Accord” and gold is suddenly worth $10,000 an ounce, that dramatically increases the value of gold producers in dollar terms. Even if this doesn’t create massive asset inflation throughout the rest of the economy, it probably leads to every country nationalizing its gold mines, if we’re being honest… but let’s pretend that doesn’t happen – Barrick Gold produces 5.5 million ounces a year or so, which would mean that their revenue goes from $8 billion to $55 billion, and their gross margin goes from about 35% to 90%. That level of cash trickles down quickly through the mining economy, every single possible gold deposit is subject to a bidding war of epic proportions, environmental restrictions are lifted (or cash is thrown at solving environmental problems at particular mines), labor and mining costs go up dramatically as everyone pushes to produce more… it would be bedlam, particularly because the price would be set in that narrow band, it wouldn’t be allowed to fall back down as production dramatically increases. Even the bitcoin miners might give up and become actual miners.

Like I said, the genie doesn’t go back into the bottle easily. Or the cat back into the bag, or whatever metaphor I threw at you earlier. When you talk about a gold standard, you’re really talking about starting with a massive revaluation of the dollar followed, if the standard has any meaning and requires the Fed to stop printing money or the Treasury to begin paying higher rates to borrow, by massive government spending cuts that would swallow the economy whole.

And there sure as heck isn’t any way that the world’s serfs would stand by and say, “OK, let’s go to a gold standard — but first, make sure all the people who have gold make some windfall profits, OK? Great!”

That doesn’t mean adding discipline to the government budget or to the Federal Reserve would be a bad thing in the long run — in fact, my sentiment is that it would be good… eventually. I just don’t see any politicians lining up to set a massive change in motion when the bad stuff would happen immediately and the good stuff would come 5-10 years or more down the road, when they’ve already been vilified and tossed from office.

If you’re going to switch to a currency that is backed by something, and want to fix problems and deter governmental debt excess, rather than reward speculators, I would assume that it would have to be at something approximating the current price… either it’s backed by some combination of natural resources, or by a smaller percentage of gold, or whatever — the important thing would not be fixing the problems we already have and letting the gold price “catch up” to where things would be if we had stayed on the gold standard all along, it would be preventing the future problems that are coming because of the unsustainable debt-fueled system, and allowing for stability in the future. Even that seems unlikely to me, in a world where “muddle through” is everyone’s mantra and the absence of global leadership is palpable, but it’s at least imaginable.

More from Rickards…

“From the year 1450 to roughly 1925, from Portugal to the British Empire, the world’s superpowers have risen and fallen on the strength and acceptance of their currencies.

“Based on centuries of data analyzed by the president of world markets at a multibillion-dollar bank, the average lifespan for a world reserve currency like the U.S. dollar is a little bit more than 90 years.

“And get this: The dollar has been the world reserve’s currency for 91 years!

“The clock is ticking and Donald Trump knows it.”

Well, if you consider that the dollar was really “gold” until Nixon removed us from the gold standard, you could argue that Bretton Woods fixed agreements and gold were really the reserve currency until then… so it’s only been the “fiat dollar” that’s been the reserve currency for 45 years or so. And for probably half that time or more, it was largely because the US military was the protector of Saudi Arabia’s oil reserves (solidifying the “petro dollar” rule and forcing everyone to use dollars to buy oil) and defender of Western Europe’s borders… and, frankly, because no other currency was big enough or trusted enough to handle the role. The US being the only “superpower” in the world for 20+ years and a massive consumer market, despite the more recent re-emergence of China and Russia, clearly has had a huge impact on currencies as well.

Rickards also cites a Wall Street Journal article about the only solution to debt and trade problems being “monetary policy” and resetting America’s economy — it wasn’t actually an article, it was an opinion piece, but its’ worth a read and you can see it here.

Dammit, I got off track again. What’s this investment he’s talking up?

He finally gets to sounding a bit more rational…

“DO NOT PUT 100% OF YOUR WEALTH INTO GOLD.

“I need to emphasize that because people often misunderstand me and think I recommend putting everything you own in gold.

“I don’t.

“Instead I recommend you take five very simple steps immediately to prepare for this massive monetary shift that’s coming.

“Don’t get me wrong, I support a dollar reboot by President Trump.

“But we need to be honest with ourselves.

“Just because we may agree with President Trump’s move… doesn’t mean that it will happen with 100% certainty or that the transition will be smooth.”

That’s an understatement, that a sudden 80%+ devaluation of the dollar might not be “smooth” (that’s just the flip side to saying that gold would rise 600% — the dollar would fall 85% in gold terms)… but what are his five steps?

“Step #1: Position Yourself for 1,000% Gains in the ‘Dollar Reboot Composite’

“I may be the only person who you’ll hear about this from. I call it the ‘Dollar Reboot Composite’ because it’s the perfect play for this new monetary event.

“This little-known investment is not a coin or bar of gold, silver, platinum or palladium.

“But it IS a physical precious metal investment.

“It’s not a stock, bond, option, ETF, miner, currency or anything else you’ve ever heard of. If you try to find it on Google Finance or Yahoo Finance, you won’t.

“You CANNOT buy it in your brokerage account.

“And your local bullion dealer WILL NOT know about it either.”

That could be pretty much anything in the “allocated storage” category, but I expect he’s talking up the “PMC Ounce” — which is just a way of creating a managed asset out of precious metals and selling it like a “token” that’s part gold, part silver, part platinum and part palladium. In fact, the folks behind the PMC Ounce have trumpeted the fact that Rickards has recommended their product, though I don’t know if they’re being truthful or not – that promo piece is here.

I suppose it’s easy and convenient, though I don’t know what their premiums and discounts are to buy and sell “PMC Ounces” compared to the cost to buy and sell gold or silver coins or bars. The chart on their website indincates that PMC has outperformed gold, silver and platinum over the past ten years, mostly, it seems, because of the leverage of silver during its huge run… but certainly it’s close to the performance of gold. When Rickards first cited this idea about a year ago, the PMC Ounce was worth $87.33, and it’s about half gold ($44.69 gold, $15.92 silver, $17.47 palladiium, $9.25 platinum) — the proportions are based on weight, so by weight the theoretical construct of the PMC Ounce is 93.75% silver, 3.5% gold, 1.75% palladium and 1% platinum.

I don’t know anything bad about PMC Ounce and the folks who run it, the Neptune Global Bullion Exchange, and I’m happy enough buying gold and silver coins in the proportions I like without dealing with another online storage account so I probably won’t investigate this further, but if you find those folks to be trustworthy in providing allocated storage of those precious metals in the quantities assessed by the PMC formula, the main questions to ask would be what kind of premium you pay to buy those precious metals, and what you pay in terms of a discount to sell them and “withdraw” your money.

For smaller purchases (anything below $70,000 or so), my quick look at their website indicates that the current “premium” you pay to buy a PMC Ounce is a pretty steep 5.5%, so presumably that (and the discount you get when you sell, which they don’t disclose as clearly) is where their profit comes from… so hopefully they don’t also charge a management or storage fee, though I didn’t research further. All providers of precious metals for either delivery or storage charge a premium over the “spot” price, though it’s not always that high — for silver the lowest premium is probably in the 3% range for coins and bars, for gold it’s slightly lower, with generic coins (like Krugerrands) often available at about a 2% markup. And unless you’re selling them yourself on ebay, you’ll probably also have to take a similar discount cut to sell them back to a dealer.

So that’s one — the PMC Ounce. Take it or leave it. It is now worth about $94 as of March 6, 2019, so it’s up a bit since I first covered this ad on November 7, 2017, almost entirely because the value of palladium has risen by about 40% since then (gold is up a hair, silver down a little, platinum down more than 10%).

What else?

“Step #2: Get 10% of Your Assets in Precious Metals, the Correct Way

“I recommend that every single American immediately put 10% of their investable assets into gold and silver…

“Donald Trump himself owns hundreds of ounces worth of physical gold.

“So does Trump’s budget chief — along with nearly $1 million in gold investments.

“But it pains me to see everyday Americans make simple mistakes when buying gold… or get suckered into buying collectible gold coins.”

He provides a chart to tell you what that means, so this isn’t a “secret” step — basically, if you do the math he’s suggesting you put 10% of your money into physical precious metals, with 90% of that gold and 10% silver, starting with US Gold and Silver Eagle coins until you get up to a big enough number that you need to buy gold bullion bars. His “special report” will include his parameters and guidelines for how to calculate, buy, and store those goodies… but you can also certainly research that and make your own call.

For those who ask, I have most recently been using APMEX for buying and selling precious metal products online and find them reliable, and their prices and service competitive (I don’t have a business relationship of any kind with them, and I can’t promise that they won’t screw up, I’m just sharing my personal experience). And you can keep your coins wherever you want — a safe, a self-storage facility like Porter Stansberry was recommending for a while, a coffee can buried in the yard, a safe deposit box, whatever makes you comfortable (just don’t tell me where it is… but do tell your spouse or write it down somewhere or leave a treasure map or something so it isn’t lost if you get hit by a bus).

Next?

“Step #3: Develop Donald Trump’s Ultimate Hard Asset Strategy

“Donald Trump’s financial disclosures show that he owns a very peculiar mixture of assets…

“On one line item, he has a $100,000-$250,000 asset that, though a drop in the bucket compared to his billions in net worth, says a lot about what Donald Trump believes could happen in the economy.

“It could rise roughly eightfold in the coming months…

“And end up being his best performing asset in 2017, because he didn’t need to sell before taking the oath of office….

“It’s the strategy of a prominent industrialist and investor with diverse holdings in Germany and abroad during the 1920s….

“He was an ultra-wealthy investor whose opinion was eagerly sought on important political matters, who exercised powerful behind-the-scenes influence and who seemed to make all the right moves when it came to playing markets.

“He was known as the “Inflation King” because he was able to protect and grow his wealth despite Germany’s massive hyperinflation in the 1920s.

“I believe you need to know his strategy by heart and apply it to your own finances.”

Well, Donald Trump’s ultimate hard asset is, of course, leveraged real estate — if you borrow lots of money to buy and build properties, then the properties (at least theoretically) hold their value but the debt is devalued as the currency depreciates. If you take it beyond just real estate you can compare it to Warren Buffett buying up valuable assets and hoarding them (railroads, power plants, etc.). That’s largely what fueled the rise of that “inflation king,” Hugo Stinnes, whose story Rickards has told in free articles in the past — you can get a good sense of that from this free Rickards piece from 2015, for example.

What does that mean? Well, it’s a good reminder that strong companies with valuable assets that society will need in the future will always probably be the best real defense against inflation. Railroads and power utilities can raise prices, farmers can raise prices… though the most successful ones, of course, will be the owners of truly unique assets or intellectual property that can be price makers and lead the inflation charge (like Coca Cola in years past, for example, which people have happily paid a premium for over the past century), instead of price takers in a commoditized industry (like farmers who sell Buffett’s hated broccoli, one stalk of which is akin to another).

Strong companies with products that are in demand tend to “win” in inflation, just like they win the rest of the time — it’s not just about “hard assets” like gold coins or diamonds that you can hide in your shoe, though those certainly come into play in the panic scenarios… like being anything other than blonde, blue-eyed and conformist in 1930s Germany.

Other folks will extoll the virtues of farmland, as well, or of collectibles like valuable art — if you can afford to own a farm on the side, or you’ve got a Rembrandt in the closet, then you’ve already wasted way too much time reading my blather… go have some fun with your money.

And then Rickards throws out some more red meat for partisans with step 4…

“Step #4: Become a Shareholder in the ‘Deplorables-Only Gold Fund’

“I’ve uncovered and developed a brand-new gold investment opportunity just for Americans like you.

“It also has nothing to do with owning physical gold.

“Or tiny penny-stock junior gold miners for that matter.

“And it’s not an ETF.

“Instead it’s something totally proprietary, tailored to my exact specifications to make the perfect gold speculation.”

I suspect that what Rickards is talking about here is some sort of customized basket of gold mining stocks through Motif Investing — as he did for his “New World Money” argument that the SDR would replace the US Dollar, which meant he thought you should build a portfolio of currencies that mimic the SDR (someone else has put up a motif for that here, if you’re curious).

I don’t know how far I’d go in assuming that Jim Rickards can put together the ideal gold stock portfolio for you, though he might be better at it than I am, but you can pretty easily access solid ETFs of gold stocks — I like the idea of the Sprott Gold Miners ETF (SGDM), which weights based on the “quality” of producers and also overweights the royalty companies… but it’s worth noting that this “smart” index has done substantially worse in recent years than the plain old GDX ETF that’s market-cap weighted. For that matter, most of the precious metals equity mutual funds, like Tocqueville Gold and First Eagle Gold, have also done worse than the GDX ETF in recent years (partly because they tend to hold some cash and some gold — ETFs are always fully invested).

This is an easy industry to overthink — if gold goes way up, 99% of the gold stocks and all of the gold mining mutual funds and ETFs will likely do phenomenally well. If it goes down, they’ll do very badly and the weakest of them will go bankrupt — Gold is now flat since I covered an earlier variation of this Rickards “reboot” in November of 2017, and the average big gold miner is down about 5%, but timing matters and the miners tend to be quite levered… when gold was down 6-8% last fall, the miners were down 25%.

And, well, I’m sick of gold… those are the main recommendations teased in the pitch, along with “get a copy of Rickards’ book” (The New Case for Gold, you can get it pretty much anywhere if you like, including your library). Nothing too crazy, other than the notion that gold “mathematically has to” go to $10,000 but you should only have 10% of your portfolio in gold.

So I’ll turn it over to you, the few of my dear readers who could sit through that much of my blatheration without falling asleep. Like the PMC Ounce, or particular gold miners or gold funds? Think Rickards has a gift for choosing mining stocks? Do you see a new global currency agreement backed by gold, and gold prices at $10,000? If so, what other side effects do you think might show up from that radical change? Have any made-up dates of your own you’d like to recommend, since Rickards apparently can’t even keep his dates straight when he updates his ads? Let us know with a comment below. I’ve left the original comments from last year at the end, in case you want to see what anyone else had to say.

And yes, as always, we’re collecting investor opinions about the newsletters they’ve subscribed to — so if you’ve ever tried Rickards’ Strategic Intelligence, please click here to share your thoughts with your fellow readers. Thank you!

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organic farmer
organic farmer
November 8, 2017 6:59 am

Many other countries are also hopelessly in debt beyond the point of no return and locked into deficit spending. If everyone in all nations could learn to live within their means and require our governments to be responsible also, we could return to a world which has the capability to rebuild after default. Then, I think all nations should declare default on the same day. There will be a lot of pain and loss for most of us and every member of congress that votes for a budget deficit should get fired instead of re-elected. In reality, those who have been involved in creating our debt are as much at fault for destroying our nation as any other treasonous behavior in our history.
One thought about raising price of gold can be that it is devaluing the dollar equal to the increase in price of gold. No matter what, there will be much pain for all and we will need to prioritize taking care of each other.
How about Travis for head of the president’s economic advisory council. They blather well, but could use some leadership in good thinking.

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Don
Guest
Don
November 8, 2017 8:48 am

Jim Rickards, Kent Moors, and their ilk are all experts alright. Experts at taking your money and providing almost nothing of value in return. If people choose to listen to these types, then they will usually be sorely disappointed in their level of “expert care”.

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Jim
Guest
Jim
November 8, 2017 8:11 pm
Reply to  Don

They sure seem to like these worthless dollars.

PRESTON S EDMONDSON
Member
PRESTON S EDMONDSON
November 8, 2017 9:39 am

Thank you for that. That took a bunch of work! I believe Rickards is a self-promoting, blowhard!

saint stephen
November 8, 2017 10:30 am

The problem with Richards is that he re-packages the same viewpoint in book after book. If you read one book you have read them all.

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schubrrw3212
November 8, 2017 9:47 am

Travis, what you’re missing is the actual value of the Nixon Dollar. Nixon discovered that a very powerful government, one that was sufficiently frightening to business entrepreneurs that they would do anything to obey it’s tax laws and protect their assets from seizure, would pay those taxes with whatever that ultra-powerful government demanded that they be paid with. Nixon could have defined a dollar to be worth 20 potatoes, and every entrepreneur who lived here or did business here, would have planted potatoes so he could surrender potatoes to the government in payment of his taxes. Those who couldn’t grow potatoes would have bartered with other entrepreneurs and created a potato currency market, to pay their tax debts.

What Nixon actually did, was to re-define the dollar against Debt.
If you owe a dollar’s worth of debt to a bank, that dollar of debt is used to back the monetary system. So entrepreneurs expanded an already-existing system for bartering debt, called the Bond Market, and earned the dollars they needed to pay their taxes. The US imposed a hidden tax on the Bond Market, by converting a percentage of it’s own bonds into more Dollars, ran up an ever-increasing amount of debt, and gave out grants to universities that kept economics professors busy earning good salaries, teaching mumb0-jumbo to students to convince students that adding the country’s debts to its assets gave a number that somehow signified financial health.

One corporation actually figured this out and did such a thorough job of appearing to comply with it, that a lot of intelligent people who took those economics classes, invested in it, thinking they were making a profit. That was the Enron Corporation. It added it’s debts to it’s assets and pretended that the sum of the debts and the assets, which were growing, meant that Enron was becoming more valuable over time, and used that number to pump the value of it’s stock.

The fundamental issue, for Enron, was that eventually their debts became unsustainable, and doubters began disbelieving the assertion that Enron was growing in value. After enough doubters sought to convert Enron value into some alternative form, Enron collapsed because no one wanted to lend it dollars.

What’s fundamentally failing, if you actually take the trouble to read Jim Rickards, is that there’s too much debt being circulated and pawned off as money. The world’s governments could, in theory, agree on the 40-percent-gold-reserve number as a debt fix. Or they could agree to peg debts to uranium reserves. Or reckon them in potatoes. You are correct, Travis, in asserting that many scenarios are possible.

What governments can not do, is pay interest on debts, when the total value of the interest owed, exceeds the value of the taxes that they take in. That becomes an unsustainable debt. And just as Enron defaulted, when it could not pay the interest it owed on it’s debts, governments will default as well. The US, for example, nearly has a sustainable debt, if we ignore what’s been borrowed from pensioners who depend on Social Security and Medicare. Add what’s owed to Social Security and Medicare, to the official US national debt, and our national debt exceeds Japan’s. Bond owners at some point have to take a haircut, giving up all the interest and part of the principal, because there is no way to pay the owed interest, if interest rates rise. And a debt-backed currency has to take a haircut as well.

At the time that the Federal Reserve was created, and the 40%-gold-and- 60%-debt formula was worked out, the US was actively investing federal funds in building the Alaska Railroad, to haul rich reserves of gold and other minerals out of Alaska’s interior. This subsidy of the production of gold, depressed the worldwide value of gold and assisted the monetization of debts, globally. But since many European nations already were over-burdened with debts, the idea did not catch on globally, and instead, Europe fought the disastrous First World War. When the Great War ended in stalemate, unsustainable war debt added on to already-unsustainable pre-war debts to cause numerous governments to become bankrupt in the ensuing years. The resulting Great Depression eventually spread to the US in the 1930’s. People fleeing the currency collapse bartered to obtain dollars, pounds sterling, or Reichsmarks, investing in the debts of the US, the British Empire, and the Third Reich. World War II dictated that the investors who bought the Third Reich’s bonds, lost 100% of their principal and interest. The US stock market quadrupled in value from 1932-1936, driven by the influx of flight capital fleeing the war threats coming from the Third Reich.

Could the 40%-debt-and-60%-gold scheme work today, if the International Monetary Fund were to apply it? That’s anybody’s guess. But the lesson of the 20th Century is that when weak governments tried to use debt to back their currencies, the results weren’t pretty.

Meanwhile, the rise of the Blockchain Algorithm raises another question: Why have a currency at all?

If digital algorithms can track a virtual object like a Bitcoin, and can also track real objects like tires, loaves of bread, and music downloads, a digital barter economy can develop, with no reference to a currency at all.

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John Whitten
John Whitten
November 8, 2017 4:35 pm
Reply to  schubrrw3212

One thing I would like to point out. The Federal Government has already defaulted on Social security. They did it by changing the promise that was made when I started working and paying the FICA tax over 50 years ago. That promise was that once I paid in, I would get a sum that wouldn’t be taxed and I would no longer have to pay the tax once I retired. they also defaulted by changing the retirement dates for full vesting for those born after 1948. I’m now in my 70’s and collecting social security that is now being taxed. In addition, I continue to have to pay self employment tax even though I won’t see an additional dime of social security. Don’t get me started on the great promise(that the government also defaulted on) that was Medicare that I also have to pay into both premiums and taxes when I was supposed to be done paying in when I turned 65. Go back and look at the promises that were made by the LBJ Democrats. I now pay more for Medicare premiums than I ever paid for family hospitalization and medical when I worked for a living. So my experience says the government will continue to default especially when their debt is no longer marketable to it’s citizens and the rest of the world.

If gold ever became worth even half of what Rickard’s says it would, governments would nationalize the mines. I suspect Canada who already depleted their monetary gold reserve has this in mind. They have a lot of mines that could easily be nationalized if need be.

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Tanglesome
Guest
Tanglesome
November 30, 2017 6:37 pm
Reply to  schubrrw3212

Fantastic post, schubrrw3212!

butternut34
butternut34
November 8, 2017 10:21 am

I was a subscriber to Agora and did see the article that he wrote, didn’t pay much attention. I don’t generally comment on most reports, but I did see this report before. I worked for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) in 2006/2007 we were working with major banks building fail safe credit card processing plants. The buildings have thousands of machines and only maintenance people to monitor and repair this equipment. The one I worked on was in Wilmington, Delaware, this was one of two that Bank One was building. As I understand it the banks are building the same type of buildings all over the country. For me that means the end of cash, many people now have no cash and only use credit cards. My comment on $10,000 gold means over $500 for a barrel of oil and $20 plus per gallon of gasoline. That would give a boost to the electric car, wouldn’t it.

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johannes
johannes
November 8, 2017 10:31 am

All fiat currencies fail. BitCoin is a fiat currency as is the USD, Euro, etc. There is nothing like rare hard assets to preserve wealth.

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JBW
JBW
November 8, 2017 1:13 pm

Travis:
Thanks for your terrific work, incredible! Agoura Financial is touting a “$7.00 internet service with blazing speed that will put all the cable companies out of business. Invest one paycheck and get $100,000+. Any ideas?

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Pythagoras
Guest
Pythagoras
November 8, 2017 6:15 pm
Reply to  JBW

Probably the new 5G mobile data/cellular phone systems that are in the process of getting designed or even (I think) built out, e.g. by Verizon. Huge increase in number of system antenna sites, supporting higher data rates, kind of like a WiFi that covers an area of city blocks with high-frequency (higher bandwidth) signals versus 4G zones that are several miles in radius.

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Pythagoras
Guest
Pythagoras
November 8, 2017 6:24 pm
Reply to  JBW

Ooops, sorry – I found a copy of an Agora pitch similar to what you describe:

http://research.agorafinancial.com/research/html/tek_tinychip_0814/?code=WTEKQ942&ver=1&n=TEK_tinychip_0814

…more likely they are talking about the company Infinera:

https://www.infinera.com/technology/photonic-integrated-circuit-pic/

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jtcornpone
jtcornpone
November 8, 2017 1:15 pm

Great post Travis….and the interesting comments. As an old gummer I have seen prices rise by about a factor of ten in nearly everything (except in those areas which experienced wonderful technical breakthroughs). We’ve had plenty of devaluation but probably need more. I’m amused that around 2000 there were articles circulating about what would happen if we paid off the national debt, and the troubles the bond market would then have – one worry that certainly went away.

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worldlyview
Member
worldlyview
November 8, 2017 1:50 pm

Rickards last year predicted catastrophe for the dollar when the yuan was added as one of the currencies that give the SDR its valuation. Nothing happened. This guy simply does not know what he is talking about. The people who share his views on a total, cosmic restructuring of the international monetary system are drawn to Armageddon-like drama. They should be required to subscribe, at full price and in perpetuity, to Rickards’ publications. And they must pay in gold bullion.

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thinairmony
November 11, 2017 2:54 pm
Reply to  worldlyview

Rickards lost all credibility when he predicted a date that the dollar would collapse and that date is long gone. He has embarrassed not only himself but his family as well and has become the butt of many jokes.

noogakl
Member
noogakl
November 8, 2017 6:21 pm

So if you are an Agora Financial Subscriber to a premium service and you don’t like what you are getting, you can call them and transfer to a different service. They will let you try all of their advisory services for two weeks for free before you have to make a decision. I recently changed subscriptions and had the opportunity to look at the rate of return on the various premium services. Here were my observations:

1. All of their premium services which provide options recommendations had a negative rate of return with the exception of Jim Rickards’ Intelligence Triggers, which had been doing well the last several years, but had a whole lot of nearly worthless January 2018 options left in the portfolio. So those will probably lose a lot of money unless a financial collapse happens between now and then. They just started some new ones with Alan Knuckman and Jonas Elmerajj; who knows how those will do.

2. Ray Blanco has the best track record on that site. Agora Financial basically shuts down any services that aren’t getting enough subscribers so there is a lot of turnover in their offerings. For instance, David Stockman no longer has his Bubble service and Louis Basenese’s VentureCap Strategist is no longer there. Ray has some advisory services that have been around since 2008, which is an eternity by Agora Financial standards and he picked NVIDIA when it was less than $20/share and has gotten a 600 % return on it.

3. Most of Agora Financial’s services which involve buying stocks don’t do too badly; in many cases the non-premium advisory recommendations do better or as well as the premium services. Jim Rickards Strategic Intelligence, True Alpha, and Lifetime Income Report all have a decent track record.

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Jim
Guest
Jim
November 8, 2017 8:10 pm

PMC ounce brings to mind a friend who bought some commemorative coins that were silver with gold alto relief of some dead political figure. He was unable to sell these to a PM dealer. None of the wanted to have to separate the PMs I suppose. I may have misunderstood the PMC ounce after a quick search, but are these really mixed PMs put into a brick? This sounds enormously impractical and. well, not very smart. How could this do anything but subtract value from the individual metals?

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Mark Twain 3d
November 8, 2017 8:36 pm

For my comments on Rickards generally, see my review of “Strategic Intelligence” elsewhere on this website. As to this article: I agree generally with the investment advisory conclusions reached, but in this case not with all the premises or arguments. I omit a critique of the admitted “biases” at the top of the article. I hold a small investment allocation in mining shares but no physical gold. I will not find it very surprising if there is a currency crisis and a reset of some kind at an international conference. When or what form financial authorities will think it expedient for the reset to take is anyone’s guess but I do not believe any reset, even a reversion to a gold standard, will have as disorienting consequences as Gumshoe author Travis Johnson seems to think. It will cause cusps and perhaps a few discontinuities in currency trading charts, and a temporary acceleration in the various inflationary rates of diverse economic sectors, particularly the “stronger,” more rapidly inflating ones, but nothing more. I have not signed on to Rickards’ valuation level of $10,000, though supported by plausible reasoning in his books. But I think the intergovernmental financial experts have sufficient competence to set directly or indirectly a level for the gold price that will be not destabilizing and, like the currency exchange ranges they will set, will endure for a reasonable duration of time.

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Mark Twain 3d
November 10, 2017 1:23 pm
Reply to  Mark Twain 3d

In short, because I think the discontinuities in the currency charts (except against gold and maybe some of the weakest or softest currencies) — as well as of other commodities — will be small jumps, and smaller than Travis is suggesting, I disagree with the conclusion that there cannot be a (successful) reset with a large jump in the price of gold. Certainly not many sectors of the market have the price-setting strength to force jumps of the same or similar size as the jump in the price of gold.
For more on this see Rickards’ books for their treatments of the history of the crises and international currency resets. Evidently official and conventional-thinking sources have failed to be anticipatory of past crises and resets. Indeed it is this very fact that has rendered the pitches of “doom & gloom” investment advice salesmen so seductive to their readers. Despite the less convincing nature and less successful track records of their portfolio allocation picks.

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Ben
Guest
Ben
November 8, 2017 9:43 pm

Travis,
The first version of Rickards’s paper maintained that as a result of the reboot the value of the dollar would increase 700-800 %. This claim has disappeared from the later ones.

Mary
Guest
Mary
November 9, 2017 3:41 pm

Rickards is always positive about his predictiona and then when it doesn’t happen that way, he just rephrases things and changes the date. Someday, he will be right – but it will be more like a stopped clock. He makes the same pitch no matter what.

Phil
Member
Phil
November 10, 2017 2:12 am

Everyone has to eat…therefore Wal-M art could be better than gold if this market heads for the downside. And see how much your bitcoins will buy you when the frenzy is over. As far as all of this touting of ETFs…they too are marvelous when heading to the upside, but how will they fare when there may be no bid for a few of their stocks when heading to the downside? It will be a mess and though some of the stocks may individually be fine, ETFs will drop like a rock when part of their contents cannot be priced. Individual stocks are the better choice…stocks that will always have a market like maybe utilities. ETFs are just another sucker play that will allow the guys in the know on Wall Street to pick our pockets yet again. Think about it. How will anyone spend gold even valued at today’s price? Silver will likely be a better choice, or get something solid with which to barter.

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jameshmwebb
jameshmwebb
November 11, 2017 9:55 am

Jim Rickards is nuts.

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thinairmony
November 11, 2017 3:46 pm
Reply to  jameshmwebb

Jim Rickards is running out of money with his B.S. news letters.

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chester Gould
Member
November 12, 2017 2:26 am

Jim Rickards if full of Maird

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jimmytrade
Member
jimmytrade
November 12, 2017 1:28 pm

Ah another dollar collapse article. They are as endless as propaganda itself. There is only one way for the dollar to totally collapse and that is for the US to collapse first. A social meltdown or industrial collapse or a civil war resulting in the union breaking up into separate countries. One of those things would have to happen first and we are decades away from anything like that. The Yuan will not replace the dollar as the reserve currency anytime in the 21st century if ever. The reserve currency is always held by the nation with the strongest navy slash military. It depends on the trade routes being under control. We are the worlds policeman when it comes to trade routes and that is why we have the reserve.

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braisin-raisin
braisin-raisin
November 12, 2017 1:59 pm

Hmmm – I read through it all and my first thought was: Cherchez l’argent (who benefits NOW?). I think if someone falls for all this, bully for them. Predictions of doom have abounded thoughout centuries but rarely has anybody ever seen real dooms until it was too late. Having about 10% of your portfolio in gold is old hat. And if gold really did rise to $ 10.000 per ounce, then the dollar would be so devalued that it would not be worth more (gold to Dollar relationn) than it is now. You cannot eat gold – you have to sell it before you eat. In that case, the meal might cost you $ 300 instead of $ 30 today. Sounds to me like a lot of bull’s manure (trying not to be rude, here). But, on the other hand – it certainly is amusing reading.

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texasranger
texasranger
November 12, 2017 2:25 pm

Strategic Intelligence is actually a group of four “analysts”. Dan Amoss is the best of the group. His August pick FLIR, in less than two months returned 28% and Calls returned over 200%. Rickards seems to have a good knowledge of the global econometric situation, but horrible at picking the stocks and currencies associated with the situation. Have learned, the hard way, over the years to listen to his input but ignore his picks. Since he is now predicting a collapse in Cyptos, at any moment, it might be a good time to get in. 🙂

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