By Michael Pento
Why we Americans ever abdicated our financial freedom to a group of
12 unelected individuals who sit on the Federal Open Market Committee,
is beyond me. That being said, we are stuck with a system that allows
an unaccountable and unconstitutional institution dictate the
appropriate level of interest rates instead of the free market. Our
founding fathers made it clear that they wanted money to consist of
only gold and silver. They did this so as to guarantee that the money
supply had intrinsic value and would be limited in nature. This would
also allow bank interest rates to be a function of savings vs. demand,
not a matter of decree. Because of the above situation, we have been
forced to endure a dizzying ride of interest rate gyrations that have
created severe imbalances in our economy.
The market has now priced in the end of the Fed's interest rate
slashing campaign that began in the summer of 2007. The prices of most
commodities have contracted and the US dollar has staged a minor
rebound, anticipating the conclusion of this cycle. The question is,
will the downward pressure in commodities continue and should investors
expect the end of this interest rate toboggan ride?
To help The following charts show the performance of gold, the CRB
index and the Dollar index (DXY) during the period of June 29th 2004
thru September 17th 2007. This is the period of time when the Federal
Funds rate began rising from 1-5.25%, and the date when the Fed started
this current easing cycle.
Gold:

CRB Index:

US Dollar Index:

(charts above courtesy of www.stockcharts.com)
We can see from the charts above that despite the Fed's actions,
gold and commodities appreciated in price while the US. Dollar
continued in its secular bear market. The reason for these
counterintuitive movements is that even at 5.25%, the Fed was still
very accommodative in its monetary stance.
Assuming the Fed cuts again today, this recent round of rate cuts
will have taken us all the way back to 2%, which is a historically low
and highly inflationary level. Fed officials would have us believe that
they can take rates higher soon to combat the inflation already present
in the economy, but how can anyone take them seriously when the
consumer and the economy have become even more leveraged since the Fed
caved into saving the housing and stock markets just last summer? Can
we really have any confidence in an institution that took rates from 1%
to 5.25%, then back to 2% and now wants to move back up again, all in
the space of a few years? This is the type of roller coaster action you
get when you let a small group of individuals decide the cost of money
instead of the market.
Surely, the fate of commodities can be expected to be heavily
influenced by the direction of the U.S. dollar. Despite any
counter-rally, however, the secular bear market in the dollar should
continue because all the factors that lead to a falling currency remain
in place-trenchant interest rate differentials, a $700 billion a year
trade deficit, a record $9.44 trillion dollar fiscal deficit and a
comparatively weak GDP growth rate. Given our recent history and the
current state of the economy, gold and commodities should have little
to fear.
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