- By Don Stott - January 27, 2006
Believe me, I do have original thoughts. I have them all the time!
On occasion, I run across a book, which is so fine, worthwhile, accurate,
and timely, that I feel I must quote from it. So I will. The book is
new, and titled EMPIRE OF DEBT, by Bill Bonner, and Addison Wiggins.
I will quote from pages 308 and 309, plus some more maybe, depending
on the space I have. But BUY THIS BOOK. You'll love it. The following
does not apply to metals stocks, but to the run of the mill stocks,
of which close to 2 billion are traded each day. Metals stocks are related
to the metals, whereas other stocks, are related to huge corporations
who like to sell stock to raise money, pay bills, and.well, I quote:
"Over time, all investors are destined too lose money, for the cost
of the Wall Street Casino must be paid. Brokers, analysts, deal-makers,
financiers, fund managers, account managers - all the financial intermediaries
who make up the Wall Street industry - draw salaries and pensions as
long as they draw breath. That money, too, must come out of investor's
pockets, so that over the long run, the average investor's real return
must be lower than the actual return from the investments. And many,
including most of the little guys, will actually lose money."
"The typical investor in public markets has no idea of what he is doing.
Putting his money into a stock or mutual fund brings him a temporary
happiness. He sees himself as Kirk Kerkorian making a bid for General
Motors or a Warren Buffett shrewdly moving on an insurance company.
"I bought Google," he tells his wife. His chest expands. He feels a
crown of authority on his head and imagines his most private part growing.
For he has mastered the most sacred and all-powerful right of our time:
with a single gesture he has joined the Knights Templar, the Freemasons,
and the local country club. He is in. He is with it. He gets it. He
is one with all the other swells who make up this wondrous economy.
He has gone to Wall Street like Sir Galahad to Camelot.
He does not realize the misery awaiting him. Only later, much later,
does he discover that he is not a hero, but a chump - an insignificant
speck of dust on Wall Street's white shoes. The scene would be depressing
if there weren't something gloriously comic in it. Wall Street is doing
nothing evil; it is merely doing its job - separating fools from their
money." "The root of the misconception is the nature of investing, at
least, the public form of it. The idea of it is that a man can get rich
without actually working. All he has to do is put his money "in the
market" by handing it over to Wall Street, and through some magic never
fully described, it comes back to him ten fold. There must be some science
to it, he imagines, some wisdom that investment geniuses came up with
years ago that - like penicillin or quinine - is now available to him.
But it is not so. Instead, the whole edifice of Wall Street is built
on a hollow wish: that you can get something for nothing." The text
goes on to tell the correct way to buy a stock, and it isn't magic.
"Capital gains in housing and stocks is a fraud. A house produces no
more "income" just because it is more expensive. Instead, the utility
remains exactly the same. You could double the price of all the houses
in the United States, and Americans would still not be a penny richer;
unless they could sell their houses to foreigners. A house cannot go
up in value. It can only go up in price. Since stocks and real estate
are so widely held, an increase in prices spreads throughout the entire
society, like consumer price inflation, so the average home-owner or
stockholder is not much better off. He can sell his stocks at a profit,
but he has to buy others back at higher prices. Like- wise, he can sell
his house for more than he paid for it, but he still will need a place
to live. And it will cost him more money."
"The more people all come to believe the same thing, the more they
must all be surprised, because as they become more and more sure of
themselves, they tilt the odds against themselves. From barely 100 following
the crash of 1929, the Dow is now over 10,000. Who can doubt the tendency
is up? Yet, adjusted for consumer price inflation, the Dow is only about
500, and most of that increase is merely cyclical."
And finally, the last few words of the book, and I urge you to spend
a few bucks and buy it. I got mine at Amazon for $18, as I remember.
"What is peculiar and promises to be entertaining about the U.S. debt
empire is that it is more absurd than most; which is to say it is less
likely to last very long. That does not mean that the United States
will disappear. But you should be prepared for a write down of its debt
at any moment. You do not want to go to your grave after saying an unkind
word to your mother. Neither do you want to wake up to a market crash
with a portfolio of junk bonds, tech stocks, and U.S. dollars. There
is never a good time to die. Nor is there a good time for a crash or
slump. Still, death happens. Be prepared. Say something nice to your
mother. Offer a bum a drink. And buy gold." I love that last sentence!
Well, here's the way I see it. There are about a billion and a half
shares of stock are traded each day, and they probably have an average
share price of say $40. That's about 60 billion dollars a day in stock
trades. When the NASDAQ crashed, it is said that $5-$7 trillion went
down the tubes. Sir Alan is 'injecting' into the economy, more dollars
per year than are traded in the stock market each day. A lot more. This
is known as 'liquidity,' and it means that all the stocks traded, are
progressively worth less because of the amount of dollars that are bring
printed. This also means that since dollar numbers are on a severe upward
trend, prices of everything are also on the same trend upwards. Tootsie
Rolls, gallons of milk, and movie theatre tickets, are all going upwards
in dollar prices. Yet they are the same items. Nothing changes except
the price one has to pay for them in all currencies. All currencies
are being debased, because all are being recklessly printed and have
no backing.
Are gold and silver going up? Yes, in prices paid for them in all currencies.
They are the same gold and silver however, so they haven't changed one
iota. The Tootsie Rolls probably come off of the same machine which
made them when I was a kid, buying a package for a nickel. The gas I
bought for twenty cents is now more than twelve times that much, but
it's the same gas. The gold and silver are the same, whether it was
hoisted off of the Central America, as I wrote about last week, fresh
from the mint, or the 18 cents over spot I now have for used hundred
ounce silver bars in lots of five. Silver bars have no moving parts,
so who cares if they are not brand new? They have good hallmarks. All
tangible things, be they consumed, owned, collected, or sat on, remain
the same tangibles year after year, as their prices go up in crummy
currencies. So why stay in them? Would you stay in a leaky boat? What's
the difference? Dollars are leaking purchasing power every day, week,
month, and year. Jeeze guys, please get out of dollars! Protect yourself.
Don Stott has been a precious metals dealer since 1977, has written
five books, hundreds of columns, and his web site is www.coloradogold.com