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Real people may die when countries engage in currency
wars. Countries debasing their currencies risk, amongst
others:
- Loss
of competitiveness
- Social
unrest
- War
We discuss not only why we believe currency wars are evil, but also
what investors may be able to do about them.
Loss of
competitiveness
The illusory benefit of a weaker currency is to boost corporate
earnings as companies increase their exports. That may well be true for the
next quarterly earnings report, but ignores that their competitive position
may be weakening. The clearest evidence of this is the increased vulnerability
to takeovers from abroad. As the value of the U.S. dollar has been eroding,
for example, Chinese companies are increasingly buying U.S. assets. The U.S.
is selling its family silver in an effort to support consumption.
Importantly, when a country subsidizes ones
exports with an artificially weak currency, businesses lack an incentive to
innovate. Japan is the best example: Japans problem is
not that of a strong currency, but a lack of innovation. By weakening the
yen, companies are given a free ride, taking an incentive away to engage in
reform. Advanced economies, in our humble opinion, cannot compete on price,
but must compete on value. European companies have long learned this, as
there are rather few low-end consumer goods being exported from Germany. The
Chinese have also heeded this lesson, allowing low-end industries to fail and
relocate to Vietnam or other lower cost countries: China is rapidly moving up
the value chain in goods and services produced. Incidentally, Vietnam has
repeatedly engaged in currency devaluation, as the country mostly competes on
price; in the absence of a strong consumer recovery in the U.S., we see
further currency debasements in Vietnam.
In summary, market pressure to innovate is the most powerful
motivation. Governments subsidizing ailing industries through currency
debasement do long-term harm to their economies.
Social unrest
Currency debasement is not just bad for the corporate world: its
particularly painful for citizens. Just ask citizens of Venezuela where the
government just announced a 32 percent devaluation
in the bolívars official exchange rate to the
dollar. An overnight move of that magnitude is immediately noticeable, as are
the negative effects on consumers, whereas gradual debasement in currencies
of advanced economies are less noticeable, but ultimately have the same
effect. The natural consequence of currency debasement is inflation, i.e.,
loss of real purchasing power; the two forces meet at the gas pump: as a
currency loses value, commodities all else equal
become pricier when valued in that currency.
Stagnant real wages in the U.S. over the past decade may in large part
be attributed to the gradual debasement of the greenback, courtesy of fiscal
and monetary policy. Folks whose real wages didnt go
anywhere for a decade feel cheated and are more likely to vote for populist
politicians promising change. Currency debasement fosters growing income and
wealth inequality and diverging political reactions, e.g., the Tea Party
movement on the political right and the Occupy WallStreet
movement on the political left. The rise of populism can be seen in the rise
of Twitter: we sometimes quip that politicians that can distill their
political message into a tweet have a better chance of being elected these
days. Except that we are wrong: its not a joke.
In the Middle East, similar trends cause revolutions. People can be
suppressed for a long time, but if they cant feed
themselves, they revolt. In the U.S., we are told food and energy are to be
excluded from measuring inflation, as our economy is less and less dependent
on food and energy (although curious that a record number of Americans used
food stamps last year). However, in countries where large segments of the
population cannot earn enough to feed themselves, currency debasement
contributes to revolutions, not just the rise of populism.
War
For those that believe currency debasement is the appropriate way to
escape a depression, keep in mind that the Great Depression provided a
transition to World War II. Currency Wars fought in the first half of the
20th century tended to be a result of fiscal policy. For example, in 1925,
the UK returned to the gold standard at pre World-War-I levels,
although the UK could ill afford it. In 1931, Britain was forced to depart
from the gold standard again. Japan suspended the gold standard in 1917,
returned to it in early 1930, only to depart from it again in late 1931. In
1934, the U.S. dollar was devalued by 40% when an ounce of gold was
officially priced at $35 an ounce, up from $20.67 an ounce. Exchange rates
caught up with reality.
In todays world, where major countries have free-floating
exchange rates, monetary policies appear to be more pro-active rather than
reactive. Either way, underlying fiscal or monetary policy have
a profound impact on currency values, both in real (purchasing power) and
relative (exchange rate) terms. Given unprecedented debt and deficit levels
on the fiscal side, and aggressive central bank balance sheet expansion on
the monetary side, we believe the term currency war is
more than appropriate.
When told by Fed Chairman Bernanke that the gold standard prolonged
the Great Depression, many feel as if monetary activism were a blessing
rather than a curse. In our assessment, Ivory Tower economists are
particularly apt at confusing cause and effect. The root causes of a
depression are excessive debt, not currencies that are too strong. Currency
debasement and expansionary monetary policies are attempts to socialize such
debt, bailing out those that have taken on irresponsible debt burdens. But
because governments tend to be in the group of those taking on excessive debt
burdens, we are made to believe that such policy is for the greater good.
We respectfully disagree: currency wars destroy wealth. Currency wars
have a disproportionate impact on the poor, as they dont
hold assets whose value is inflated in nominal terms and that could buffer
some of the fallout. Central banks dont cause real wars. But monetary
policy has a profound impact on the social fabric. Abstract theories about
how aggressive monetary action are the remedy to
depressions ignores the heavy social toll currency wars have on people. For
those that argue that the social toll of a depression is greater, we respond
that the best short-term policy to address economic ills is a good long-term
policy. We cannot see how currency wars can be good long-term policy.
What to do about Currency Wars
We can lament all we want, but ultimately, we are observers rather
than instigators. We can be actors when it comes to our own wealth, seeking
to protect it from the fallout of currency wars. We believe the best place to
fight a currency war might be in the currency market itself, as there may be
a direct translation from what we call the mania of policy makers into the
currency markets. Its not a zero-sum game, as
different central banks print different amounts of money (that is, if one
calls central bank balance sheet expansion money printing,
even if no real currency is printed, but central banks purchase assets with
fiat currency created on a keyboard). Equities may also rise when enough
money is printed causing all asset prices to float higher, but one also takes
on the noise of the equity markets: when no
leverage is employed, equity markets are substantially more volatile than the
currency markets.
Some call currency markets too difficult to understand. We happen to
think that ten major currencies are much easier to understand than thousands
of stocks. But nobody said its
easy.
Calling it a race to the bottom does not give credit to what we
believe are dramatically different cultures across the world. Gold may be the
winner long-term, but for those who dont have all their assets in gold, the question remains how to diversify
beyond what we call the ultimate hard currency. To potentially profit from
currency wars, one needs to project ones
view of what policy makers may be up to onto the currency space. And if there
is one good thing to be said about our policy makers, it is that they may be
rather predictable.
Axel Merk
To learn more how to survive the
currency wars, please join us in our webinar on Thursday, February 21, 2013. Please also sign up for our newsletter to be informed as we discuss global dynamics and
their impact on gold and currencies.
Axel Merk is President and Chief Investment
Officer, Merk Investments.
Merk Investments, Manager of the Merk
Funds.
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