From Louise Yamada – technical analyst:
“History shows the only place for interest rates to go from here is higher.”
Examine the above chart of interest rates for 200 years.
- Rates rise and fall in long cycles, 20 to 40 years from a peak to a trough.
- Important highs occurred in 1920 and 1981.
- Important lows occurred in 1946 and probably 2016.
- Current rates are the lowest in 200 years. Some analysts have said the lowest in 5,000 years.
Examine the chart of annual silver prices since 1913 on a log scale.
The upward trend in silver prices is clear and will continue as long as
debt is increasing in our fiat currency system.
INTEREST RATES AND SILVER PRICES:
Refer back to the 200 year chart of interest rates and the 100 year
chart of silver prices. Note the correlation between interest rate highs
and silver price highs and similar lows
(ovals).
Highs: Interest rates 1920 – silver 1919
Highs: Interest rates 1981 – silver 1980
Lows: Interest rates 1946 – silver 1932 and 1941
Lows: Interest rates 2016 – silver 2015
Interest rates rose approximately 35 years from 1946 – 1981 and fell
for 35 years from 1981 – 2016. Silver prices could rise for several
decades, along with interest rates, as the dollar is devalued further,
silver is aggressively used for industrial applications, investment
demand increases, and perhaps … the world is forced to return to a
monetary system tied more closely to gold or silver.
RISING INTEREST RATES:
We also know that interest rates are the “cost of money” and have
been steadily pushed lower for 35 years by government and central bank
actions. Further, the bond market rises as interest rates fall
(good times for Wall Street) and
falls as interest rates rise. Higher rates mean the $200 trillion or so
of debt is more costly to service – we know it will never be paid back
in current dollars – but interest to service the debt is more onerous.
Budgets are squeezed, projects are curtailed, weak businesses go
bankrupt, stock buy-backs are reduced and all those derivatives that are
tied to interest rates — well, it won’t be good for many of them…
The Resolution:
- Let it all crash. Admit the governments of the world have no
intention of repaying the debt (at least since 2008), let the depression
begin, destroy economies, governments, businesses, and millions of
lives including the politicians and central bankers who created
unsustainable systems and encouraged deficit spending.
or
-
Monetize debt, fire up the printing presses, launch the
Bernanke helicopters, and blame someone for the inflationary
consequences later.
What politician, banker, Wall Street CEO, central banker, or
corporation CEO will choose the crash option? Hence expect the inflation
option.
For review:
In 1913 a dollar bought almost 1/20 ounce of gold, 8 gallons of gasoline, and 14 loaves of bread.
Today we all know the devalued dollar buys much less. In round
numbers our politicians and central bankers have devalued the dollar by
perhaps 98%. Expect the devaluation of all fiat currencies to
accelerate.
During the 8 long years of the Obama administration total official
U.S. government debt has approximately doubled, from about $10 trillion
to about $20 trillion. Expect more debt, lots more debt.
LOTS MORE DEBT!
What does this suggest about silver prices?
- More debt means more dollars are in circulation and that means
erratically higher prices for most items including bread, energy, health
care and silver.
- Bond monetization, “printing” dollars, and helicopter money will
suggest to everyone – eventually – that the dollar is not a reliable
store of value and has not been since 1913. When that realization is
finally common knowledge, people will act to protect their wealth and
purchasing power. Silver and gold will perform better than crashing
bonds, over-valued stocks and promises from politicians.
- Silver and gold are insurance against crashing markets, central bank
and government manipulations, devaluing currencies, collapsing “Ponzi”
schemes in debt and currency markets, and more.
- The dollar has lost about 98% of its value in 100 years. Silver and
gold have, on average, retained their value. Expect their current low
prices to spike higher as fiat currency declines toward its intrinsic
value.
HYPERINFLATIONS:
Many hyperinflations have occurred in the past 100 years. Example:
Argentina has devalued against the U.S. dollar by 10 trillion to one
since about 1950. The continued devaluation of the U. S. dollar, loss of
reserve currency status, and coming massive “stimulus” spending could
result in hyperinflation in the United States. Silver will reach
incredible prices in such a disastrous situation. Few if any will be
pleased with the consequences of hyperinflation, but owning silver will
help mitigate the trauma.
Expect interest rates and silver prices to rise, along with
debt, accelerating currency devaluations, and economic craziness until a
massive reset occurs.
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GE Christenson is the owner and writer for the popular and contrarian investment site Deviant Investor and the author of the book, “Gold Value and Gold Prices 1971 - 2021.” He is a retired accountant and business manager with 30 years of experience studying markets, investing, and trading. He writes about investing, gold, silver, the economy, and central banking. His articles are published on Deviant Investor as well as other popular sites.
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The author is not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by Sprott Money Ltd. The views and opinions expressed in this material are those of the author or guest speaker, are subject to change and may not necessarily reflect the opinions of Sprott Money Ltd. Sprott Money does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, timeliness and reliability of the information or any results from its use.